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..
· Pomeroy-Mid~

Page 1 2-Th8 Daily Sentinel

Linder A. Dains

Florence W. Will

Linder A. Dains, &amp;&gt;, 35471 Texas
Road, Route 3, Pomeroy, died
Friday morning at V&lt;;&gt;teransMem·
olial Hospital.
Mr. Dains was born Aug. lB, t!Xloi
at Athens, a son of the late Samuel
and Adelle Staneart Dains. He was a
laborer for 18 years at the Pomeroy
Cement Block Co. and had been a
shovel operator from 1948 to 1966.
Surviving are his wife, Mildred
Smith Dains; a daughter, Betty
Milhoan, Ro'lte 3, Pomeroy; three
grandchtldre~eggy Lynn Moore,
Held! Ewing and Rhett Milhoan, all
of Route 3, · Pomeroy; a sister,
Evelyn Dains Rathburn, Athens ,
and two great-grandchildren,
James Ewing and Randy Moore.
Besides his parents, he was
preCeded In death by ll brothers and
sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m . Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call from2
to4and 7 to9 p.m . Saturday. Burial
will be In Beech Grove Cemtery.

Funeral services for Mrs. Florence Wealthy WW, Kingsbury
Road, Route 2, Pomeroy, woo died
Wednesday night at the Arcadia
Nursing Center In Coolville, will be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home.
Mrs. WW was retired as a
seamtress from the Athens State
lnstttlite. She was a member of the
Carleton Ch11rch. Mrs. WW was
born Sept. 1, 1898 at Pomeroy, a
daughterofthe!ateDanaandNancy
Smith Cumings.
Surviving are a daughter-In-law,
Mrs. Guy (Lenore) Will, Brighton,
Mich.; a granddaughter, Barbara
Marsh, Mentor; a grandson, Jerry
WUI, Brighton, Mich., and five
great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Clarence WW, and a son, Guy Will.
Officiating at Saturday's services
will be the Rev. David Curtman.
Buria l wW be In Carleton Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 this evening.

Meigs County happenings ...
Emergency squads .Revival in•progress
answer seven calls
A revival is now in progress at the
The Meigs County Emer~rency
Medical Service responded to seven
calls Thursday.
. At 3:26 a.m .. Tuppers Plains
traveled to Indian Run for Tina
Chevelier who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. 'l\t 9:54 a.m.,
Pomeroy went to a construction site
on Mulberry Heigts for Robert
Allman who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Pomeroy unit went to the Country
Mobile Home Park at 12:26 p.m. for
Marilyn Oiler who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pomeroy then responded to a call
from New Lima Rd. at6: O!lp'. m.and
transported Loti Faulkner to \lete·
rans Memorial. Racine responded
to a call,at6: 25p.m. and transported
Cora Webb from her residence to
Veterans M~morial. At 6:59 p.m .,
Middleport we nt to 30 Riverview
Olive for Ann Davis who was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital. The
Pomeroy unit answered a call from
the Eagles Clubat9:35p.m. Marvin
Darst was transported to Veterans
Memorial.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions .. -Paul Michael ,
Pomeroy: .Ethel Reeves, Coolville;
William McCormick, Gallipolls;
Alma Woods, Racine.
Di sc harges ... Nfna Saunders,
Audra Longstreth, Nora Nitz,
Frances Howery.

Saturday dance set
Square, round ands!owdancingto
a live band w!IJ be offered Saturday
evening at Eli Denison Post 467 of
the American Legion in Rutland .
Music will begin at 9 p.m . and
continue through I a.m. Donations
at the door are $2 per adult and$1.50
per child. Refreshments will be
available. Everyone is welcome.

judgment sought
A judgement for$ll,494.601sbelng
sought In Meigs Cqunty Common
Pleas Court bY KillbargerConstructlon Co., Logan, from Warren E .
Miller. doing business as, Ohio
River Oil Co. of California, Alas·
cadero,Ca.
The plaintiff claims to oold a valld,
unsatl~f!ed mechanics lien lor labor
and materials provided for an o!l
and gas well located on property In
Rutland Township.
·
Other defendants named in the
suit are W.C. HW. Cheshire; Gary
Hill, Long Beach, Ca., and James
Harrison, San Luis Obispo, Calif.

Ohio lottery wirmel'1!
CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was !0!. In
the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was &lt;1406.
Lottery officials reported earn·
lngs .Thursday of $578,363 from
wagering on " The Number." The
earnings came on . sales of
$1,136,563.50, while holders of win·
ntng tickets are entitled to share

Old Dexter Church on County Road
6. Nightly services begin at 7 p.m.
with preaching by Pastor Charles
Hatfield and Rev. Ralph Smith.
Special singing will also be featured .
The public Is welcome to attend.

Alumni band meeting
planned for Wednesday
The Racine-Alumni Band will
meet this coming Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m., In the high school band room to
practice for the performance to be .
presented at the last home game on
Oct. 19. Anyone needing to borrow
an ins trument or wanting more
information may call John Van
Reeth, Southern band director, at
school, 949·2600, orathome,992-6970.

Seeks license
A marriage license has been
issued In the Meigs County Probate
Coort to William Christopher
Woods, 23, Pomeroy, and Aneta
Marie Evans, 20, Portland.

Marriage ends
A dissolution of marriage has
been granted In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Terri Lynn
Wilson, Pomeroy, and Max Wayne
Wilson, Shade.

To end marriage
John 0. MuiUns, Long Bottom,
and Christy Mullins, Pliny, W.Va.,
have petitioned for a dissolution of
their marriage In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

BRimrroN, England (AP)- An
IRA.b ombexploded early to6ay at a
hotel where Prime MiDtSter Mar·
garet Thatcher was staying, ldlllng
twopeopleandlnjurlng24,tncl\ldlng
a Cabinet mtnlster and a member ot
ParUament. Mrs.111atcherwas not
hurt.
· The IrlshRepubUcanArmy, tn a
statementlssuedtnDublln, claimed
responslblllty for the blasi and said
It was an attempt "against the
British Cabinet and the Tory
warmongers."
Mrs. Thatcher, at the seafront
Grand Hotel along wlthmostofher
22-member Cabinet f9r Conserva·

:e~:;~~:~:u~~renv:;;;~

Joe Hysell

(AP) _

Scioto county
Prosecutor
·Grimshaw
has Issued
a reportLynn
that .
found no evidepce of mlstl't;'atment
of animals at the county dog pound,
but recommended changes In the
way the facility Is operated.

'Fhereport recommended aselies
of improvements Including
regular maintenance, more space,
proper disposal of dead imlmals,
Installation of an effective heating
system, improved record·keeping,
different methods of exterminating
dogs and establishment of a closer
working relationship with the Scioto
County Humane Society and the
Anima! Welfar.e League.
Grimshaw said his investlg~ttlon
found no evidence of charges that
dogs had been Inadequately fed or
that dead animals had been left In
cages for lengthy periods. His report
didn · t recommend action against
anyone at the pound.
Commissioners Thursday also
accepted the retirement of Dog
Warden Earl Brandenburg, 64, who
said he moved up his planned
January retirement at the recom·
mendation of county Commissioner
Paul Griffith.
Commissioners earlier had reprt·
manded Brandenburg and Assist·
ant Warden Danny Burke over
conditions at the pound.

,------------------------1

Sunday thrOUJh Tuesday:

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l!bowertl Maa,y and 'l'utwcla;y.

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8 OZ. FRESH SALMON STEAk ................................ $995

ENTERTAINMENT
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RESTAURANT
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The monthly meeting of the
SallsburyP.T.O. wtl1 not be held this
coming Thesday as was previously
scheduled. The meeting will be held
Instead on Ocwber 23 at 7: aJ p .m.
Dr. James Witherell wt11 be present
at the meeting to discuss chtld

HllbBM&amp;IIea~lllldMonda,y
&amp;be JIIIIHII to low 'llll

MIDDLEPOIT

Tl-'"1· LoWIIM ~ IIOB.

•

tmts
Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipoli5-Point Pleasant

GALLIPOLIS - A hearing has been scheduled for
Thesday In Gailla County Common Pleas Court on a
motion for a new trial lor a Franklin County man
convicted on charges of complicity to negligent
hom!cfde and compllc!ty w tamper with evidence, ·
Columbus attorney John J . Wolery flied them9tlon
last June for Alvin R. Mitchum, 40, Hilliard, who was
found guilty of the charges on Aprl\23, 1982.
Wolery said In the motion that his request lor a new
trial has been prompted by an affidavit from Ph!Wp
D. Downing, 25, Hilliard, one of the chief prosecution
witnesses In Mitchum's trial. In the affidavit,
Downing recanted s!gn!ficant parts of h!s testimOny

GALLIPOLIS - Neither Gov.
Richard Celeste nor State Rep.
Jolynn Bosler were attempting to
take poll tical credit last week for the
construction of the new science and
math building at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
Boster, D&lt;Galllpolls, made that
statl'll'!e~~t Frtday in response to an
accusation her·opponent In the
!Nth House
race, PomeroY

1984 CHEVROLET BIVOUAC CONVERSION VAN

Ollet

about Mitchum.
Mitchum and Downing were secretly indicted for
the July 28, 1981 shooting of Craig H. Fisher, 25, Rt. 2,
Patriot, at the Skyline Lanes In Kanauga. Fisher died
of h!s wound more than two weeks later.
MitChum was manager of the Skyline at the time,
and· Downing was an employee. Proseeut!on
estabUshed that bowning accidentally fired a
handgun owned by Mitchum. When the guq
discharged, the bullet passed through an open
corridor and struck Fisher, who was In the Captain's
.Lounge, an adjoining bar.
·

"I think It must be a Jack of
understanding, or a blatant attempt
to twist the facts," Boster said.
Celeste helped college otftctals
dedicate the $3 m!Won structure last
Thesday, and later In the day
appeared at a fund-raiser for
Boster, who is seeking a second
term In the House.
On both occasions, Celeste
praised Bosi,e r' s etforts In convlnc·

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Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-66.14

AT DEDICATION- Gov. Rlcllard Celellte, center, wlllb toward
new science and math bulldlng'at Rio Grande College and ComrnunKy
College earler this week, Banked by RGCCC Presldellt Dr. Clodll'l
Smith and two memhers ol Celeste's stall .. State Rep. Jolynn Boster
dtlnled a charge she and Celesh! sought poutlcal credit lor the buDding's
cOIII!tructlon bt 1983.

lng his office to appropriate funds In
early 1983 for construction of the
science and math building, In spite
of a budgetary freeze on capital
stiendlng. The freeze was Imposed
shortly after Celeste took office,
when the state was facing a $500
mtlllon deficit.
.
In her statement, Sheets admon·
!shed Cele!;te and Boster to, In the
words of a commercial brokerage
televts!on ad, get political credit
"the old-fashioned way, they ought
to earn it."
Sheets said the building was
reatlzed through the efforts ot the
community college trustees, the
Ohio Board of Regents and the work
ot a previous administration In the
statehouse. ·
While she said 1t was light for
Celeste to help dedicate the bulld!ng
and receive an oonotary degree
from the college; "If was wrong" to
claim credit for himself and Bo'ster.
Boster said she was contacted by
COllege officials shortly after the
budget freeze went Into effect. They
were worried that the building,
which had been b!d andwasreadyto
be bUilt, would be ignored.
The building was one of three
capital improvement projects In her
district needing funding , Boster
said.
"If we had waited, It would have
· cost more," she said of the building.
"It was one of those situations that
would have created a hardship for
the community and for .local
students.
"The only credit we claimed was
that we moved that buUcllng
forward In sp!teof a budget freeze,"
she added.

•

tntmt
•

1 3 Sections. 84 Pageo 50 Cents

Sunday, October 14, 1984

A Multimedia Inc. N - - '

Downing was indicted for negligent homicide,
tampering with evidence and felonious assault, while
Mitchtiin was indicted for complicity to those charges
and for having a weapon under disability.
))owning later: pleaded guilty to the negligent
homicide and tampering charges, and the feloniou s
assault charge was dropped. He was later given a
suspended sentence and ordered to perform
community work in Frankl!n .County .
Mitchum was sentenced to six m onths in the Gallia
County Jail for complicity to neiligent homicide , and
three-to-10 years in the Ohio Penetentiary fo r

'
complic ity to tampering with evidence.
Earlier this year , the F ourth District Court of
Appeals overturned Mitchum 's negligent homicide
complicity conviction. but upheld the one for
complicity to tampering.
Wolery 's motion said Downing contacted Mitchum
last April and "indicated he wanted to cleanse h!s
conscience and tell the truth." Mitchum got in .touch
with his defense attorney, Edwin L. Malek of
Columbus, who hired a private investigator to
in terview Downing in the Franklin County Jail.
I Continued on page A·3)

Truck driver
charged with
vehicular
homicide
MIDDLEPORT- A Westerville
man has been charged with
vehicular homicide following the
death of a Middleport woman.
Middleport police said Jane S.
GOkey, 00,368 Y., North Second Ave. ,
was allegedly struck by a large
del!ver"j truck driven by David
Eptln , 57. as she walked along North
Second Avenue.
Gilkey was walking north on
North ·· Second when she was
apparently struck by the truck as it
attemPted topullontoNOI'thSea61
atter mal&lt;lng a delivery at King
Builders Supply Inc., according to
Middleport Police Chief J .J.
Cremeans. •
Cremeans sa id Eplin apparently
did not stop after the accident. He
was arrested by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department while making
a deli very at the Racine Planing
Mil!.

TOE TAPPING TIME - Thousands of people have poured Into R!o
Grande for the annual Bob Evans Farm Featlval, which features
traditional arts, crafts and music. Crafts Uke coopering, lye soap
· making and blacksmithing have been oo display, and old-time music by
the WBT Briarhoppers from Charlotte, N.C., has been featured. Here.
the group's fiddle player takes off with some traditional sOunds. The
festival continues through 5 p.m . Sunday. (Photo by Lee Ann Welch)

Meigs County Coroner Dr. R.R.
Pickens said Gilkey died from chest
Injuries received when the wheels of
ihe vehicle passed over her.
Additionally, Dr. Pickens said both
arms had been fractured.
Her body had been dragged 12 feet
by the truck after being struck,
officers said . She was taken to
Veterans Mem orial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency Suad,
where she was pronounced dead on
arrival.
Officers sa id there is no sidewalk
at the location of the accident. The
area is used for vehicles pulling Into
the establishment to make purchases or deliveries.

Hocking prosecutor disputes Johnston defen~e 'theories'
LOGAN, Ohio (AP)- A deCision
ls expected Monday on whether
·DaleN. Johnston wtl1 receive a new
trial.
Johnston, 51, was convicted Jan.
28and sentenced todeathln the Oct.
4,1982, murdersofhisstepdaughier,
Annette Cooper, and her fiance,
Todd Schultz.
The three-judge panel consider-

lngamotlonloraretrtalmetFliday
In Akron to discuss the matter. That
sameday,HocklngCountyProsecu·
tor Chris Veldt (lied his final
response to the defense motion.
Veldt's affidavits claim that
Johnston's attorneys stretched the
truth In sworn ·s tatements they filed
In seeking the new trial.

DefenseattorneysThomasTyack defense assertions that the m ur·
and RobertSuhrotColumbus asked dered teens' body parts were found
for a new trial on the basis of newly · ·in a cornfield near the residence of
discovered evidence.
the mother of Kevin Meyer, a man
Veldt, however, said Tyack and the defense says should be investi·
Suhr presented "numerous and gated In the case.
varied unsubstantiated theories, all
"The trailer court is located
of which were or could have been approximately one-haH mile from
previously presented or argued."
the area .where the defendant buried
The prosecutor also disputed the

the parts of Todd a nd Annette,"
Veldt sal d. "The burial site is much
clcrser to numerous other residences
and businesses than it is tot he tra iler
court where Kevin Meyer's parents
resided In 1967."
Veldt also d ismissed the defense
contention t hat Meyer could not tell
police wher~e was on the night the

\iCtims were kUJed . ''Actual fact:
Kevin Meyer told police where he
was on this night and his whereabouts were verified by other
witnesses. " Veidt said .
\he defense also claims Meyer
was seen in a bar with Miss Cooper,
but Veidt ca Ued that "totally
unsubstanti ated speculation."

Reagan; on whistlestop tour, says opponent
offers 'fe~ itself;'' Mondale hits at Bush
· . WASHINGI'ON (AP) -After denouncing Walter
F. Mondale bt strong teni1S on aheiglbt·biOW'

through· Ohio, President Reagan Is spending a
relaxing weekend at Camp David until he sets oot on
the campaign trall again Monday.
On the tour through ~ mtles of Ohio countryside
Friday, the president used U.S. Car One, the same
annored car used bY President Truman 36 years ago
as he bam5tornted the nation attacking Republicans.
"Fraltkun Roosevelt warned us that the only thing
we bave to fear Is fear Itself, " Reagan deClared.
"Well, sadly and tragically, the only thing my
opponent has io olfer Is lear Itself."
Meanwhile, Mondale demanded that · Reagan
running mate George Bush apologize Immediately
tor saying the Democratic ticket had suggested that
Marines "died In shame" In Lebanon.
"That's unpardonable," Mondale said of the vice
president's statement IIi his nationally broadcast
debate Thuraday night Wtth Mondale's running mate,

Geraldine A. Ferraro.
1n the debate, Bush said, "For somebody to

suaest. as our c9ll0111!11ts have, thatthese young men

died In shame, they had better not tell the pa~ts of
•,

-Page A-3-

Boster denies she, Celeste
tried to take unearned credit

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Inside:

Vel. 19 No. 36

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Congressional inaction is holding up Ohio
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FOR. MEN and WOMEN

As a joumalist., humorist Art Buchwald presents
•one man's fantasy' - Page A·2 -

-Page B-1

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

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Chain saw
artists

r~a=b=use::::_._ _ _ _ _...;.._ _ _r~P~O~T~A~T~O~E~S~5~0~1b~s~-~··~"~·-~--~-·~..~-·~..~··~...~..~..~-·~"="=··:··:"~"="=··:·:··:$=·~9~9~~

Griinshaw, responding to complaints by members of the Scioto ·
Cwnty Animal Welfare League
about conditions at the pound, Issued
the report to county comniissioners.

Weather forecast

Exteaded Forecast

PTO meets Tuesday

found on dog
•
mistreatment

·· REMEMBER
· Tu stnd

..

. ~~i

• - '.ot...,_...:'

OPEII 9-7 MOIIDAY·SAlUIDAY- SIIIIDAY 11·6
MAIN ST.
. 992·6036
POMEIOY, OH.

The Injured Included Mrs .
Thatcher's trade inlnlster, Norman
Tebblt; the Australian ambassador
to Britain, Alf Parsons; and the
Consen·atlves' whip In the House of
Commons, John Wakeham.
Mrs. Thatcher said she was still
awake when the blast occurred at
3: 10 a.m., working on a speech she

No evidence

•

party .c halnnan John Selwyn
Gummer said, his voice breakl!lg
with emotion.

MAIN STREET MARKET

you."

Joe Hysell, 12, 751 Brownell
Ave., Middleport, Is the subject
· of this week's Daily Sentinel
~rrier Corner. Joe Is a seventh
grader at the Meigs Junior High
School. He likes sports and
fishing and besides dellverlng
The Sentinel to his 55 customers,
he also earns spending money
by cutting grass.

PORTSMOUTH,Ohio

planned to dellver to the conference
today. Her husband Denis was tn
bed. "AU the windows went, and the
bathroom was extremely badly
damaged. We were very lucky,"
Mrs. Thatcher said.
Six hours after the blast, Mrs.
Thatcher kept her eyes ttnnl~
closed as the conference. convened
on schedule with a prayer for the
dead and Injured.
"We Intend to continue with our
conference ... because those who
wtsh to lntlmldate democracy must
be shown thatwhatevermeans they
use, those means will In ·f acHall,"

..
Shuttle returns to earth•-Page A-5

r.~=~~:;;;;;,;;~~~~!!!;;;~~~~~~;;;;~

of her second-Door room. She. was
taken w a pollee station In this
EngUsh Channel resort and told •
reporters: "I'm very well, thank

$558.~.50.

Tonight, variable cloudiness with
patch dense fog developing. Low In
the m!d-50s. Saturday, variable
cloudinesS with a high 70-75. The
chance ot rain Is 10 percent tonight
and Saturday.

Friday, October 12.-1984

, Ohio

IRA bomb kills 2, injures 24

Carrier's Comer

Area deaths

'

I

these young Marines."
Ms. Ferraro denied Bush' scharge. Mondale did the
same a nd issued this challenge to Bush:
"Apologize and do it today . Mr. Bush, if you don't
apologize, jn my debate with the president on the 21st.
I am going to bring !t up and demand that he take
responslbtuty." Bush refused.
Reagan accused Mondale of purposely m!srepres·
entlng his pos!tlon on Socia! Security and of doing a
good job of "sUpping, sUdtng and ducking away from
his record."
The president said Mondale's philosophy could be
summed up In four sentences: "If It's lncome,tax!t. If
It's revenue, spend !t. If It's a budget, break it And If
it's a promllit;'. make It. "
Reagan drew laughs when he sald he had been
tempted In h!s debate with the Democratic candidate
w tell him: " Mr. Mondale, you're taxing my patience.
"And then l caught myself- why should I give him
another idea?" Reagan said In speeches In the Ohio
communities of Sidney, Lima, Ottwaw; Deshler and
Perrysburg. ·

,.

WHERE OTHERS STOOD - Presldeut Renlllli
Reagan addrew!S the crowd gathered at the trata
station bt Ottawa, Ohio Friday on his wN!ttJe stop
train trip thrOugh Ohio. Reapu !s speaJdnltrom the
rear platfonn ol the FenllnlUid Magellan, a train e.used by several other presidents lor wiUde stop
tours. (AP Laserp._).
.
,
I
t.

�J

•

October 14, 1984 .

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

I

Comment

and perspective

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
· pag~

r--"---_..;...Weather:------------. Thousands line stops

A·2

October 14,

1984

The drying day will be shortened as heavy morning dew and fog

far 8 p.m. EDT, &amp;J'I.,Oct. 14

dls!ilpateil. Some cloudiness will persist during the afternoons,
llm1tlng sunshine to about a third of what Is possible at this time of
year. Pan 1!Vaporation rates of less than 0.15 inch per day will

As liberals .see her______Ja_m_es_J._K_ilpa_tric_k
A Division of

...1125 '11drclA.ve., GaWpoUs, Ohio
(614) 446-23t2

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(6Uj !J92.2li!6

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
·HOBART WILSON JR.
: ExecUtive Editor

'

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pubilsher·Controller

A MEMIIIlR &lt;i The "-&gt;claaed ...._ Inland Dally """" Ao.oclotlon and the
.

""-'ean N . . . _ P u - .Aosocladon.
:

LE'I'I'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed, !hey should be tESS thon 300 WU'ds tong. AD
leUen an eubject kl edltln&amp; and must be signed with name, addre881U1d telq~honenum­

, Mr. No u.lped let&amp;en '1¥10 Ill! published. Ldten~ 8hould be In good f.a..•lte, addreulngl.§,_,notpei'oollallllto.
.
.

'

Veep candidates
fill roles; ·stand
by their leader
Geraldine A. Ferraro and George Bush stood by their men. That is, after
all; the role of vice presidents.
Bush told of his joy in seivlng as vice president to Ronald Reagan, "a
president who does not apologize for the United States of America."
Ms. Ferraro sald Walter F. MondalechOoseshiscauses because they are
right.
"I wouldn't be standing here II fritz Mondale didn't have the courage
and my party didn't stand for the values that It does, the values of fairness,
and equal opportunity," the congresswoman said.
·:This battle is not over," she sald. "For our country, for our future, for
the principleS we believe in, Walter F. Mondale and I have just begun to
fight."
So much for the vice presidential campaign debate in Philadelphia. Now
Reagan and Mondaie meet again, a week from today In Kansas City, to
· debate foreign policy. That's the one that counts.
Reagan needs a comeback as a debater after his faltering performance
against Mondale last Sunday. Mondale still needs a comeback as a
candidate. Debate points notwithstanding, he remains a landslide behind
In the public opinion polls.
.
In the Interim meeting of understudy candidates Thursday night, Bush
and Ms. Ferraro had different missjons. His was to take the offense In
Reagan's behalf, to reclaim whatever momentum the Republicans lost
after the first presidential debate. Hers was to prove that a three-tenn
cQngresswoman belonged In the vice presidency.
·Both debaters pronounce!~ their missions accomplished.
:Bush, whose experience as a debater has not always been happy, carne
qr( strong, extolling Reagan almost every tlme he got his turn. He spent
mpre of his time slapping the absent Mondale than criticizing the
Democratic vice presidential nominee he faced,
.Running against Reagan for the Republican nomination four years ago,
BliSh was the victim in one of the more memorable moments in campaign
debate. That was the night In Nashua, N:H., when Reagan announced that
he'.d paid for the microphone and he was going to talk on it. Bush sputtered,
but never found a comeback line.
This time, debating In behalf of the Reagan ticket, he was animated,
enthusiastic, an effective cheerleader.
.Ms. Ferraro seemed intent on underplaying her role as the first woman
e.,er to engage in vice presidential debate.
·She slowed her smccato ~peaking style, made . her points carefully,
wi(hout wisecracks or one-liners. When questions were raised about
eiperlence; credentials, the.abllity of a woman to deal with the Kremlin,
shi&gt; peered over her glasses and spoke firmly, sometimes sternly.
·"I can make the hard decisions," she said. " ... I wasn't born atthe age of
4~ when I enfered Congress."
:At one point, In a discussion of terrorism, Bush said, "Let me help you
with the difference, Mrs. Ferraro. between Iran and the embassy In
x.e)lanon."
: ~· ... l almost resent, Vice Presi~nt Bush, your patronizing attitude that
·yOu have to teach me about foreign policy," she snapped.
·~· ... Secondly, please don't categorize my answers either. Leave the
ln~rpretation of my answers to the American people who are watching
this debate."
'

.•

'Tax them to the hilt.. .'

tnecme tax also!
I am not one to complain of

liiiCceu ot a Utile town, but let us not.
we are still a nice Utile town,
IIdia Iarae clty - as you are trying

Ja~Jlet,

to villuaDze. Plal)ning Is one thing,

•

•

~-

' ..&amp;rr w~~

Peru as 'new Cuba'
Jack Anderson
~----~------------~-------WASIUNGTON- Peni today Is
a land of polltlcal paradolles, and
the way these contradictions are
resolved in the next year may have
a tar-reaching Impact on the
U.S.-Sovlet balance of power In this
hemisphere.
Consider the current situation:
- President Fernando Belaunde
Terry is the most pro-U.S. leader
Peru has had since 1968, when he
was ousted by a military coup. He
later regained power, but today the
country Is a haven for so many
Soviet spies, military advisers and
other personnel that they out·
number the total of U.S. milltary
advisers in all of South America.
- The nation of some l8 million Is
being tyrannized by a handful of
fanatical Marxist guerrillas who
call themselves Sendero Lumlnoso
(Shining P;~th) and who, unlike
their Central American counterparts, apparently spurn aid from
Cuba and other co,rnmunist
countries.
Shining Path kept a low profile
for 10 years under the military

dictatorship, declaring war against
the government only in 1980, after a
free election put Belaunde back in
power.
· - The Soviets, for their o~m
devious reasons, have been quietly
advising the Peruvian military on
the best way to deal with the
guerr111as . Since Shining Path
rebels Idolize Mao Tse-tung, It
almost seems as II the Kremlin has
transplanted Its 20-year-old confllct
with Its one·time Chinese ally to the
Peruvian Andes.
My associate Dale Van Alta
ITa veled to Peru to size up the
situation in this strategic country,
which the Soviets have ~et their
sights on. He spoke with Western
Intelligence sources In Lima and
was shown top-secret CIA docu·
ments, including extremely sensitive satellite photographs of Peru·
vian military Installations.
The Soviet Union Intentions In
Peru are clear: They want \O make
the country their ·::;outh America
Cuba.

,

To further this amblilous plan,
more than 550 Soviet personnel, by
U.S. Intelligence estimates, are
stationed In Peru. At least 150 are
military advisers, 90 of them with
the army. Another 100 have been
identified as agents of the KGB and
GRU.. the Soviet military intelli·
gence arm.
Incredibly, It was the the same
anti-democratic military men responsible for ousting Belaunde whO
brought in the Soviets. And the
immediate cause was the Johnson
admlnl~tratloli'S high·mlnded cu·
toft of arms sales to the new
dictatorship. A secret Defense
Intelligence Agency report
explains:
"Prior to· 1968, the Soviet presence was non-existent, but that year
the United States suspended mil·
ltary . sales to Peru and the
Peruvians turned first to Western
Europe and then to the Soviet Union
for mUitary hardware.
"Moscow:s massive offerings of
military equipment not readily
available elsewhere, at extremely

One man's fantasY-

Newspaper people cannot live by
in-depth question on urban housing,
bread alone. They have ·to have
and then Ronnie will stammer and
Walter Mltty fantasies to keep them
get the sympathy of the 1V
going. My latest 9ne has to do with
audience. People don't like to see
last Sunday's debate. It was
someone beat up on their president
revealed before the confrontation
during a debate, particularly when
that over 100 names of media people
It comes to urban housing."
had been submitted and rejected by .
"It's too much of a risk. This guy
either Mondale's or Reagan's
is the foremost authority on sleaze
but let us walt untU the need arises advisers. I have to believe that I
in the country. I say cross him off
prior to jumping In with both feet. was one of the people on the list.
the Jist."
This Is what I'm sure happened.
Do we remember the big so-called
"Tell the League of Women
The hundred media names were
recreation area that also went
Voters if they put . this Darwin·
sent over to Reagan headquarters .
defunct?
loving secular humanist on the
One 'or Reagan's key aides
There are many residents.of thls
panel, our man sleeps at Camp
David on Sunday night." ·
small community that this extra recognized mine Immediately.
"They have to be kidding! " the
expense would put them under. I
"My fantasy Is not limited to the
know for a fact there are many aide said to the president's debate
Reagan people. I prefer to believe
residents that do not have the funds ~taft. "According to our flies this
the Mondale staff also flipped when
to buy required amounts of food for guy Is one of the few people in
they saw my name on the media
list.
• ..
.
their families. Of course one of their America who Is not better ot! today
needed commodities Is water and, than he was raur years ago."
"'J1lls Is outrageous ..·we can't
"How did you fihd that out?"
of course, sewage. I can see the
have this guy questioning our
''We talked to his wife."
reasoning behind your actions for
candidate."
·
"The man Is relentless when It
the Increase In water rates, as these
"W)Iy? He seems awfully ignor·
citizens do depend on water to comes to asking the tough, trenant when It comes to the Issues."
survive, so Jet's tax them to the hilt. chant questions."
"The man's a closet Reaganlte.
''Not to mention his follow-ups.
I, as one citizen, am begging you
He wants the president in for fQur
to reconsider this Increase, and look He'll go for tile home run every
more years because he thinks
Into any other means In which to time."
Reagan will provide him with
"It says he has no respect for the
raise the revenue. I am sure If you
better &lt;COlumns than Mondale. I
look hard enough you could find office of the presidency."
heard him say on the radio he has to
"Or Vice President B\ISh's tax
some other means. If you can't
think of himself before his
country.''
think of any I am sure Mr. MorriS returns."
"He drove Nixon out of the White
could come up with something. This
"If Fritz sees him on the panel
House.''
brings tQ mind one other point our candidate will lose. all his
"I thought that was Woodward con11dence and forget to bring up
when Mr. Morts was hired as city
manager were there any local ·and Bernstein."
Medicare, Beirut and the fairness
"Who do you think led them tothe
issue.".
citizens who applied for this job,
"You have to watch out for the
and If so, why did they not obtain smoking gun?"
"Walt, maybe It's better to have llbel"als. They'll stick It to their own
same Instead of going out of the
the devil we know than.the devil we every time."
area to hire him?
don't."
"He's a wimp, and If there is one
BettyShlfi~ .
"What the devil does that
thin&amp; we don't want Sunday night
1741 Chatham A~.
It's someone who wW ask Mondale
Gallipolis mean?'~
"He'll ask Re~iian a probing, where he stands on wimps in this
J,

letter to the editor
E:ontrary to the belief of our
Ganlpolis City Commission and our
bolaorary. so-called, city manager,
t)l$'e are many citizens that are up
In -arms and definitely opposed to
tiMi water. Increase, upcoming. As
yo{l can tell from this writing I am
oiiJi!ctlng to the proposed water
rale inCrease the city commission iS
coUtdering adopllng.
'there are those on low and
rntSdJe Income that can not tolerate
an-tncrease of any kind at this time.
1 ~ ti very disrespectful that the
cl~ commission would pass on a
ml)take on their part to the
laJ!PIIyer&amp; of this city, or the
ouiiytng area.
·
tve are not responsible for the
l8Jlll! treatment plant that. was
bUilt. We realize the commissioners
anllclpated a large influx of sewer
uen, and water users. 'This should
tell tbem something.
the tarae users have had to cut
blli:ll clue to the high operating cost,
aJCIIClllle of them have rooved from
our area; Scotten·DIIIon, Chris·
c~. juat to name a couple. I am
sute It was more than jilst the water
ra~S· Could It have been the city

struck, she was writing her ·own six of them. In 1983 the ACLU used Rights; the ACLU strongly sup.
views 111 the yeas and nays of the eight roU calls for Its scorecard; she ports it. So does Rep. Ferraro.
House.
In 1983 ADA looked at key roll
voted "right" every time. Sim·
on defense and foreign affairs.
calls
In earUer columns I have re- ilarly, ADA gave her a rating in 1979'
. viewed her record as seen by of 74 percent (five wrong, 14 right), The gentlewoman had a perfect
organized labor (excellent), by the but a better rating in 1983 of 90 score: She vote&lt;l against developbusiness community (poor), by the percent (tWo wrong, 18 right) .
ment of an anti-satellite llili!slle;
American Security Council (not so
During the five years t'1e 1:\!'0 against an amendment to permit
hot) and by the National Taxpayers organizations have tracked some of manufacture of chemical weapons; ·
Union (big spender). How does she the same Issues. In several Instan- against the MX missile; and
fare In the scorebooks of Amertcans ces they have used the same roll . against a motion to give . a
. for Democratic ACtion (ADA) and · calls for their Ulmus tests. The "reduction" In nuclear weapons a
the American Civil Liberties Union
priority equal to the priority of a
picture that develops Is the same.
(ACLU)? She fares very weU.
weapons
"freeze."
In 1983 the American Civil
Rep. Ferraro's track record 1n
On
consumer
Issues, Rep. · FerLiberties Union examined three roll
Congress covers the years 1979 callS having to do with abortion. raro voted In 1983 In favor of the
through l.l&amp;. One of the Interesting The ACLU Is for It Rep. Ferraro domestic content but for the .
things about the gentlewoman Is earned a plus on each vote. Two roll automobile Industry. in the area of · ;
that she has grown more liberal
calls last year had to do with covert clvU rights, she voted In favor of the
with every passing year. During operations of the CIA In Nicaragua. Equal Rights Amendment to the
her first year In the House, the The ACLU was against these; so Constitution and 1!1 favor of the
ACLU selected nine roll calls as
was Rep. Ferraro. · Two votes holiday to honor Martin Luther
critlcitl; alas, she voted "wrong''.on concerned the Commission on Civil King. She voted In 1983 agalnsi the
amendment gradually to raise the
full·benefit retlrfi'ment age under
Social Security from 65 to 67 by the
year 2IXXI. Her cumulative five-year
rating from ADA Is 79, from the
ACLU 74.
As I have noted before, the
ratings of special Interest groups
have to be viewed with a mildly
skeptical eye. ADA, the ACLU and
the AFL·CIO tend to pick key roU
calls that make Democrats look
good. The U.S. Chamber of Com·
merce and the American Consel"lla·
tlve ·Union tilt toward Republican
virtues.
Yet when this selective bias has
been discounted, it has to be said
that the particular recorded votes
actually have been cast. Tile ·
pattern of .Rep. F:erraro's yeas and
nays Is a pattern of emerging
liberalism; it is a pattern she
herself has woven. Those who count
themselves liberals will love t)lat
pattern. Conservatives will find lt of
small appeal. Like it or dlsUke it,
~-~tu..-sw~ .Nf» oo-miCTIV£ "'Il~" t7.6oo ~6Mf&lt;l\6~ MIGII~E. ' politically speaking, this Is ho;;.. her
heart beats.

WASIUNGTON - Long before
she became the Democrats' vice
presidential nominee and long
before she debated George Bush,
Geraldlne Ferraro was writing her
own record as a member of the
House of RepFesentatives from
Queens, N.Y. It Is fair to ask what
can be learned from the record.
The question is Important. Within
t)lls century three presidents have
died In office, one has reslgni!d, one
has become disabled, and one has ·
narrowly missed death by assassl·
nation. It Is more than a dramatic
turn of phrase to say that II the
Mondale-Ferraro ticket wins In
November, she would be within a
heartbeat of the Oval Office. As
Mondale'srunnlngmate, sheneces·
sarlly must evince a team player's
loyalty to his views and to the party
platform. Before the Ughtnlng

t\L

campaign."
"The big question we should ask
ourselves is, 'Is this guy better off
today than he was four year-S ago?'

..

"Are you kidding? He's made
mare money In the last four years
off Reagan than Bill Casey has
made in the stock market."

Doonesbury•

generous terms, drew a positive
resonse from the Peruvians and ser
the stage for the arrival of Soviet
advisers and the training of Peru·,
vlan military personnel ' ln the: ·
Soviet Union."
A secret CL\ report agreed with
this cause-and-effect chronology.
saying:
"The Soviet-Peruvian military ,
supply relationship dates back to .
1972-1973, when Lima turned to
Moscow because of continuing
restrictions on U.S. sales and the . •
lnabUity of West European coun.
tries to meet delivery schedules ...
Soviet prices and repayment terms .
were favorable - 10 years at about :
three·percent interest - and acrep.
tance of Moscow's mllimry aid
gave credibility to Lima's non- .·
aligned stance."
I

W8Jm

*

prevent rapid drying.
Harvest conditions will be marginal. Additional drydown of grain
Iii the field wtil be llm1ted toaroundone-halfprecent per day and will
seldom be blgher. Access to fields will be llmlted while morning
wettness burns off. However, while the showers hold off, conditions
sl)ould ·be suitable for fall tillage operations. Soli moisture should
continue to be adequate for gOOd germination and early development
of taU seeded forage cro~. Soli temlieratures at four Inches under
bare ground will still avet"age in the OOs, higher than what's suitable
for appUcat1o11 of fall nitrogen.
Mild conditio~ will keep fruit ripening rates up, and timely
harvest may be necessary to maintain the quality of produce.
Harvest condltons will be gpod, even though air tempratures may be
higher than optlinal for keeping produce between the field and
storage facilities.
Last week In Ohio, daytime temperatures averaged one to two
degrees above normal. Nighttime cloudiness and fog kept minimum
values up, with morning lows averaging eight to 11 degrees above
normaL Highs averaged from the upper 00s to the low 70s and, at
their highest, were In the low to mid 70s. The lowest morning
readings were In the 40s to the low 50s, with few exceptions.
Soli temperatures at four Inches under bare ground averaged in
the low fills for the most part, with low readings In the low to mid 50s.
Rainfall for the week was fairly evenly distributed, but seven-day
totals ranged from 0.041nc)l at Youngstown to 1.3i Inches at Oxford.

Cold_.
StatiOnary

WEA'l'HERFORECAST·- Showers are forecast for Sunday for
pans of New York aod Washlnpon, and from Wisconsin and the

Dallo&amp;u tAl northe,n ~ aceordlilg to the National Weather
Service. ( AP Laserphoto),

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Fair through the period. Highs each day from the upper 00s to the
70s. Lows in the 50s.

·State zone forecasts
omo

Stagnant weather pattern

Mostly cloudy with patchy dense fog Saturday night. Lows
between 50 and 55. Variable cloudiness Sunday. Highs from the
upper OOs.to the mid 70s.

By The A!I!IOCiated Press
A. large, stationary high pressure area centered in the middle of
the Great Lakes will remain over Ohio through Sunday. This high
has caused a stagnant weathet pattern over the,state, prompting the
Nati\)nal Weather Service to continue an air stagnation advisory for
all of Ohio. Weather conditions will trap pollutants !)ear the ground
and poor air quality will result.
Depse fog blanketed parts of Ohio Saturday morning. Heavy fog
developed In many sectlonsofthestateovernlght, cutting viSibility to
near zero In many places.
The fog will redevelop Saturday night and visibility of near zero
will return. Lows will be in the lower 50s. The weather for Sunday will
not change much because the high iS not expected to move. The
morning wW dawn with clouds and fog which should break up by
noon. Temperatures will again range from the upper fills to the mid

.

NOR'DIWEST, WEST CENTRAL

Mostly cloudy with patchy dense fog developing Saturday night.
Lows around 50. Cloudy Sunday. Highs between 65 and 70. The
chance of rain Is 10 percent Saturday night and 20 percent Sunday.

CENTRAL LAKE SHORE, EAST LAKE SHORE
NOR111EAST, CENTRAL IDGHLANDS

...
Art Buchwald ....

•
·..
.......

......

&lt;YITAWA, Ohio (AP)- Ohioans . dellvered essentla jly the same
by the thousands took off from their speech a t every stop.
jobs, left school early and packed
In add ition to the thousands wbo
into forgotten rail depots F riday to saw Reagan at his scheduled SloPS
catch a glimpse of President
were handfuls of others w ho parked
Reagan during a one-day revival of their cars and pickup trucks at
the whistle·stop qmpaign .
crossings along the route. Many
Pollee estimated about 12.00! canied cameras. hoping to catch a
people clustered a round the tidy
picture of the president or his train.
brick depot in this town of 3,500 In
Some of those who stood to see the
northwest Ohio to hear Reagan
president were more Interested In
deliver a 2Q.minute SJJ€eCh a ttac k- history than politics.
ing his Democra tic opponent. Wai·
"I saw Truman in '48. 1 was in the
t.er Mondale, a nd praising his own eighth grade in .the band . And I saw
admln.istra tion's effort s to improve Nixon In '52,'. said Dick Lipoid of
the U.S. econom y.
Sidney. "It's history. "
The president spoke fr om the
Police Patrolman Eddie Mabry
platform of the Ferdinand Magel- estimated more than ll ,OOJ packed
lan, thesam e train HarryS.Truman
the former Baltimore &amp; Ohio
rode during his uphill election banle railroad depot in Sidney, a city of
in 1948. The parallel wasn't lost on 17,00!.
spectators. including one m an here
Ma ny in the crowd carried signs
who lofted a sign reading . "Give supporting the president such a s ,
'Em Hell, Ronnie."
"We need Reagan " and ''I'm . •
Sunny skies a nd tempera tures in woman. I'm Catholic. I'm for . ·
the 00s greeted Reagan as he
Reagan. " But many others said ·'
arrived here aoout 5 p.m ., sur· they cam e simply to be part of an
rounded by a sea of faces, farm silos unusua l event.
and neat homes. The crowd was
Doug Leffler ·of Jackson, Mich ~ • •
peppered with pro-Reag an signs a s said he stopped on his way tO·
well as those protesting theadminisDayton. about 35 milessouthofhere,
tra tion's policies in Central when he heard Reagan was coming,,
America.
.•. ~1 wanted to see the Ferdinand-.
Reagan 's trip to Ohio began with a Magellan," Leffler said. "That waS:~
. late·morning ra lly on CourthOuse
my primary reason.''
Square in downtown Dayton. The
"When you work in the same; .
whistle·stop la ter carried him ·town , it's just too convenient not to&lt;
1come 1. " said Neill Ha as. an··
through Sidney, Lima and Otta wa
and was to stop in Deshler and
urn Folder Corp. of
Perrysburg as welL The president

MIAMI VALLEY, SOUTHWEST
Cloudy with patchy dense fog developing Saiurday night. Lows
between 50 and 55. Mostly cloudy Sunday. Highs between 70 and 75.
The chance of rain Is il percent Saturday night and Sunday.

'Aear me low cuffed.

I

70s.

The nation's weather

Ohio agricultural advisory

Wearme ~

By The Associated Press
Thunderstorms pounded away Saturday from southeast New
Mexico across western Texas and Oklahoma Into southeast Kansas,
while Hurricane Josephine dawdled with Its 9(J.mph winds in the
Allantic Ocean off North Carolina.
Gale warnings were posted from North Carolina's buter Banks to
Manasquan, N.J. The high winds resulted as high pressure over land
met the low pressure of Josephine, more than 200 miles east of Cape
Hatteras, N.C.

By The Associated Press
Tile weather pattern remains relatively unchanged from what It
was Friday. High pressure centered over the eastern Great Lakes
will weaken slowly, but should keep precipitation from getting to
Ohio this weekend. There wW be a good deal of morning cloudiness,
and dew. points in the upper 40s and low 50s will keep drying rates
lower than optlrllal. Temperatures will remain mild, with highs from
the upper fills to the mid 70s and lows in the low to mid 50s.

STOAl HOURS
Mon.-Fri. 'Til 8 p.m.
1ue5., Wed., Thurs.
&amp; Sat. 'Til 5 p.m.

• •• ..____ _ _ _ _ _• - - - - - - - - - - M0 t100
(ConttnuedtroniPageA-1)

The investigator obtained from
Downing the affidavit, "wherein
Mr. Downing recanted the testim·
ony lmpllca tlng Mr. Mitchum on the
tampering with evidence charge. ''
Downing said that when he
testified that aftec the shooting he
"picked up (the gun) and then that:s
when the bullets got into the trash
can," he had actually not unloaded
the gun.
Downing recanted earller testlm·
ony In which Mitchum told him to
hide the gun. Downing said In the
affidavit that Mitchum pleaded with

Downing to stay at the howling alley
until the sheriff's department ar·
rtved to investigate. "I panicked and
left the bowling alley,'' he said.
Downing said be took the gun with
him and hid It under a trailer, and
not behind the pin machines on one
of the bowling Janes, as he earlier
testiiied that Mitchum had told him
to do.
Under cross-examination, Malek
asked Downing If Mitchum told him
to hide the gun. His response at the
time was, "Yeah, I think ... you
know,Ican'tswear, but !thought he

did tell me to hide the gun.''
In the affidavit, Downing said,
"Tile true answer to the question is
that Aldidnot, at anytime, tell me to
hide the l!Un."

Lottery winning
numbers: 358, 1751
CLEVELAND . (AP) The
winning number drawn Friday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, ''TheNumber,''was358.
In the"Pick4" game, the winning
number was 1751. .

Quality Apparel,
Affordably Priced

NeW·

Harve' Bernard
I. B. Diffusion
Triangle
Hunter
Gasoline
Generra
Urban Outfitters
You Babes
Alfred
Dunner
'
Ecco Bay
Catalina
Ko Ko Knits
' Cricket Lane
Ship 'n' Shore
Crazy Horse
Tom Boy

""

...
'"'
"Let's tell the League of women ,..
Voters II he sits down on the panel,
Fritz Is going to church that night."
Well, that's my big fantasy for
this election year. Being black·
balled by not one but by both
presidential , candidates Is every
newspaper person's ultimate
dream.

for glimpse of Reagan

.

~ ~

Mostly cloudy with patchy dense fog developing Saturday night ..
I..ows around 50. Variable cloudiness Sunday. Highs around 70. The
chance of rain Is 20 percent Saturday night and Sunday.

.

All told, inteli,geJ)ce eStimates , ..•
indicate; \he Kremlin has sold Peru·"'-''
about 450tanks, 36 flghter·bomliers, :::
:nhellcopters an\Jlarge numbers of 'M
mlssUes, rocket launchers and ~
assorted artillery.
:..1

..

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

,..::

.:3
·•
~
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,;:::

FISH
IN ·N E

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Three tender baked
fish fillets on a

bed of lightly
seasoned riee
pilaf. Served.
.with garden '
g,een beans,
freshly rrale cole
slaw and a lemon wedge.
I

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t the very
best in fashion, style, fit, quality, price,

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GALLIPOLIS .
43 Court Street

,\ " l 'l'"lruu

"-"~-·

from Municipal Parking Lot)
Daily 9:30-6:00
Mon. &amp; Fri. 'til 8:00
Clos~d Sundavs

MIDDLEPORT
179 Mill Street

(On the T in Middleport)

Daily 9:30-6:00
friday 'til 8:00
Closed

�The Sunday Time5-Sentinel .

()ctobe; "14, 19114

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

. Briley 'exceedingly brave'
:. faclng. electrocution death
ByR.D.GERSH
Aaaoclated Press Writer

Capitol office with an open phone
line to the State Penitentiary a mile
'' •
•.• RICHMOND, Va . (AP ) - Lin- away.
; WOOd Briley, whose seven-murder
Briley ' 'made it a little easier for
,:'I reign ot terror' 'included smashing everybody by being exceedingly
··:a woman's skull with a baseball ba t, brave, " said his attorney, Deborah
.went to his (jeath in the electric chair · Wya tt, who reluctantly witnessed
•:Shaking but calm and still proclaim- the execution as "a lawyer's.
; ;lng his innocence.
..
obligation."
•; Briley, leader of the nation 's
Two chaplains accompanied Bri·
;. largest escape from death row, was ley to the dea th chamber at 11 p.m.,
,.l!xecuted Friday night, one day after read to him the · 23rd Psalm
·;the U.S. Supreme Court refused to beginning "The Lord is my she·
. ·Issue a stay.
pherd, I shall not want," imdstayed
·: , "He said he was Innocent, he was with him until the execution was
guilty," Corrections Director complete.
:Robert Landon said just minutes
" He had his eyes closed and he
: &lt;liter Briley was pronounced dead at was shaking when he came in," said
. .11: 05 p.m.
B. Randloph Wellford, a Richmond
· · Briley's execution for the 1979 lawyer who was one of the eight
,·murder and robbery or a Richmond volunteer citizen witnes'ses. "He
•:41sc jockey came after a plea for was very unsteady on his feet and he
•:clemency went unheeded by Gov . was shaking quite a bit."
Charles S. Robb, who was in his
Briley, 30, spent three weeks at

::not

~:one-car accident
•

GALLIPOLIS - A BidweU man
)Vas treated and released at Holzer
• Medical Center for injuries suffered
In a single-car accident on Gallia
· County Road 10eariy Saturday.
Hospital officials said Don Saxton,
: 21, was trea ted for chest bruises .
- Saxton was a passenger in a car
'driven by John D. Church, 22,
Northup, according to the Gallia. Meigs post of the State Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said Church was
westbound when he apparently lost
control of his car in a curve, went off
the right side of the road and struck
an embankment at 3 a.m. Church
was cited by the patrol for failure to
control his vehicle.
A Portsmouth, Va ., man wa s c ited
by the patrol foUowing a two-car
accident on U.S. 35 Saturday
morning.
The patrol said vehicles driven by
Edward J. Felix, 49, Cleves, and
Alfred S. Burnham Jr .•23. were both
eastbound when Felix slowed at the
entrance to a campground.
Burnham apparently could not
stop in time and struck Felix from
behind at 3:41 a.m. The coUision

injures man

resulted in moderate damage to
both vehicles, according to officers.
Burnham was cited by the patrol for
assured clear distance following the
accident.

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RACINE- Racine Village Coun·
cU wW meet in recessed session
. Monday, 7 p.m .. at the v!Uage hall. ·
Resk!ents are invitEd to attend.

lOOZ.

JAR

,t.maq ti"',.- imtinrl '
USP5~8e0

A Multimedia New!lpaper
Published each Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, by th~ Ohio Valle;' Publish·

$399

tng Company · Multimedia. Jnc. ~­

c ond class postage paid at Ga llipolis.
Ohio 4S631. Entert'd as second class
malllnR mal1er at Pomeoroy, Ohio,
Post OffiCI:'.

16

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MAXWEll HOUSE

~:. $149

CARNATION

Admissions - Bertha Diehl,
Pomeroy; Faye Kirkhart, Long
Bottom; , Lois .cornell, Dexter;
Diane Starcher, Rutland.
Discharges ·- Wllliam Barnhari,
WUUam Hamrn, Rita Stobert.

DECORATOR
TOWELS

SUNSHINE

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LIQUID
DETERGENT

Mttmbtr: The Associated Press In·
land Dally Prt'ss Association and the
American N~wspa)&gt;fr Publishers As·

aoclatlon, National Advertising Reo·
pre1rntatiYC!, Branham. '1717 West
Nlnl' Mile Road, Suite 204, Detroit.
, ,

Mlchl~an,

a, Carrier or Motor Route

One Wt&gt;ek .. ...... ... .................... .Sl.JO .
One Monlh ....... ....... ... .............. S4.80
SINGLE COI'Y
PRICE

50 Cent•
No subscriptions by mall permltle(l

In towns where motor carrier service

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The Sunday Time-s-Senti nel will not
bt&gt; responsible for advance p4yments
madt by carrll"rs.
·
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26 w..~u .... :.......................... $31.20
13 WNIII ... ................... ......... IIUO

POMEROY - Meigs County
Shertff James J. Proffitt received a
report Satutday morning from
Warren Stearns, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ,
who said that a number of
trespassing hunters had been on his
property.
Stearns also reported that several
no hunting signs posted on his
property had been tom down within
the last week.
Marsha Guess, Tuppers Plains,
reported to the sheriff's department
on Friday night that two dogs had
gotten into a field, attacked and
seriously injured a yearling suffolk
ewe that belonged to her daughter.
The ewe was the 1984 Meigs County
Grand Champion _
Investigation Is continuing in the
reports.

ville, Tenn: Atlania- arui Jackson'
•
ville, Fla.
.
Astronauts Kathy Sullivan and
DavidLeestmadonnedspacesults

and stepped into Challeng •
er s open
cargo bay on Thursday and made a
plumbing connection between two
fuel tanks.As America's first

r•---------------..

lk M , Sulll
woman spacewa er, s. . - van
told President Reagan during a
radlocaUonFriday it "wasthemost
fantastlcexperienceofmyllfe"
·

----·-·;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;a

VALLEY ARTISTS SERIES HONOR ROLL
VALLEY ARTISTS SERIES, a joint venture of Tri-County Community Con(ert Associa•
tion and Rio Grande College artist Series, gratef11lly acknowledges those who con·
tributed funds to make this first season a success.
FRIENDS OF THE ARTS

BUSINESS FRIENDS OF THE ARTS
PA1RONS
First National Bank. Wellston

Or. and Mrs. Arnold Sattler, Gallipolis
Or. and Mrs. Coldus Smith, Rio Grande
Or. and Mrs. Oonald ·Thaler, Gallipolis

DONORS

PH. 446-021 7

This Week's
Special

TACO
SUPREME

1S(ea.

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings, Pomeroy ·
Gallipolis Savings &amp; Loan . Gallipolis
Milton Bank ing Company , Wellston
Ohio Valley Bank. Gall ipolis

Ms. Jea" Curtis, Rio Grande
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Haskins, Gallipolis
Rev. and Mrs. Luther Tracy, Rio Grande

•

SPONSORS

Mr. and Mrs . Gordon Baker. Gallipolis
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. "Bob" Evans . Gallipolis
Atty. and Mrs. Bernad Fultz. Pomeroy
Or. and Mrs. Robert Seal!. Gallipolis
Mrs. Bernadine Stockmeister. Jackson

Tht Valley -.rtists Striu "btcutiu loortl
thanks the french Art Colony for prowid·
ing tht subKription-drin heallquarttn
in Gallipolis.
Wt also thank our volunhtrs ·and appndatt an~ and all othtr contributions
wtli,h han made this program a suu111.

Bastille. Inc.. Gallipolis
Bernadine's, Inc.. Gall ipolis
Brunic_
ardi Music, Inc .. Gallipol is
Central Trust Co .. Gallipolis
Commercia l &amp; Sllvings Bank. Gall ipoli s
Ewing Funeral Home. Pomeroy
LaSalle Corporation. Middleport
McDonald 's Restaurant . Gallipoli s
McGinness-Stanley Agency . Gallipo lis
Paul Dav ies Jewelers . Gallipolis
Pt. Pleasant Federal Sav ings &amp; loan . Pt. Pleasant
PJ's . Inc .. Gallipolis
Tope's Furn iture Galleries. Gallipol is
Waid Cross_Grocery, Rac ine
WomeldorM &amp; Thomas Hardware . Gall ipol is

REAL HICKORY SMOKED

lr~~=========~~===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

POMEROY - Two dissolutions
have been granted in Meigs County
Common · Pleas Court. The marriages ot Jolm E. Umbarger Jr. and
Anita D. Umbarger, both of
Gallipolis, and Gregory Charles
Scott, Hemlock Grove. and Mary
Ellen Sheets, New Cumberland,
W.Va., have both been dissolved by ·
Judge Charles Knlgbt.

$149

Do G Ant.
flo•on
FOOD u ••-c....
100

Trespass incident
reported to sheriff

Marriages ended

8 PAK

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MACARONI &amp;
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2%

POMEROYcalls were
answered on Friday by units from
Meigs County's Emergency Medical Service.
At 11:32 a.m., Pomeroy was
caUed toPomeroyCiiffApartments
for Bertha Diehl who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
12: 23 p.m.; Rutland went to Depot
Street for Murtel Young who was
transported to Holzer Medical ·
center. Middleport went to Mlll
Street at 1: 23 p.m. for Jane Gilkey
who was taken to Veterans Memorial. At 6:40p.m., Syracuse went to
Second Street for Wllliam HaUey to
:Veterans Memorial. Racine went to
Southern High School at 9: 19 p.m.
for Chester Combs to Veterans
Memorial. Syracuse went to Fourth
Street at 9:.34 p.m for Karen Cook,
first to Veterans Memorial, then to
Holzer Medical Center. And the
Pomeroy unit was called to the
shertff' s office at 10: 13 p.m. for
Karen Douglas who was taken to
Veterans MemoriaL

NEW YORK

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LOIN END

CENTER CUT
PORK

Sl.89

See Our Display

NEW HI· FI

-: woman. cewa
an
can
:; The lOl·ton space plane, its dash
:·oown the east coast or FIQrida
heralded by sonic booms dro
out of a cloudless sky ;u;d
. 15,00}-foot runway, just three miles
• fro the I
h
.· m
aunc pad where the
· astronauts started their space
adventure eight days ago.
With commander Robert Crippen
at the controls, ChaUenger touched
down at 12: 27 p.m. Euron Runway
33, a concrete strip flanked by a
canal where alligators lurk and wild
pigs feed. The ship came in from the
south after making a wicte sweep
over this spaceport.
Thousands or spectators at the
strip and along banks of the nearby
}Jidian ·River cheered the landing,
the second here In 13 shuttle Olghts.
The return to Flortda was another
high point for the highly rated,
eight .&lt;fay mission in which the crew
or five men and two women - the
largest ever to flY in a single
spaceship - used cameras and
sensors to extensively study Earth,
tested • tools and techniques for
refueling- satellites in space and
recorded the first space walk by an
American woman.

a::::

STEAK

·S-Moy qualify for energy tax credit

Olght. That Is Important, With the
to drop
out ofglide
orbiton
a nda
shuttle now on a once-a-month
start
it Challenger
on a supersonic
launch schedule.
path over the Pacific, the heart of
For Crippen, It was a personal Canada, the U.S. Midwest and
triumph. Flortda's changeable Southeast andjustofftheeastcoast
weather interfered with two or the
of Florida into Cape Canaveral.
three p~ous landings scheduled
On that course. the space plane
here. Crtppen was In command of . flew over or nea,; Duluth, Minn.;
both, which were diverted to the
MUwa1,1kee; Chicago; Indianapolis;
desert strip at Edwards Air Force Cincinnati; Lexington, Ky .; Knox·
Base, Calli.
"We'll mak It this ti
" th
e
me •
e

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NEW

· AP ...-...:..Writer
~Y landing here instead of ·in
veteran ortpurshuttleOights vowed
· ·
·-·.....,_,.,
C&lt;illfornia where most shuttle
be(ore the launch. He did.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Qlghts ha '
ded NAS
c~~::u~~~~~::e=
- Challellger and its seven astra- shave upv~e~ ~k : ~b~
nautsglldedtoaprectstonlandingat . neededto t shl
ado, Its
the h !tie' h
·
ge a pre · Y.or next
braking rockets high over Australia

Emergency runs

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~LOSED

The Sunday Time5-Sentinei-Pagt1

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

T!!.,~th •space shutde fligh! .~nds with perfect landing

1

large after leading five other
condemned prisoners - including
his brother James - out or the
Mecklenburg Correctional Center
on May 31. He was captured with
James Briley In Philadelphia on
June 19.
Briley was executed for ijle Sept.
14, 1979, slaying of disc j()Ckey John
"JohnnyG. from Tennessee" Galla·
her, who was abducted tram a
tavern, robbed of$6, shot in the back
and dumped by a liver.
Briley also had six other firstdegree murder convictions in what
Richmond Circuit Judge James
Wilkinson called the "vllest rampage or rape, murder and robbery
the court has seen in 30 years.''
In asking for the death penalty,
prosecutor Robert Rice caUed the
crimes, which included k!Uing a
woman by crushing her skuU with a
baseball bat, a "reign of terror."
He had spent more than three
years appealing his conviction and
sentence - Which were affirmed
three times by the state and
country's highest courts. The U.S.
Supreme Court refused twice this
week. on 7-2 votes, to put off the
execution.

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October 14, 1984

·Give Yourself Some Credit!

Your Own Personal Line of Credit of $500
or More.· Then When)bu Need Money
Simply Write Yourself a Check.
Now enjoy one of the best credit opportuniti e s you 've ever
seen .' CAPITAL-LINE is an affordable way t o have m o ney when
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you pay simple interest only on the amount actually borrowed
at a much lower rate than most credit ca rds or re lated charge
cards .
You can also draw up to $100 a day from any J(::ANIE
machine or get a cash advan ce from any Ohio Vall ey Bank
teller. Five hundred dollars or whatever you need to spend
on anything you want. What oth er b a nk w o uld offer you
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There 's another way our inte rest r ates save you
money. They ' re based on " simple in t erest. " Which means
you 're only charged on your unpaid b a lance . So every time
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It's Time You Gave Yourself Some Credit.
And you can with CAPITAL·L INE . your own per sonal revolving line of c r e dit at Ohio Valley Bank .
Take advantage of your good credit qualifications
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Specially structured for those who prefer to borrow
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Ohio Valley Bank is making an ex tra effort to
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can you think of anything be tter than talking to
a bank that really wants your business?

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••
•

�Page--A-6-The Sunday Time.,Sentinel

Pom-y-Middleport-Gallrpolis,

POINT PLEASANT ~ Fune ra l
services will be held a t 3: 30 p.m .
today In Ha rmony Baptist Church
for Amy F. Bowles, 89, Southside ,
W.Va .. who died Thursday in Scenic
Hills Nursing Center, Gallipolis.
The Rev. F red McCallister will
officiate. a nd burial will be in J:.one
· Oak Cemetery.
Bom Oct. 26, 1894, da tighterofthe
!ale Fra ncis M . and ;Earnie Hayes
Bowles, she was a mem ber of
Harmony Baptist Church , where
she was a Sunday school teacher and
chur&lt;;tt pia nist for more than 50

years.
Surviving a r e a brother, F .M .
Bowles of Southside; and a siste r,
Ova Henry of Ca nal Winchester .
Arra ngements are by Crow·
Hussell Funeral Home .

Minnis Elliott
POMEROY ~ Minni s E lliott, 70,
i\lfred. died F riday night in O'Ble·
ness Mem or ia l Hospita l , Athens .
fo llowing an extended illness.
Born in Ranger, W.Va ., son of the
!ale Andrew a nd Geneva McCle llan
E:lliott, he was a retired e m ployee of
the Athens Menta l Health Cente r
a nd a ttended Bear Wallow Church
of ChJist. He was also a 25·year
member of Alfred Gra nge. a World
• War lJ ve teran a nd a member of the
Disa bled Am erican Ve tera ns ,
Pomeroy.
Surviving a re his wife. Alice
Cr islip E lliott; a son, Dona ld of
Alfred; lhree brothe rs, Warren of
Alfred. Ray of Albany, a nd Howard
of Taplin, W.Va.; four sisters. Mrs .
, J.B. iE una) Smith of Ra nger. Mrs.
E mory (MaJie) Yates of Hunting·
ro n, W.Va., Mrs. Edd ie (lcie)
Spear s of Proctorville. and Mrs . Ben
(Opal I J ohnson of Yellow Spring~;
a nd two grandchild ren, Donnie a nd
Byron J . E lliott , both of Alfred.
Private services will be held
Tuesday in White Fu ne ral Home,
Coolville, wit h Pastor J oseph Hos·
kins officiating. BuJial will be in
Ret'&lt;lsviUe Cemetery . Friends may
ca ll at the fune ral home after6p .m .
today a nd Monda y.

.Jane Gilkey
POMEROY ~ J a ne Shlive r
Gilkey, 80, 368Y, N. Third St. .
Middleport , was pronounced dead
on llniva l a t Ve tera ns Memoria l
Hospita l F riday afternoon.
Bom J a n. 10, 1904, in We tzel
County. W.Va .. da ughterofthelate
Mr. a nd Mrs. J ohn C. Shriver, s he
was a retired employee of Imperia l
E lectr ic Co. of Middle port, a
long-time m em ber of Hea th Metho·
dis! Church. Middleport. and a
mem ber of the Me igs County Senior
Citizens.
Survivors include a son, Bernard
of Midd le port, a son a nd d a ughter ·
in·law . Guy a nd Carol Gilkey of
Columbus; a daughter . Mrs. Cha ·
rles (Helen ) Eye r of Middleport ;
five gr a ndc hildren, John Byer ,

October 14, 1984 .

Pleasant, W. Va.

Pomeroy- Midd,lepott Gallipolis, Ohio--Point Pleasant, W. Va.

NATO mernhers ponder missile buil~up:

A rea deaths
Amy F. Bowl-;s

Ohi~Point

KeM eth Byer and Richard Gillcey, ·
all of Middleport, Mark Gilkey of
Washington D.C., and Deborah
Ha lley of Syracuse; five great·
grandchildren; and many nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Bernie B. Gillcey, In 1960;
a nd by 11 brothers and sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m . Monday in Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Hom~. Middleport,
with the Rev. Bob Robinson
officia ting. Buria l wlU be in River·
view Cemetery. Friends may call at
the fu neral home a ll day today.
The family will be present at 2-4
and 7 to 9 p.m. today.

Walter K~nnedy Jr.
POMEROY
Wa lter R.
Ke nnedy J r ., 62, 122'h Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, died a t 1: 15 a.m.
Saturday in Holzer Medical Center,
following a lingering illness.
Bom Aprjll2 , 1922, a t Bradbury ,
son of the la te Wa lter R. and Bertha
S. Wise Ke nnedy Sr ., he was a
retired store clerk a nd railroad
employee. He was a World War II
veteran, a mem ber of P omeroy
Church· of Chlist a nd a member of
the Disabled American Veterans
chapte r at Pome roy .
Surviving are his wife, Pa uline .
Kennedy; a daughter, Mrs. Ivan
(Barbara) Loftis o f St. Peters. Mo.;
three grandc hildren , Shawn, Katie
a nd KeUy Loftis, a ll of St. P eters;
and a sister, Betty of Columbus.
He was preceded in death by .a
sister, Kathaleen.
Funeral services wlU be held at 1
p.m. Monday in Ewing Funeral
Home, with Minister Neil Proudioot
officia ting. BuJial will be in Brad·
ford Cemetery. F rie nds may caUar
the fune ra l home from 2-4 a nd 7-9
p.m . today.

Walter V. Swell
POMEROY ~ Wa lte r V. Swett.
68. Largo, Fla .. formerly of the
Carpente r area, died Friday morn· .
ing in La rgo Medical Center,
following an extended Illness .
· Born in Carpente r , son of Audrey
Morrison Swett of Middleport, a nd
the la te William I. Swett, he was a
World War II Army veteran a nd a
r etired employee of Tennessee Gas
Transmission Co.
Also surviving a re his wife, J ean
· Gotscha ll Swett; a da ughter , Mrs.
. Arthur (YvoMel Reedy of Southside, w.Va. ; three grandchildren ,
Cindy Ha mm of Barboursville,
W.Va., Linda Roach ofOak HiU,and
Michael Reedy of Point Pleasant;
a nd a great-grandson. Stephen
Hamm of Barboursville.
Funera l services will be held a t 2
p.m . Tuesday in Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Horne, Albany, wilh Rev.
Willa rd Love officiating. Friends
may a t the fune ral home from 2-4
a nd 7-9 p.m . Monday. Burial will be
. in School Lot Cem ete ry, Carpenter.
M!lltary graveside services will
be conducted by Albany VFW Post

9893.

"Exorcism' slayer
·e nters innocent plea
CLEVELAND (AP ) ~A 26-year·
two count s of aggrava ted murder in
old ·Cleveland m an accused of - -the.course of a felony in the deaths of
behead ing his 4-year-old da ughter
Myrta Davis, 8, a nd Na taliaDavis, 4,
a t their home Oct. 5.
a nd killing a nother child in a n effort
to rid them of evilspirits has pleaded
According to police, Parke r
innocent to the cha rges .
a
tt
acked his common-law wife,
DoM ell Pa r ker pleaded innocent
Davis, and tortured her three
Linda
a t his arraignment Friday in
children
- Myrio, Natalia a nd
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Kashonna . Pa rke r is the father of
Court. Judge William Mahon set
Natalia a nd Kashonna, police said.
bond for Parker at $5 million.
P ollee said Ms. Davis told them
Parker m ade no comme nt during
Parker cla imed he was exorcising
his brief appear ance.
the devil from the family in the
He has been cha rged with two
attacks.
counts of aggravated murder a nd

By ROBERT BURNS
1\!IIOCiated Press Writer
STRESA, Italy (AP) ~ American
assertions that the Soviet Union has
a imed m ore nuclear missiles at
Weste rn E urope increases pressure
on the Dutch government to Install
the U.S.·m a de rockets strongly
opposed by m~y Dutch citizens.
Defense Secre tary Caspar Wein·
ber ger said F riday at the cloSe of a
tw&lt;XIay NATO nuclear strategy
meeting In this resort vlilage in the
Italian Alps that the Soviets have

mell&lt;O, denied We inberger 's stat.ement and said tt was· made to
pressure Washington's European
allies.
American diploma tic sources.
who spoke on condition they not be
Identified, said the additional Soviet
missiles are rlot yet a t the bases
being built to siore them . Asaresult,
they said, the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization was not yet offjclally
countlngthese mlsslles as partofthe
Soviet arsenal.
Weinberger said NATO would

added to their contingent of ss-w
medlwn-tange missiles capable of
striking most of Western Elll'OpE!.
He declined to say how many
more SS-20s have been built or to
pinpoint their locatlori, but stressed
that U.S. inte lligence data showed
the m issiles were "ready a nd able to
be fired ."
In Moscow ,. a Soviet Foreign
Minlstry spokesman, Vladimir J..o.

upda te lts. January l~ estima te of
378 SS-20s in the Sovie t Union
"shortly." He declined to be more
specific .
The U.S. d iplom a tic sources said
the first of about 11 new Soviet
missile bases are expected to be
completed by the end of this year.
Job de Ruiter, the Dutch defense
minister , said F riday tha t We inberger 's assertion had no imme-

~

diate effect on his gove rnment since
NATO's official count of S$-20s has
not changed.
.
But Weinberger's statement
·clearly was Intended to underscore
the American contentions that the
Soviets P.QSe a · growing threat to
Western security, and NATO must
stick to Its decision to deploy 572
c rujse and Pershing 2 mlssUes.
The govenunents of the 13 NATO
nations agreed in 1979 to begin
deploying the American-built mfs·

sUes in WestemEill'OpE!bytheendof
last year to counter the increased
threat from the Soviet SS.20rockets.
· In addition to the Netherlands, the
mfssUes are slated for West Germany , Brita in, Italy, Belgium and
the Netherlands.
Thousands of Dutch m arched in
peaceful protest in July 1983 when
the Woensdrecht air force base was
picked as the site for the 48 new
Ame rican missiles, scheduled to be
deployed in 1986.

·,
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r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;

failure to y ie ld .
Harold W. Kemp, 21, Rt. 2, Vinton,
was fined $12 foro squealing tires;
forfeiting $40 bond each for Insecure
load we re Donald H. We llington: 29,
Rt . 2, Vinton, Carron L. Ruff, 'll,
Thurma n, J a mes D . Caldwell, 34,
Rt. 2, Crown City, a nd Freddie A;
Knipp, 40, Rt. 3, Ironton.
Richard 1... Taylor,24, P a triot Star
RQute. forfeited $40 bond for failure
to produce a certlflca t.e for regtstra·
tlon for traile r ; William F . Moody,
21, 5~ Spring Va lley Drive, forfeited
$40 bond for expired registration;
Rick C. Hic kman, 33, Zanesville,
forfeited $40 bond for improper lane ·
usage; Robert I. Bethel, 54, Jackson, forfeited $40 bond for expired
passenger care registration; Tarissa G. Bea ver , 24, Cheshire,
foifeited $40 bond for assured clear
distance.
Forfe iting bond for speeding were
William S. La nier, 51, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, $38; Anita K. Smith, 25,
Dunbar , W.Va ., $38; J ackW . Gra nt,
34, High P oint, N.C., $39; Mary J .
Kuniff, ~. Kenna, W.Va., $39;
J ames H. Milam, 62, South Charleston, W.Va. , $39; Robert F . Shrader,
60, Oxford, $39.
Cheryl A. Allen. Oak HW, $40;
Betty A. Gillespie, 22, Columbus,
$40; Robert L. Merry, 22, Rt. 1,
Galllpolfs;$41; Mary L. Turner , 44,
Hurricane, W.Va., $41; John P .
Brown,40, Seth , w .va .,$42; Sabrina
J . E vans, 28, Columbus, $42; Homer
E. P e rdue Jr.,24 , Welch, W.Va.,$43;
Jofm P . Bowe, 21, Bristol, Ind., $47;
David R. Jividen, 22, Rt. 1,
Ga llipolis, $76.

By MAUREEN .JO~N
Alloo'e""' ~ Writer
BRIGHI'ON, England (AP )
Britain's top terrorism expert said
Saturday that the IRA bomb tha t
blew up In the Grand Hotel, kUling
four people and just missing Prime
Mlnlster Margaret Thatcher, may
havebeenplantedweeksagounder
thefloorboatdsofaslxth-floorroom.
Crndr. William Hucklesby, the
chief of Scotland Yard's anti·
terrorist branch, told a .news
conference that the 20 pounds of
explosives probably had a longt.ei'J1lfuse

to

deteCtlon by bomb-llllf!lng dop.
· ''It must be one of the most
discerning bombs planted by the
IRA because of _the dlt!erent
dimension in tlrnlng of the device,"
Hucklesbysald.
Rescue crews working by the light
of powerful portable lamps recovered a third body from the
wreck!!ge of the Grand Hotel early
Saturday and searehed for the body
ofafourthpersonpresumeddeadin
the IRA bombing.
Ot!lclals identified the third
victim as Eric Taylor, northwest
regional chairman oi Mrs.
Thatcher's Conservative

Make Her
Eyes Sparkle

British security · authorities
launched a massive hunt for the
attackers, 'tfhosebombexJilodedin
the hotel where Mrs. Thab;:her and
most of the Conservative Party's

leaders werestaylng~or theparty 's

annua l conference.
Mrs. Thatcher a,nd .all but one of
her 22-J1M11llber Cabinet escaped
Injury in the assassination attempt
eBTly Friday morning. Trade Minister Norman Tebblt and 33 others
were injured in the attack.
Among those killed was a
member of Pa~liarnent ~ Sir
Anthony Barry, 58, who was also a
relative
marriage ·of Princess

OUR FALL ROUND-UP SALE CONTINUES THROUGH THE MONTH OF OCTOBER!
t

:t
•

..

••

Come Oul And Make Us An Offer On ·one Of Our More Than
11
100" Cars, Trucks And· Vans ... No Reasonable Offer Will
Be Refused!
• THIS WEEK'S SUPER SPECIALS •

.•

F/o~Wrs

Say It Besl!'w

Sweetheart Roses .....:......~~m!. S12 95
Standard Roses ................~~m!. $1 795

.
I

ICASH &amp; CARRY)

On Sweetest Day, October 2th, tickle her
fancy with a bright bouquet of fresh flowers. Flowers are a special way .to show
how much you care. Call or stop by The
Pomeroy Flower Shop, to surprise your
sweet-heart with the Sweetheart Bouquet. It's available in q, variety of sizes
and prices.
"

..
"

· Send your thoughts with special
~ ~d

4 door, automatic trans., power

4 door, loader with all the buttons &amp;
toys. Local Trade-in .

4 door, air cond .. am-fm , tilt. cruise. ·
power door locks .

Was $13,900.

Was $7,900.

Was $7,900.

'7 ,200.

1983
MERCURY MARQUIS

'12, 7 00.

.•

NOW ONLY

.,.•

1984 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS • 4 door, overdrive trans. , lull power accessories, just 17,000 miles.
Compare to new prices and see what you can save here! •••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••• • • • • • • • • • · · • • · · $12,500.00
l9U BUICK REGAL UMITED. 2 dr, Wt wheel, power windows, am-fm stereo &amp; just 17,000 miles ••• $10,500.00
1114 FORD MUSTANG TURBO GT • Hatchback, 5 sp, air, power wind., door locks, tilt, am-1m cassette. 10,000

...",.,.

•...
'

;

"The Way America Sends Love"
Pomoroy, Oh.
Wo At&lt;opl All Major Credit Cards

1983
LINCOLN TOWN CAR

steering &amp; brakes, air cond ., am-lm
radio, radial tires.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
106 Butternut Avo.

1984
MERCURY TOPAZ

PH. 992.2039
or 992-5721

NOW ONLY

CARS

NOW ONLY•7

Was $10,500.

,200.

-t•• '

Marriage licenses

..

•

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GALLIPOLIS ~ The followin g
couples flied for marriage llcenses
this past week In GaUia County
Probate Court .
Robert E. Adkins, 44, Vinton,
Southern Ohio Coal Co. employee,
and Brenda J . Downey, 42, Wellston,
crew leader.
.
Robert E. Gardner, 34, R t. 1,
Gallipolis, brick mason; and CaroiJ.
Gardner, 26, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
housewife .
Philllp A. Thomas, 32, Galllpolls,
unemployed, a nd Julia A. Henderson, 21, Patriot . Star Route,
unemployed.
Anthony W. Nolan, 24, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, carpenter, and Violet R.·
Watson , 18, Eureka Star Route,
babysitter :
Freddy L. Hicks, 33, Eureka Star
Route, roofer, and Nancy K. Jessee,
33, Eureka Star Route, unemploy~ .

•

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•

0 •

•• 0 ••••••••••

11112 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 5TH AVE.· Black, 4 door,loaded with all the toys !. .. . .... •••••• • .$10,900.00
19820WS. cUTLASS SUPREME. 4 dr, VB engine, air cond, am-lm stereo, Wire wheel covers .••. • '· · $6,900.00
11112 PONTIAC PHOENIX • 4 door Hatchback, 4 cyl. engine, automatic trans., air cond, am radio •. • • $5,800.00.
1.882 CAMARO Z.ZB. White, V8, automatic, t-tops, am-fm cassette .••••••••.• • •••·•• • • • • • • • • • • • · • · : $10,~.00
1981 BUICK ELECTRA LMITED • 4 door, blue, VB, overdrive trans., am-fm cassette w-C.B., t1lt , crwse,

cHmate contro~ full power optlons. •••· •••· ••••

a 1 o oo o 0 I 0 0 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 I 0
I •

• • •

• • •

°

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·

$8 500.00
,

1981 PON11AC BONNEVDLE-4 door, white, VB, air, tilt, cruise, am·fm cassette,local trade ........ .$5,900.00
1981 BUICK SKYLARK .' 4 door, 4 cyl, automatic, air cond., tilt, am·fm, wire wheel covers, loca~:~:O

•

1!118 CHEVROLET IMPALA. 2 door, VB engine, air cond., am-lm, vlnyltop - Local trade ....... .. · .. • $4,900.00

0

1984 FORD F·l50 PICKUP. Longbed, two-tone blue, VB, automatic overdrive, air, tilt, cruise, am· lm cassette,
dual tanks, chrome bumpers. radials, sliding rear wlndo'f &amp; just 1,200 miles. Compare this price to a new one
•- save here' Just
'• •
"'~"
$10,900.00
Ql:
o o o
o
e
11113 FORD RANGER. Longbed, : goLD I cyl, 4 speed, am radio, radlaltlres&amp; just B,OOO miles.... . .... $6,400.00
191,3 FORD ·F-150 u4. Blue, longbed; 6 cyl. eng, 4 sp. trans., power steering &amp; brakes, am radio, radial tires,
Explorer package &amp; just 17,000 miles .•• I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .• • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • • • I • • · : • • 88,~.00
1983 CHEVY C-20 . Custom deluxe, 350 eng,,automatic overdrive trans., power steering &amp; brakes, a1r cond, arn0

0 0 I 0 0

jO

0 0 0

0 0 I I

I. • •••• •• • • •••• • ••••• • ••••••• •. •

•• • •••••••• I • ••• • • •

• •

fm r&amp;dlo, radial tires. I.A&gt;cal trade-in . •••• •••• • •• •••••••• ••
~,900.00 ·
198! FORD BRONCO . Black &amp; white, VB engine, 3 sp overdrive trans., power steering &amp; brakes, am radio,
1

• • •• • • • • • • • • • • •

I • • • I • •

• • • • • • • • •

• • • • I I I

• • • • •

18,500.10

li8Z FORD 'F-150. Long bed, maroon, 6 cyl. eng, 4 sp., power steering &amp; brakes, radial tires..... . ... . . $6,901.00

NEW lOTOS VARIATIONS P·ERM!
.~Worth Waiting For

118! FORD F-150 XL -l.ongbed, white, VB eng., auto. trana., air cond, tilt wheel, am-lm cassette stereo, dual
tanks sliding rear window spoke wheels radial tires, cooling pkg. , locally owned. Nice Truck .. .. .. . . $7,90UO
118100VROLET C-10 sCoTrSDALE. 'shortbed, red, 6 cyl., auto,.air cond, tilt wheel, am-fm B track , rany
wheels, radial tlrBB, sliding rear window &amp; just 33,000 miles.... • • .. • • • • · · • .. • • .. .... • .. • • • • • .. • • • • • SI,IIIIUO
1181 CHEVROLET C-10- SUver, VB engine, 4 sp overdrive trans., powers steering, am radio. • • • • • • • • •f5,900.00
1H1 JEEP WAGONEER UMITED - VB, auto., air, Wt, crullle, power seats, windows, door locks, am-fm
CBBRtt
defog alum!nwn wheels, radials. woodgrain, roof rjlck, locally owned .•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·t8,11118.to
JJIOF0~-480 VANTRUCK · IB' van body, roll up door, VB engine, automatic trans... . . . ... ; ......$8,5111.18
19'11 FORD F·l50 CUSTOM -l.ongbed.,!IOLJ;l IB engine, automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes, am radio &amp;

.

$3 850

I • • • • .• • • • • • • .- • • • • • • • •• • • • • •

• • ••

• •

•

• • • • • • • • • •

g,,,~,

_.;....-!J!!/1-

•

•

•

•• •• •

197&amp; DODGE ASPEN WAGON -Red, V8, automat ic , air •••••••• ••• •••. •••••••• •••••• • •• ••• •• •••• •. $1.500.00
1976LINCOLN CONTINENTAL ·Blue. 2 door, vin ylto p. air, tilt, cr ui se, stereo . Nice car . .. ........ . $2.900.00
1976 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT ·Yellow , 4 door . 4 speed .. . .. ....... ... . . . . . . .. . ........ . .. . . .. . .... $1,000.00
1976 VOLARE ROAD RUNNER- VB. autom at! ' · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · • · · · • · · · · · • . · $700.00

19740[J)S .88 - Blue.•• •••••• •• ••• ••. ••...• •••. . •.• •• •. . •.••• ••• •••••••• ••• .• •• .• • •••..• •..• .•• •• 1350.00
1973 OLDS sOLI) reen . .. ....... ........ .. . . ... ... . . . . .. . . . . .. .. . . .. ... .. . . . ... . . .. . . .... . .. . . .. . . $350.00

1978 FORD F-150 b4·Stepside, VB, automatic ...... . .. .. .. . ..... · · ...... .... .. .. · .. .. .... .. · .. .. $2.500.00
' 1978 JEEP WAGONEER · Brown, VB, automatic .... .......... ..... .. .. .. . . .. ... . : .. .. .. .. .. . .... $1.500.00
1978 JEEP WAGONEER UMITED - Green , VB, a uto ., air cond ., am-fm cassette. cruiSe, alwn. wheels . r ad1als
$5.500.00
.
.
1977 FORD F-150 • Longbed, blue, VB, automatic .... . . . . .. . .. . . . - · · .. · · . · · · .. • · · • • · • .. · · · · · · • • · · · · S3,200.00
197.7 CHEVROLET C-10 ·VB, long bed. automatic, rusty ..• . . . •. •• •. . ••• . . • . . • · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · $1.500.00
1977 DODGE D-100 b4 ·VB, 1SO.L n.tic, rough around the edges ........... .. .. .. .. - . .... · · .. .. .. · · .. $900.00
1976 JEEP J-10 b4 TRUCK· VB, automati c, rusty .. .. ..... .. . .. . ........ . ............. ...... .. .. .. $1.600 .00
1975 FORD F-600 - Cab&amp; chassis, VB, 5 speed trans, 2 s p. axle, good sha pe . . . • .... . . . . . . ... . . . . ... . . $4,500.00
1973 CHEVROLET C-65 DUMP TRUCK - R ed, steel bed, VB, 5 sp trans., 2 sp axle. cheate r ,,,!c. good tires
$i.500.00
1973 DODGE D.-JO FLATBED. 21 ' bed, 361 eng. 5 sp trans., 2 sp axle, good tires, good sha pe . ..... . .. t3.000.00
1971 CHEVROLET STEP VAN -8 cyl. , 4speed .... .. .. .. .. . .. .. . . . .. ...... ...... . . .. • ... .. · · .... -~~.500 .00

1971 CHEVROLET MO"rrR HOME - ... . . .. . . ... . ..... . . . ..... . .. . ... . . . . . .... .... · • · · · · · · · • · · · · · $3.200.00
19811 CHEVROLET DUMP TRUCK - Single axle, steel bed, VB, 5 sp trans., 2 s p axle, good shape ... ... .$4.900 .00

•

VANS

And today,when getting ahead takes rrm than ever
befoce, you need a banK that Sb3res this attitude.You need
CentralThlst. &amp;4use we make your
money wOik harder than ever befoce. .
For YO!l,yourfamily and Y.our business.
Jpm the poople at Central 'ftust. -~~
People with the ~determination
and the dedialtim to help you get
LJ._ ahead And getting ahtm is
;,......
what it's ai1 about
----4i. _..,.. .
Mt• lrFOIC

'

A

1111 CHEVY BLAZER. Blue, 8 cyl. eng., auto. trans., power steering 1c brakes ......... . ..... . ......$4,8to.OO
1111 DODGE TRUCK . Short Stepside, VB, auto., power steering &amp; brakes, am radio, ratlllll tires •••• • -'Z,M.eo

1tll FORD F·ZII· Wltlte. 8 cyl., 4speed.·

OPEN

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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •

lm INTERNATIONAL VAN TRUCK· Blue, 18' Oberglau van body, VB engine, 5 speed trans.• , ••••• te.-.00
IIIIINTERNATIONAL TILT CAB ·19' flatbed, va·engtne, 5 sp. trans., good tires, nice truck ....... .. te,8811.00
19'11 GMC 1 TON TRUCK. Dual wlleels, 454 engine, automatic trans., nat bed, locally owned .• • ••••• ••$4,8to.OO

"Full

•• •

1977 DODGE ASPEN WAGON · Blue, 6 cyl, air cond.. . ...... ... .. .. .... .... . .. ..... . . .. ..... . .. . . . 11.500.00
1977 FORD LTD - 4 door. gray, VB , air, cruise. am-fm .... .............. .......... . ...... ..... $2,000.00
1977 FORD LTD • 2 dr, gray , VB, tut, cruise, windows . . ......... . ......... .. . ..... ..... .... .. .. ... $2.100.00
1977 IroRD LTD II · Green , 4 door, VB, air. radials . .. . .. . . .... . . ... ...... . . ... ... . .... . ...... ... . . $2,300.00

jaat 30,000 mllea! .••••
~ ~
$4,1100.00
19'11 JEEP CHEROKEE. 4 dr, silver, VB, autorriatic, crulBe, air, am-lm casaette, new tires, aluminwn;,:~

TOP

•

TRUCKS

" • • • • • • • • • • • • •

The 80's .... a major d e parture from the c urly was h &amp; wear of
tile 70 's. Slyles are more poliohefl, more finis hed. Now more
I han ~Y e r, hair should po ssess the prope r te xture for easy
~are 10 respond lo your c r eative finiohing lou&lt;!h. Adunced
lechnology allows Varialions Bond Modifier to adjust the
d egree of ocalp and waYe and end~c url. Our slaff has receiYed
Zolos training in I h e High Ene rgy cutting, otyling, and texlur•
iz in~ of Zotos Variations.
·

'9~500.

NOW ONLY

19800LDSMOBILE OMEGA ·4 door, V6 en gine, a utom atic, air cond, am-fm 8-track, r adial tires. " SPECIAL"
$2,900.00
1980 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME · 2 dr. VB, air cond., tilt wheel, vinyltop, Local trade
$5,500.00
1980 FORD MUSTANG · 4 cyl , 4-speed, air cond. am·fm cassette, sun roof,l ocaltrad e . ...... . . .... . . ·SUOO.OO

a

florists' T~ DelnofryASIOdMIOn.

White, VB, automatic. air cond ., am1m cassette . T-Tops.

'
.
• •• •••
$7,500.00
new . ·•······· · ········· · ··············· · ······················ ~ ·
.
1983 UNCOLN TOWN CAR • 4 door, red, loaded with extras. lAce! trade-in ........ • ........ .. $13,900.00 1m PONTIAC GRAND PR.IX • Burgundy color. V6 engine, air cond, am-fm cassNtl·. "f:ort wheels . new
radials Local trade .•••• ••.•• ••• •••• •• •• •. . ••••. ••• •• •• .•••. ••••• ••.• ••. •... . • . ••
14.900.00
1983 UNCOLN CONTINENT~ ·4 door, vanilla color, all the buttons &amp; toys . .... . .. .. ........... . ..$18,900.00 1979
CHEVROLET MAUBU • 4 door. V6 engine. air cond, am-fm. vinyl top, low miles, local trade .••• . J3.700.00
• J913MERCURY MARQUIS. 4 door, velour interior, tnt, cruise, power door locks, am-lm, alr cond .. • • $7,900:00
. 1919 FORD LTD ·4 door. VB, am-fm, air con d., c ruise. power door locks, radials. Local trade.. .... .. . $3,600.00
1983 MERCURY COUGAR. Baby blue, tilt wheel, SOLD wind., power mirrors, air cond, rear defogger. Nice
1978 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX • Silver. V8 engine. a ir cond., am-fm , tilt wheel, iocal trada .3.900.00
car. · · · · · · · · · · · · '! · · · · · · · · · · · · • i o4ooo • t • • • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · I I I O $8,900.00 19111
CADIUAC ELDORADO· Loaded with extras. Local trade-in · nice car • • , •• •• ••.• •••••• •• •. •• •$5.500.00
1J113 PONTlAC BONNEVIlLE WAGON. Black, air cond, am·fni, tUt, cruise, new tires. , • • • • • • : • • • • • $8,500.00 1978 CHRYSLER LE·BARON WAGON - V8 engine. air cond, am-fm , roof ra ck, radia ls, just 411 .000 miles .
1983 MERCURY LYNX WAGON -Tan, 4 cyl, automatic trans; air cond, am radio, rear defogger . • .... $5,400.00
uS3 OLDSMOBILE N1NETY EIGIIT REGENCY. 4 door, royal blue, vinyl top, wire wh~el covers &amp;.all the 1978 CHEVROLET IMPALA WAGON · VB engine, air cond ., roof rac k, 3 seater , nice local trade• . . . . . .$3.900.00
$3,800.00
other toys! I 0 I 01 a a I o 0 0 0 0 .. I 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oa 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 I I I 0 I I I I I 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 I I o o o 0 o o 0 o o 0 0 .112,900.00 1978 MERCURY COUGAR XR7- VB, air, tilt, cruise, am·fm, low miles.... ..... ... .. ....... .. .. $3.900.00
liB% FORD LTD CROWN VICTORIA ·4 door, creme color. This car ha&lt; I of every option, new tires, local car. 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA- VB, air. tilt, cruise, am-fm, power seat. Nice car ... . ... . .. . .... .. . .. . -$2.900.00
$8,800.00
1978 LTD WAGON - White VB. aircond .. good body; lots of miles . ... . ..... ....... . .. , . . ..... . .. . . .. $1.900.00
1182 MERCURY MARQUIS . 4 door, tan, VB, ollerdrlve, air, Wt, cruise, local one owner. • • .. • ; ••• • • • • -$7.500.00
1978 FORD FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON ·Blue. 6 cyl., automatic, air cond ., am 11-track, radial
~ 1182 DODGE CHARGER 2.2. Red, automatic S()LD_nd., am-lm, power steering, rear defog . • : •.. • •. • .$5, ~.00
tires, wire wheel covers. Nice car.•••. . • •••. . · •• ••• • · • •• · · • • • • • · · • •• · •• • • • • • · • • • • · · · • • • · • · :. ·. $2, 700. 00~
• 1182 AMC EAGLE • 2 door. 4 vSOLilrive, 6 cyl., automatic, air, am-lm cassette, tUt, crwse, 22,~~~~ 1978 PLYMOUTH F1JRY WAGON· VB, air cond., am·fm B·tra ck, low mUes.. . .. .. .. ... ......... $1,900.00
0 ••• 0 • •

care:·

1982
CAMARO Z-28

mlles. "SPECIAL"•••••••• •••••••• •••••••••••• •• •••• ••• ••••• ••••••• ••••••• •• ••• •• • • • • • · •• • • · • • · • $9,800.
1!1114 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT L. 4 dr, air cond, automatic trans., power steering, am·fm radio. Compare to

radial Ures -spoke wheels, low miles. • • • • · • •• • •• • • • • • •• ·" •• •· · · • • • •• • • • • • • • • • •

Special

$eafront hotel. She later lett
Diana, wlfe otthe' heir to the Britlah of the British·Irish conflict tn the
Brighton for her country residence
past 15 years.
throne, Prince Clulrles.
AllBritishportaandallllOrtawere
Mrs. Thatcher told the conference Chi!Quers at the end of the four-day •
under SIIIVeUiance. Pollee report·
that the failed attack " was an · conference.
('. pollee Specia l Branch o!tlcer,
edly thlnk-' the bombers may be
attempt to cripple Her Majesty's
who
d eclined to be Identified, said
hiding in London , 40 miles to the
democratically elected governMrs.
Thatcher lefl the bathroom ot
oorth, or already may have esca ped
m ent. " She insisted that the
her
second·floor
suite two minutes
to Dublin, Ireland.
· conference conclude as scheduled
before
the
bomb
exploded on the
Therewas lmmedlatespeculation Friday to signify "not only that this
fifth
floor,
sending
debris c ras hing
that security for British leaders,
a ttack has failed hut that all
into
the
bathroom
.
·
attempts ID destroy democr acy by
· traditionally llght, will be stepped u p
The mainly Roman Catholic IRA,
to Amerlcanstandards.
· terrorism will fall."
fighting
a guerrilla wa r to drive.
, The bomb blast was the m ost
M rs . Thatcher, who celebrated
Britain
trom
predom inantly Prodaring attack yet by the outlawed
her 59th birthda y Saturday, dell·
testant Northern Ireland, cla imed
vered her keynote address less than
Irish flepubllcan Army on the
British mainland. More than 2,400 12 hours after the blasl collapsed an responslbWty for planting what it
entire section of the eight-story sa id was a 1(X}pound bomb
been killed on both sides

MOTOR CAR BROKERS

Two men sentenced
for theft charges
GALLIPOLIS ~ Two m en were
sentenced F riday in Galllpolis
Municipal Court on charges of theft
and resisting a rrest.
Bruce E. Brumfield , 22, Rt. 2,
Crown City, and Timothy A.
Chapman, 22, Rt. 1, Proctorville,
were cited in a Thursday incident in
which they w e re alleged to have
taken swe&lt;~ts hirts from Murphy's
Ma rt .
Brumfield was fined $50, sentenced to two d a ys in jail and given 18
months probation for theft , and $50,
a suspended 90-day jail sentence and
18 months probation for resisting
a rrest. Cha pman was fined $50,
sentenced to one day in ja il and
placed on 18 m onths probation, a nd
was fined $25, a suspended 90-day
jail sentence a nd 18 months probation for resisting a rrest.
Billy H. Rous h, 63, Kana uga, was
fined $.Ul, sente nced to three days in
jail, given a 60-&lt;lay dr iver's license
suspension a nd 18 months probation
for DWI. An additional c harge of
dlivlng . unde r suspension was
dropped after he agreed to plead
guilty toDWI .
Fined $300, sentenced to three
da ys in jail, given a 60-day license
suspension and 18months probation
for DWI was Rick! E . Mosley, 32,
2204 E astern Ave.
In traffic cases, Milton Polly, 30,
Vinton, was fined $12, received a
suspended six-month ja il sente nce
and was placed on one yea r
proba tion; R obert C. Evans, 18, 422
Hedgewood Drive, was fined costs
for no motorcycle endorsement;
fine and costs for no child restraint
against Maggie E . Barry Bing, 20,
Rt. 2, GaUipolis, were suspended;
Willa rd Ne wsome, 34, Rt. 2,
Ga llipolis, wa s found not guilty of

'.

·

IRA .explosive may .· have .been hidden · weeks before blast

I······ ••··•·••·.~; .. •···~ •• ···•·•••········•. ••••••••I•••.11.110.00

19114 FORD CONVERsiON VAN. Custom conversion by Starc ruiser. 302 engine. a utomatic overdriv e ,. • .,,
tilt wheel, cruise control, air cond. am-lm cassette, CB radio, TV, ice box. clock, roof rack, running boards,
plus much more! Demo special . ....... . .. ... .. .. ............. . ... ..... . .. . WAS $17,900.00 • NOW Ub,500 .utJ
1983 CHEVROLET CONVERSION VAN - Custom conversion by Bivouac, 305 engi11e, autom ati c overdrive
trans., dr J air&amp; heat front &amp; rear, tilt wheel, cruise control, delay wipers, power windows, power door locks.
arr\·lm cassette, CB radio, running boards, ra Uy wheels, plus much more! IAcal one owner . . ... ... .. $15.500.00

.

STOP IN AND SEE: MERRILL, JAY AND ALAN EVANS
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8&amp;00 A.M. TO 8&amp;00 P.M., SATURDAY 8:00A.M. TO 3:00P.M.

.·
•

•
'
...•

•...

�Ol;tober

14, 1984

Moderate growth
predicted f~r '85 ·

F AM1LY SUPPORT NETWORK BOARD - Members of the
in-home family support network, with a federal grant of $17,511! for a
demonstration project in Meigs County, pictured with Eleanor 'Thomas,
center left, Council on Aging, and Norene Ordruslro, project director,
center right, are from left, Bonnie Dingess, representing Malcolm
Orebaugh, Woodland Centers; Florence IUchards, a senior citizen;
Teresa CoUins, R.N., Veterans Memoria.l Hosplta.l; Nancy Berg,
Bu ckeye Hills; David Sutherland, Gerontology Program, Ohio .

University; .Cindy Oliveri,. Meip County Cooperative ·Extension
Service; Scott Lucas, administrator, Veterans Memorial Hosplta.l;_
Jolm D. Jacobs and Nonna Ann ToJTeS, R.N., Meigs C6uaty Health
Deparlment; Dr. James WithereD, the Rev. James Corbitt, Methodist
minister, and Michael Swlshet', Department of Hwnan Services.
Members not pictured are Sid Edwards, Community Action l)gency;
Edna RusseD, Home Health Service; and Charlene Hoeflich.
.

By .lAMmi F. PELTZ
AP "'*-Writer
HOO' SPRINGS, Va. ·(AP)- The
U.S. economy is undergoing a
"significant and welcome" slowdow!ithlsyear, but should stU! enjoy
moderate, ''more sustainablf" expansion in 1985, top business leaders
reported Saturday. ·
Toward 1~. however, there
looms the prospect of a recession if
the massive federal budget and
trade deficits go unchecked, the
i Business Counell said in its report.
Some of the exeeutives on the
council, meeting at this mountain
re;ort in southwestern Virginia,
gave less than tull support to certain
suggestions in the report, which was
prepared for tliem by ~ corporate
economists,
For example, Walter Wriston,
retlrlng chairman of Citlcorp, said .
at a news conference that he did not
expect Interest rates to rue in the
next six months as the economists
forecast, but Instead to drift lower.
And While the report appeared to
link the possibility of a recession In
1986 to the high federal budget and
trade deficits, Wriston, International Business Machines Corp.

Family Support advisory _b oard selected
POMEROY _Ad visory Board
· mem bers for the · Family Support
'ietwork were announced by Elea·
~or Thomas executive director of
t·he Meigs co~nty Cou ncil on Aging
· '
and Norene Ondrus ko, prowct
·
.
· F 'd ,
direc tor. a t a meeung n a) at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
P lans for thP federally-funded
pruj e&lt;"l were outlined byitsdirector
a Cf'l'ified phYSICian's assistant fo;
·
'
the. board membersandrepresentativesofthcvarioushealth ,social and
welfare agencies who will he
involved in 1he training.
E mpha sis of the prog-ram is to
teach familymembers oi thea t-risk
and frau rldcrly how to provide

q~ality care in the home as an

alternative to nursing home care.
Sponsored by the Meigs County
Council on Aging, the grant is for
$17,508and is to be carried out over a
16-m onth period · The tralru'ng
·
program will involve between 15
..
and 25 selected farruiles .
Mrs. Thomas repOrted that it is
demonstration project, one of 225
urban and rural health programs in
the u ru'ted States t0 he t unded · She
said that one phase of the over-all
project is to draw a comparison
between cost of care lr! the home and
care In a nursing facility.
Mrs. Ordrusko displayed a brochure and noted the schedul!? for

implementing the program. She
said that October and Novem:~
will be used to make contact t
families who want to apply. The
criteria forselectlon, she~xpialned,
willlncludewhethertheretsalready
an elderly person needing assistin th h me the needs
ance
e o '
expressed by the family, and the
commitment of the fall_lllY
members to carry through with the
full program ·
In December screening of applicants . will take. place with -the
selection of participants expected to
be completed by th~endofthe~ear.
The actual tramlng sessiOns,
which will teac h such things as how

tochangeabedwiththepatientlnit,
;:,::;e.~~ stroke v:ctlms, :?"~/he
n en, g 1v ng m ca on,
changing bandages, proper nutrltion: death and dying, and skills for
copmg
mentalIn and
...
1 with1 hthefllln
th hemouona angus o
ess
e orne,
will begin In February.
ld
h
A discussion was he on o": to
dev;;lop a ~";:preh~~s~e tr=~
pafuC agtre Wlni C WOU
US t nl
lure
a
ng
programs,
M · c
b In thno o Y1
in eigs ounty, ut o er rura
areas.
Meetings of the board weresetfor
the first Friday of each month
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Privately-oWned banking firm in news
By COTTEN TIMBERLAKE
AP BIL•ines.• Writer
NEW YORK (API - A com pany
called Kohltx&gt;rg Kravis Roberts &amp;
Co. keeps popping up in the news.
. This past week. City Investing Co.
announced it was selling its Motel 6
Inc. unit for $565 million to a n
investment group led by the fi,rm. It
was just the latest in a st ring of big
deals by the firm in recent ye'ars.
Kohiherg Kravis does n't have a
hlgh profile. as do Merrill Lynch,
~ierce Fenner &amp; Smith Inc. and
E:.F. Hutton Group Inc.
Kohlberg Kravis is a privately
owned merchant banking firm
founded by J erom e Kohlberg,
Henry Kravis a nd George Robert s
in 1976 for thesolepurposeoffinding,
fi}1 anc ing, investing in and moni tor·

ing " mana~;emcnt buyouts... or
levera!'ed buyou ts in whi ch man·
agem ent gets a chunk of the
compa n~· and s tays on.

The firm, which has a .fourth
partner, Robert· MacDonnell, hljS
done 22 deals worth a total of atxmt
$5.7 billion, says Tl'IOmas Daly, a
spokesman.
The City Investing deal is a
multi-faceted one.
Last month, the diversified manufacturing, service and financial
concern, said it was selling three
other units for $1.25 billiOI! to an
inv.e stment group jointly led by
Kohl berg Kravis and Merrill Lynch
Capital Markets.
The unitsareRheemManufacturing Co., a maker of central heatlng
and air conditioning; World Color
Press Inc., the nation's leading
printer of consumer magazines;
and Uarco1nc.,amajorproducerof
business forms. ·
Kohlherg Kravis operates out of
New York, where Kohlherg and
Kravis are based, and San Fran-

cisco, where Roberts and Mac Don·
nell work.
Other firms in the same business
Include ForstmannUttle&amp;Co.. Carl
Marks ·&amp; Co., Jordan Co. and
Qibbons Green Van Amerongen
Ltd.
Other .developments this past

week:
-Wholesale prices, down two
months running, fell 0.2 percent in
September, the government said.
The drop was the sharpest since
January 1983 and marked . the first
time In eight years that prices fell for
two straight months.
-Sales by U.S. retailers rose 1.6
percent in September, partially
erasing two consecutive· monthly
declines, the government reported.
-Financial Corp. of Amerlca,'the
nation's largest savings and lOan
holding company, said it will lay off
a fifth of its 7,500 workers, cut

Stock m.a rket reeovering from
By STEVEN P. ROSENFEW
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP ) - The stock
m arket snapped out of a slump this
past week, with a double-barreled
boost from a drop in interest rates
and a cooling off of inflation.
Alm ost unnoticed in th&lt;&gt; rebound
was a rise in the little-watched Dow
J ones average of 15 utilities to its
highest level in a lmost 16 years. a
development some analysts believe
points to continuing declines in
int erest rates and further gains for
stocks.
Analysts, as usual, were divided
on the market's next move, noting
traders still are subject to preelection jitters. worries about the
course of the economy and nervousness inspired by the federal deficit
and the currentbarrage ofquarterly
corporate ea rnings reports .
. Midway through this paRt week,
tlle market was still mired In a
~treat from its late-summer highs

executive salaries by up to 20
percent and takl' a variety of other
cost-cutting steps. FCA' s American
Savings &amp; Loan Assoeiatlon is based
in Stockton, Calif.
-Farmers received a record ~.3
billion In direct federal subsidies last
year, more than double the previous
high of $3.96 biillon paid out In 1972,
an Agriculture Department report
showed. The report said more than
$5.2 blillon of the estimated record
payment was in th&lt;&gt; value of
commodltles given to farmers
under the administration's
payment-In-kind program.
- Interna tiona! Business Machines Corp., the world's largest
computer company, said its profit
rose 21.6 percent in the third quarter.
For the three months ended Sept. 30,
IBM reported profit of$1.585 bllllon,
or $2.60 a share, on revenueof$10.657
biillon.

slu~p

and the outlook was anything but month.
Friday to crack the 1,200 barrier. A
cheerY.
"It's optimistic, it's hopeful, it's week earlier, however, the stock
not euphoric," said Leslie Pollack, market's best·kliown Indicator had
By the time Wednesday's session
began, the Dow Jones average of 30 chairman ofShearsonManagement tumbled 24.18 points.
Inc.
The .New York Stock Exchange·
industrials had given up more than
40 percent of the 150.~polnt surge it
The Dow Jones average of 30 composite index gained .90 point to
industrials wound up with a gain of 94.79, and the American Stock
had fashioned between July 24 and
Sept. 14.
.
. 8.17 points to finish the week at · Exchange market value Index was
The downward drift was Inter· I 1,190.70, but failed in an attempt up .26at2ll.66.
rupted with late gains Wednesday ".-------.,..---.,------------.,----1
that resulted in a mixed session and
what technical analyst William
-· .
..
Raftery at Smith Barney, Hanis
Upham &amp; Co. called "a key reversal
day" for the stock market.
As Interest rates fell and ~ew
evidence of a slowing of Inflation
surfaced later In the week, It was
"good news in a market prepared
for a snap back," he said.
On Thursday, yields on Uli'ee"
month Treasury bU)s fell to ~
lowest level since early July. Those
' rates feU even further on Friday as
the goverrunent said wholesa.le
prices feD for the second straight

BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY

,L... _

.
.
service mcreases.
'

',.

-.11)

September directly reflects the
addition of new alrcralt operated .
during September with service
added to Fort Wayne, Ind.," said
Charles Curran, senior vice president of marketing.
'
Curran said the figures reflect
"the first month ot our operation as
'The Delta ConnectJon' carrier,
feeding pal mptll betweeD 00MAIR's routHyatem and Delta Air
Lllle'sClnciDnatihllb."
·

Chairman John R. Opel and ot hl'rs •
cautioned against making such a :
direct connection.
.
Instead, they said, any downturn :
might he a normal cyclical pa,use In •
an economy that had just undergone :
powerful growth. They also em·
phaslzed that the report specifically :
covers only the next 14 months, .
dwing which It sees continued
expansion.
The council's report noted· that
1!&amp; economic groWth should reach
7.2 percent - the strongest performance in 33 years.
The 220-member council, which
includes the chief executives of
manyofAmerlca'slargestcompanles, also projected continued low
Inflation and further declines In the ,
unemployment rate through 19ffi. '
The forecast in some ways ,
mirrored tlie report released at the
councll's spring meeting in May, •
w~en economic growth through :
next year was forecast. but warned :
that federal red ink could derail the •
expansion.
The Reagan admlnlstratlon is ,
more optimistic, projecting sus- :
tained growth with no recession •
through the rest ofthis decade. · :
'
I

DIG mOSE TEJ::'TH!- But
don't (lal1k. This mounlaln lion
may he bearing his teeth but,
relax, he Isn't aboot toattack.ll's
anoiher of Kenneth Johnson's
chaln saw creallons. Johnson Is
one of several Wolf Pen Road
residents who create their own
. lawn decorations. For the practical, a chain saw Is equipment
used In cutting firewood; for the
compeUtlve, It's a way of winning
a trophy, and for the aesthetic,
it's the means for creating
sculptures.

.
•

Whg Psg Mote?
, Chain saw artists
·line Wolf Pen Road
1985 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE SEDAN

Thi1 .~eautiful d,uble monument is of autumn roM
~"'~.
.
.

LOGAN MONU,..ENT CO., I
VINTON, OHIO
W. l1ln Stlllt
381-1&amp;03

By CHARLENE IIOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY- It's amazing What you can see on a drive along the
country road.
Take Wolf Pen Road 'in rural Meigs County.
Residents there are Into doing their own thing when it comes to
lawn decorations. For something '' nifty" they go for chain saw
sculptures, creationswhich Include everything from hears to birds to
12 foot totem poles.
For even the most imaginative it's not easy to envision a
gasoline-pOwered chain saw, known for its speed in cutting through
wood, as an artist's Instrument In sculpturing.
After all, when most ot us think of a chain saw, we get a mental . ·
picture of a piece of equipment compatible to the lifestyi~ of the very·
practical - something a genera lion ago used for dowrung trees to
, .clear the land, to cut lumber for building and fireWOOd for heatlng.
The past decade has seen increased use of chain saws as utility
costs escalated and more and more residents turned to wood burners
to ward off the cold winter winds.
Recent years, however, have seen the chain saw take on yet
another dimeilslon -recreation.
There's scarcely a festival or a county fair around which doesn't
feature chain saw contests.
Modifying chain saws for competition has become a popular trend
as operators are pitted against each ot her to see who can cut through
the wood the fasti!St.
And then there are those who turn to chain saws for creative
pursuit.
Like those who live along Wolf Pen Road .
Their sculptures of llfesize wild animals and birds cause many a
motorist traveling the country road to take a second look.
Besides the animal and bird ·replicas each created from a single
piece of wood, at least two of the Wolf Pen residents have 12-foot
totem pole sculptures carved from single logs hauled In from the
woods behind their homes.
To sculpt with a chain saw takes considerable skill. It takes ,a
feather-Ugh! touch to &amp;dd the minute details, and just one slip of the
saw with the whirling chain could reduce a potentlal mountain lion or
a totem pole into a piece of firewood.

Air conditioning, · AM/FM stereo, sport mirrors, white
walls, body side mouldings, tinted glass, carpet savers and
much more.

$1 0,32 7 IN STOCK
1983 .CHEVROLET

CAPRKE

CLA~SIC

CL

Absolutely the sharpest around!
Completely loaded with power
seat, power windows, power
door locks, rear defoeger,
AM/FM/~ssetle, wire wheel
covers. and custom two-tone
paint in the popular Rosewood
Brown. 21.000 low miles.

'85 LeSABREUMITED
TRADE THIS WEEK

1983 BUICK

SKYHAWK 2 DR.
We Sold It New!!
AM/FM/Cassette, luaa&amp;e rack,
automatic, air conditionna. and
only 21,000 actual low miles.

QUAliTY ANP
ECONOMY COMBINED

,

..

'

1981 OLDSMOBILt
98 REGENCY

This local one owner features
nearly every option available
on a luxury car! Navy blue exterior with matching interior.
Expect quality and low actual
miles.

WAS 19900

Special

$8995
THIS WEEK ONLY!

1981 CHEVROLET

, MONTE CARLO
Only 27,000 actual miles! This
new Buick Repl trade-in is
quality in every respect. Lt. Jadestotie finish.

Section~
October 14' 1984

1983 PONTIAC

PARISIENNE 4 DR.
Local one owner. We sold it
new. Full size family comfort
features tilt, cruise, 55-45
~eats, passenger recliner and
more! Less than 16,000 actual
miles.

"Save A Bundle"
1981 BUICK

'

PARK AVENUE
Completely loaded with lactory accessories - includina
the fuel efficient diesel engine. '85 Park Avenue trade-in.
Compare our price.

WAS 17995

ONLY

SPECIAL AT ONLY

$5995

$6995
. 'TODAY'S

TREND -

~ country are .''In''

.·

COMAIR
passenger
.

CINCINNATI (AP) - COMAIR
Inc .. the Clncinnatl-based regional
airline. reported a 25.6 peu:fnt
tpcrease in ~ger serv1ce In
September and will begin serv1ce to
Richmond, Va. on Monday.
: CO:l\~J;\IR, which serves 16 cities,
ieported Friday It carried a record
38,146 ~I'll In September.
The airline earned 30,381 pas·
sengers in September 1!113.
"The record traftlc earned in

.e r

Rusllc
10 . wild

lllllmal8 and birds fl&amp; rilht IDto
. the ICheme of the backwoodl
look in deeGratlng. A IIIUIIber ol

cr a......,onWolfPenRoadhaw

beeR JMde with chain ......
fllcii!C)•g, above, bean. IIJid at ,
the lower riP!, a deer bead.
'Diid'a one way of havlnll a
tropby without JdDing the anJm.
all! AtthewupperrJPt,aae
. . oflbe lAW when CIII'VIDIGIJt
IIIII e.p poilled for flllll&amp; atap
IMJ IGtem pole could have
N'llered the wllale . . Ill lire
wood. ..,. JJ.foclt IJNplare4lii'Ved . . • dutlll ... by
•
lll.hl • Atlberilht.
liN. . . e Jill ..., IIIJIINCiatlft ol ber ........,.. bollby,
,... rib Jill wild ......

• \2 ...

I·

..

"

' ~'-

/

�.

Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

The

johnson,
Sliger we~

Calendar
SUNDAY

POMEROY - Auditions for
dancing In a community vartety
show to tie sponsored by the Big
Bend Civitan Club will beheld at4
p. m. Sunday, Pomeroy Mun!cl·
pal Building auditor ium. All ages
invited. Show scheduled for Nov.
24,8p.m .

.,. .

··~·

RACINE - T he Praisernen
from Vienna, W.Va. will be
s inging a t the F ellowship
Church, Racine, 1: ll p.m Sun·
day. Charles Bush, pastor,
invites the public to a ttend.

'

GALLIPOLIS - St. Peter's
E piscopa l Churchwomen will
meet Monday, 10 a. m. for
Bazaa r workshop, followed by
luncheon at noon .

. ..

theJ&lt;'t,rstBaptlstChurchof~atur;

· was perfo11!'1ed by the Rev. Wallace
Duvall. Honor attendants were
Paula Hampton, sister of the bride,
and Bruce Sliger, brother o! the
bridegroom. Other bridal attend·
ants were Roseann Kendrick, &amp;tster
· of the groom, Debbie Hill, and

&lt;..,J

.

Margaret Pope.

CHESTER - Mortgage burn·
mg cerem ony for the parsonage
purchased only one year ago will
be held a t 9 a.m . Sunday at the
Chester United Methodis t
Church with District Supt. Ben·
jamin E dwards as speake r.

MONDAY

'

. 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman White

Christy Gray, Sherman White
trade vows in Oct. 5 ceremony
POMEROY - Christy Gray and
Sherman White of Pomeroy were
un!t\'(l in marriage by the Rev. Paul
McdJireon Oct. 5at4: ~p.m. at the
home of the bride's mother.
She is the daughter of Doris
Haynes, 796 South Third Ave.,
Middleport, and Leo Dalley, POl'·
tland. The groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Nev White of Alabama.

Several friends and relatives
attended the wedding, whlch was
followed by a liiivn reception at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. David
Upscomb, Route 124, Pomeroy.
WhiteisemployedattheMountal·
neerPowerPiantinNewHaven.His
wife is also employed there as a
security guard. The couple resides
at Route 2, Pomeroy.

Groomsmen were Mark Johnson,
brother of the bride, Timothy Peltier
and HeiU)' Dallas Wilson ID.
.
Charity Hill, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Hill, was flower girl
and Justin Kendrick, nephew of the
groom, was ring bearer.
The wedding ceremony was
highlighted with vocal music by
Frances Marty.
Following the wroctlng, a reception was beld at the Main Street

registred nurse at Henrietta Egles·
ton Hospital for children. The
bridegroom attends M~rcer Univer·

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Auxiliary will conduct its
monthly meeting Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m. a t the Legion Ha ll.
GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette
White Shrine will meet at the
Masonic Temple Tuesday, 7
p. l)l.
LECTA -There will be Bible
Study at Walnut Ridge Church,
Tuesday, 7: 30p.m . with the Rev.
Earl Hinkle .
GALLIPOLIS - Ga llipolis
Rotary Club will meet Tuesday,
6 p.m., a t Oscar's.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Grubb Family singers will be at
St. Pa ul's United Methodist
Church Tuesday.
VINTON - Vinton Friendship
Ga rden Club will meet Tuesday,
1 p.m. a t the home of Opal Dunn.
GALLIPOLIS- Right To Life
will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
F irst Baptist Church. Speaker
wi ll be Dr. Francine Chirb.
POMEROY- Group ll of the
Mi d dl e p or t Pres byterian
Church will meet Tuesday at the
regular time at the horne of
J5a thryn Miller. Dorothy Morris
will be the assisting hostess.
MIDDLE PORT - The Scot·
tish Rite Pla yers Club from the
Scot !.ish Rite Valley of Columbus .
will present the play " Greater
r,.ovc Ha th No Man," Tuesday
evening. 7: :ll p.m ., at the
Middleport Masonlc Temple.
'!'his is a masonlc play and aU
master masons are invited to
attend. Refreshments will be
served following the play.

Mrs. David P. Turner

Mr. and Mrs. Van Odell Sliger

Clubhouse. Serving were Barbara
stty School of Pharmacy, Atlanta, couplelsreSidlnglnStoneMountaln.
Johnson, JennHer Blount, Mimi
where· he is working on his Out·of·townguests Included Mr. and
McCully, and Lisa Warren.
pharmacy degree.
Mrs. Robert Eason, Pomeroy, aunt
The bride is a 198J graduate of
Following a wedding trip, the and uncleQfthe bride.
Georgia
School
Nursing,Baptist
and IsHospital
employed
as ofa . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

~

TUESDAY

· ·~

Brenda G. White becomes bride
of David P. Turner August 31
GALLIPOLIS Brenda G.
White and David P . Turner, both of
Gallipolis, exchanged wedding
vpws In a candlelight ceremony at
the Chapel Hlll Church of Christ on
Aug. 31.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred White of Neighbor·
hood Road In Gallipolis. The groom
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Turner of Romney, W.Va., former
residents of Vinton.
William B. Kughn officiated the
double-ring ceremony. A cappella
music preceded the ceremony. A
12-branch candleabra and two
ceramic mother of pearl cherubs
holding peach candles and a unity
candle decorated the altar.
Given in .marriage by h.e r
parents, and escQrted to the altar by
her father, the bride wore a
floor·length gown of chantilly lace
·over satin with a scooped neck of
sheer lace covering the bodice,
:falling Into a full hoop skirt. Pearl
'buttpns enhanced the back and
cuffs. The bride's veil fell from a
·Juliet cap highlighted with sequins.
She carried a cascading bouquet of
white silk orchids, sweethear1 roses
and daisies with lavender and
peach ribbons. ·
Maid of honor was Terry Hemby,
sister of the bride. She wore a
floor·length gown of lavender taf·
reta with an overlay of peach and
I;IVender posh print. She carried a
nosegay of sweethear1 roses, dal·
sles, carnations highlighted with
J)each and lavender ribbons.
Bridesmaids were Judy Hutton of
Athens, Lynda Gibson of Rio
.Grande, and Debbie Niebel of
Nashville, Tenn. They wore match·
illg floor -length gowns . of peach
taffeta with an overlay of peach and

lavender posh print. The brides·
maids carried two lavender and one
peach silk rose surrounded by
baby's breath and lavender and
peach ribbons.
Flower girls were Amy and Kelli
Hemby, twin nieces of the bride .
Each wore a fioor·length gown of
peach with lavender ribbon trim.
They carried matching baskets of
white carnations, sweetheart roses,
and daisies trimmed with lavender
and peach ribbons. They also wore
crowns of baby's breath, trimmed
with lavender and peach swee·
thear1 roses and ribbons In their
hair.
Nathan Hemby, ·nephew of the
bride, was ringbearer. He wore a
white tuxedo with tails and carried
a white satin heart-shaped pillow.
Kelly J alley served as best man.
Groomsmen were Steve Turner,
Ertc Turner, and Thomas Turner
II, all brothers of the groom. All
wore black tuxedos with lavender
boutonnieres. The groom wore a
white tuxedo with taUs and a
carnation and rose boutonniere.
Miss Pam Weich of Gallipolis
registered guests.
.
The mother of the bride wore a
floor-length gown of peach satin.
'l'lie groom's mother wore a
calf·length gown of Ivory l~ce with
lavender accessories . Imogene
White, grandmother of the bride,
wore a floor-length gown of
lavender.
A reception followed at the Senior
Citizens Center In Gallipolis. The
color scheme of peach and lavender
was carried out In the bride's ,
refreshment and gift tables. Shari
Wedemeyer was pianist at the
reception .
The couple resides In Rio Grande.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei---Page--8-3

Sacred concert
planned at MU

Balderson,
Long wed:
in ceremony

POMEROY - M.f. and Mrs,
Martin L. Johnson of Atlanta, Ga.
arul()Unce the recent marriage of
their daughter, Marta Lynn, to Van
Odell Silger, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Odell Silger, Cookeville, Tenn.
The bride Is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. P~ A. Riggs,
Pomeroy,andotRDbertE.Johnson,
Stuart, Florida, and the late Mrs.
Malona JohnSon, Toledo.
The candlelight ceremony held at

ADDISON - Addison Freelvill Baptist Church will have the
Rev. Arnold Skaggs speaking,
Sunday, 7:30 p.m ..

GALLIPOUS - Ohio Valley
Christian School Boosters will
meet Monday, 7:30 p.m in the
F irst. Baptist C!JUrch auditorium. Program directed by Mrs.
Barbara Stewart will be pres·
ented by grades 4 to 6, and the
high school c(loir.

Pomeroy:.....MJddlepo~llipolii, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Odober 14, 1984

HUNTINGTON, W.Va . A
concert of sacred music wtll be
Pl'!!5ented by the Marshall University Syrnpho7c Choir on Tuesday
evenJng, Oct. , at 8 p.m. In Smith
Recital Hall .
Dr. Joseph Line, Marshall's
newly-appointed director of choral
activities, will conduct the program, which wt11 be hiS first
full ·length concert In this area. Dr.
Line is also conductor of tbe Chor al
Union In A Cappella Choir .
Concert selections Include the
Vi valdi Gloria and works by
Thomas Tallis and GiovannJ Ga·
brielli, as well as a setting of Psalm
100 by German com poser Johann
P achel,bei.
.
The Vivaldi Gloria Is one of the
most famUiar and frequently per·
formed pieces of choral literature.
It is a setting In 12 sections of the
Gloria In excelsls text drawn from
the Latin Mass . Soloists a re
· Katherine Kirk, J ulia Smith a nd
Brenda Barty, sopranos: and
Cathy Maynor and Mary Ellen
Logsden, altos.
· The Symphonic Choir Is a select
cham ber choir of 23 members
chosen from the undergraduate a nd
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Allen Long
graduate student body at Marshall.
The concert is open to the pubUc
groom; Mike Stodard, Ken Gilke·
Probert.
free of charge.
They wore gowns of polyester and son, and Mickey Davis. The groom
chiffon in light blue and lavender. and all of the male attendants wore
Each wore baby's breath in her hair silver tuxedoes with boutonnieres
''Good
and carried white carnations edged edged in the weddtng colors.
Mrs
.
Balderson
wore
a
pink
In the bride' s colors.
good
Flowergirls were Kim Long, polyester chiffon dress while Mrs.
good
niece of the groom, and Sarah Long was in lilac. Lisa Kolb and
Frydnnan. They wore lavender Lynette Morelli registered guests.
A reception was held in thechurch
gowns with white eyelet tril]l and
baby's breath in their hair, and social roOm.
carried wicker bas kets with ribbon . The bride Is a graduate of Ohio
''
trim in the wedding colors. Bryon Unlvers ity and is employed a s a
Caudill, nephew of the groom , was teacher in the Eastern Local School
District.
r!ngbearer.
The groom, also a gradua te of
CAROLL
Serving a s best man was Brian
SNOWDEN
Long, brother of the groom. Ushers Ohio University , Is a teacher In the
417 Second All' e.
were Bill Dietz, cousin of the bride, Marietta School System .
Gallipolis, Oh .
The couple resides at 1213 Wyatt
Cliff Caudill, brother-in-law of the
Phone 446·4190
Lane, Belpre.
Home446 ~4.511
A rehearsal dinner was hosted by
the groom's parents at The Ponde·
L•ke a good nP •n h.hf'lr
rosa in Marietta .
Sta te Farm JS there.

REEDSVILLE - . ~illy Ellen
Balderson of Reedsv111• and Jay
Allen l,ong o! Marietta ~xchanged
wedding vows In an afternoon
ceremony at St. fiatt's United
Methodist Church, 'ruPPjrs Plains.
The bride Is the da~ter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Baldemn, Reeds·
ville, and the groom Is thison of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Long:Marietta .
Church pastors Don krcher and
Edward Long Jr. otflcllted at the
double ring ceremony. Crgan music
was provided by Jenny Machlr. The
church was decorated with spiral
candelabra and fiord arrangements on the altar.
Given In marriage b) her parents
and escorted to the alar by her
father, the bride won a gown of
poly-organza and chanllly lace.The
long fitted bodice had a&gt;chlffie yoke
edged with a lace ruffe and a high
neckline of chantilly laoe. The sheer
bishop sleeves had a Ylde cuff with
lace at the wrist.
The lace bouffan skirt was
gathered at the walstlne and had a
pickup front. A wldt lace edged
organza flounce circlel the hem and
attached chapel train
· With her gown, sht wore a lang
two tiered veil of she« illusion. The
scalloped edging hill a schiffle
embroidered hem atd the head ~
piece was a clrcleofslk flowers and
pearls with a large pwfy bow in the
back.
·
The bride carrie! ·a cascade
bouquet of mlniatun white carna·
lions and lavender, tlue and pink
daisies.
.
Honor attendants rere Kim Reed
and .Susan Wltrnet They wore
Identical gowns of lOiyester and
chiffon In suede rosi Bridesmaids·
were Nancy Dletz, 1cousin of the
bride, Cindy Pltze, Gay Long,
sister of the
and Karen

service.
coverage.
price-

That's
State Farm
.
msurance.

Video tape sales up·

With the
number of home video recorders
continuing to grow at a fast pace,
sales of blank videocassettes are
expected to reach 95 million units
ihJs year, according to an Industry
journal.
Last year, some 65 million blank
VIdeo tapes were bought ey Arneri·
can consumers.

Walking Lady

I'Cn .m..l~.Jild l hr wf1 rld on t h r
m ost dt• m.Jndm~ wom~n .
lrr.l trd l''&lt;prr ~~ ly ro p rovodt•
go-any w hl' rl' ,md dJy - l on~ com fort
For ~ troll !&gt; 111 muwums. lnr ~ hoppmg.
Jnd, of rourst&gt;, for worktng I n il
wtdl' ilrr &lt;ly· of (U I (u-~ .md pt•rff&gt;rt - fu
me!i The W,1ikm~ L1dy tSsi mply the
dt·fm'!'ve wdlkm~ !&gt;i hur Srr t hf'
W~l k mg Ltdv Jnd n ur l'nt•rr Trottrrs

GALLIPOLIS-MiaLeaYoung,
daughter of Mr. nd Mrs . Jerry L.
Petterson,
Brown of Galllpoli
son and
Mr. Michael
and Mrs
A..
Archie (Joe) Prterson of Point

20
at Pearlsbul'!
Va. The Rev.
Raymond
Kellel performed
the

ce~~:;pleresiesat191Auanuc

~~r;;:~~n~ :~duate of Kyger

Bible College
rally planned

w.

' WELLSTON- Wellston Wills
Chapel w!ll host a Circleville
Bible College Rally, Monday,
i': ll p.m . Participating will be
the college choir, handbell choir
and the two travel ensembles Rejoice and Maranatha. The
concert will be at the Church of
!=hrist in Christian Union In
Wellston.

Granville.

.

~~~t~':~~ ;:P~~-w::.

Paul's united Methodist Church,
.
.MJss Duvall Is a graduate of
Eastern High School, Reedsv11le,
and ·has attended Ohio State
University and Hocking Technical
~ege. Nelsonville. She IS employed at Ohlb University, Athe!!~·
· Sgt. Davies Is a graduate of Utica
Hlgh School and graduated tram
!:locking Technical Conege o! Elecirlcal Engineering. He Is stationed
with the U.S. Air Force, 3'79thMMS
•t Wurtsmlth Air Force Base In
Michigan.

'J'uwers Plains.

Revival slated
CHESHIRE - The public Is
invited to a revival at Cheshire
Baptist Church, 's tartlllg Oct. 15
and ending Oct. 20, with services
eaeh nlght at 7: 30. The Rev. Ken
Sanders will be speaker. Special
music and ·nursery services will
be ptovkled each evening.

---

' •'

...

· · ~~ T,

""
; The Amlirlcan Cancer Society
l-eports !hat one out ·or every 11
fl!mlen will develop breast cancer
at 10111e time during their Uves.

~

.

If you want to know more at no o!ligation,
telephone now or mail the coupm below

to .....

,·

..._, ... ••th

KIRKLAND MEMORIAL
... , ,_, GAIDENS
675-2112

·75-2465

675-1136

J

::1111 S t•Ctllld .\ I' C .

l.a fa wlt e .\ ! all

(; a llipoli s. 0 .

_ '/.~(&lt;) . /.

lit \lJ

V11f

c(9

2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE
YOU BETTER.

~~

1~~·
U ~

GALLIPOLIS/~OMEROY

Vitif Out Sfote$ TDdsg Dunng

'C"'"fmsg
L
In 0cfo be, 11
1

\
•

'

IUU

SAVE

OFF RETAIL

DIAMONDS ••••••••••••.••••.••...•.•••.•...•....•.•.........•.• ~ .... 2S0/o
KREMENTZ JEWELRY •••••••••••••••..••.•••••.•.•.••••...••••.. 20°/o
14K GOLD JEWELRY ........................................... 30°/o
. SEIKO WATCHES •••••••••••••••••.•••••••.•••••••••••••..••••••••• 20°/o
BULOVA WATCHES ..........................:................... 20°/o
PULSAR·WATCHES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..• 20°/o

EARRINGS All Styles .......................................... 20%
STONE RINGS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20°/o

legtweg Now Fot Cbtisfmsg

Stato IHh •1
'p, o.... 422

pt, ,.....,., .., 15550

The
-~Shoe
Cafe
·

~n

Pleasant High School and is
employed by the Newport News

Creek High Scho&lt;.
Duvall
Davies
Thegroomlsa:raduateofPolnt
REEDSVILLE-Mr.andMrs. r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~::::::::;rl

Pre-need selection of Cemetery Property
do~s more than just let our SUrViV)rS know
what We Want.
f
Pre-arrangement is an expressi&lt;n o love
that will always be remembered

mow

r~S~h~ip~B~u~il~d~ln~g~C~o~.===:::==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Pleasant,w.va.~eremarrtedJuly

A";he

James w. Duvall, 51700 ruce Run
Road, Reedsville, are announcing
!he approaching ~ of thl!lr
daughter, Nlese!EudorahDuvall,to
Sgt. James William (Bill) DaVIes
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Davies, sr., '5152 Loudon st.,

State Farm Insu rance Comoan•es
Home O tfiCes Sloomrngro n, llllnots

S

Couple ved in Virginia ceremony

CROWN CITY-Plans have been
cOmpleted for the wedding of Sonja
Renee Call and Daren J . Halley. The
prospective bride is the daughter of
•John J . and Farris Call, Crown City.
Halley Is the son of Jim and Connl9e
Halley, Gallipolis.
The open-church wedding will
lake place Oct. :rl, 7:30p.m., at the
Church of God In Rodney. A
reception In the church will ·follow
\he ceremony.
·

CROWN CITY
Revival
begins a t King's Chapel Church,
Monday, with the Rev. Eddie
DePriest. Services are at 7:30
p.m . nightly and · will continue
through Oct. 20. Special singing
hightly and the pubUc is Invited.

0

Collc'fttnn

Call - Halley

Revival set

INSURANCl

Taupe or Grey
Suede
Camel or
Burgandy

==Engagements

Happenings

STATE fARM

NEW YORK (AP ) -

WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY

We are your Full s.. rvicc J.. welr y Store; with a prol•·••!on,al
jeweler, walchmaker, and well trained sa1Ps ~tafl w.. ca~ ol~rr you .fREE
ring sizing, e&amp;timates, appraisal s, and engra,•mg done r1ght m our !li'orPs .

NAME------------~----_nPHmO~N~EruNO~·---------

ADDRESS --.,--- - - - - - - - - - - -.-----CITY

Mosl of all we offer you the lowest price• on quality namr brand produrt•.

113 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2054

342 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2691

�Pag1

8-4-=fh. SundGy Times-Sentinel

Octo!Mr 14, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipoliS) C»tio-Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

. PomeJC!Y-Middleport-Gallipoli5, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Neal cho~en sdCiety head
POINT

PLEASANT, W.Va. The West Virginia Association for
Hospttai Public Relations at Its .
annual meeting In Pipestem,
W.Va., recently elected Sam Neal,
DirectOr of Personnel and Public
Relations at Pleasant Valley Has pl. tal, President for 1985-lli. He has
been a member of the Association
5even years and has served as vice .
president for the past two.
A Huntington, W.Va. native, Neal
graduated from Gallla Academy
High School in Galllpolls and
Marshall University. He has taken
post graduaie courses at the
University of anclnnati, West
Vlrglilla College of Graduate Stu·
dies (COGS) and Marshall
University.
For the past seven years, Neal
has been Director of Personnel and

Carla . R. Rife becomes bride

Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Moses

Ginger ~outs becomes bride
of Robert Moses in Oak Hill
OAK IDLL - Ginger Suzanne
Bouts became the bride of Robert
C. Moses during a ceremony at the
Oak HIU Presbyterian Church.
Rev. James A.M. Hanna officiated
the double-ring ceremony June 30.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Guy Bouts of Oak
Hill. The groom Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy A. Moses of Thurman.
The sanctuary of the church was
adorned with flower arrangements
of variations of pink and white silk
roses and tiger lilies. Two sevenbranch candelabras trimmed with
forget -me-nots and satin bows
decorated the altar. The lighting of
the candles was done by Steve
Moses and Rick Rees.
Music preceded the ceremony.
Organ selections were by William
Lloyd. Roger Williams, great-uncle
Of the bridegroom, sang.
. Escorted to the altar and given In
marriage by her father. the bride
wore a white sleeveless gown
featuring a sheer neekline with a
; ::!fimdup collar edged In scalloped
- ·tace whlch rna tched the bodlc~ and
a natural fitted waistline. Rows of
English lace ruffles held by tiny
pink bows cascaded to the hooped
hemline, formed a seml-cathedral
llmgth train. The bride fashioned
and made her fingertip veil of
jmported English illusion, trimmed
, ·with lace and seed pearls which fell
from a circlet of .Pink and white
petals. She carried a cascading
bouquet of silk roses and tiger lilies
In white and various shades of pink.
accented with greenery and pink
and whlte streamers whlch she also
made.
Maid of llonor was Ronda
Smittle. Bridesmaids were Heather
Gray, Ceclll Evans and Robin
Daniels. The Do)Ver girl was Brock
Williams, cousin of the groom .
The maid of honor wore a
; ;flqor-length dress of pastel pink
.:hiffon with double ruffles accent.
· lng the bodice and shoulders. She
· Carried an arm bouquet with a
• variety of pink roses and baby's
'.breath tied With a white ribbon.
, ·- .The bridesmaids wore floor; ' epgth, pastel pink dresses of

chiffon featuring a ruffle extending
over one shoulder and a full flounce
gathered to a bustle. They carried
bouquets like that of the maid of
honor, tied with pink ribbon.
The flower girl wore a white
·Door-length, off-the-shoulder dress
with spaghetti straps. Her hair was
adorned with ribbons and flower
streamers and s he carried a basket
of pink and white silk roses with
baby's breath and pink petals.
Mrs. Bouts · wore an orchid
floor-length gown with a full pleated
skirt and orchid lace capelet. The
mother of the groom wore an orchid
floor-length dress with ·a full skirt
and scalloped bodice. Both moth·
ers' corsages were white silk roses,
lavender baby's breath with Ia·
vender ribbon.
The couple had all four of their
grandmothers attending and were
attlred In street-length dresses in a
mixture of pastel colors.
The groom wore pearl grey
tuxedo wlth a pink bow lie and
cummerbund and a grey and white
pleated shirt.
Best man ,was Tom Moses,
brother of the groom. Ushers were
Broce Bouts, brother of the bride,
Steve Moses, brother of the groom,
and Rick Reese.
The best man and groomsmen
wore pearl grey tuxedos with grey
cummerbunds and bow ties with
pink pleated-shirts.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held In the church. social

room.
The blide table featured a cake
surrounded by ·pink and white
streamers and wedding bells. The
three-tiered cake a nd a two-tiered
cake were connected by a white
staircase which supported the
miniature wedding party.
The couple reside in New Jersey.
The bride will graduate from Rio
Grande In December with a major
in marketing. The groom received
a bachelor of science in mathematics from Rio Grande College. He Is
employed by AT&amp;T Technologies
as an information systems designer
in Holmdel, New Jersey.

Angie Triplett, Danny Morris,
wed in lAurel Cliff ceremony
POMEROY - Angle Triplett.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Triplett, Pomeroy, and Danny
Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Morris, all of Pomeroy, were
married on Alig. 11 at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church;
The Rev. Robert Miller performed the double ring ceremony
following a program of music by
Jeff Nash. organist. Arrangements
of gladioli, pansies, and daisies in
pink and white, flanked by seven
branch candelabra, decorated the
altar.
Escorted to the altar by her
. fa ther, thebrideworeagownoflace
over satin fashioned with a high
neckline and long sleeves, with
ruffle accent on thecullsandbodlce.
The A-line skirt flowed Into a chapel
train with a double ruffle at the
bottom. Her veil of illusion fell from
a lace headpiece, and she carried a
colonial bouquet of pastel colored
daisies with baby's breath and
pastel streamers.
Barbara Triplett, sister-in-law of
the bnde, was matron of llonor and
wore a formal go'.\'n in rainbow
colorswithanoff-the-shoulderruffle
· on the bodice. The other attendants
cousin
of theRoush
bride, bothofPomeroy.
a nd Kim Eblin ,
were Lori
They wore rainbow colored gowns In
spaghetti straps and softly gather~
skirts: All of the attendants wore
picture hats incolorsmatchlngtheir
gowns, and carried colonial bouquets of pastel daisies.
Teresa Molden, cousin of the
bride, was the flower girl and wore a
blue sleeveless gown with shoulder
ruffles and a white picture hat, and
Matthew Morris, Pomeroy, cousin
of the groom, was ringbearer.
Ronnie Eblin of Langsville was

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the refreshment table were Carolyn
Casto, Fern Morris, aunt of the
groom, and Tammy Eblln, also a
cousin.
They now reside at 34619 Rocksprings Road, Pm:neroy.
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
High School.
The groom , also a graduate of
Meigs is employed by Jay Mar Coal.

Clip Ute

Anniversary reception planned
. POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Willard E. Miller will observe their
25th wedding anniversary on Oct. 21
wlth an open re.:eptlon from 1 to 3
p.m. a t their home on Union Ave.,
Pomeroy.

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Monday lhru Friday
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Saturday 9 AM to S PM

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Marri~ on Oct. 24, 1959, Mr. and
Mrs. MiUer have a son. I;liU ,
Pomeroy , two daughters, Tammy
of Pomeroy. and Penny Riggs,
Columbus , and two grandchildren.
They request that gifts be omitted.

Blue Ink stick
ball point pens .

GROUP TENNIS LESSONS
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DR. AAROM BOONSUE,M.D.
PHONE 675-1675
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVE.

W. Davis

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Mt. and Mrs. Martin Wesley Davis

r-------------1

AT THEGALLIPOLIS 'RACQUET CLUB
MEN'S DOUBLES LEAGUE
MONDAY NIGHT

MONbAYS ·&amp; THURSDAYS
6:30 TO 8:30 P.M.

best man and Mike Triplett, brother ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;~
of the bride, and Joe Garnes were 1
the ushers. ·The male attendants
wore blue tuxedoes.
The bride's mother wore a 'pink
floor-length gown. The groom's
mother was In a beige and blue floral
floor length gown with a sheer
cover-up and both mothers had
carnation corsages.
A reception honoring the couple
was held In the church social room.
Blue, pink and white steamers and
bells were used In the decorations.
The tiered cake was decorated with
pastel flowers and topped with the
traditional miniature bride and
groom ,
. WIII/I
Carol Andetson, sister of the
Wh/11
SUIIPIIII
groom, registered the guests, and
Lilt
Tracy Eblln, IX}usin of the blide
Ntst ol Sawi
gaveouttherlcepackets.~rvlngat

of Martin

Page

POMEROY The Dexter
The bride carried a whlte hand- Dexter: Ronald Taylor, uncle ofthe Cheshire.
:..
Ch\lrch Of Christ was the setting for kerchieftrlmmedlngoldaglftfrom bride, Fostoria; John Moore, DarThe reception table featured-a
the June wedding or Carla Raynell her grandmother, Bertha Rife, and win and Raljan Sinclair of Shade.
three-tiered fountain cake wt1l
Rite, daughter of WUUam B. and a white Bible whlch had. been
Diane Milliron· registered the mitllature replicas of the wedd!QI
Ruby Rife, Route 1, Middleport, and carried by the groom's mother on guests.
party on stairways ~adln~ to s~
Martin Wesley Davis, son of Mrs. her wedding day. For sOmething
The mother of the bride wore a cakes. Love l:llrds and ~
Francis Davis, Middleport, and the borrowed, she wore a gold heart pink dress with lace trim . The surroundedeachcakeandthetie.W
!ale Harold G. Davis.
necklace belonging to the late Nina groom's mother was in a pale blu e cake was topped with a f1llnia~
Candelabra and baskets of roses, Macumber and entrusted to the ensemble and both mothers wore bride and groom.
-..
daisies, and c~Uons tn pastel bride by Vicky Macumber.
white rosebl.td corsages.
The bride, a graduate of Meliil]
colors decorated the altar for the
Becky Rife, sister of the bride ,
A candleUght reception was held High School, is employed at ka~l
afternoon ceremony performed by
was maid of honor. She wore a floor In the church social room hosted by Beauty Salon, Middleport.
• ..
Pastor Charles Russell. Commun· length gown of pastel blue In dotted Bonnie Rife, Eva MUiiron, MiddleThe groom, a Meigs graduat(l:
ion was a part ·of the wedding swiss and a head wreath of blue · port, and Brenda Taylor, Fostoria, worksatTomRueMotorsandalsq!J
ceremony which followed pre- carnations, datsles and baby' s all aunts of the bride; Mary Nelson, a self-employed mechanic.
••
nupti,U music by Cindy Wheeler, breath with ribbon streamers. and Dexter; Eleanor Hoover, M1 dieThey reside at 550 Russell St~~
plants!, and John Moore, vocalist.
carried a long stemmed red rose.
port; and Vicky Macum r.
Middleport. .
.: i
· Escorted to the altar by her
Best man was Steve Lane,
~"
father, the bride wore a formal gown Middleport.
:~
oflace over iatfeta fashioned with a
Tammy Milliron, a cousin of the 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
·•
standup neckline and long sleeves, bride, was bridesmaid and wore I
· and a yoke of illusion with ruffle pinkdottedswlsswithaheadwreath
accent, all trimmed with venice lace of pink flowers and streamers, and
and daisies.
also carried a rose.
The teired skirt flowed Into a
J esslca and Shannon Vv'heeler of
chapel train. The bride wore sprigs Dexter were the flower girls and
of baby's breath in her hair along they wore gowns of slmlliar design
with her wedding cap from which in pale yellow and green and carried
flowed a veil of llluson. She carried a
baskets of rose petals.
bouquet of red roses, carnations, ·
Jason Neigler of Bradbury was
tipped In blue, daisies, IJIJes of the ring bearer; and jheusherswereJoe
valley, and baby's breath.
Davis, Middleport; WaidNicholson,

Public RelatiOOJ at Pleasant Valley
Haspltal In Point Pleuant. In
addition to his duties at the holpltal,
he bas served on the .. Public
Relations Committee and the Legislative Task Force Committee Of the
West Vlrglrtla Hospital Association.
He Is currently on the board at the
West Virginia Hospital Personnel ·
Directors Association and Is a
former secretary at tllat organlza·
lion. He ts alsO President at the local
chapter of, ~ American Society Of
Personnel Admlnlstratlon (ASP~).
Nationally, hetsa memberott.he
American Hospital Association, the
American Society of Hospital Marketing and Public Relations where
he Is a Region m CouncU member,
and the Society of Professional
JournaUsts, Sigma Delta Chi.

EVENING OFFICE HOURS

...

Mr. and Mrs. Danny Morris

SIGN .UP NOW
LADIES! DOUBLES LEAGUE
TUESDAY MORNING '
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gollipoli,, Ohi-Point PIRasant, W . Va.

October 14, 1984

Frederick,
Rammwed
Sept. 8

PENTAX .

An'niversary
celebration
set Oct. 21

YOUNGSTOWN - The cha~cel
in St. John's Episcopal Church was
the setting for the Sept. 8 marriage
of Robin D. Frederick, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Frederick
and Brtan N. Ramm, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Ra!nm. The Rev.
WUilam Brewster olllclated the
double-ring ceremony.
· .
The bride, escol'(ed by her father
and given ln marriage by both
parents, wore a gown of white silk
chlfton with a molded bodice
teaturlng princess sleeves and an
open neckline dramatically v-ed to
the walstllne iJi the back and
acc.'e!lted with satin ribbing and a
satin rosette. The sottly gathered
skirt of silk chiffon swept to a
cathedrill train and seed pearls
edged her cathedral veil of French
sDk Uluslon which was delicately
gathered to a wreatll or" organza

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs
Walter Morris will be !Ionored with
an open reception In obServance of
their silver wedding annlversa,y on
Sunday, Oct. 21, from 2 to 4 p.m. at
tiJeir home, Blake HUl Road,
Pomeroy.
Hosting the observance wiU be
their children, Danny and Angle
Morris, and Carol, Jim and Jimmy
Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Morris
were married on Oct. 23, 1009 by
Ernest 'Ibomas. Friends and relatives are conllally Invited to caD
durtng the open house hours.

Gallia County
Bookmobile
route named

flowers.

GALLIA ACADEMY HOMECOMING - 'J'he Queen and her court
were chosen and crowned before-the Gallia Academy - Ripley game
Friday. Queen is Carol Baney, center, daughter of 1\lr. and Mrs. Mike
·Vanco. She was sponsored by FHA. Princesses are, left, Kelly Graham,
daughter of 1\lr. and Mrs. Hugh Graham, sponsored by National Honor
Society, and Renee Saunders, daughter of 1\lr. and Mrs. Lowen
Saunders, sponsored by Varsity G. Miss Bailey is also the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Vanco, Gallipolis, and Mrs. and
Mrs. Jack Randolph and Mrs. and Mrs. Butch BaUey, Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va.
.

EASTERN HOMEOOMING ROYALTY- During
haltlme ceremoniEs at the Eastem-Hannan Trace
football contest Friday evening, JenHer Grover was
crowned as the 19M Eastern Homecoming queen by
1983 queen Sheila Koenig. Pictured is the queen and
ber court; front from left, Angle Chapman, escort Jeff
Homer, 1983 queen Sheila Koenig, .escort . Rick

row
Gaddis, Steve Sarns, Queen Jenaller
Grover, escort Jimmy Schaekel, Tonya Fonney, and
Mark Sluivers. Back row, Ruth Nutter, Jeff Caldwell,
Krlstl Hawk, Greg Leachman, Veronica Provo, Gene
Jacobs.

Halloween·movie_~==r=-,.,.......__,.~~sponsarea jointly by the theater

Talking book
program is 50

GALLIPOLIS- Movie with a
)VIonster has .been set for Oct. '1:/ .
'at the Sprtng Valley Cinema,

r-;=========::::::;;;;1

NEW YORK (AP) - October
marks the 50th anniversary of the
Talking Book program, which I
reaches 635,00l blind and physically
handicapped children and adults
throughout the United States.
The program is financed by
Congress and administered by the
Library of Congress through 170
regional libraries and specified .
state agencies.
There are 38,000 titles currently
available .

SPECIAl
SAlE

and the Ga)llpolls Junior
Women's Club. "Annie" will be
shown at 9 a.m., and there will
be a costume contest for ages 4 ·
through 12 in categories. Admls·
sion is a $2 dona tlon to benefit tbe
Guiding Hand School Christmas
Project.

Pentax Cameras and Accessories.

TAWNEY STUDIOS
424 Second, Gallipolis

·-··Commltanent

S1an1ev StHmH will
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of your dirtiest carJJM ..
tf you a111 not comptetely

These people go ·
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Stllnley Steemer'a special cleaning rroCIIss
revltelfzes and gives your old carpe new life.
Nobody worka harder to gat your
carpet clean. .
.

RAClN'E, Wis . lAP)- There are

SOUTHERN HOMECOMING QUEEN - Karen Hemsley became
the 1984 Southern lligh School Homecoming Queen during halftime
ceremonies Friday in Racine. Hemsley, escorted by Chad HAlberts, a ·
member of the Tornado footbaU team, was crowned by the 1983 queen,
Anne Adams.

See our complete I inc of

30 persons who daUy go Into an area
where the ratio of insects to humans
is 500,000 to one.
A ·research team of entomologists, biologists and technicians at
the Raid Entomology Center here
shares its daily work evironment
with 15 million insects.
There are between 30,000 and
40,000 houseflies of about !he same
age available for testing each day,
'says Dr. Roger Grothaus, manager
of the center. He says the center
houses some 35 different species of
bugs, including mosquit oes, ants,
fleas , beetles, roaches and files.

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

Pomero·
. 614-992-2181
.

E. Main St.

Dear Meg

They want ceremony
By Meg Whitcomb
DEAR MEG -John a nd I dated
for two years, then got en.gaged.
Two mont hs before the wedding we
broke up. Ten months la ter we
decided t&lt;&gt; get back together .
Instead of going throu gh the
engagement. etc., we got married
quietly one weekend with only our
Immediate famlly present. He has a
·small fa mily, buU'm the only girl in
· a large family a nd the first to get
.married .
Now I'd like a church wedding
with a ll our friends a nd family,
complete with pictures and recep·
tion. Even though the state consld·
·ers us married,· the church does not.
Is this too tacky? I'd like Mom a nd

Dad to be proud of this special day
and me , too. If you had a daughter,
how would you feel? P .S. John says
it's OK with him either way. WANTS TO WEAR WHITE, WILMINGTON, DEL.
DEAR WANTS- Nothing done
out of consideration for others - in
this case, your family - a nd in
celebration of love a nd commit ·
mentis tackY. In this day and age, if
virginity were the prerequisite for
wearing white, the bridal-gown
trade would be out of business.
I have daughters and if they
choose to repeat their secular vows
"before God and this company," I'll
be all for it, as long as the
checkbook holds out!

FOR SALE
MOBILE HOME
&amp; REAL ESTATE
19 78 MOBILE HOME

. 14'x70'
3 BR on good 82'x165' corner lot
Village of Potter.

A Message From The Bibl£ .. :
GOSPEL OBEDIENCE
William B. Kughn
The gospel consists of/acts to be believed, promifea to be received,
and commands to be obeyed. "Facts" deal with reality and truth.
''Promises" offer the assurance that is founded on an agreement or
covenant wherein the stipulations we must meet are made known and
on which the promises rest. "Commands" are the exercising of
authority, havin~; _the power to control in religious precepts. The gospel
is real and true vacts) ; it is the divine arrangement that reveals the
conditions you must meet in order to have the assurance of things
hoped for (promises); and it is the power of God to control you by the·
prmc1ples of righteousness !commands) established in the truth. Since
the gospel contains the power of God to save and the gospel is made up
of facts , promises, and commands, you cannot ignore any one of the
three!
A Good Example Of Obedlenee
Jesus, our example and whom we must follow (1 Pet. 2:21), has
sought to impress upon our minds, both in word (teaching) and deeds
(obedience), the necessity of obeying the commands:
1. His "meat" was to do the will of God (Jno. 4:84). "Meat" has
reference to food which refreshes and supplies strength. To JesiJll, the
doing of the will of God was the· spiritual food that refreshed and
supplied Him with strength: Even though He may have been tired and
hungry, He was able to overcome it because of IDs desire to save a soul
and to accomplish the task He was sent to do.
2. Christ came from heaven to do the will of God, "Far I come down
from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of /aim tl&amp;at lent me"
(J no. 6:38).
3. Christ finished the work assigned Him, "I /&amp;ave gltmfied thee on
earth: I have finished the work whi&lt;:l&amp; thou gavest me to do" (Jno.
17:4).
4. Christ's life was one of obedience, "Th"'!Vh he wen a Sun, 71et
warned he obedience by the things whi&lt;:h he 111l/fend" (Heb. 5:8); "And

For Free Bibl£ Correspondence Course, Write •..

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
SuiKhl)' [ .....:

Blblt Stltd:r t :JO

Wor*'p 6:11

Wol'llllp IG:llt

For More Information Call .

446-0664- Ext. 23
Between 9:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.
•

COCA·
COLA
2 Liter

'

..........
o.lr•Wmt

··Me~~~~~~,,...

UiJh&amp;

POMEROY- The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center has the
following activities scheduled for
the week of Oct. 15-19:
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11: 45 a.m.; Square Dance,1-3 p.m.;
Paint Class, 1:15-3: 30 p.m.; Lots
Pauley will be given step by step
lnstnJctlon lor a finished painting,
cost $4.
Tuesday- Hugh McPiuill, Phar·
macist with Nelson's Drugs In
Pomeroy, will speak at 11 a.m. with
a question and answer period
following; Chorus Practice, 1-2
p.m.; Exercise Class, 3:15-3: 45
p.m.; Councll Meeting, 1 p.m.
Wednesday - Social Security
Representative, 10 a.m.; Black
Lung Representative, 10 a .m .·
noon; Bingo, 11 a.m .; Bowllng, 1:30
p.m.
Tlnrrsday ~ Ceramics, 10 a.m .-2
p.m.; music by tbe Athens Kitchen
Swingers under the direction of
Fred Gaskins at 11 a .m .; Exercise
Class, 3:15-3: 4() p.m.
Friday- Blood Pressure Clinic,
9:30-11:45 a.m.; Bingo, 1·2 p.m.;
Round and square dance from
7:30-10 p.m., admission wW be $150
with the music by the Happy Hollow
Boys from the Athens area with
John Russell, caller. The publlc is

invited to attend the dance.
Tuesday, Oct. 16, at 1 p.m., the
Meigs County Councll on Aging wlll
hold the annual e lection of officers
for 1985; the public ls Invited to
attend this meeting as well as the
regular monthly meetings held on
the third Tuesday of each month at
1p.m .
The Senior Nutrition Program'
menu for the week ls:
Monday - Uver and onions
parslied potatoes , Harvard
cake.
•
.Tuesday Salisbury steak,
mashed potatoes, spinach, biscuits,
fruit salad.
Wednesday - Navy beans with
ham, lettuce salad. strawberry
gelatin with fruit cockta il, corn.
bread, coolde .
Thursday- Fish sandwich, oven
browned potatoes , tossed salad,
peach cobbler .
Friday - Chicken a nd noodles,
creamed peas, cole salw. a pricots.
A choice of milk , coffee or tea is
available with meals.

,

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SALE ENDS NOVEMBER 9
,--_:__ _..:1::..5..:s.:!.:q....!.y~d. Mr-i; . :.n; . :.im;. :u; . :,m_ _ ___,

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wavs and living rooms .

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the money. Tested in ba1hs,
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hall-

REG. 123.75 sq. yd.
SALE

SALE

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$}8 88

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A~ulely the

REG . $22.50 sq. yd.

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sq. yd .

lneludes pad &amp; installation

Includes pa d &amp; in•t allation

28 DIFFERENT QUALITIES

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Kimberton
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Reg. 121.35
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SAlE '17.88
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SALE 118.88

ROYAL TREASURE
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FROM

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.

ALL PRICES INCLUDE A SOLID FOAM PAD
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TO

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matting under wear. A
larce array of color
choice.

SJ688INSTALLED
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Ce1tainly a Change oF Pace Menu .....
OPEN 11 A.M. 'TIL 8 P.M. MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
11 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M. FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

We Welcome Orders To Go - -Ph. 446-802 8

.

Leeg Quality Ca,pet

Lees' Best Seller

4 111 Mni11 .'it.

NoWc Open

FEATURING

24 colo rs in a soil hiding,

4'
JEWELERS

Walter and N ancy Morris

Ftll CBipet Sale

beets:

The Saturday parade ls at10a.m.
and the homecoming game against
the Kent State University Golden
flashes begins at 1: 30 p.m., after
skydivers deliver the game bali.
There will beaHomecomingRun,
book sale and arts and craft sale
throughout the day. At night, Dizzy
GDiesple will be in concert at
MemorUiJ Auditorium, 8 p.m.
For tlcli'et lnfonnation, contact
the information desk at Baker
Center or the Konneker Alumni
Center on University Terrace.

97-C S3tln

WMINIIIIQ:
·· AltSIIIQ

7i81p..... ·.

Meigs County Senior Citizens
plan weekly activicy schedule

Adams.

BalnlloRoad • P. O.Bo•JN
Gallipolis, Olllo 45631
S.ndar MoNI..:

best man and groomsmen were · where the groom will enter the
Robert L. Frederick 11, brother of University of Toledo Law SchooL
the bride, Eric Stephenson of He, a graduate of Boardman High
Lorain, Thomas Gus tlnella of School , earned a B.A. de~ in
Boardman, Daniel Slmllle Jr. of pollll cal science at Mlaml UniverCanton a nd Nicholas Minnie of sity , Oxford.
Uberty.
The bride, a graduate of Canfield
The groom's cou sin s, Chris- High School, holds a B.A. degree in
topher and Mary Ellzabeth Ramm bu s iness a dministration from
of Hudson registered guests at an Mount Union College, Alliance.
evening reception at the Salem Golf
Attending the wedding from
Club.
Ga ll ipolls were Mrs . Claire G.
Hand-placed ivy leaves sur- Hamilton, grandmother of the
rounded the tiered wedding cake bride, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam
which was topped with white roses Hamilton, uncle and aunt of the
and Engllsh Ivy.
bride, and Sammy Hamilton. couThe couple wll Uve ln Toledo sin of the bride. The bride' s mother
is the former Nancy Ha milton of
Gallipoll~.

ATifENS- The Spirit of Athens
will take off and draw over 8,000
alumni to Ohio University for
homecmllngnextweekend ,accordlng to alumni director Barry

Sr&amp;ITEX

GALLIPOLIS - The Bossard
Library announces Its schedule for
the week of Oct. 15 to 20.
Monday - Rodney Village,
3:304: 45 p.m. : Gallla Metro Estates, 4: J0.5: 15 p.m .; Kerr, 5: J0.6
p.m.; Bidwell, 6: 1(}.6: 30 p.m.;
Harrisburg, 6: 40-7 p.m .; Rio
Grande Estates, 7: 10-ll: 10 p.m .
Tu~ay - Africa Road , 2: 152:35 p.m.; Roush Lane, 2:45-3:15
p.m.; Cheshire, 3: 3Q.4 p.m. ; Addaville Elementary, 4:15-4:45 p.m.;
Kanauta 5th Ave., 5-5:30 p.m .
Thursday- Cora, 3:15-3:30 p.m. ;
Raccoon Tr. Ct., 3:40-4 p.m .;
Patriot, 4:15-4:45 p.m .; Cadmus,
5-5:20 p.m.; Gallla, .5: J0.6 p.m .;
Centerplnt, 6:15-6:30 p.m.; Centerville, 6: 40-7: 10 p.m.
Friday - Individual Stops for
Senior Citizens.
Saturday - Northup, 1().10: 30
a .m.; Green Terrace, 10: 40-11
a.m.; Rodney, 11:15-11:45 a.m.;
Ewington, 1-1:30 p.m.; Vinton,
1:35-2 p.m.; Morgan Center, 2:15-3
p.m.

. Mrs. Robin Frederick Ramm

Homecoming
activity set

being found in fashion as a man, he humbled h.imaelf, and became
obedient unto death, even the death of. tile crou" (Phil. 2:8); and this
was a commandment He was to obey, ''No man taketl&amp; it/rom me, but I
lay it down of my•elf, I /&amp;ave j!ower to tcke it again, Thia c07111114114ment
/&amp;ave I received of my Father" (Jno. 10:18).

By Christ keeping the commandments of God, the Father, he abode
in H.is love IJno. 15:10) . It was throu~h His obedience to the commands
of the Father He made known Gods love; finished His worki offered
the sacrifice for sin; laid down the principles of righteousness; and
established His church. Can you hear the Lord reuoning, "! do not
have to obey the commands of God, becatllll! He Ia able .t o !lAve me
without iny obeying." Just as Christ could not have linlahed the work
of the Father nor have glorified Him Mthout obeying the commands of
God, neither can you! You must believe the.fuctiOfthe goeoel and obev
the comma11ds if you desire to be recipients of Ita promile1!

She held a cascade of gardenias,
stephanotis, lily of the valley and
English Ivy.
Barbara L. Czuba was honor
attendant ln an emerald green
gown of Iridescent taffeta fashioned
with a v-neckline, full pouffed
sleeves and a I gathered skirt
accented at the natural waistline
with a cummerbund. She carried a
hand-tted ann bouquet of white
roses, stephanotis, illy of the valley
and sword fern tied with narrow
satin streamers.
Bridesmaids Carl J . Ramm,
sister of the groom, Rosemarie
Ackennan of Salem, Lori Ann
· Harntlton of Gallipolis, a cousin of
the bride, Loreen GaUo of South
Euclid and Tammy J . Gregory of
Minerva also wore Iridescent
gowns of emerald green and caried
slmllar ann bouquets.
Thoams Schneider of Dayton was

The. Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 8-7

HOURS:

SECOND at GRAPE ST.
GALLIPOLIS

Mon . &amp; Fri. Eve.

446-0332

Until 8 :00

9-6 Daily

'

434 COLORS

�Page

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

B-8-The SundQy Times-Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

Being in the know.
By BOB HOEFUOH
'11mes-Sentlnel SWf

Ia te start :on its Halloween party for
youngsters ofthe community - but
thanks to Bob _Gilmore, village
councll m ember , and Pollee Chief
J .J. Cremeans, things are Is going
great gunS.
A feather was placed In the cap of
the party F riday when It was
vertlfied tha t the Meigs High Band
will be taking part and wm lead the
parade from the uptown Mill Street
parking lot to Hartinger Park.
Those taking part a re 'to assem·
bly at 5: 30 p .m . on Oct. 30 and oh the
following evening, trick or treat
night will be held In tile town.
By the way, Bob and J .J. could
probably use a few good volunteers
for the party. They plan games,
refreshments and costume judging
- pretty big undertaking for just
two people. So if you can help, give
'em a call.

Drew Webster .t"os;r ~ .
Legion , h as
started a news let·
ter which wiD
&lt;Jnfonn members
of what's cooking
not only with· the
post but the
aUXIllary.
. I felt Informed to learn through
'the letter that Meigs County has a
,total of 2850 veterans with 2,340 of
·them serving during a war time
~period. F igures show that 130
served In the VIetnam era and 440 in
the Korea n Conflict. The largest
group, of course, is !rom the World
War IT period, 1220 In all, and there
are 40 veterans In the county from
1he first World War.
Due to the high cost of!ood and a
little confusion , members of the
Li!tart Falls PrO have abandoned
all plans for a true jitney supper "that means five ~ents a serving for Oct. 20.
The PrO will instead hold a
public ham and turkey dinner
beginning at 5: 30 p.m. on Oct. 20.
Admission is $4 for adults and $2 for
children 12 and under. There will be
door prizes and funds ra ised will be
used for projec ts to help the kids in
school.

Sport

Gallia Senior Citizens plan activities-----GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of Oct. 15-19 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at ~
J ackson Pike are a s follows:
Monday, Oct. 15 - Chorus, 1·3
p.m .
Tuesday, Oct. 16 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10: 30 a.m. ; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m .

Meigs Bookmobile
P OI'iiEROY - Bookmobile ser·
vice In Meigs County Is brought to
you by the Meigs County Public
Library under contract with the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
Bookmobile service for Monday,
Oct. 15 - Burlingham (County
Mobile Home Park), 3: 35-4: 05

The Senior Nutrition Program . sherbet, rolls.
Thursday - Covered dish dinner,
will serve the following menus:
Monday - Beef patty with gravy, meat .and beverages furnished,
corn, greens, chocolate pudding, Galllpolls Center.
Friday - Liver, onto~ and
bread.
rice, beets, jello with
gravy,
Tuesday - Salmon patty and
bread.
topptng,
cheese sauce, cauliflower, peas,
Choice
of
beverage
served with
fruit cockt,aU, bread.
each
meal.
Meals
subject
to change
Wednesday Roast beef,
without
notice.
mashed potatoes, brussel sprouts,

Wednesday, Oct. 17 - VInton
Bible Study, 1 p.m .; C,..rd Gam~.
1-3 p .m .
Thursday, Oct. 18- Bible Study,
11 a ..m.-noon; Annual Meeting,
noon poilu~.
Friday, Oct. 19 - Art Class, 1·3
p.m .; Craft Mini-course, 1-3 p.m.;
Evening Activities, 6-10 p.m.

rou~e

~

- 1-•

DETROIT (AP) . - Alan Trammell drove 1n all the Detroit runs
with two homers and Ja~ Morris
pitched a five-hitter to wlJ\ hls ·
second game a8 the Tigers defeated
San Diego 4-2 Saturday to .move
wttlitn one victory of their {ourth
World Series championship.
'The victory gave the American
Leligue champion Tlgets a 3-1lead
In the best-of-seven Series. The
Padres must overcome a massive
obstacle If they are to win their first
World Sertes ever. Only five teams
have come back from a 3-1 deficit to
win a Sertes.
BothofTrammell's homers came
after Lou Whitaker had reach!!d
base, on an error In the first Iilntng
and on a single and an error In the
third. The two accounted for five of
Detroit's seven hits. Trammell had
a single in addition to 11\e two
homers, and Whitaker singled and
doubled.
Morrts,artght-handerandtheace
of'Detrolt'sstaff, struck out four and
did not give up a walk. After giving
up a second-Inning h&lt;lme run to
Terry Kennedy he shut out san
Diego until Steve Garvey doubled

p.m.; Harrt5onvllle (Church) , 4:35-

Peddler's Pantry
340 second /{venue.

FOR SALE

4~631

Phone 614 446·17SS

r----- ---------------------1

Fi''' Annire''''Y
. Ssle ·
20o/o Off Storewide

P lans are progressing for an Oct.
20 diriner to honor fanner Rutland
H~h School football coach J im
Vennarl a nd Charles Barrett has
called a m eeting of all Rutland
firemen a nd the auxlliaty unit for
7:30p.m. Monday at the fire sta tion
to make fin al plans as sponsors .
Between 9:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.
Meantime, Barrett announces
that tickets for the banquet may be
purchased a t the G&amp;J and New
~:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
York 'ctothing House in Pomeroy; 1-------------,-------------'the Village Pha rmacy in Middleport and at the Rutland Department Store.
The fire department ani! auxiliary would appreciate it, if you
would pick up you tickets early so .
th ey ca n mak e prop e r
preparations.

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel

4 Dr., AM/FM radio, in good condition.
PH. 446-0662, Ext. 23

Speaking of school, the Southern
Local Kindergarten held a maga·
zlne drive last April and raised
some $2,000 which was. used to
'purchase new carpeting. Te acher
Jean Alkire asks that If there is
anyone who has not yet started to
receive magazines from the pro·
gram to contact her at ~9-2664 .

Stop bg fot ,;f~eshments 1nd
R•gi1t, fot ' F,, Qlftl

•

Middleport m ay have gotten a

3-1 series edge

oft the left·tleld wall with one out In
the ninth, moiled· to third on a
groundout and SCOred on a wild
pitch. Kennedy then Died out to end
thengame.
·
'The P~. meanwhile, hurt for
starting pltmers. Ellie Show lasted
only 2 2·3lnnlngs, giving up both of
Trammell's homers.
San Diego's starters now have
worked a total of 10 Innings In these
· ·four games, giving up 13 earned
runs for a collective earned run
average of 11.70. Detroit won Game
One 3-2, lost Game Two 5-3 and won
Frtday night, 5-2.
ForTrammell, thethreehltsgave
hlm nine In 16Sertes at,bats- a,.561
average - and the twin two-run
nomers gave him six runs batted In
for the Series.
After his second straight shaky
start, Morris settled down. After
givlngupadoubletoKurtBevacqua
after Kennedy's homer, Morris
retlned four In a row before Tony
Gwynn singled with two out In the
third. Gwynn was erased in an
Inning-ending forceout, and Morris
retlned 13 more before pinch-hitter
Tim Flannery led off the eighth with
a single to center.

Morris Wl)rked nine Innings to win
Game One In tbe first complete
game for a Spar)ly Anderson•
managed team In postseason., He
gave up two runs. both in the first
Inning, and allowed five hits In thl\1
game.
, The Tigers are appearing in their
ninth World Series. This Is the
Padres' first. The last Detroit World
Series appearance came In 1968,
when the Tigers beat St. Louts In
sev~- rallying from a 3-1 deficit lri
games to do lt. Detroit also won the
Sertes In 1935 and '45, both times
against the Chicago Cubs.
the Tigers won 35 of their ftrst 40
games en route to a clul&gt;'l'ecord 104
victories this season and the AL
East title. They defeated the Kansas
City Royals In three straight to win
the pennant, while the National
League West-champion Padres
went to five games before beating
the Chicago Cubs In the NL playoffs.
After splitting the first two games
of the Series In San Diego, the Tigers
now have won two In a row a I home
before crowds of 51,970 and 52,130 at
Tiger Stadium, on whose historic
site baseball has been played since
1900.

.m ,
lfl /

Buckeyes dumP lllini
Trudeau threw 3 yards to wide receiver Randy
Grant,10 yards to split end David Wiliams, the nation's
leading receiver, and Byards to tight end Cap Bose for
touchdowns.
Chris White, son of the Illinois coach, also kicked a
26-yard field goal in the first quarter.
· Quarterback Mike Tomczak led Ohio State to three
touchdowns In the tast 4:13 of the opening half. He
pitched 16 yards to split end Crts Carter in between
BELTS TWO HOMERS Alan Tranunell over the San Diego Pftdres. With the victory, Deb'oll
scoring
runs of 16 and 4 yards by Byars, the nation's
slanuned two home runs Saturday afternoon in takes a 3-l lead In the best of seven game series. ( AP
1973.
.
leading rusher and all-purposerunnercomlnglntothe .
leading the Detroit T!Kers toal-2\\'!&gt;rldSerles victory Laserpholo).
Byars now has 464 yards .rushing In his last two
contest.
·
games aod 1,076 for the season.
Byars' third touchdown, a 4-yard run, put Ohio State
Byars, whohasscored16touchdownstn0hloState's
'
ahead tor th3e firSt time 2S-24early In the third quarter.
5-1 season, matched another school mark with his 30
After White's 46-yard field goal, Byars romped 67 '
points. Pete Johpson first scored that total against
yards for a 35-27 OlhiO State lead.
.
North Carolina In 1975.
•
Trudeau tted It 35-35 for the Dllnl, throwing9yardsto
'The victory mOved Ohio State Into a share of the Big
runntngback-RayWilsonandrunntngforthetwoextra
Ten lead at 3-1 With' Michigan and Iowa. Illinois fell to
points With 1:091eft In the third quarer.
. 4-3 over-all and 3-2tn the conference.
Rich Spangler bootetl a 46-yard field goat for Ohio
IDtnols stunned an Ohio Stadium seilflutot!ll,937wlth
Notre Dame had the ball a t the Air lrlsh a 7-6lead.
SOUTH BEND, Ind . (AP) State and a 38-35lead with 10:21 remaining. White tied
three touchdown passes by quarterback Jack Trudeau.
Air Force, with quarterback Bart
Force 49-yard tine needing one yard
Halfback
Jody
Simmons
rushed
24
It with his third field from 16 yards with 3:18 to play,
In the first 16 minutes and built a 24.{1 lead.
tor
a
first
down
and
failed
to
make
it
Weiss
operating. Its wish hone of·
' setting the stage for the Buckeyes' winning ~yard times for 141 yards, scored one
· Two of the Illlnj scores were set upon an Interception
on two trtes resulting In a chorus of fense, came right back with a
touchdown and set up another
touchdown match.
of Tomczak and Byars' tumble, both at the Illinois
hoes.
76-yard drive lnllplays totegaln the
Saturday to lead Air Force to a 21·7
Simmons
put
theAirf
orceahead
lead on Smith's 1-yard run. Slm·
21-yard line.
victory over Notre Dame.
with
a
5-yard
touchdown
run
In
the
mons ga ined 43 yards In the drive .
Strnmons scoredooa 5-yardrunin
first
quarter,
but
Carlos
Mateos'
The second half was scoreless
lhe first quarter and then went 11
kick
was
wide.
until
the Falcons put on a clock·
yards to set up a 1-yard touchdOwn
Early
in
the
second
quarter
.
Notre
killing
drive in the fourth quarter
run by J olumy Smith in the second
final pertod.
for
most
touchdowns
held
by
13
Dame
put
on
a
53-yard
touchdown
when
they
drove 51yardslnl4plays
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Appalachian State dropped to 2·5 quarter to put the Falcons ahead to
other
Soutlx'rn
Conference
players.
for acllnchingtouchdownonWelss'
drive capped by Scott Grooms '
Tailback Robert Surratt scored a
overall and 1·3 in the conference. stay When they passed for two points
5-yard run. The Falcons knocked off
2-yard s coring pa ss to Milt J ackson
Southern Conference record five
and
a
14-7
lead
.
The Mountaineers' lone touchdown
'The Temple Hills, Md.. senior
6:31 off the clock.
and John Carney' s kick gave the
The triumph was the thind
touchdowns Saturday as Marshall
came
In the second period when
scored on passes of 9, 10, 57 and 13
crushed Appalachian State 35-7 in a
straight
for
the
Falcons,
boosting
·
quarterback Randy Joyce capped a
yards. He finished the afternoon
college football game.
72-yard
drive WI than B-yard scortng their record to 5·2 as Notre Dame
with
eight
catches
for
106
yards
and
slumped to 3-3 with the heavy end of
Surratt's first touchdowncameon
pass to Steve Wilkes.
six
carries
for25yards.
an 18-yard run. His other tour were
Fodor, whose accounted for 148 the Irish schedule coming up.
Marshall, 4-2 overall and 1·11n the
It was also the third straight Air
on passes from quarterback Carl
yards through the air, set a school
conference,
led
21·7
at
the
half.
The
Force victory over Notre Dame in
Fodor, who had 13 completions and
.
Thundering Herd added two more single-season record for most pass the last three years after the Irish
Nallonal Foutba.U l.ealue
rttlcaRO
4 2 0 .fGI Ul
one Interception In 22 attempts.
Anlertrsrl CmleruK-T
1&lt;3 .
attempts
on
his
nlnthpassoftheday.
Say
3
3
0
Tampa
"" t:IJ
Minne!IOta
- 2 4 0
Surratt's scoring performance touchdowns In the third quarter and Saturday's performance left hlm had won the first 11 games in the
.lJJ "' 164
then
played
reserves
for
most
of
the
Dclrolt
1 5 0 .167 Lll
"
'
L
T
t'ct.
PF
P.\
eclipsed by one a conference mark
6 0 0 1.{00 l!l; K3
with a season total cif 240passes and series.
Green Bay
1 5 0 .161 !!
Miami
4 2 0 .f£1 121 131
Early In the fourth quarter
w...
Nl'W EnJdand
136completions, goodfor1,785yards
4 2 0 .f£T 149 Lll
San F rancl'iffi 6 D 0 1.([{) 163 100
N.Y . JI:'IS
following
a
series
of
turnovers.
2 4 0 .:m 127 174
Atlanta
J 3 0 .500 151 1.14
lndl anapol.l~
and 18 touchdowns.
o6ocm t mt~
L.A Rams
J 3 o .sm l.l2 m
Jlu!!alo
C&lt;nlnl .
COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) -Tailback Keith Byars'
fifth touchd~ of the game, a iyard sweep with 36
seconds left Saturday night, gave eighth-ranked Ohio
State a 45-38 victory over Illinois, a Big Ten game In
which the Buckeyes trailed by 24 points.
Byars, scoring at least two touchdowns In his 12th
stralghi game, broke two-time Heslman Trol?h)l
winner Archie Griffin's school recordwlth274rushing
yards. Grtffln had run.for 246 yards againSt Iowa In

The Big Bend Merchants Associ·
a lion appears to be proving itself
quite a pr omotional organization.
Mem bers are coming up with some
clever ideas to encourage local
shopping. 11 merc hants can keep
those cash registers ringing, they
should find it easy to keep
smiling ....

The gestures were extremely
nice ones, but Mrs. Hlndy doesn't
know the names of individua ls
Involved. She asked that we extend
her heartfelt thanks - and so we do.

October 14, 1984

.

Byars sets rushing record

The Meigs Board of Elections located in the Masonic Temple
building in Pomeroy - Is ready to
start processing absentee votes for
the Nov . 6 election. Hours right now
are from 8: 30 to 4: 30 p.m., Monday
through F riday.

Mrs. Cass Hindy has a problem .
At the time of the death of he r son ,
Dan, two floral offerings arrived one from Middleport High School
and anotlier from the Middleport
High School Class of 1961.

Section

Morris allows Padres five hits

5:05 p.m.; New Lima Road (one

Gallipolis, Ohio

Tig~rs

Trammell's bat·gives

set

nille south of Fort Meigs), 5: 15-6
p.m.; Rutland (Depot St.), 6:40-8:10
p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 17 - Tuppers
Plains (Lodwick's), 7:25-7:55p.m. ;
Rlggscrest Addition, 8: 1(}.8: 40 p.m .

iimes .. ~entiaut

'

'
Simmons leads Falcons 21-7 ,.
.

Pediatric ostomies topic
pf area group Thursday

·triumph over Fighting Irish

'

GALLIPOLIS - The Galllpolls
Area Ostomy Group will have its
regular monthly meeting on Thurs·
day, Oct. 18, a t 7 p.m . in the French
500 Room at Holzer Medical Center .
A special program on "Ostomies
In the Pedlallic Age Group" will be
presented by Dr. Alice Grlcoski, a
fourth-year" surgical resident from
the University of Cincinnati who
will be at Holz e r thr o ugh
December.
Grtcoski was born in Pottsville ,
Pa. and received her medical
degree from Washington Univer·
slty Medical School In St. Louis,
Mo., and completed her internship
at the University of Cincinnati
Medical Center in Clnclnnati.
Following the meeting, there will
be a Halloween Party with refresh·
ments for members and their
guests.
All ostomates a nd their families
from Gallla, Meigs, Jackson , Vin ·
ton and Mason Counties are invited
to attend and participate in the
monthly m eetings of the Gallipolis
Area Ostomy Group. The meetings

re also open to the friends of
ostoma tes, as well as other Inter·
ested Individuals, inciudilig physi·
clans and nurses.
For a ny additional information,
contact Barbara McKiritey, R.N.,
at 446-5246 or Phyllis Brown, R.N.,
a t 446-5080.

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MORGANTOWN, W.Va .. (AP)WUlle Drewrey rei:U1ned a klckoff93
yards for a touchdown and tallback
Tonuny Gray scored on a 57-yard
pass In the fourth quarter to lead
wes, Vlrglnla toa21J.10vlctoryover
syracuse on Saturday.
.
Paul Woodside added two field
goals for West VIrginia, 5-1, and the
Mountaineer defense took over In
the second half and llmlted the
Orangemen, 3-3, to just thrEie points
on.a third-quarter field goal.
Syracuse starting quarterback
Todd Norley, who did not enter the
game until the second quarter, hlt
Scott Schwedes With a 16-yard
touchdown pass with 1: 34 rematnlni In the second quarter to give the
Orange a 7·31ead.
·
·
But Drewrey th~ took the
ensuing kickoff the distance, stiff-

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Georgia 18 Mlsslsslppll2
Nebraska ~ MissoUrl23

South Carolina 45 Pitt 21
West Virglnta~ Syracuse 10
sMU 24 Baylor 20
Alabama 6 Penn Sta~O
Rutgers 14 Anny 7
Michigan 31 Northwestern 0
Florida '-1 Tennessee 30
Maryland 44 N.C. State 21
Wake Forest 14 North Carolina 3

397 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

614-446-21 07
Setrl~t

Wlt6 Prldt
..

.

.

.

.

' ·~

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.

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arming a final defender 'a t the
Syracuse 40-yard Une and outrun·
ning hlm to the end zone.
Two plays later, linebacker Matt
Smith recovered a tumble by
Syracuse fullbllck Harold Gayden
at the Orangemen 24, and West
VIrginia added three more pcill)ts on
the final play or the half as Woodside
booted a 21·yard field goal for a 13-7
lead. Woodside also kicked a 53-yard .
·field goal In !lie first quarter. ·
' · Syracuse's' Don McAuJav hit a
34·yard field goal with 1: 55 remain·
lng In the third quarter to slice the.
lead to 13-10.
But after the teams traded.punts,
Gray took a pass from quarterback
Kevin . White, eluded linebacker
Rudy Reed and bolted across .the
field lor the cUnchtng touchdown
with 6: 16 remaining. ·

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.Ui7 106 1$
.167 T.l 114
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.K33 Jl}i 7S
.10.1 Ull Jill
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St. Lou is

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San F'ra11d'iCO 31. New Yock Giants 10
~. Oct.t4

Chlct!$!0 at Sl: . Louts

Cincinnati at N~· E ngland
\ndianapolls at Philadelphia
Hcustoo at Miam i
Lul A.niZ('If.'S fWn5 a t New Orit'i!llS
~· Yof-k G iants at A tlan ta
.~·

York JE&gt;ts at Cl {IV(&gt;Iand

San D!£oRO at K ansas City
Tampa Bay at Dc'l:rdt
Butfakl at Stank'
OaUas at Washln~on
Mlrtnf&gt;Sl)(a at ~ An ~I£'S RaldPrs
Pln swrlih at san Fran('\!i('()

Monday. Od. · ~

Gm:on Bay at Drnv&lt;'"r

Golphers stop Badgers, 17-14

·

Manclieliter 3, Defiance 0

Wt.lmlngton 38, Bluffton~
Bowling Green 34, W, Michigan 7
Kent St. 15, Ball St. 10
Case Western 45, Ohio Weslyn 15
Denison :r7, Kenyon 7
Ober~ 14, Allegheny~

3 .0
I 0
I 0

Hruston

Dallas

Michigan State 131ndlana 6
Texas 15 Oklahoma 15
Vlrg1nla Tech zr, Duke o
WUllam &amp; Mjuy 24, Boston U. 3
Kansas St. 24, Kansas 7
Texas·Arlington 17, Wlclilta St.15
Minnesota 17Wisconstn 14
Ashland 18, St. JOIIePh. Ind. 7

Findlay 311, Hanover 29

3
I
I

~C1ty
3
. ~11om
National Conft!rU~t"f'

.
Saturday's .c~llege results ••••
Marshall35 Awatachlan state 7
Kentu~:ky 17 Mississippi State 13
Central Mich. 35
3
Iowa 40 Purdue 3
Toledo 10 Mtam17

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SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

Marshall bombs Mountaineers' 35-7

-

MOVES FROM POCKET- Air Force qwuterback Bwt WeB! (4)
movbel out of the podlet oa 1111 option play while Notte Dame defensive
tadde Mike GriiiiD (IM) app11eB pr
•re during second quarier action
or 8alurda)''s 11-7 Air Force victory at South Bend, Ind. (AP
h erpboto) .

MADISON. Wis. l AP ) - Chip
Lohmlller kicked a26-ya rd field goal
with 6: 26 to play and qua rterback
Rickey Foggie ra n for 153 yards as
Minnesota · posted a 17-14 victory
over Wisconsin in Big Ten football
Saturday.
Foggie's second long touchdown
run, a 43-ya rd scamper with 5: 58 left
in the third quaet, tied the game at
14-14.
Wisconsin (3·3 overall and 1·3 In
the Big Ten) drove 90 yards on Its
next possession . But Minnesota (3-3,
. 2·2) stopped the Badgers on fourth
down, one-half Inch short of a first
down at the Gophers' 2-yard line.
After Minnesota punted, Wiscon·
sin 's Thad McFadden fumbled the
return a t his own 32-yard line .
Minnesota reco!.rered , and Loh·
miller booted hls game-)Vlnnereight
plays later.
The Badgers were unable to move

close enough to a ttempt a tying field
goal as tim e expired.
The loss was Wisconsin's first to
Minnesot a in Dave Mcaaln's seven
years as Badgers coach.
It ruined the best effort of the
season by Wisconsin quarterback
Mike Howa rd , who completed 21 of
29 passes for l !ll yards.
He fini shed the Badgers' first
scoring drive with a 1-yard touch·
down dive early In the second
quarter to give Wisconsin a 7.{1 lead.
Foggie sprinted. 35 yards for a
touchdown on an option keeper to
knot the game at 7-7 wtthll:44Iefttn
the half.
Howard setupWisconstn'ssecond
score with three completions for 28
yards. His fourth completion of the
drive came on Michael Jones'
sprawUng 6-yard touchdown catch
with 2: 31 remaining In the half to
give Wisconsin a 14-7- lead.

�,.

\
~roy

October 14, 1984

....

C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

KC defense shines in 32-0
•
loop Win
over. Southwestern

Marauders score .late, win
··7-3 thriller from ·Warriors
.

.

'

BJ KErnl WISECUP
POMEROY- Brad Robinson's
31 Yard touchdown run with 2: 07
.remaining In the game lifted Meigs
to a come-from-behind, 7-3 nervewracldng victory over· previously
~ted Warren before a jampacked Marauder Stadium here
Friday night.
'The . Marauders started thelr
g~llnchlng drive at thelr own
ID with 4: 54 left. It took Meigs eight
playa to hlt paydlrt.
After Jackie Welker ran for nine
yards on the opening play of the
drive, Mike Chancey flred a second
down and one situation pass to J. R .
Kitchen for 26 yards. But It was
Chancey's next completion that
was the most crucial.
Faced with a founh and eight at
the Warren 45 and the clock down to
2:20, cliaticey drilled a perfect 14
yard pass to Dan Thomas for the
llrst down.
Robinson then threw a halfback
Qptlon pass that fell Incomplete.
'J'he game-wlnnulg run went the
same direction,· but Robinson
~eked the hall and sped for the end
t-one.
: Warren, now f&gt;-1 overall and 5-1 in
the 1VC, scored on Kevin FiveCoat's 26 yard field goal on .its first
llossesslon. Warren had gone 40
fllrds In nine plays.
.
Goal Une Stand
; Undoubti!dly, the game's turning
point came.near the end of the first
half when Meigs stopped Warren on
four straight plays from a yard.out.
: warren quarterback Greg Huf·
!rrJan nailed fullback John Fryman
with a 45 yard pass to the Marauder
one as Meigs' Mark Hammonds
fnade the touchdown saving ·(and
alsO game-saving) tackle from
behind.
: With linebackers Nick Bush, who
~. Meigs In tackles with nine and
played superbly all night, and
ll'arnmonds bunched tightly around
llqbinson at middle guard, Huf·
fman was stopped ior no gain on a
sneak. Fryman then was piled up a
toot from the end zone.
: \)n third down, tailback Craig
~hary was met hard in the

.

middle or the line for a yard loss.
Huttman rolled out on fourth
down and had a wide open Matt
Jameston in the end zone, but he
dropped the ball.
M.elgs CoaCh Charley Chancey,
who drifted away temporarily from
the usual "Tom l..an&lt;lcy" unemotlofl!ll look to lellcd the Marauder
chl!el'lng after the winning touchdown, remarked, "The goal-line
stand was the biggest four downs In
the game. U we ·had gone down 10-0,
It would have ~n awfully tough to
come back with the way Warren
plays defense."
The Meigs mentor added, "Both
teams played well although they
both missed some opportunities.
Warren Is a good team because it
has no glaring wi:&gt;akness."
Both teams missed opportunities
to score earner In the game. Meigs
drove to the Warren 18 on Its second
possession, but lost the ball on
downs th;lt InCluded a dropped pass
In the end zone.
On their next series early in the
second period, the Marauders
drove to the Warren 12. bUt
Chancey's potential game-tying
field goal attempt was aboqi a foot
short.
The Warrtors struck quickly In
the thlrd quarter after returning the
kickoff to their own 43. Lochary
circled left end for 43 yards to the
Meigs 14, but Lochary coughed up
the ball two plays later with James
. Acree, who played his finest game
of the year with eight solo tackles
and kept the Meigs defense Inspired
with hard hitting, recovering at the

seven.
Misses Opportunity

Warren missed a golden opportunity later In the third period when
the Meigs snap from center In ·punt
formation sailed over punter Huey
Eason 's head. Eason alertly
gobbled up the ball and tossed an
Incomplete pass. Had the sopl)omore tried to run, he would have
been nailed much further back than
the line of scrimmage at the 29.
But once again, the Meigs
defense, which now has allowed the
fewest points In the 1VC, rose to the
occasion. Three plays netted three

yards and Fivecoat was wide on a
43 yard tleld goal attempt.
Warren's Coach Robert Hill said
· ahout his teanfs first ,Ioss ." "When
you miss as many opportunities as
we did, you ought to get beat. We
were lucky to contain Robinson as
long as we did. You really have to
cover the entire field when a team
has two good nmnlng backs
(Roblns6n and Hammonds) and a
good passer (Chancey)."
Robinson had 130 yards In 22
carrtes while Hamrrionds had his
best rushing game of the year with
95 y ards In nine tries. Lochary had
95 yards to lead Warren, coming on
16 carries.
Besides the standout defensive
play of Bush and Acree, Hammonds came up with seven solo
tackles and hard-nosed Tony
Welch, who required stitches for a
laceration to the back of his hea:d
after the game, with five.
The entire Marauder defense
played Inspired, hard-hitting
football .
Meigs, now 5-2 overall and tied
with · Trtmble and Warren for
second place at 5-1 in the 1VC, has
won five straight games.
This Is the first Marauder team to
win five straight since Meigs won
seven straight 12 years ago.
Meigs won four at the end of 1m
and Its first three In 1972. Not since
1969 has Meigs won as many as five
straight In one seasop when they
won seven in a row.
Meigs goes to Alexander next
Friday, a team not to be overlooked
since Belpre will come to town the
following week. The Spartans have
Improved considerably since the
season began.
Warren hosts Trimble with the
loser probably dropping from tllle
considerations.

-

Depal1ment
M
First downs .... .................... 13
Yards rushing .. ...... ....... .. lO-W
Yards passing .. ...... ....... ... ... fli

Total yards .. ............. .. ...... -~

Passing .................... .. .. : .. 4-18-ll

W
9
39-!69
87

'

256
6-13-1

Punts ......... ...... .. ...... , !l-100(32.0) 4-164(4l.(h
Fumbles-lost. .... ......... ....... .. 2·1
2-1

Ponalties ................ ....... ..... l -5

4-61

By quarte.l'fi:
.......... ., .............. ...... 3 0 0 o.-3

V.'ar~

Meigs .................................. 0 0 0 7-7

GRABBED FROM BEIDND- Meigs' Nick Bush
(12) throwS Warren qiUllterback Greg Huffman for a
loss on one of nine taddes for the Marauder

linebacker Friday nigh~. Meigs won the TVC coalelit,
7-3 lo snap Warren's unbeaten streak.

Interception saves Gallipolis'
14-12 win over Ripley team
GALLIPOL!S - "They were a
good football · team. We · were
fortunate to win this one," quipped
Brent Saunders following Galllpolls' 14·12 non-conference football
victory over a big Ripley team on
Memorial Field Friday night.
"They throw so much stuff at you,
both offensively and defensively,"
continued Saunders, whose Blue
Devils Improved thelr season record to 3-2·2.
"Those two backs (Todd Martin
and David Fisher) were about the
best runners we have faced this
yetJr; " the GAHS men tor
continued.
Martin rushed for 'irl yards lp 14
trips, and Fisher had 69 in 17
attempts, ·but It wasn't enough to
overcome a first half effort by the
Ohioans.
Marino Figures Wrong
"We didn't playveryweu the first
half," muttered Frank Marino,
veteran Ripley coach.
"You must give Coach Saunders
and his boys credit. They've really
Improved over (ast year. We
pl'(lbably should have stayed on the
ground Jn the final two or three
minutes, but I figured wrong, and
we lost," Marino added .
A pass Interception by Gallla' s
John Strait with 31 seconds assured
the Gallipolis victory.
Grant Srores Twice
After a scoreless first quarter,
GAHS got on the board first when

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) Defensive end Mark Gastineau of
the New York Jets, the National
Football League's sack leader, Is
listed as probable for Sunday's
game with the Cleveland Browns
due to a hyperextended left knee.
Gastineau, however, wasn't sure
he would be ready for the game in
Cleveland.
Reese said Gastineau's kneecap
"banged against bone and that's the

THROWN FOR A LffiS - Meigs' Nick Bush (12)
Chancey (1•) combine lo brlnp; down
: _Warren' Jom Fryman durtnr Friday's 7-3lhrlller at

Trotting record set
at Lebanon track

out. A "game-saving" tackle WflS
QB Todd Slone hit Wingback
Gamble Grant with a quickie credited to · Bernie Niehm, who
over-the-middle in the endzone stopped Hatcher on a run for the ·
from 11 yards out with 9:46 on the extra points. Wayne Walters was In '
clock. artan Shepler's kick split the .on the play. So were siX or seven ,
other Blue Devil defenders.
uprights for a 7-0 GAHS iead.
After an on-sides kick by RHS
Ripley came back with a 74-yard,
14-play drive to narrow the count to failed , Ripley held, then GAHS ,
7-6. QB Rick Hatcher sneaked It In · held. Gallipolis tried to run out the
from the two with 4: 23 left In the clock, but had to give the ball up
first half. Gamble Grant and Bo with 31 secondS lett. Then came ·
Smith smeared the RHs runner on Strait's pass Interception to end the ·
game.
the points-after aftempt.
Close Top Rusher
. Four plays later, GAHS led 14-6.
Close led GAHS runners with 79
This time, Grant, on a "cross-buck"
zipped 46 yards to paydtri with 2: 24 yards In 14 trips. Grant finished
left In the pertod. Again Shepler with 50 yards In four attempts. ·
Andy Howard was limited to 211n
spilt the uprights.
eight, Todd Slone was a · minus ·
FeDure Intercepts
GAHS tlu'eatened again just seven In seven trips and Kirk .
before halftime, but RHS took over Jackson had 16 yards In four
.
and came right back with a threat carries. ·
of Its own before Keith Fellure
Slone was five of,12 passing for 44 . ,
Intercepted a Hatcher aerial to end yards and one touchdown. Grant •
first half play. ·
caught two aerials for 23, Jetf .:
Fumbles, penalties, and out· Atkinson one for 12 and Strait one -·
standing defensive play by hoth for seven. Howard had one for two. ;
teams hlg}lllghted a scoreless third Overall, GAHS had 172 yards '.
rushing and passing In 52 plays •;
period.
Gallla's Paul Close appeared to from scrimmage - 135 of tho.se :;
~ "gone" ·on a 63-yard TD gallop,
came In the first half.
'
but was caught from behin.d on the
Ripley, now 3-4, totaled 190 yards .
RHS 20 after a 43-yard gain late in in 62 plays - the VIkings netted 79 •
the period. GAHS got to the RHS 18, the second half. RHS had 16 first ~
but the drive fizzled.
downs - six the final half.
~
Jll()kson
Next
-~
Nlehm Saves GABS
The Vlldngs reduced the count to
GAHS will return to league play ::
14·12 with 6: (II left when Martin at Jackson Friday. Ripley will host ;
slammed over from eight yards Pt. Pleasant.
·&lt;
ScbedaR

main pain he's feeling rtght now.
We'll have toseewhathlssymptoms
are. We'renotgolngtotakeachance
on hurting it."
Offensive tackle Marvin Powell
accidentally fell on Gastineau's leg
while the two were blocklng each
other In practice.
M~anwhlle, Freeman McNeil
missed practice Thursday to get
fitted for a rib guard,- He aggravated
his bruised ribs dutlng last week's
victory over the Kansas City Chiefs.

Deportme..
G
FU.t downs .... .. ........................ 10
Yards rushing .................... ,..... ~

196 ;:

Lost rushing .. .... : .. .................... 75

57 ,...

Net rushing ........ .. .............. .... .1:18

139 ·.,

Passanempts .................. .... .. ... l2

12 :

Completlo~ .......... .'.................... ~

0

't

Yards passing ............ .. ............. 44
Total yards (lilsh-pass) ............. 172
Plays from scrimmage ......... ... .. 52
Return yardage .. .. .................... ~
Fumbles ........................ .. ....... 2
Lost tumbles ............................. 0
Ponalti., :.. ................. .. ...........6-00
Punts ...................... , ............... 2-62

51
00
62
54
l
1

:·
..
:;

i981-

: Friday, the Bulldogs scored six
!Ouchdowns, but two were called
back on penalties In the fourth
i!uarter after they had boUt a 2-8

lea'd.

• ·Mark Wllllams scored twice for
Athens In the first period on runs or
ime and tour yards with Blll

,.

reached the end zone 13 playa later
when Edge zoomed over from the
three. A pass for the conversion
failed.
Southwestern started moving In
the final minutes of the game
driving from Its :Jl to the Bobcat 19
before Vogel's second-Interception.
Bobcat mentor Mel Com praised
his defense for Its fine showing along
with the team 's offerislve llne~ "It
was a good overall team effort.
tonight. Southwestern did a fine job
in the first half taking away some
things were had hoPed to do, but
McGuire and Edge carne on strong
to provide the spark needed to
overcome that. Coach James did a
· fine job In preparing his kids for us.
Even though we won, Southwestern
Is a team to be reckoned with In the

futUre," .
Kyger Creek oow 5-2 overall and
2.0 In the SVAC travels to Hannan
Trace Friday.' Southwestern, 2·5
overall and 0.21n the league, goes to
Southern.

~~~~
KC
FU.t downs .................... , ........ l5
Yards rushlrlg ... ... ............. .... ... !73
Yards passing ............. .............. 46

sw

Total yardage .......................... 219
Passes attempted .... .... ...... ......... 6
Passes completed ........ ... ....... ... .. 5
Had Interceptions ....................... 0
Fumbles .... .. ................ ............. 0
Fumbles lost .............. ... ............ 0

91

4
4ti

45
9

4
4
I

0
5-4.1

Ponaltle!i ................... . -· ...........2-10

By..,_
KC ................. ........... ......... 0 12 14 6-32
sw ........................ ............ o 0 0 0-0

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Ripley .. ............... ................
11-1! :
Gallpollo .... ... ...... .... ............ l 14 I t-14

.

•'

..

Kyger Creek
quarterback Garry Pennington (15) fires a pass back
lo tallbaek Chuck Vogel durlngtblrd.quarter aclion of
Friday's SVAC enC&lt;l!IIRr - Soothwestem. Kyger

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

Sclledule

·"
;

'

Creek won 32-{) Increasing its overall record to 5-2 and
2-11 against league foes . The Bobcats' Brian Wamsley
(80) Is shown in this Lee Ann Welch photo along with
Southwestern's Dan Patrick (71 ), Benny Boyd (66)
and Justy Burlesoo ( 12).

TAKfE BACKWARD PASS -

You don't ·have t_o hunt
to find ihe current
Time-Weather· Temperature.

5 •,

Intercepted by ........................ ... 2

Scoreby..-

LEBANON, Ohto (APJ -OpArt,
driven by Bruce Riegle, set a
Lebanon Raceway trotting record
in winning the S87 ,&lt;XXI Corwin NIXon
Trot, the Ohio Sires Stakes championship race for 3-year-old colts
Friday night.
Op Art won in 2: 00.3, topping the
old mark by one-fifth of a second.
0p Art won by a length when Mad.
Speed, the top horse In the series J
preliminaries, broke stlde In the
stretch.
I
0p Art paid $4.40, J.M, 2.M. Gayn
T was second and paid $4.40, 2.40.
Mad Speed was thlrd, paying $2.00.
Lebanon will host the $105,200
Walter J . Michael Pace Saturday
night, the sires stakes final tor
two-year-old fillies. The race hrlngs
the J.S84 series to a close.
Acrowdof2,394wagered$236,395.

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tho - • of lho art In
pot1ormllnco, qullltty
lnd prtcel

Marauder StadiUm. Bush ~ nine tec!c'es f• the
Marauders. Keith Wisecup photo.

~Athens snaps long Logan jinx, 21-0
; ATHENS - Playing before a
l)omecomlng crowd at Athens
Frt&amp;ly night the host Bulldogs
,inapped a 12-year Logan jinx by
~hll'lll'ring the Chieftains 28-Sin an
$EOAL contest.
• fJi. Bulldog football team had not
t\eteated Logan since a 21.0 triumph
In :1972. However, the teams
cleaiDocked 7-7 in 1974 and 20-ID in

PATRlOT - Sparked by a Barry neither could muster an offensive
Matthews Interception, visiting attack. Kyger Creek's offense was
Kyger . Creek broke a scoreless held to eight yards rushing as the
game open with 5: 28 left in the Highlander defense collected three
second halt here Friday night sacks for losses or 18 yards.
E!IU'OUte to a lopsided, 32-0 SVAC
Likewise, the Bobcat defense was
victory over Southwestern.
just as tough as Southwestern wa.S
Following the Interception, Kyger held to three yards rushing and 'rr
Creek took control at the Highlander passing.
36whereLarryEdgewasthrownfor
· Second half
a three yard loss . At that point, the
The Bobcat d!!{ense continued to
Bobcats' of(ense came to llfe as apply pressure In theopenlngsertes
Seniors Chuck Vogel and John ofthethlrdquarterasSouthwestern
McGuire picked up good yardage after iOslngsiX.yardson a pass play,
Which put the ball at the SW 17 yard was forced to punt.
Kyger Creek took control a tits 44
line. From !,here, the Highlander
defense held untn a big fourth down then marched up field, aided by a .
play. · Senior quarterback Garry pass interference call. A 21-yard
Pennington hit Vogel on an 11 yard passcompletlonfromPennlngtonto
pass giving the Bobcats first and Matthews put the ball at the three.
goal at the one. On the next play
Twoplayalater,Pennlngionwentln
McGuire shot . off tackle giving for a l.S{)lead.Kitchen'sklcl\pustied
KygerCreekaf&gt;.Oadvantage. Akick It to 19.0.
for the EP saUed Wide to the right.
Two plays later, Kyger Creek got
, The Bobcats reached paydirt for the ball back on Kitchen's
the second time with just 40 secopds lnterceptlon.
remaining In the halt when McGuire
With tlie Vogel and McGuire each
capped a 58 yard march In seven gaininggoodyardage,KygerCreek
plays with a 21 yard run after scored again with 1: 44 left in the
breaking a tackle at ·the line of third quarter on a 14 yard pass
scrimmage. He also had a 28 yard reception by Matthews. Kitchen's
jaunt during the drive. A pass for the,_ boot pushed the count to 2£&gt;.0.
two-point conversion was knocked
Intheopenlngmlnuteoft11efourth
down.
quarter, KC's Vogel grabbed the
During the first quarter, both tlr.;t of two interceptions stopping
teams played on even tenns as another SW drive.
Taking control at the 45, Kyger
Creek, sticking to the ground,

. '•

Gastineau doubtful starter Sunday

: ll!ld Mike

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-C-3

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

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

Flnnearty kicking both extra WUllams saw his ll! yard TD run
nullified by a holding penalty In the
points.
In the second period Logan's fourth quarter.
Keith Myers had a punt blocked · Wllllarns carried 17 times for 155
which gave AHS possession at the yards and Flnnearty added IKI
yards on just siX carries as the
Logan eight yard line.
Dave McAllister hit Chris Leo- Bulldogs registered 19 11rst downs
nard with a six yard TO strike to put and 264 rushing yards.
Kelly Wolfe paced Logan with 95
Athens up 20-0 at halftime.·
yards
on 22 carrlel as the Chiefs
Myers got Logan on the board In
the third quarter when. he scored on netted 11 first downs and !1!1 yards
a three ·yard run and then ran the rushing.
The tWo rivals threw the ball 53
conversion with 4: 45 lett.
times
with Logan COMpleting 11 Of
Athehs came rtght hack on a 53
31
for
124
yards and Athens hitting
yard pass from McADister to John
Ranklna and Williams ran !lie 10 of 22 for 120 yards.
conversion With 3: 00 left in the third
Score by quarten:
quarter.
Logan
.......... ·......... 0 081}-8
McAllister lost a 17 yard scoring · l\tllens.............
............ .... ........ ,..... l4 6 8 1}-20
run on a clipping penalty and

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GOEs JIUB BALL - Walwna'a Seott Rl-n
attempts to make a eatdt betw- two Fort Gay

defmtlers ~ Frtday'allllCioa at Fon Gay. 'l1le White
Falcooflacored a ~ In lhe clollnp; llllllllldll to

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

foB lhe Vlltlllp' apaet bid. 1be 11-14 'vlctoioy ~ · '

Silver

Bridge Pl~za

Spring Valley

Wallamaurt n!rlnlbell8he-111Miqu•Uau :
san playoll berth.

,.-v

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�:-~·~m;=·•:;;C~4~-·~lhe~~Sunda~~y~Ti~lme~~o-~S.~n~ti~ne~I~======~P~III~u~eroy~~Mid~'~d~le~po1~rt~-Gallipolis, Ohio-Poin

.· Otlober 14, 1984

Pleasant, W. Va.

'~:Foreman paces Pirates' 26..0 SVAC win
Mark Foreman broke the scoring
ba'nier three times, the first
occasion being a six yard run In the
first frame With 2: 13 showtng on the
clock. Foreman booted the PAT, the
score7-0.

By~WO{.FE

'ftnes So ,..... Writer
RACINE -Eager to overcome a
iXisslble upset at the hands of the
'unpredictable Southern Tornadoes,
the North Gallla Pirates came
' : prepared With tun battle gear and 'an
otrenslve arsenal Utat propelled the
undefeated league champs to a 26:{)
l:!1umph here Friday evening In
::NAC league action.
· The wtn boosts North GaWa to 7-0
overall and 2-0 Inside loop play.
_ ~uthern drpps to Hi and ().2.
- Reflecting Championship form of
· the past, the possible playo!t-bound
: Pirates again looked sharp from
both sides of the line, compUing 246
total yards while yielding just 43 to
_. the Tornadoes.
.
The Pirates struck paydlrt first in
• the opening stanza,but not before
· Southern put up a legitimate figh t In
: the trenches. Grinding out 18 first
. downs, the visitors controlled possession most of the night as well as
the tempo of the·game.
One of the area's leading scorers,

Not only did Foreml\n heat up the
scoreboard, but he also roasted the
turf for a sizzling 100 yard game.
Teammate Blian Hawks contrlbuted 33 yards on the ground.
Although North Gallla was dominating With a potent ground game,
frequent v~li:s to.the endzone were
not common as Southern's defense
bent, but refused to break.
Finally, North Gallla broke the
game open with two more Foreman
scores, flrstatthe6: 25markona two
yard run and next on a six yard
carry. Foreman kicked the .EP
conversion on the second score for a
20-0lead.
Although Southern never really
got Its offense untracked against the
tough Pirate defe!ISe, sOutpem
mustered a third quarter defensive

..

~

Ocl. 12 ile;ulls
Meigs 7 Warren 3

2B
.2 1 0 19 19

Athens ............................ .. 1 0 1 48

Iront on ...................

. .. 1 2 0

Loga n .. .
')'(])'AI-"

9 56

5 5 2 '114 '114

.

FTklay's results:
Ironton l'i Jackson 0

Athens 28 Logan 8
Ocl. 19 games:
• Ga lll ~lls at Jackson
· Athens at Portsmouth
· Waverly at Ironton
Wh('("lersburg a t Northwest
Jenkins at Boyd County
Pt. Pleasant at Ripley 1
•.Dayton Dunbar at Loga n
Coal GrOVE' at Symmes Va lley
Oak Hill at Rock Hill

Belpre 33 Miller 12

'-

...
',.

' ..

•

•

.•

....

" J'rtmble .......................... 5
Meigs ........ .......... ............ 5
NelsonvJil~ York .... ........... 5
Vinton County ...... .............. 2

0
0
0
0

183
Ill
126
76

Southern . . .. ..

TMM

M
98
52
73
136
128
134

Frida)' !I Sjlor1.••• 'l'nlnlwM.:tium
8ASKE'11W.L
Natlonld Basketbal AHsoctatiOO
BOSTON CELTICS-Signed Grrald He-n
dc'rsoo, guard, loa mul!l·.)'l'ar contrat't.
DALLAS MA VERJCKS-Signed R~BI1.do

..·..
...
~

.
.....
....
·,....
..•.
.-........

...
...
.. ...
...
••• •
• •
' • ....
,•

246

Byq.......:
Southern .............. .. ........ .... 0 0
North Gallla .... . .. .

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hehasmlraculouslyescapedtbe~

thing that might have blemished his
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trad itionally come with a juicy stick
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out to earn
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:E. N. Urion 0

She thinks the experience wtll
benefit her son when he later
chooses~ business field as a career.
And McCarty, who . ravors the
Tigers to win the World Series, SilY5

qard -1963- that has about a$425
or $450 price tag on it. They are In
demand."
·
Mrs. McCarty hasspentcountless
hours helping her son sort cards into
792-plece colle&lt;;tor sets. But she
thinks her son has really benefited
from his hobby.
"It really is good experience ,
especially when they are investing
their own money," she said. "He
understands how you have to make
a profit In order to expand and that
profit lsnotadlrtyword ."

''~'re

N. Rl~t"VVUe 15'. Mldvit'w U
N. RrJy'a Jtm 13, C lr:wertear 0
Nor1h\l.Old :.!0, LIIJllny Coo ter 18
NorwaYJI(' 'll, Dalton 6

CC4Jiey 14. Nonon 7 •
Coshoctoo 21, Utica 6
Cn.&gt;!rtlJne 1J, Fl'l"dPrlcktown 12
Cn&gt;stwood 14, Windham 7

Ample Parking Space

. . . oil

Nt'W Alblln,y 32, E. 'Knox 6

Col . East 19, Cot Marlon·f'ranklin 0
Col . 'Eastrnocr 42, Nt&gt;Wark ~
Col . Har1 )ey 17. Col. Watterson 0
Col. ln:iepR!dm«&gt; 14, Col. Llndert 0
COl . MltfUn 8. Cot Northland 2
COl : Sc.lth 2:1, Col. Walll.ll RidgE' 6
Cot Wehrk&gt; 17. Col. Rt . Charles 0
Col. Whetstone 27. Col. Brl&amp;gs 0
COOIK'Iut 14. GEneva 0

Save pp an

"You can't Jet a high-priced card
just sit there," he said.
His current all-business approach.
Is different from the early days
when neither he nor his mother, Jill,
became upset when a card got
sucked up by the sweeper or washed
In a jeans pocket.
Now they understand how lrnportant It Is to maintain cards In "mint
condition."·
"The demand Is always greater
for the ones that have sharp corners
and no creases," McCarty
explained .
McCarty Is still waiting for tha t
really big find that wW brtng a
windfall, but he's satisfied With the
business so far .
'~I'm not trying to make.a living or
anything," he said. "I'm just trying
to get by and learn about business."
Besides Parrish and the Padres '
players, Pete Rose, who came from
Montreal at the end ot-t~ season to
be player-manager oftheCinclnnaU
Reds, is popular in the Lexington
area.
"Pete Rose is reall:t the main guy,
especially since he came back to
Cincinnati," he said. -"His rookie

NMV Lexington 'll. River VIew 0
N. Canton 19. CantOn Swth 17
N. CaUia a;, Racine S. 0

Col. Bee\:hcrolt ::S. Col. We!!il 6
Col . Brooltha\11!1'1 ~. Col. C«&lt;tmnta l 13
Col. DeSala 18, COl. Ready 0

ny RIC'arrtl, kicker.

WILLIAM S. DILES

...

Miami TrOC'(' :t!, Wasrung~on C.H. 21
Mlddlelown M&lt;tdlsoo 28, Bellbrook n
Mldlll."lown Fi'fiWick 8. Lemon ·MonrQf' II
Midpark 14 . SII'Ongsvllle 12
1\11ncrva 34, Canotllon 0
Moj!:ador£' 21, Ravenna SE 0
Mohawk!!, Carey 6
Monlpeller 36, Delta .12
MI. Hf'althy 21. Cln. AndP~ i '
Mt. VE'f1101'1 H.. Delawaro 6
Napok!On 14, Bedford, Mic h. 8
NelsonvUl!'-York 21, Alc~eandc r 6

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CJe.' Clmvllle 44,. ae. W. Tech 8
(1(&gt;. Hay 56, C1e. Linroln·West 0
Coal drove 17, Chesapt&gt;ake 14
Coldwa·ter 10. Parkway 7
Coklllel Crawford 17, JUverdale 0
Colu mllla :D. Cuyabof:'a Hts. 0
Cotumlllaaa 6. J ackscitt·Miltoo 0

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McDonald :rl, Mineral Ridgt&gt; 0
Mec ha nlcsburK l'J, Rl~emom 0
100Jna Boc-k~yP 12, Bronktyn 0
Me igs T. WaiTen i...oC3 tJ
Mentor 13, Brush T

Cla)'TJU!t 1(1, Unkli11IM1t Lake 8
Clear Fork 52, Sprtng. NIH1hwes1E'r!l 0
Qe. Adams 26. Cle. E. Tecoh 0

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Canfield 34, Campbell Memorial 28
Canton McKinJey :rr. Cle. St. Josc-ph 0
Cant0111'rtnlty 7, Akron Hoban 0
CardlnaJ 34, Richmond Hts. 12
Cardington 41, Nor1hmor 14
Cafl.lslc
OB.y . DakwOOd 0
Celina :w. Deflanoo 14
Centerburg 12, Rosecrans 0
Centerville fll, Day. CarTOU 7
C1wM.&gt;I 7, Padua 0
Chardln 13. Orangp 1
C.,. CAPE·49. l...odl:land 7
t;ln. De!1" Park 28, Mllford 6
Ctn. GJ'el!'nllllls 31, N. Bend Taylor 0
Cln. Han1D"J 'l7, Flnn€'ytoo.-.n6
Cln. o.k Hills 14. Cin. Turpin 0
Cln. Prlnc:Et~m C . HamUton o
Cln. R...tlng 21, Cln . W)"'t'Mg lJ
Ctn. St. Ka\1er li, Cin. Ekrr 1B
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&amp;rkshlre 23. Kirtland 13
&amp;&gt;xley Z!, Big Walnut ?
BM'ftor. 48, Upper Scioto VaJ . 0
Bowling Grt'l"'l. 24, MWbury Lake 7
Bradford 21, National Tra!l 0
Brookvlll€' 20, Eatoo 0
Brurrsv.•k:k :fl. Cuyahoga .Falls 0
Bt:Yan l8.•Swantoo 14
Budle}(' S. 19, Shadyside 0
Bucyrus 21. Norwalk 18
Cad iz ID. ll"le Miami 7

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Malabar 27, Wooster 3
Mapleton 7, Ashland Cresnie w 0
Margaret1a '!'!.Clyde 8
Manon. l.oca l l~. Mlnst£&gt;r 0
Marysvllie 22. l..oriOOn 0
Mason 20. Nev.· Miami 14
Massillon Pl'rry 28, Canlm GlenOak 0
Massillo.n 'l'us.law 14. Sandy Val. 13
Massillon Wash!ngloo Zi, Barbfonoo 6
Mayfield 36. Bedford 1.1
MrOaJn 42. MMISlln Plains 0
MCComb 6:!; LlbPrty Benton 0

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Llma Cath. 41. Pallldinft 6
Llma Sh.awl'l('(' 36, Ottawa ·CianOOrf 'll
Usbm ll , Sl&gt;brtng 0
l.ogM Elm 10, Amanda.QearCJ'E.'el( 8
Lora in Klnl{ 28. Martln Hanting 7
UlJ!!Willr&gt; n2. Marllngton 11
11lll!lVi\lc Aquinas 21l, Cantcn Ttmken 0
Lcwr&gt;land 6·, Glen EstC' 2

AvOil 14, Flrt&gt;lands 0

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62
!84

l&lt;yKt'f Crtft 32, Palriot SW 0
Lakewootl «). Garfk&gt;ld Hl5. 18
Lancuter ~. Tol . Bowstw&gt;r II
Lancasu~r Fisher 22, 'COl. Ham!l1on
TWp. 1~
Lebanon 15, Franklin 3
l....ef.&gt;tnnla 41 , Colum~an a Crf'!!tvit'W 0
Lclpslc l R, Hardlrl N. 13
Le:&lt;lnji!ton :fl. Elyr!CI W. 0
Lima 27. Fairfield t5o
Lima Bath 26, Wapako!K'ta ~

*·

Aratanum 28 , Ansonia 0
ArllnRton :E. Vanlu~;- 0
Ashl..lhula ll. Ashtabula EdgewOOd 20
Alheni 31. Logan 8
Aurord 32. Newbul)', 0

' 18

:n, Ravt'fiJla Ill

' KettPmg Fairmont JS, Spring, S(l.lth 0
Kings 34, HamUtai fJm;&lt;~ 12

Alll.ant'e 71. MassillOn Jacksc:.l 7
Anttnny Wayneo 14, Holland Spring. 7

.. ....... .. 1 6. 0 50 131
SVACONLV
W L T P OP

North Ga iiJa ... .. .. ..... .. .. .2 o o 59 o
KygorCreek .. , .................. 2 0 0 61 6
Eastern ................. ... .... .... 2 0 0 40 8
Southwester f! ....... ............ 0 2 o 0 44
Southern ..................... ... ... 0 2 o 6 57
Hannan Trace ..... ... .... ...... 0 2 0 8 61
Friday's resulls:
North Gall! a 26 Souther n 0; Kyger Creek 32
Soulhwcsterr't 0; Eastern 28 Hannan Trace 8.
Friday's Ganlftj:
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace; Southwest·
ern at Southern a nd Eastern at North Gall Ia.

Alexa nder .......... ........ ....... 2
0 66
Wellston ..
. ... .......... .... ... 1
0 72
Miller ...... ........................ I 6 0 6l 199
Federa l·Hock.Jng ...... ..... ..... 0 7 0 ~ 2'JJ
(TVC ONLY)
Team
W L T Pis Opp
IJlolpre .......... .......... .. ........ 6 0 0 192 51
warrm .................. .... .. 5 1 0 157 47
1'rlmble .. .......... .......... .. .... 5 l 0 163 62
Meigs .................... .. ..... .. 5 1 0 135 45
Nelsonv111l'- York .. . ..... .. 4 2 0 106 66
Alexander ........... . ............. 2 4 0 66 121
Wellston ............................ 1 5 · 0 58 119
Vinton County ........... ....... 1 5 0 55 128
Mill l'J' ...... .................. ....... I 5 0 &gt;4 167
FJ!{Ieral·Hocklng ................ 0 6 0 20 :lXJ

.....
..

6 p.m. Volleyball vs. .... .. ... ................. ...................... ................. ... CIOI!&lt;!d
Central State Unlv.
Oct. 196-8 p.m. Open Rec.... ............ .. ... .............. ............. 11:ll-12::1l Fl-s Swim
!HI p.m. Open Sw!m
OCt. ZJ 1-J::.J p.m. Open Rec ................ .. ............................. 1.J::.J p.m. Open Swim
OCt. 211-J: :.&gt;p.m. Open Rec ................ .. ... .......................... 1-J::Jl p.m. Open SWim

NG

PasS('S .attempted ............. .. ... ... . . S

Complete&lt;! ............. .. ........ ......... . 1
Hamd bln tercepted ............. ._. .. ... ..... 4
Fu 1es .. ,. ... , .................. ,....... . 3
Fumbles loot .-.......... .... .............. 1
P&lt;naiUes .................. ............. ..4-.'IJ

!HI p.m. Collece SWim

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Detrolt Tigers catcher Lance Parmh
Is hot, and so are the fresh-faced
newcomers of ~ 8/!n Diego
Padres.
But the game Isn't the World
Series; It's baseball card collecting.
And with 650,001 cards in his
basement, 15-yeai'-old Brian
McCarty Is serious about his sport .
Chewtngonawadofbubblegum ,
the Lexington Catholic High School
student said he started collected
hasehallcardswhenhewas6.
"I just caught the fever when I'd
go to the drugstore and buy the
packs for 15 cents or 20 cents
apl~,'' McCarty said.
Now he buys cards from three
companies by the case, sorts them
Into much-coveted collectors sels,
and sells them at shows in Kentucky
andOhioatenoughofaproflttokeep
the process going.
"I had to make a decision about a
year ago,'' McCarty said, "lfeelyou
can't he a collector and a dealer at
the same time."
U you "fall In Jove too much" with
a popularcard,youcanendupinthe
Mle, McCarty said.

21 , Chagrin Faus 18

Kent Roosevelt

el'ltry 19, Falrless 13
'
chest«
Rootstown 0
AkrOn N. 9, Akn::rl Gartlekl 0
,\Jtrcrl StY·SI .M ~ . Walsh Jesuit 8
'Akron SP.rtni. 28. Nordonla 2ti
Allftl E . b . Spen~l'\lilll? 3
A

Hannan Trace ........... ........ 2 3 .1 99 111
SOuthwestern ..................... ·2 &lt;1 0 UO 1%'i

(OVERALL)

o 172

Total yardage .......... ...... ...... .. . c

STANDINGS
o\LLGAMES
TEAM
WLTPOP
North Gallla ..................... . 7 0 0 161 22
Kyger CreEk... .... .. ....... ...... 5 2 0 145 68
Eastern ............................ 4 3 0 150 152

Transactions

1
2
2
2
5
5
6

.............
........l3o
Yards passmg
rushing ........
..........
.................

SV.~C

Team
W L T Pis Opp
Belpre . .. .. .... .................. 7 0 0 241 65

warren ............ .... .. ........ 6

So.

11:~~:~ ~O:tl:::

· Kenstm

umbue Q.n)vp 0
tel '1, Akron FirEstOIW.' 6
Howt&gt;r J:l, Akron E. 0

•

Oct. lB Qosed .. ..: ..... .. .. .. ... : ............ .. ........... ............... .. .. llll-12::1! FIIness Swim

Sclledule

Firs! downs .......... .... .......... .. ......3

I

STANDINGS
~

Oct. 171H! p.m. eoues.; He&lt;.......................................... :

f'ridaf'•....._
Ada
,\kron

The Sunday Time~o-S.ntinei-Poge- C-5

ITeenager collects650,000.baseball car~s

High school results

· . ,.
P...

Nelsonvilll'-York at Vinton County.

TRI-VAIJ.EY CONF'JlRENCE

...
'1..:

De~

.

OCt.1l 6-8 p.m. College Rec.... ...... ... .......................... ... ....... !HI p.m. College Swim
Oct.' l!IIH! p.m. College Rec......................................... .. :. tlll-12::1! Fltnels Swim
•
!HI p.m. Collece Swim
Oct. 161H! p.m. cOllege Rec............. .. , .......... .. ........... :..... n :ll-12::1! FllneSS Swim

GaWa With 10 tackles .• while Chuck
Easter and BJJl Hat;'den each had
sacks. For Southern, Kelley
Grueser had 12 tackles,Jirnmy
Wolfe had ll,Chad ·Roberts 6, and
David Ebersbach 5.
Southern hosts Hannan Trace
Friday, while North GaWa plays
Southestern.

Trtmble 41 Vinton County 8
Nelsonville- York 21 Alexander 6 (Called ln
third quarter due to rog1
WeUston 28 Federal· Hocking 6
Oct. 19 Gam&amp;~
Meigs at Alexander
Federai ·Hocking at Belpre
Miller at Wellston
Trimble- at Warren

SEOALONLY
W L T P OP
. ....... 1 0 1 J9 22

TEAM
GalJl!XlliS .. ..

Dole-G~

DISHES

Grid standings
o\LLGAMES
TEAM
W LT P OP
Coal Grove .................. ...... 7 0 0 194 76
Wheelersburg .................... 5 2 0 137 93
lronton .............. .... ... ..... ... 5 2 OlHO ~
Gallipolis ........................... 3 2 2 115 103
Pt. Pleasant .... .... .. . ........ ,. .4 3 0 140 92
11pck HUI .......................... 3 3 1 59 105
Logan ..... .............. ........... 3 4 0 103 162
Ripley .. .. ........ ....... ........... 3 4 0 11J 15.1
Jackson ......... ... ............... 2 5 0 68 131
Boyd County .................... 3 6 0 167 135
Athens ...... ... ....... .... .... .. ... 1 5 1 Jll4 llll
Friday's Non-SEO Besulls:
Gallipolis 14 Ripley 12
Greenup 21 Boyd County 7
Coal Grove 17 Chesapeake 14
Fairland :Kl Rock Hill 6
Wheelersburg 14 Minford 10
Pt. Pleasant ~ Huntington High 0

stand that kept Its avenger out of the
endzollt!,the score remalnlng·:aw.
The Pirates did, however, hit
paydlrt again when Mike Kemper
plunged In from one yard out With
4: 151eft In the game, a26-0flnale.
Besides an outStanding otfenslve
night from Foreman, both Hawks
and Kemper steadied the solid
Pirate gameplan.JackieGJassburn
hauled down lhreereceptlpns for44
yards as NG hit 4 of 9 passes for fiT
yards.
Tom Greathouse led Southern
with 12 yards,Charlle Boso had
10,and Sean Grueser 7. Southem
was 0 for 10 pasSing With four
Interceptions.
·.
Defensively, Joe Moore led North

Ceoter-

l.yae
Week al Oct. 14, 1184
.

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

Booster
Cables

12FT. 10G'A
169S
,
'

.

"WE MAKE

'

IT RIGHT'•

Bill Kelly
Manaaer
.. .'

Silver Bridge Plaza-Phone 446-9335
1.

t

�Page--C-6--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 1'4, 1984

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

Eastern has sweet 28•8 homecoming
victory _over Hannan.Trace :friday night:
By BILL BENNETI' .
EAST MEIGS - It turned out to
be a sweet homecoming for the
Eastern Eagles here Frtday night
as they defeated the Hannan Trace
Wlldcats, 28·8 In an SVAC
encounter.
Coach Ray Watson's club set the
game's tempo on its opening drive
picking up big chunks of yardage on
eacll play before settling for a punt
deep in HT territory. ·
The Eagles' defense shut down
the Wildcats' offense through&lt;lut
most of the first half allowing
Hannan Trace lts initial first down
with 2:28 left In the half.
The Eagles got on the board with
2: 50 left In the first quarter as junior
John Rice carrted the ball in from
two yard line.
Quarterback Royce Bissell's attempt tor extra points failed. The
scor e ended an 80 yard, nine play
drive.
Late in the first half the Eagles
churned out another long drtve
covering 66 yards which ended with
a five yard run by senior fullback
Mike Lance. ·
Brent Bissell ra n for the two-point

EAGLE DOWNED - Eastern's Jeff BlsseD (80) Des on the ground
foUowlng a pass reception from Royce Bissen during acUon In Friday's
· 28-8 SVAC victory over Hannan Trace. WUdcat players, Gary Kirk (30)
and Mike Davi~ (52) ronverge on the play. Bill Bennett photo.

7th
straight victory;
Wellston claims
first win, 28-6

By Rick Slmpklllli
Mike Rawson
HUNTINGTON ~ Junior tallback Darrell Mitchell rushed for 179
· yards a nd a tenacious Point
Pleasant defense limited Huntington High School to only 59 total
yards as the Big Blacks pounded
the P ony Express 50-0 Friday night
at Fairfield Stadium In Huntington.
Huntington took the · opening
kickoff and marched upfield to the
Polrtt Pleasant 44 yard line before a
fwnble, recovered by Doug Hern,
halted their drive. Point Pleasant
Coach, Steve Safford, wils quick to
potnt out that this crucial mistake
was the turning point of the game.
"If they had moved the ball in and
scored on the first drive, it
might have given them confidence
and made it a different ballga111e."
The Big Blacks, however ,
capitalized on the turnover and went
on top 7~ on Mitchell's ·two-yard
plunge into the endzone. ·Mitchell
rushed for eight times for 53 yards in
the opening drive.
At this pQint, the Big Black's
d!fensive unit took over.
Hun·
tington's offense managed only two
total yards for the remainder of the
quarter.
The second quarter was one that
the Pony Express would like to
forget. . Only seconds into the
quarter, Kelly Riffle returned a
Huntington punt 19 yards to the Pony .
Express 23 yard line. Two plays
later , the Blacks increased their
lead to 14-0. Mike Rhodes found
Shawn Nibert in the Huntington
secondary and Nibert made an
outstanding catch before .going out
of bounds on the Huntington three
yard line. On the next play, Mitchell
crashed Into the end zone for his
second touchdown. Rhodes converted the extra point.
· On their next possession the Pony
Express lost eight yards in three

Campbell scored on runs of nine,
POMEROY - Belpre suiVived a
fi rst quarter thre at against Miller to five, 17, and grabbed a 23 yard pass
from Paul Jewell . Other Tomcat
post its seventh straight victory. a
33-12 verdict over the Falcons while scoring came on a four yard run by
Wellston won its first game of the Kenny McClellan and a five yard
vear 28-6 over Federal-Hocking jaunt by John Long.
VInton County scored on a 70yard
Friday night. In other TVC action,
Trimble routed Vinton County 41-8, punt return in the fourth quarter by
Nelsonv ille· York won a fog· Aaron Booth. Booth lei! the Vikings
shortened game over Alexander in rushing with 00 yards In 15 carries
2i -6. and Meigs Scored late to hand while Campbell led Trimble with 64
·
Warren their first loss .7-3 in . yards on eight tries.
Trimble
outgatned
Vinton
County
Tr i-Va ll ey Confe rence ac tion
318-137.
Trimble
had
204
yards
Frtday.
Earnie Williams ran for two rushing and another lH through the
touchdowns and Lee Holder passed air. Vtnton County had 69 rushing
for( ~hree others as Belpre s~pped and 68 passing.
Golden Rockets erupt
pas! Miller.
Wellston erupted for 21 second
the Falcons we re in front 6-0after
one period on Ray Jenks' 10 yard half points In sprouting a 7-0 halftime
nm. The mighty Eagles came against the wihless Lancers.
'!'he Rockets' Jeff Cheatwood did
roaring back, however with 20
second quarter poihts to put the m ost of the damage with a 15 yard
pass from Steve Newman and a five
game put of reach.
Williams scored on a pair of seven yard run for touchdowns. Also,
yard runs and Holder threw three J erry Aleshire scored on a two yard
touchdown passes of 25 yards to run and Mike Johnson grabbed a 20
Roger Ruble, fou r yards to Shane yard Rob Rice aerial for the final
Simmonds. and 'Zl yards to Jerrod Rocket points.
Tony Burelll scored the lone
Smith
Lancer
points on a lOyard pass from
Holter was 16 of 29 passihg for 246
yards a nd Williams aided the J ohn Young.
Eagles offense with 102 yards • Wellston held Federal-Hocking to
rushing. Miller was led by J enks minus 11 yards rushing and 146 total
yards while Wellston mounted 209
with 141 yards ih 24 trtes .
Roy Robinson scored Miller's rushing and 35 passing.
Alesliire led Wellston in rushing
second six-pointer on a three yard
with
51 yards on eight carries while
run ..
Darrin Welch led the Lancers with
Tomcats growl
Trtmble shot frorn a 20-0 halftime 42 yards ih seven attempts.
In the Alexander-Nelsonvillelead to a 41-0 advantage alter three
York
contest at Buchtel, play was
periods and fullback Steve Campstopped
with two minutes left tn the
bell romped for four touchdowns in
the Tomcats' rout over Vinton third quarter due to heavy fog.
No details were available on the
County.
21-j) Nelsonville-York win.

Francisco defense did not allow a
touchdown until the closing minutes
of the game.
The Giants" 1D was the first in
three weeks against the 49ers.
Pittsburgh's offense has three key
players , quarterback David WOOdley, wide receiver Luis Lipps and

•

Hunttnglon did manage to gain a
first down on their next (l068esslon,
but the Black's defense tightened
and forced a punt.
By quarters:
Huntington ......... ...... ....... ... 0 0 0 0- o
Polnl P leasa nt ... .. .. .... ., ....... 7 28 7 8-50

on Bethany players' helmets
BETIIANY, W.Va. (AP) Bethany College football players
will wear the number "33" on their
helmets for the remainder of the
season as a tribute to teammate
Brian Sprulll, ktlled this week In a
freak accident.
Spruill, a 17-year-old freshman
safety from Pittsburgh, ran through
alargewtndowatadormltorywhile
on the way to a team meeting. A
piece of glass punctured his heart,
and he died Monday at a Wheeling
hospital.
'

Officials said Spruill was late for
the meeting and apparently mistook
the window for a door.
Bethany players fll ttended
Sprulll's funeral Friday tn Clarion,
Pa., before leaving for Cleveland
and their game today against John
Carroll University.
''There's no reason or logic for it,''
sald Bethany coach Wally NeeI. "If
you try to make any sense of It, you
dlive yourself crazy. Obviously
there is no sense to it.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page--C-7

Wahama remains
unbeaten behind
last second drive

NCAA
·seeks
tougher
codes

BARN&amp;&lt;; MOVES D0WNF1ELD - Hannan Trace's taDhack Delle
llanleJ (M) goes between two Ea8tenJ Eagle defenders, Allen Reed (7-i)
and Tim Doni (54) during second period action Friday night at Eastern.
1be Eagles won their SVAC homecoming tilt, 28-8. BW Bennett photo.

•
h II ' •
in fall diamond tilt .
M

Marauderettes claim
one of three matches
ROCKSPRINGS - The Meigs
volleyball varsity won one of three
mat.ches "tn last week'sactlon while
the reserves won three of four
matches. The varsity is now 12-j)
overall whUe the reserves go to 13-5.
Vinton County rebounded from an
earller loss to the Marauderettes
with a 15-0, 15·9 wih. Coach Ron
Logan's crew had whipped the Lady
Vlktngs 15-6, 15-0 earlier in the
season.
In the double reserve match,
VInton County won the first match
15-12, 14-16, 15-13 while Coach Rick
Ash's charges took the second
match 13·15, 15-10,15-7.
Before the Meigs student body in
an assembly match, both the
Marauderette reserves artd varsity
were victorious over Southern. The
varsity won 15-5, 7-15, 15-5 and the
reserves 15-5, 15-9.
Meigs scorers Included Jodi
Harrison and Shannon Htndywlth 10
each, Julie Miller seven, Jennl
Couch and Greta Kennedv tl\fee

I

each, Ruth Fry two, and Jenny
Miller and Rhonda Neece one
apiece.
Reserve scorers for Meigs were
Rhonda Zirkle nine, Terri Roush
eight, Shelly Stobart flve, Cindy
RiUie four, Donna Lambert three.
and Lisa Pulltns one.
'frlmble' s Lady Tomcats won in
three games tn the week's final
matches, 15-13, 7-1.5; 15-10 while the
Meigs reserves won 15-10, 15- t"J.
Hlndy pace&lt;IMeigs tn scoringwlth
13 points while HarriSon added 11,
Ju. Mlller five, and. Je. Miller,
Couch, Fry, and Kennedy all with
two each.
The reserve scoring was Rillle .
eight, Lambert seven, Pulltns and
Roush five each, Zirkle three, and
Stobari two.
In this week's action, Meigs will
host Miller Tuesday, tFavel to
NetsonviiJe.York Wednesday In
sectional tournament play against
New ' Lexington, and Thursd!ly
travel to WaiTen Local.

Darby Downs results

·COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -After
10 straight days without a winner in
the Pick Six betting at Darby
Downs, two people correctly chose
the correct combination Friday and

I

won $25,580.00 each.
Thepayoffsetarecordforthenew
Pick Six wager. The wlnnipg
combination was 14-8-2-2-6.
Acrowdof3,497wagered$.JMJ,185.

.
.- ..
.·
•

~

•

•

was a-.ea a 15 yard penalty
ByGjii')'CWk
#
which
put it deep in a hole at Its own
FORT GAY -Theoidadagelhat
NEWYORK (AP )- Claiminghis .•
1
16.
Tlli-ee
plays
later,
Waharna
was
lt's not overuntU it'sdVerwasnever
group is lostng ground in trying to. ~
more evident than Frlday nlght forced to punt with the center snap
check
athletic abuses," Walter By- ;
when the Wahama White Falcons salllng over the punter's head Into
e
rs,
executive
director of the . :
drove 71 yards for a touchdown with the end zone wllere Robbie Grtmm
National
Collegiate
Athletic Associ- ·
just : 'll second re!t)atnlng to take a retrieved it and_ran It back to the
a
tlon.
has
called
for
a convention of
come from behind 19-14 gridiron e~ht yard tine.
university presidents to explore the
Fort Gay, aided by a controver·
victory over the host Fort Gay
posslblll!Y of a tougher violations ,
slal pass Interference penalty •.
Vlklngs.
code.
'!be White Falcon overcame a scored five plays later when Eddie
Acknowledging the size of paypoOr first half showing by .dominat- Byrns went In from a yard out. The
. ments to athletes for the first time Ing Fort Gay during second half PAT pass failed and Fort Gay held
payments he estimates to be uup to
action to keep its 1984 record a 14-7 lead at the half.
$20,000 or more a year- Byers said •
The second half proved to be-all
unbleintshed at 7-0 and enhance its
in an interview in The New Yark
Wahama
as Marshall began ta gatn
chanceS of a post season playoff
.Times that illegal payments and
berth. The Vlktngs had the game tn his confidence an(j the offense and
other improprieties are so widsUleir grasp 1111tU the final 2: 15 of the defensive ltnes began to control the
pread that s tronger policing meacontest before succumbing to the line of scrimmage. The White
sures
are needed .
rr•s A SCORJ;!: - Detroit's Lou Whitaker scores i&gt;tego In the third game of the World Series. Padres'
late Wahama rally which dropped . Falcons, after picking up just 65
"We're
not keeping up with !hi! •
on Alan TrammeD's single In the second tnntng
catcher Is Ten-y Kennedy. ( AP La.serphoto) .
the Wayne Countlans to 2-4 on the yards In total offense· during the
chase,
..
Byers
said in t he story In the
Friday night to help ihe 'HJ~ers' ~2 victory over San
flrsthaUf,eruptedfor214totalyards
year.
Times· Saturday editions . "I've
The bend area team lost Its durtng second half action while the
ta !ked with our representa lives and
starting quarterback Jeff Barnltz defensive unlt held Fort Gay to just
people l respect and the problem is
early tn the game due to an Injury. one first down and 13 total yards
much worse than I thought."
The Injury to Barnltz forced over the final two quarters.
Byers would not identify schools
Late tn the third period Wahama
DETROIT (AP) - After the way
look at It this way: it was. a
had replaced starter and winner
or athletes involved in receiving
Coach Bill Jewell to go with
seven-game series when it staried
Milt WUcox.
payments. David Berst. the NC~ _
sophomore quarterback Billy Mar- began a drive at 1ts own 47 yard his players walked around Tiger
Anderson waved Witl ie Hernan·
shall who was thrust tnto the line whlch covered 53 yards In 11 Stadlwn all eventng, Detroit Man- au t an d tha t' s th e way 1 thtnk it' s
dir ector of en forcement. was quoted
gain g tog0 · I reaUY belleve It's going
dez. the Tigers ' ""stopper," in from
b y theT"unes as saymg.
·
··M r . Byers .
unenviable task of guiding the plays with Marshall and Frishette ager Sparky Anderson figured they
making
the
big
plays
which
culmiwill have to fly back to San Diego.
to be a long, drawn-oui. toug h
the bullpen. And he served up a
is bound by the wrttten poli cies and
· White Falcon offense with virtually
The Tigers got only seven hits
Sertes."
heart-stopper.
procedures that require us to keep
no varsity expertenee. AlthOugh the nated In a five yard Todd Gress
Terry Kennedy bashed the ball to
· forma t1on
· conf 1"d ent 1a 1.··
6-2 155-pound sophomore made touchdown run. The two point Frtday night, but one of them was
that m
"I'm glad. to hear Sparky say straightaway center fie ld. Lemon.
Byers said the violators are using
some early mistakes he grew up In conversion came up Inches short on Marty Castillo's two-.run homer in a
we're going to go back to San
who plays a routinely shallow
··sophisticated techn iques" to get
a hurry and «nrected the two White another controversial call by the . four-runsecondinning. .
They also got a record-tying 11
Diego. " Padres Manager Dick
position, wheeled and took off . his
the payments to the a thletes. He a~ •
Falcon fourth quarter drives which oftldals and Wahama traDed by a
14-13 score with 11:24 rematntng in walks from the Padres' erratic
Wllllams said. "I know we're going
back to the ball.
said that most violations occur in •
they so desperately needed.
the game.
back. but I'd like for them to go back
He glanced over his shoulder. He
foot ball and basketba ll.
pitchers. That., coupled with an
Wahama took the opening kickoff
After
stopping
Fort
Gay
the
acrobatic
catch
tn
center
field
by
with
us
."
had
turned
the
wrong
way.
He
Among the penalties Byers said
and marched 63 yards In six plays
White
Falcons
regained
possession
Ch!'t
Lemon
_
Anderson
said
.
He
charactertzed
the
Padres·
pirouetted
and,
racing
backward
he
would like to see for the mos t
1
1
for an early touchdown with 9: 15
Starling
"very
very
toward
the
440-foot
sign.
reached
up
.
.
Pltchtng
as
at
thetr
own
eight
yard
ltne
with
remaining in the first quarter. Jeff
wasn't all that special - gave the
'
senous cases are more routme
nine
minutes
to
play.
WHS
began
vi
d
tw
poor.
As
you
noticed,
we
had
11
and
caught
the
drive.
curtailm
ent
of
schol
arships.
dism
is2
Frlshette broke free for a 33 yard
Tigersa5- ctoryan a ogames
walks ... Wedidn'tsetanewrecord
"I said 'Oh, my goodness.""
otf
sh&lt;lrt
chunks
of
real
estate
blttng
run tor the six potnts with Jeff
· to one lead tn the World Series.
sals ol coaching staffs and suspen·
but we tied one. Eleven walks isn't
Lemon recalled. " As l ran back- sions of team schedules for one year
Barnltz booting the potnt after for and moved to the Viking 42 yard ltne
. The Tigers, who split the first two
ward. I looked over my light
anyth.mg that's too pretty ·..
where the drive stalled forcing a
games tn San Diego last Tuesday
or m ore.
an early 7-0 White Falcon lead.
and the ball was on my left
Diego
shoulder
N
Sh
th
San
punt
with
minutes
remaining.
orm
erry,
e•
Bye rs. interviewed a t the Nc AA
and Wednesday niahts, can win the
On the Vlktngs' first possession
..,
•t
hln
h
s
b1
"
t
morn
...
U
I
ca
n
reach
it,
I'll
catch
it.
"
1
A
seven
yard
run
by
Frtshette
championship with victories today
P c g coac • wa a
~
offices a t Sh
. awnec Mission. Kan ..
Barnltz suffered his Injury and for
and
an
11
yard
scamper
by
_ when first-game winner Jack
graphic ih his descrtptlon . "They
"He"sdoneitsomanytimesfor us
said: "I have the b&lt;&gt;lief that an
the remainder Of the half Wahama
Morris faces the Padres' Eric Show
drove m e crazy on the bench." he
in the years I've been with him.
overwhe lming number of peoplewas In trouble. Following a White Marshall preceded a 12 yard pass
play
from
Marshall
to
Gress
for
a
1.
3
and
Sunday
night.
said.
·"It
was
like
a
bad
d
ream
.
You
three
years."
Anderson
said
with
a
the presidents , athletic directors.
Falcon punt Shawn Fraley went 26
yard
d
dbein
expect
gatn
followed
by
an
11
and
13
wntn
th
11
walks
in
the
rookie
league,
shrug.
"Ididn"tthink
it
was
anything
faculty
and coaches - warit a be~er
1
yards on the return with a
Despite a
g e ea an
g
not in them'ajors .. . !twas like I was
different .. ..!thought Chester made
run
by·
Eddie
Starcher
which
yard
home
for
the
next
two
games,
world
in
intercollegiate athletics . I
a
t
facemask penalty glvtng Fort Gay
gave
Wahama
a
first
down
at
the
derson
sounds
as
though
he
In
another
world
on
the
bench.
"
a
good
catch
but
I've
seen
lt
so
m
any
think
they
will embrace a new
An
a !lrst down at the WHS 13yard line.
times, itdldn'texclteme."
rder. "
ho fl.nds few good
And
five
with
:
38
seconds
remalntng.
hasn'tevenbotheredtounpack.
erson
,
w
o
Six p)ays later Gary Coli scored
" It means for sure we a !least are
things to say even in the best of , , - - - - - - - = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
from one yard out with Eddie Cyrus Frtshette went four yards to the one
gotng togettogobacktoSanDiego,"
tim es , found plenty to complain
catching a Gary Etnfeldt pass for and following a time out Starcher
put
W
ahama
ahead
to
stay
with
one
he
said.
"
It
aih'
t
going
to
end
here.
I
abOut.
the two potnt conversion and an g.7
"We 're just not hitting," he said
yard
plunge
with
:
27
second
to
play.
Vlktng lead with 11: 58 to play in the
after
the Tigers raised their
The extra point was stopped sh&lt;lrt
half.
ars
a
VICtOnOUS
.
three-game
total to 22.
On the ensuing kickoff, Wahama again and Wahama had the lead at
" Tonight their pitching was just
19-14.
very wlld, but their bullpen has shut
Fort Gay tried four desperation
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . IAPl us downeverytlmetheycomein."
passes following' till! kickoff with
Tha t bullpen had gone 13 · 1-3
Mike Wolfe intercepting the Etn- Marshall University's baseball team
innings beiore allowing a Detroit
fleldt's heave on the final play ofthe blasted Morehead State 6·1 to win its
first game at its new baseball field
run when Greg Harris hit Kirk
game. ·
- University Heights.
Gibson with a bases-loaded pitch tn
Statl.!itlcs:
Herndon, Va ., freshman Scott
the fourth Inning.
FG
Deplll1ment
w
5
First downs ............... ............. 17
Crosby cracked a three-run homer
But that was only the fifth run.
Yards rushing ........... ,. ........ . 51-243 35-66
in
the
sixth
inntng
to
break
a
1-1
tie
And
even though Harris went the
Yards pass!ng ......... ............. ..... 36
0
in Wednesday's practice game.
rest of the way, allowing just three
Total yards .. ............................ 279
66
0.5
Passing ...... .... ..
. ... ..... ...3-9
RACINE suffertng a
hitsin51-3shutoutinnlngs, thegame
At Thundering Herd coach Jack
lntcrceptlons
thrown
................
...
0
I
non-league loss last · week, the Fumbles-lost ..... ......... ............... 5-D
was, as it turned out, virtually over.
Cook's request, the two teams
().0
Southern Tornadoettes bOunced P(lnaltles-yards .. .. ...... . .... .. .... .. 8-91 3-25 played two additional Innings so
Virtually. But not quite.
back into the winning column with Punts-avg ...................... ........ 3-36.0 6-31.3 more players could see action .
In the seventh inning. Tony
011 plays .............. .................... 63
46
vlctortes over Federal-Hocking and
Marshall is about a week away
Gwynn singled, Steve Garvey
Scorebyqllllllers:
Hannan Trace.
Wahama
7 0 0 12-19
from ending its fall baseball prac·
doubled a nd Craig Nettles hit a
0 14 0 0-t4 lice.
sacrifice fly off Bill Scherrer. who
Against Federal, Southern lost Fort Gay
the opening game 12-15, but came
back to win the next two games, J5.9
and 15-13.
CHESTER
Karen Hemsley led the winners
with a career high of 23 serving
points, followed by Tracie Hubbard
with four, and Lori Adams, Jill
JACKSON -The Ironton Tigers
Late in the third quarter, Greg completed two of n(ne passes for
Nease, and Mandy Hill with three scored 28 points in the second half Thompson blocked a Jackson punt
nine ya cds.
each.
Friday night enroute to a 35-0 which Mark Pierson scooped up _
Pierson fin ished with 92 yards on
Southern upped Its league record thrashing of the host Jackson and ran 19 yards to score with 45 nine carrtes a nd Moritz added 83
tti 6-2 with a big wln over the rapidly
Ironmen.
seconds remaining.
yards on 25 tries.
Improving Hannan Trac e
The Tigers, smarting from last
Pierson tallied his second TO of
The lronmen. 2·5, netted three
Wlldkittens.
week's 19-2 upset loss at Gallipolis,
the contest on a 64 yard gallop in the first downs. 22 ya rds rushing, and
Southern struggled In the first scored on their first possession as
final pertod and Kyle Colvin closed completed four of 17 aertals for 41
~ruw® \)\¥fi@J~fi[]]Q®fi' liilB~~®mliDU~gg
bout, but managed acloseJ5.13win.
they drove 80 yards in 16 plays to
out the scort?g on a 38 yard run with yards.
therm al lining . To earn these coats . all
To keep our co nst ruc1ion cr ewmen
HT led at one time, 11·6, however. send Ryan Ainsworth the final one 3: 18 remalnmg. ·
.
Score by quarters:
you do af ter you bu y your Morton Build·
work ing th is winter, Morton Bui ldings
mg Is trave tM bui ld in g site ready for
SHS showed Its ablllty to fight back.
Ironton, now 5-2, rolled up 18 first Ironton ... ......... ..... ......... . 7 g1~ 'g:~
yard. Ainsworth's kick was good
is oflerlng big winter discount s on all
types ol buildings which can be buil t dur· erection by the date spe erl ied.
downs. 286 yards rushing. and Jackson ... .. ... .................... 0
The second game was highligh- and the 7-0 score stood into the third
So to t a~ e adv antage of th is li mrted
ing the winter monthS. You can now get
ted by the excellent seiVing of quarter.
otter.
c all yout..,M orton Bui ldings satesour
building
built
this
winter
and
save.
1
Becky Adkins, wh&lt;l served the first
Senior guard and linebacker
Also offered are two beaut iful winter mat~ tor complete details. Then get you r
Morton Buildings coats and caps. These..... si te ready and 111ea r th ese beautiful
11 points and added the final point to Steve WU!is, · sidelined with an
coats and cap s al l winter. (Retail 'o'a lue
beauliful coats and DuPont Zepel 11 rain
Injury for the past three weeks , set .
win the game, 15-8.
and ataln resistant poly cott on shell with $260.00.) Offer can be wrt hdrawn without
Adkins led Southern with 17 up the next Tiger score when he
~·
not ice .
nylon taffeta Qu ilted to 3M Thinsulate 111
seiVing potnts and Rachel Reiber.
returned a pass Interception to the
Tracie Hubbard anc:l__ Mandy Hill Jackson 19 yard line.
Timberlan&lt;P
and handsewns are constructed with
Fullback Dave Moritz scored
each had three.
Southern is tied for first place in from the one and Ainsworth toed
only the finest q~aterials by experienced craftsmen, for
the SVAC with North Gallla.
the second of his five extra point
lasting comfort [Ulder the most demanding conditions.
Southern is now 9:5 overall.
kicks .
Thats why year alter year more and more people are

Detroit takes 2-l edge \_Vith 5-2 win

,------:--c-------:----:--:------:--------------.,.--------------

tight end Bennie Cunningham, who
are recovering from recent injurtes.
Mark Malone took over at quarterback alter Woodley suffered a
cpncusslon last Sunday. and Malone
will start against the 49ers.
Coach Bill Walsh considers his
current 49ers team .stronger than
the 1981 club which posted a 13-3 .
regular season record and went on
to a Super Bowl title. The major
reason is superior depth.
"We h3vematurity and the added
talent ot younger players," Walsh
says. "The players are communicating well and the coacl1lng staff is
doing an excellent job of coordinating the WhJ&gt;le thtng."
.
The 6-0 stan Is the best In the49ers'
NFL history - the 1948 team had a
10.0 start tn the Nl·American
Conference - and a seven-game
winning streB.k would match the
49ers' longest of the 1!m season.
One ot the victories tn the 1981
Streak was over a Plttsburglt team .
featuring players such as Terry ·
Bradshaw, Franco Harris,
~

plays and were forced to punt. Potnt
took possession at their own 28 and
put together a 12·play drive hehtnd
the strong rwmlng of Mitchell and
Bobby Barnette. Barnette capped
the drive with a four-yard touchdown run. Rhodes again converted
the extra potnt to give the Big Blacks
a 21~ lead.
The Big Black's defense. dgatn
refused to allow the Pony Express
any yardage and Huritington pWited
the ball back to Point Pleasant.
Mitchell, at this pQint with already
over 100 yards rushing, took control
again by capping a three-play
scoring drive with a brilliant 1\)·Yard
touchdown run. Rhodes added his
fourth PAT of the game and the Big
Blacks held a ~ lead.
On the ensuing kickoff the Pony
Express fwnbled the ball and Point
Pleasant's Ken Fleming recovered
the loose pigskin. Two plays later
the Big Blacks scored again.
Rhodes threw a picture-perfect pass
to Nibert that was good for &amp;3 yards
and the fifth Point Pleasant touchdown of the first half. Rhodes made
it 5-5 in the PAT category and the
Big Blacks led 35-11 at halftime.
The Big Blacks added to their lead
midway through the third quarter.
With Brian Wedge running the of·
fense the Big Blacks moved 46 yards
in six plays. The big play in the
drive was 26-yard scamper · by
Wedge. Barnette bulled Into the
endzone from one yard out and
Rhodes converted his sixth extra·
potnt of the evening to give Point
Pleasant a 42-0 lead over the Pony
Express.

Teammate's number -'33' put

San Francisco seeks
seventh straight win

•

Eagles' fumble glvtng them the blin were Rice 151 yards and two
at midfield, on second down Mike touchdowns, Brent Bissell 69 yards · .
Lance Intercepted Gary Kirk and and Ron Hensley had 74.
Deke Barnes led ·Hannan Trace
returned the ball to the Wtldcats ll.
On a !lrst and goal from the three with 92 yards.
Top receivers were Jeff BisseU
Lance got the call up the middle and
· and Brent Bissell. Steve Stitt led .
added another six for Eastern.
Royce Bissell's pass - to Brent Hannan Trace with 58 yards In
Bissell finished the scoring glvtng receptions.
Friday night, the Wildcats play
Eastern a 28-8 victory.
Coach Brett W~n commented their hOmecoming . against the
·about his team's performance Kyger Creek Bobcats while Eastfollowing the game saying, "We ern, now 4-3 overall, travels to •·
have not been the same team stnce North Gallla.
Sdoedule
lfl' .
the game against Green (24-24
llepaltmenl
E
12
tie) ." Wilson said he f!!l!ls his tell,lll
First downS .... ............. . ········· 20.
90.
Yards ruslllng... ..... ............ ... 350
is lacking In size in compartson with
99
Yanls pa~ing ... ... ..... .... ... · .. - -~
other teams in the league but that Total yardage .. ................... ··
189
l8
Passes attempted .................... 5
its speed could compensate for it.
13
Complelf.'d .... ... : .. ·.... .. .. ........ .... 3
Wilson commented a bout his pre2
Had Intercepted .. .................... 0
vious teams falling nat alter losses
1
Fumbles .... ..................... ....... 2
1
Fumbles lost ..... ........... ... ...... . 1
In the past, but that his team this
2-10
PenaltiES .. ... ... ...... ::... ......... lfl.lOO
year had more class than to give up
4-ll.2
Punts (No.-Average yds.) .... 2-32
following its third loss.
By quarters:
Eastern .., ... ..... ... ..... ........... 6 8 6 8-28
Leading rushers for · Eastern
Hannan Trace ..... ... .... .. .... .. 0 0 8 0-8

Big Blacks bomb
Huntingion, 50-0

B~lpre posts

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers saw the unbeaten Miami Dolphins In person
last weekend, then began studying
film of the unbeaten San Francisco
49ers.
" ! don 't think I've seen a better
team on fUm . I haven't seen a team
play with the Intensity that they've
played with.- They're relentless, ..
Steelers Coach Chuck Noll said.
Th!!49ers will be trying to llve up to
that rave review and to improve
their record to 7-{) when they play the
Steelers. 3-3, on Sunday at Candlestick Park in a matchup of division
leaders. The Dolphins, only other
unbeaten team in the National
Football League, went to 6-0 by
tiurytng Pittsbur-gh 31-7last Sunday .
&lt;in the Steelers' home field .
." It was their show all the way,"
N'oll said alter the Dolphins' victory.
Blltheslzed upthe49ers atmldweek
b&gt;; saytng, " From what I've seen on
fllrn, I thtnk the 49ers are a much
blitter football team (than Miami l tn
all areas."
:·the 49ers are c oming off their .
.nOst convtnctng victory of the
;ytjurlg season, a 31:10 Monday night
trMJ!ph over the New York Giants.
-Joe : Montana tossed three early
:tout:hdown passes, Wendell Tyler
~ for 101 yards to raise his
se.iaon total to 578, and the San •

conversion glvtng the Eagles a 14'0
lead.
The Wildcats put together there
most consistent drive of the half
following the Eastern-score, but the
clock ran out ending first half actlon
with the Eagles up 14-0.
Second half action got underway
with the Eagles kicking to the
Wildcats. The 'Cats moved deep tn
Eastern territory before turning the
ball over on a fourth down play.
Eastern kept the momentum
flowing taking the ball back down
field . With 6: 31 to go, Rice scored
his second six-pointer on a two yard
run. The Bissell connection (Royce
to J eff ) fatled as the ball fell just
short of the receiver.
HT came light back moving the
ball 53 yards in five plays. Deke
Barnes got the 'Cats on the board
with 4: 51 In the third quarter on a
five-yard burst up the middle.
Ba rnes then added the two-point
conversion making the score 20-8
Eastern.
·
The teams then exchanged
drtves, endtng with punts then with
four minutes to go HT recovered on

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ROUTE 4
CALDWELl, OHIO 43724

PH. 614-783-2331

�Page-Ca- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 14, 1984

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

State/ ational

\

;

'«imea-

.

~•nlintl Section

D

oCt~ -14, 1984

.

Death of highway bill may delay Ohio projects
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress adjourned
Ftiday wi1hout p~lng a highway funding bill,
holding up at least $187 rilllllon for Ohio and
threatening to delay Interstate highway construction
In the state.
The action held up national distribution of $7 billion
trom the highway trust fund designated to pay for
· normal construction on the lnterstale highway
. system. The tru ~t fund artnually collects about $14
: - billlon, primarily from a 9-Cents-per-gallon federal
.• gasoline a nd diesel tax, plus other road-use taxes.
: ; ' To free the $7 bllllon from the highway trust fund,
Congress had only to approve the "lntersta te cost

2~

(73ll841 ftll..... .

1O"x17"

DOUBLE HIBACHI

estimate," a technical document computed by the
Federal Highway Administration.
"Essentially It brtngs us to a. halt as far as Interstate
projects," said Stev~ Fought, spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Transportation. He said Ohio
only has $~.000 remaining In lntersta te construction
funds.
"We've got projects planned," he said. " We're just
going to have to walt."
.
Fought said the only project that may be affected
immediately Is construction of a 2~mlle section of
Interstate 400 In Cleveland, estimated to cost S50

mUllan. However, a spokeswoman for the governor's
office saki federal funds from other sources are being
sought for that project.
Fought said if Congress a pproves the highway
legislation by early next year, there still may be time
to solicit bids be{ore the highway construction season
begins In Aprtl. However. he said If no action Is taken
by February, state highway officials would be getting
" pretty nervous."
The highway btll died after House and Senate
negotiators couldn't agree on how large a share of $1
bllllon in highway " demonstration projects" the
federal government shOuld pay.

Congress calls it
quits for 1984

OCC defends
court refunds
ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (API- Ohio's
consumers feel more confident of
receiving u tlllty bill refunds when
they are. administered and mailed
out by the Ohio Supreme Court,
Consumers' Counsel William Spratley says.
He told a news conference Friday
that he agrees with court policy of
handling the refunds rather tlian
leave them up to the uttllties "who
made the overcharges In the first
place."
Spratley added : "Youdon'tletthe
fox guard the henhouse."
He referred to three separate
refunds which have been ordered py
the Public Utilities -Commission of
Ohio and upheld by the Supreme
Court.
·
In the first, Involving Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co., the
Supreme Court denied the company's bid to refund an estimated
$12.9 million through bill reductions.
Instead, the court sent out checks to
603,000 C&amp;SOE customers.
That refund was ordered after the
PUCO refused to allow C&amp;SOE to
charge Its ratepayers for construelion costs on the aborted Zimmer
nuclear power plant n ear
Clnclnna ti.
Spratley was asked about complaints by some Republicans a nd
others that the Democrat-controlled
Supreme Court took over the
mailing process for political purposes, timing It to coincide with the
Nov. 6 election campaign.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan's
whistle-stop tour through western Ohio Friday was
only the latest reminder that the Buckeye State Is
considered Important to Republicans and Democrats
as they enter the final weeks of the presidential
campaign.
Since the campaign's official Labor Day kickoff,
· the nation's presidential and vice presidential
' candidates have practically tripped· over each other
. In Ohio, making stops In the state 14 different times .
Although definitive numbers nationwide -weren 't
· • lmmedlalely available, reports and campaign
' : officials Indicate Ohio may have been the most-visited
· • state since the beginning of September.
·
According to an analysis of press accounts, the only
;, ; other state coming close was Michigan,·which had at
· · least 10 campaign visits. Illinois and Pennsylvania
· : had at least seven visits apiece, California six, New
. York five, and Texas and New Jersey four apiece.
Democrats Walter Mondale and Geraldine Ferraro

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have campaigned in Ohio 10 different times, Kathy
Rogers, deputy campaign manager of the Ohio
Mondale organization, said Friday.
Ms. Rogers said Mondale stopped In Cleveland on
Sept.17 and26, 1n Cincinnati Oct. 9 and in Columbus on
Oct. 11.
Ms. Ferraro was In Toledo on Sept.ll , Columbus on
Sept. 12. Youngstown on Sept. 24, Akron on Oct. 1,
Dayton on Oct. 3 and 4, and Is due in Cleveland on Oct.
15 and 16, Ms. Rogers sa id.
She said Ohio appears to beoneofthemost-traveled
states by the Mondale-Ferraro ticket. However, she
said, "I'm not sure we're the most visits. "
The two Democrats have appeared In Pennsylvania at least six times and Michigan and California at
least five times aptece.
President Reagan and Vice President George Bush
have stopped In Ohio four times since Labor Day.
Curt Steiner, s and the absence of 40 of the 100
senators.

Painter dies in accidf!nt
CINCINNATI (AP) - Frank Wagner, 42, a painter from North
Bend, Ohio, was killed, and James Lawson, 34, Dayton, KY:• was
Injured, when their scaffolding gave way on the fourth story of the
Teachers College Building at the University of Cincinnati on Frtday.
Wagner fell to the ground and died lrrunedlately, according to
Greg Hand, spokesman for the university.
·
·
Lawson clung to the scaffolding ropes and hungon'until securtty
pollee could pull him In through a third-floor window. Lawson was
reported In fair condition with back and stomach injuries ·at
University Hospital, Hand said.
The painters were working for Miller Brothers Wallpaper &amp; Paint
Co. of suburban Norwood .
The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration was
investigating.

........................&amp;.84-

4 Dllwtr(A4R)

DOUIU BURNERS

"There wlU bti no more votes today, there wiD be no
more votes In this session, there wiD he no more votes
In my career." Baker, who did not seek re-election,
was given a standing ovation at the end of the 19M
session. (AP Laserpholo).

congressional leaders sa id had to be
passed before Congress could quit
for the year. Reagan was prepared
to call Congress back Into session
next week if lawmakers recessed
withoul passing the measure, GOP
leaders said.
The controversy represented the
latest in a strtng of stalemates on
federal spending and borrow41g
1hat plagued the election.-year
Congress.
Congress is regular ly asked to
raise the debt ceiling , but it is a vote
few members relish, particularly In
a time of such high federal deficits.
Democrats, blaming current deficits on Reagan, sa id they opposed the
measure to force Senate Republicans to take responsibility for the
action.
Most returning members hastlly
made commercia l plane reservations to gel back to Washington to
vote, but the Alr F' orce sent three
planes 10 brtng back four Republica n senators - John Tower of
Texas, Thad Cochran of Mississippi,
Jeremiah· Denton of Alabam a a nd
Charles P ercy of lllinois.
However. Percy, tacked in a tight
re-election bat1te, stayed in Chicago
when it a ppeared that Baker had the
support needed to pass the debt·
limit extension without him .
As It quit for the year. the 98th
Congress left behind a number of
major controversial Items .

•

O~io

The Air Force was enlisted to ferry three of the
missing Republica.n s back to the capital and others
took commercial flights. The lawmakers had lefl
Thursday under the mistaken assumption that the
borrowing bill would be passed without a roll call vote
a nd a llow the Senate and House to adjourn until
January .
Republicans, who contrc;l the Senate 55-45, had said
before Friday's v ote that the bill could not pass
without Democratic help. They were wrong. The fin al
roll call showed no Democral voted for il. F our
Republicans and 26 Democrats voted no.
A second vote on that measure- which rai Ses the
federa l debt limit to $1. 824 trillion - was the fina l
hurd le standing in the way of adjournment. The
House, which had conducted no bus iness s ine&lt;&gt;
Thursday evening, had left a skeleton crew standing
by in .case the Senate rejected the measure a second •
time.
But Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker

.

voterS

wa sn't about to let thai ha ppen . "When I' ve gor the
votes, we' ll vole," he told reporters. "E ither I'm
going Ia win or we're not going to have a votE' ." ~
II took three hours for Baker to make sure he had
those votes before the roll call started. Shortly
afterward. the latest in a series of stalemates
affecting governm ent spending and bon-owing had
been broken, senaiOrs congratulated each ot her on
their work and the Congress shu I down.
Thursday's action had left the government with no
credit, Congress already having postponed two
securtties auctions and reduced a third because of the
Senat e delay.
Raising the credit timil Is a task Congress is called
on to perform with regularity although few members
relish it. The action s imply gives the government
authortty ro borrow to pa y its bills, bul many
lawmakers like to use the occasion 10 protest federal
spending.

.--......__--Ohio briefs:·------------------.

(728181

· - (51571)

GAS GRILLS

JumiANT LEADER - Senate Majority
Leader Howanl Baker of Tennessee, left, smiles as
Senate Minority Le&amp;der Robert' Byrd of West VIrginia·
and Baker talk \IY phone 1o ~resident Reagan Friday
from Capllol IDD lo Jet Reagan know that the 98th
Congo-eM had recessed. A• Jublllant Baker deelared ·
/

WASHINGTON (API -'- Congress has quit for the year , but
before the fina l gavei could fall,
more than a dozen senators 1interrupted their plans to fl y back to the
nation 's capital so they could vote to
restore the goverrunent's borrowIng authortty.
The House and Senate adj ourned
Friday until next J anuary after the
Senate voted 37-30 to pass an
emergency bill on federa l a uthortty
to borrow money.
That bill had been rejecled late the
night before . 46 to 14, in a vote that
ca ught Senate GOP leaders by
surprise, with many members
already gone for the long adj our n·
ment recess. Democrats sta yed
behind to deliver a solid biocofvoles .
against the debt-limit increase.
Majortty Leader Howard H.
Baker Jr. summoned Republican
colleagues back , and took another
vote Frtday afternoon, allowing the
bill. which raises the nation's debt
limit by $251 billion. to go to
-P resident Reagan.
"There will be no m ore votes
today. there wi)l be no more votes In
this session , there will be no more
votes in m y career," Baker declared. The Tennessee Republican .
retiring after 18 years,_the last four
of them as maj ority ieader. won a
standing ovation from colleagues a s
the !lith Congress came to a formal
close.
The debt-limit btll was one Lhat

Candidates lavishing attention on

314"&lt;16 ' (459721 .. ...... • . . . ... ... • . ... •• • . • .• ..... . . .

2f1_::.!l~ Type (6611&amp;J

Both houses of Congress previously had a pproved
highway spending btlls by wide margins .
The Senate version Insisted states pay half the costs
of the clemonstra tlon projects. with a $12.5 mlllion cap
on the federal share. The House version called for the
federal goverrunent to pay the entire cost with no
general cap.
Ohio demonstration proj ects in the bill included
i\Uthariza tion of $15 million for a Route 2 bypa$,5
around Huron, $3.5 million for a highway project In
the Tremont area of Cleveland a nd $600,000 for
Interstate 670 in Columbus.

Embezzler gets reluctant probation
HAMILTON (AP)- LenlceWise,45,Somervllle, sentenced to two
years for embezzling $37,000 from Armco Inc. Insurance funds , has
been released for probation reluctantly by Judge John R. Moser ,
Butler County Common Pleas Court.
Moser had sentenced her Aug. 16 to consecutive one-year prtson
terms on each of two counts of grand theft by deception. Friday,
Moser told Mrs. Wise he would grant her request for early release
only because Armco attorneys recommeh~ It when her family tast
month completed restitution to the company for the stolen funds.
" But I want to say that I think you have s'hown a lack of contrition,"
the judge said. "I also want to say this court never accepted your
explanation of why this. money was taken.;•
Mrs. Wise plead!!(l guilty June 4 to embezzling $12,327 from
workmen's compensation funds, and $24,327 from sickness and
accident benefit funds .
Mrs. Wise ortglnally pleaded Innocent by reason of tilsanlty, then
claimed she took the money because her niece was blackmailing her
about an extramarital affair. She later pleaded guilty.
The judge sentenced Mrs. Wise to the Ohio State Reformatory for
Women In Marysvllle after she failed to make full restitution within a .

two-month grace pertod following her guilty plea. Armco attorneys
dropped a lawsuit against Mrs. Wise and her husband, Roscoe, for
recovery of the money after the couple finished repaying it last
month.

Sudler Trophy goes to O.S.U.
ffiLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio Stale University marching band
will be awarded the Sudler Trophy. known as the " Helsm an Trophy
of marching bands."
The Sudler winner is chosen by marching band directors from
National Collegiate Athletic Association schools.
"It's truly a national recognition ," said Craig J . Kirchoff, director
of bands at OSU .
The university is to receive the trophy at a ceremony Nov. 3 at the
OSU-Indiana football game in Ohio Stadium . OSU will keep the
22~- lnch , bronze trophy for a year.
OSU Is the third college to receive the awa rd, which is
administered by the Joim P hilip Sousa F ounda tion and named after
Lou is Sudler, a music lover and fou nder of a Chicago real-estate
company.
P ast winners have been the University of Michigan and the
University of llllnols.

Court awards $3.5 million
NEW LEXINGTON (AP) - A 20-year-old woman has been
awa rded $3.5 million as a resull of a January 1983 traffic accide nt
tha t Jell her In a wheelchair, a judge says.
Perry County Probate Judge John Taylor and lawyers for Marcey
Albertine announced the out-of-court settlement Frtday, two weeks
before her $10 mllllop suit against Paul K. Fitzpatrick and White
Chevrolet of ZanesVille was to go to trial.
The car dealer's Insurance company wlll pay the $3.5 mlllion,
which Is to be Invested under the court's guidance and Is expected to
grow to $18.3 million In Miss Albertine's lifetime.
Miss Albertine was driVing south on Ohio Route 93 on J an. 24, 1!&amp;,
.•when her car was struck head-on by a pickup truck drtven by
Fitzpa trick, of Shawnee. She lapsed Into an 8~ -month coma and

cannol bend either of her legs or one of her arms. according to her
brother.
Fitzpatrick, who was anem pting to pass a nol her car on the
two-lane road. was charged with usi ng speed excessive for road
condi tions. He pleaded no contesl. was found guilty and fin ed $40and
court costs .
Clay Graham . one of Miss Albei1ine 's an orne)•S. sa id White
Chevrolet was named a defenda nt because ir ownPd lhe truck
Fitzpatrick was driving.

Ohio corn crop increases
COLUMBUS t AP) -The U.S. Departmenl of Agriculture says
this year's com crop in Ohio is expected to t01al412.5 million bushels .
up 84 percenl over last year's yield.
The 1983 com crop was red uced by the federal Pa~menl In Kind
program. which took milUons of acres out of crop production. ·
The department also forecast the state's soybean production at
135.7 million bushels. up from 104.96 million bushels a year ago.

Judge orders return of funds
NEW YORK tAP 1- A U.S. District judge has ordered sales agent
Edith Reich to retum$1B.9 miUion s he had been pa id byDaycoCorp.
as commission on falsified orders for V·bell s she claimed were
placed by the Soviet Union.
Dayco. based In Dayton. Ohio, filed a lawsuil in May 1!112 in U.S.
Distric t Court asking judgments against Foreign Transactions
Corp., Ms . Reich and others .
The suil alleged that the defendants defaulted on a promissory
note and fraudulently mlsrepresenled certain foreign sales
transactions. It sought to recover $13 million on the promissory note.
and more th an $25 million. for fraud a nd other rPlief. ··
ln granting the judgment, U.S. District Judge Mary Johnson Lowe
also dismissed a countersuit filed by Ms. Reich In which she alleged
that Dayco Cha irman Richard J. Jacob had been part of the plan to
defra ud the company, and that he had received kickbacks from her .
A separate investigation by outside members of the Dayco board
had exonerated Jacob.

~

•

'

•

�Times-Senttnel

October

W. Va.

Ohio-Pomt

14, 1984

October 14, 1984
31

junhq ~im.es- ientin.el

Homaa for Sala

Houoe 172 N Pork Drive, 7
roomo, 2 botht, oompletaly
redeooreted 304 · 171·
2118 . Dorothy Mltohell,
Porrloh Avenue.

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

New homo tor oale whh 3
ooreo of land, UI,OOO 00
304.773· 11474

A fra__me hou1a, 115 acre
UO.OOO 00 or trade , fo;
equal value 304-8911
3935

Announce ments
1 -Card of Thanks Ipaid 1n advance)
2 In Memory
(pa1d '"advance )
3 Announcements
4 · G•veaway
5 Happy Ads
6 l os t and Found
1 Yard Sale (pa1d m advan ce)
PubiC Sale
&amp; Auct1on
9 Wanted to Buy

21 ·Business Opportunity
22- Money to loon
23 Profesuonal Serv1ces
Real

31-Homeo for Sole
32 Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farms for Sale
34-Busoness Buildings
35 lots &amp; Acreage
26-Real Estate Wanted

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51-Household Goods
52 CB . TV &amp; Rad1o Equtpment
63 Antiques
54 M1sc Merchandise
55·BUIIdmg Supplies
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5 7-Muslcallnsl"uments
58-FrUits &amp; Vegetables
69 For Sale or Trade

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Classified pages cover the
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71-Autoo for Sale
72· Trucks lor Sale
73.Vans &amp;4 WD
74-Motorcycles
75-Boats &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessor~es
77-Auto Repair
78-Complrig Equ1pment

Meigs County
Area Code 61 4

Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

446 - Galllpolls

992- M•ddleport
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
343- Portland
247-Letort Falls
949 - Racone
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolv•lle

675-Pt Pleasant
458-leon
6 76 - Apple Grove
773-Mason
882 - New Haven
896 - Letan
937 - Buffalo

367-Chosh~re

38B - VInton
245 - RIO Grande
256-Guyan Drst
643 - Arabla 01st
379 - Walnut

Sc rv ic es
81-Home Improvements
82-Piumb•ng &amp; Heatmg
83 Excavating
84-Eiectr~cal &amp; Refngeratron
85-General Hauling
86 M H Aepan
87-Upholstery

61 -Farm Equipment
52 Wanted to Buy
63·llvestock
64- Hav &amp; Grain
6 5-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Galha County
Area Code 614

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~07-~
J
Pubhc Not1ce
Pubhc Not1ce
3 Announcements
8
Pubhc Sale
11 Help Wanted
NOTICE OF
PUBUCATION
Jo hn E Hallrday Executor of
t he Estate of Della 8 Kerns
deceased
No 17 922
In purs ~ a nc e of the order of

Probm~" Court o! Gall a

tti'e

C ounty Oh i'O John E Hallrd a y

r= Y.P cu!Or of the Estate of Del la
3 KPrns de( P:tSf'rl I w ll offer
o ~ saiP at oubl c auct on on
TtnJr s rt~y

the

81h day of
\l rjvPm nPr I 984 at 1 00 P M
;n. hr p P.mrses the follow no
i ...,.en bed re :J I "" 51.11€
T~ e lol owrr q descr bed real
~:.t J r r srtui3led rn the Sta te o f
O i't
Cou nty :J I GJII a Jnd rn
h~ C ry Jf Ga lrpol s to w 1
l l :JiHI 1l C ty Lot N mber
rM H Jnrlrf'&gt; j ~ n rtv nrnf' f249 l
i 1"1 nJr
I 1 y 0~'"- &lt;:C r oed as
n ' t 1". '&gt; 8 11 r l l at lhP no r
1h. IP lv r u OO~" :J rner o f
o:; " 1 Lr t No 2 19 o n the I n e o f
r r Av
1
h ~ ru p &lt;;O Jl h 4 7
Jtr 1
I rl l!IIJ T"l d Avenue
2 • t r ~ J tl n c nP."' hi!&gt;ncr;
n 1~ J J If 1 \ • I 1 7 3 IP.et 10
r~I r
In l h f' 1 a k I nA n f Stl cJ
8.-

PUBUC NOTICE

The Gall po!1s C1vrt Sel\rCe
Commrss•on 'lnnot nr:Ps Tha
tney writ bF- g v 1q Pot ce Oil leer
EJO. am 1at o ns at the M un c pa
Burld rng
ar 5 18 Secon d NO Hunttng No treapaalA 1cnuf! Ga lilpolrs Oh 10 on tng, Howard Htckel propThu r sday Oc tober 18 1984 at erty Hartford W Va
7 00 PM The C \ Serv ce
Comm• ssro n wr 1 certrlv the r ~-(3ii;;;;i;;--­
pass ng ;~ppl1cants to the C 11y 14
M nnagf!r and the Chef of
r'o 1ce to be co ns dered lor
emplov 11ent by the Crty
Border Col he pup good pet,
RRq u r ~:&gt; 1rerrts sPt hv he good w1th ktds 1 yr old Call
Comrnr ss on f1 o rdPr 10 1a~e th e 614 367 7134
e~&lt;um n )Irons J e as to IOY.. S
(J JAqP 2 1to35VPi'H SOf age Electrtc range to g1ve away
17 1 H oh &lt;;c ho o l g &lt;'lduatP or
Can be sean al 631 Thord
P:::Ju "i3 ,., 11
Ave •Galllpoha
(3
w(l qhl 'I u ht&gt;rqh t

4

1-----------

p

j 1.JDrl J '1('1 25 19 14 nnd
l r.: J r1~"' I n Vo lume 92 Page
J •
Or J H lo r js of Gdl ra
c~

rl

01 I(

""t tr

r Jl

Hf&gt; n l lllr. same

r('r. o derl n
V )IL n 1Y Pd I' 380 uf th e
I )~, l H r.r rrt c;
I Gnllr i'l County
011
1
l

a..

f3 II

II 0 hf' r J l CSI.JI C
r 1 Prl 1 V o t ~6 Pag e
Dr Pr1 Rr c o r f l &lt;; nf Gall r i

1

7~
, , 1,. On r)
r OORE SS

\

r

UP

(; 1

624
"ln l r&lt;;

f rwd
Oh o

1 {/;] 1
Jllr

1

&lt;;

p t rw-"r&lt;;

~ ~~

000 GO

1

14

, w

I~

1npr:1sed
1L1 o brd
11\ 000 00 I iii bP.

{ f f)( P d

I FRMS OF SALE C ISh ul
1 n j " n r s l lr
JOH N F HAL IOA Y
E\(Pcuro1 of rhR

[ stat e ot
Del tl ll Kerns
() f' (

1t1 ? 1 2 8

pn n o afP

A11 applrc m ron to tJk nq th e
f!S t must he I lr&gt;rl Ot 1 n thP C I {
M • ra 1 so ft r:r [) nr o t et k n~
thP tf''1 1 The aoDI cants that o e

Del 4 8 I 0

I4 I7

Ann ounce 111 en! s
Card of Thanks

I WISh to than\ my many
fr10nds for the clrds flow
ers g1fts and attending tho
open house celebration for
my 90th birthday Spec1al
thanks to my son Cale and
w1fe Joann for the1r
thoughtfulness May God
bless you all Ina Kautz

rf't'l &lt;JtdrnrJ

veh1cle

1t J ll 1 1 1

Or 1 12 14 26

1

Card of Thanks

We WISh to extenrl our heart
felt thanks and apprec10t1on
for the many acts of kindness
stJo wn us durmg the 1llness
abd at the t1me of death of our
•lOved one Lera Lowen We are
"Vll'f (ra teful to Dr Witherell
:and Or Lance and to the
nurses and staff of Veterans
.Memonal Hosp1 tal the PO
merol Emertency Squad Ew
tng uneral Home and all
ose who helped tn any way
ur srncere thanks to the Rev
len McClung for hiS comfort
10g words and prayers May
God bless each and evecyone
of you
Husband Bill
•
S1ster and Brothers

ID

CARD OF THANKS
!r!r and Mrs Walter
• Danner would ltke to ex·
press thetr many thanks
to everyone of the1r
fnends who se nt g1fts
~nd fl owers and the
' m any cards they re·
celved for thetr 60th
weddmg
anntversary
and to everyone who
came and the telephone
calls they recetved God
bless you all

6

lost end Found

Not1ce Blue Heeler 11 roam
mg the v1cmtty of the f1rst 2
blocks of Second &amp; Thtrd
Aves Galltpoha Owner
should contact Jean Runyon
at 446 1532 or 446 1272

The famtly of Martma Van
Matre would like to thank all
the~r family
fr.ends and
netghbors for the1r thought
fulness and ktndness durmg
our sorrow It was deeply
appreciated

Found Beegle female dog at
Burlrngham Has black flea
collar and a black leather
collar Lovable dog Soma
bod yo pot Call 614 992
7764

3

Man's billfold, lost rn Porno
my Caii992 -789B or 992
5405 or return to Pohce
Dept F1nder may keep
money

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewmg rna
ch1ne repatr parts end
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pick up and
~ ~~ ~ t
s hPrr&gt;by 01vnn thai supplies
Dav1s Vacuum
11 1 rt wr I t){' :&gt;r P veri hv dehvery
r .., 0 r --"~ tor
o t lh" Gal1a Cleaner one t'lalf m1le up
Call
C " r tv Co w 1r t o n Ag nq Cl t the Georges Creek Rd
c, w () Cr l t/fllS (!.:! 1~ ~ 220 614-446 0294
~ ~ n
P1kf"' Galrpo rt. Ohta
lr r th o:; ~l( o t .J 1970 DodqP Balloons for Get Wall Anm
S .non! B -; M odel H 30 T h ~ versarys B1rthdays, part1es
1•
1 ry hr n'i pec od 1ny Smg1ng Gornlla Call Bel
loons &amp; Co 446 4313
I 1r 11 th&lt;' a b ove 1drlress
h uu rt t r d rPC c r1 towa rrl lhP
v trr
rlrv1 1s
Bd s w ll be
f . " "d 11 l hP. ab ove address
J t
1 1 30 A M local trme
r1 r 1 ~ 0 n ober 18 1984
111 ~1 1 rt tv o pr r r-rt l!n:1 reJd

S1x hbardor pupptes 6
weeks old call 614 667
3B26

Male cat houaecat htter
tramed, two years old and
neutered John Lambert rea
I want to thank the folks for tdence between Foreat Acre
the flowers and card1 and Perk and Harrlaonville on
letters durmg mv tllnell New Ltma Road
Also I want to thank the
doctors and nurses at Vete To g1ve away male German
rans Memor~al Hospital for Shepherd 9 months old
thetr n1ce care Thanks 304 676 7606
agam, Velma Quillen
1

Public Not1ce

1J l 'it o ne.

7 pupp1e1 port Basgle Call
245 9129 after 4pm

Free Couch &amp; cha1r worn. 1
chest of drawers m need of
cr.rt hAd tor cons dcr &lt;~ ! on w• I
repatr. useable See at the
h~" req 1
d 1J hi'lv" :t como ele 2nd b1g red barn on At 218
lhvc. r 11 c ~&lt; am 1 Jt o 1
or call 446 3428

(( I th 1l C n o rth 4 7 &lt;lr.g CJS.l
:l t fnfl ~ ~/ 8 'lt hr:s to ., he
m ) 1 orthPr v cornf'r oi sa rd
fo t- 1hf"'nc.f' _,outh 4 3 dAg e ast
t l3 IN• 10 nc hr:s t:J hAp ace
ol I r fl nn rnQ BP nq 1! e samP.
0-1' rn ~ "'&lt;; C')'lvP.yed b., Allee C
P ,..1r ro lPrr p Grd f rh by deed

Gun shoot at Rac1ne Gun
Club every Sunday. 1 00
p m Factory chocked guns
only

ALTERNATIVETOANURS
lNG HOME Adult Personal
AssiStance Home lo1S of
TLC Nurse available 24 hrs
a day Spectal d•ets as
needed Sen1or c1t1zen act1v
1t1es church pnvlleges
beaut1c1an serv1ces 1n
eluded For more tnforma
t1on call (614)662 3284 or
write PO box 165 Ste
wart Oh1o 46778
No huntmg No trespassmg
James Stewart s farm
2

In Memonam

IN MEMORIAM
In memory of our beloved
husband father and grand
father Ralph B Cox who
passed away Oct 2 1984
We want to express our
smcere thanks and appre
ctatton to all h1s many
frrends who helped durrng
th1s t1me of sadness Those
who sent flowets cards
and food
Those who
VISited the funeral home
and attended the funeral
Spec1al thanks to Rev Jack
Rankin for h1s comforting
words To Carl and 'Betty
Caldwell to the pallbtar·
ers, and to the Wtlhs Fu
neral Home for thm spe
e~al care and undmtand·
mg We cannot begrn to tell
you how much you all have
meant to us
The Fam1ly Of
B Cox

&amp; Auctton
Auct1on Every Tuesday
n1ght, Pt Pleasant WVa
Auct lonnie Neal Youth
Center Bldg Cemden St
Cell6t4-367-7101
Auct•on avery Fnday night at
the Hartford Commun•ty
Center Truckloads of new
merchamh.. avery week
Conalgmenta of new &amp; uted
merchandise alwaya wal
comed R1chard Reynolds.
Auctioneer Call 304·275·
3069

9

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
J1m M~nk Chev, Olds Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
446 3672
l----------Wanted to buy used coal &amp;.
wood heaters Swam Furn•
ture 446 3 t 59 3rd &amp;
Ohve St • Galhpohs Oh
Cash paid for fancy lfOn or
heavy ~ron beds 9160 and
up for certam Me1gs Co
stone 1ars Old t1ma cupboard call 1 304 882
2711
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Beds ~ron.
wood cupboards chatrs

chests

lost from Durat farm on
Send H1ll Road 5 hoed of
cattle, red and whtte Here
ford cow and calf and ateer
Angus cow and calf Last
seen 4 days ago between
Sand Hill and Jar~cho Road
If found please not1fy Early
Russell 304-676 2798 or
Robert Russell atthe Mason
County Bua Garage

1--_,;____;:.:...____
Lost one Gtp and Beagle
pups call 304 675 6659
Set of car keys GM and
Mazda, call 304 676 1333

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

'
Dowler Umouam
D11parsal
Sale Mineral Well1, W Va
Saturday. Oct 20. 1984
1 1 am. Selling 64 Iota of
L1mouam Cattle lncludmg
37 Iota of fullblooda For
enform1t1on contact V1rgil
Dowler 304 · 489 · 2B46
C R Jarvia Auction Service
304 927 4480

2

In Memoriam

IN MEMORY
In lovmg memory of
FRANKLIN (Pete) COX
who passed away one
year ago on October 13,
1983
A prectous one from us
IS gone
A VOICe we loved IS still.
A place IS vacant in our
home
That never can
Sadly
W1fe

baskets

dtshes .

stone 1ars, ant•ques gold
and 11lver Write M D
M1ller Rt 2 Pomeroy Oh1o
45769 or call 614 992
7760
Buymg dally gold stlver
coens nngs, JIWelry sterling
ware, old co1ns large currency Top prrces Ed Bur
ke1t Barber Shop 2nd Ave
Middleport Oh 614-992
3476
Need f1re br1ck for 24 tnch
gas furnace call Sm1th
Nelsons 614 992 2174
GINSENG ROOT Top qual
rty and stze graded selected
S200 00 lb Ord1nary
smaller root - Less! All
other ktnds of root also
purchased Call Robart
Harper 304 676-7977

Found Beegle mother dog
and puppy Lovable, seems
to be hunt1ng dog Found 1n
Burlingham Call992· 7764
LOSTII S100 00 reward for
all wh1te female dog
po1nted ears, curled up tall
lost on long Hollow in
letart 304·B95-3935

Wanted To Buy

Emplov mr.nl
St!r VIGCS
11

Help Wanted

Merrt Mac Homemakers
earn x tra 1ncome We need
several representative~ rn
th11 areal Party plan exp a
plu1 Grfts, toys. home de~
cor No rnvestment Car &amp;
phona nee Call free 1-800
563 9077 Alao book1ng
parties 614 446 3043
DECK HANDS lmmad1a1e
openings w1th tnternat1onal
maritime or@nizatlon, seek
mg to man raprdly expandmg
fleet On the ~Job trainmg
good stanmg ulary, excel
lent benefttl pack1ge, world
travel Appllcanta thould be
17 24 yearo old and In good
phy11cal condition Call toll
free on Oh1o. 1 800· 2B2·
1 384, Mon Wed • 9AM ·
2PM for an mtarview
Sell AVON make 45% Call
446 336B
RN LPN EMT
We need a mature peraon to
complate mobile hfe rnau
ranee eum In Galllpolia-Pt
Pleasant area On a partt1me
basrs You nMd to be
enthuaaltic 8t enjoy a chal
lange Car &amp; phone necea·
aary Reply In wrrtlng to
Examiner At 2 Box 86,
Ripley, wv 25271

Hourty cltmc a•de needed
pertt1me
family
planning
offices in
Must
have
high
school diploma or equtval
ency good commun1cat10n
skills accuracy With figu res,
be dependable organized
Tra1mng
and reapona1ble
ava1leble for mature md1v1d
ual who lai sensitive to
reproductive health needs of
chenta Muat have reltable
transportation. be wtlltng to
travel locally Weekday ev
en•ng and Saturday hours
are to be expected Send
resume, 1nclud~ng two em·
ploymarn references to
Planned Parenthood of Sou
theast Oh•o 8 N Court St •
Athans. Ohoo 45701 by
October 26. 19B4 PPSEO
11 an Equal Opponun~ty
Employer
- - - - - - - -' to GOVERNMENT JOBS
$16 559 $50 663 per yeer
Now h.r1ng Your area Call
1 B06 6B7 6000 Ext R
9805

1H:;;;;;~;;;.;i,;:;;-&lt;;;;;:;;t:;;;;;-;:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~n

Wrll care for lady 1n my
home Call 986-4416 after
5 00 p m
Young woman needs female
roommate to help meet
e•panses of n1ce 3 bdr 2
bath house on Rt 36. V:t m1
from HMC Ph 446 ·9472
15

Schools
Instruction

Kar(lte·Pnvate Leuons
learn the ultlm•te 1n self
defense Amertcan Karate
StUdiO Since 1971 143
Burlmgton Ad • Jackson
Oh10 614·2B6· 3074 In
structor Jerry Lowery
1984 Inductee Into Wa•gh
tliftmg Hall of Fame

Carlton 8 Repatr Service.
aud1o equ1pment stereo &amp;
pubh coh addreas
Kerr
Call 446systems
7141 or
446-4410

Garage Sale 1 mile out
Sand Hill Road lots of
young chlldrens clothmg
and toys

1

Garagesale,1203 Meadow
brook Dr Fn Oct 12th and
Sat Oct 13th F1ve family
n1ce wmter clothtng furnt
ture d•shes etc

.

~-

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Re al

31

Financial

Eslat c

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms central atr
v1nyl wall paper carpet
throughout. well msulated,
new pamt attached garage
gas outdoor gnU awn1ngs
many extras Call446 2583
Ill 5 OOPM after 6 OOPM
call 614 245 5B59

a staffing
pool ~ :~~~~i;.;;i~;i==
developmg
for part t1me
pharamc11ts
Part tlma pharmacists Will 23
BIS1st with the operatton of
Services
thetr 10 patient pharmacy • - - - - -- - ; - - - - Hosprtal will pay premtum .hourly rates plus travel, may
work aa much or as httle as Plano Tunrng and Repair
your schedule will allow Brunlcordl Music Co , 446
0887 Twentieth year of
Call today for application
quality SBNICG lane Da·
Peraonnel Off1ce 304~372
n18ls 614 742 2961
2731

11

Free Estimates

Ph. 379-2651 Day or Night

1989 New Moon 12x80. 2
bdr • best olfarl Call 448·
4282 or 304 626 4073 af
ter4 00
1977 Mobile Home 14X70
3bdr walk m closet nice
carpet CA, r•nge &amp; refnger~
etor redwood porch under
pmmng, ex cond , price
reduced to &amp;9600 Call
3B8 9767
For Sale tra1lar With 3
bu1lt on rooms 3 buddinga
approx 2 acres tn V1nton
area $18 000 Call 448
4268 after 6pm

Farma

for Sale

ly owner 4'1\ aoreo whh 32
X II Horoeborn 2yrs old
f22 ,ooo Call 11 4 · 2811·
11!22
200 aero term lor sale Will
oubdlvlde Rutlond Town·
ship Call 814· 373-0458
34

Business
Buildings

Commencal butld1ng and lot
lor laasa.plonty of park1ng
call 614 992 7251 attar
5pm
35 lots

&amp; Acreage

Lot for ule 1n Mercarvrlla, 3
trailer hookups electric, ru
ral water, septic tank
IB 000 Call 614·266
66tB
Budd1ng lot Neighborhood
Rd 65x150 16 000 Call
446·3B44 after 7PM
For Salit Once acre lot with
large In ground pool, torn
hner and partially flmshed

~=~e~~n~ 6 = ~l3~ormatl0n
0

Trailer lot for rent
367·7438

Cell

Rr. nlals
41

Houses for Rent

r

Unfurnished house 3 bdr
stove ref Rodney V1llage II
1260 mo Cell 446 4416
after 8 PM
House for rant large 3 bdr
1 V. both, fireplace, fenced In
yard, in town, 8300 p• mo
Call 614 388 8248

Garage sale Mornmg Star
Sub d1vhuon-county Rd
30.0ct 13 and 14 houro
10AM to 8 PM Tent
b1cycle toys boys clothe1
tiFBI m•sc cell 949 2637

1981 K~rkwood 14x70. 3
Bedroom. 1 Vz Bath.Eiectnc
heat wood stove Call614
843-2544

4 bdra m Tara with range,
rafng &amp; dishwasher Frre
place • famdv room 2 full
beths Call 614 367 7454
after 6PM

Barnyard sale {not auct1on)
19th and 20th October 10
a m 6 p m at Rocktng G
Ranch St Rt 1 43. 711J
m1lasoffRt 7 by~ paaaandY.t
m1le east Harr11onvrlle
Many Items accumulated
over 22 years serv 1ce career
Nol responsible for ecc1
•
dants 742 3033

19BO. 50x 14 Patriot total
elec 2 bedrooms 1972
60x12 Baron total alae 2
bedrooms Can be seen at K
8t K Mobde Homes Inc
Now open under new
owners Preston and Arlene
Love, across from Pomt
Pleasant Jr H1gh School
304 676 3000 W1ntor
hours 9-6

31

In Maaon mobrle home w•th
or without lot ga111ge ex
tros, call 304·BB2· 3774 or
304 773 6583

Homes for Sale

3 bdr ~ousa pool AC
fireplaces, Pt Pleasant, sale
or rent Call 676 6104
By owner mod1f1ed A
frame fully carpeted fJre
place, on 6 acres wtth
t1mber fru1t tree&amp; garden
space 1n Portland area lm
med1ate occupancy, terms
av11leblo $42 600 Call
843 5384
Leav1ng state, owner must
sell beaut1ful 3 bedroom
home Famtly room has 20
ft of Windows for pastoral
v1ew fm1shed double gar·
age fireplace. large porch
60 ft deck. woode, pnvacy
near Royal Oak Park re
duced to 159 900 B'h
percent assumab1lltv Call
992 5420

1972 Klngswood 12x88 2
bedroom large hv1ng room,
bay wmdows. gas heat.
askong s 6 500 00 304·
B96· 3655
Selling for payoff 1983
Schultz llm1ted ed1t1on
14x70 w1th 7x11 elll:pando.
3 bedrooms 1 Ya baths with
garden tub Extra lneulatlon.
all &amp;lee central air fireplace
built tn stereo and many
other ax,tras 304· 773·
541{or304 4681694
8

3 bdr • 2 both doubla
garage all electnc with
woodburner Out Rt 218
S350 mo Call 446· 7044
after 5pm call 446-BOBO
3 bdr 2 both goroge, lg
rae room 2 FP barn $426
mo Call Lola Richards 446
2761 or Ralph Barcus 814
246 9176

Modern 4 bdr 2 baths, FP.
DR basement &amp; garage
Mulberry Hts 8325 mo •
dep &amp; ref Call 446 ·0116
2 bdr house 42 Ch1hcothe
Rd $210 mo. $76 dep
Call 448· 1 340

had now become a llabtlity rather
than an asset If he unguarded the

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00

P.M.

Somothtng For Everyone.

WATCH FOR CHRISTMAS SALE sOON
Door Pnzes gtven every Sahwclay
Have somet111ng you want to sell? Bnn11t to the Pa·
tnot Auctton Barn and we'll sell1t for you Constgn·
ments accepted from 1.00-5 00 p m on Saturday
Available far special salts upon request

Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer
245-S 152-388-8249.

Three bedrooms mce ne1gh
borhood near achools
churchs, uores Under
$37.000 00 Shown by ap·
po1ntment 304-675-6793

PUBLIC AUCTION

10.11-14

tJQ

EAST

+au

99832

t!O 8 7 4
SOUTH
tQJ to H

Vulnerable North-Sout h
Dealer West

It
DbI
Pass
Pass

Nortb
p,..
Redbl

31

PallS

East
Pass

2+

Pass
Pass

Openmg lead t K
dummy s ace, establtshtng the queen

If

west

threw the Jack of clubs, he
would be thrown m wtth the club ace
and forced to lead away from the
heart

~~h=e=a~rt~=ki=n=g~~d:ec:l:•:r:er=iw~o=u=ld::p:la:y:::::::~~~EN11:JIPJUAE~=~=ASS~N=I==~
41

H ouses f or

Rent

4 bedroom colonial br~ck
house fQr rent or sale 10
Pomeroy Call1 373 0456
Modular home, tully car
peted 3 bedrooms, 2 baths
total electric, forced a1r
furnace with central air, fully
equtped k1tchan Double
garage $47.600 See at
Sacond St , Syracuse Call
992-6762 anytime

2 houses for rent and bar for
ule or lease with optiOn to
buy 304-675 6720

42 Mob1le Homes
for Rent

4 2 M ob1le H ames
for Rent

2 bdr 2 ml from hospital In
country No pets, 8176 mo
$100 dep Call after &amp;PM
446 t722

2 bedroom mobile homero,
rent Racme area Call 992
5B58

2 bdr unturn11hed very n1ce
adults only, *175 mo plus
depo11t located 3 m1 Rt
68B Call 446 2300
14X70 3bdr totol elect
furntahed plus washer &amp;
dryer on prtvete lot, 10 mm
from town 8200 mo plus
utrht1es Deposit &amp;: Ref Call
256 1393

3 bedroom house $150 00
plus deposit ut1ht1es all 14X70 mob1le home adults
alec. With wood burner preferred, 1 ch1ld accepta
304·676 6644 after 5 PM ble no pets Call446 1339
1
2 bedroom houae 1n
Pleasant, garage, no pats
phone 304 676 13B6

===========
42 Mobile Homes

8

12 x 50 Deposit requ~red
Located on Nye Ave 2
bedrooms Call 992 7034
or 992 6732
2 mob1le homes Both 2
bedrooms located m Galh
polls 304 675 3000
3 bedroom trader J 1m H1ll
Rd wnh 1 acre of ground
Partly furmshed 304 6 76
3999 after 5 00 304·6 76
2498

8

Tratler for rant Call 446
4226 after 4pm
112X60 3bdr total alec
Add1son Oh•o 8175 mo
Call 614 446 0176

for Rent
- - - - - - - - - -- 1 2 bdr tra1ler for rent Upper
Furnished 2 bdra TV cable At 7 area adults only Call
446-045B
after
5pm lcclean, qu1at, beautiful r.ver _
___
_....;__·
v1ew 1n Kanauge Fosters
Thraa bedroom mobile
Trailer Park 446 1602
home new carpet 1 ch1ld
2 bdr • AC gas heat wall to accepted no drunks or dope
wall carpet m Galhpohs Call Rt 7. Middleport Call614
367 0611
after 6PM. 446-1409
Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

MINERAL WELLS, WV.

SAT., OCT. 20, 1984-11 A.M.
Sellmg 54 lots of L1mousm cattle, mcludtng
lots of fullbloods.
For tnformahon contact

37

Virgil Dowler, 304-489-2846
C. R. Jarvis Auction Service
304-927
80

Thts ts the personal proporty of tho late
Ethel Taylor, located on Salem St. on
St . Rt 124 m Rutland, Ohio
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS AND HOUSEHOLD
Glass doo' cabmet relly cupboard, wood cha1r 78
RPM records Burroughs and Amencan addmg
machmes electnc sewmg machme three bedroom
su1tes stand recliners •G1b son upnght freezer, gas
Maytag dryer Maytag automati C washer baby bed
gas stoves, lamps, mtsc cha 1rs mtsc lmens pots
pans and dtshes
MISC Handtools railroad 1acks handmade atr com
presso r p1pe, tron tractor sea t and oth er m1scellane
ous
ELEANOR THOMAS: Executor
CASH
POSITIVE ID
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER, Oh1o #004H4 W Yo #51 s as
Ph. 614-949· 2033 or 614-992 7301
'Not responstble lot Accidents or loss of Property

ESTATE AUCTION
NOV. 8, 1984

AT

1:30

P.M.

Location: From Gallipolis follow Rt.
7 south for 12 miles. Turn right on
the Clay Chapel Road and go one
mile. The following will be sold/

The followmg personal property from the Estate of
DELLA 8 KERNS Probate Court Case #17,922 , wtll
be offered for sale at public auction The sale wtll be
conducted at
624 THIRD AVE , GALLIPOLIS, OH

Two ptece llv1ng room sutte (newly UQholstered), II
bra ry table old rocker Nechh1 electrtc sewmg mach
mg anttque square table 3 pc bedroom su1te Norge
refngerator Smger treadle sewtng machme, HotPomt
electnc range , old wooden kttchen. cab met anttque
krtchen cabmet wtth flour bm, buffet, dmette set wtth
four chatrs, Maytag wnnger washer Amana chesttype
freezer, old wooden bed , stdeboard, chest, metal ward
robe, qutltmg frames, chatrs electnc fans, electnc
heater vacuum cleaner coffee and end tables, qutlt
mg blocks, beddmg and linens, 16 quart pressure can
ner (like new) new blender, electnc oven (never
used) coffee maker (never used), small 011 stove, 2
lawn chatrs, wheelbarrow , lawnmower, porch swmg,
hand tool s d1shes, pots and pans and other mtscella
and collectors' 1tems
~:..

ANTIQUES
Oak stdeboard se rve r wtth beveled m1rror mahogany
drop leaf table w1th rope legs 4 pressed back chatr s
old rocker, walnut Sideboard oak pressed back rocker,
walnut veneer vamty dresser wtth mtrror, old ward
robe 3 old stand tables, old floor lamp, walnut cup
board base, oak wardrobe w1th beveled mtrror, Vtcto
nan walnut chest old comforts, qu1lts blankets Blue
W1llow dishes, se vera l pteces Depresston glass old
crock, bo~ old stratght razors

VIRGINIA UNROE - Owner

If

MODERN
Kttchen table and chatrs, n1ce easy cha1r 21arge odd
chatrs 1 metal bed I wood bed old Whtrlpool wa sher
tromng board, lamps electnc fan pots, pan s d1shes
toaster lots of mce blankels and much more too num
erous to mentton
TERMS· Cash, Personal Check wtth Postttve

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER
Crown C1ty, Oh10
Ph 256·6740
Not Responstble for Acctdents or Loss of Property

10

DELLA B. KERNS ESTATE

TERMS. Cash

1" 160
18
pick
20 It - delivered

SAT., OCT. 20, 1984-10 A.M.
located at D. J.'s Tradtng Post
923 S. 3rd Ave., Mtddleporf, Ohto.
TRACTOR M F 1085 D1esel
EQUIPMENT New Idea 2 row corn p1cker w/ 30 10
ro w and a large hus ktng bed lour grav1t y wago ns com
plete fl at wagon bed N I one row corn p1cker J D 55
EB Comb1ne w1th two row corn head and 13ft gra m ta
ble (In excellent cond 1t1 on ) J D 700 grmder/ m1xer

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

SAT., OCT. 20, 1984-9 A.M.

CONSIGNMENT SALE
McCAULEY TRACTOR SALES
SANDYVIUE, W. VA.
TRUCKS -

FARM MACHINERY AUCTION

TRAILERS

FARM EQUIPMENT MISCELLANEOUS
Ph (304) 273-2611
Offtce 272-3700
AUCTIONEER: Edwtn Wtnter, be. #334-15

Most of thts equtpment belongs to Andrew Cross
who has dtscontmued farmmg due to health
CASH

POSITIVE 10

DAN SMITH-Auctioneer
614-949-2033 or b 14-992-7301
Not Responsible for AcCidents or Loss of Property
Auctioneer L•cense Number Oh1o 00454 W Vo 515 85

OUTSTANDING
ANTIQUE AUCTION

DOWLER LIMOUSIN
DISPERSAL SALE

THURS.,

Completely furn1ahed all
elect 468 Second Ave One
1BR Apt 8196 mo One
2BR Apt f220 mo adults
only aacurtty depostt Ref ~
erences Call 448·2236 or
446 2581

AUCTION

SAT., OCT. 20, 1984-10 A.M.
441 East Mom St., Jackson, Oh.
(ooo #8495 Do&lt;kot 13, Pogo 1, Ettate of lulo E11nougle
frank (tsnaugle Adm1n1strator
TO SELL Slanl Iron I desk small ron safe 2 wood hum1d 1
IIBrs laney old full siZe brass bed large Tif fa ny lype ha ng1ng
lam p V ctor an llvmg room su1le oak curved lronl ch1n a Ia
ble c ha~rs and matchmg buHel unusual fa ncy muSic cab1
net w/ m rr ors 2 knock down wardrobes severa l wash
slands pmeapple bed 2 pc VICionan parlor set w/ old man
lace seve ral fan cy I able lamps wiC ker ch•" laney old bam
boo cha~ r se vml wood beds and chests ol drawe rs twm
beds desk and cha11 3 laney mantel cloc ks several walnut
VICionan cha11s Wurhtzer phonograph se vera l mce flower
and parlor stand s lib rary !able halllrees round t•ble oa k
k1tch en table w/ cha rs color TV cookslove rel r~ge ra lor au
loharp 2 old VI Olin s mandolm banto many n1ce piCtures
and frames old l n d ~an dolls Sh11ley Temple doll plusolhers
old Na11onal cash regiSter 2 pr miiiVe drop leal lables ol d
cupboard mce Jerse y coffee bo&lt; w1cker b11dcage w1cker
shoppmg ca rt ca sl non bank old m1n1alu re bark canoe
clock shell easel old kitch en ute ns Is old gran11ewm sev
eral old stone tugs an d cro cks goll clubs old trun ks bo&lt; ol
s lverware plus much much more lurn 11ure
GLASSWARE There IS a la rge amount ol Bavanan Ge rmany
Wellsvill e Limoges Johnson Bros WarwiC k Plates Pilch
ers bowls el c Please plan on slaymg l1lllate 1n lhe day'
lunch Served By Sctoto Twp Ftre Dept

John E Halliday-Executor
Geor&amp;e E Woodwerd, Jr -AuctiOneer
446- 9466 - 446 8130

~

Not Responstble for Acctdents or loss of Property

THURSDAY, OCT. 18, 1984
9:00 A.M.
All anttques from the home of the lote Ethel
Wilson of Boyd County, Ky., will be sold at
auct1on at the United Steelworkers Holl
located at 734 Carter Ave. 1n the west end
of Ashland, Ky.
Abbreviated hst of anttque s as follows Over 60
pteces of oulstandmg furntture . 35 beautiful
qutlts, coverlets, many pteces of ant1que glass·
ware and chma . blue decorator stoneware
tlems early spongeware tlems over 50 early
adverttsmg 1tems. outstandmg collection of
vtnlage c lothmg plus many other rare and
unusual 1tems too numerou s to mentton
TERMS Ca sh or Good Check Wtth Pos1 t1ve I D
LUNCH SERVED

Mtke Clum Inc -AUCTIONEER

MUSTARD AUCTION SERVICE

For lnformohon (all

Jackson, Ohto

304-525-3262

229

ANTIQUE AUCTION
Jackson Auction House
Jackson, Ohio

October

SAT., OCT. 20-1 0 A.M.

2bdr mobile home whh New 2 bdr Apt unfur·
naturel 0" heat Adulto nlohed, UIO mo Coli 441 ·
only, no pato Call 317 02011
7431
New 1 bdr ept , unfur
PSI
Houoe trailer, odulto only, no nlshed. 1110 mo Coll4411 ·
1 ft. pato. 322 Third Ave Galli· 0201
up
polio Coli 441 3748 or
1
2111-1903
3 bdr houn nece
·2bdr
apt redecorated ~
1bdr
Also ptpe connec·
1pt •
A. 1 Re11 Eat•te
44
Apartment
676-6104 or 875 6383
ttons
and
p1pe
for Rent
Oownctetrt 2 rooma &amp;
bath furmahed clean no
Central (V~enna) W Va
pets adults only Dep &amp; Ref
JACKSON ESTATES roqu~red Ca ll 446 1519
PH 304 295·8615
APARTMENTS (Equal
Hous~ng Opportumty) has Unfurn11hed 2bdr 1n Crown
one and two bedrooms rent City Call 256 6620
starting at $163 for one
bedroom and $198 per R1vars1de Apts Middleport
month for two bedroom Special rl!ltet for Senior
With • 200 deposit located C1t1zens $130 Equal Hous
near Foodland and Sprtng 1ng 0 ppo rtun11 1e1 614
Valley Plaza pool and TV 992 7721
ant Call 446 2746 or leave
message
Two bedroom fu rn11hed
apanment call 614 992
For leaae 1 bdr apt over 5434 614 992 5914 or
lookmg the park $160 mo 304 BB2 2566
Call 446 t 819 o• 446
2326
Urge 2 bedroom newly
remodeled apartment Syre
1 small turn eff1c1ency for 1 cuse Deposit reqUired Call
gentleman only Call 446 992 7034 or 992 5732
0338
APARTMENTS mobile
homes houses j)t Pleasant
2nd $1715
utllltras
large
Furnished
apt paid
919 and Gallipolis 614 446
Men onlv Share bath 446 8221
441 6 after 8 P m
Onebedroornapl 614 446
513 Th11d Ave 1 bdr water 0682 or 304 675 3000
fum1shed adulta only S135
mo
dep required Call One bedroom furmshed apt
m Pt Pit Extra mce Adults
446 4222 between 9 &amp; 6
only No pats Phone 304
3 bdr 1 bath. fireplace use 675 1386
of barn 8300 mo plus
ut1ht1es also aff1c1ency apt
With ftreptace &amp; garage
$175 mo plus utd1t1es Calf
8
Pubhc Sale
Lola Richards 446 2751 or
Rolph Barcus 614 246
&amp; Auctton
9175

S&amp;H PLASTICS

•Qs
tQB 32
tK o
WHt

64 Mlac Merch•ndill

water

• s'

t A K 10 7 6
IAJ9

Ap•rtment
for Rent

1----------

tQU2

•xJ 10 4

SAT., OCT. 20r 1984-1:00 P.M.

Apprenttce Fints (Ike) Isaac, 388·9370
Not respon11bto for acttdtntt or loss of property.

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Equal Opportumty Employer

.,

44

PLASTIC
GAS PIPE

IAKU
9AU

WEST

PUBLIC AUCTION

Galhpohs Ferry 3 br bnck
large rooms, 4 car garege
and storage bldg • stove, ref
washer ~ dryer
Make an
offer 304 675 6B51

THE DAILY SENnNU
P. 0 lox 729-S

It'• a nice feeUna to 1ee a lot of
picture cardl and aces when you start
to sort your hand But someumes too
much high-card strength can be a Jia.
btllty rather than an asset
South could have bid three notrump ratber than four spades He
might even have passed three spades,
but that would have deprived us of a
good bridge hand
THree rounds of duunonds were
played, declarer trumplnc the third
dtamond with a high spade In dummy
At first It seemed lnevttable that
declarer must lose a club and a heart,
but South saw a £IImmer of hope He
played a low spade to his band and
led a club toward the queen West
ducked After wmnmg the club queen,
South drew trumps, cashed the dta·
mood queen and played out bts last
two spades
For poor West, the ktng of hearts

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

NEW, USED, and ANTIQUE5-W•kll

Ashland 011 IS expandmg 1n the gas
ohnelq Ui ck servrce food s tore bu smess
wrth 1t s Su perAmen ca St ore s and offe rs
real ground fl oor opportun1t1es for am
bilious IndiVIdua ls seek mg growth
onen ted careers Responst bllttles m
elude recru1110g h1n ng and )ram1ng of
s tore personnel planning work sc hed
ules salary admln1strat1on em ployee
performance appra1sal recordkeepmg
and supervision of general st ore ma in
tenance Minimum of 2 years college re
qutred Several years reta 1l ex penence
preferred Mu st be w ll ltng to rel ocat~
For 1mmed 1ate cons1derat10n send re
s um e or wnte to

NORTH

By James Jaeoby

Unfurnished 2bdr house
with garage Call446 96B6

4 badroom bath and half
hv1ng room, dtntng room
equipped k1tchen, large 1 car
garage. large level lot claM
to Holzer Hoap, owner anx
IOUS to 1011 S4 1 900 00
Call after 6 00 PM 304·
676 7547

Help Wanted

One high card
too m~ny

3 bdr house tn country
water furnished fully car
petad, dap 8t ref no pets
Call 266-8B13

Must sell 10 room house on
47 foot frontage lot by Nov
20 The pnce w11t never be
lower $3750 00 loan value
11 h1ghar Call 216 394
8741

House for sale 4th St
Mason W Va UB 000 00
304 773 ~53B

..

6 rm 2bdr home. ax cond
depoait requ~red Call 446·
1370 eftor 6ptn

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt. 775.
Turn nght onfo the Potnof-Codmus Rood. Watch for
stgns

ASSISTANT MANAGERS
AND MANAGERS

MODERN LIGHTNING PROTECTION CO., INC.

1972 Freedom t 2xll6 ft
fully furn11hed &amp; extras
$3,900 Call 446 7603

Wantad to buy UMd mobile
home Call 114-441·4712
33

The

42 Mobile Home•
for Rent

Large houee good ehapel
Call 614 388 9909

Announcements

for nursing aids Apply 1n
peroon from 8-12, Mon Fr1
at Scamc Hilla Nuning Can·
ter, In Galllpollo. Oh

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUAL
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 PHONE 614 446
7274

32 Mobile Home•
for Bale

1974 Community 12X70
2bdr. 1 beth ex gae heat
new krtchan counter•
17200 Call 246 9103

J.::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::f;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::=

Wdl cut and dehver f.re
_
wo
_o_d_C_a_
ll _2_6_6_1_5_
2.:_
8~­

Scenic Hilla Nursing Cinter
now accepting applteatrons

Excellent opportunity for
advancement Good benefit
pacltog• An equal oppor·
lunity ompf'!Yer Send Re
sume to Bo\i C·6 of the
Point Pleasant Register

Moving sale 2212 Jaffer
son Ave table and chatrs
dolls TV s one feather ttck
304 676 3513 after 5 00

CATV Installers and Technt
cums Excellent opportumty
Business
for advancement Good be· 21
Opportumty
nef•t package An equal
opportuntty employer Send
Resume to Box C 51 200
600 block of 2nd Ava 2
Ma1n St Pt Pleasant
I NOTICE I
eJ~:c cond
b•g back
bdr
WVe 25660
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
yard S37 500 Call 446
LISHING CO recommends 2158
Baby Sitter 1n my home 5 that you do busmess wtth
days a week 2 school age, people you know, and NOT
one 1nfant Ma1l 3 baby to send money through the 3 bdr home for sale by
owner, located on At 160
s1tt1ng references salary and ma1l until you have 1nvest1
naar
N G H S S36 000
phone number to Box P8 , gated the offering
Call 614-388 87t 1
care of the Pomt Pleasant
Reg1ster 200 Ma1n St
Cost Free Chnstmasll La
Must Sell Nowl
Potnt Pleasant, w Va
d1esll earn 81 000 00 or Owner
Small house fneplace gas
more by Chrtstmas Show
Earn $1 000 00 by Chnst mg toys g1fts weekly pay furnance storm wmdows
mas plus awards, no mvest checks plus bonus Choose Middleport Call 614 992
ment FleJ~:able hours 304 your hours Pant1me nowt1ll 6941
675 6162 batween 9 00 December Car, phone - - - - - - - ·lc and 5 00 for appomtment needed Htnng th1s week 8 yrs old 3 bedrm 2 baths
for mterv1ew
only! For more details calls fam1ly room w1th wood
burner S1nglecargarage on
today collect 304 744
8 flat acres w1th stocked
Government JObs $16 559 0924
pond C1ty water tn Racme
550 563 year Now h~rmg
Call 614-949 2641
Vour area Call 805 ~ 687 ~
6000 ext R 10263
22 Money to Loan
Three bedroom spacious
house New ltma Ad Au
Secretary Bookkeeper, Ma
son County Pubhc L1brary HOME LOANS FIXED tland Pool Low ut1ht1es
spec1al f1nanc1ng call 614
40 hrs per week wrth one RATES Balow market rates
742-30BO
evemng and rotating Satur Ftxad eonvent1onal FHA
days Salary open Call VA Leader Mortgage
Sharon Stone for appo1nt Athens collect 614 592·
ment Interviews startmg 3051
Tuasday Oct 16 1984
304 676 2913 or 675
Qurok cash Frank's Pawn
2943
Shop. 430 Second Ave
Galhpohs Instant loans,
Hoap1tal Pharmaetsts Pre
merchandese of value guns
mtum rates Jackson Gen Jewelry stereos TV's etc
oral Hospital. R1piey WV In and also buy tho above

3

.

""Pi"Pieasa.nt

18 Wanted to Do

Government Jobs
S 1 8.668 - fiiO 663 year
Now hiring Your area Call
BOII - 1187· 8000 axt R
t0188

Office position• available

Last Sale Everything goesl
Take At 7 to 218 second
btg red barn on the nght
10·16&amp;16, 10am to Spm

&amp; Vicinity

Take thrs JOb and love 1t Full
trme pay and part t1me work
Call before 5 PM .614-986·
4171
Are you m H1gh School and
Look1ng for a part t1me JOb?
If you are a h1gh school
Jun1or or Samar, you can
enlist 1n the West V1rg1n1a
Army Na11onal Guard. at
tend dnll one weekend a
month for pay and complete
requtred act1ve duty training
dunng summer months Call
304 676 3950 or 1 800
642 3619

Porch Sale Mon and Tua1,
311 f1fth St. Po1nt Plooant
Household 1tems misc.
1972 Hol).da motorcycle

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Buccaneer 12x60 2
bdr mobile homo $3 800
Call 446 4113

$3 00
$4 00
$7 00

Up to 1 5 words
One day msert1on
Up to 15 words
Three day msert1on
Up to 16 Words
S1x day msert1on
(Average 4 words per line)

By owner 3 bedroom, 2
bath, IIWtng room. eun
room living room with
l replace famltv room with
buck stove. cellar. kitchen
w1th range and microwave
large two car garage Must
1ee to apprectate Shown by
~ppo•ntment
304 676
o385

W Va.

Ohio-Point

20, 1984 -

11 :00 A.M.

I Mile Eost on Rte 788 next to Ooniols Truck1119 (o.
Oa k s1de by s1de secre tary bookcase beveled m1rr or oaK 4 she ff
curved glass chma doset B1rdeye ma ple pr ncess dresser be~eled
m1rror 3 shelves open fron l bookcase w1cker colfee table sma fl
dropleaf end ta bl e oak wa shstand oa~ Eastlake dresser beveled
mr rror la1ntrng cou ch sfant fro nt eng1neer s desk mahogi4ny chest
of drawers oak 4 shelf curved glass ch1na large 2 door bookca se
!Eastla ke) small w1cker chest 3 flal wtcker flower baskets 2 oa k
h1gh boy chest 2 n ce walnut top lamp tables 2 wrder chars ch
erry loveseat and 2 chars 6 oak t back charr s 3 match ng t ba ck
ch&lt;ms ntce oak slat front ch1ld s desk oak dresser beveled mrrror
and serpenlrne end s mce Easllake oak dresser w1lh beveled m1rror
noce oak 11•1 top 2 pedeslal desk noc e walnul orga n (w1ll play) 6oak
d1ntng room cha trs 1 k !chen ca bmet (pamted} n ce marb e top
dresser (Eastla ke) (ma tbl e broken) oak pot11e chan mce mahogany
5 drawer chest w1th m1rror mce white oak dresser wtlh beveled m1r
ror 11n1shed old platlorm rock1ng churn mahogany rockmg cha11
(mce) oak krtchen cabmel w1\h flour btn (porcelatn lop] mahogany
gate leg table ~quare p1e cru st stand table 4 slack oak bookcase
(very mcel oa k 4 shelf glass door bookcase very mce mahogany
marble lop crede nza [m1rrored s~ elves) real otd se w ng cabtnet
Mart ha Wa sh1ngton sewmg cabmet Bur wa nut ch est ol drawers
waln ul lamp lable oak 41egged sq dmmg Iable (reallg legs carved )
5 legged oak tal:lle oak Jelly cupboard w1th dr awer at top small
ound oak d1ntngtable lg !lat top tr unk Duncan Phyfed1opleal rna
hogany table w1cker baskets w1cker lamp table plan! stand s 2
wrcker bar stools 3 old chests (pam ted ) old eleclnc wall clock kero
sene lamps sad trons crocks 5 gal stone JUg maple knee hole
desk Sess10ns mantel clock Coco and Chocolate bo x float lamps
mrrrors prctures 25 p1eces Ro sev1 11e pottery exi ra cha1rs old hall
tree wash boards rol ltn g ptns coflee m1ll grantte ware several
brass 1tems 5 leaded glass wmdows rockmg cha1rs mce walnut
Eastlake upholstered ch a1r several bottles and dishes 1ron and
brass beds 2 walnul beds maple bed potato cart home corn plan
ter several cylmder type phonograph records card tables clothes
rack old elect11c Cash regtster pme 2 pc cupboard needs repa1red
dry 11nk round oak pedeslal ta ble oval marble lop table w1l h
drawer oak 10ckmg cha11 pegged together
Two """' lrvd&lt; loolls "'"""!! 11. This s our Fal Honllt Solo.
Muc:h more not l1sttd
COLEMAN BELLAMY -Owner
Ph. 1-614-286-3065
Atek Peorson- Audlonttr

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO
ANGUS

ASSOCIATION

BR EE D IM PRDV £M£"'T

BUil DS lETTER lEU

RBGISTERED

ANGUS

SALH

GALLIA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
ON U.

S.

3S , GALpPOLIS, OHIO

MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1984
7:00 P.M.
COWS, BULLS
BRED AND OPEN HEIFERS
ABOUT 25 CHI -ANGUS CROSS STEERS
For Information or Catologs See

DICK NEAL
Rt. 2, Vinton, Ohio 45686

Ph. (614) 388-8287

�1984

Times-Sentinel
46

51 Household Goods

Salf-defro1ting refrigerator,
o1 00 .00. 241nch gu range,
8100.00. Gao clotho• dryer,
S60.00. Ken~ora washer
and dryer, 0200 .00 . Coli
742-2362 .

Remoldeling. kitChen
binets. stove' and refrigarl·
tor, call 304·882·271 5 of·
tor 5:00PM .

County Appliance , Inc .
Good uaed appliances and
TV oeu . Open BAM to6PM .
Man thru Sat. 446·1 699.
627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis.
OH .

Hoover pon1bl1 wether,
$166 .00 . 24 inch apartment
size auto washer, $100.00.
40 inch gu range, 885 .00 .
Call 742-2352.

bod. best offer . 304·675·
3447.

Heavy Pine BR suit, Poster
Bed. Bachelor chest &amp;. night
stand, like new . Call 256-

675-6483 or 676· 1460.

51 Household Goods

For rent SIMplng Rooms
ind light hou• keeping
rooms. Park Centre! Hotel.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Walhars, dryers, refrigera·
tors, ranges. Skaggs Ap·

Coll614-448-0756 .

pliancea. Upper River Rd.

Furnished room. t146. Utili·
ties. r~nge . ref. Share bath .
Men only. 919 Soc. , Gollipolio . 448-441 8 after 8 p.m.

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33: North ol
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
814·992- 7479.

beside Stone · Crest Motel.
614 -446 -7398.

ca-

53

Antiques

Antique feinting couch. wal·
nut dining auite. pie cabinet,
Louis XVI chair. Mofe• call

814-949-2719.

Gold vinyl couch converts to

54

Miac. Merchandise

8 pc. Walnut Dining Room For t~le 'tlll dirt, ond top .Oil.
suit, t300. Call379 -2113. Call Coll614·258-1427.

Knouff FlrO)Nood Split· 95%
hordwooda. SHoonod or
green. You pick UJ or we
deliver. HEAP vendor. 814·
261· 8246.
U~tone.

Sand, Gravel.
D'livered In Meaon, Meigs.
GaHie or pick up at Richerd•
a. Son. Coli 448· 778&amp;.

1267.

Treller lot with natural gas
on Scout Camp Rd. near

Chester. 1100.00. gos in·
eluded. Call 985-3979 .

64

64

Plastic ciat•rnt state IP·
provld, pleltlc 1eptic tanka.

Childorl Sow Supply Foil
Speclolo. Huoqvorno 11"
f229 . 95. Poulon HI"
o239.9!l . Echo 11"
.235.95. Uood IIWI
t99.9!l to U 26 .95 . On1g0n
Specloll b~y blr lnd Dlt
chain •a.oo. bar chain oil
t4 . 00 gal., buy coao
822.60·8 go I. Koontz-lollar
Rd .. Vinton, Oh. Coli 814388·8584.

Romodlllng Sole G.E. dlo·
hwolh_ar, G.E . droplnttovo,
Hotpo1nt refrigerator. all a
yro. old or ..... R'o uonoble
prices. Will conllder oflero.
Wood TV lllnd for ulo oloo.

ploo1ic: culvert, metal cui·
verts, RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES, Jockoon. Oh 814·
288-6930.

Firewood cut up alabs. •16
PU lood. Lorger load• doli·
vered. Call for prices, 614245-5804.

For Lease

180,000 BTU furnace
•300.00. 1.800 s9 It com -

446-6610

Reai Estate General

L ESTATE
446-4206
Bonnie l. Stutes
Realto1
446-4206

mercial building to sub·

'!:( "'liOII

~onseer~ay
Cathy Clark Burdette
(Sonny) Garnes
Assoc
Assoc .
· .
32 Evenongs
•
o
E~~enings
446-80
446 27 7

Realtor, 388-8155
Merrill Carter. Realtor, 379-2184

•

Jim Cochran. Assoc., 446-7881
Becky Line, Assoc .• 446-0458
Cathy Pope, Assoe., 379-2748
Margaret Bryant, Assoc. 245-9277

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E.r INC.

Virginia Smith, Assoc.- 388-8826

PutNtJtttberl toworkforyou:

Merclland1sr.

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olivo St., Gallipolis . Now
&amp; used wood-coal s1ovas. 8
pc wood LR suite 1399,
bunk bods $199. ontron
recliners $99. used bedroom
auites. ranges. wringer
wa•h•r•. 6 •hoes. Call 614·
448-3159.

LOVELY HOllE IN THE COUNTRY- 3bedroomranch
can be bought with 3 or 25 acres. Horne has new
knchen wnh all appliances, formal dining with beautfful
chandelier, living room Vlith stone fireplace, breakfast
room. famiy room. part basement utilny room, garden
tub in bath. Barn and outbuilding.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofl, chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 tablea, (extre heavy),
$886. Sofa. chair and loveaeat, t276. Sofas and chairs
priced from $285 . to 8895.

Tobloo. •so and up to 8125 .
Hide-a-beda. $390. and up
to 8660., aoto beds S145,
Recliners, $286. to $376 .,
Lampo from 128. to 8125.
pc. dinette• .from ., 09 .. to
435. 7 pc. 8189 and up.
Wood table with six chain
1285 to 8746 . Dask 1110
up to 1225. Hutches. $550 .
Bunk bed complete with
mattressea. 8275. and up to
$395. Baby l&gt;odo, $1 10.
Mattre11as or box springs,
full or twin. t58 .. firm. $68.
ond $78. Queen sets, 8195.
4 dr. che•ts, $42. 5 ttr.
che1t1, 854. Bed frames.
UO.and 125 .• 10 gun · Gun
cabinet•. •aso. Gas or
electric ranges 8375 . -Baby
mattreaees, $26 8a 836, bed
framn 020. 825. &amp; 830.

NEW
I
carpeted
I you have to do rs just move
bedroom,
kitchen and dimng room comb w/shdmg doors
leading lo large fenced in yard. Lrving room. bath. laundry room,
single car garage. Garden space and grape arbor. City schools. They
don't construct them like this anymore. A good solid home. Gas
heat Arr conditionrng. City schools. Priced rn 40s

PICTURESQUE CONTEMPORARY - th~ emptional
home is nestled in 11 acres Of beautiful woods. 3200
sq. ft. with 3-4 bedrooms. Living room, dining_with
cathedral ceiling. den wrth fireplace, full fin~llid
basement new 20'x40' in-ground pool, 4 car garage,
barn. pond. Owner may help wnh financing. #63
7

2

thru Sat.

·

: ·Real Estate

SETIING IN ·20 ACRES OF WOODLAND - Contemporary home
leaunng a solarium w/ hot tub wrapped by a open rormalliving &amp;
dining room w/atrium doors. massive stone -fireplace. A modern
complete kitchen and a breakfast nook, 2'h balhs, 3 bedrooms
w/ masler surle. shdrng doors lo a patro area. laundry and mud
room. Unfinished basement. 2 car garage. Vegetable garden and
dwart fruit trees. Shown by apfX)intment.

m

REDUCED PRICE- 14'x70' Hoi~ Pari&lt; mobile home. 2
bedrooms. formal dining area. I \7 baths. knchen
complete wnh appliances including .dishwasher,
24'x24' garage. 2acres. Good private locabon Pro:ed rn
the 20s.

HMTOI .

E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-1814)-992-3325
216

NEW LISTING - Nicely
carpeted 3 BR home rn Racine. Coal stoker and gas FA
furnace, 2 lg. front porches,
concrete blk. building for
your business and lg. lot
from St. lo ·St. Askrng
$65,900
NEW LISTING - 96.5
acres, remodeled 4 BR
home. 2 new stone fire·
places, free gas. FA furnace
and lg. barn. Only $60.000.
POMEROY - We have a
number of all sizes of nice
· homes for you to choose
from. Drop in and let us
show you one.
REDUCED DRASTICALLY
- Now you can have a Ig. 3
bedroom home near schools
for a real· low price. Only
$39,900
13 ACRES - On 4 lane 33
or 5 acres on good country
rd near Racine.
'1•

OFFER WANTED -Good 2
BR home. Walk to the stores.
Asking $16,000.
BARGAIN - Remodeled
one fl. 3 BR ranch . Full basement, dbl. garage and one
level acre. $32,500.

i'iii!h&gt;; ,.
TARA - NOW AT REDUCED PRICE - Features a large master
bedroom. breakfast nook. 2 fireplaces. a full basement. OR, FR.
knchen wnh drsposal and ref ·freezer. Also has pool and club house
pnvileges

VACANT 5 room burlding and lot located near Tycoon
Lake. Open your own country store and stock picnic
and fishrng needs. Building was used as store and
apartment at one time. Priced very low.

LAND CONTRACT - A-frame home on .65 acre lot m/1. 2 or 3
bedrooms. l 'h bath. livmg room. krtchen. utility room Thrrd
bedroom could be used for family room, '?basemen! unfinished. 2
stoves. relrrgertor, washer &amp; dryer included. ASking $28,500.

VINTON COURT - 3 bedroom rancher with carDirrt,
fenced front yard with covered patio Compact clean,
ce11tral air and oh, so nice ..Vinyl ~ding. low heating ·
bills. Alnght here it is Only $33,900.

EXCELLENT LOCATION - Walking distance to city schools
Modern 4 bedroom home, 2family rooms, 2 baths, built-in krtchen.
liVing room. utrlity room. hobby room. workstxm. fruit cellar.
screened-in porch. central air..9 acre ~t with ~rden, fruit trees
and grape arbor. Horne has been well cared for. Energy efficient

TUCKED AWAY IN THE WOODS with privacy all your
own. Small frame home wilh 2 bedrooms, living room,
knchen, bath, basement with lamily room. 2 acres wnh
garden area, apple trees Priced in lhe 20s.

39.40 ACR.ES OF VACANT LAND - Lois ol woodland. Black ·
walnut trees. Awatertall. Secluded and pnvate. Abeautiful place lo
build a klg cabin. located on ' ~acktop road. Crty schorns.

17 ACRES and double wide home located in Rio
Grande area. Home has 3 bedrooms, knchen, 1\\
baths, dining room, small room for nursery or ~orage.
Outbuilding _garage. pump houS€btftlllays
rnostlyftal
-li...-- 11648

• SOUTHERN SCHOOLS Remodeled 8 rm. home in
· letart. All new kitchen, bath
and furnace heat.

LOCATED IN COUNTRY -LR, 3 BRs, knchen,-bath, utility room,
cedar panelin&amp; fully carpeted, air conditiOned.-several appliances,
washer. dryer. large metal outburldin&amp; agarden. 3.6 acres. Will sell
for $32.000.

HI.',I(/(Juarters

NEW LISTING - HOME OF THE WEEK- Excellent
workmanship and matenal have gone into. thrs 4
bedroom, 2 bath ranch home. 4acres of land. Uke new
carpel country kitchen, 3 fXJrches. 2 car garage with
workshop bench. cement drive, horse stall and ()Jnd.
Make your apfXlintment loday.
#693

TARA ESTATES - A spacious home. lorl!lal ent"', livrng room
w/ wb fireplace, drning room. lg. spacious family room w/ patro
doors, 4 BRs, 2 lull baths, krtchen, garage w/storage space and
electric door opener, well landscaped. Pnced rn lhe 60s. Kyger
Creek School Oistrid. Shown by appomtmenl

LARGE RANCH - 12 rms.,
new bar, ma ids rm .. 3 full
baths, family rm ., fireplace,
heat pump with $108.00
budget. 1.79 acres.

Hm1sing
••

STATELY HOME- .656 acre of woodland and 1.6 acres m/1can
also be purchased. Formal entry, living room and formal dining
room. modern krtchen, family room w/ wb fireplace, 3BRs, 2baths,
2 car garage. 8'1&lt;% interest rate assumable. Shown by
appornlment. Priced in 60s.

INCOM£ COMIN' IN - Three one bedroom apartments, and a
' one bedroom house. All located on one lot Currently renting all
units ror $900 J month. Low utilltie and upkeep. Each unit has
bath and separate entrance, two unrt! ' are comp~ely furn~hed
nad will accompany thrs sale. Property is located in lown and
would make a ~d inv~me11t
INVESTMENT OR RENTAL PROPERTY- Owners wrll con~der any
reasonable offer. 2 story, 3 BRs. large lot Located on 3rd Ave.
$19.000.
.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 641 Thrrd Ave. 2 ~ory home or can
be used as 2 rental&gt; Large modern kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
formal drning and living room. Nice back patio. Also a 14x 70
mobile home in good shape. A covered carport Priced in the 40s.
Shown by apfX)intment only. $450.00 rental.

FARIIS - 110 acres. free
gas, remodeled 7 rm. home
and lots of farm bldgs. Also
12 acres with like new
ranch . 2 bedrooms, full ba·
sement and minerals.

ACTION NEEDED NOW on thrs ranch style home.- 3
bedrooms. living room. large. window. l 'h acre lawn.
Nice garden area Country atmosphere Close to Vrnton
County line. Price reduced to $19,900.
#594

FARM - 140 ACRES TOTAL w~h l story older home.
Large barn, garage wilh shed, tobacco base, 2 gas
wells, approx. 60 acres tillable A good workrng farm.
Located at Cora Mill Road.
11656

Real Estate General

TEAFORD

OWNER NEEDS QUICK SALE - 4 bedroom hom~
located on 1.8 acres. more or li!ss. Large fami~ room
wnh fireplace and beamed ceiling. Den or~ffice. dining
room, 2 large barns, tobacco base.
11688

GREAT STARTER OR RETIREMENT HOME -Owner
will con~der helprng with 'financin~ 2 bedroom
remodeled home. Aluminum sidrng, insulated. Storage
building. I acre lawn with garden area. Priced to sel al
$24,900.
#593

bedroom

8, 4-448-0322

OWNER FINANCING on this rmmaculate 3 bedroom
home in Kyger Creek Schools. Included: fireplace, I'h
baths full basement with 15'x40' family room. natural
gas, 'central air, garage plus 16'x32' in-ground pool on
landscaped \; acre yard.
11680
ACREAGE -Owner is anxious to sell this21.487 acres
and will even help finance a qualified buyer. Take
advantage of this opportunity today.

SOliE Of GALLIA COUNTY'S FINEST HOMES. 190 AND OVER
'100,000- GIVE USA CALL FOIIIORE DETAILS &amp;LOCATIONS.

1600 boord feet of mixed
rough lumbar. Call 814387-013&amp;.

55

Bui

-::B:-u::-lld:--yo-u-r o~w.J_nL:,3-o-r"'4,..,...bd-r

1-::---::-----:--

I"!Ormally 1:00-7 :00

Rough Cut Lumbar, ook.
poplar. and . pine. 2x4'e,
2x8'a, 1x6's. 1x8'a, As·
oortod length&amp;. Coli Hogg
and· Zuopon Materials
Co .. Inc . 7 7 3 . 6 6 54,

Co~nouflogo rogular ' army
clothing, denim surplus,
Rom Somorvllle'o, 7 mlleo
EaatRavenswoodtneweraJ:
pm, Fri, Sat. Sun. (open
after 6:00 evonlngo until
Oct. 221 .

56

UniCfamble thele four Jumbles,

AKC

"Y

4

home. •1998 kit dolv.. Our
new modal ie open, aee it
today. Coll1·888-7311 .

ftf}~Jrul!i)'\t \'ilTHATIC-LEDWOIIOGAIIE
~
~~·
byHenrlAmoldandBoblM

onalefter 10 each aquare, to rorm
lour ordinary worot.
W0 \,[nan::___ "~-- - ·

j

I. ORrrEC
I, _ ,_ _-;;.
X .,.
--I HIOUM
I

I K)

Roto tiller, fireplace screen. l ·d:-a_vt_l_m_•_
· -----8674.
'
10 speed bike, 28 country Now open for buaine11.
•nd wenern records . Phone Mountain State Block, At.
Antique hanging light. an- 3POM4. -876-3048 oftor 6 :30 33. New Hoven. Complete
ma1onry •upplies, 4", 8", .
tique waHie iron, queen aize
12" block. Delivery aervico.
V 'f
bodlprHd ond shams, I mpo·
rial cryrotal. Coli 245-6274 For Alo Cabboga Patch, Phone day 304·882-2222.
!... ,1
oftar 7pm.
now In box with adoption ovonlng 882-3239.
papers . 304-676-5011.
·
2 extra Boaton Ferna in tubs
with molal trayo. Coli 446l-5_e__P_e_t_s_f_o_r_s_a_le_ [ )
3373.
Fjrewood for 1111. Call 256 ·

·I

#641

N681

#64()

BRICK - RT. 35 - 5 bedrooms, Irving room, 2\lt. of
cabinets in kitchen, 2 lull baths, full basemenl4 car
garage, situated on I acre. This horne has had alot of
TLC. Lots of possibilities. Call for more details.

'

M636

INVESTMENT AND INCOME - ~nme location off Rt.
35, Jackson Pike. \\ acre roore or less wjth mobi~home
and doub~wide, 24'x56'. Both presen~y rented. lots of
possibilities. Thrs one ~ priced to sell fast Call today.
.
#617
FOR THE SMALL FARMER - 10 lovely acres with a
brick ranch home. Home .has 3 bedrooms, full balh and
2 half baths, living room, kitchen, dining room, full
basement attached garage. Land and home in
excellent condition. Located Rt. 35 West area.

N686

33 ACRES OF TRANQUIL BEAUTY - Water, electric,
septic system, telephone service already placed on
property. Road frontage. Home Site. Pa rtial~ wooded.
Priced to sel.
11650
1980 DOUBLEWIDE HOME with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
k!chen wrth range and refrigerator, living room, dining
area, 2 acres of land wilh txJnd, fruiltrees, garden area,
block garage. located at MI. Tabor Road.

11642
SPLIT LEVEL HOME- Approx. 3 years old and needs
afamily. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, livrng room, drning room,
krtchen on main level. Basement diviJed but not
fin~hed with area for family room, utility, bath. Garage.
I acre of flat lawn.
11659
NEW LISTING -LOOK TO THE FUTURE- Thrs 3.6
acres approx., is located close to the new Southwestern
school site and would be a beautiful s()Jt lor your new
home. But while you are waiting to build, move info th~
14'x60' mobile home plus have another completely
separate mobile home hookup.
#701

Table with padded chairt.

Extra. nice. Call 614-9925742 or81 4-992-2094

SECLUDED FARII - 146 ACRES - A farm that
shows its care and prominence of past hiStory.
Complete set of farm buildings. Drilled well, rural water
available. Springs ror livestock. Good pasture farm,
crop land, timber. Tobacco crop and a full line Of
machinery. $65,000. 12 miles from Gallipol~

11663

GREAT LOCATION! - More tllan a house- tllis ~a
home! Brick ranch within a mile of Holzer Medical
Center, St. Rt. 160. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, equipped
k~chen, spacious living room, full basement 2 car
garage. 2 acre ffat lawn, in-ground swimming rml. A
home with a lot of charm.
·

AKC Doberman puppieo:
1 acre of sorghum . 304- . Stud Service. Call6 14 _446_
676-6088.
7795.
·

•

Firewood, &amp;20.00 pick up

lood. $30.00 delivered .
304-675-2991 or 675 6762.

65' Building Supplies

Yesterday's

German

Shephard

814-986-3849 .

M. l. "Bud" lleGIIE(
llftrUr
•
Clsei)I!BIIIIoy,
lleies Couoty Assacia
Phone 742-3171

.

AKC reg Pomeranian pupa
for ule 'alao Siamese male

\

kittono. 304· 895 -3968 .
AKC Pomeranian pupp ies.
roadv to go . 304-896-3926

I·· )

57

NEW LISTING - MMR 555 - Grand 2 story home rn Mrdctlepor:t
on Rrver Fronl Use your 1magrnat1on on .thrs home that reflects On

earty rrver days 2 ~rge doublefront fXJrches on wh1chto watch the
O h~ Uvmgroom. drnrng room, uuhty bath and 4 bedrooms. Small
lot. look today at Only $25,000
NEW LISTING - MMR 554 - lArge 2 stO"' horne rn Pomeroy, 3
bedrooms, I ~ baths, formal drrrng room ' tung room and
basement Owner wrll con~d er f1n ancmg Sells for $30.000.
MM R 537 - Lovely total e1ec1nc ranr:Jl home New carpet
throughout 3 bed1ooms, eat-rn kitChen wrlh )Oinrng utrl1ty One car
atlached garage Nrce level lot w1lh septrc and rural water Sells lor.,
$36.500 Owner wrll finance down pymt
-MMR 536 - Cottage on the n v~r A nrce olace to spend the fall .
lersure lim e. IOO'x200' lot.AII furrushrng,; rncluded rn our REDUCED
PRICE of $6.000
MMR &gt;49 - Colonral sljle homern Mrddleport on 7th Ave Large
spacrous rooms Could be 3 or 4 bed rooms. formal drnrng room
hardwood Noors We have red uced the prrce to $35.000 Owner ..11
lake partral fina ncrng

Musical
Instruments

~

Anawerhere: A

indoor- outdoor tacilitlea.

R ea l Estate General

Pets far Sale

j

"[X I XXJ"K .l I I J
-

-

-

IAnlwwo - Y )

J

umbles: INLET TWINE FRENZY MALICE
Answer: What the author 's pseudonym was-

Conn Trombone, good cond.

8150. Call 266 -6808
. Piano, Wurlitzer Spinet. like

new. 304-773 -5324
Upright piano 1or sete .
$200. 304-675 -2375 .
Drum kit, one snare case .
stand. pad . sticks, eac cond ,
304-676-4831 .

H IS "WRITE " NAME

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220 .
.

Real Estate General

Real Es1ate General

Briarpatch Kennels Profeelional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding f&amp;·
cllitieo. English Cocker Spa·
niel puppies. Cell 614 -3889790.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennels. ~KC Chow puppies.
Siamese kinena. new litters
CFA Himalayan and Persian

kittens. Call81 4-446-3844
attar 6 .

'Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winter•. Rio Grande,

0 . Call614-245· 51 21 .

1- - - - - - - - -

Build your own 4 bdr. home .

86.995 dol. to your site.
New display modal open .

See it nowl
7311.

1-614-888-

1---------

AKC Golden Retriever. 1 3
weeks old. 1 shots. Call

614-593-5243.

1 0 American Pit Bull pup·
pies . Call 388-9681 .
AKC Registered cream color

poodles for solo. Call 4469865.

j------::--r-::---::----:-----Real Estate General

!;=====~~~::::::~~~::::====:.

PRICE REDUCED!!!!!!

Price reduced on quality ranch style home, well
maintained, located in convenience of the
Spring Valley Area. City school system, city
sewer and neighborhood watch program. Latest
ma.intenance includes new roof, outdoor
carpeting, asphalt driveway and indoor
painting. Home well maintained - 2200 sq. ft.
living area, including 3 large bedrooms, 2V2
ceramic baths, large living-dining area and
family room with indoor barbecue. Other
features include new kitchen cabinets, Formica
top, stove and ,double wall oven. Dishwasher,
disliosal and refrigerator included. .Most
window treatments go with the house. Outdoor
recreation area featuring covered patio with
pennanent Warm Morning gas grill and
regulation ba~mirrton court, ideal for basketball, shuffleboard, etc. Choice location immediate possession. For sale by owner. For
further details and appointment, call446-2734
or 446-2206.

BE YOUR
agood small town
busrness1 This gas ·
and garage has rt all. Already
stocked and ready to go. Call today for all the detai~.
11596

#697

FRAIIE RANCH and 2 nice size lots located at Lower
River Road. Home has 3 bedrooms. eat-in kitchen.
dining room, bath, utility room, front porch. storage
building. Calllo see.
#67!
NICE 3 BEDROOM RANCH in cny district This.home~
very neal and clean. li'ling room, large lamrly room
with fireplace, bath, carport Owner willing to listen to
reasonable offer. Building new home, needs to sell.

BEAUTIFUL VICTORIAN rn a small town. lKcellent
condnion. 4 bedrooms, l'h baths, formal dininr, nice
krtchen, basement garage. Nice lawn with large shade
trees. Garden. Owner anxrous to sell.

LOTS FOR SALE - If you are looking for aspot for your
new ho'me then lake your choice. We have 71ots priced
to sell Owner will even help finance aqualilie.. buyer.

SEVEN ACRE COMMERCIAL LOT - Near Rodr.ey on
St. Rl 35. One of the best available. Rural water, 11"
line. Electric and natural gas. Make us an offer.

11603

#673

SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM - A formal entry leads the
way in th~ lovely tri-level which features complete
kitchen. large living room, 2 baths, famrly room. rec.
room. 2 car aHached garage. 1.33 acre. Only minutes
from town.
#653
40 ACRES TIMBER- 3 miles off Rt. 7, Hannan TraCe
Road. 'These are appro&lt;imate acres. Rur~l water,
electric available. Fencing and small stream crossing
property. Priced ror quick sale. $15,500.
11698
200 ACRES - PARADISE LAKE - Year around
retreat located on Hannan Trace Road. 3bedrooms. 2
story charmrng older home. Beautiful stocked lake.
Wooded land to hunt deo.~ .:1d wildlife. Tobacco base.
Owner will sell all or part.

LO ACRES - HAS A GOOD BARN - Rural water
and electric available. Great building potential. 10
mrles of Gallipolis. Route 775. Perry Township.
.
#679

FARMER'S FARM - One of lhe area's
better farms. 101 acres m/1. lois of
Symmes Creek bottomland, pond, new
fences. large barn, several other buildings,
large tobacco base, mod. 3 BR home. 2
balhs. located on Cadmus Crossroads. Call
!:: for more information.
~ ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A BRICK HOME?
z - Then this may be just lhe one.
C) Convenientty klcated on Rt. 35 West this
"' home offers a large Irving room. drnrng
z room 3 bedrooms, laundry room, I \\
::::l baths. equrpped kilchen, carpeting, centr~ .
o air and a 2 car garage.

MAKE US AN OFFER? FHA-VA SPECIAL
- 3 bedrooms. maintenance free home.
!Veterans no down payment. FHA buyers.
appro•. $2.500 downl. Located rn Rodney
Village II.
BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Greal INVEST·
MENT lor the buye~ Located on Graham
School Road Each unrt offers 2 BRs, balh,
Irving room. krtchen wrlh stove. refrig.. OW
and displ.. laundry. large carfX)rt. central
arr and storage area.

8

GOOD LIVING FOR SALE - 78'h acres
HEY, MR. INVESTOR - You can move
mi l lovely brrck and frame ranch displays
inlo th~ one and pay your paymeniS with
2 bath~ 2 BRs. 16•24 kitchen wrth washer.
the rent from the olher two. Duplex. double
double oven range, refrig. , OW, displ.
z wide and fenced pool can be yours Rear dryer,
Large living room, artifici al fireplace
duplex unrl ~ absolutely lovely. Rustic
Master bedroom ~ 16x18. Cellar ~ouse,
walls, 3 BR~ ~fl, woodburner. beamed · shed and 30x50 barn. 44 acres of pa~ure
!:: cerlings, 3 BRs available in lronl unit with
with spring and fX)nd. located rn Cheshire
~ ktchen. livrng room. chimney .lor • Twp.
z woodburner, baseme11l balh. Ooublewrde
~ has 3 BRs, k1tchen, living room and balh.
LOTS FOR SALE!,- Three level lots in
iil!i GUY AN TOWNSHIP - tn~ acres more or Kent's Addrtion of Bidwell. Can be
purchased rndividually. Call for details.
,., less located "I!
·rv~le. Approx.
~ 20 A. tillable . ., . ... ""'as,tobacco base.
0 Owner will help finance.

aE

"O-l· 0

I

A STYLE OF ITS OWN ....descrrbes lhrs
lovely whrle br~k horne wrth 3100 so. ~ 3
or 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. 20x40 FR. drnrng
room, kitchen with OW, drspl., mrcrowave
and trash compactor, intercom. central arr,
2 car garage, utrlrty bldg.. deck and a
20x 40 pool. Beautrfully landscap ed.
100 ACRES, M or l ST. Rl141- Ranch
home features 2 bedrooms. bath. krtchen.
living room, famrly room. lull basement
central air. countY-water and well waler,
storm windows, s he~er house. barn and
fXJnd. Call lor an appointment
TRANQUIL AND SERENE desc ribes the
settrnR lor t h~ lovelv two storv t-ome nn?"
acres more or 1~ in Cia~ towns hr~. Thrs
home offers 4 BRs and 2 baths, krtchen
with ra,rge and eye-level owen, 15x48 hvrng
room. newly carpeted. frreplace. 6x40 Iron!
,.porch, large ~t garden lot, city sChool
·aislnct. Call for more delariS.
GREENFIELD JWP
- , acres more or
less. tobaccS-0· l- Do shed, 34x4b
barn. Priced . , &gt;'~. ~00 .

... '"

.

..

;
\

CHESHIRE AREA - ROUSH LANE Ve"' anractrve 3 BRranch offers equrpped
krtc hen. L-shaped hvrng room and drnmg
room wrlh lrreplace. I 'h baths. lull
ba sement wrlh woodburnrng ~ove. 14x21
garoge, carpetrng. Call for an apporntment.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 62x80 all
sleel conSirucMn wrth fireproof rnsulanon,
has overhead crane offrce and balh.
Formerly used lor boat Solfes and reparr.
Located across from Srlver Brrdge Plaza
wrth access lo Ohro Rrver. Potenllal
unllmrted.
GALLIA'S BEST LAND BUY!' - Pnce
red uced to $87.500 - Former darry farm
- 7 rm. 2 story house, several burldings.
180 acres m/ 1, located on lhe Northup
Paino! Rd near Northup
PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED! OWNER
SAYS SELL THIS MONTH! - Rro·
Centerpornt Rd. !Cherry Rrdge). Appro•. 75
acres. woodlan d. fronts on 2roads. county
waler avarlable. $250 per acre

200 ACRES Mi l. FRONTSON RACCOON
CREEK - Approx 65 acres hllable a1d
t 35 ac res woods ComlortrliJie ;wo slory
home oHers 4 BRs bat h. krlchen lrvrnl'
roo m. tam1ly roorn two flrcplaCPS. ban !
large screened DOIChe&gt; Lovely quret
sertrn g
OAK HI LL AREA • r{lunl) Ro,,; lP n''"
St. Rl 27° ' 1,)-\:V:ore orlre'.5 vacant
land, nrce C:,· "'"1 srtes $24 750

.

BEEF CATTlE COUNTRY - 132 acr"
mostly clean hrll pasture good fences I
slory home. large tiarn. tollacco base
lroniS on 3 roads near Mi.dsrck Pncl'
reduced to $56.900

PRICE REDUCED TO $29.900 - Aslumr
9'~ '\ loan. Rancl1,rvr" , ••.' oilers 3BRs.
0 hood. and
balh, krlchen

11604
MAKE US AN OFFER on this acreage. Over fiffy acres,
plus ~rge bam in i!lod condition.. County water and
free gas. Located Africa Road, Cheshire Township.

#660

REDUCED TO $49,500 - COULDN1 ASK

~ FOR A BETTER LOCATION! - Handsome

·a
Victcrian home offers 3 BRs, l'h baths.
,., laundry room. living room, lamrly room.
o
1

carport unattached garage 16x32 fenced
pool. Kitchen has range, refrig., OW. and
displ Nat gas heat and alum. ~drni
t.ocaied at the edge of town. Call ror an
appointment

FOR TilE PARTICULAR BUYER ~ You'll
be pleased with this 3 BR ranc~ with
approx. 1700 sq. ft. of living space. i)ning
room, living room. knchen, family room.
Addition~ features incli.de new custom
drapes, carpeting, woodburning stove, ·
deck. cent air, carport and natural wood
siding. Call for appointment ·

.

NOOrltJurnrrr,·

LilY sctlOOI dtStnct

lt,l,ol

;;:hirf t'Jn rl trlnt1, .l
an 'IHlDrrlrnrrt

1

1··

Z

C)
(/)

INVESTMENT

PROPE RTY

-

balh rn ead un'

PRICE REDUCED TO $59,500r - 3 BR
rMch on I I acres more or less. Pond. lull
basement. family room with woodburner.
Irving room, equrpped krtchen, drning
room, l 'h baths, attached 2 car garage

0
...,

$/ ~, 000

0

z
...,

garage. crty

sch~ol

drstrrct.

~

CADMUS AREA - 26.5 ACRES - 1slory home oHe" 3 RRs h•tchen. lrvrng
room dmm~ room tmh c.ar petmg and
al urnrnum srdmr, Call lor 1n apporntment

r-

"'=:!z
"'
:z
...,
,.,.,
C)

'

$13.000 - 7 rm

h(' llt'

lt•atures 4 BRs

hvmg roorn. krtchen 'r,llll Sltu.3ted on

lrvrl lol rn Brd well

0
a ,.,

ATIENTION HUNTERS' -- 4 rm. block
burldrng on apw·t'\ \.·() rn Greenfreld
Twp on Dry C:,-v· .. uad Rural water
avar lable. Propeny adtorns Wayne Natrona!
Forest. $5,900

0

2'
,.,.,
,.,.,

Th"d

S-0-l-

..

PRICE REDUCED! IIUST SEll TO SETILE
ESTATEI- 3 "s" .I .nrwn features
eat-in kitchen, ·" .':.3ru,"'ath, carport
carpetrng, nice klvel lot

(;;
..._

purchased. CaiiiO!

drsposal. hvtng 1wr11. Utility room one car

11635

COMMERCIAL BUILDING- - Crown City. Uke new
metal burkfr~g. located at Rt 7, Manor Addrtion. Two
lOis tofal 91 x150' deep. Water and electric available.

MUST SELL TO SETILE ESTATE'
FINANCIN G AVAilABlE - EXCELLENT
TER MS- Cop•· C1•d home offers 3Brs 2
bi1ths. ~rlr:hen Nrlh ~VP.Ievelloven, dtnett e. ~
:,v"" •oom "" bearrect cerh ngs, ulrl•ty ::;:
room, dcnbl~ rrHwr storrll wJndows r-

Avenue. two "lnr v duolf"'k. 5 rooms and

WHAT A BUYI For $16,900 you ca•: 1111n 2\\ acres
more or less, in the country and a 12'xiill' mobile home
~ith expando. Wooded land and really nice. Call today.

«,? 1984 Century 21Real F..state Corporation ~s trustee rorthe NAF. ®and '• - trademark!\ fJrCt&gt;ntury 21Real Estate Cflrporatltm . Prlnle4lln I'.S.A. F. quallluusi n~ O~tunlty1i:t

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPEIIATED.

new and 1 uaed . Call 61 4 ·
992-2941 in evenings.

1 2 ton Michigan mobile
crane. t8.500: 4 wood
burning atove 8260. each.
304-876· 1878 after 6 :
304-675-7898.

. JUsT LISTED -WHY PAY RENT? - When you can
purchase !his remodeled horne for $19,500. Large
lrvrng room. formal drning or family room, 2bedrooms.
bath, utility, vinyl sidingShed. Treed lawn.
#696

11669

For sale. wood burners,1

llongo. 145.00. Call 986·
3979.

WANT ELBOW ROOM? - Raise your meat ~nd
potatoes on 4 acres Of level land. Home with 3
bedrooms, modern knchen, bath. Some new Anderson
wrndows and ~her improvements. Off Rodney-Bid~l
Road. Low pr~e.
•

.

Mexican Cathedral Cactus,
approx. 7 feet high, 835 .00 .
Boston Fern. $10.00 . Call
992-7888.

6 112 ft .• 6 inch aebestoa flue
liner, bracken and roof

370'DEBBI EDRIVE - If you are lool&lt;ing for something
in this much des red neighborhood look at lhrs one. A
quality 4 bedroom brick ranch with formal dining, 2~
baths. full basement wrth rec. room and large family
room with fireplace. 2 car gara~e. natural gas heal
private fenced yard. You wont be drsafliJOinted.

11647

The Flatrock VFO haa one
turplua army portable kitchen 8300 . 304-875-4038
or 676-3906 .

Chrome and Walnut Dining

1973 BARON MOBILE HOME, 12'x65' - Located at
Quail Creek. 2 bedrooms, lovely Irving room and bath.
Deck, awnings, underpinned, small bldg ExcepMnally
well maintained. Low price. $7,700.
#691

#700

For Sale: Electric baaeboard
heaters, 220 V., used carpet
with podding dark green,
FJaher woodburning atove.
Coli 448-7339.

number 59C . Call 3877479 . Virgil Wamoloy .
Cheshire.

DONT JUST DRIVE BY THIS ONE - You must see
inside' Convenient one floor Irving 28'x70' doubtewide
wrth over -I acre. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, equipped
krtchen. formal l!ting room, family room wrth buill-in
bookshelves and fireplace. Central air. Garage. IO'x40'
covered patio. All for $49.900.
11634

$68,000.

4162 .

The Sunday Times-Sentint!l- Page-D-5

pupa· 8 wka old wormed and
flrt1 lhots. Excellent size for
age. Fir~t cl••• pups. Call

I "P
&lt;q
A A WHAI A SUDDEN
C(.0UDfJUR5'T IS.
LWHEPENI
K) • () s:;~E~i?·:~~

~~~~8&amp;76-h4':1*s40 ~~o:;;: ~!~r~l;,=~~n..~.N~;t~~

Klng-olze Crehmotlc bed &amp;
Lowery organ, split level
with mogic Jennie &amp; rhythm
chorda. Coli ~48-31 01 .

Cemetery lot for sale in
Memory Gardent . lot

·11665

Ueed Furniture ·· head
and

Flrowood . 304-773-9179
or 304-773·5887.

open

1978 Monte Carlo. baled
hay, boled whoot. Call 2566738 evenings 7:30·9:30.
-:-:-:---..:...---·lcOak furniture, tabtas.chairs.
cupboards. pie safe, telt·
phone~. dhk, also antiques
and gle11wore. Open Sundays. Conkel's Tuppers·
plain•. Rt .7 .
-=-------·lc1954 Maasey-ferguton 30,
good condition. 11700.00.
8 ft.x 16ft. tandem axle flat
bed traitor. 02000.00. 2
benjo•. eaccellant condition.
Coll 992-8990.

ENJOY TilE CHARMING CHARACTER of this stylish 2
story home. 6 bedrooms, formal dinin~ lrv_ing room
with fireplace, 2 baths. Garage burn rn 1983.
Outbuildrng;. 2 large flat lois. Priced in the 40s.

NORTHUP AREA - 3 BR horne. Large modern eat-in krtchen.
Family room, living room, office or den. Nice lot and storage
buildinl&gt; Crty schools. Srownby appl Priced low 50s.

885.
boards.

FOR TilE INVESTOR - Thrs neat and clean home is
deafly situated for rental property or someone_wantrng
• close to town. Numinum siding. outburldrng. nrce back
lawn. within walkrng distance to stores. Pnced at
$13,900
11616
'
HAVE IT All - 38 acre farm plus 14'x70' mobile
home completely furnished. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, King
automatic woodburner, drilled well, 30'x30' uarn All
Just waiting for you.
#597

11602

king frame •so. Good selection of bedroom suite1,
rockers. metal cabinets,
headboards $38 &amp;: up to

auites. 3 miles out Bulavill8
Rd. Open 9em to 6pm, Mon.

Misc. Merchandise

For Sale: used R86 Ditch Firewood . •20.00 load
Witch Trencher. Call 1 ·8 14- $30.00 delivered anytime
894-7842.
during doy. Coli after 5:00
304-458-1728.
Firewood for 01lo: 100 per·
cent hard wood, aplit &amp; Used 2300 Ditch Witch
trencher. 1-814-694-7842 .
deliver&amp;~ . Call 379·2552.

BUILDING LOT located ·inCheshire Village. Lot approx.
60'xl05' in ~ze. Can be used for mobrle home or
building a home.

•••••. 304-876-5000.

61

Ce11446-7307 .

54

~:~·;:;orTVt40.00:219"

Judy DeWitt,

m

Misc. Merchandise

roy-Mlddleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Vo.

IWARTQDt

Couch, 4 chairs. ottoman all
U25 .00. Phone 304-676·
7353 .

STUT

14, 1984

64 Misc.

Pickens used furniture . 304·

2nd. floor office space for
rent. Court St .• Pomeroy.
Cell 814-373-0456 .

49

61

Household Goods

Furnished Rooms

~Iober

REDUCED TO 144.900 - HILLTOP
SUBDIVISION - 3 BR ho me lealures
kitchen. lrvrng room drnlng room. famrly
room. ~replac~ gas heat central arr and
carpebng. 9'.$% assumable.

. f ,EEDED- NEW LISTINGS iiEEDED- LISTINGS ~EEDED- NEW LISTINGS NEEDED- NEW LISTINGS&lt;~NEEDED- NEW LISTINGS NEEDED - NE~ USTI~GS NEEDED- NEW LISTINGS Nq:DED

0

2

~

�Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolts, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

October 14, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipoli$, Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

Trucica for Sale

72

Fruit ·
&amp; Vegetables

68

71

1977 Moroury Morqulo ••·
don, good condition. 1973

P11ro . . .00 bu. dollvorod,
you pick 111.00. Phono 304·
1711-2108 .

Ford

L
ong tacto1. Vermeer round
balers,
rakes, tedders &amp;
n

Foreno,gaod

1973 Oodgo Coronot. four
door.Aulo.. P.S.. P.B.. Axc .
Phono 614-986-4278 .

l:::=-------

r owera and a complete line
of bale handling and feeding
accessories, grinder mixers,
wagons. rotJ!Iry tillers, rotary
c~tters, blades. cultivators.
d1acs. plows, postdrivera.

I.

woo d sp lttei's , seeders,
gates , powerwaahers .
Wheel Horse Lawn &amp; garden
tractors w -tandom axles .
~nd see us for a complete
line of parts. and service .
Used:

1977 four door chevy im-

pala,49 ,600 miles, VB 308 .
AC.PS.PB,PDL. Cruise co ntroll . 'ti lt ·steering wheel .
Gold color with black vinyl
roof . Good t ires. Clean plush
upholstery,$3500 .00 . See
it at 850 Maple St .. Middle-

990 IH haybine , plows
blades . And check our fall
sale prices!

FARM

·1 no . 30 JD co mbine pull

type. Call 614-2 56-6518 .

Jay Crisenbery .

'For Sale: H)10 John Deer

Dozer 83500 . Call 256·
1477.
l

71

1981 Horizon, ex. shape .

Call446-1216.

Trucka for Sale
1·10 lang bod PU, 4
441-4447 or 441·

1---------

1980 O!M19e Truck. low
mllogo. Roooonoble prico.
Coli 182· 7208.

1881 Ford Courier, 4opd,
om-tm. UIPO. roll oport¥
13188. 1880 ChiiYV Luv,
oulo .. om·fm t3198.John'o
Auto Saloo lulovlllo Rd ..
Golllpollo, OH 4411·4782 .

1970 Dodoan truck, coli
247-31211.

$65,500

R8al

I
Located on the tower level of this brick/alum. ranch I
· on Jay Drive. 2,010 sq. ft. includes 3 or 4 BRs (or .

11
1

den). 2'12 baths; formal LR. 2 car garage, CA and
fenced backyard. Convenient for family living,
friendly neighbortiood. city schools. $67,000.
#401
CALL WISEMAN R.EAL ESTATE AT 446-3643 ..

'20x30- 30x40 or UP TO 20,000 SQ. FT.
Easy Access for Tractor Trailers
and Large Trucks
LOCATED IN CITY OF GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Contort lawrence Bastiani-446-1 559

------

IN Clll ON AOIHAN DRIVE - 3BEDROOM RANCH HAS
FAM ILY ROOM, LOW MAINTENANCE VINYL SIDING.
FENCED BACK YARD. NICE QUIET STREET. ASUPER BUY
AT $40,000.

John Deere 1020 deisel.
Ford deisel, 601 Ford, 9N

Ford. 65 MF. 304-57623 28 , 576-2606 .

Livestock

3 tall growthy, eJtc . ent
Hereford C.lub calves . Butler
Hereford Farm, Lower River

WALK_DOWNTOWN SI!OPPING - GROCERY. SCHOOLS.
2 STORY OLDER HOME. 3 BEDROOMS, 2'BATHS, NICE
BACKYARD. NEEDS SOME REPAIR PRICED FORQUICK
SAlE ASIS FOR $22,000.
.

$23,100 FOR A 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME WITH
FAMILY ROOM ANDCARPORT. ONLYAFEWMILESFROM
CITY. SOME SMART HOME BUYER WILL BE LIVING IN
THIS HOME SOON. IF YOU HURRY IT COULD BE YCXJ
AND YOUR FAMILY. CALL 446-3636 NOW AND WE WIU.
TEll YOU HOW TO GET IN ON THIS SUPfR BUY!

EAST ST.. POMEROY - $19,150. IAAGE COLONII'I.
STYLE HOME. NICE FRONT PORCH. CRYSTAL
CHANDELIERS IN LIVING AND DINING ROOMS. 4
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. ABOVE GROUND POOL NEEDS
SOME \\IJRK BUT IT IS A IERRIFIC BUY'

Heavy hens f or sale. Call

$28,000 - LOOK AT THIS HOME
AT THIS PRICE COULD YOU GO WRONG7

76

MINI FARM AND ORCHARD - VERY PRIVATE
LOCATION. 5 ACRES. All FENCED. BEAUTIFULCUSTOM
BUILT 3 BEC»&gt;DDM RANCH HOME. FIR SIDING. OAK
CABINETS IN KITCHEN, CUSTOM CARPET AND DRAPES,
HEAT PUMP. ANDERSEN WINOOIIS. PLUS MANY
OIHER EXTRAS.CITY SCHOO. SYSTEM. FABULOUS BUY
AT $54,000.

Modern 3 BRs, 1!1. kitchen, stov~ dishwasher, refrigerator and
range, LR, bath, laundry, dining area, family room. Storage building.
C1ty schoo~.

STUTES REAL ESTATE - 446:..206

THE BIG MIEEL CARRYOUT IS FOR SALE
BUSINESS, LAND. BLDG . EQUIPMENT AND INVENTORY.
BUSIEST IN THE AREk SEt UP FOR EASY, LOW COST
OPERATION. YOU CAN'T BEAT THELOCATION ON ROUTE
35, OR THE PRICE. $110,000.

••
•

•.

I

•
•

1

~arcum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng. Now installing rubber
r_oofa. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof .

.BEAUTIFULLY _
REDECORATED BRICK ' FEDERAL" HOME snu- .
ated w1thm Galli!XJI" . 3-4 bedrms.• 21h baths, family room, formal •
• liVI ng and d1 nmg rooms and library. 2 WB fireplaces, central air •
e cond. I
.

••

Call 814-388-9867 .
PAINTING~ interior and

0

Mt(M;i~
WHY SEmi FOR TELLING THE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?
Ask Yourself This Question
•Willts T. Leadin&amp;ham . Realtor. Ph . Home 446 -9139
•Ed Evans. Realtor, Ph . Home 446 -0821

BRICK RANCH 5 MILES
FROII GAlliPOLIS
In Gallipolis c~ school system
!Green School by Centenary). 3
bedrooms, 11h bath~ 6 rooms
!WI with central air. Large
hardMIOd surdeck approx. 10
by 30, partial basemen'
modern kitchen. Nice landscaped yard w1th chain link

24741 Hill Road
Racine, Ohio

' Tel .: 247-3644

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Certified seed wheat , barl ey,

rve . spelts. triticale.

also

fence.

cover crop wheat. Altizer

Farm Supply. Call614 -245 ·
5193 .
PIN£ TREE SETTII«l
Modem 3 BR home w~h aiUched OJrport. ·Porcll. 3
tenced acres, pond, trees and garden area. Assume 91oan
wilh $5,900 down

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

$47.900.

LOOKING FOR AN OHIO BUILDING SITE - l et us show you
l h1s srx ac res "all level" located on Route 124 at Portland!

GROWING PAINS!
You need this 4 BR home With 111 balM, DR &amp; FR. Full
basement ami enclosed back porch. S!lade trees.lli!rden
area, and trailer space rmtal. All fur $40.000.
#319

Virginia D. Carroll, Broker

1981 Camaro Z-28, 23 .000
original miles, would con-

sider lrade. Call 446-4053 .

Real Estate General

For Sale or Trade: 1967

CLELAND REALTY, INC.
608 Eost Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 992-2259

1975 Pacer, good cond .,
will trade or sell for pick-up
1979 Camaro Derlinetta for

eale by owner . Call 4467814 .

I
II

1973 Honda. 1966 Ramber.
1973 F-260, 1971 Bug,
1977 MGB, '1958 Ford
2-ton . 1967 GMC 2 -ton.
1972 SS. Mazda Truck.
1971 Ford Hatchback, 1971

II
I
II
I
II

Pinto. 1958 Ford Tractor.
Generator. 1972 Malibu
pans. 1971 Monte Carlo

parts. Coli 446-9154 ave .
8-7pm .
1976 Cadillac Coupe De
Ville. two door. In excellant
condition . Phone .614 -986·

M.INERSVILL[ - How about almost 5 acres with country setting?
N1ce~ remodeled 2 story 3 bedroom horne. basement patio and
carport 13% inletest 251h yeatS remaining $243.36 per month
P&amp;l, $275.21 with taxes and insurance. Assumable balance of
$21,600. ~ 1 eed $4.700 dowll VA assumable. $26,300.00. ·

3967 .
Do~ga

Colt automatic . 4 cyl. Needs left front
inner fendar. 8300 .00. Call
986-3920.
1979

Monte Carlo

305

auto, PS , PB, Air, tilt wheel,
nice car . sale or trade,

$3900. 304 -675 -4181 .

'78 Century Buick wagen.
good cond. phone 304·8751090.
1974 Chevy y, ton Pickup,
350 , engine. rebuilt trans.
f79t5. Coli 448-0780.
1979 AMC Concord, 6 cyl ..
good cond. Coli 256-8216 .
~

I'

IN THE CCUNTRY - Approx. 98 acres. 'barn and other buidings,
i~~f~e1ncing, approx. 16 acres tillable, 35 acres pasture. All for

~~

I

PRICE REDUCED - P.omeroy - Convenience is the key to this
house! Oose to downtown for all your need&gt; 3 bedrooms, I bath.

with'!~ ~=.R~Fon

•Don't follow the crowd.

I

k

oo .

·

L.--------.~-----J

1·I.·

I
I
I4x70 MOBILE HOME WITH EX PANDO
On 2 ac. Screened porch, sun porch and deck.S!Oiage I
Garden
and
building
Ill

bU1Id10g.

area

other

lot

..

#315
WOODED LOTS
011 Rio Grande-Centerpoini Road Somerestnclons.Rural
wale&lt; availa~e .
#361

FARMS

cALL : .

I'

1.
1

We have 10 1f2% Mortgage
d 'II
money an WI never-run out.

MODERN 4 BR HOME
Wlh 15 ac "" Rl 160. Part brne farmmg operabon Good
~ghway lrontage
#370

III

3 8R HOME &amp; 10 AC.
II woods and 1\ open pasture. Farm pornl and road
lrontage. $55,600. .
4
#38
ll5 AC. FARM.
52 ac. crop, 50 ac pa~Uie. good !lome. large barn.
Tobacco base. CaR us lo sho w.

I

':J

TREED SETTING
LovelY 3 BR bnci&lt; ami fnme, 2 baths, ove!Sized 2 OJr
lli'rage with worllsMp. Awox. I ac. $61,000.
1143 1
ROOIIY
Has
stone fi"""ace fR,R
•·1
'""
' 2 car del
· ~ ac ..tree Shaded seltin~ .
11431

iar~

i~ ~~:!.men•

I 446-3643

_
EVENING DIVid
B. J. Htlil11an,
Assoc.
E Wi
As 446-4240
CALL· Gtorp · IMIIIIn, soc:. 44&amp;-9555
'

WoodWird.

Auctianw. 446-9466

·-------.------

, STOP. lOOK ·&amp; USTEN

Best all around part-time farm "" ll'e market Crlltl
pasture arnl woods. Modem home- private location. 49
ac in all.

.WISEMAI ~ JS[j A
.Jo.

HOU~E

.

SOL

,

WORD

------~------------ ..

QUALITY
Quat~ at a price YiJU can afford. love~ 3 bedroom 117 bath, brick
and frame home. Fully equipped kijchen, extra large living room, all
011 nicety ~ndscaped lot Priced in the low $40s.
#b07

7 ROOM FRAME
One floor ~an, 3 bedrooms. no upkeep white alum . siding. Bui~- in
cabinets, fA furnace. nice carpetin~ well kept properly ms1de and
out 14'x20' block garage. Concrete drive. Chain linl&lt; fenced-in level
y~rd. Insulated walls and ceiling. Phone today.
#615
.

#341
1,500 SQ. Fi. BLOGII BUILDING
On ""' 16,000 ~ 01. 24x38 ma~ room, 2other sm~l
~~rnl bath. ew FA gas furnace and waler heater.

ATTENTION HISTORY BUFFSnt
2 slay brick home in lown. BUi~ in 1818. Home features
beatm_
lul hardwood lloors. 4 fire!)laces, 4 llll~ 2 balhs,
den, hlnl). DR. en~l!flce Ioyer. Also, 3 room 31Jartment
witf1 separate staircase. Priced at $99.900.
_
"'"2
3 BR HOlliE &amp; 3 PLUS ACRES
Over'ookin Rae
c
balM, IJR.gdeck
3~-e'!:!g~ullped kilcllen. FR. 2

ALMOST NEW
Brick and cedar. 3 bedrooms. l \7 bath ranch. What a beauty 1!
Owner has given this home excellent ca re. Take alook lor yourselfll
#619

I
II

JACKSON CO. fARM
On St Rl 327. Crop land on lxlth sides OIIOad. Pos!Uie
and woods on most of farm. Buy with 01 without coal.
Older home. Asking $160.000.
n88

#350

VACANT LOT-CITY OF GALLIPOLIS ·
40'&lt;130' LOT #65 located 011 Madison Ave. in Gallipolis. All city
utilities. Only $5,900.
#620
PROFITABLE BUSINESS FOR SALE
Owner leaving area . Computer. typewritetS, desks. chairs. file
cabinets and calculator. all included w1th sale. This 1S an 1deal
bu~ness b the right per"'" or couple. Agoi ng business with lois of
room for expansion. For lull mformation phone now lor an
appointment.
#b18

WHAT A DEAL - $24.900
Come see for yourself. ::OZy 6 rooms and bath, 3 bedroom~ range.
dishwasrer. storage, building and 2-car carport Kyge&lt; Creek
School. Large level lot
#552

WISEMAN REA.l ESTATE
AGENCY TODAYl

:t

3 ROOM HOME
Plus bathroom and baseillenl Forced alf furnace. Insulated. Front
porch. Storage building. Nice lev~ yard and clea n. All of this for
ONLY $15,000 Phone today.
#612

1
I1
I

EVERYTHING YOU IIIGNT NEED
3 BRilomeon I ac._; 2cargarage.screenedinpcrch ""·
d&lt;!ck, stcrage bul~mg and above ground pool. BONUS•
i~~.~tellle dish. Motile rome site and lli!rden .,..:

REALTORS
Henry f. Cleland.
IEAUOI

I·

10 AC .. MODERN 3-BR HOME &amp; GARAGE
1'1111 cons1der mob1le rome mtrade. Pncerl al $33.000.
#309

Check us out now . . It
doesn't cost anything to

3 BR ranch
Rt 7 Beautiful
lirep~ce in LR, hardwood noors Mobile oome pad
BuYf!S' Protecl~n Plan
.
·
#216

11210

Jr ......... .. ...... 992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
.Jo Hill .. .......... .. 985-4466

Well mainlamed 3 SR. l ~· balh vmyl •ded home. OR.
eat-in ktlchen, basement, 2porches.'" " · !30's. Need an
offer.
#212

Prices Will be higher next
spring when most buyers
look.

1::
1:

1:
~! Rt. 160. 3 BR. tmproved bath and roomy ut liiY I'
~~r
OWNER SAYS SELLII

•Ho. me prices are down.
• Owners are anxious to sell
before winter.
•

1::

20 VR. OLD HOME IN GOOD CONDITION

,.

~I

truck. Call 388-9909 .

1976

.
#204
I $79,iXXJ . .
RIVER VIEW
I 3 B~ ranch 3miles south
oftown. f.Qutpped k~chen. DR. ·
I llleplace. basemeol, ~ ac. yard. Mobile rome too#ku2p2.8
·I
IMPECCABLE CONDITION
I and3 BRovergzed
brick ranch. 2~ balhs. FR. spac.us eat-in klchen
2 car garage. Landscaped in a qutet
ne1
gllborllod.
$59,900.
I
1
#20B

nm

#133

NOWISTheBest
• T0 Buy A
T1me
H
Ome,

basement with finished FR. 2 fireplaces. 2 car garage

446-8201 .

28x42 basemen! and sub floor on &lt;~ere lot 1n Green
Township. Electric and rural water available. Will cons1der
trade Need offer.

·1QJ/2% FINANCING

COUNTRY ATIIOSPIIERE
3 BR !-shaped brick ra nch with 2 baths ·and ru ll

Bronco $600. 1976 .Catalina $800. 1972 Dan S250.
Call 446-3032 .
1970 Nova, California car.
ral~y wh eels, also 1971
Camero. Call after 4 :30pm

HOME SlARTEO

Attractive kitchen, dining area and FR. Good lo~t1on .

140 ACRES located at Portland. Oh ioll Beua tilullandll Own er
ftnancm g available on this one' Ca ll our office for detailsll

1977 Monte Carlo PS. PB,
AC. swivel seats. cruise,
AM : FM c assette, new
carpet. brak es, &amp; shocks,
82 ,600 . Call 446 -3485.

#241

TOP NOICH SHAPE
Nicely decmaled 3 BR home. gre~ for beginners.

tour!!

Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. Call

614-44lf2282 .

INVESTMENT- INCOME
Need a oome, plus an income Who doesn't' We got iUS! whal you
need! Lovely modern ~one oome plus 10 renlal motel units 1n
excellent condition. Com[Jetely furnished. All you have to do is
move in. Approx . 8 acres and stocked pond. Located on a slate
highway. You can own your own bu~ness. Just call for more details.
#599

A REAL CHARMER
.
2 story o~er !lome offers 3BR with polenlial of 2more in
attc and l above garage. 2balhs, beautiful fi~eplace. Nice
3 ac. ~t $51,900. Additional ac1eoge availabl•
#305

A_BIT OF THE NEW AND A TOUCH Of THE OLD- This spa CIOus home has had extensive remodeling and additionsLa rge lwo car detached garage, corner lot, two woodburners,
fou r bedrooms. lantast;c kitchen . Just a few of th e featu res of
this home' One of Racine's f1nest homes " Call today for a

_TOP CASH paid for ' 80
model and newer used cars.
· Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911

CLEAN AS A MIISTLE
Quality 3 BR llri:k with hardwood lloo~. 1•11 dNided
basemeflt Nice back yard and' sun ·perch. $62.000.
#J37

JUST WAITING FOR YOU
Lovely 3 bedroom brick home
in a very desirable localion close ·to Ho~er Hospital. This
home has formal entrance, a
large living room, a nice large
kitchen with for.mal dinin garea
with garage. The home is
srtuated on a large well
landscaped lot with chain link
fenced in backyard. Also nat
gas and central air.
#488

addition.

I
I
below Raccoon I

PRICE RED~CED on 3Y, acres of land . 3 BR, adapted for
woodburner. 1.440 sq. ft. Guyan Twp. Buy now for $39,500. e
FOR SALE OR RENT. - 3 bedroom home within Galliolis City. Fam..
rm.. wbfp, attached garage, nice lol Good netghlxlrhood Price .

I

$55.000. Rent $325 mo. plus dei)Osil.
•
• $21.000 WILL PURCHASE th~ 2 bedrm. cottage along 4th Ave.•
e Owner will finance to qualified purchaser. $10.000 down. bal. at .
• 8% int.. over 10 yr. pcnod. Pay $133.47 per month.

LUXURIOUS
Estate with 3 lnd~ana slone lireplaces. mcluding one 1n a
suite, 4 BR total. l'h baths, 112 acres m/ 1. 1ust short diSfrom Gallipolis. This cuslom buill log home lealur_es nearly
sq. It of beautifully decorated and well planned liv1ng. Stunliving and dining a~eas with beaublul hardwood lloors. The tokitchen is lully equipped and destgned for convemence. Cenheating and air. Attached garage. Includes 5 room caretaker

I·

I
1
I

·-

J

home.

#610

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. Nice ' i:e building klts with all utilities there. Lol size
101.8 by 171.2. Better get 'um now.
#456
1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS
w~ter system. large family 1oom,
26'x22'. Garage, storage buildin&amp; storm windows and doors. Nice
home. See it now.

Nice home Cet1tral air rural

256 · 1 141 or 614 -446 1175 or 614 -446 -7911 .
K_en 's Wat er Ser\1/ce . Wells.
p ools , fi lled . Phone

CIStef ns·,

367 -062 3

Cal! J1m Lan1or, 304 -675 -

cian. meaon. painter. ro ofing [including hot tar

Dozer Work bv Ted Han na
Ditches , ponds, road s, land
clearing, etc. Call M otor Car
Broker s, 446 -6592 .

opplicalionl 304-675 -2088
or 676 -4580.

87

J ._A .A.Construction Co .Ru-

lland. Oh .614 -74 2 -2903 ;
Rotary or cable tool drill ing . Basements . Footers . Con ·
Most wells completed same crete work , · Backho e's ,
day . Pump sales and serv i·

tel. 304 ·896 -3802 .

Dozer &amp; D it cher, Dump
trucks , &amp; water-gas· sewer·
electri cal l ines

367 -77 41

00

ntght or day

JIM S WATER

SERVICE.

7397

U phols1ery

1 AI STATE
UPH OLSTERY SHOP

116 3 Sec Ave . Gal lipoli s.

614 446 7833 or614 -446 18 33

t---===~:;:::;::;:;=::;:::;=:;::::::;:::;:::;:::=:::-l:::-:--:--:-~:-:===--

~~E:Ie:ct;~~!~1 ,W~i~rin~&amp;~-~~=U

1

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

suN D A y p u zz L ER

OF lAND w11h1n lhe c1ty of Gallipolis Owner will sell lor:

L___......:========:::;==================~---J
ACROSS

•

f
f

Garti~d

22 Daughte' of Mmos
23 Part of harness
25 Pedal d rgr t

131 Addillonat
132 City in Russia

27 Oappted
28 Callings

133 Communist
134 A sta1e: abbr.

76 In India, native

136 Insect eggs

30 Wan
3 1 God of love
33.Sma/l stoves

chief
79 Rugged mou ntain

13 7 Head of Ca tholic
Church

35 Playt hmg

crest
81 Sign of zodiac

138 Threefold

37
39
41
42
44

82 Playing card
64 Din
85 Lawmaking body
87 Break suddenly
90 Unlocking
92 Article

35 Tille of respect
36 Crawls
38 Tidier ·

95
97
98
99

40 Make into leather

THIS ISA REAL "SlEEPER". Alittl e "TLC" and this home could bet
one ol the best in Gallipolis. listed f01 $30.000.00, however. "make•
us and offe r"!!
•

t

126 French for " friend "
127 Representatives
129 Continued story

93 Characteristic

•
•

I

65 Man's nickname
66 Amount owed
67 Oemean
69 Indian tenl
71 Third person
73 Moving on wheels
74 Tear

34 Disturbance

•
e
•

I

~nd

Ja mt;ts Boys Water Service .
A lso pools filled, Call 614-

Lennox Healina &amp; Air Con&lt;li-.1
tionina. All Types Insulation.

41
42
43
ESTATE SALE - 214 acre larm w1th house and barn. lawrenc:eill 45
Co . Aid Twp Sec 2 &amp; 11 $90.000
.
46
47
NEW LISTI NG - 3 hedroom home alon g Chestnut St. Lot wilhl
48
serviCe alley 1n 1ea1 2 ca 1 garage and 111ce garden area. Price
49
$38,500
51
APPROX. TWO AND A THIRD ACRES Wllh1n Clly limits. Zoned .· 52
comme~c&lt;al. Along Rl. 7. Pnce reduced to $25.000
53
54
3 BE'DROOM HOME - Ranch style. lg. carport. adapted for
wood burner. fenced .yard and In-ground sw1mm1n g pool. Price
55
reduced to $42.000.
57
DON'T OVERLOOK TH IS BARGAIN 1n EUieka 2 bedroom home ·.
58
with 2 balh s and lots of room for e&lt;pa ns~ n . Located lUst off Rt. 7
60
near dam. Pnce $22.000.
.
t
61
62
A CONVENIENT LOCATION along
Ave. Hocoo can be used t
64
for 3 01 4 bed10oms and w1thm walking distance from m&lt;Jst au t
services. Only $30,000.
t

•
e
e

General Hauling

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

NESTLED IN TREES and only '' mile below Gallii)Oiis along ~u~;:; 1•1
River Rd. 4 bedroom home w1!h beaut1lul sol 1d p1ne pa neled -- 'th ral
• and comfort able fireplace. formal dining and livmg room ••
e fireplace 2 cor gara~e and wo1k area 2 baths. Call lor an
e appointm ent.
• VICTORIAN BRICK HOM E -lower R1ve1 Road near Clay ocnou,,,.. l
• Outbuildings and 7 acres. Buy lor $37.500.

e
e
e

Excavating

85

.,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
1

•

•
•

83

and
St .,
304 and

atorm window1,

1 Foot lever
e VINTON - $20.000 will purchase th1s 3 bedrm. home along Matn ••
6
Ex1ra
• St. lot: 4Jx200' wtth 3 oulbUildings .... CALL TODAY~'
11 Playhouse
eviNTON: EXTRA CLEAN: - Clean. cool and convement 2 bedrm.
18 Place for combat
home located along Main Street. Refng. &amp; many other items of.
. 19 Jury list
• furniture w1ll go with house. ldeaiiOI newlyweds and priced at only
20 Bulwark
. $22.500.
21 Goal
23 Workman
• VINTON NEXT DOOR TO ABOVE HOUSE- 3 bedrms. owner has.
24 Consumed
• completed much w01k 011 t111s house and w1ll sell now for $13.000
26 Girl's name
• NEW LISTING: 2-bedrm. cottage along While Ave. Either rent or.·
27 Follow copy: abbr .
e "l!&lt;e 1n". Price only $8.500.00.
29 Enthusiasm
GO Agreement
• LOT IN RODNEY II S.D. $5 ,900 .00.
•
31 Son of Selh
• 2 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RD. w1lh Raccoon Creek. frontage.
32 Spinning l oy
e $7.500 each
33 Guido's high note

e
e
•

SHULA W 'S Plumbing
Heating. 211 Shl:th
Point Pleasant. W . Va .
675 -5420 . licensed
insu red.

Call collect 1-614 -2370488, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
R ci v e r • B a • e m a n 1
Waterproofing .

•

e
•

poli s. Call 614 - 367 -0576 .

furni1hed . Free aatimetes.

BRICK HOME: Located along Lower River Rd.
• Creek. WB FP, formal dining rm, re c rm. 13'&lt;36'. Aqual~ home
s1tuated on 2'.7 acres. Call fo r appointment'
·.COMMERCIAL BLDG. 700 block of 2nd Ave. Purchase or .lease.-. 1
Lot 22.620 sq ft.: Buildmg: 7.560 sq. ft. Excellent condit1on. 1

•

Pomeroy 614-992 -2284.

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Rl . 1. So&gt; 355 . Galli-

Ilona. Coli 614-367-0409
_o_r-8-14_·_3&amp;_7_-_72_4_4_.- - BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetfmo guo rantee. Local references

e BEAUTIFUL
BRICK 3 BEDRd.
ROOM
2'h acres.
7 yrs.cen1.•"
1•
lUst off Bidwell-Rodney
Elec.HOME
heat w1th
pump.
lireplace
• vacuum system. $70.000.
·

GORREll REAlTY

or

H &amp; S Home Improvement•
vinyl •iding. roofing. room

•

: i5~~~0ES

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

614-446 -3888

614-446-4477

SEWING Machine repairs,
service Author ized Singer
Sa les &amp; Service Shnpen
Sc issors. Fabric Shop .

terior. plumbing, roofing,
aome remodeling." 20 yrs .
e•p . Call 814-388-9662 .

I

. .. ..
.
•
.
rm ~~me outside city situated
.g
pict uresque 1 Or . lor ma l dining room . 21 'x 15' tam 1ly
room, 2 bath s,
FP, fen ced in ba ck yard . Mod ern kitchen
with many amenilies. Priced to sell. $58,500.
.

•
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ex-

· CARTER 'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor . Four-th and Pine
Phone

Elec trical

&amp; Refrigeration

septic tanks, landscaping .
Call any tim e 614 - 446 ·
4537 . James l. Da vison . Jr .
owner.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE , ex perienced carpenter, electri-

Home
Improvements

84

&amp; Heating

Good -1 Excava ti ng, base ments, footers. driveways.

Fetty Tre~~;t Trimming. stump
romovol. Call 304 -6751331 .
.

1

••
••
•

vinyl aiding.
!indoors end outreplacement wi'n -

RQN'S Teleulo lon Serv ice.
Speclelizlng in Zenith and
Motorola , Quaz:er , and
houso coils. Call 304-5762398 or 814 -448-2454 .

Serv r,es

•• 3 BEDROOM HOME w1lh 17.9 acres. Situated with1n Sec.
Huntington Twp. price $45.000 .00.
.

large round bales of halj.
$20 each . Call 446 -1052.

doors)

1980 Yellowstone camper,
28 ft. ~arpeted. air cond.
awning. exc cond.
18,500 . 00 . 304 - 6782005 .

Estate General

~

Contractors.

dows coli 304-773 -5 1 31 .

t9500. Coli 446-7019.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

For Mei.gs Co. listings Call: Cheryt'Lemley 742-3171

Grain

pt~lnting

. new tlrea, Sell thl1 week

WE NEED LISTINGS

Hay &amp;

GENE'S OEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN .
aco1chguerd -water extraction. deodorizer•. FREE estimet••· Reasonable retea.
Geno Smith, 992-8309 .
M.

Plumbing

82

Gallipolis. Ohio

Remodeling,

1

446-4821 .

64

2611 -1182.

Winnebogo Chloftan . 24 ft ..
perfect con~ .• elr, generetor,

oxc cond, 88,200.00 . 304'
876-4085 .

Quality
energy
· I wooded lot 3
bedrooms, spacious living rooiT\ modern ,
oa k
cabine4s, d~hwasher and d~posal, dining room w/ atrium doors
and ceiling fan with light Comlllete master bath. large laundry
rooiT\ lots rl qual~ fin~lted woodwork and closet space. Select
ywr own color carpet A2car frn~hed garage. Aquality plus home.
Wouldn't you realty rather have
a new home17
. STUTES REAL ESTATE - 446-4206

BMR 447 - NEW LISTING - 3 RR Ira me localed on S.R. 141.
Includes LR. k1tchen wilh d1mng area. lull basement. Th1s is
~tu aled on 5'' acres more or less. ThiS one " vacanl - so cal l
loday for appOintmen t

4053 .

P111terlng &amp; Plaster repair.

D. and

1977. 28 ft camper. 1elf
contlined, _air, gas furnace.

ESTABLISHED BAR - DOWNTOWN AREA LARGE
SEATING CAPACITY WITH SPACE fOR f.XPANSiON SET
UP FOR EASY OPERATION. MODERN EQUI PMENT IF
YOU ARE lOOKING FOR A GOOD BUSINESS BETTER
HURRY. IT'S PRICED TO SELL!

oi

Black Angus Bull , we ighing
approx . 750 lbs . Call 446-

frH ettimetea. Cell 614-

79 Motors Homes
lit Campers ·

•
•

BMR 446 - NEW LISTING - In town loca tton mcl udes 3 BRs
liv1n g room. dinmg room. balh &amp; basement lots carpet. Gasheat:
Pnced al $29.900. Call lor deta&lt;ls.

Rd . Call 614-256 -6518 .

4 Goodylor Wrangler rodlol
tlreo 10R 1&amp; . Approx .
10,000 mlloo. UOO.OO .
Phono 892.-7844 after 5:00
p. m.

Harley Dev idaon

Sportster . m~my extras.
., .900. Call 446-8234.

-$23,100

lJGRANDE BLVD. - JUST LISTED! VERY NICE BRICK
AND FRAME RANCH. EQUIPPED mCHEN, ATTACHED
GARAGE. BEAUTIFUL LEVEL LAWN. LOW. LOW PRIC~
$45.000.

Steve McGhee
446-1255
BMR 448 - FIRST TIME ON MARKET - Ranch slyle home
s1tuated on 13 acres m/1 Includes 2 BRs. LR. kilchen with dimng
area. FR, lull basement with w.b. fire~ace and soo wer. AHached 1
car garage_. separale garage, 2 outbuildings. You have to see the •
land w1lh f1sh oond.lolsol pine trees. Call foranappointmenlto see
th1s 011e.
BMR 444 ~ LOAN ASSUMPTION - Bricl&lt;lrame ranch situated on
fl at 2.35 acre lot Includes 3 BRs. carpet, lg. eat-in kilchen, LR with
carpet. fam tly room w1th fireplace, utilily room, and bath. Kyger
Creek School D1slnct Call for details on loan assumption.

304-675-2902 after 6:00 .

81

81

Call 446-0552 Any1ime
Beth Null 245-9507

firm .

1979

'·

Home
. Improvements

78° Auto Perta
_ &amp; Acce11orie1

HUGE FAMIL i ROOM

Broker-Auctioneei"

67 hp. diff lock. 396 hrs like

19n Ford 4 whool drive.
3111 · modified 400, outo
trent, tlnhed ,wlndowa. · Q .
78 mud tlrM with chromo
epoke rtm1. exc. cond.-,
u.ooo. Coll448-4462 .

7 4 · Motorcycles

1982 AMC Eoglo Wogon 3'12: In lift kit for Jeep and
4X4. loodod. 83,000 mllea. Buckshot Muddera Q' s with
tiiiOO. Colt 388-8803 .
white Spoke Rim s:

Real Estate General

MF -275 Diesel. spin out
wheels, bumper. dual Hyd,

Ven1 &amp; 4 W.O.

. 73

OWNER'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN - HASMOVED OUTIJ
STATE AND MUST SACRIFICE THIS BEAUTIFUL 4
BEDROOM BRICK AND FRAME RA~H. 1 fUU: BATHS,
fAMILY ROOM WITH fiREPlACE. EAT-IN KITCHEN PLUS
fORMAL DINING. STORAGE GILORE. INGROUND POOL,
2 CAR ~RAGE, STORAGE BLDG., CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM.
FEWMINUTES FROM GALLIPOLIS. $65.500.

1978 Pifito, 4 speed stick,
air. less than 25,000 miles.
no rust. 304 -876 -4683.

M . Call 388 -9367 .

V ana &amp; 4 W.O.

73

1818 Chevy C-80 dump 1980 Jaep Charokae, 4 new
truck, newly POinted cab &amp; llros , .67,000 miles,
bed, no r••onable after $3,200.00 or boot offer
304-875-6492 .
•
rofu01d. CoH 1· 288 -6622.

1981 Dodge Arie• K special
edition, good cond. folly

Oliver 77 Tractor, 6 cvl..
gas . with or without equipm ent . End loader for Farm all

63

Truck• for Sale

1983 Z·2B Comero, 4 ,300 1872 Chovrolot Collfornlo
mlloo, whlto with rod otrlpeo, truokl oil orglnol, vary good
T·1op, oruleetllt, a-c~ am-fm. running oond. Coli 111,4· ·
caentte, lt~reo. lot• more. 387.7111 .
Soma 11 now. t11.000 .
304-11711· 71181.
1978 Ford F1110, V-8, auto,
1977 Chovrolot Mlllbu ciao- PS, PB . 53,000 octual
sic. exc. cond. lo1ded wtth mllee. one-owner, no run.
extru. 73 . 000 mllea. Call 448-4063.
$2500. 304-578-2782 .

INDIVIDUAL
COMMERCIAL
INDUSTRIAL

1-286-6522 .

S10,000.00

72

72

STORAGE WAREHOUSE

1984 2 horse trailer. 6 mo.
old, never been used . Call

new .

Auto1 for Sale

loaded. 304-676-1764 or
614 -245-9666 .
.

port , Oh.

MF 150. MF 165, MF 60.
MF 160 w-loader. 801 Ford.
2 Vermeer round 'Demo'
balers. 2 used balers, 120
MF baler gravity wagons.

JIVIDENS
EQUIPMENT
614-446-1675

Or1nd

condltlon,coll 1114-992 ·
11974.

Farm Equipment

81

Autos for Sale

The Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei- Poge·- o.7

Burrowing animal
Footwear

Move furt ively
Lasso
Proceed
College degree:

139 A state· abbr

140 Mast
14 1 Mounlain pass

142 Wash
143 Narrow-minded
persons
144 Vanety of cat
146 Choice part

148 lstle fiber: pi
149 Consecrates

150 Took one's pari
151 M ake amends

abbr.

101 Rise and tall of
ocean: pt.
River· island
103 The sell
Wallz
Paid nolice
104 Fruit seeds
Story
105 Rabbits
108 Cloth measure
Stitches
Showy flower
110 Missives
Garden implement 112 Rational
Registered nurse:
113 Decay
114 Chinese di stance
abbr.
measure
Be ill
. 115 Fluenl
Hardy heroine
117 Cook in oven
Poisonous
118 Article ol jewelry
substance
119 Indefinite number
Weighl of India
120 Printer's me3$Ure
Part of flower
Diplomacy
121 Class of objects
123 Natlooal Bureau of
Fuss
Surgical thread
Standards: abbr .
Symbol for
124 Baked ctay
125 Plunge
dysprosium

DOWN
1 Forgive
2 Fungous d1sease
3 Antlered an1mal
4 Pismire

36. Farm an1ma1 s
Locatmns
Sw155 nver
Post
Cho1cest
Ooctnne

94 Moumam range 1n
Wyomtng
96 Negatrve
98 Openmg 1n lence
99 Mendrcants
100 Stated posilively
out without p roOf '
102 P1erces
t04 Sheet of glass
1(}!) Dorn1c11e

1DE lnq~t=du'!nl
107
'OY
1 11
11?

4 7 South Alr 1c;m
· Outen

f-1gures ol speech
Covf:'rt-d rns1de ol

All If"'
P,:nt Jf wrndow
I rurnt:

48 Poritons

1n

49 Got up
50 Ceremo111t:'S
54 ArtiC les ol furn!lurc
55 Hebrew month
56 Contenc1mg w1t h
59 Father or mc.thPr
60 Narrate
61 Hebrew month
63 Roman tyrant

'lb Bol\er
, IF lf'IPb

War,tj~•r

nroduct

11~' ~att-·el

1 ~L w,re

r~oill

1 &lt;&gt;4 N~r-e:..

1/c; n&lt;..rr:1~&gt; .'ltorrnatron

•.,
1?6 Lh&lt;'~' (K ter 1zed by
meod~

66 Fullil l

1;'1P ~..Sdrrnvv f-It boaros
lvO Spanlsr fur ·rrve r''

67 SymbOl for &lt;,•I .er

5 Note of scale

68 Gorng w.
70 Nf'wspaper

6 Room
7 Gasp lor breath

execullvl
71 PossPss.P'

13:, W;r• \-Jl•d

8 ln addition
9 concerning

72 Before

1J7 Top of hP..ad

~73 Sell tro cono;umc-r

10 Kite

75 S1gn1fy·

11 Encroach
12 Exclamation

77 Hard-wood trpe
78 Female rull
80 Fru1t ca~f'
83 Pmchc~
86 Downy duo.
88 Wide-awak e

13 Send for1h
14 Dress protector
15 Pounded down
16 Period of !1me
17 Footbalt pos1tion ·
abbr.
21 Intractable persons

1~~ ~

,

St.lfPr!

~; Mu&gt;H~rll ~n~.lrumen t

t3E .Josrp Broz
140 Sod1um c hlonoe

142 Cover
143 Small amount

14&lt;1 College dP&lt;jree
,rbtH
t4~ Com pas~ potnt
t47 Chtnese dl$ta nce

89 Hogs

I-----------------------------------90 Stamp of aPproval
91 Compass porm

mea~urP

148 Parent colloq

.INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 5 rooms and bath down
4 rooms .
I and bath upstairs Located along 2nd Ave. Buy now lor $17.000.
P1ice reducedII
t

t

1
I wE HAVE A HOME AND PERFECT LOCATION for a lamllv .Located.
I almost ac ross from Washington School. 3 bed rm. ~ome. 2 balhs. t
1 2kttchens, mce lot whiCh IS w1de and deep e 'Ough lor garden and f

.

.

sw,mnllng pool. Needs some wor k. However. can be moved into
• today.
·

'

f

I COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL LOCATION- Upper River Rd. 3I

bedrm. home wb fp. owner Will sell, lease or rent. Buy now for
• $41.500
•

•

•

2 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME located along Hazel Ridge Rd. 25
• acres, more or less. with nee garden area and wooded area. Priced .
• $27,500.
•
•

.COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES: Some leased. some emply. Call fore
linvestment opportun ites'
•

•

:NEW LISTING - 2 Bedrm. cottage. with extra lot Buy all fore
$29,900.00.
•

I

•

•

•

RACCOON CREEK PROPERlY - l to 4 acres, w1th 3 bedrm .•
. .home and outbuildings. From $55,000.00.
•

I NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm . home along Smithers St. 15'x20' .
. famil y rm. Some applia nces w1th hom e. Buy all for $28,000 . •
eNEW LISTING - 109 acres located in law rence Co. near.
eLecta. Costs less than $300 pe r acre. Buy now for $32 ,000 . •
•
APARTRMENTS FOR RENT
•
WE NEED LISTINGS - LIST WITH US
•

r.
f-.---------------------~-----

•
..•

.
---------------------------------------·---·------------------\....,

.-

'

�Page D8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 14, 1984

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

Suicide pill vote at .Br~wn
viewed as symbolic action

FIRST PlACE - "Skunk the Pir;ltes," was the
winning floai In Southern High School's annual
homecoming parade Friday afternoon in Racine. Built

by;the junior class, this ldng·sl7.epolecatwould doPepe
· le Peu proud.

By CHRISTOPHER CALIAJIAN ·
. A-.iated Press Writer
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A
referendumsbnilartooneapproved
by students at Brown University
calling on the Ivy League school to
suppiy suicide pills In the event of a
nuclear warw111 be considered on at
least one other university campus.
The Student Executive Council at
the University of Colorado at
Boulcter says a measure to be voted
on later this month wln, like '!he
Brown referendum, be a symbolic
action In opposition to nuclear war . .
Tile non·blndlng proposal at
Brown calling on the health center to
stock cyanide pills so students can
choose suicide over dealh by
nuclear radiation was approved by
a 60-40 margin, 1,044 to 687.
"I lhlnk It's possible that we will
see things similar to lhls" a tcolleges
around the country", Jason Salzman,
a junior from Denver who organized
the Brown campaign, said after
votes were counted Frtday.
Brown President Howard R.
Swearer said that while he recog·

nlzes the referendum's "serious
purpose" of "(lramatlzlng the
danger ot nuclear war," the school ·
will not stockpile suicide pills.
OfficialS at Colorado University
alSo said they wlilnot be Influenced
by the student vote.
" We will not stock it. No way," ·
said Jan Imeg, acting associate
director of !he school's Wardenburg
Health Services.
"Suicide Is a uniquely personal
decision, " said Kaye Howe, vice
chancellor of academic setvlces at
lhe Boulder campus. ''And, while I
understand the sYIIlbollc nature of
lhe students' action, I could not
imagine our condoning lhe stocking
of cyanide capsules In our health
center for lhe purpose of suicide."
AdamTurner,lheStudentExecu·
tlve Council representative who
sponsored !he measure, said Friday
he expects lhe referendum will be
approved .
Salzman first proposed lhe idea of
suicide piUs at Brown last year. But
his original idea to urge the federal
government to abandon Its civil

defense and crisis relocation plans
imd distribute suicide tablets Instead got nowhere.
"I goess you could say people
thought Iwasmoreof a nut then and
people shrugged lhelr shoulders,"
Salzman said. "Nobody picked up
on the idea.''
But when Salzman proposed a
referendum on the student ballot
and called on ·Brown to supply the
tablets, students responded In force.
"Such an Idea is a complete
antllhesls of why universities exist,' •
said Robert Reichley, vice president
for university relations at Brown.
"Wearetotallyopposedtothenotlon
of suicide as an alternative to
anylhlng."
"We're saying we're scared. We
don't want suicide," said Salzman.
"What we wantis to prevent suicide
and we think !hat nuclear y.oar Is
going to be suicide."
Salzman said Frtday that he and
other Brown disarmament activists
"are now looking across to other
campuses to plck · up the
mornentUIJl.' '

David Kennedy's last.days detailed
By MAUD S. BEELMAN
AllloclaCed Press Writer

' SECOND PLACE - "Cream of Pirate Soup" is
"umm, unun, good" according to the sophomore class
at Southern lligh School in Racine, who bulli this entry

for the annual homecoming parade on Friday
afternoon. The float took second-place honors.

Moral Majority still hacks Reagan
CLEVELAND (API- The Rev.

Jerry Falwell says members of his
Moral Majority would vote for
President Reagan regardless of his
performance in della tes with Walter
Mondale.
"Our people are so committed to
the philosophy of Mr. Reagan !hat
even If he had not shown up for the
debate or If he had fallen asleep on
the podium - and~he didn't - we
would still pull the Reagan lever,"
Falwell said before addressing a
City Club forum Frtday. ·
"I don't think you vote for a
debater," he said. "I think you vote
for the person who agrees with you
the most closely of the ones who are
running."

During the second Reagann~ • "The president and I don't have
Mandate debate Oct. 21, Falwell
a ny close relationship," said Fa!said aU !he candidates must do Is
well, who said he has met privately
"show up and state the facts
with Reagan only once.
correctly and the vote would be the
F a lwell confirmed r emarks
same as without the debates, in my .made by Vice President George
opinion. They are really not debates
BushdurlngThursday'sdebate that
but glorified press conferences."
he Initially had opposed Reagan's
Falwell, responding to charges by appointment of Sandra Day O'ConMondale and running mate Geral· ' nor to the Supreme Court. Falwell
dine Ferraro that he would help pick said he now thinks Mrs . O'Connorls
Supreme Court justices in a second· "one ofthe finest justices."
Reagan administration, ~aid he
The last two Republican national
never has said he would have input conventions have adopted a plat·
on the appointments.
'
form plank supported by Falwell
''I'm sure I'll get as much Input In a nd antl·abortlon forces that says
the next two to five Suprem e Court the president only should appoint
·justices Mr. Reagan appoints as I judges who "respect traditional
did the first - and that's none," he family values and the sanctity of
said.
innocent human Ufe .''

WESTPALMBEACB , Fia. iAPl
- Less than two days before drugs
killed him , a tearful David Kennedy
told a woman he had just met he
could " never find peace Inside" and
was "full of pain" from the 1968
murder of his father, Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, documents said.
Details of lhe last, agonizing days
of the 28-year-old Kennedy's life
were revealed Friday after a judge
ruled the material galhered durtng
an official . lnvestlgatlon of
Kennedy's death was covered by the
state's open records law.
Kennedy, found dead of a fatal
drug combination Aprtl25 a ta P alm
Beach hotel, spent his final days
drinking and snorting cocaine while
complaining about Ufe, the r ecords
show.

A German imrn1grant, · Marion
Niemann, 42, said she met Kennedy
a t a popular Palm Beach nightspot
Apr1l22. a nd saw him again the next
day at his hotel suite.
The conversation turned to the
June1968slaylngofSen. Kennedy at
a California political rally, an
incident that David, !hen . 13,
watched over and over on television
at
family's hotel room.
" I can, I can never find peace
inside, I've been full of pain,'" Ms.
Niemann said Kennedy told her.
"And I say, 'You need help, David.'
And he say, 'Yes, I am crying for
help.'"
At one point, she said, !hey cried
together.
Olher interviews also chronicled
lhe agony Kennedy suffered before
. lhe fatal drug ingestion. Experts
said he died of a combination of

t't;

Officials of several rural school
districts did not want to add the
missed time onto the end of the
school day because they said
students would get home too late,
Interfering wilh farm chores or
baby sitters' schedules, and that the
added time would cut lntoextracur•
rtcular activities.
Wllllam Phlllls, an assiStant
superintendent of public Instruction
wilh the department, said the policy
change gives schcl!lLtll$trlcts flex!·
blllty In determining how they w1ll
fultlll an Ohio .law that requires
students to attend 182 days of school
a year, oot Including the five
calamity days and tour other
special-exemption days. The department has been fiY.lng to crack
(

or

Five

dyear employees join Top 10 Club

POINT PLEASANT- Goodyear
Point Pleasant . Plant Manager
James Catver recently .a nnounced
that Dale Watterson, Sam Keith,
Griff Cook Jr. , Conard Hudson and
Leo Rogers have been selected tor
membe'tshlp In the Point Pleasant
plant's 1984-&amp;'i Top Ten Club.
The Top Ten Club was established In 1969 to recognize !he
contributions of outstanding super· .
visors and foremen and, as lhe
name Implies, !hose chosen for club
/
mernbe~hip are rated In the top 10
percent of flrst·llne supervision.
Watterson was hired as a cheml·
cal operator for the plant In
September 1962. He worked In
several prOduction areas before his
I
promotion to production supervisor
J
In July 1967.
WatterSon attended Hannan High
Dale Watterson
SamKehh
School In Ashton, W.Va., and Is a
veteran of the U.S. Air Force.
He and his wife, Sandra, are lhe children reside In Huntington, . Grande College.
parents of two children and reside W.Va.
He and his wife Deanna are the
Cook began his Goodyear career parentS of two daughters and reside
In Point Pleasant.
·
Keith joined the plant In De- In June 1965 as a chemical operator. In Rio Grande.
Hudson joined the plant In
cember 1976 as an Instrument· Cook served In this capacity until
his promotion to production super· September 1962 as a chemical
electrician supervisor, the position
he currently maintains. Keith Is a visor In March 1971. He was operator. Hudson was promoted to
promoted to his current position of a group A operator In December
graduate ot MadiSon High School In
Richmond, Ky., an~ Is a veteran, shift forema n In January 1982.
1966 and to·productlon supervisor in
Cook •graduated from Southwest· February 1967. He was promoted to
having setved In the U.S. Navy.
He and his wife, Judy, and two em .High School and attended Rio his current position of utility

LOS ANGELES (AP )- Doctors
fought today to save the life of
television actor Jon·Erik Hexum
who accidentally shot himself In !he
head while toying with a blank·
loaded pistol on the set of the selies
"Cover Up," officials said.
·
Hexum, 26, was in critical
condition after a lengthy operation,
said Beverly HillS Medical Center
spokeswoman Maria Teter . The
exact nature oft he head wound was
not revealed.

A blank cartridge contains gunpowder but no projectile. When fired
It emits a powerful blast of hot gas,
which can cause physical harm at
closerange.
Hexum was working alone when
he shot himself Friday afternoon on
the 20th Century Fox set of the
television series, said studio publlc
relatlonsexecutlveChuckPanama.
"It happened so quickly," Pa·
nama 5a!d. He said apparently no
one saw the accident.

Hexum co-stars In the series with
Jennifer O'Neill , whowasnotonthe
set at !he time of the shooting,
Panama said . .Hexum plays a
former Green Beret posing as a
male model to do undercover work.
His . acting credits alSo Include
"The Voyagers'' TV series and the
'IV movie, "The Making of a Male
Model.''
He recently acted in the new
motion picture, "The Bear," star·
ring Gary Busey.

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

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.

.IS

down on school districts tha t abuse early for county fairs and other
thatlaw.
activities unrelated to school.
"We saw gross abuse of the school ·
The department in May required
year-day standards throughout
all school districts to be in sess ion for
Ohio," he said, adding that some a full school year.
districts were dismissing school

.

\\Youl' New 8, UIBII Csl' Conn~flon"
•

New
Chevrolets
&amp; Oldsmobiles
Arriving
Daily!
1

Change~

See Morris Sheets, T~rry Hamilton, Mike Sickels,
Jim Walker or Roger Dillard

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.
1616 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, OH.
PREVENTIVE MEDICINE- Shannon Bailey, Middleport, wore
cut-off sleeves when he visited the Melp Cowiy Health Department on
Frtday to receive Ids nu shot from Norma Torres. R.N. Approximately
· 000 people received Ou sho&amp;B ou 11amlda7 and Friday when the
lnunur*atlons wer_e admbd8tered by pei'SOIIJI!'l from the Melp Coumy
Health Depariment Sho&amp;e were given to senior citizens at the Senior
Citizens Center on 11tul'!lday, and to the pneral pubic on Friday al the
health depal1ment. A make-up day has been IICheduled for Tuesday at
the health department.
.&gt;

I

446-3672 .
Ask Our Sales People About lifeguard Protection
For Your Naw Car or Truck .

'

'~ '-f)

supervisor ill September 1979.
Hudson and his wife, Lyda, are the
parents of two children and reside
In Gallipolis.
Rogers, section head of warehouse and shipping, began working
for Goodyear In August 1963 as an
operator In the warehouse. In
January 1967 he advanced to the
pesltlon of merchandise clerk and
In Aprtl 1968, he was promoted to

Leo Rogers

Conard Hud'iOII

Grill Cook Jr.

scheduler. In August 1968, Rogers
became a warehouse supervisor, a
position he held until his promotion
to section head warehouse and
shipping in June 1979.
Rogers Is a graduate of Point
Pleasam High School and received
an associate degree in specialized
business from Ashland 1Ky.l Busi·
ness College. Rogers is a veteran of
the U.S. Air Force.

He and his wife Marj&lt;il'leare the
parents of two children and reside
in Henderson, W.Va.
The Top Ten Club w111 hqld
monthly meetings and conduct
activities such as field trips to other
manufacturing fa cilities, educational programs , social functions ,
management meetings and com-.
munlty projects.

announced in·Multimedia's newspaper division

GREENVILLE, S.C. - Realign·
ment of top management responsi·

bUllies In the Multimedia's newspaper company was announced. by

Area personnel file

Walter E . Bartlett, president and
·chief operating officer, and Wilson
C. Wearn, chairman and chief
executive officer.
Rhea T. Eskew will relinquiSh at
his request the position of president
of Multimedia Newspaper .Co. and
will be succeeded by Donald J .
Barhyte. .The moves are effective
Dec. 31.
Eskew, who will be 61 In
November, will become senior
exe.;utive of the company, a new
post, and will continue to serve as a
member of Multlm~a Inc.'s
Board of Diroctors. He has been a
corporate vice president and head
of newspaperJ since 1979.
"This move to a position of less
responslbiUty Is one that I have ·
conslderecUor nearly two years,"
Eskew said. "WhUe I iltlll w1ll be
active In the affall;s of our

newspapers, 1 will have more
opportunity to pursue areas of
personal Interest.'·
"This appointment of Donald
Barhyte as president of the news·
paper company, In add!tloil to his'
. key and continued important !I nan·
cla l role In Multimedia Inc. is a
planned transition in our top
management group that will serve
us well In future years." Weam
said.
Barhyte, 47, will retain responsl~
blllties as treasurer, chief financia l
offleer and a board member of
Multimedia Inc. He will assume the
additional operating assignment as
president of Multimedia News·
paper Co. He joined Multimedia as
research and planning manager in
1968, previously having been with
ffiM Corp. He Is a director at South

Carolina National Bank and serves South Carolina Press Association in
on the teleeommunications com- 1981. He joined The Greenville
mittee of the American Newspaper (S.C.) News-Piedmont Co., pubPublishers Association tANPI\). lisher of two Multi media newspapHe is also active with the Southern ers, as genera l manager in 1973,
Newspaper Publis hers Assoc iati on subsequently becoming president
!SNPA) .
and publisher. Eskew had been
"Rhea Eskew is a respectl'd 11oth United Press International for
veteran and recognized leader in 24 years prior to joining MultimeAmerica's newspaper business." dia . He is on the board of F irst ·
Bartlett said. "He has led Multlme·
Federal Savings a nd Loan of South
dla newspapers to a position of Carolina.
outstanding achievement . We are
Multimedi a is a media communi~
fortunate he has agrQed to continu e ca tions company which publishes
to provide project management
13 dally and 30 non ~da lly newspapand guidance to the president of
ers. owns and operates five televl·
Multimedia newspapers and the
s!on and 12 radio broadcasting
publishers."
stations, operates more than 100
Immediate past president of cable television franchises in four
SNPA, Eskew is a member of the
states and produces and syndicates
government affairs committee of
television. programming, including
ANPA, and
president of the ' the PhU Donahu e show.

was

Moody's increases ratings ·for Zimmer . utilities
Dr. Aarom lloonsue
.

-

POINT PLEASANJ' -

l)ow

DAYTON, Ohio (AP).-Moody's
Investor Service Is !he second major
bond·ratlng firm to raise the credit
ratings of the three utllltles building
lhe Zimmer power plant.
Moody' s said Monday it has
Increased lhe bond ratings of
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.,
Dayton Power and Light Co. and

w. Saunders

Dr. Aa·

.rom Boonsue has been recertified as

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co. from speculative to investment
grade.
Last Thurs(j;)y, Standard &amp;
Poor's, the other major bond-rating
service, moved DP&amp;L' s ra tlng from
speculative to investment grade.
However, Standard &amp; Poor's kept
ratings forCG&amp;E and C&amp;SOE a tthe

a Diplomate of the American Board
of Family Practice .
Boonsue, who has practiced since
1967 at the Point Pleasant Medical
. Center, 25th Street and Jefferson
Avenue, exceeded !herequirements
for recertification by completing
1,005. hours (300 hours required) ot
continuing medical education dur·
tng the past six years, having an
of!lce records review and comp!et ·
_lng 10 hours of written examination.
Recertification IS for the period
1984-1991, according to lhe Amert·
cail Board of Famllty Practice.
Boonsue Is a graduate of lhe
University of Medical Sciences,
Faculty ofMedlctne, Chulalongkom
.U niverslty,Bangkok, Thailand.
Following Internship and surgical
·Angle Baker
training In Thailand, he setved
residency In thoracic surgery In
director of social services at Holzer
National Jewish Hospital, Denver,
Medical Center.
, Colo., E;mory University, Emory,
The l!Ppolntment was made Sept.
Ga., and University Hospitals,
24,
according to Charles I. Adkins,
University of Wisconsin. He alSo .
HMC's
chief executive offlt,:er.
served residency in anesthesiology
A
·
G
aillpolls
native and graduate
at Ohio Valley General Hospital,
of
Gailta
Academy
High Schooi,
·
Wheeling. W.Va.
Saunders
received
a
bachelor's
. Boonsue Is a member of lhe
degree In social work, wllh a minor
American Academy of Family
in psychology and sociology, from
Physicians, West VIrginia chapter,
Rio Grande College.
·
American Academy of Family
After graduation, he became
PhY!!Iclans, Occupational Medical
director of social services at
Association, American Society ot
NEW BUSJNE91# - A GloviiiUII'slranchlse has o~ In dowdllwn
PleasantValleyHospltallnJanuary
. Clinical Hypnosis Education and
Gallipolis II&amp; t.'lli 8ecoad Ave. Operallng &amp;he famlly-«ien&amp;ed res&amp;aurtlll&amp;
19'19, holding that position until
Research Foundation, National
are, from left, Bonnie Coburn, Unda Sims and Alan stewart.
coming to HMC .
Acupuncture Research Society.
Saunders has been serving vice
West VIrginia Society of Anesthesl·
chairman
of the 'west Virginia
ologlsts, Amertcan Society ot Anes·
{)epartzrdtt
of Human Services
theslologlsts, Wes1 Virginia Medical
~
12
(Cabell
and Mason counAssociation; Amertcan Medical
ties)
and
as
a
member
of the West
Association, Biofeedback Society of
· Stewart Is no stranger to the
VIrginia
Chapter
ot
Hospital
Social
GALLIPOLIS - A new business
America, Fellow of the American
Work Directors and National Chap- geared toward family enjoyment
restaurant business ellher. He
Academy of Family Physicians,
.Mason County Medical Society and ter of Hospital Social Work has opened In downtown GaWpolls. worked for Long John Silver for s!J(.
Directors.
A Giovanni's tranehlse owned by years and for Domino's for lhi'ee
A·merlcan Ac .ademy of
Within the community, he Is a Alan Stewart haS taken up quarters monlhs prtor to taking out a
1bermoiogt.
In addition to family practice, board member ot Big Brothers-Big at 435 Second Ave., siteofthetorrner franchise wilh the Ashland, Ky.·
based Giovanni outfit.
.
BoonSue Is active In treating chronic Sisters or GaWa, Jackson, Meigs · Donelll's.
"I like the location, and the people
and Mason counties, and was
"I think we'll have a good chance
pain wllh the use of nerve biock,
elected
to
a
four·year
term
on
the
are
rrtendly,''
said
Stewart,
of
when
we get started, '' Stewart said.
here
biofeedback, trigger point Injection,
Gallipolis
Qty
Commission
In
Raceland,
Ky.,
who
Is
venturing
Into
"We
will be delivering to local
physical therapy, hypnosis. acu·
November
1983.
·
businesses
In the near future.·'
his
rtrst
business
as
owner
and
puncture and transcotaneous t;Jec·
He
Is
the
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
that no video game
Stewart
said
operator.
tr1ca1 nerve stimulation.
Tile
restaurant
contains
a
dining
room
Howard
Baker
Saunders.
has
been
Installed at the
~operatlni Point Pleasant
area
with
tables
and
chairs
the
rear
restaurant
because
he wants the
Medical Center, Boonsue setves on
and
there
are
plans
to
Install
a
Pepsi
business
to
be
tamlly-ortented
the aCtive staff &lt;if Pleasant Valley
GALLIPOLIS-Angle Baker has cooler. Hei&amp;*li him wilh the center. Therestauranthadltsgrand .
Hospital In Point Pleasant. He I&amp;
ltcenaed In West VIrginia, Ohio and Joined lhestaffotEnchantedMirror operation of the restaurant Is his opening·Friday.
mother·In-law, Bonnie Coburn, who
Beauty Salon, tl29 Jackson Pike.
Hours at Giovanni's are Monday
lndlaJUl.
A Pomeroy resident, Baker lw nearly nllle yeal'l ot experience through Thursday, 11 a .m .·11 p.m .:
attended Meigs County Vocational With restaurants. and employee Friday and Saturday, 11 a :m .·1
GALLIPOLIS - Dow W. Saund·
School.
Linda Sims.
a .m .; and Sunday, noon·10 p.m .
ot GaUJpolls has been named

as

BANK &amp; GMAC Financing on the Spot

.j.... "

'

I TV lead· accidentally shoots self I

Makeup day policy reconsid~red
By KElTJI ROBINSON
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -School
opening delays a nd cancella tions
lhls week because of heavy fog in
some PQrtlons of the state have
prompted the Department of E du·
calion to ease a policy o~ make-up
time.
The department on Friday noli·
fled school distrtcts that they can ask
to count towards emergency days
lhe portion of'a school day that is
missed because of fog or other
weather conditions.
,.
The new pollcy was set because of
complaints from som e school off! ·
ctals, primarily In the northwestern
portion of the state, that the
deparlment was too rigid in
requiring students to attend a full
day of classes.
The new policy changes a
directive Issued last week that said a
school &lt;!lstrtct could add onto the end
ot the school day the time lha t was
missed earlier In the day because of
a fog delay or waive theentlre day as
a "calamity day." School districts
are entitled to five ca lamity days a
year.. They are usually a result of
snowstoi'TilS or Icy road conditions.

cocaine, a tranquilizer and a
painkiller.
Two former bellhops at the hotel,
David Linwood Dorr and Peter
Andrew Marchant, were arrested In
mld·May on.two cocaine counts. But
aulhortties cannot'tell It the drugs
they are accused of supplying to
Kennedy contrtbuted to his dealh. ·
Dorr, :Jl, of West Yarmouth,
Mass., told pollee he had no
knoWledge concerning Kennedy's
drug use how Kennedy obtained
drugs during the last days of his life.
TherecordsshowMarchant,24,ot
WarWick, R.I. , told aulhorltles !hat
Kennedy asked him to buy cocaine
at least twice. When questioned
furlher, herequestedan attorney be
present.
No trial date has been set for lhe
two.

~im,.- i'tntiul Section

Giovan~i's franchise··o pens
·for business in Gallipolis

a

ep

specula tive level .
Zimmer'sownersannou ncedear·
liert his yearthey would conven the
Moscow, Ohio, pla nt to burn Ohio
coal. The projected completion da te
for the long·delayed project L&gt; July

1991.

.

"The upgrading refl ects Moody's
belief in the technica l feasibilit y of
the project, as well as the reduction
in the financial risk associated with
the companies ' investments in
Zimmer," Moody's said.
Better bond ra lings mean the
utilities can obtain better long-term
fi nancing needed fort he conversion.
Low ratings mean investors can
demand higher interest rates when
buying securities.
DP&amp;L · was pleased with the

change.
"Essentially it's good news in that
we're back to investment grade,"
sa id Hamid Rafizadeh. assistant

treasw·er .
But. Rafizadeh added, DP&amp;L
doesn't expect the ratings' to
improve much more unt il uncer·
tainty about how the plant wil l be
regulated Is cleared . That won't be
for several years.
Moody's latest revil'W changes
the ra tingofDP&amp;L's firs t mongage
bonds and secured pollution control
issues to Baal from Baa3. Ratings
on unsecured pollution control
txmds were raised from Baa-2 to
Ba·l. The preferred stock ratings
were upgraded to Baa·2 from Ba -2.
And previously unrated commer·
cial paper was assigned Prlme-2.

Psychologist opens clinic
to serve Meigs-Mason area
POMEROY - Dr. James E.
Altho!, a local psyc~o logist licensed
in Ohio and West Virginia, will open
a satelllteoffic·e of Whitney, AlthO! &amp;
Associates to prov ide more conve·
nlent services to residents of Meigs
and Mason counties .
The private firm has been
providing personalized services in
Meigs, Gallia, Mason, Jackson and
Lawrence counties for more than
· eight years.
Althof said the new clinic,located
in the Meigs Health Services .
Building on Mulberry Heights
across from Veterans Memorial
Ho,spital, is now open and receiving
clients. The phone number is

992-6414.
"My reason for going Into private
practice was that I'm interested in
providing high quality, private
psychological services in a way
that's cost-comparative with most
community agencies," Altho! said.
"Since going into private psychological service I know that private,
personalized counseling and psy·
chotherapy can do the job that lhe
people of this arealiave asked us to
do," he added .
The move into qua rters at
Pom eroy came at the prompting of
several physicians, attorneys a nd
community ~rv!ce professionals,
Altho! said, adding that he likes
working In rura l areas.
AlthO! did his undergraduate and
master's work In psychology at
Pennsylvania State University. He
taught on lhe Penn State faculty In
the College ~f Human Development

for six .vcars, and finis hed work on
his doctorate at the University of
Mary land .
The nl'W clinic is open on
Tuesdays and Thursdays and are
likely to expand its hours soon, but
ca lls will b&lt;' received on all
workdays.
Services provided by the clinic
include counseling, psyc hot herapy,
t&gt;valuations. man·iage and family
counseling fo r a dults , adolescents
and children .
Sessions arc scheduled by appointmentsonly . but can be initiated
either by Individuals themselves ·or
through referrals by physicians,
a tt orneys, ministers or olher
professionals.

Dr. James E. AJihDf
'

�..
Octob4HPage E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Alonzo

THE SMAU.. SHOP at 4114 Second Ave., GalllpoHs, dates to just
alter the Civil War and was originally designed as a law ofllce or an
Insurance ofllce. Many yoling atlomeys started here before moving on
II) the last century to belter quarlers.ln the 20th century the building has
been used mostly as a restaurant and was the home for the Wlllte Palace
fi.om 1941 to the 1970s.
·

.
.
PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

Baltimore can boast
Peeps diary how long?

a

roamed in sections of the city where
,By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
houses nOw stand."
:GALLIPOLIS - Baltimore can
boast a Peeps diary ... too. We
almost didn't put that adverb "too"
MACK E. LAYNE'S telephone
in · there because maybe no one
rang and rang and rang. No
exposed to the Gallipolis Peeps · , answer. 01' Po;eps ":as seeking
diary does any boasting about it!
more ·detaUs on a steed to be
entered Oct: 20 in the 18th annual
HOWEVER, we have the photos· super sale in the Ohio fairground
tatic copy of the upper left-hand coliseum - a super sale in
conjunction with the world famous
corner of a page obviously from
Ail-American Quarter Horse
Baltimore. probably Maryland but
extravaganza .
no real evidence from the photostat
WHERE it' s from. · The ·kicker
LAYNE'S entry Is among the
he&lt;&gt;dline is "Our Changing Subanimals to be sold from consignurbs," and this column doubts that
menls out of 24 states and Canada in
Ohio's Baltimore has NY suburbs.
the 87 entries. The sale Is managed
EJN THAT QUARTER page is a by Natlonal Equine Sales, Inc., 20-10
short two-column-wide piece head- W. Blee Road, Springfield, Ohio
lined "Mr. Peep's Diary." Notice 45502. Managing this sale is Na·
where the apostrophe laUs: It's tlonal Equine Sales, which has
Peep plus an "s" whereas the condUcted sales as far away as
Australla and often producing
Gallipolis scrivener has the "s"
a ttached, thus : ·· Peeps. How long national and ·world champiom.
has this one lasted? Ours started in
THE FOLKS of Springfield, Ohio,
1942.
say that the quarter horse · Is
FIRST PARAGRAPH of the steadily gaining in popularity as an
Baltimore Peeps reads: "The American bred horse known for its
following living Baltimoreans can versatility and use as a show and
family horse, as well as for sprint
r~member when sheep or cows or
horses or some son of livestock · racing.

J. Greene sen'ed in 3 confederatepouce·
prisons

By JAMES SANDS
would lind lice literally by. the prisOners then orgaDIZe!l '
'him bllek.''
Special Correspondent
thousand."
.
force with a judge to subdue the
Greene was eventually released
GALLIPOLIS - .When the Qvll
Greene who went from 140 "Raiders."Sixoftherlngleadersof from the hospital to go home to
Rutland, Ohio. On his release be got
War broke out In lll61, the grandson pounds to .86 pounds while at the "Raiders" were eventually
a hat, blanket, drawers, and shirt.
and great-graodson of ~olutlon· Andersonville, also recalled seeing U1ed and hanged by their fellow
ary hero General Nathaniel Greene "maggots by ~ handful working prisoners for disgracing "the Union He sold the hatfor·a bushel of sweet
volunteered to ·~·'Gil'!'
in the joints of living men·too sick to uniform."
pata\Des.
join the 13th Indlhelp themselves."
Alonzo's hair grew to over a foot
Greene later became a promi·ana Battery Inde. On one occasion Greene told how in length and his skin became dark
nent attorney in Gallipolis, moving
two men had made a tunnel of brown from constant expci9ure to to the old French City about 1876.
pendent Light Ar· fJ~:.~r.llt?•
tillery. At the
escape of about 150 feet only to be the elements. It was after some He died in the 1!llms and is burled in
battle of Harts:
turned in by an anonymous note to months ~~ot Andersonvnte that one of · Gallipolis.
.
ville, Tenn., on
the commandant of the prison, Greene's buddies' - WID Morrison
The buDding we feature today
Dec. 7, 1862, the
General Wirtz. The commandant -'- was inspeCted bY, the surgeon of was a law ofllce at one time and ·
lll'andson, Dr. Oliver Greene, was ordered rations stopped until the · the hospital and told to march over probably housed Greene briefly as
mortally wounded; dying two anonymous "ratters" came for· to what was 'called the "dead line" many attorneys starting out in the
weeks later in the hospital. Dr. ward. When three men gave - that Is those who had beeorrie so 19th century used this building as ail
Greene's son, Alonza J . Greene, themselves up, they were taken to desperate, that they h&amp;d tQ receive office, including Hollis Johnston,
was only 17 when his ·f ather was Wirtz's office. they came out with · hospital care. Will said that he could who started there in 1886.
killed, and through the persuasion pieces of corn bread two feet long not stand without his brother John
In more iecertt years the buDding
of Alonzo's mother, the 17-year-old and huge hunks of meat.
and so John was sen~ to the "dead has served as an "eatery" having
was discharged on account of his
Greene also remembered that line" as well.
been the home of the White Palace
youth.
not all atrocities were committed
"Then Greene made up his mind for almost 40 years beginning In
Greene re-enlisted in the Second by the Confederates there, as 200 top, too, or die right there, and he 1941 under Mr. and Mrs. Jack
West Virginia Cavalry in 18&amp;4 and New · Yorkers had formed an went, the rebel sergeant saying not Hackworth.
was taken prisoner by the Confeder- organization called the "Raiders" . a word. Afterward the same
U you wish, . y~u can write to
ateson June17, 1864, at Lynchburg, who would steal, be~t up and even sergeant advl&amp;ed Gl'e!Olne that he JarnesSazid!latBod2,Ciarbburg,
va. Alonzo served time In three kill other prisoners. The remaining had belter limp or they would send Ohio 43115.
southern prisons: Andersonville, ~::._:.::..:..:.:.::..:.::.:.:.:.__:__.:...:.,:.::...:.::..;.,:,_=:_::::::..:::::..::.=.:....::=::.:.::.::._.=:=.=::::.

______,..__

Charleston, and Florence.
In 1894 Greene recalled his
experiepces at Andersonville for
the Gallipolis Bulletin.
"The bill of fare served the
prisoners, .as recalled by ~.
consisted of one meal a day.
Generally this was a chunk of com
bread, made of com, cob, arid hllllk
all ground up together. About once
a month they hot a hunk of meat
about one and a half inChes square.
At intervals this · was interspeftiC!d
with stoek pea soup, brought In
buckets. In which was min~
soup, peas, bugs, and other ..rf
that Is unmentionable. At times two
tablespoons of Dour to a man was
served of which they made gnHII."
Greene . also remember that
"every morning It was a regular job
of an hour or more for them to take
off their pantaloons, turn them
inside out, and relieve them of
vermin. Under the seams they'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

FALL :II,
FESTIVA~ ·
OF TIRE VALUES

FINANCE CHARGES
PAID AS AGRII!D

*MINIMUM MONTHLY
PAYMENT REQUIRED

Meigs County
'

Road Kina areat traction
on front or back wheels in
all kinds of weather. Easy·
rolling, fuel efficient fi·
berglass radial.

.

agent s corner

.

Extension
.
notes•••
.

.,

By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY - Calendar of Upcorning Events - Monday, Oct. 15
.- Registered Angus Sale at 7 p.m.
at Gallla County Fairgrounds;
Tuesday, Oct. 16 - - &lt;1-H Horse
Committee meting at 7 p.m. in the
Extension Office; Thursday, Oct.18
- Junior Fair Sale Committee at 7
p.m. at the Extension Office;
Monday, Oct. 22 - 4-H Committee
meeting at 7: 30 · p.m. at the
Extension Office; ·Tuesday, Oct. 23
- Athens Feeder Calf Sale at
publications from the Northeast Athens Livestock Yards; Thurs·
Agricultural Engineering Service day, Oct. 25 - Meigs and Athens
(NRAES) of Ithaca, New York.
County Dairy Tour at 1 p.m . at the
The MWPS oilers !ann struc- Robinson and Son Farm on Route
tures publications on swine, beef, 33 between Pratts Fork and Shade.
sheep, dairy, horse and solar
Cleaning Grain Bins and Cribslivestock hOusing: livestock ma- Don't forget to clean out your grain
nure 'management: framing and bins and cribs prior to storing the
utility buildings: farmstead plan- new crop. Corn bins need to be
ning; and hay, grain and machin- cleaned up around the outside,
ery storages.
inside, and under the false bottom.
Also available and described in Be sure to remove it all. Old com
this catalog -are publications about just contaminates the new corn.
related areas such as solar grain For your safety use a dust mask to
drying, private water systems, filter the air. People with lung
domestic sewage disposal, and diseases can he affected by the dust
home and yard improvements. and spores from the old corn.
These publications are written by
Corn Crop - The corn crop for
agricultural engineers. Stop by and Ohio is 90 percent mature and about
browse through our copy any time. 10 percent has been harvested.
Daily production is declining Corn moisture on the average Is
while sales are increasing for the 25-30 percent. This Is still too much
first time in five years. In recent moisture to crib safety.
years, production has greatly exAccording to Doane's No. 2
ceeded commercial sales with a
yellow corn in Central Illinois Is
10-12 percent excess being pur- $2.60 per bushel, s6ybeans $5.11 (ler
chased by the Commodity Credit bushel, and soybean meal $136.75
COrporation (CCC) . The · Dairy '· Iierton at Decatur. Feeder steers at
Production Stabilization AGt of 1983 OklahOma City are $63.34/cwt. and
provided for a reduced suppilit feeder pigs (40-50 pounds) $32 per
price and diversion program. The head.
impact Is now evident as cuiUng
Shrubbery Still Need Water and a depressed milk-feed price Shrubs and slmllar woody plants
ratio has res_ulted in fewer cows and have been under a great deal of
lower production. Projected milk stress this year. Plants have either
production for 1984 Is 135.5 billion died or showed cOIISlderable stress
pounds, down three percent from all · year. The extremely dry
1983. .Demand. stimulated in• part weather in 1983 along with the
by lower prices, Is up three percent. sudden cold weather periods in
This combination should lead to a 45 December of 83 and Mart:h of 1M
· Jiercent drop in CCC purchases this damaged the root system severely.
year as excess -supplies decline If you have shrubs around the house
from 12 percen! to seven ~rcent ·of you especially want to protect, you
production. The savings in promight want to consider watering
gram costs should be about $1.3 and 'fertilizer. Be sure to fertilize
,
billlon fqr 1984.
properly. No f~rtlllzer is better than
too much improperly done.
Most Firewood Insects Pesky But
Hannless - As winter approaches,
cutting and stacking of firewood
political, social, cultural and eco- will soon reach Its peak. Now Is the
nomic forces affecting current time to prevent firewood Insects
from infesting this wood ..nd
deciSions in agriculture.
· "To educate and develop them· becoming a nulsailce In the h!lfDe
selves in a leadership role, partlcl· this winter.
Bill Lyons, Extension Entomolopants must see agriculture as
gist,
recommends you start with
others see It ,.... view It through the
eyes of outsiders. Ohio's future harv.estlng firewood in mid to late
leaders must see the entire agricul· .a utumn to auow some drying ·
turai picture, nationally and Inter- before winter. H you cut logs during
nationally, to make decisions that. the growing season, remove them
will enhance future agriculture trom the woods Immediately to
prevent an infestation.
programs In Ohio. . \;,

FREE MOUNTING

Radial 1
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One1reat tire by Road Kina.
Everrtbinl you .would want
in 1 durable road-bagina
tire in wet or dry pavt~~enl
Two s~n1 steel belts with
polyester cord for smooth
handlin&amp;

Eighth annual ·production
sale slated Monday evening

.

'

' New and revised publications on
sirie.n farm buildings and equlpm&amp;nt, circular concrete manure
~riks. building plans, pole and post
blildlng construction, trickle irrigation and boom sprayers are lea·
tilTed in a 28-page catalog available
ttH:ough the Cooperative Extension
Slisrvlce.
~ .This annual catalog lists new and
ri!VJsed plans for farrow and start
ttuDdings, swine growing-finishing
" bilildlngs, raised deck swine nurser·
1~. and a 42-foot-wlde utility
tfailding. It also updates all Mldw·
e:StPian Service publication prices,
which include postage and
liandling. ··
·.The catalog gives brief descrip· lions, prices and illustrations for
MwPS' 18 handbooks, 14 agricultuengineers' digests (AEDs), four
!j!Chnlcal resources (TRs), and 109
building plans. It also features 11

ral

New program offers young men,
~omen

&gt;coLUMBUS- A new program
is avaUable for a select group, of
young Ohio men and women from
me agricultural community ac·
cording to Dr. Max Lennon, vice
president lor agricultural adlll/nls·
ti'atlon, Ohio State University.
-;The program Is ldentlfled as
Leadership Education
and Development.
Major purpc;!SC Is to help young
agricultural leaders gain a broader
knowledge and awaloleness of the

LEAD -

I

I

opportunities - Lennon

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IIITAIUD

MEIGS TIRE CENtER·
992-2101

POMIIOY, OHIO
JOHN NLTZ, OWNB

992-2101

andlKJ.
It resulted in thefirst theater-wide
victc.yfortheUnitedStatesoverthe
Japanese an&amp; provided American
mUitary planners with a nurnl)er of
llank!amed lesSons used in later
amphibious operations.
Although the winds of war have
blown 011er Attu and the rest of the
tlloosand-~long Aleutian Island
chain, a campaign has just begun to
save the relics from scavengers or
from being scattered throughout the
wtrld.

'

A National Park Service advisory
board Is to meet in Boston on Oct. 22
to determine whether Attushouldbe
included as a national laJidtnark
along with 2D other II)Jlltary or
battlefield sites in the Pacltlc.
The list includes six other
locations in Alaska- World War 1l
bases or airfields at Klska, Adak,
Dutch Harbor, Kodiak, Sitka and
Fairbanks, · according to Erwin
'Thompson, a Denver-based historian who visited. many of the sites
and wrote the oomlnations.
Gaining national landmark status
Is an impOrtant step toward
preserving a landmark, but It
doesn't guarantee protection,
'Thompson said.

when

''banzai.''
And a twin-engine Anny pursuit
plan!! that crash-landed after a
misslonmorethanfourdecadesago
Is a nesting plape for birds near
Temnac Bay, a few miles and a
mountain range west of a 33-man
Coast Guard detachment.
Except for spawning salmQn and
a variety of waterfowl and wUdllfe,
CoastGuardsmenhavethelslandto
themselves. Only about a half-dozen
of, the 279 Islands in the volcanic
Aleutian chain are lnh8blted and
most are unspoiled - protected by
their distance from population
centers and by notoriously windy
and wet weather.
Despite their Isolation, the !stands
took on a strategic significance
during the early days of World War

. .

uaker State Oil
10W30

alter mig's rebate

Zerex
Anti-Freeze
ProteCts all year against
fr.eeze-ups, bollovers &amp; corrosion.
Sale 3.24 Reg . 3.88

l

Vo1.1r cost

.Quaker State Oil
10W40

efler rebate

· Reg. 99'

3.24 Sale
- 1.25 Mig's Rebete

1•99

64

• •

' each

'
'\

Lim it 12

Your Choice

4
6Motorcraft
~

1Puro.
·~66
l ator XSV Oil

'four cost

1Uer 1et1ate

after mig's ,.,,,. ••

or Air Filters

Spark Plugs

I Filter Reg . 2.59
' r Fi lter Reg. 3.77

For most Fords only.
Sale 89' 'Reg. 1.24 . Limit 8

Valves .... ....... .. ... .. . ...
.1.98

_
M
~~cholc•
9 88

99'

.49
Gumout

Pylon
Wiper

Carb &amp;
Choke
·Cleaner

2: 1,~Js

.,.,r

Pylon
1
Wiper Blades
Reg . 2.49 . . 1.88

'~ "''Q ' ...
n~ r• •a..• c... ~,
. ,~, lb ~ ~~~ ·

!..&gt;-~

7.88
2 ton

7.88
Rear

Bottle
ack

·Window
Defroster

Reg . 1·0.95

4 ton .. .. 11
Reg. t 4.95

. .14.88

Clear or Ambe r

Reg. 12.95

f4-3000·2WS.
f4·300t ·2'1'15
Reg. 44.95

•BD-1
WED6L

....... . 10.88

30•88

Wilh e&gt;change . Limiled 40 month
· warranty 90 days tree replacement period delivers
up to 3~5 cold cranking amps. Recommended
tor vehicles with limi ted power opt ions . Main te
nance free· at an economy price.

37 •88

With exchange. Limited 50 month
warranty 18u day free replacement peri od
· deli11ers up to 380 cold cran kin g amps . Reco~T~
mended f or vehicles with m.oderate amount of
power oplions.

Fits mast 8 cyt
veh ic les.
Reg. 18.95

44 •88

24.95

.76.95

24.88 6amp

Battery Charger

'

fB7612 Reg . 29.95
IIC7612 10 amp Reg . 3? .95 .. .
IJ6612N 61t2 amp
Reg. 99.95 ...... ........... .

Savr
S.n f&gt;
S(we

Prices
·October 14thru October 20, 1984
We reserve tho right to limit quantities.

209 ·UPPER RIVER ROAD
.446-3807
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
,,

lrom

From

With exchange. Limited 60 mo.''""
warranty 365 day free replacement period deli
up to 540 . cold cranking · amps. Ex ceeds
vehicle manufac ture specification . Mainte nan ce !
free•
•Never needs water unde r normal cqnditions

n.

'

lslan• Frozen in lime, protected by their
remoteness, rwiling relics ·from World War D litter
the treeless landscape of this westernmost Aleutian
Island. (AP Laserphoto).

RUSTING RELla! - The rusting ret1'ialns of a
twin-engine Anny pursuit plane that crash-landed
durlns a mislllon more thim four decades ago rests
near TerJI!IIIC Bay in AUu, Alaska in the Aleutian

infantrymen
they came
screaming out of the fog with a final

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
inflation of health care costs slowed
last year, butthenatlon's$355bWion
medical bill was a record 10.8
percent of the gross national
product, the govenunent says.
Health and Human Services
Secretary Margaret M. Heckler
attrtbuted the drop in health care
inflation from 12.5 percent In 1982 to
10.3 percent last year to emclency
measures undertaken by providers
and businesses as well as program
changes approved by Congress and
the administration.
A prospective payment system
for hospitals partlcpatlng in Medl·
care is the greatest change. It Is
based on . more than 400 llinesS
categories known as diagnosis
related groups. Instead of the
traditional fee-for-service system.
most hospitals now know exactly
what Medicare will pay them for
treating a patient with a specltlc
complaint.
The figures released Wednesday
showed that Medicare remained the
largest federal health program at a
cost of $57.4 bllllon: The federal
share of Medicaid was $18.1 bWion
whlle states and locaHties spent
$15.8 billion.
·
Health care InflatiOn reached a
record level in 1900 when spending
rose 15.3 percent. Health spending
was 10.5 percent of the GNP in 1982
and 9. 7 percent in 1!&amp;.
Overall, $1,459 was spent for each
American last year, up from $1,337
in 1982. Spending by governments
. rose trom$1.'l5.8bllllon in1982-$564
per person- to $143.8 billion in 1983,
or $611 per person. Govermnent's
share of health care spending
continued its sllghtdeciinetrom 42.1
percent 1n 1982 to41.9iJercentin 1983.
Tile federal govermnent spent
$102.7 bllllon compared to $46.1
billion by s;ate and local govern·
ments in 1983.
WithOut rounting research and
construction, personal health care
cost $340.1 billion In 1983 or $85.2
lillllon from direCt consumer pay·
merits, $1l0.5 bllllon from private
insurance, $140.3 billion by govern·
ments and $4.1 bllllon from other
'
sources.
2
Hospltatcareaccountedfor$147.,
billiOn in spending while physiCians ·
seiVIces claimed $69 bUllol!. dent·
lsts' services cost$21.8 billion, drugS
and other medical supplies con·
sumed $23.7 billiQn, eyeglasses and
appliances cost $6.2 billion and
nursbig home care accounted for
$28.8 billion.
Tile cost of physicians' services
rose more slowly 7 percent in
1983 compared 10 12.8 percent In
Sl'l.

•Rallied Open Letters
•Radial S. Ncm-Radial

your budaot. LOlli -ina
trood. strona polyester cord
body.

.lakeD and held by enemy forces
since the War of 1812.
One of the toughest campaigns ol
the war was fought tor control of the
Aleutians through 15 months of 1942

Health
care
.
.. ·
inflation dips;
.despite record
medical bills

Sport Tire Close-outs

Kin&amp; over the lnt 10 Jllrt.
Smooth ridi!W ond nsy on

ATnl,Aiaska (AP)- Frozen in
time, protected by their' remoteness, rustlrig relics from World War
nutter the treeless iandscapeofthls
westernmost Aleutl;m Island.
A .5().callber. machine gun mount
stands In a pool of brackish water
near Massacre Bay where It was
placed more than 40 years ago to
defend against low-flying Japanese
planes.
A village Of Quonset huts sits
abandoned near a rocky beach,
many with roofs open to the sky but
furnished with broken-down desks
4111d benches. ·
&lt; Cartridges He sprinkled around
foxholes on the fragile tundra of
Engineer's HIU; cartridges left
hehlnd by a thin Une of American
troops who threw back Japanese

They curve like a bullet's arc
toward mainland Alaska. Attu Is
2,424 miles from Tokyo, 1,335 miles
from Anchorage. That made it
about 12 houn; by bomber from the
western Aleutians to wartime
aircraft pl8{1ts nearSeattle.
Along with nearby Klska, Attu Is
~ only slice of the United States

PRICE
34.00
37.00
39.00
39.00
39.00 .

REPLACES

SIZE
Pl55110Rl3
Pl65110Rl3
' P175ii0Rl3

Rusting
reli~s ·&amp; om W.W.II'
litter Aleutian -Island lands

rr

PRICE ·
36.00
39.00
41.00
43.00
45.00
48.00
49.00
53.00
49.00
51.00
54.00
57,00

REPLACES

SALE

Fiesta
ALL SEASON RADIAL

Agriculture and our community

By BRYsON R. CARTER
EKtension Agent
Gallla County
GALLIPOLIS - The Southeast·
ern Ohio Angus, Association will
hOld its eighth Production Sale
Monday evening, Oct. 15, 7 p.m., at
the Gallla County Junior Fairgrciunds. Dick Neal, President of
tits Angus Association. says your
attendance will be appreciated and
61 lots will be offered for sale.
Copies of the Sale Catalog are
available from Neal and we also
h;iye a copy or two here at the
Gallia County Extension Office.
: Merlin Woodruff, Urbana, Ohio,
WID he the auctioneer, so plan to
Clime early and look over the cattle
atid . help the Angus Association
~ve. a good sale.

OctOber 14, 1984 .

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

The Sundqy Times-Sentinei-Page-E-3

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

14, 1984

\

$11J {)II

AI·
Radiator·,

�Sunday nrnet-Sentirwl

!1 You're Thinldnt About luylng New Home Purni1hln11r The l•t Tim•

STORE HOURS: 9:00 A.M. TO 8&amp;00
SATURDAY 9:00A.M.· 5:00P.M.

.To Buy Is Now ·Through October 22nd•. If'• tlte .Second Annual .Naflf}nal
Furnfture Sales &amp; Sweepstakes. Hundred• Of Top Manufactures Have
"Cut Their Prices,. -so We Can Pau Great sGvlngs On To You.
When You
.
VIsit Our Store Be Sure To Inter The fantasilc Great Gef~Away
SwHpstalces••• Packed With Thousands Of Dollars And Prizes ·
Including A Chance To Wlrt $10~0oo In GOLD. Thli Is A Sale You ·
Can't AHord To Miss And Prices Y'ou May Never See AgalnRI
-J ... " -- ~·

-

'

·-

z-

fKIIIIOn ror fWO alalll' S/taraton
· hole/ In lila World, Nell year tor illt

nell /lwlye.,.~ lncludei coec/1
,,,,,., PlUS $10,000 In ootid gold INtra,

2 SECOND I'RIZES

t•-

2....., r..:•llon for fWO 81 11M
Flfzpalr/clr
C..Ueln Dublm, lrw/lrid.lncllllf• C08CII ,.,,.,.,
liM Ia/ ~r prottlded tor algh,.../ng. PLUS HCh
wtnnergell $5,000 lru/l..r ll.tra.

Save 10% • 20% • 30%
Up To 60% OFF

3 THIRD PRIZES
One weell -lion tor 1wt1 at lllfJ Cond- 0./ Mlr
In Acapulco, llfexlco.lnclud• co8Ch altfal'l.

4 FOURTH I'RIZES
Oneweell r.ullon /orlwo aiiiM.M..rlcana OUictt
llnort Hot./ •I t.l&lt;eVIala, Orllndo(Dl,., World},

.

A. beauti fu l Coun try Trell urlllilliB tnisls nard toliM.
-.peclally 11 I n Incredible low f)fice l ike lhial
11'1 conllrucled w it ll e~ comfort t n.o quam~·.
lll lute pouit»l, lndwdir\g billo¥r}l weltiiM
euah1ont, deep button lulling sf'd attached pilli)IIW
1~ m 1 . Tr'll cover is In tough 111CI durable Herculon.
DUurlfully ICcanted w ith IOhd pine irlm on thtl
arms and wings. Wl'!lte our 1pecial at~ lui$.

.

· Here are just two of
· · ~ the super buys
•

~3~

Reg.
$1195.

1,000 FIFTH I'RIZES

$795

3-dlf, 2-nl9i11 riiC81iono ff1r IWO I lodging only}.,
1ny one ot 12 qiRII/11 /IDfellfl'ltOrll In ll'lfllonal

......

'Eoch ..oco~ tnUII bo lohn •Rhln o caiMdor

SOFA, CHAIR, LOVESEA
Unbelievable Deals On ·A ll Living Room Su
·1n Stock. Save •10000
To •600~ On
2 &amp; 3 Piece Suites. These ~ptctals Could Never Be
Repeated Again. Get Yours While The
Is Great •••• Our Lou
- You.r Galnl

to let you tak.e
it easy in style ...
.

Florida. Includes cOIC/Ialrfll'l.

LIVING .ROOM
SPECIALS .

England's Claaalc Country Slyht
Group With Solid Pine Accllnlal

All

NOWI

-:-

,..... . 1915-ltn.

Fln~y

crafted of pint Vlntlrll

The quality, sty Ia and comtort of a
lo-Z-Boy Recllno-Rccklll' choir
ot a special ,-ite. 8ut 11'1 doubly

.

..

..

fewest repairs •

ft.eher lboJ'd 'ute lo own )

~. . . .

EVERY RECLINER IN STOCK
.. ltEDUCED UP TO 'ISOOO OFF! ·
5 PIECE

NEW

BeaatUully

styled,

Solid ·WIMMI cJWn,
wtlll beavy spladle
t.ck. 'l'bkt ..deled
seall. SboWD In rleb,

REMOTE CONTROL CONSOLE

eartb·toae
cover. 31"

........

trettle
eUin.

lENITH 21" DliftoNI C.. b;e uSCilei (do, 1\'

lllbl~

NOW

,..

vlayl

'179•

48"
and t

11

$.279.

1

Sail 150.•
Reg. 1329."

AvtU.ble In Chrome or Almond . .

• Deptndt ble 100% Moautar Z-1 cnaU~ fill

lof'la-lir, depe"'lMMilitp.

SLEEPER
SPECIAL

• Computer Sp • c• Cornman~ 2&lt;400 Remote
Cotllfol.

• 111 Ch.lnnel C.p.otliillr !rt(:h,Jdona: 122 Cfble
chM&gt;nels.•
• Qu•rtJ -Coml(ljlf&lt;l £1ect"""t T11non 8
• Ch &lt;em nt.. rp 100 Pit h u e T ~tbt luturn
Zen ith'• 100 Hi-Bi [lllctfOO'I C..nt lor outWIIdrnt podu,.

t

&amp;~~.,poWt.s;

1

A FINE ACCENT
FOR YOUR

HOME

Reg. 1399."

all wood~

25"

!lli1iiil

B¥ Pulaltl .

DINETTE SET

DINETIE.

1985

REGISTER TO WIN A 3 DAf SALE IN EFFECT
AND 2 NIGHT VACATION
THRU
TO ONE OF THE WORLD'S OCTOBER 22, 1984.
MOiST FAMOUS RESORT
HOTELS. ONE TO BE GIVEN
AWAY EACH DAY OF THIS
SALE COMPLIMENTS OF YOUR
. FRIENDS AT MASON FURNITURE.

pendablllty •
.
Commercial listed by U.L. •
·~e 1.2 bu. ft. capacity • 10
· 1~ variable power control -

CD!l8111Ders wblcb ~ or

.

"

• Maytag De-

D&amp;IIDD&amp;I lUrvey UkiDC

ore now ol sin·ulor sov•ngsl

ALSO

PWS RECEIVE A FREE
ATIRE:SS &amp; BOX SPRINGS
AND A FREE NIGHT STAND
AN EXTRA ADDED BONUS!

::.- ~ &lt;;;\

In nationwide
. preference &lt; ~•n•

"'ce w•tha cho•c• of rwo of 10doy'1
most pop~.~ lor dfttgM! oYony others

1n • rnte~rum ,_

NO. f •In long life •

4,lllW8m service oostB

Jvst step in our store
in the next 10 Days, and
register your name. No
purchase is necessary
at all. ·

'50000
On All
Bedroom

and solid Pint
111\lah.

Dual comfort RecllnaRoeker" Chair values

HERE'S HOW YOU ENTER ...

Save Up To

In Stock!

1=::::::::=~=1

REGISTER HERE!

Concord Hall E~rly American bedroom by

suites
SALE on MAYTAG

•

. A WINNER. A DAY!

ORANDPRIZ£

UVING ROOM GROliPS - FAMILY ROOM GROUPS ·- SOFAS .,..
CHAmS WVE SEATS - ROCKERS - RECLINERS - JUDEAWAY BEDS - BUNK BEDS- MA'ITR~ SETS IN ALL SIZESTRUNDLE AND MATES BEDS - DINING ROOM SETS ~ DINEI11i21
- TABLES - LAMPS - ACCESSORIES - SECTIONAL SOFAS BEDROOM SUITES - MODULAR GROUPS - OPf;N STOCK
BEl)ROOMS - DESKS- CHESTS - WALL UNITS - mOUSANDS OF
ODDS AND ENDS SLASHED TO SELL!
DOZENS OF .SPECIAL FACI'ORY PURCHASES! EVERY111IN~ ON
SALE! .

-

Save Up To 1200.•

st§9.

111d IIIJIII!iht dt·

lrOIU II«II) VVCI.
t Auto-curllrol Color Syi(IMI
• CIUIIC t lyiii!J . Simulifted grt lned NLifmell
011~ tinlstl.
·

QUEEN SIZ E
SALE PRJ CEO
FROM

County
7 PIECE EARLY

AMERICAN DINE'ITE
Has oval esten~loo lllble; 2leave1; 8 cbalrs... In
oak. Complll'e ttSt.95. . MBDy 'Iller styles &amp;o
ebooee from· ID maple aad piDe flnlabea.
Redactl001 up &amp;o 30

SAVE 1146.H

FULLS I ZE
s·AL E PR I CEO

•••
•
('-dronic f'oo¥er ~I) ~~' We.s~ COO·

O..ath~

perceat oa mOll sell•

$343.

88.

•I $lJIIs To
a- fRill!

A

I

Save
21."

1

Set of 3 eolollal
aeent table•

Sale Priced

eoellilllO;

e WITHOUT REMOTE

· Solid Pine..:2x6"

$57 goo

CLOSEOUT PRICES

.$149•..

Not Exactly

Sne '50.'

ro -Stop ·By
Mason .Furniture
.. .
...
~d R'egist~r For
. . . . ., -~11)'1·

Series Color TV . • Z2!11'PN
• Quortz·controllo!d Electron lc
Tunlna featuring 157 chan·
nel capability, (incl. 101 ·
.,
Cable TV).•

~

~lletheylast
c holceof
3 Cab I net Styles

'649

I

OUR ;J

~Jay : ·

. 2· Night ·
Vacat~onsi

'29915

All Pldlll'ed.

-Don't forget
.

elld

:119
JL
•·

$

1

Roll Top
-0 -..QK
rA:t : gM
'l
Reg. $

II IDcladed. )!edd!a&amp; Ia DDt
IDeladed. Campare at .....~~.

. 25" COLOR T.V.

'$329.

Save
'llO."
Save
0"

hidesbiit1811le .... l!ed In
MIJdld" pllle. Olle 11111n1 n8

1984

ZENITH ,19" Dbo&amp;&lt;&gt;hal CustomSeries Color TV • S1!Ml&amp;C
, • ·Zenith Chromasharp 90 Picture Tube for superb picture
sharpness and highlight detail.
• Dependable 100% Modular
Z-1 Chassis for long-life ·reli·
ability. .•
• Super Video Range Tuning
1 wit~ Perma·Set Fine·Tun!ng.
• Electronic Power Sentry pro·
tects chassis, controli energy
usage.
.
• Auto-Control Color System.
• Oar!&lt; Brown Textured finish.

IMU5

· BUNK BEDS

-

I

. . . . Com!IIID at

5

STORE

19 .

9:00 .A.M. TO 8:00P.M., SATURDAY 9:00 ·5:00P.M.

�Page-Eo6-The Sunday Timet-Sentinel

~ 14,1984

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

Pameroy-Middleport-Gallipoll•. ~io

\}C .physicians develop·new
cholesterol treatment 'device

Something's .
wrong in this
neighborhood

'

''

GINCINNATI (AP) -Doctors at stop It," said Dr. Evan Stein,
thel.Jnlverslty ofCincinna t1 Medical program designer. "There Is no
· Ce(Jter · have developed a new other form ot treatment that lowers
treatment program aimed at cu\· chOlesterol this s!gnlflcantly.''
.tlng down on dangerous cholesterol
Wilen blood vessels become
blocked by lumps of cholesterol,
bulldup in blood vessels.
The experimental program com- doctors can Insert a device to widen
bines advanced. drug therapy WJtha the vessel at the point where It's
blood-filtering technique to dramat- blocked or perform a bypass lcally !'educe dangerous cholesterol . splicing a new .artery al'lillnd the
levels in the body, researchers said. blockage.
Hlgh cholesterol levels are
Stein said hoth surgical proceblamed for dangerous bulldu!l'! that dures are valuable, but neither
block blood vessels and cause heart "addressestheunderlylngcause''of
attacks. The UC researchers be- the . disease. The experimental
UeVe their prOgram . can reduce pn;&gt;gram Is designed to work on the
.;hcilesterollevels by 60 percent to 70 cause.
"We're Interested in cures," said
percent.
"The crux of the study is to Dr. Charles Glueck; dlrectorofUC's
detennlne whether we can reverse General Cllnlcal Research Center.
existing blockages or, If there's a "Our goal Is to clean the gunk oot of
progression (of disease) , can we the carburetor line, rather than just
replacing a part of the line."

Stein lsn'tpromotlng his program
as a replacement for bypass
surgery or other surgical techniques. But If the program can be
showri to reverse blockages, "then
It's possible ~patients will never
need a bypass," he said.
Glueck and Stein also point to
studies that show patients who have
bypass surgery but retain high-risk
factors can develop blockages in the
substitute vessels.
Stein and others are analyzing the
new treabnentonagroupofpatlents
whoareathighrlskforheartatacks.
The five-year project has received a
$2.2 mllllon grant from the National
Institutes of Health.
One of the more·unusual parts of
the prograln is a plasma exchange.
Patients have their blood filtered
every two weeks to reduce the
cholesterol level.

MORRlSON, Colo. (AP) - Tile
hazy~ of the Rockies stretch

entertainment will be part of, the
event from noon to 1 p.m. at
Coul:(bouse Square. '
"Since we haven't many birthdays, they're more Important to us
than an older institution," Kegerreis
said.
Wlight State has added new
programs to meet community
·needs. That's why a medical school
was started 10 years ago, and that's
why the university recently began
offeling a child-care program for
students.
The medical school was developed when there was a shortage of
general-practice physicians in Ohio,
many medical schools weren 'I
enrolling enough minorities and
rural areas needed doctors. The
school became a model for other·
medical schools by using area
hospitals as clinical sites, rather
than building its own hospital.
"We were fitting this medical
school to the known needs of society,
which is a subset, I think, of why the
university itself has been so
successful. We have never neglected or forgotten that our Slipporl
comes from the community,"
Kegerrels said.
"Partofourgrowthhasbeenfrom
not just having more kids signing up
to take freshman English, but from .
implementation of programs that
are, If not unique, are really geared
towards pressing long-terrn social

Starts Sun., Oct. 14; Sale Ends Tuft., Oct 16

•"'*

cloberleSt

36" 3·SJ1-I,__JI

®[ill]

needs.''
By the same token, Kegerrels said
that when there was a "poorly
organized" push to start a journalIsm program, the school resisted,
after surveys and discussions with
professionals showed there was no
real need for it.

Ceiling
Variable speed,
reversible mo-

Save 16.08

68.8

Our84.96
70·W. High-pressure Sodium Fixture
Energy-saving securily light with lamp.·
to
. fl. Save now.

Save24%
Our R~. 6f:t; .

·s

2Pkgs.1
Pkg. Of 50
Hoi Or Cold
FoamCJips
Insulated
to
keep
drinks
hal or cold.
Space-saving
~~~:-!- 6.4-oz. · size.

Colors Available

7e97

Our 12.96
victlmsbelngwomen, theyoungand
·:By GEORGE W. CORNEU.
old, he said.
Gallon
:
AP ReUglon Writer
1n the last two seasons, primeNEW YORK (AP) -FilmandTV
Interior Latex Flat
violence leads to aggressiveness, time violence fell slightly below the
Ceiling while, or wall paint.
callousness toward women and a 17-year average of five violent
Our 13.97, Satin, GaL.................. 8.97
episodes per hour, the data showed.
grtm world view, and reinforces
"machO" domination of the ,weak, But violence In children's weekend
researct)ers said at a National showS rose far above the average of
Councll of Churches committee 20 violent Incidents for hour. to a
record high 30.3 violent episodes per
hearing.
But a network teleVISion official hour.
Also, the plime-tirne "famlly
insisted studies often are skewed,
Barbasol®
baSedonscenestakenoutofcontext, hour"- from 8p.m. to9p.m., when
11-oz.*·slze.
and don't generally show that chlldren usually are In the audience
Shave
Cream
reliltlvely
lower
and
which
had
television viewing increases violent
violencelnthel970s-becamemore
Concentrated
conduct.
Bearo Buster®
:rt.e recent day-long healing by a violent in the'lll's, Gerber reported.
shaving lather
·
Jerome
L.
Singer,
co-director
of
special committee of the councll's
in
choice of
Yale
University's
Family
TV
Recommunication commission was
formulas.
search
Center,
said
his
studies
show
the first in a selies. Others will be
*Nel WI .
held In Los Angeles and Washing- a "consistent correlation between
heavy TV viewing and g~;eater
ton, D.C.
It Is "the first religious national frequency in aggressive behavior.''
George Comstock. communlca-.
stUdy lo seriously examine problems presented by sex and violence t!on"professor at Syracuse Univerin media," said the Rev. James M. sity, said "a very large majority of
Wall, editor of the Chicago-based studies report a positive association
Christian Centur.y and chalnnan of between exposure to media violence
Sold In Our
and aggressiveness."
the committee.
Auto Dept.
However,
Ronald
Mllavsky,
the
The Inquiry comes amid swelling
demands for some kind of remedial NBC vice president tor news and
social research, said studies of the
action.
George Gerbner, dean of the effects of teleVISion violence "often
Annenberg School of Communica- don't take the context Into account.''
NBC studies of teen-age boys
tions at the Unlversll)iofPennsylva,
nla, said "violence pro!lle" studies found TV not did not cause
anti-social behavior' but rather
sl)oW that people who watch a lot ot
·
factors
such as living In ,poverly or
teleVISion are more likely to feel they
Sale
aggressive
environments, Ml- ·
aie Uvlrig In a "mean world" than
Price
lavsky said.
t!losewho watch less.
"The avaUable Uterature doesn't
"We have been Immersed In a tide
support
that television viewing
of violent repreSentations that Is
increases
aggression in the real
hlstorlcall)i unprecedented and
world,"
he
said. "It's a plausible
shOWs no real sign of recedtng,"
hypothesis, but so far the Uterature
Gerbner said.
:TV portrayals of violence tend to doesn't bear It out." . .
He urged more research on "why
·..Cultivate · a pattern of inequality
the
pubUc llkes suc~~rial. "
al)d domination," wltll the llkeHest

5.27

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6 pair, grey, extra long

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I'OWsofbrlck ~. SUJTOUnded 1r;
green fields and splashes ot golden

CHOLESTEROL TJiEATMENT - Dr. Evan University Hospital in Cincinnati Wednesday alterSome students attend Wright
Stein (light) checks a blood 1plasma exchange moo. Suddendorf Is a section supervisor at the
State because of location. Others
machine that Is being used to help clean cholesterol hospital. (AP Laserpboto).
find It's a wise economic decision or
from the blood of volunteer Larry Suddendorf at
like the class hours, which make it
possible to hold a daytime job and
computer science ' department,
The school has accepted
pursue college work at night, are not so old and set in our ways that
teaching and pursuing degrees.
philosophers
with
strong
backnewly
arlived
faculty
member
a
Kegerreis said. For faculty, Keger.
ground~
in
logic
to
work
In
their
canpot
make
a
difference."
·
rels says part of the appeal is "we

Film, TV violence
leads to pro~s
for some women

We Reserve'The Right To. ·

along the horizon behind the neat

Wright State University has
grown a lot in -20 years
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Twenty
years ago, when students and
instructors filed into the fledgling
Wright State University. there was
little more than a game plan and
high hopes for the new one-building
scliool.
Since then, it has added a medical
·school, becomeamodelofaccessfor
the handicapped and grown to a
campus with more than 15,500
students that offers ahout 100
undergraduate' programs and about
60 graduate programs.
"Wiight State today, though the
newest state university, is not the
smallest and certainly not the least
prestigious. in celiain fields at
least, " says its president, Robert
Kegerreis, who has announced that
he will retire next June 30.
After a feasibility study shOwed a
state school would be successful in
·the Dayton area, ajointfund-ralslng
dlive was launched in 1963 that·
accumulated $3 million in six
months for the existing University of
Dayton and $3 million for the new
school, Kegerreis said,
Wright State opened in 1964 as a
joint campus of Ohio State University and Miami University, with the
understanding that when it reached
S,(JX) students, it would convert to a
university of its own, Kegerreis said.
It enrolled ahout 2,!rostudents the
first year and was converted to an
autonomous university in 1967.
Kegerrels became the school's
second president 11 years ago,
succeeding Brage Golding.
A 2001 birthday celebra tlon is
planned for the school Oct. 19 In
downtown Dayton as part of
anniversary festivities throughout
the quarter. Music, displays and

Paint PllaiCII'Ii, W_Va.

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·stonoord·surfoce. stonclord·IIJe
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J)flnb

AT YOUR K mart®
CAMERA DEPARtMENT
Oct. 16

1.OQ

Le~FaclorvRebale- 50¢

50¢,

Your Nel Cosl
Affer Rebale
~

1"""-d 10 m11.'I Slif)IJOtiOn

STP Penetrant
And Lubricant
Heavy;duly.
Stops
squeaks. loosens rusted
parts. 9 oz. • Save.
'Netwt.l

=ng

·

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Sold In Our

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Prof. .llonal
Quality

aspen.
It's Colorado's version of the
American dream. But !IOJ!lethlng Is
wtmg In this nelghbori¥JCd_
Twelve chlldreil have died Within
thepastftveyears,elghtofcancera rate two to thrEe times the national
average. Others haye been plagued
by Wness, according to $&lt;me
residents.
Nobody knows why,
· "A lot of, people feel there's
something wrong, but they don't
know what It Is," said ·resident
Rebecca Parr. ·
This .week, Mrs. Parr and some
neighbors are conducting a door-todoor survey to determine the fuU
extent of the health problems that
have befallen their 1~year-old,
rnlddlk!ass nelghborOOod at the
edge ot the Colorado Rockies, about
10 miles southwest of Denver.
The Jefferson County Health ·
Department did some tests but
didn't flnd anything abnormal. The
federal Environmental Protection
Agency hits taken son, air and water
samples, butresultswon'tbeknown
for a few weeks.
"These people have brought us
some sympptoms," said Dean
Gtllam of !hi! EPA In .Denver.
"These symptoms did not point to
one direction. We would be the first
to jump If we can !lnd a direction to
go. If It comes up negative we don't
know where to jump next"

'file EPA laUIIChed Its study after
getting ,a letter from a group of
neighbors frightened by an inordinately high number of cancers,
tumors, persistent infections and
allergies. '
Yvonne Peterson lost her 4-yearold son Jesse to cancer of the
nervous system in 1982. That same
summer another child Uving a few
blocks away died of leukemia, she
said.
"He was healthy ·when we came
into the area," Mrs. Peterson said of
her son. •"They don 'Heel he had It at
the time of birth."
'ThePetersonhomeisabout50feet
north of Bergen Ditch, which flows
through the netghhorhood.
'':!be kids have played in the ditch
ever since we moved In there.'' Mrs.
Peterson said. "I just have a gut
feellng It's probably related to· the
ditch."
.Other residents have other Ideas..
Could the neighborhood's proximity
to defunct uranium mtnes be the
. problem? Or to the Rocky Flats
nuclear weapons plant north of
Denver? Or to suspected Illegal
cliemlcal waste dum!E?
So far. there are more questions
thail answers.
. WhenDebbleMcCtintock'sne!ghPor suffered a miscarriage, she
decided she would not stay In her
housewhllepregnant.Soshemoved
outun!Uilerbabywasbornrecently. ·
"Knowing there were problems
here and finding out I was pregnant,
I was conl'el'lled about. whether I
Wodld beallnght,"Mrs.McO!ntock
said. "Ifwecouldmovewewouldln a flash." ·
Mrs. PaiT said she began collectingdata in~. butsaldshehasrun
into a roadblock with county health

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES IN EFFECT
THRO SAT., OCT. 20, 1984
.
'

FRESH PORK

19
Steak/Roast .. ~L~ $1
.•

BONELESS

Rump Roast • • • • •
LB.

HILLSHI.RE FARMS SMOKED

.

$

Sa usage .........L~-.
MIXED

.Fryer Parts
.

LB.

••••••

.

199

49¢
l
·
gg
~

SUPERIOR E-Z-CARV~ BONELES~

Hams • ••••••••••••••
WHOLE

LB.

.

SUPERIOR ·

Lunch Meat ••••••
LB.

Carrots • • • • • • • • • •

officials,
Dr. Torn Vernon, head of the

· Colorado Health Department, said
~ office has been responding In a
'methodical way to deal with the
known facts."
· Of MrS. Parr and her backers, be
said, "I think they're driving
themselves ' to distraction with
Information that's been gathered In
a haphazard, Wllll€thodlcal way."
But Lou Johnson of the EPA
disagrees. "Idon'tthlnkthecltlzens
of that neighborhood are overreact-·
lng," be said. "I would want to know
whether there's any possfb!Uty
there are any environmental faetors
Involved."
.
Not everybody in the neighborhood Is pleased by the publicity.
"We are unable to seD oor homes.
I am not conv1nced that there Is
lUiyth!ng wrong ... Give us some
f!lets," Karen Price said during a
community meeting last month.
Scme residents say property
Values have dropped by as much as
&lt;lO pen:ent over the last three
months. And s&lt;me people fear their
neighborhood will be 'labeled the
Lave Canal of the West
" Love canalln U!l'!tate New York
.was ~ by the fanner Hooker
Chem1cal and Plastics Corp. as a
Chemical dump. The state declared
ll health emergBicy there in 1918
after (."!lll1lllalnt aboot chernlcals;
•fUmes aDd DJness·by residents wjx) ' .
lived In hou.les built 011 the site.
GUJam IBid he doobts that's the
case in Colorado. "LoveCanal was a
ce•u•bated waste site," he said.
''It bad loll rt Identified waste. and
people were llv!ng oo that waste.
• He added, b:lwf!'Ver, "'lbat ISn't to
lillY It eouldn't become a Love
CallaF'If new evldellce surfaces.

.

1-LB. BGS

'

TROPICANA 'GOLD-N URE

Orange. Juice ••••oz.
64

ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGE OR

'

Potted Meat !~z.2/79¢

JENO'S FROZEN

FRANCO AMERICAN

INTERSTATE CRINKLE CUT

Pl.zzas .... ......oz. .89¢
10.1 • 10.8

~· ·-··

Spaghetti-O'S .!5.~z.3/$} Fries .•'• ........... .
5 LB. BAG

REGULAR or SELF-RISING

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

~~:

69C .

lilllit Ont Ptr Coupon
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer hplrn Oct. 20, 1914

••
••••• •
·····coo}l(W·······
•

•
•

•

•

•

•

:CORONET TOI'tET TISSUE

TIDE DETERGENT

JUMBO

:K~~Ll$149

Limit Ont Ptr Coupon
Good Only At Powell's
Offer hfliru Oct. 20, 1984

111

oz.$ 599

Limit Ont' Ptr Coupon
Good Only AI Powell's
Offtr Expires Ocr. 20, 1914

DOMINO SUGAR
SLB.
BAG

$159

limit Ont Per Coupon
Good Only AI PowtH's
Offer Expires Oct, 20, 1914

�••
Pap E-8-The Sunday niMI-S.ntinel

Cincy disc jockey _.·
d~bs in politics,
investments too
CINCINNATI (AP) - When he player, and since has had the
Isn't riiilng the ·role of politician, nlcknameaddedtohlslegalname.
Dusty Rhodes plays rock n' roll
Rhodes, a Democrat, has a knack
reeords at a radio station or dons a for controversy In poiltlcs, engaging
three-piece buslne$8 suit to COIII)Sel In repeated disputes with Hamllton
lnvesteiillln his downtown otflce.
County Ilen\otratlc Party leaders. ·
Rhodes, 44, career disc Jockey He supported &amp;nald ~agan for
wllo has found his place In politics president In 191ll and earlier this · ·
and the Investment buslnl!$8, sees monthannouncedthathetssupportnothlng strange about his three 1ng the re-election bid of JO!!eph M.
roles.
DeCourcy, a Republlcanrnemherof
"I liken the polltlcal thing to an the Hamllton County Canmlsslon,
avocation and radio to a hobby," he ·overDemocratlcchallengerBrewssald during an Interview In his offtce ter Rhoads.
.
ashesatnearacanputerheusesln
Rhodes also led the successful
his work as an Investment counse- fight earlier this year to defeat an
lor. "The Investment buslnl!$8 Increase In Cincinnati's Income tal(.
allows you tD Interact with people He said the proposal was lll)falr ID
and to help I)eople. In that, I'm people from · Delill Township and
Conservative. What my other roles other suburban conununltles who
have done, they've · given me an commute tD work In Cincinnati, bui
entree tD people."
have no say In how. reveli\les from
Rhodes saki his community thelncometaxesthey:payarespent.
reputation as a dtsc jockey Isn't
Of his disputes with coUnty
necessarily an advantage when Democratic leaders, he said, "The
customers ask advice about Invest- problem! seetsthatthepeoplelnthe
ments, traditionally a more conser- toWnships" and the suburbs are a
vatlve profession.
second-class group.... The problem
"The disadvantage Is, 1t gives me with the Democratic Party Is, Its
a credibUity problem. People say, base ts the city, and they've never
· 'You're a D.J.,"' hesald.
really done anything for the people
Rhodes, a native of Syracuse, In the suburbs. They figure if they
N.Y., who has been established ln can get their votes, that's fine,: but
Clnclnnati since 1961, is the an- theyaren'tgolngtoworkforthein."
nouncer for Top 40 rock n' roll oldies
Rhodes said he has philosophical
shows on Saturday and Sunday dlff~ces with DEmocratic preslnights at WLW, a 50,00J.watt, dential candidate Walter Mondale
clear-channel radio station.
and that he might consider becom._
He ts serving hts fourth consecu- lng a Republican.
live termon the board of trustees In
"Who knows? You don't rule out
suburban Delhi Township, a com- anything," hesald. "I recognize that
munity of .ll,&lt;ID where he lives, and my style is confrontational. U we
has served two terms on the canralsethepublicconsclousnessof
governing board of the Ohio Public the debate, then we've done
Employees Retirement System.
something."
Monday through Friday, he
Rhodes started In radio in 1956,
works as a counselor tD Investment answertng telephones at a radio
clients.
station. He was on the a1r at age 16,
His legal name is William and has since worked at stations In
Emerson Dusty Rhodes and reads Syracuse, Detroit and Clnclnnati,
that way on his business cards. He Including's Cincinnati's WSAI and
was nicknamed . Dusty after the WKRC, before he moved to WLW
former New York Giants baseball abQuttwoyearsago.

a

Death pact rumors checked
HOUSTON iAP) - Authorities
are investlgatlng rumors of a death
pact said to Involve up to :Jl people
following the suicides of five
teen-agers ln a comfortable suburban community. One clergyman
tears the Incidents will have a
o
"domino effect."
The rash of deaths In the Houston
suburb of Clear Lake, which
Includes the Johnson Space Center,
has prompted school officlals to call
In a suicide prevention group for
counsellng se!;Sions at Clear Lake
High School.
"When one person does it, 1t
serves as arolemodelforotherswho
have been contemplatlng It," said
Nora Barrera, coordinator of Crisis
Intervention of Houston, which wlll
send a three-member' team to the
school next week. "It confirms that
the action Is an OK action to do."

She said as each of the suicides ·
became known in the community.

It's possible a ripple effect made It
easier for wtential suicide victims
to go through with the act.
"ItcertalnlysoundsllkethePJano
situation all over again," · )\fs.
Barrera said.
Eleven students have committed
suicide ln the North Texas city of
Plano since January 1983, authorities said.
Harris County Medical Examlner's Office records Indicated Wednesday that five suicides have
occurred in the Clear Creek School
District areaslnce Aug. 9. The latest
was Tuesday.
Deputy Supertntendent of schools
Jimmy Larrabee said rumors
perslstthatthereisapactlnwhich:lll
to 30 people swear to take their lives
wlthln six weeks.

CANDIDATES NIGHI' - More than liiO people atteacled the anDual
candidates nlgh4 program lleld at the Senior Citizens Center '1'11111'8day
night. Candidates and their represef!lajlves spe~ at the dinner
meeting, which raised nearly Sl,OOO forCenterprogramslncludedJolynn
Boster; lncwnbent, and Jennifer Sheets, 94th Dlstrlc)t Hoilse of
Representatives; Gene Wagner speaking tor Clarence E. MIDer and
.Jolm Buchanan, loth Congt [ stolllll District represeatattves; Hugh
Collman and Larry E. Kandel, State Boanl of Education; Philip M.
Robens, COUIKy engineer; Frederick . w.. Crow, m, pl'IJiieCUtlng

aatorney; Larry E. Spencer, cierk of CCIIIris; Robert E. Buck, probate
Judge; J - J. Ptullltt and Howard E. Frank, sberllf; Ernmogeoe •
Hol!teln Collp and P!!II!Y BowersBrlcldes, county recorder; GeorgeM.
CoiiJDs, Mary RuUtSwalll, county lreasurer; James P. Conde andlolm
H. Ridgway, coroner; David J. Koblenlz, Don E. MuDen, county
cornrnlll!loner, tenn commencing January 2, 1985; Yvonne ScaDy and
Richard E. J0111!8, county COIJlDlillllonl,lenn conune~~clng January 3,
1985. BoRer was the maiD speaker on 1blll'llday's proi!J'IIIII.

A Guide to local
Television prot?"amming

Oct. 14 thru Oct. 20

Kaiser Aluminum has net loss of $73.2 million
OAKLAND, Calif. - · Kaiser addition, sales of low-margin prim- nlzatlon program under way at the
qliarter because of Installation of
Alumniurn &amp; Chemical Corporation ary metal made up a greater company's 'Irentwood, Washingnew equipment at Trentwood," he
reports a third quarter 1984 net loss proportion of our overall shipment ron, rolling mlll had a temporary
said, · "and expenses were up
of $73.2 mUllon or $1.68 per common volume, thus weakening our prO- negative effect on aluminum divbecause of the program, which wlllshare, Including a loss provision of duct mix," he said.
Ision results. "Some . fabricated
contlnue through the fourth quar:
$65.0 mUllan or $1.49 per share
Jlllaler said a $230 million moder- products shlpmel)ts were lost In the . ter.
resulting from anticipated sales of
its refractories and agricultural r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p,.ii;p;jiiiiiiiiiiiP;p;p;;;;;;;;;~~!!i!P;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
chemicals businesses and an Idle
aluminum extrusion plant. The
quarterly loss from the company's
continuing operations was $12.5
mUllon.
In the third quarter last year,
Kaiser Aluminum ewertenced a
net loss of $36.8 rollllon or $.86 per
share, _Including asset write-downs
and other nonoperatlng charges
totaling m.o mllllon or $.46 per
share. The quarterly loss In 1983
from the company's continuing
operations was $19.0 mllllon.
Sales train continuing operations
In the 1984 quarter were $827.9
million, compared with similar
sales activity of $624.3 million In the
same period last year.
Chairman Cornell C. Maier said
the quarterly operating loss from
the company's aluminum division
was well below that of the year-.ago
period, but that It Increased fromthe second quarter 1984 level ..
"During the past three months,
prices of both fabricated and
•Chennelock
primary products have declined. In
digital . key-

(fRy Car

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Atlanta, GA
WTBS
, WTVN Columbus, OH
WTAP Parkeroburg. WV
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THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA SHOPPING MALL
OCTOBER 15-19, .1984
9:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

rfelds Warehouse
•chanlc St.

Cii

MUSIC MISSIONARY - GOIIpel singer Wesley Brown. a SZ..yeaNJid seH-styled "lltUBic
· mlsl!loaary," wants to spread bill faith to the Iron Curtain and "the' darkest places In the world."
( AP l.oa8erpho&amp;o ),
•

Ill
Ill·
(!)
I])
I])

CIJ

0(1)
(I)

CD
!ill

.ill

•

.Keenan Wynn
Pages 6,7

Serving Gallia, ~eigs and Mason .Counties

&lt;Eify Engine .·

Dill

' HBO

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