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Friday, January 14, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Citeshire woman .cited by patrol
Tbe Gallla-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol cited E lizabeth
· Heiskell. 42. Rt. 1, Cheshire. for
assured clear distance In a, twovehicle accident on U.S. 33 Thurs-

daymornin~.

mE Nl!lWSPAPE~, A TOOL FOR CLASS. ROOM LEARNING - Middleport ElementarY
School fourth graders of Mary Grim will soon start a
school newspaper. In preparation for that, Charlene
Hoeflich of The Dally Sentinel stall, met with the
. stUdents to review conlents of the newspaper and to
gtve Ideas and suggestions on the planned bi-weekly.

school paper. Class members, all of whllllt wUI work
on the newspaper, are Catlna WoUe, ~orma Ratllfl,
Jamey Ultle; Van Klein, D.J . He~, Timmy
Deem, Eric Qayes, Kenny Reyliolds, Tracy EWs,
Tammy IIoily, Carla Seldeoabel, Erica Elias, KeDy
Johnson, SheUy PuiUns, Krtsta Chadwell, Kurtiss
EngUsh, Jason Smith and Todd Napara, shown with
. their te8che r, Grim.
'

.
The patrol said Helsl&lt;ell
was
northbound . at 8:15 a.m. wher. . a
. vel]lcle a head of her dr iven by
Thelma E. Banks, 58, Pomeroy,
stopped to observe an object In the
median.
Heiskell was una ble to stop In ilme
and struck the rear of Banks' auto,
causing severe damage to both. The
drivers complained. of Injury, but
·· wer e not lmmeruately treated.
The patrol investigated another
two-vehicle accident near Addison
Thursday afte rnoon.
Michael J. Dalesandry, 33, Rt. 3,
Athens, was northbound on Ohio 7 a t
4: 52p.m. when he was unabietostop
for · a stopped vehicle driven by
Carolyn R. Shadle, 29, Rt. 1.
Gallipolis, and collided.
Shadle was stopped to m ake a left

Johnson remains Racine fire chief
By SCOTT WOLFE
RACINE - The Racine Volunteer Fire Department recently held
tts organiZational m eeting and
announced its yearly report of fire
runs for 1982.

The Racine volunteers an swered
47 calls during the past year,
traveled 612.9 miles, put in 17~ total
m a n hours, a nd estimated damages over 'the yea r a t $203,625.
Of the 47 ca lls, 14 we re structu re
fires, 11 auto accidents, seven
vehicular fires, 13 brush fires, one
fa lse a larm, and one man hunt. The
· Racine ' Volunteers serve Racine
Village, Sulton township, Letart
township, and Lebanon township as
'well as recogniZing mutual ~id
co n trac t s w ith neig hb ori ng
communJties.

In recent department election s.

J Area death

I

Lenith L. Jarvis
Lenith L. J arvis, 67, RT. 2,
Albany , died Thursday at Holzer
Medical Center.
J arvis was born May 30, 1915
at Hurricane, W. Va ., the da ughter
of the late J ames Buckhannon and
Mary Agnes Hicks Lowe. She was
also preceded in death by two
brot her s a nd one sister.
Mrs. JarviS, a housewife a ttended
the Rutland Bible Methodist
Church.
She is cSUJV i~ed by her husband.
Otho J arvis; five daughters.
Mildred Miller, Columbus; WiUadeao Morris, Marengo, Ohio; Dolly
Svoboda, Necedah. Wise.; Louise
Miller, Fox Point , Wise., and J une
Lambert. P omeroy; six sons. Alien
J arv is a nd Darrell J arvis. Milwaukee, Wise.; L€eroy Jarvis , Langsville; Sherman Jarvis, Bucyrus;
Frank Jarvis. Harts. W. Va., and
Ottie J arvis . Pomeroy; one sister,
Belva Nelson, Rutland; 34 grandc h ildre n a n d 13 g r ea t
graodchiidren.
Funeral serv ices wlii be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at tlie Ewing
F uneral Hom e with the Rev. Amos
Tillis officiating. Bu rial will be in

Mrs.

Wells
Cemetery.
Friends
m ay
call2
a t the fune
ra l homeSa
turd ay
from
to 4 and 7 to 9. In lieu of flowers
friends may cont ribute .· to the
American Cancer Society~ Meigs
County Unit , P. 0. Box ·692,
Mulber ry Heights, Pomeroy, or
other favorite charities.

SWry on Page D-1

L-Su,p/les Last

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Although
PresldentRea.gansaysthecommisslon working to draft a rescue plan
for Social Security can have more
time, tbe. panel's chairman says
negotiations were likely to end
Saturday if no agreement ls
reached.
. Alan Greenspan, a Republican
1 . ·economist who heads the panel, sald
Saturday's session with White
House oltlclals was a "critical one.
... It just doesn't strike me as
feasible to goon negotiating" Ifthere
Is no compromise.
Key members ot tbe commission
.began meetlaa with admlnlstriuton
otlldals late Saturday morning at
Blalr HeuJe, a guest residence for
. vlsillna statesmen aCI'088 Permsylvanla ' Avenue from tbe Wblte·

t -OWNER
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Sport wheels, auto. ·trans .. PS,
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.

I
'

'

Dr. Paul C. Hayes
master's In the same field a year
later. His doctorate was Gbtatned
from the University of Ottawa.
·
For 20 years, Hayes served a s a
superintendent in five school sys'
terns before becoming professor of
educational administration at the
University of Akron in 1967. A year
later, he was elevated to head of the
educationa l administration departmentthere.
Robert S. Wood, trustees' executive committee chairman, praised
Hayes for helping Increase student
registration to a high of approximately 1,400thls year and making it
"one ot the finest small colleges in
the midwest.
"Dr. Hayes has provided the
leadership and foresight that has
enabled the institution to grow and
prosper, academically, fiscally and
physically, during the past six
year-S." he said.

House.

.
'

.

\

pi aimed to remove their board members who did not
vote In favor of the panel's recommendations .
, The commissioners In tbe three counties choose 10
members for' the 648 board and the Ohio Department
of Mental Health appoints tlie remaining five
members. Plummer said there ls currently three
vacancies on the board, all of which are mental health
department appointments.
A spokesmen for the department would not
comment on how the state would react to Us
appointments who did not vote to implement the
panel's recommendations.
...
To ftt e Plummer , a m a jority of the full
membership of the 648 board would have to vote in
favor of removing her.

Loss of federal designation cool~ .make
u.s~ 33 'ghost road,' fe~rs ~ity official
By~- KELI::Y

Tbne&amp;Senllnel Stalf
PT. PLEASANT The
dream associated with the Wil·
Dam S. Ritchie Bridge connect·
lng Meigs County's GJ;"eat Bend
area and Ravenswood, W.Va.,' ls
to someday link the capitols of
Ohio and West Virginia with a
four-lane highway.
But at least one local official
feels that if it means U.S. 33
through Mason County will lose
its federa l highway designation,
there could be "a drastic
change" for river communities
In the "tri-county area .
. Point Pleasant Mayor J .J .
Wedge is taking his case to
various government bodies, ex·
plainlng that tum)ng the section
of 33 from Cottageville down to ·
Mason ; back over to West
Virginia tor funding and maintenance could make it a "ghost
road."
Wedge 's coni:ern siems from .
a resolution a pproved by Ravenswood's city council which
can be viewed as 33's deslgna·
lion being given to a· new road
between Ravenswood , Ripley
and Charleston .
From
the Ohio side, it 's hoped
.
a new ~pad, or possibly an
improve ment of Ohio 124, c an go
across Meigs County to 33 at
Rock Springs and on to A !hens
and Columbus.
A sudden flow of traffic a way
from Mason County, and the loss
of federal aid for road upkeep, ls
Wedge's main argument.
"When federal financing is
abandoned, it . hurls," he said.
"Even though this qoesn't affect
Point Pleasant directly, there's
a spUiover factor from the

LINKJNG TWO STATI!N - A petition drive to slop
an abandonment of U.S. 33's
federal highway designation Is beln&amp; organlled by Mason
who fear that reverting 33
back to a state road through the northern part of the rounty to where It crosses Into Ohio at Pomeroy,
above, could make It a "ghost road."

.

Mason area."
The highway passes along tbe
. river In Mason County through
Mount Alto, New Haven and
Mason, wher...tt links up with the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge, opened
in 1929.
Wedge is now taking a resolution to various communities to
dium up support to keep 33's
designation. He pointed out he
will be contacting Gallipolis and

Gall Ia County officials because a
direction of traffic awal!)rmn
U.S. 35as itpassesthroughPotnt ·
Pleasant and GaiUpolis could be
potentially disastrous.
''I'm interested In protecting
what we've got," he said.
The matter wlll also be taken
to the National League of Clites
conference In Washington, D.C.
on March 1, where Wedge said
he wlll try to obtain support .

"I anticipa te I'll dow hat neEds
to be done," he commented.
The original resolution Wedge
is concerned about can be
lntel-preted to mean abandoning
33, but that isn't the case,
explained Larry Hancock , a
Ravenswood attorney and president of that · community 's
chamber of commerce.
The resolution is actually an
(Continued on page A3)

'

'

Inflation slows, output down last month.
By ROBERT BURNS

tary, ·called the inflation report
evidence that "we have coqtlnued to
make substantial progress In attacking the underlying rate of
lnflatim\. It ls good news for the

-

another cut in the belief that the short·tennlnterestrateslntheopen
centralbankwUihavetodrlvedown market edged higher and some
Interest rates further to stimulate . long-term bond prices. sllppa;!
the economy.
. following the Fed 's late afternoon
But thecutdidnotcome, and some announcement of its money figureS.

..

...---Wholesale·Price----.:
Inflation ·
Percent'
..:.

(12 YeNS)

a

wee-

.

PartiCipants had llttli! fo say to
report~!!-, as they entered tbe
buldlq. although Sen. Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.,
~· "You may be colll!cllng
your Social Security betorewellnlsh
• this ccnunlsslon, but I assure YQU

-

several years .
The Gallla, Jackson aJid Meigs county commission·
ers met seperately Frtday with their appointees to the
648 board. Although they all indicated they discussed
the review group's report, none would detail what was
said.
One issue apparently facing the comrrtlssione rs In
all three counties ls what tO do if their appointees to
the 648 board do not agree to implement the review
panel's recommendations.
Under Ohio law, the commissioners have the right
to remove their appointments to the 648 -)icard for
" neglect of duty, misconduct or malfeasance In
office."
;
None of the commissioners would say if they

AP Busfuess Writer
The White House describes the
modeSt wholesale price increases
for 1982 as "good news for the
economy.' '
· economy : · and an economist says
it'll be there when the \lmecomes."
Private economists often note.
new figures on industrial output
The commission was scheduled to show that December may prove to
oowever, that oile of the main
go out of business Saturday.
reasons for reduced Inflation ls the
be the low point of the recession.
Greenspan added, In an Interrecession. December's 0.1 percent
The government said Friday its
view, thatthepanel'sstaffmayneed Index of producer prices rose 0.1
drop in iridustrlal production was
an extension untll Thursday to wrap · percent last month, closing year in
the 15th time In tbe past 17 months
up lechnical details of the commls- which wholesale prices climbed 3.5
that the measure of factory output
skm's final report.
percent - the smallest Increase
has declined.
.Later, Greenspan said on ABC- since the 3.2 percent of 1971, when
Big gains In a~,~tomobile assemTV's Nightllne program that any
blies held d&lt;iwn theq~eralldecllne In
wage-and-price controls were In
extension would only be "just to put effect part of lhe y~ar .
output, the report said. Auto output
the finishing touches on an
llaS risen as car sales have
The Federal ReseiVe Board also
ment if we reach one" today.
Increased In recent weeks.
reported Friday that Industrial
In an earlier Interview. Greens- pr!lductlon In December slipped_
The decline In Industrial producPIIIl conceded that while there was a
tion for all of 1982 wa5 the largest
only 0.1 percent. The full-year
chance a majority of the commis- decline was 8.2 percent - the
since the8.9 percent drop of 1974, the
sion could support a compromise, biggest drop In eight years.
Federal Reserve . Board figures
"There's no way to get (all) 15
Indicated. ·
"December wUI turnout to be the
membersofthlscommlssion'opany trough of the ~sion," said Allen
The credit mar~ets showed some .
slnglepackage."
·
disappOintment . !hal the Federal_
Sinal, an economist at lheconsilltlng
Meanwhile, Reagan said Friday. firm of Data Resources Inc.
Reserve Board did not cut its
that if the panel needs "a few more
discount rate late Friday, . said
The economy. as measured by the
days before they come 1o such a
groisnatfoJJal product, ls belleved to • Thomas D. Thomson, economt,st
decision, then we'll give them those have contracted. 2.2 percent In the
with Crocker National Bank in San ·
few more days."
Francisco.
. :final thtee months of 1982. Most
Reagan also refused to say·What econoinlsts expect a modest · lnhelboughtofacommlssionplopoaal CJ'1!811(! of about 2 percent In the GNP
The rate, charged on Fed loans to
to maintain tbe solvency of !he· this quarter.
nnanCtai tnstltuttons, has fallen to
retirement system hy treezlng thl&amp;
.At the Wblte House, Larry s.5 pereent trorn '1!1 pel ce11t last July.
July's cost-of-living Increase forstx · Speakes, the deputy P!'e!!S secre- Some on Wall Street wereexpec!lng
,.
months..
·

By CLIFF HAAS
AIIIOdated Press Writer

ASK ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE 12 .MO(UH OR 12,000 MILE NATIONWIDE US£0 CAR·
..
WARRANTY! .·
CA~L JOHN SANG, JIM WALlER, WENDEU VAUGHAN ·oR BILL HAAS

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College and Community College
Presklent Dr. Paul C. · Hayes
submlttro his resignation to the
coliege board of trustees executive
committee Saturday morning.
Scott D. MUier, directorofcollege
relations, , said Hayes ls retiring
from the position he has held since
July 1976 on Dec. 31. A search for a
new president is expected to begin
next month.
' A sUccessor may be named by
December. MOler said. HaYI!ll was
not lmmeclll!tely avatiable for
cOmment Saturday.
The 119-year-bld Hayes succeeded
Dr. Paul Hines as college president
after H.lnes accepted a position with
Marshall University. Hines came to
Rio Grande In 1975 following the
. 13-year tenure of Dr. Alphus R
Christenson.
·
Coliege officials have credited
Hay115 with the expansion of the
campus physical plant, which
Included the opening of three new
facilities- the E.E. Davis Technical Careers Center In 1979, the Fine
and · Perfonnlng Arts Center in
February 1981 and the James A.
Rhodes Student-CommunlryCenter ·
last September.
Additional plans call for tbe ·
rernodeli!lg of the old student
cafeteria Into a business management complex and (he construction
of a $3.2 mllllor rna th and science
center.
Hayes' tenure also saw . an
increased emphasis on technical
-education, with the development of
academic .programs in preprofessional and professional areas .
Tbe president earned his bachelor'sdegreelneducation In Wilmington College in 1947, obtaining his

SocSec panel
session ·'critical.'
says Greenspan

"TURBO" DIESELS ·

__ )

1978 PLYMOUTH
ROAD/RUNNER

Exduding lrt., dealer prep., etc.

52

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(3) IN STOCK!

RENAULT
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Built in America
&lt;BosePri&lt;tl

sides

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.,

Stories on Page C.I

discussed when tj!e 648 board meets Monday, Hice
said. However , he does not feel any decision will be
Tbn.....SOOtlnel Slaff
1 POMEROY- Although there are "strong.feelings
made then .
both ways," members of the G~jilia-Jackson-Meigs
"We have to arrive at a decis ion very quickly, but
648 board have not yet decided whether to fire
we can't make a hasty decision," 'he said.
executive director Maxine Plummer, according to
Plummer's · resignation and other sweeping
board chairman John Rice.
,
changes at the 648 board were recommended in the
Rice sald he has not spoken extensively with board
final report of the state-formed Community-Services
members from Gallia and Jackson counties , but
Review Group released lasf ~k.
Meigs county members have not reached a consensus
The review. group also called for the reslgnatjon of
on the issue.
Bernard Nlehm, PhD., executive director of the
"I'm not sure we as board members agree as to ' Ga llta -Jackson-Meigs Community Mental . Hea lth
whai to do yet," he said Friday after a meeting with . Center . The panel investigated the operations of the
the Meigs County commission~rs.
648 board and the mental health center in response to ~."
Plummei-'s employment with the agency wUI be
the bitter conflict between the two agencies the past

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

t

Story onl'ageC'jll

By JEFF GRABMEIER

BAUM TRUE VALUE

,,~-'

.

Plumnler firing: strong feelings, no decision

Gets through traps &amp;
bends. With pistol grip,
steel drum. B029MP

Slip joints for ad1ust:
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he Ia a worlrlng p~rlner.

.

8 S.ctions, 54 Pag" 35 Cents
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Drum Auger.

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ADMISSIONS---George Reis,
P omeroy; Lincoln Russell, Middleport; Pauline CuM(ngham, Racine; Norman Grueser, Syracuse;
wla Roberts, Pomeroy ; Annette
Boyd, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES---Gertrude Gray,
Edythe Spencer , Jack Stivers, Jr.

Page ·B-1

s.,J/N Lllf

Set 012

Veterans Memorial

Fearu,ed

...

Will,.

11)88

Rape: separating fact from myth
Of
Kin!!'s birthd_ay celebrated
NFL ·playoffs resume

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992-2039 or 992·5721

1

Today's
Times-Sentinel

.

PARTNERS

COLUMBUS - Director Clifford
Retch of the Ohio Depa rtment of
Liquor Control an noun~ed today
that ali state liquor stores~agencles
and departmenta l offices will be
closed Monday, J an. 17, in obser vance of Martin Luther King's
Birthday, a legal ooliday for state
employes.

'The WI'/ America
Sends Low"

Reagan
credit card

JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE

Closed Mon~ay

Pomeroy
Fi,..r Shop

•
The Winding TraU Garden Clul:l
wUI meet Monday, Jan. 17, at 7: 30
p.m . a t the Meigs Museum. Margaret Parker will serve as hostess ..

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'

\IUORKING
more !han jusl a pet

•

Meets Monday

rum onto BulavUie-Addison Road at
the time of the crash. There was .
slight damage -to Dalesandry's
vehicle and moderate to Shadle's
car. No citation was issued.

Through their chicken barbecues
In the summer months, "Fourth of
Mondaymeeing
The Middleport Business and
July'' activities, donations, and
Professional Wome n's Club will
.gunshoots every Saturday night,
m
eet Monday, J an. 17, a t 7: l&gt; p.m.
the" fire department recently paid of
a
t
the Middleport Library.
their note on the new Ford Tanker
In
charge of the program on the
Truck. Over three years $10,500 has
foundat
ion will be chairman Farie
been raised to pay off the vehicle.
Kennedy
and her committee.
The Racine department is planning on continuing its fund drive ..-------------.~-1
campaign In those areas net
covered last fall soon. Additions In
the future include an J,S00-2,000
gallon dump tank for use in areas
wtth limited water supplies and a
...-brusb truck or "mini-pumper" to
,,~..&amp;u:.v...-all response time.

Robert "Hank" J ohnson reta ined
his title as chief. Others elected to
office were Mitch Nea se, assistant
chief; Dave neigier, ca ptain; John
Holman, cO-captain; Doug Rees,
first lieutenant; Roger Manue l,
second lieutenant; • and Henry
Lyons, third lieutenant.
Holman was elected as , the
president of the depai-!nlent, Hank
J ohnson, vice-president; and Doug
Rees, secretary-treasurer.
During the past year ,Jirefighters
spent many hours and much
money ·1n improve ments around
the firehouse as . well as other
community servioes.

••

•
•

·'

.,

I -~

notJRES -

WHOlESALE PRICE 1Nft.A'l10N
Clwt p-apba
the yearly wboJeeale prlce _,!Jelloll llpa'llll for 'the Jut JJ yean, .ea
cornpDed by the Labor Deparaneal. (AP I • erplwto Chan).
.\

•

"'

•
(
c'

�,

•

Commentary and perspeet•ve
•

The
~~~

~m~

A Division of
r-T"'L-J ~....--r•

~=·~

~v

825 Third A\'C., Ga llipoli s, Ohio
t61 4 i 441).2342

111 Court St., Pmnt.&gt;roy, Ohin
i 614 1992·2156

ROBERT I.: WINGETT
Pull Iixher

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HO!lAHT WilBO N JR .
F: xl·•·ult\ l' Ed itor

".
PAT WHITEHE AD

As.sista nt Pub Iisht·r-Control ie t·

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\ 1\l E ,\IIIt~ H ur l 'lw ,\ ~stw i uletJ l'ro ~ s. Inland Oai l} l'n ·s~ ,\ ~~nd: lli+lll :t nd tht· Anw r it•;t 11
llJ n• s plil'•·r l' uhli.-; h, -r, ,\ ~~nn:itiun.
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t t :Tn:HS OF OP INION an• "~'k"m t•tl . Thn ~ IJUu h ll~t• h· :o.~ than 1110 ""rds lung. ,\II
ldh- r~ an· ~uhjt• • · t In l'ditiu).( ami mus t ht• ~i.Lt ilt'll 11 ith '';~mt· , udd n· s ~ and ll'lt'Jih(uw
num ht•r. Nu U11.~ lg1w d il'lttn wi ll ht· puhlisht•d . Ldtt·rs shuuld lw in l.! untl tUs ((• , lldtlrl'Ss in).!
is!'Un , uul pt: r sunalith•s.

Suppose you were to read:
:·Jolm"s infidelity led to Jane's
hitting hlm over the head with an
ax. would you not ·assume that
jolm's Infidelity was -!tow do you
wa nt to put It - the prime move,
the proximate cause, the efficient
agent , of Jane's violent act? One of
those. You would not read the
sentence as meaning that John was
unfaithful on Monday, and Jane
just happened to bop him on
Tue&amp;ctay, no connection between
the two, right?
So Time magazine (echolngmosj
journa lsi writes, "(Reagan's) tax

fTrA ®'"-s I'Oil'l' woRl\1 s-·-~
IW~I'Ie

Business
failures soar

The Worl~ Economy ·. ~·rP_ .~ '-i.?
o- r;-~ -_..,,
~ _" .

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"Someday, kids, unless
to this."

Nowhere in this peculiar schlzoprenia more prevalent' than inside
the Pentagon. The most publicized
example Is the administration's
plan to· broaden the scope of a
current regulation that subjects
employees to lie-detector tests.
At the whim of theli' sur;ierlors: If
the new regulations are adopt!ld,
Pentagon workers could be
strapped to polygraph machines
and Interrogated on any number of
subjects, from press leaks to their
personal habits. This could become
the biggest government snooping
campaign since the Red Scare after
World War II.
- Right to legal representation:
The Justice Department, with the
evident blessing of Deputy Attar·
ney General Edward C. Schmults,
,. - .
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January 16,. 1983

.,....

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PRIZES In this once-ln·a-llfet!me
In your S.OCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL SECURITY SUPER· LUCKY NUMBER right now.
SWEEPSTAKES DRAWING.
You are probably asking how we
Listen to some of these other
can afford all these unbelievable
GRAND prizes.
prizes at NO COST TO YOU.
A MONTII'S STAY In a PRI·
The ansWer Is that the SOCIAL
VATE room In the hospital of your
SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
choice, ALL MEDICAL EX·
has a trust fund which was set up to
PENSES PAID or $60,00J In CASH.
take care of Amertcan senior
FOOD STAMPS FOR FIVE
citizens. The trust has decided the
YEARS worth $20,00J.
fairest way to dlstrtbute the money
FREE HEATING FOR ONE
It has '!eft in It Is to hold a
YEAR worth $5,00J.
SWEETSTAKES, making It possiA TWELVE MONTI! VACA·
ble for people who otherwise would
TION IN A NURSING HOME . get nothing from the system to win
WITH YOUR' OWN ROCKER
a SUPER PRIZE.
WORTII $30,00J.
· This Is how the SWEEPSTAKES
PLUS HUNDREDS OF OTHER
will work. On March 15 all the
VALUA!lLE MERCHANDISE in·
Social Security 'numbers that peocl!!lllng EYE GLASSES at a 50
ple Uke yourself sent In will be
percent DISCOUNT, PRESCRIP·
placed In a large sllver bowl in the
TION DRUGS AT COST, and a
Rose Garden of the White House,
YEAR'S SUPPLY OF
and Miss America of 1983, in the
POLIDENT.
presence of the SECRETARY OF
Now you understand, MRS.
THE TREASURY, will dniw the
DALTON, why we want you to send
GRAND PRIZE WINNER - the
person who will win $250 a mon!h

LONDON, 0hlo (AP) - Doug
Dalley, whose 191-acre farm was
sold at a sheriff's auction, says
farmers are "In the forefront Of a
major battle for economic freedom" and will continue fighting
foreclosures.
'The sole bidder, the Federal Land
Bank of Louisville, Ky., purchased
Dailey's farm Frtday for $225,00J
amid chants of ''no sale. no sale" by
an I'Stlma(!!d 500farmets surround·
lng the Madison County Courthouse
steps.
·
Alter the sale, Dalley thanked the
farmers who rallied'behlnd him.
"The family farm people have put
forth their belief in hard work, and
they don't believe they should be
robbed of this," said Dalley, his
volee cracldng.

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PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS

Flur,ries continue across Ohio

404 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis

Snow flurries wlll continue across Ohio Sa turoay night with squalls
again possible In the northeast. Temperatures wDI fall to the low to
mld·als. Lows will be in the teens .
.

round of bidding. The chanting .
continued as auctioneer Richard
Shoemaker wrote the minimum
acceptable bid, the land bank's bid
and "Sold'' on a crayon board, then ·
lifted It over his head to show t)le:
crowd.
Earl H. Anderson. regional vk;e,
president of the Federal LanqBank,
said the $225,00J represented the
bank's Investment, principal, aa&gt;'
cuinulated Interest and court costs·
In Its mortgage on DaUey's fann . :

ta~··•oo.•••··~·~·~uzJ

takes pleasure in anl')ouncing
the reappointment for 1982 of

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Sale

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Hardback .&amp; Large Format
Paperback Books
Reduced 35%

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AMER ICAN GEM SOC IETY

Jack Andersoni

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The Alcove

Dan Davies

The nation's weather
By The AssoCiated Press
A winter storm watch was In effect Saturday for most of the
mid· Atlantic states and Ne\Y Engiand, where snow was expected to
sweep Into the region and continue through tonight, accumulating to
as much as a foot.
A strong low pressure system ov..er Lake Erie spread snow from
the Great Lakes to Kentucky, building to more than 61nches Friday ·
nlght at Wausau and Green Bay, Wis.
Four Inches ot new snow was reported at Niagara Falls, N.Y., with
3 Inches reported at nearby Buffalo, the National Weather Service ·
said.
_
Strong northerlY winds gusting to 35 mph extended as far south as
the Gulf Coast while ter)'l~atures in the teens stretclled from Upper
Michigan toMontana. The mercury at Warn;&gt;ad , Mil)n., dipped to 10 .
'
below zero early saturoay. .
Sides were inostly clear from the Pacific Coast to the Great Plains.
Dense fog was reported In the Inland valleys of California and along
coastal Oregon.
Snow was expected to continue falling across the northeastern
states from the Ohio Valley later today whlle.llght rain was forecast
for the Pacific Northwest.
1lle southern half of the United States, the Great Plains and the
Rockies were expected to have sunshine.
Cold. weather was predicted for the North Central states.

42 Corm ' St.
The REGISTERED JEWELER has met the eth ical and gemological standards.established by his fellow jewelers in the American Ge~
Society. An AGS title is by annual appointment and must be rewon

by' yearly e ~amination .

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Hallmark Dated Seasoned Products
Reducea ·50%
Final Closeout of HaUmark
, Everyday Party
Reductions of 50% or More

:IS REGISTERED JEWELE,R

-··.

Lafayette Mat/

Gatlipo!tJ
Open Daily 9:30-8:00

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33 designation•••
(Continued from Page All ·
Indication of support for the
Meigs County commissioners In
their efforts tQ get a four-lane
corridor from Jackson County
over the Ravenswood bridge
and Into Ohio.
This bas been Identified as the
Meigs commissioners' priority
·i'oad project, but removal of 33's
designation Is not what Ravens·
wood wants to see, Hancock
said . .
".We don't wish the 33 designation takEil away," he noted.
"Traffk Is going to come
through here anyway,"
The resoiutlon does note the
"deplorable" condition 33 Is In,
Hancock said.
Opposition to the resolution
has also been heard In Ripley, .
Jackson's county seat, where 33

for the REST OF ms OR HER
LIFE . If you are the winner you will
be flown tJy AIR FORCE ONE to
WASHINGTON and PRESIDENT
RONALD REAGAN will person·
ally present you with your ftr.;t
SWEEPSTAKES SOCIAL SE·
CURITY CHECK.
There Is nothing to buy and a
Social Security employ~ will not
call on you. Consider this SWEEP·
STAKES. the U.S. GOVERN-_
ME NT'S way of taking care of Its '.,
retired citizens who can now look' ::
forward to enjoying the September ' •
years of their lives, PROVIDING ••
'·
their LUCKY qumller Is drawn,
No one has a better chance than -&lt;
you, MRS. DALTON, to win- so "
glve your LJJCK an opportunity to !:
Will',!&lt; for you. But yoti have to get ·~
your entry In NOW. 1lle SOCIAL ~
SECURITY CLEARING HOUSE ::l
may never have as much money to fi
distribute amongst Its winners "'
again.
:

passes, Hancock noted, explainIng that Ripley's con&lt;;ern Is that
redesignating , the road and
routing traffic through Ravens·
wood rould hurt the county's
western end.
Because of Ripley's access to
main roads leading to Charleston, the community bas been
experiencing a quiet ·economic
boom, while Ravenswood Is
recoverlng from massive layoffs
at the Kaiser Aluminum &amp;
Chemical Corp. plant there In
1982. .
G. KeMer Bush, highway
users tax committee chairman
for the Southeast Ohio Regional
CouncU, said four·lane construction Is SEORC's main priority.
"Our long-running regional
Interest Is what's best for the
area," Bush said.

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NEXT, THE FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT IS GOING TO
WITHHOLD TAXES FROM
YOUR SAVINGS INTEREST
AND DIVIDENDS....
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This year w~ over 100 chlnge1 In the tex Jew• and
torrn1, you have inore chii!'ICel of ~ng 1 mlltake.
And that could meen an IRS eudlt. If H•R Block
pi'8JI8res your ten• and you're eudlted, we go with
you et no lidded coat. Not •• your llgel repreMntetlve, ·but ta explain how your taxH were pre·
pared. H WI rn11ke I mistake and yau owe additional
tax. you pay only the tax. We paY the penalty af!(l
Interest,
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' 1M new tax lawa.
.
11111 yean nunliMt one reaaonlo go ~ H•R llock.

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OPEN WEEKDAYS-9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
SATURDAY 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

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APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

618

E. MAIN STREET
PH.

27 SYCAMORE STREET
•
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Open 9 U .~ P.M. Wtllldlp, 9-5 Ut.
.
APPOIIITMENTS AVAILABLE
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The recently pas!'led tax bill will require us to withhold and forward to the
Internal Revenue Service 10% of the interest you earn on depository accounts,
certificates; and dividends. It will require unnecessary paperwork, and your
persopalloss of these funds &lt;luring a critical time in·our economy.
A vigorous campaign to convince Congress to repeal this 10% withholding
tax is urgently needed. 10 be iJUCcessful, this Ca.mpaign will require the help of
each and every one of our valued ci,J.stomers.
Our bank, along with financial institutions across the United States, is
working to change the law. We feel that it is unnecessary, unfair, and unjust. The
federal government is already receiving all the information it needs to curtail tax
cheating.
We tlrge you to join our effqrts by writing letters to your representative in
Congress and to the two senato~ from this state. Thll.them you want the 10%
withholding tax repealed, becau,se it would impose an uilfair penalty on savers
like yourself.
·
For assistance in contacting your representa,tive and senators please ask
any of our bankers. if we all act now, Congress will get a·clear·message from the
voters ba,~k home, and they :will work to repeal tbis needless law. . ~· .
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POMEROY, OH.

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Pllont 44&amp;-0303
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AIIO II·

have

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" You ~an'tQI'eak the fanners. We
Few people in the crowd could
are··In theforelrontofa·majorbattle . hear the one bid. made. The local
for economic freedom . We will take
loan officer who placed the $Z!5,00J
a few hits. That doesn't mran this
bid for the Land Bank stood a few
movement bas given up this fight to
feet from the auctioneer.
,save ourfaqns."
Madison County ' Sheriff Stephen
Dalley,37,1satnemberofthenew · Saltsman, woo had called in 60
Family Fann Movement, a group · deputies ,from six counties, said
trying to stop what It fears will be
there 'was no violence during the
widespread economy-and weathersale.'
related farm foreclosures.
'fl1e farmers chanted !.no sale, no
DaUey, who said he would contest
sale" ln unison while Saltsman read
the sale of his farm, urged Ohio
the property's description for 20
farmers to press state legislators for
mlnulel&gt;, then opened the brief
a moratorium on foreclosures.
" I'm not sure they dldp't miss
some bids,': saldDalley, whosaldhe
still had legal motions pending In
Madison County Conunon Pleas
Court and U.S. Oistrtct Court In
Columbus.
·

The American Gem Society
oLthe United States and ·Canada

Fair Monday and Tu.isday. A chance of rain or snow V,Vi'dnesday.
Highs in the 20s to low 30s Monday and in the mid·30s to the mid40s
Tuesday and Wednesday. Lows near 10 Monday a nd In the 20s
Tuesday and Wednesday. ·

SS SWee.Ep~S=ta~k==e~S=====r======A=r=tB=u=ch=wa=ld
There is one solution to the Social
Security bankruptcy problem that
has not been suggested yet, and
that Is the government might hold a
sweepstakes for ellglble senior
citizens. 1lle Department of Human Resources could hire one of
the professional sweepstakes companies to write and mall out brown
envelopes to everyone on the Social
Security rolls.
The letter would read:
DEAR MRS. DALTON,
Do not throw away this letter.
You may have won one of 300 prizes _
adding up to $1,00J,OOJ In the 19&amp;3
SOCIAL SECURITY SWEEPSTAKES. Yes, tha\'s what I said,
ONE MILLION DOLLARS In
prizes offered to you ab5olutely free
by t he SOCIAL SECURITY
CLEARING HOUSE. All you have
to do, MRS. DALTON, is return the
enclosed coupon with your lucky
number on It and you Will be
eligible for our MILUON ,DOlLAR
SWEEPSTAKES.
Just think, MRS. DALTON, If
your number Is picked on March 15,
you could win $250 A MONTI! FOR
THE REST OF YOUR LIFE. You
may be holding the WINNING
ticket in your hand right now. But If
you don't send It back right away
you could be the sorriest serilor
citizen In America.
I know. \What you'r~ saying. No .
one wins In aSWEEPST:AKES. But
MR. CARLOS SEGURA, aged 70,
of Long Beach, California, won
$50,00J, MISS Kl'ITY SOAMES of
St. Louis, aged 83, won $75,[))), and
MR. AND MRS. JASON MARKS of
Sun City, Arizona will receive
Social Security checks for the next
20 years worth (are you ready for
this?) over $100,00J.
If they can win, MRS. DALTON,
there Is no reason why you can't
join this lllustrlowi list of people
who took the time to send In their
coupons. ·
Not only wiD you be eitglbre tor
the GRAND PRIZE of $'l!lO A
MONTII FOR THE REST OF
YOUR UFE, but you Will also
a · chance ·for other SUPER

Stationary ••

Extended 9hio forecast

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could represent those employees •
under those strictures."
.
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Fortunately, the U. S. Court of :
Appeals agreed with the lawyer. It l
ruled that the employees dld not ,
have to abide by the JustiCe ,
Department directive: 1lle court :
also took the opportunity to deljver •
a brief civics lecture to the justice: !.
Department:
"Meaningful access to the courts
Is a fundamental right of citizen-,
ship in this country ... Undermining
the confidentiality of the a ttomeycllent relationship ... cuts too
deeply Into the employees' First.
Amendment rights."
What Is disturbing Is that the
court felt It necessary to pOint out'
these self·evldent truths to the legal
ann of the federal goverru:nent.

Occluded -

WEATHER FORECAST
. 'The National Weather Service
lorecasto !IIIDW Sunday for most of the Northeast, from Maine to the
Vlrgbdas. Saow ls also pJ'e!llcted for paris of Montana, Idaho and
Washlnpoo. Raln Is forecast for parts of Oreg011 and Washln~.
Cool~r temperalures are expected BCrll!lll · the country. (AP
La&amp;erpholo ).
.

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last year Issued a Cromwellian
Justice Department administrator,
''l want a report concernlng all oral
edict that would have effectively
Information provided and a copy of
denied employees the right to legal
all such documents delivered to me
representation If they sued the
."
department. Supervisors were alsO
forbidden to cooperate with emIn other words, the Justice
Department . official wanted to
ployees: attorneys In any way.
In one case, employees · chal- Intrude upon the confidential reU.lenged what 'they considered to be tlonship heiween the employees
an unfair personnel policy. The
and their lawyer. This Is a baste'
administration warned the supervl· legal right enjoyed by murderers,'
sors bluntly: "You may not provide
traitors, embezzlers arid you·
Information or documents to the
name-it. Yet It was to be denied to
attorney representing these civil servants woo had merely
employees."
sought rellef !rom what they
The Instructions ·that followed considered Improper treatment.
were even more outrageous. "U ·
"That was a direct lnfrlngernent
you or your employees have of attorney-client privilege," the
already provided Information or employees' attorney, Mona Lyons,
documents to the attorney, either
told my associate Indy Badhwar.
directly or lndlrecUy," ordered a
"There was no way any lawyer

The Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei- Page- A-3

'...--·'----..-weather:~---- Doug Dailey farm ·sold at public auction

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Pom-y-Middleport-Gollipolil, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

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cuts led to huge budget ~ells,
bUUon In lost purchasing power. Inpuncturlngth&lt;motlonthatallyou:
which could reach $XIO b1llon in the
Moreover, that Inflation res.pts In a need to do In order to ptojectwbat's
current fl$cal year." Moreover, · bracket creep that increases taxes golngtohappentotheeconomylsto
Time magazine commlls the above
by $30 bllllon to $40 blllloq; then
devote your life to the subject. B8h
ln an extended, and tascln8t:lilg,
there Is the rise In Social Security. humbug. Su!ldenly llfi,OPle are
story on the Inexactitude of ecoAsk then the qu!'Stlon: How asklttg how Is It that Mt,. lleagan :
nomic projections and the lnterfer- woUld the economy .have fared If 1did not anticipate the del!lhs of the
ence of prominent economic spathere hadn't btlen a tax deci'e115€? recession, to which surely a more :
kesmen with anyone who
Do YO\.l want ~e ans'werto that Interesting question woul~be: How ;
disagrees.
question? The answer 1st nobody / lsltthattheecononilclratemltYdld :
.The tax reduction this year adds
knows. It Is no safer to say that the , not guess whai'woul~ be the depths
up to $90 bUUon. Mr. Reagan's
tax decrease "led" to a budget of the recession?
,
policies have · brought · Inflation
deficit of$:nt billion than It!:; tp S.y,
Take Data Resources Inc., whose ·
down a gre;&gt;t deal (from 13 percent · "Tax decrea:;es led to .holding the reason for being Is to make .'
.to five percent) - but even at five budget deficit down to $200 bUIIon." projections. ·well, lis vice president :
percent, that comes to about $175
·Time magazine's story Is useful Is quoted by ;nme as saying that It :
assigns lts'forecasls no inorethana
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50 percent to 55 percent projlabllity :·
of bell!g right. Big deal. So you ask, :
"Will General Moa&gt;rs sfock be :
-se!Ung for more at the end of1.83 '
than · today?" And the difference •
between nipping a coin and asking •.
Data Res!&gt;urces Is five percent. ~·
Maybe. five percent.
But of coJu:se, my favorite Is .
Professor John KeMeth Galbraith. ·
l\'lr. Galbraith, as we all know, ,.
speal!s only In the ai!Odlctlc mode, c
whicl! is why Ills good to dwell from ;
time to time on his past statements. :
Exactly a year ago, writing In ·
The Washington Post, Mr. Gal- \
bralth said: "Given the tax reduc- 1
\Ions,, and the military . spending,
the economy ·COuld well recover .
next year. But Wtth the big deficit ·
that Is In prospect, and the absence .
of any restraint on wages and ·
corpofate prices, Inflation will then ~
resume. And glven thenewenthusl- :
asm of the adlnlstration for deficit ~
financing ... 11 will be !_aced with the '
Choice between another round of •
murderously high Interest rates :
preclpltat:lilg another recession, or :
of accepting more price Increases, • ·
the EPA gets its act together, you will all ~elong
more inflation."
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.Basic rights lost

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January 16, 1983

soothsayJ;;;.;:e=:r;;;s~.~;::;::::=::;::;;;:=:==:==~==W=t='llw=·.m=fl=E.=B=uc=k=ley=]==r:

"E~

DUrlng every ho~r of the work because they have assets of less
day throughout the year that jast than $8 million, those firms ree nded ..ll business firms- many of ceived only 11.5 percent of the
benefits from the Reagan-inspired
them small, struggling companies
tax revisions which were supposed
were forced to declare
to help business recover from the
bankruptcy.
While public attention has been recession.
The vast majority of the
focused on the esca lating unembenefits
- in the form of acceler·
ployment rate as an iridicator ofthe
ated depreciation schedules, "sate
nation's current economic difficul·
ties, the equally distu rbing climb of harbor leasing" and corporate
income tax rate reductions - were
the buslhess fa ilure rate has gone
purposely structured to be suitable
virtually unnot iced.
"Businesses a re fa lling at a only for the country 's largest .
rate not seen since the Great corporations.
But even those firms have not
Depression of 50 years ago," says
fared
well under the president 's ·
Rep. John J . LaFalce, D·N.Y .. ·
chairman of the general oversight leadershi p. Virtually all of the
measures of business prosperitysubcommittee of the House Small
Including industrial output, capital
Business &lt;!'ommlttee.
"Today's business· fail ures •investment al)d after-t&lt;U&lt; pm(its have dropped sharply during Reamean lost jobs, ruined lives and
. dashed dreams," adds LaFalce. gan's tenure .
Major firms which have joined
"They also take a toll in human
small businesses . in fl!lng bank·
Sl?lf·esteem : .. They mean an end to
ruptcy petitions in recent years
the American dream of opporiunity
include the Wickes Cox., Braniff
and owning one's own business."
Internationa l, AM International ,
The Dun &amp; Bradstreet Corp.,
which has been compiling business Saxon Industries, McLouth Steel
failure sta tistics for the past 125 and the Lionel Corp.
years, has just reported that more
Although Dunn &amp; Bradstreet
than 25,500 companies declared figures are valuable becamse of t he
long-term statistical base main·
ba nkrulltcy ln 1982:
That figure ·IS the highest for tained by the company, they do nat
any year since the early 1930s, reflect the full scope of business
when bUsiness failureS peaked at failures in any year:
In 1981, for example, when D &amp;
31,822 In 1932.
Equally disturbing is the fact B counted slightly more than 17,00J
failureS, business bankruptcy petithat t he 1982 business failure rate is
50 pereent higher than -.the 17,044 tions filed with all federal courts
totaled 47,000 to 66,[))). (Differlng
level of 1982, more than twice as
measuring techniques account for
high as the 11,742 rate of 1980 and
the disparity In those figures. I
3¥., times as high as the rates
In addition, uncounted thou·
recorded In the late 1970s.
Release of the most recent sands of businesses are forced tn
statistics follows President Rea· shut down every year but are neve r
gan's preposterous suggestion that reported as bankruptcies because
they pay off their creditors b(;fore
the country's economic difficulties
abandoning operations.
can be ameliorated if every
The White House Is promoting
business merely hires one addi·
tiona! employee.
prospects lor an economic recov·
These figureS show , howeve,r
ery, but many economists share the
tha t since Reagan was inauguconcern expressed by Dr. Edwaro
rated, almost 42,00J companies ! . Altman, a professor of finance at
have failed - and now. don't New York University and an expert
on business failures:
e mploy anybody. Moreover, the
"The real risk is not whether
sm a ll business which most desperthe economy will turn a round and
a tely needed assistance during the
pa st two years received little aid stage a recovery. The real risk is
how long the recovery will last. If
irom the pres ident's "Economic
Recovery Program."
the turnaround is relatively short .. .
Although 97 percent of a ll · then thousands of firms , particudomestic corporations can be larly small ones, will not have time
classified as small businesses
to get back on their feet."

•

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.--1'~

' I

'

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'

. ,)

COmmercial &amp; Savings Bank
Ohio Valley Bank·
The Central Trust Co.

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0-

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

• Page-A-4- The Sunc!Qy Times-Sentinel

January 16, 1983

16, 1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

0

Teacher
By The ~iated Press
Relief ls in sigh t for students in Ute
Clevela nd Heig ht s-Un ivers it y
Heights school system. one of three
strikebound districts in not1heast
Ohio.
More tha n 400 Clewhind Helghts
teachers will vote Su nday ·on a
tent ative agrwment reached Friday night that could end their
walkout, which lasted seven school
days, a sc Hool board spokesman
said.
Negoliations will resume Sunday
in strikes by teachers in the Lake
Local ·a nd Willoughb0•- Eastlake

strikes:~vote

schools.
Walkouts by 1,100 teachers in the
three districts have affect€&lt;) 22,(XX)
students.
In the Lake Local Schopl District,
22 teache rs were arraigned Friday
on charges that they ltiect to keep
sc,hool bu:;es from leaving the
garage.
The 22 pleaded innocent before
Canton Municipal Judge Irene
Smart to one or more' irilsiiemeanors. Ten of thf' teachers also facf' a
third-df'gree felony charge of disrupting a public ser\lice. Pretria l
hearings were set for Jan . 28.

the campus and surrounding area,

we re canceled. School President
·David Ponitz said he hoped classes
:could resume Monday. ·
: The latest water main break,
lliscovered by a security guard
·hired after last Sunday's break,
occurred at about 1: 30 a.m. near
~here the first break happened. City
ciffictals said the water was turned
qff about 3:15a.m.
· :w ater got as d~ as 9 feet in one
lOading area, a foot deeper than the
Sunday flood. Power; turned off
after the break, was restored to
~rts of the cam pus shortly before4
a.m.
·"Essentially, it 's the same probl~in over again. with more water In ·
- some areas and less In some,"

, ··~~-------------1

USPS !25-!14111
A Multlmedia NI:!WSpBper
Avenue. by the OhJo VallE'y Publishing

Company· Multimedia , Inc. Seco nd class

JDStagc paid at Galllpo}ls, Ohlo 45631.
Entered as second class mailing matter
at Pomeroy. Ohio. Post Office.
Member: The AssoCiated Pres.~. Inland
Daily Press Association a nd the American NP~Nspaper Publishers Association.
National Advertising Representative,
Branham, lTI7 West Nine Mile Road,

Suite :114. Detroit. Mk:hlgan, 48)75.
SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ...•.............................. $1.00
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One Year ............ ... ....: .............. $52.111
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No subscriptions by mail permitted In

towns where home carrier service is

ROMAN
HOLIDAY

·.

@
~

APRIL 11).18
7 NIGHTS IN ROME
PHONE 446-0669

~

·

The Sunday Times-Senti nel will n01 ~
responsible for advance payments made '·

t'o ca rTiers.

'

·

MAD.. SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only

One year ............................ ... ... $:l).fll
Six months ...... ................. .

. .. $10.41:1

$3995

'

1972 FLAMINGO
12x50

$4995

$5995

1971 STAR
12x50

1971 BUDDY
12xSO

$5695

$5295

1974 YOUNG

1974 CASTLE
14x60

14x6S

SONY.

1970 MONTECB 10
12x60 -

$5795

$8495

EXPRESS TUNING CONTROL
Reg. '674.95

With

@.

~

52 Weeks . ................... .. ............ $51.48
26Weeks .....'.. ........ ..... .............. $27.30
13 Weeks ..... .. .. ................ .. ....... SM.M
Rates Outside Ohio

'

26 Weeks ..................................$29.64

52 Weeks ....... ........................... S56.16

~®®®®®-~

~Judge' bans

'60 Minutes'
segment; CBS to appeal

--; ThE!'e was no hearing In open
court. Duplantier conferred with the
, lRwyB"s In hls office before Issuing
his order.
~ ,Robert E . Barkley Jr., a C&amp;&lt;&gt;
In New Orleans, said the
Judge's order amounted to a
i'(atlonwide blackout of · the
;.,';'flrogram.
;;::- ~ Geraldine Sharp-Newton, a spQ:; 1«!5woman for CBS News In New
ork, said in a prepared statement
~ that CBS would appeal the rullng
~ today to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of
: Appeals here.
:_·,. Lawyers for seven New Orleans
~ IJO!lce otncers awaiting trlal for
.. jlllegectdvllrlghtsvtolationslnthelr
~ Investigation of the Nov. 8, 198l,
.. munlerotorrtcerGregNeuperthad
~
to have tbe segment banned.
: t· Thelawyerssaldthe"60Minutes"
;: report was based on intervieWs with
; ~pie llsted as "victims" In the
:.. !Jidlclment
'"' .. 'lbe ''Algiers Seven'' were
..
0'
~ Charged with threatening and
•• pbyslcally abusing people quest!·
::: ohed In the Neupertkllllng, violating
:, lfielr civil rights.

$498

7x24 Expando

NOW

PH. 446-7274

300 Second Ave . ,
Lafayette Mall, Gall1polls, OH.

.

40%-50%
Off s~

$698

•

~-

~~~
l1NG£Rl£
s

USDA CHOICE

DRESSEs
•

~-- ~d.

.

.

THE JAYCEES~ A LEADERSHIP TRAINING ORGANIZATION.

•

.
.•·--

39·

1/2 Price

• Hides most colors in one-coat
. • Washable, colorfast flat .finish
• Easy water clean-up

REG. 1399.95

NOW

GRADE A

.

PEPSI ·

Pee:wee·
Eggs

$2790°

REQ. or DIET

MT. DEW

39
Caffeine free
or SuJar Free

:s1~39
8·16 Oz.Btts.

REG. $9.99
•

SHURFINE
PURE CANE

Plus.•

,.

•

' JP.red

• For walls or woodwork
• Scrubbable lo-lustre finish
• Easy water clean-up

MAGNAVOX 25"
.COLOR CONSOLE

NOW.

0

0
$498°

SALE
ENDS

FEB. 13

8

'

GALLON
REG. $13.99

HEAD

~l
, 2•3 Thi.~ A... ClolliiX&gt;fll, OhiO &lt;S63I

t8t4) 446-711116

·TOILET
TISSUE

SUGAR

-----------

H
E
A
D

s

·'I

irloin Stea

99

......and much, much more.

: The SI!Ven are scheduled to. go on
q1al Feb. 7 in U.S. Dlstrt&lt;;t'Court In .

-

PORTERHOUSE
STEAK

~

~

• •r

You

All Sale Merchandise

-

::
•

Boiled Ha
ulli ·ii.

SEMI-ANNUAL aEARANCE

..

..
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t ,·

Sat ., Jan. '2'2, 1_9_8_3

.

19" PORT ABLE SUPER OOLOR

REG. $679.90 .

0

•

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CLOSED SUNDAYS

(COLORS SLIGHTLY

.

.

'•

*******

9 am til-9:30
Fri.-SaL 9 am til 10 pm

•

,

I

January White Sale

Authored by C William Brownfield in 19~7

•

Our inodern !lfe·style Is often stress that not all softcontactlenses
hectic and fast-paced. Frequently, can be used In this w'a:y,,On!y a soft
we don't have time for the things we contact which has met the crlterta
MuST, do, much less those things of the U. S. Food and Drug
we. WANT to do. Contact tenseS Admlnlstratlon can be worn for
'which ri'Qulre dally insertion and I prolonged periods. Also, prescrtbretnoval also require dally care. · ing these contacts depends on such
"Extended wear" contacts, on the factors as the hea lth of your eyes,
other hand, are designed to be worn ' your tear chemistry, and the way
continuously for.up to twoweeks·:_ you work and rgjax.
depending on the lndlvtdual and hls
or her prescribed :SChedule.
There are also many more
people today who are traveling,
/n 1he in ler c~ l ol be tter 1o' isio11
camplng, and spending their leis/rom f/w olh ce_ol
ure time In ways which make daily
care of conventional contacts par·
George W. D~vls, O.D.
tlcularly ImpracticaL EJ&lt;tended·
458 Second Ave., Gallipolis
wear con!acts may be the answer
· Phone 4411-l'.&lt;JO
for them . But It Is Important to

,mUliio'lnll~

:~· ·~ ''Among other things, ~officers

REG. 1899.95

.,

Extended· Wear Lenses

$TORE HOURS:

·:' handcuffed or tied persons in their
::: pustooy loa chalr, struck them over
" tl)e bead with a large book, struck
.
• tllemln1hechestwiththelrllsts,and
••
•
• 'Ngged'
them - placed a hag over
;. tfleJr head and sealed it off at the
::' llOttom to cut off the person's air
:: supply," a grand jury indictment

MAGNAVOX 25" COLOR
FULL REMOTE CONTROL

THAT FAITH IN GOD
MI•.JtiiiGAND
GIVES
PURPOSE .
TO HUMAN LIFE; r
.THAT THE
BROTHERHOOD OF MAll
TRAIISCENDS
THE SOVEREIGNTY OF
NATIONS;
THAT
ECONOMIC
JUSTICE CAN
BEST BE WON BY
FREE MEN
THROUGH FREE
ENTERPRISE;
THAT GOVaNMENT SHOULD
•oF LAWS
RATHER THAN OF
MEN;
IHAT EARTH'S
GREAT ~-- TRE'SURE LIES IN
·HUMAN
PERSONALITY; AND
THAT SERVICE
..
TO HUMANITY IS THE
BEST
WORK OF
.

D'R.'GEOR.G E W. OAV
--------OPTOME TRIIS~~-----

;::X

We Believe:

'

crf: will

asked

Gallipolis, OH.

547 Jackson Pike

, NEW ORLEANS (AP) - C&amp;&lt;&gt;
· Vowed toqujckly appeal an order by
a federal Judge wbo blocked the
lfoadcast of a "60 Min\ltes"
'$egment this Sunday after lawyers
tOr pollee accused o~ brutality said It
~auld . "seriously prejudice' ' their
defense.
'· U.S. District Judge Adrian Du·
P!antler on Friday issued the
l\llndwrttten order barring bi-oadsast of the repo~ after C&amp;&lt;&gt; refused
to show him a script of the program

project already done by the VA and
could decide to go in other
directions.
"
,
The agreement. turning over the
study to the CDC w~s signed by
Donald L. Custis, the VA medical
director, and Edward Br311dt Jr.,
assistant secretary of health.
It provided for the transff!r of $3
million from the vA to , the CDC
during the cu1Tent fiscal year.
Further funds will be required in
fu,ure years, but their amount Will
be determined by the size of the
study.
The VA agreed on Oct. 11 to give
up control of the study alter
members of Congress complalDed
about the pace of the VA's work on
the project. More than 100congi'E!IIS· ·
rilenslgnedaletteraskingtheVAto
tum over the project to the CDC.
Twelve million gallons of Agent
Orange, con!aining dlmdn, a dangerous chemical, were sprayed in
Vietnam between 1965 and 1971 to
protect U.S. fo~!romambush by
ld!Ung off the jW!gle growth. The
. spraying was stopped after health
concerns were raised.

~.

KESSEL'S
Q~ality Mobile Homes

L1 Weeks .... ..............................515.21

.

$l5,900
Ali SIZES
$239

NEW TRUCK TOPS

Inside OhJo

.

1981 FAIRPOINT
14x70

$8995

MAIL SUBSCRIPI'IONS

Model KV 1924
.

DaDy and Sunday

'

19" Model

$8995

1973 GRANVIW ·
14x70

compensatiOn on the
that
their earfling capacity was lmpaired by Agent Orange, but no
payments have been aw!ifded.
Abo!!tlOO,,l mveteransllllvetaken
special 1'\geirt orange physical
ex;uninatlons In VA hospitals.
'The best, avaUable sclentitlc .
evidence falls to indicate that
exposure to Agent Orange or other
herbicides used ·in Vietnam has
caused any long-term health prob!ems for veterans or their children,"
the VA has told tbe veterans.
The study will compare the health
- of several thousand servicemen
~allas:e t~:.;dw;" moved to bellevedtohavebeenexposedtothe
exas
ause
e ense success·
toxic herbicide In Vleinarn with
fully argued that pre-Ilia! publicity
others who were in the military at
made a fair trtallmposslble In New · the same time but were not exposed.
hite
Some veterans blame the herb!Orleans.
~::;':~· w:::: ~:r wtstol'w~ clde for such dilficult!es as cancers,
sitting int~ Patro~ car !ar a black Uver and kidney disorders, skin
h in
j t In the Algiers problems, nerve disorders, numboutls g fpNro ecOrl
and hearing impairsec on o fN' eans. Pollce then ness, vision
f
conducted a sweep of the neighbor- ments, at!gue, sexual dysfunction,
hood t h
he
thorltles -nuscle _aches, personality disorders
• a oug are~th ret"u
k
and headaehes.
sefldom venture
ou a bj!c up
The
review work on the
orce.

Frida.¥,

:1ttorney

$5495 -

1970 ACADEMY
12x60

wounds

Under an ~t signed
afte
. r seven weeks of
Degottiltlolll!, the wor~ will be
co~Jd1#1ed , by the ·(.enters , for
~.eControl, ~inAtlan!a .
CDC said It lntengs ~~ \i;l-ve 1
answers by 1987; 1 •
'
Abot.lth6,lm VIetnam veterans
have IIPPlled to the VA for diSability

f'ii-

:~· ·

segment

1964 BUDDY
12xSS

· AMERICAN

SINGLE COPY

~~~®~®. ~

~
~

Sunday , 825 Third

.

1964 RITZCRAFT
lOxSO
•

$3895

By MIKE ~n.BER
Aeeoc!•'ed
Writer
. ,· WASHINGTON (Al") .,..: The
J.'vetetans Administration has relln· ~ quiSiiedcontrolofthegovernment's
- 1chlet research project into wh~r
, · "the herbicide Agent Orange danj·
· :aged the . health ·of American
servlcemen In Vietnam.
'
;; .

hlreer -·

0

1962 UBERTY
10xSO

;,~VA gives up. Agent·.:Orange research

r-----------....:...-----------

~

junbq 'limrt· ,;,.nttru(

available.

period.
The.base p;~y for a starting Lake
rested last week alter.trylngtostopa
Local
teacher Is $12,&lt;m. The board's
II teachers t'atily the contmct, the ' substitute teacher from cr95slng a
latest offer calls for an addltjonaJ ·
board will sign it Monday and school Lake High School picket line.
will resume Tuesday, Ms. Lester
$700 tor the fh·stl'year of a twO:year
Stark County ComrnOJl Pleas
said. Schools will be closed Monday Judge William Quinn on Wednesday
contract and $In) more In the second
regardless of the vote, In honon of continued a court order that limits
year. The 140 striking teachers are
Martin Luther King Da~.
· pickets to two at each ent ranee to the
seeking yearly Increases of $1~
The arrests in the Lake Local dlstrtct'sfiveschoolsandonetoeach
and $1,020.
'
district came a·t about 7:15 a .m ..a.S driveway.
In a strikP by ;.oo teachers In the
subst itute bus &lt;)rivers began their
'School officials said most regular ·
mutes in thf' northern Stark County drivers have not been reporting for Wllloughby-Eastlake schools, "!&gt;
district , which covers a 25-square- work. Substitute drivers have bee'\ incidents were report~ on the
picket line Friday.
.,
inlle radius. Seven df'putles broke
up the disturbance and allowed
buses to roiL
SiX striking teachers were ar-

Start The New Year With A
-Clean Quality Used Mobile Home

Ponltz said. "There is more mud
"f1d water than debris this time."
One of the hardest-hit areas again
was the library . below ground In the
center of campus. Damaged by 4
feet of water.Sunday, the library had
a foot of wa ter Friday .

Published each

Details of the Cleveland Heights·
University Heights agreement were
withheld pending 1 the teachers'
· ratification vote, , school board
public relatior\s spokesman Ruth
Lester said. Tentative agreement
had been reached- Thursday on
n9n-ecor~omlc terms of thP threeyear contract.
.The base starting salary lor a
1 teacher in the 8,700-pupil system is
$13,400. Tl\e'Iioam'hadofferedraises
totaling 9 percent, 8 percent and 5
percent over the next three years.
The teachers demanded 16 percent,
4 percent and 2 percent in the same .

JANUARY TV CLEARANCE SALE!

·Sinclair water main
bre-a ks second time
DAYTON. Ohio !API - City
officials are trying to determine the
cause of a downtown wa ter main
):&gt;reak that flooded buildlngs at
Sinclair Community College for a
seccnd time in less than a week.
. The main broke early Friday,
tiouring about 900,&lt;m gallons of
:water into college bulldings.
Classes, scheduled to open Friday
for the first time since Sunday when
8 million gallons of watf'r from
another water main break flooded

set in Cleveland HeightS.

ETTUCE

YELLOW

ONIONS
; 3 LB.

BAG

49·¢·

"

�,Page

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,
.

A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Paint Pleasant,

W.

Va.
~
.

Jan\ICII'Y 16, 1983 · '

IB,~~.~~~?r:!!~!!:.!o::_!~'!,~

Area deaths
Teddy Barker Sr.

Ohio

Teddy Barker, Jack Barker, Jeff
Barker J lmmle Simms and Steve
AITI:M'~·

GALLIPOLIS - Teddy Barker
Sr.. 7l. Patriot Star Route, dled
Bertha M. Dailey
Saturday morning in Holzer Medl ·
cal Center.
MASON - Bertha May Dalley,
Born Aug. 2,1900, in Boyd County,
KY .. son of the late Henry annd Hartford, died Saturday morning in
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Kathryn Childers Barker, he was a
Funeral arrangements will be
retired iron worker.
announced Ia ter by Foglesong
He married Thelma Lockwood,
Funeral Home, Mason .
who survives, on Dfc. 3, 1924, in
...
Boyd County,
Also surviving are five daughters,
Wanda Leport
• Mr s. Ralph (Elizabeth) Barber of
Wheelersbu rg, Mrs. Alex (Betty)
POINT-PLEASANT- Wanda J .
Cress of · Lexington, Ky., Mrs. . Leport, 29, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant,
J ames (Bonnie) Simms of Gallipodied Friday afternoon In Holzer
lis, Mrs. Fleni (Sheila) Arrowood of
Medical Center foUowing a lengthy
Oak Hill and Mrs. Walter (Sue )
lllness.
Born April 15, 1953. in Orange,
Brown of Mount Sterling; six sons,
Ted J r . of Ashland, Ky., Bill of
Texas, daughter of the late Earl
Raceland, Ky., HaroldofLakeland,
Couinier and Peggy Coumler of
Fla., Alben of Portsmouth , Gerald
Vinton, La ., she was a member of
of Gahanna and David of Ch1111·
Grace Bible Baptist Church, Point
Pleasant
cothe; lour brothers, Robert and
Clarence, both of Ashland, Henry of
Also suzylvlng Is her husband,
Charles Leport; a daughter,
Baltimore, Md.,. and John of
Turlock, Calif.; a sister, Lucy
!;leather, at home; a son, Chad, at
Wellman of Colorado Springs,
home; two sisters, Mrs. Linda East
Colo.; 26 grandchildren and seven
of DeQuincey, La., and Mrs.Earline
great-grandchildren.
Picone of Houma, La.; and two
A son, two brothers and a sister
brothers, Eddle and Tony, both of
also preceded him in death.
VInton, Lac
Graveside services will be held at
Funeral services will be held at 2
1: 30 p.m . Monday in Ohio Valley
p.m. Monday In Crow-Russell
Memciry Gardens, with the REv.
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with
the Rev. Ken Coleman officiating.
Robert Ccilvin officiating. Friends
Burial will be In Kirkland Memorial
may call at Willis Funeral Borne
Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends
fnim 2-8 p.ni. today.
may call at the funeral after 4 p.m.
Pallbearers will be grandsons:
Chris Barker, Darrell Barker,
today.

The· teen-age driver of a school bus was on the bus when thetralnhlt at3 ,
said she tried 'frantically 1 to ba~k p.m. Friday.
away from a . crossing before a
The bus driver, 17-year-old Ma·
freight train hit, pushlng the bus200 · rllyn Francine Mills, of Jackson· ·
feet along the track a nd injuring 41 vtlle said ber brakes failed betore ·
elementary school pupils.
the ~hlcle was hit by the.Seaboard ·
Twelve pupils were admitted to Coast Llneeilg!ne, whlchpullednine
Onslow Memorial · Hospital for freight cars.
treatment of broken bones, lnciUI;JAnother pupU, Terrance Bank·
ing seven children who suffered head, said Miss Mills tried to back
pelvic fractures , One c hild was still away from tbe crossing.
•
in in tensive care late .Friday after
"She tried to get off the tracks by
receiving in ternal injurieS and getting It in reverse, butlt Wouldn't '
broken bones.
shlftsothenshetriedtogofOJWard,"
"We saw the train coming and we he sajd.
.
heard its horn and everyone tried to
North Carolina State Pollee Sgt.
gettotheothersideofthebus,"said DonaldCumbosaldnochargeswere

Local Briefs:
Trustees elect president
REEDSVILLE - Francis Andrew was elected president of the
Olive Township Board of Trustees at Its recent organizational
meeting.
.
Everett Schultz was elected vice president, while Bernard Bennett
serves as the board's third member.
·
·
Regular meetings will be held the 'first Wednesday of each month
during' the summer months at 7:30p.m. in the REedsville fire station.
During the winter months , meetings will be held at 6:30p.m. until the
time change. All meetings are open to the pubUc ...

Rio council to meet
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande Village Council will hold a special
meeting at 7 p.m. Monday In the Rio Grande Municipal Buildlng.
Agenda Items will include consideration and approval of expenses •.
village marshal' s position, consultation on Phase II of the village
recreation park, acquisition of a four-wheel drive for the fire
department and establishment of the village clerk's salary.

GALLIPOLIS - Three persons
werecitedforfaUingtokeepassured
clear distance as the result of
unrelated accidents investigated by
Gallipolis City Pollee Friday.
Police cited Carey E. Martin, 19, ·
Rt. 1, Cheshire after an accident on
Eastern Avenue at 11: 47 a.m.
Martin was northbound when the
vehicle struck the rear of a car
driven by Nellie J . Devault, 60, 119
Fourth Ave., Galllpblis.
Martin 's car sustained moderate
damage and Devault's car was
slightly damaged.
Gary A. Warren, 24, 412 Smith
Drive, Gallipolis, was also clt€\1 for
assured clear distance after he
struck the rear of a' car driven by
Virginia K. Betz, 57, Rt .1, GalllpoUs·.
Betz was . reportedly stopped in
traffic &lt;in Upper Rlver Road at 12: 49
p.m. when the accident occurred.
Warren' s vehlcle was slightly
damaged and Betz' s car recel,ved
heavy damage.
Pollee also responded to a tw&lt;&gt;ear
wreck on Portsmouth.Road at 10: 56
p.m. Friday.
According to patrolmen, Theodore I?. Neal, 16, Rt. 3, GaJJipoUs,
slowed to avoid hitting an animal
·when his car was struck by avehlcle
driven by VIctor D. Littlejohn, 16, 41 '
Holcomb Hill.
Littlejohn was cited for falltire·to
keep assured clear distance: ·
Neal's car was slightly damaged
and Littlejohn's . car sustained
moderate damage.
The theft of gas from Super
America, 801 Second Ave., was
reported to city police Friday.
A man In a light blue Chevrolet

linpala reportedly pumped ~· of ·
gas at 3: 45 p.m. and left without
paying.
· Super America employees were
not able to get the license number of
thecar.
.
Pollee also cited tbe following
perscins Friday and early Saturday:
Stepben E. Wal~rs. 27, Rt 1;
N:orthup, no operator's license and
no valid auto registration; William
F. Johnson, 41, 499 Oak Drive,
speeding; G. Kart Eldred, 42, ·
~:esapeake, no valid auto registration; D.R. Cheney, 19, Gallipolis,
open container; Wayne L. Schoonever, 20, 6JJ Burnett Rd., tallure to
obey traffic s~; .Marlene S.
McCoy, 20, Rt 3, G~lllpolls, DWI;
Gary C. Roach, 30, 503 Third Ave.,
DWI; Betty J . Waugh, 24, Rt. 2,
Crown City, speeding.
·

GALLwOLIS ..: The Galli~ Cciunty license bureau on Third
A venue wUI be closed Monday in observance of Martin Luther King
Day, announced Deputy REgistrar Evelyn North .

The train's engineer saw the bu)
stop, but .Just before the train
entered the crossing the bus lunged
forward, Clunbotsald.
"·'l'hl! engine of the train hit the
center ol the bus and pushed It on
down the track, about 200 leet.' '
Clunbo said. "It could've burst Into
flames, there was gasoUne out •
1 there. I shudder to think what It
could have been."
Oazens of passers-by stopped to
move children into 14 ambulances · from Onslow County rescue
squads and the Naval Regional
Medical Cenier at Carop Lejeune.

17 was cleer, said Clunbo, wllo said
~doubted the: brakes hsd failed.
"No, we doil't think so. :I'he bus
had stopped and moved forward,"
he said. ·· · · ·· ·
1
~·1 hit . the brakes.',' Ml$s Mllls
sobbed ru; she helped . tenl' ' the
Injured children after thecOlllston.
"!;pumped them. I pumped them
harq, but, the bus wc:Wdn't
We
wen! rlght over the,tracks
It

!

helP

H~d-Up

336

se~nd

Ave.
GampoliS, Ohio

·Storewide
Clearance Sale

.. '

On Fall &amp; Winter Merchandise ·

30%-so·%
Off

to....,.
:i•·

t2.000 .,.. IU to glw Son for Cd
.
Reiher thin olmplv giving Son *2.000 ..., In the norftlll
frt "COlla" " owr t3.300 to
Mom ond
o.d llrould conalcler IMidng ., "'h1twwt free" 1oen 10 Son. For
........... F.UW ......_ • ezo.ooo iotw• free 1oen toiSon
llid lhe to.n Ia 8llldanced by a """'-1 wrhllln ........m ,cq which
..,.ailcaly iillltar !hat no i n - Ia to be chattled lthloo il.in)pclitaot).
Son 1m; I b thl money for one v- rrt 10% ond- t2,000. At ...
llid of the ,_. Son prrya F.U.. l&gt;M* ... f20,000. The t2,000 in
arminp hal ..... lhlhlid to lhe Son'a 1M rrrtum whete it wiR be laud'
rrt a muc:t1 ~tu rata t1wn the 40%- Mom and Dlld woulcl"p.ld. Thk type of technique hM ..... dioput8d by the I.R.S.; h&lt;l'•-·
the COUrb
aidlld with lhoi taxpliyer.

tupay••

do.,,

.,_gel...,.

Police

'

William 0. Smeltzer

•U .L. Certified-Insurance Approved
.Closed Circuit TV &amp; Surveillance Systems ·
•Physical Security S."""'Y' II&lt; Conot.ltation Sennco
•Radio Dispatched~Service Technicians

CIITIRIO I'IIIUC ACCOUNTANr ·

Chamber of Commerce
16 St1te St.

Buildinc

Phone 448-4471

MAIN OfFICE - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO - 446-3144
24 Hour Phones ..,.. Call Anytime For Information
•

Trash pickup ~-

ao5ED SUNDAY
OPEN MONDAY-THURSDAY-11 A.M.-9 P.M.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY-11 A.M.-10 P.M .

RACINE - Tfash collection in
. Racine wUI Tuesday and Wednes·
day due to the landfUI being closed
Monday, according to Glen Rizer,
village street commissioner.

.

Marriage licenses .
GALLIPOLIS - Flllng for mar·
rlage licenses wtthln the past week
In Gallla County Probate Court
were:
Eric Mulholand, 25, Rt. 2, Vinton,
sprinkler fitter, and VIcki George,
22, Rt 2, Vinton, hair dresser:
James W. Price, 31, 17 Garfield
Ave., · Foodland employee, and
Ellen L. Maley, 28, 17GarfieldAve.,
barber-styUst.
Michael T. Conklin, 36, 81 Locust
St., fire prevention officer, and Joan
M . Park, 32, 8l.Locust St, medical

I

I'

secretary.

SERVED

I

can

help

you

I N DEPEt4 0 ENCE
in ~' OUr relirt:'rnt•nt yc ar!i

GARlAND II. DAVIS '
512 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH.

8! h:e

•

_ F. :~: •

~ s ,J nc

LOUNGE OPEN 10 A.M. -2:30A.M.

MON. &amp;TUE.-Charlie lilly
WED. &amp; THURS.-Roge·r Elliott

FRIDAY-Billy l"
and Sounds of Country
ATURDA'Y-fiOCtl Elliott

SPECIAl PRICES APPLY TO IN STOCK MERCHANDISE ONLY .

I

LOOK AT LANDMARK BEFORE YOU BUY

lbldt it ant'fdaCtrlne PI Jno.91. therefore, the word
tha . . . ol ..... cliristi(Ads 8:4,5).
l'lwliic 1'111 Chlrdi
. The c:ludl and the kl,.._ art not two ilfllllll! i'n~'~
same. Cludi is from the Gl8ek "eillesil," wh~h means "the
includes the whole com,.ny olthe savad who have beencaled ..rt,llhollllriJ of~nand
. llided to the church by the Lord (Ads :t47). audi describes His spiritual body in thil
World t£ph. 1:22,231 which He pnrmiled !Mit 16:18), ol which He Is the held (Col. 1:18),
and of wh~h we arel!ill!lbeB (I Cor. 12:20,27). Hrtislhe SaWJrot. thee~~. 5:23).
lqiJDii in Graei is beillia, denotinta dominion ol peo~ IM!r ~a soveniiP!
rullls, extn:illllll his royai~~JMW.IUJwdotl describes lire IIJ]rlt.l
Christ (Jno.
18:36) which He priinisod (Mll6:18), whose Uljectslrtthe 111'111 ~2:19),1ooowr
whom He reip IS Killll 0 Qrr. 15:24,25; I nm. 6:15). 1he
. ,or clltlldt was
esiablished oo Per111Co!t (k1s 2) and Clllnot be movad (Heb, ll28). 1ne ldli&amp;llom or
clillldl -Ill ~ Ia tha 01 =-~stl _(Acts 8:12). '
'
,'
/1 i
"'
llptta, from the !lree1t brplm, IIIMns to~ or immerse and is spoken of bv Paw
as 1 burial (Rin. 6:4; Cd. 2:12). ft- commanded by Christ (MrtL 16:1""1!.: ID be
ldnica1ad in His nrmelor thi renlission ol sins 1Mtl2B:l9J; kts ~:38).
must
Ill ]JIIidtldln tha - o f Clltlllt JJ&lt; 24:47; kts 8:121
'
.
1111 dactrlnr is Gad~ ward (Jno.17:17), ''the lnrth olthe JlS1181' (Gat 2:5}, ~Maine
the
God (Rm, 1:17) in.reprd "lhecl-.:h, ......... and !MPtln.• il
IIIII' aIIIII to preech 1M! ..cl not Hs dactrlttl, 1111 cllun:h, end lilplilrn. To reject
these is 1D ~SillaM Hs holy name!

..

,,

1....

.

,..,..,._of

(FQr Free Bible Gooespondence Coorse Write .~ · ·

•

"

614-992·2181 '.

....... Melgl, ~ .... ~c.,

I

PIM!iii&amp;Cint
Christ was the Prop/let ol whom God !lli)lleiD Moses
given the Wlll1la Uno. 17:81. These _ . constitufl! the doiCirirlll'
pve the llllllil to the a~(Jno. 17:8). The word is ••=,,-~, .:
(Jno. 17:17).and thiOtJ&amp;h which laith in Oirist flows (Joo.
.,.u.' dactrila (k1s :t42), whic~ is none other lllan the
13:12).1'1ul clilrJes us lD "Pf*h !lit IIOid" and "lillort
duclli•" (li'Tm. 4:2), holding fiSt the flilhlul word o1 Gad
I1IIY pr1JIIQe the one·flilh lnd its practice (Tot .1:91. loor tloctJ,fnl

fll.tl/ul:
.1C/I
~~teA
"' ·~~~
'
,
' ..
I I.
.

Drtw A Utile onol S.V. A Lal D11h• r Wllhln 7S M1laa
Y.., W~ Ser.iol lit .Y - l.arl Hllpalnt Darlar
·'
·s..,. Haun: 1:30 r. 5:30. Mil a-.1• 1:011 P.M.

,,

"Preach Christ, br« not doctrine, the church, and baptism," ~ a popular Cl'llmOfll
many. Ths cry is made by those who !UPIIOS8 that ulity may be oblllinlld by exaltirw ·
Christ, mallifyila H~ klve lor al, ...,.. cb:bine, the church, and brplism dMde. Such a
cry is empty alii void ollnrlh, lor it is not poslitJie lD preach amst. and at the same tma
iJIOf1l Hs doctine, the church, and brplism.
•
· · • Whlln Ptiip went down " Snarlnndll!erdlecl Christ. hi prlliChed the/-.1
ldactriilel. the ~ ol God (the church), and illlptts. (Ads 8:4-6, 12). When we ·
pruch· am lllday, we, too, must preach lhe doctrint. the chardi, and blplin!

lulaVIIIe Roact e ~.0. Bok :1M
OALLIPOLJS, OHI045U1

·-·-

W-y

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

.
.
.DISCHARGES - Robert Alldre,
., • • s.yre, Alma Cartwrlght,
P_.Heu, Joe Moore. .

William B. Kuehn

ki,.

· All TVs REFRIGBlATORS, WASHERS, DRYERs, DISHWASIIERS,
• ttOT WATBl HEA-TERS, COAL and WOOD BURNERS.
.

'c om

11

By BOB HOEFLICH
Meigs countlans were generous
over the holidays tri glving so that
Others might 1have a nice
'Christmas.
•. ' The Salvation
·Army received
money, food, and
used toys and
there were many
workers lnvoived
-to see that rerilembranees were sent to nursing
homes, the hospital, county lnllr.mary and county. jallln addition to
the packing of some 170 . food
baskets glven to the underprlvl·
icged. Army personnel extends a
ilfg thanks to all who gave and
IVprked.
. There were over 70 Individuals,
organizations and businesses providing a pleasant holiday for
residents of the Meigs County
fnflrmary. Sharon Bailey, matron,
expresses on behalf of residents of
the infirmary, a sincere apprecla·
tlon to those glving .such generous
'l"Pport.

.

O

"'

'I .

tWo boys and two girls. will be
designated Ohlo ConservatlonKlng
and Queen and Prince .and Prin·
cess. Winners .wlll be announced
· April16. ·
.Any students In Ohlofrorrtgrades
seven through 12 is ·eligible ~d
entries, not over 500 'words , are to
be sent to: Ot&gt;Jo Conservation
Congress, P .O. Box 4'!17, New
Philadelphia, Ohlo44663. All entries
should Include name, sOcial security . number, grade, school, home
address and home lelephone
number.

Point Pleqsant, W . Va.

newbornglrlwhowas whlskedfrom
concerned about the charges . I don 't
a hospital by hen ang parents has
think lhc parents wou ld Intentiona probable heart defect and needs
.ally hurt the baby . I th ink they're
'' urgentmcdicalcare,"saydoctors ·safeandwarm.It' sstUl thelr baby."
hoping they \viii bring back I he
The baby was born Wednesday in
:1-day-old baby:
New England Memorial Hospital In
Kldnappln gwarrantswereissued Stoneham. A judge awatded ternFriday for the infant's 15-year-old
porary custody of the Infant tb the
mother and 24-ye~r-old father,
state Departm e nt of Social
Wilt on I. Pena. but authorliie; said Services.
·
. I hey hoped thcparcntswouldretum . Pollee said the parents tookt the
I he child on their own.
baby from the hospital Thursday
"We' re not r&lt;&gt;ally looking any- night · while two of the mother' s
where right now," ·.-a id Det('('t jve friends quarreled and drew the
.John L&lt;'Ccesse. "We·rc jusI hoping attention of a guard who was
one of their friends will sm a rten up watchingthe childuponordersofthe
,....:::_~_:::_:.:.:::::::_::.::.:_.=:::::_:.:.::_::::__.::.:.::=::.:=-:..::.:.::..:::.:.::.:.:.::.::.:.::.:.:::::._

Gregory Shamblin of near ·Racine found a deflated balloon
containing a note on his, parents'
!arm In Sutton Township. The
balloon had apparently been' sent
up by Jam~es Wittenberg of AmarUto, Texas , who Invited tlie flnper
to write so Greg may be picking
himself up a Texas pen pal.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-7

The baby's mother has not been
identified because of her age, but
said she grew up In foster
homes in the nearby town of
Wa ltham a nd has been a chronic
runaway:
Doctors believe thp baby has &lt;l
co~genltal hearl de!ecl , said hospi·
tal spokesman Ben Jacques.
"Test result s obtained lhls morn ·
ing indicate a likelihood of a serious
heart condition," he said Friday.
"Webelievethatthebabydoeshavc
a congenttat'he&lt;~ft abnormality tha t
needs urgent medicalfollowup."
The condition "is something th a t

Leccesse

deteriurate," Jacqu&lt;'S sa id . " It Is a
real illy thing, .but ~lth lhc risk
fac tor as such. wp stnmgly rocom,;
mcnd thalthech tldtx •h? s plllllized ,_
Woburn Dlst n ct Court J udge
Franc.ls Cullen ISsuroa r PStrm nlng
order J'hursday, baonng thP r'Ouple
from. removing the chtld from the
hospil~l, when hospJia l a nd state
social worhers express&lt;.'&lt;! concern ·
over whether the young mother
could care for the cht id.
Another judge Friday issued a
warrant for I he arrest of the baby's
father.

_ _:_::.:_:::._____-:-_____________---:-

Open

Daily 1()..9;
Sunday 1-6

U "power" Is your bag, you .
might want to attend the 13th
annual Power Show Ohlo to be beld
at the Ohio State Fairgrounds In
Columbus, Jan. 29 and 30. The show
will have over eight acres of
construction. agricultural, recreatlonal and lawn and garden equipmenton display and will utilize four
buildings.

' A couple of tidbits- Dan Morris,
Meigs Local superintendent, wanis
}iou to know that schools of the
OJ strict wUJ close on Monday for the
qbservance of Martin ·Luther King
I;laY and Presidents' Day will be
observed In February.
'
: .Bank 0ne of Pomeroy personnel
Ken Richardson of Racine was
oMlvlse that the drive-In facUlty In
another ·Melgs resident spending.
~meroy will be closed on WednesChristmas in the hospital. Ken was
day for repairs.
a medical patient at Holzer Medl·
And - Mrs. DorothY Oliver
cal Center so th~ holiday season
brought by an Associated Press
was dulled. However; by special
release on proposed changes In
permission, his daughter, Shirley
hunting laws. ·u is being proposed• Carpenter, and three grandchUd·
iliat the deer season be ~xtended
ren were permitted to vtslt him a
tom six to eight days In Hunting
bit In his room. Incidentally , Ken
l,lme 4 which covers about half of
appreciates your cards and your
ObJo. Hearings on rules will be held · prayers. He's home now :_ not
~ the five wildUfe di$trlcts on Jan.
but is
back to work yet 26 with a statewide hearing to be in
improving. Ken 'has the highest
Worthington on Feb. 4.
praise for the Racine Emergency
'
Unit.
~ Students of the county are invited
Confined to O'Bleness Hospital In
tO take part in the annual conserva- Athens Is the Rev·. Robert McGee ,
tjon ess;~y contest staged by the
pastor of the Pomeroy United
(}hJo Conservation Congress, In
Methodist Church. It would be a
cooperation with the Veterans of
'good time to let Rev. McGee hear
F:orelgn Wars, Department of Ohio.
from you. The room number is 316.
' Theme for this year's essay event
Ill, "Gun Ccintrol Versus People
Wasn't Eleanor Crow a 'vely
d:Jntrol." There will be a total of 12
lady•! She dld and said so 1 NY
$:jO United States Savings bonds
thlngs to help so MANY of us to
atVarded and four of the 12 finalists.
keep smUing .. .

3-day
Sale I

2.97
(600)

.

we
Honor

•'
PolyesterI Acrylic
Choice Of Colors

I'

Sl:1op Kmort"'

(6b9)

AndSove.
Our Reg. 1.4 7
$ 1 3-Pack,
,
.
Men's
Handkerehlets
Soft, absorbent cot"
ton in while. Permolock"' hem . 16x16 in.

25

.
0/
OFF
?r~~!eg.Low
/40

13.99

Eleetrle Blanket

Twln·1lze Blanket Wit~ Single Control
Double·slze Blanket With Single Control
Double·slze Blapket With Dual Controls
Queen'·slze Blanket Wlih Dual Controls

Supercolor

Our 3.68
Flashbar 11 .....2.97

Passengers robbed·
:.COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
Columbus bus driver In jured during
a;roobery says he has experienced
P!enty of dan~r on his job but never
eitpect~ three gunmen would rob
an entire busload of passengers.
j J'We've had quite a bit of trouble
ani this particular line," said
Richard Remley, 40. "Everything
. tljat's happened has. happened on
tiiJs line. The life of a bus driver is
kind Of tOUI(h."
' During his career as a bus driver.
mley said he has been threatened
lh a straight razor, had his nose
"oken by a man under the Influence
i1J drugs a nd had glass fragments
!!Prayed In his eye aft er someone
IJ1rew a rock Into the bus windshield .
« 'Thursday afternoon , he said, two
. ~en and a woman boarded the bus
f1 the city's east side and one man
eonlronted him with a gun. The

•

f:ite
,, driver

~ GALLIPOLIS -

The GaUia·
itelgs post of the Ohio Highway
i&gt;atrot cited a Rt. . 3, Pomeroy
Aioman after a two-car accident In
..elgs County Friday morning.
,1• Troopers cited ·Shelia Taylor, 26 .
~r failure to keep assured clear
41tstance.
~. Taylor was hort!J9und on Ohio 7ln
~ange Township when she report·
4dly struck the l't'ar of a vehicle
4J'lven by Hoy L Nltz. 31. Coolville.
~. Nltz's car sustained heavy damand Taylor's car was slightly

bandits robbed lhe bus, pistol whipped Remley and caused the bus
to crash Into parked car.

.,.............
...................... ........
...................
-·.... ,._,.............
................... . . .
~

~ " ' ' " ....... "l..........~ •••

~

Police said .the gunmen Oed with
fou r purses taken from among about
40 passen~rs on the bus.

".I never dreamed thai he'd try to
rob a whole bu s load ofpeople," said
Remley, released afler treatment at
University Hospital.

... ....... ~o. .. .. ....... .. .......
~·

Our 68¢-94¢

Sale Price

48¢Pkg.
EvereadY"' Batteries
2-pkg. "C", "D"; 1. 9~V .
Our 1.28, 4 Pkg. "AA", 78~

Tom Grube
Photography
~

••

(606)

1 66

(607)

1.68Ea
ClalroJI!l Condliian'"
Clalrol® shampoo · ·
or conditioner. 16 oz. •

Ea.
• Pledge• • Spray
Regular or lemon.
1.63, Glass Plus'", 97~

'Fl. oz.

'Nelwt. ''FI.OZ

r

•

~;~~

Focal® Or Ko1clac:olc•r
Film Or
Other C·41 Films

Q

Valentine's
.;. Day ~
~'!-'' ·~~~ B 1~i

Sizes llO, 126 And
35mm And New Disc"'
Regular Proeesstng .

12 Exp.... --·'· ... . ........... 1.89.

15 Exp.............. .. ... .. ,.
bp........... . ....... .. .
24 Exp............. ... ......
P"'I30 Exp... ... ...... · · · · .. · · · ·

:zo

Give A
Valentine's
Day.

1.27

Llghtntng'" .22 Ammo·
High-velocity , LR.
ammo. Box of 50.

Visit Our
Camera Dept.

I

Portrait For

.....

Sole Price

Our Reg. 2.41

2.47
2.'99
3.47
4. 8~

Price

Film
Developing
Service
Quality Prints
Back When We
Guarantee Or .

.

Your Photos Are

FREE
For standard colqr-print
film, original roll. developing and printing of C-4 1
110. 126 or 35mm (full
frame only). 1 print each
on our standard-finish
POJJtn. Save now!

.57Ea

1. Mile on Rt. 141

OFF OUR. REG.
PRICE

.

Casio
Watches
Men's or Ladies'
IN

STOCK

WANTED!!!
Potential Home Owners
Are You .Tired or ~enting?
Would',. Vou Like to Own Your
Own Home??
IF YOUR INCOME IS BETWEEN
sg,ooo and sts,ooo A YEAR
"

.

CALL ,._.OW!!
992-7034

11 -16 Oz. ·
Depending
On Pigment

1 57

0ur Reg. 2:01'
•
WITH COUPON
100 K marf" Tea lags
Orange-pekoe flavor, 8 oz.•

39$

Out Reg. 1.27
WITH COUPON
Super Gtue''' Super Strang
Permanent, clear glue, .10 oz. •

is

88$

OurReg. 1.37
WITH COUPON
tndaor /Outdoor Spray. Paint
Flat or gloss latex enamel. ·

'F! ot

· Coupon Goocllhru Jan. 18, 1983

Doilf-WJIII

185 Upper River Rd .. Gallipolis

I h 10

Time-Zero

SX 70 Land Film.
Two pack.

''"
. .....__

"'"••·
!"!' .

•

:·

_.of

;\1 1 no ~ ~

HOTPOINT AND GENERAL ELECTRIC"
APPLIANCE CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES AT POMEROY LAN_DMARK ,

ter, West Coluinbla; Glegoey,John·

I

'

MONDAY-Stuffed Peppers
TUESDAY,-Spaahflti
.
WEDNESDAY-Beef nps &amp; Homemade Noodles
THURSDAY.:...Turkey A II~Killll
FRIDAY-Baked Fish in red Sauce
SATURDAY-Roast Pert &amp; Dnssin&amp;
UVE ENTERTAINMENT IN LOUNGE NIGHTLY

FTaternal L1 (c /nura11a
Mom ~

1011, Syncule.

•

a.m.-3 p,m.

Home ~e-388-9691
MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICf'.

ADMISSIONS Katlierlne
Weawtr, Pomeroy; Robert VanMe-

I

~1

ph. 446-8235 . .

Veterans Memorial

I

to

FINANCIAl

.

·nmothy W. Smith, 26, Rt. 2,
CrownCity,deckhand,andCathyL . .
Day, 25, Rt. 2, Crown City,
.
.
unerpPioyed.

. ..,

DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS ·

Rotary Anns visit
MIDDLEPORT - Rotary Anns.
In observance of Valentine' s Day,
will be guests · at the regular
M&lt;ddleport-Pomeroy Rotary meetIng or Feb. 11, It was announced at
the Rotary's Friday night meeting
held at Heath United Methodist
Church.
Guests Friday night were Jtm
Diehl and Roger Morgan. Dinner
was served by the ladles of the
church.

PREACH CHRIST, BUT NOT...

Gallipolis, Ohio

,.
~?!;!o~,!PP~a!
..
~~~.~~~~~ped
· child'~"r~~~~~ ;, ~·
..me.nds holiday·. 'fJ',ene·r·OS;ty

.E

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE....

Middleport

Beat ·of the Bend

"'

li1twwt ~on ltilir lm;arbriMolll

Di~ect

I.

Pomeroy

'.

Let'a -.me Mom and·Ded . . in the 40%
IU lncUt and would ... to glw their Son
ez.ooo ..., ,... to hllp""" pjly for colage
expeo 1 h will t.u about t3,300 of grou

Alann Systems

com8ction

'•

GHERKE'S'B~

~ ~'

License bureau closed. Mpnday

.•'•.

PAYING FOR
COLLEGE

UNITED SECURITY &amp;_
COMMUNICATIONS, INC~
.COmmercial. Industrial, Res~
•Purchase or.Lea• Plans Available
•Central Station Monitoring or

POMEROY - Trailer tax stickers must be purchased prior to
Jan. 31 to avoid penalties, according to Meigs Cciunty Auditor
Howard Frank.

.

hit."

In North · Carollna, the minimum
age for school bus drivers Is 16.
Miss Mllls attempted to get the
bus Into ~gear after pUlling
fOIWard tO see It the crossing on U .S.

Police c·ite 3 drivers

•Burglar, Fire, and

Trailer tax sticker purchase

ac.c ident

.----------i--------------

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

i

.,

•.

·January 16, 1983

•

•'

�..

'
Page

A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel .

Pomeroy Midd"port,-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point flli.aiCIIlt,

:-

w. va.

JaG:M 16, 1983

.

Gun. theft ease reduced,
accused
Sentenced
·
_
.
• --"'

GALLIPOLIS - A mixed bag of
cases, ranging from theft to
speeding, were handled Friday in
municipal court.
·
Judge James A. Bennett found ·
Gary Ra tcliff, Rt. 1, Crown City,
guilty of a lesser charge of
attempteq_receipt of stolen goods
after prosection moved tb have the .
charge reduced from the ortginal
theft citation filed by the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department.
Ratcliff was charged with the
theft last Nov. 1 of three guns from
Crown City resident John Marshall .
Ratcliff was subs€quently fined
$100, sentenced to 14 days in jailal)d
put on 18 months proba lion.
Three charges filed by the Ohio
Highway Patrol against Bryan L.
Donley, 24, :&gt;!\'&gt;Jackson Pike, were
continued until Jan. 24 after Donley
. pleaded not guilty to all charges.
He Is charged with DWI, no valid
operator's license and carrying a
concealed weapon. Donley's bc;md in
each charge was set at $1,00l.
·
In other matters, John· Russell,
Rt.l, Bidwell, received a suspended
six-month jail sentence and 18
months of' probation for domestic
violence, while an intet1erencewith
custody charge against WU!iam M.
Harvey, Eureka Star Route, was
dismissed after the complainant,
Judy A. Calvert, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
revealed she had regained posses·
sian of her children.
Bonnie Denney, 6081'1 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, charged with writing a
check on insufficient funds to G.C.
Mur1Jhy Co. last Jan. 21, had her
case dismissed when evidence Was
shown costs were paid. A charge of
failure to pay parking violations
against Peggy Evans, 501 First
Ave., was dismissed at ~of
Gallipolis Police Chief Gar!iind
Nibert.
A three-year driver's license
suspension was leveled against
Tony Slone, 'n, Rt. 2, Galllpolls,
charged with OWl Slone was also
fined $.'W, given a suspended
six -month jail sentence aqd put on 18
months probation.
Fined $.'W, sentenced tofourdays
in jail. given a six-month license
suspension afid 18 months probai!On
for DWl was Emmett B. Syrus, 39,

24; Larry T. Huffman, 19, Rt. I,
Nortlnip, open container, Jan . 24;
James L. Hogan, 44, 1445 Eastern
Ave., permitting a minor to drive a
motor vehicle, Jan. 19.
Irt traffic cases handled in court,
Marilyn J . Gagnon, 43, Mason, was
fined $15, received a suspended
six-mohth jail sentence and and six
months of probation for expired.
operator's license; Edgar G. Cline.
40, Rt. 1, Crown Cit)', forfeited $35
bond for insecure load and $339.9&gt;
for overload; Michael H. Sassa, 44,
St. Albans, W.Va., forfeited$.llhond
for expired operator's license.
Mark A. Cremeans, 23, Lower
River Road, · Gallipolis, fot1eited
$216.60 for overload; Gall D. Mount,
21, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was fined $12 for
assured clear distance; Steven J .
Arrowood, 26, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, was

.
fined m for walking lntoxicatljd on
the roadway; RobertL. Legg,39,Rt.
,1, Bidwell, was fined costs for unsafe
vehicle.
Forfeiting bond $35 bond for
failur&lt;; to display valid registration
were: George A. · Groghan, 32,
Parkersburg, W.Va.; James A.
Ward, 33,. Kettering; Arnold D.
Wallace, 57, Eurelqi Star Route.
Forfeiting bond for speeding
were:
,
Nicholas R. Montgomery, 26,
Marine qty, Mich .. $39; Bill E.
Waliace, 49, Louisville, Ky., $37;
Jeffrey A. Darding, 25, Xenia, $35;
Rodney ·J . Deskins. 26. Proctorville,
$36.
.
VIctor L. George, 25, Malibu,
CaiU .• $37; Brian D. Barlow,. 21,
WrightstoWn, N.J., $36; Arletta P.
Vanover, 44, Syracuse, $36; Gre-

.'.
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Rape: Separating fact from fiction
- healthy women can resist rape
- i f a woman has sex with a managainstherwlllonadateshe
has had sexual relationships with before, the Incident cannot be
called rape
- women invite rape by their dress or behavior
~ most rapis~s are strangers to their victims
- most rapes occur outside the victim's home
-:- for every rape reported, -10 rapes are unreported

Male
' 3
·Female
9
Total
6
,
Do you believe that women can invite rape by the way they dress or
behave?
'
- Desired response: no
:Ves
'Male
93
,Female
78
Tollil
85
No
Male
7
Female
22
Total
15
Do you agree with the statement that half of all rapes happen in the
victim's home?
·
· - Desired response: yes

By DEB FOX
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - About one-half of respondents answered
Incorrectly to phrases such as those above In a recent telephone
survey in Gallia, Jackson and Meigs counties to assess attitudes
and knowledge of rape. The survey was the first part of a rape
education and 'prevention program conducted by · GalliaJ ackson-Meigs Mentil Health Center.
"There are a lot of myths associa[e(_l with rape. We hope to
change attitudes and knowledge of.the subject," Linda Krasner,
of the Consultation, Education and ?revention section of G-J-M
Community Mental Health Center noted In describing the
organization's program concerning rape.
Granted $25,&lt;XXJ from the Ohio Department C'Jf Health from
October 1982 through October 1983, the center has developed an
extensive outline for the program fo~ residents in the
three-county area.
The program, which is not deal solely with female rape, "will
give an increasing awareness of what rape is- anytime there is
not consent for intercourse," said Jeannette Rowsey,
Huntington, W. Va., a contract employee with the center hired
for the project.
.
.
According to Krasner and Rowsey, females surveyed
obtained slightly higher correct answers than the males
surveyed (left chart). A correlation also was found between age
and the number of questions missed, they said. Younger
respondents missed fewer questions.
Despite the relatively low rate of raPE! reported in the
three-county area {bottom chart), the actual number of rapes
m&lt;ty be quite nigher.
Rowsey said, "The F.B.I. estimates for one rape reported,10
rajles are unreported." The Bureau also reports "rape Is the
least reported of all violent crimes."
When conducting a needs assessment to apply for the Ohio .
Department of Education grant, the center contacted clinicians
In area mental health renters to determine what they thought the
need was for a rape education and prevention program. The
clinicians estimated 8.2 percent of their female clients were
raped during the past year and that 19.4 percent of them raped
sometime during their lives, Krasner and Rowsey said.
· · "Rural women may be less likely to prosecute or report a rape
fan a number of reasons - they know everyone," RoWsey
explained. "And In urban areas," she continued, " there are
more support groups, such as rape crises centers/•
Krasner noted, "In both rural and urban rapes, it's often a
relative. or acquaintace who is the attacker."
Other factors also may enter into a rape situation, such as the
fear of how others will react.
Meigs County Sheriff's Department Investigator Gary Wolfe
said, "Sometimes when we get down, to the investigation {of a
reported rape), it isn't rape per se. Wild parties and things goon
a nd someone thinks maybe she ought to report it in case her
husband finds out."
Information about rape ·may be limlted by a large portion of
society, as the center 's recent telephone survey seems to
indicate. This misinformation may be reflected and perpetuated
by society.
"Rape is reinforced by a lot in our culture," flowsey noted .
"Violent pornography perpetuates certain myth~ about rape.

.•.

:y!lS
' Male
40
53
Female
. 46
Total
No
Male
52
Female
~7
TotaJ ·
49
Tell me if you agree with the following statement: Rape is an act of
violence and power rather than an act of sex gratification.
. - Desired response: yes Yes
Male
62
Female
84
Total
74
No
Male
26
Female
13
1·-Total
16
Do you believe that most rapes of white women are committed by
white men?
·
•
- Desired response: yes
·.'fes
76
'Male
59
" Female
67
Total

:No
:Male
11
,Female
41
·Total
30
.
Is it tf'Je that rape is a spontaneous act of sexual passion by men who
·fack available sexual relationships?
·
•· ·:: ;· •
·- Desired response: no
Yes
31
,Male
38
"Female
34
Total
'No
Male
62
1-Female
59
Total
61
, ;' Do you believe tilat women frequently make false reportsof rape to
seek revenge?
- Desired response: no
•

&gt;

YEO&gt;

I 'Male

72
66
Female
Total
49
No
Male
55
Female
47
Total ·
51
,
' If a man forces sex on his wife, shOuld it be considered rape?
;- Desired response: yes
·Yes
Male
72
Female
66
69
Total

POMEROY - Reported to the·
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
was thetheftpfa "winter front"used·
on a school bus.
Roger Hobnan informed deputies
the winter front was taken from a
Meigs Local bus while parked at a
residence on Ohio 124 west of
Rutland. The theft occurred Thursday morning.
The department is lrivestigating'a
complaint lodged by Jenny JackSan, Morlln Addition, Tuppers
?lalns, in regard to a vehicle
runningthroughseveralyardseariy
Thursday morning.

There is often a correlation between sex and violence."
In addition to the phone survey, center employees plah to have .
a program dealing ~!Illy with date and acquaintance rape
available to area high ~hools; develop a slidi!ltape show for
civic groups as well as skits to be performed by Emotion Picture
Show, the center's psycho-social drama troupe; and compile
resources available to the public at regional libraries. The staff
'
will also use posters and public servic;e announcements
to relay
information of the subject.
The center staff members also · plan to conduct another
telephone survey next spring. It will involve the same questons
and will test how well the project was completed.
'
-.
As for. the r.ape education and pteverttion project, Rowsey . :. · ,
explained, "You have to work on attitudes before you can change
anything. You have to get across to people the mythS b!lfore a
victim feels a rape can he reported. "
'

,,

I

,
-•
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..

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.

'

·. :':,.·&gt;. ·-·.'"':...

'

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'\,·

Rape can occur to anyone at any age, not ,just females, as ·this
drawing depicts from the State of Ohio Division of Crime
Prevention and used by Operation Crime Alert. The Federal .
Bureau of InVestigation estimates for every rape reported, 10
rapes are unreported to law enforcement agencies.

·!So
.¥ale

21
31
-Total
26
· Do you believe that most rapists are strangers to the victims?
~ .- Desired response: no
:Yes
41
·Male
41
Female
41
Total
·No
•Male
59
, Female
59
:Total
59
• Do you beiieve.that a healthy woq~an can resist rape if she really
wants to?
:- Desired response: no
· Yes
62
Male
13
Female
'
46
Total
No
Male
38
Female
66
Total
. 52
1 . If a woman Is forced to have sex on a date or wtth a man she has h;ld
sex with. in the past. would you Consider this rape?
, ..1.... ~ired response: yes
,.
I
~Female

List4runs
POMEROY ~ Four runs were
made by local emergency· units
Friday, according to the Meigs
Cou nty Emergency Medical
Sen'ice.
Atll:46a.m., Tuppers Plains was
called to a two-ear accidenton0hio7
near Eastern High School. Pamela
Nitz whO was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 12:21 p.m.. Pomeroy was
called for Bob Mitchell, who was
also taken to Veterans.
At 2: 38 p.m.. Middleport was
called for J~ Schuler, and at 8:12
p.m. Rutland wascalledforHoward
Wilson. Both were taken \0 Holzer
Medical Center.

·.ves

COLUMBUS - State , Auditor
'Thomas - E. Ferguson reported
ioday' the fourth quarter 1982 liquor
pel')lllt fees disti'lbution ,of
$1,911,243.9&gt; toOhio'scities; villages
and townships.
1n addition, $37,970.66 was allocated. for county operated alcohol
treatment and control for alcoholism and $487.~.56 for research,
j!ducatiDn . and prevention of
Melgs County's share was $2,3)3.

Fergucn also ·!'e!lOrted that a
total ~ S3,496,m.40 was distributed
u tile ftrst dlstrlbutlon of Interest
payments from the 1982 motor .
veblcle Jk:eniiP year. .

-~e
== l e

Melp Cpunly ~ $3,516.(17,

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!UtiYioi li.J UCRI

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•

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fDid nol l_'fl"'ritue
!14.atkioi _ttl l r('R)

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(For fl monihoo: )

0

0

1!n9

1980

1

0

6

0

"

2

IDid nell oor&amp;rlnut.·

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0

0

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(For fl monUl'i : I

IFor 11 monttr.: 1

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0

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41
43

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LEFT ~ The charl to the left of 12 ques!l0111f compn.ed a telephol!e
survey conducted by Galla-Jac~elgs Conununlly ~Health
Ceilter In J)ecember 1.9821&lt;1 ascertainadudes about, and knowledge of,
rape In tile COUIIIIEillt llei'Ves.
.
.
The nmdom .-nple of telepbooe numbers was selected from the
Gallipolis. Mlddlepori-Pomeroy lind Jadmon telephone boob. The
nilnbnum munber of respondents aoul!ht for the IIUn'ey waa 88, with 30
niale IIIXI30 female respondent~. Actuall'f!IIJOI 1e1 were from 29 males
,.
lllXI S2 fenudes In Gallla, 'Jacklion and Meigs counties.

2

1

"

'

'•

..

-:-···----~- ----:_------·::::--::~-~ -71--·-- --- -·~---~---.-

by year

., ·

Male
69
Female
69
Total
69
No
Male
24
· Female.
31
Total
28
.
Do you agree with the following statement: Men who rape g~nerally
")lave normal sex lives and score normally on most psychological te5ts.
l .:.. Desired response: yes
· . ·
·
Yes
48
\'Male
.1-,Female
59
54 .
Total

a.lcl&gt;hollsm. :

"¢

Rapes
' •.
'
per area

'

,.

Liquor fees

-

'

·l'rue or false? ·

!1/o

Report.theft

--~,..-, ~ -.

.

16, ]983

''

Do you believe rapes happen in Gailia,.Jackson an.d Meigs Counties?
,=-Desired respo!ISE': ye~ , .
'Yes .
·
Male
97
percent
Female
87.5
Total
92

Three OWl cases were continued.
Frtday. Lewis E. Henry, 37, Milton,
W.Va., pleaded not guilty and w~l
return to court Jan. 24 for pretrial.
Cases continued until Monday were
Donald C. Joy, 48,2216 Eastern Ave.,
and Erma K. Adkins, 48, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis.
· Achargeofdefraudingacredltor,
filed by Clarence Huffman, 24
Grape St., against Diana McGuire,
117 Bastian! Orive, was continued
until Jari. 24 for pretrial.
Other continuations were: Leonard "Jeff" Maynard, 23,342Spruce
St., driving under suspension, Jan.

-- 1'

.
•

'l'elephone surVey results

Kanauga.

SeCtion[~ •

therl

\~

It

gory N. Richards, 34, Anna, $36.
Paul W. Qvrrly, 1~, Mount
Vernon, $35; Thomas P. Netting, 'n,
Dover, $35; Virgil :E. Matthews, 54,
Charleston, W.Va., $35; Lorraine
Navalkowsky, 25, Rt. 1, Point
Pleasant, $39.
Terry G. . Roberts, 19, Linden,
Mich., $37; Bobby E. Smith, 45,
Winston-&amp;lem, N.C .. $35; Russell
W. Orrick, 44, Winfield, W.Va,., $33;
John Burdette, Leon, $39.
·
Patricia A. ,Smlth1 24, Rt. 1,
Langsville, Ui; Kenneth R. Evans, ·
54, Bloomfield HUis, Mich.. $35;
Deborah L. Chevaller, 28, Rt. 2,
GalllpoUS,$37; MaxlneH.Queen,49,
Rt. 1, Northup. $44; Carroll W.
Saxon, 38, 111 Fourth Ave., ·$37;
Joseph MacFarlane, 25, 366 Martin
Drive, $39; Michael D. Munn, 34,
Middletown, $34.

f

..

2

.-

Per

· ABOVE -

The above chart Is a listing oi rapes
law enforcement
agmcy II:om 19'l8 througli 1982. The infonnatlon from 19'781hr\Jugh 1981
was obtained from the Bureau of Criminal Investigation'&amp; UnHonn
Crime Report statistics as gtven.lo the Federal Bureap of lnvestlgatioD

bY local law agencies. .J'eeanse 8latlstlcs of 1982 are 1101 yet available
lrom lhe F .BJ" Individual Jaw enforcement agencies supplied
lnformalton.
. COunty lcltlll8 Include ·mddents that OOOWTed In lhat ~s townS
. and cities whldt have their law enfo~t departments. Thus,
duplication of J"ei!Orted cases occunln lbe chart. ·
, ,·

I

•
'•

II&gt;,

�Ohi~int

Ohio-Point

Pleasant, W. Va.

Weddings ·

The

W.Va.

Times-Sentinei- 'Page-8-3

======Anniversaries
.

Open house held in observance of Bechtle's 50th

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
wedding selections.
David Kevni Theiss (Sandra Oe- ·
The bride's sister, Dorinda Ertel,
nlse Ertel) ate residing in. ColumColumbus, was maid of honor.
bus following their maM-rag'e at th!!
Bridesmaids were Lynn Marklns of
United Methodist Church of the
W;tUnlngton, Leslie Mowen, Xenla.
Good Shepl)erd in Columbus Dec.
FIO\ver girl was Erin Theiss,
11.
'
· Lancaster.
Rev. Ray Vincent presided at the
Serving as best man was Ken·
double-rtng ceremony.
neth Theiss Jr., Lancaster, brother
· The bride ts the daughter of
of the bridegroom. Ushers were
Harry G. Ertel of MarttnsvUJe and
Randy Forbes, Pomeroy, and
the parents of the bridegroom are
Randy Warner, Sunbury. Ring··
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. ·lfhetss,
bearer was Danny Sayre, Racine.
Racine.
Assisting at the reception In the
Mustc was presented by Tom
church were Sharon Birch, Donna
Sartori, Columbus. guitarist.
Sayre, Racine, and Debbie Theiss,
· Tammy Rlquino sang, and orgaLancaster.
nlst, Rlnehold Werling played
•

........_ ...
Mr. and Mrs. Wayland
POMEROY
Marta Dawn
Legar and Michael Bryan Wayland

exchanged wedding vows tn a Dec.
' (continued onB-5)
·

Mrs. Horton

MIDDLEPORT - Drummond
HaD foilowlng the -ceremony. The
Chapel \Jolted Methodist Church
rehearsal dlnnerwsa held at Flame
was the ·setting for the Nov. 6. Restaurant hosted by the groom's
weddlngofGwYJ!nE. Reynolds and . mother.'.
Joe R. Horton II. · Rev. Daniel
The new Mrs. Horton ts a
Johnson performed the candlegraduate of Morgantown High
light, double-ring ceremony.
School and was employed . at :
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. · Holiday·Inn.
· ·--..,
and Mrs. Val E . . Reynolds of
Her husband graduated from
HIUview Drive, Morgantown, and
Morgantown High School andjyest r-;:;:;::;;:;;;;:::;::;::::;::::;::;:::;:::::;:;::;:::;;;:;::;====;:;::;;~;;
the granddaughter of Mrs. Edgar
VIrginia University. He Is ·em- I '
Reynolds, MiddlepOrt, who atplayed by IBM Corp., tn Midland,
tended the wedding. The groo']) ts
Texas, as an acco u nt
.
the son of Janet W. HortonofSterra
admtnlstrator.
AJuNJFORMS
Vista, Arizona, and the late Joe R.
The couple resides In Midland,
MATERNITIES .
Horton.
Texas.
FULL-FIGURE FASHIONS
. For her wedding the brtde wore a
gown of white florentine lace with a
fitted bodice fashioned with a V
neckline, outlined with white silk
revlre lace, pearls and sequins.The
gown had full bishop style sleeves
and wide cuffs. The seml-fuU skirt
· had a chapel-length train and was
accented with scalloped ttei-s and a
Mr. and Mrs. Fowler
white satin rtbbon· sash with
. GALLIPOLIS - Kathy Renee were married on Nov. 13 at 1: 30
FULL FIGURE FASHIONS - MATERNITIES
touches of lace at the natural
(continued on B-6)
·
Smallman and David Eric Fowler
waistline.
She wore a chapel-length nylon
Illusion tulle veil with a lace edging
attached to a lace bridal headpiece
trimmed with seed pearls. Her
IJQuquet was a cascade of candlelight white stl,k roses.
••
The maid of honor was Susan C.
Trantham, Ellreka Springs, Ark.,
..
and the brldesma.lds were Rebecca
Jacobs, Donna May and Lisa
Ammons. Christl Anunons served
as flowergtrl and the rtngbearer
was Ian Jacobs. .
'
1 The bride's attendants wore
MasterCharge &amp;·Visa Welcome
damask rose colored gowns. They .
carried fireside baskets of pink silk
709 lsi Ave., Gallipolis
STATE &amp; THIRO
GAlliPOLIS. OHIO
roses and baby's breath and thetr
headpieces were trlrruned with
pink silk datstes.
Kenneth C. Ashton· served as the
groom's best man. Ushers were
Kevin M. Valentine, Douglas A:
Burton, and Val E. Reynolds Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Phillips
BIDWELL - Carol Ann Rey- employed wtth Carter's Plumbing br~P of the bride. • ·
A reception was held In Cowan
notds and Charles Frederick Phil·
and Heating, Gallipolis.

'

SALE

[$]

25o/o;O~F --· ·- ·.

PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
AND MT. DEW

8

16 Oz.
Btls.

$139

Ia HOUSE
DRIVE THRU

SLACKS,.TOPS, DRESSES,
SWEATERS

.Walnut St., Point Pleasant, and the
. groom, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wtlllarn H. Phllltps, Route 3,

rr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,-~
1

ISea.r.SI
.

THE BffiE DAVIS
COLLECTION Of
AUTHENTIC INDIAN JEWELRY
.

.

Bidwell. Uniting the two at the 7
p.m . ceremony was Rev. Charles
Bledsoe.
The bride wore a forrnal white
:gown of chantilly lace over chiffon
·featuring a U·shatied neckline with
·seeded pearls around the neckline.
,
:She also had puffed sleeves, wrtst
'
i-umes and fuil sweeping skirt. Her
'
veil \vas attached to a camelot cap
Use Your Sears Charge
or lace.
The church was decorated wtth
.Chillicothe Mall '
Eastland Mall
pink and blue carnations and
Chillicothe, Ohio
Columbus, OhiG
-daisies and a candlelight service 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
was held. Renee Kaiser played 1:·"Love Story" and the theme from
&gt; Romeo and Juliet."
: Maid of honor was· Diana Reynolds, Point Pleasant, the bride's
sister, who wore a baby blue
pleated dress ma.deol!ace.Tlowerglrl was Alison Marie Reynolds, the
bride's niece . She wore a cotillion
·blue dress of ,polyester organza,
lined tn acetate taffeta. Her
'neckline was ruffled and the back
of the outfit had a bustle effecl. Her
hat matched her dress.
·
· Best man was Wtlllam W.
·P hillips, the groom's brother of
· Bldwetl. Ushers were Kevin Day
and vtrgll watson.
A reception was held at St. Paul
Unl\1!11 Methodist~ Church, POint
Pleasjlnt. The wedding cake had
five tl~rs wl th a stairway of heaven.
It wa~ made 'by Phyllis Ferguson
and ~o Greathouse. The bride's .
J
CALL NOW FOR BEST
• table was decorated with an
I
arrangement of blue and pink
APPOINTMENT TIMES
daisies, carnatons and baby's
breath. Reglstertng guests were
Sandy pancake, Judy Reynolds,
Bellnds Broyles, Thomas Rey·
• holds, Susan Bledsoe and Dtna

HOOVER·

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'.

..

edge brU!!,IWi deep
cleans cldljjf'to the wall.
'

·Automatic ·
carpet
adjustment

• For their wedding trip, the couple
Wl!nt to Niagara FaDs, New York
and iollthem Canada. The couple
liVes In Bidwell. ·
• "lbe bride is a 1980 graduate of
I'Otnt Pleasant High School and the
;groom, a 19'18 graduate of North
·GaDJa High School, Vintcn. He. Is

$849

424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

ACCESSORIES DEPT.
Robes BRusHED NYLoN. vALuEs TO 146.oo
Buxton Wallets FoR LADIEs. vALuEs To 1 18.o·~ ­
Sieepwea r sMALL GRoup wiNTER wEIGHT
Canvas Handbags sMALL GRouP
READY-TO-WEAR
Coats LEATHER AND FABRic. vALuEs w2so.oo
Sweaters oNE GRouP. vALuEs ro 13o.oo
Corduroy Jeans cHic-cALVIN
KLEIN~LEvl
VALUES TO 148.00
Jog Suit Separates sy cHIC, 'AILEEN,

All Beef

Sportswear MANY GRouPs of FAMous BR.ANos ..
CHILDREN'S DEPT.
Gi ris Coats By LoNDoN FoG. vAL~Es To 174.5·o
Assorted Children's Wear

sandWich Steaks -

5t8lllr ildns

·'

ftiiM

32 OZ. PACKAGE

\

$18 ~ 88

Y2 Price
V2 ·Price
Y2 Price
V2 Price

.

¥2 Price
¥2 Price
¥2 Price

ONE LARGE RACK, JOG SUITS TO BLAZERS

PKG.

Sh.
r
lmp
·8 oz. PICg.- ·
'

GALLIPOLIS

Y2 Price
Y2 Price
~ Price

SPRING FOOT. BROKEN SIZES. VALUES TO 135.00

MEN'S DEPT.

"'*"II

'

KfOitl"...,.
111111d II'" di::l run out ol1n aMrttMd liM,. . . .
ort.fJ(lU JOIII dloa oi&amp;COI!IC*IDII brlnd: Jtflectll't
rlttSIIN Nilllf'l9&amp; or 1 r...-ellllttl; lffHCIIWIII ..-1411 }IOU
10 purdl.- .... . . , , . . , """ ,, the .twert.-cl
~· Wlitlil'l30 deyt
1ft tiCtl

Sweaters By PURITAN AND cAMPus

¥2 Price

Men's Outerj:Vear LoNooN FoG. BoTANY 5oo

Y2 Price --

·
1
SIZES S-M·L-XL. VALUES TO 32.50

.

89

MEMBERS ONLY AND CAMPUS.

·Sport Coats ENTIRE sTocK .

Breaded Round

PHONE 446-140'5

,') f .J it' ,'J.l r P~t

Gplltpor, , Oh10 45631

FINAL MARKDOWN OF
FALL AND WINTER FASHION ITEMS ·

· ·
I ·
VALUES TO 1109.00, SIZES 38 TO 46 Reg. &amp; Long

·

842 SECOND AVE.

., j

(614144f&gt; 1&lt;o 73

.

Brand.

EMPIRE FURNITURE

Pictured

·=~

•A Trademark of Tho Singer Company
Cebinet end nrrylng r..ne extr1 on all models

14 OZ. PACKACE

'

•

Ron Sowards
Not

•

Pomeroy. OH.
Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

PRODUCTS

:
''

~·~~·~

115 W. 2nd

SINGER

16 qt.
disposable bag

.L EAR.

SpRING VALLEY PLAZA-GALLIPOLIS
CLOSED MONDAY$

1450

·TAWNEY JEWELERS.

THE FABRIC SHOP

VEb.LER

S}Q55
Complete

P+IOIOGRAPIIY

y, Ct.
'700 .Value

'1200 Value

20% OFF FABRIC SALE
CONTINUES

adapts cleaher to most
carpet. Special deep
shag &amp; plush settings!

·'446-7494

·

..,..

let

COUNTllY CLUB BRAND
MEALIN AMINUTE

Edge c

•9

~a9

'lr Ct. •
1900 value

.

BE TAKEN BY..
JAN. 29th

.

•

Be
Our

·

Other

action
beautlf_ully
groomed.

. WILL LOVE THIS!!
BEAUTIFUL NATURAL
COLOR 5X7 PORTRAIT

' Jteynolds.

ENTIRE STOCK
OF SINGER SEWING
MACHINES, CABINETS AND
CHAIRS

INDEPENDENT

CHESHIRE
Ga ttla-Metgs
Community Action Agency will be
closed on Monday for Marfln
Luther King Day.

•
'
'

SPEQALS

•.

10% OFF

agitator

ALL JEWELRY ON SALE

·

v

Afl'PFO.IED

•

DIAMOND RING

.----£&gt;~·~~·

. t.,; .

Quadratfl'l .

30°/o to 50°/o Off

ONLY

.Closed for holiday .

·~

foliage and Mr. Bechtle with a

,,

January
Clearance
Sale! &lt;

Gigantic Stock Reduction Sale

YOUR VALENTINE

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul . Eichinger, Pomeroy, celebrated their 25th wedding anniver. sary on Dec. 10 at their Mulberry
· Heights home Wtth a dinner party
hosted by their ch!tdren, Paula and
Tammy.
- Mr. and Mrs. Eichinger were
· married on Dec. 14, 1957, by Rev .
Eugene Brown at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. He ts the son of
Mr. and Mrs . Allen Eichinger,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Eichinger Is
: the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rex
: 'O'Brien, Stewart. .
: • Etchinger nas been e mployed
: with Kaiser Aluminum tn Ravens·
; wood, W. Va., since 1957. Mrs .
• Eichinger has been employed tn the
· title office of Meigs County Court·
house stnce 1975. Their two daughters are Paula, 23, a reglstereQ.
: nurse at Holzer Medical Center In
Gallipolis, a nd Tammy, a fresh·
man at Muskingum Cottege, New
Concord.• Famtty members and friends
~tiended the a nni versary
: celebration.

Columbus; and Darrell Bechtle,
yellow rosebud boutonnlere . wtth
Refreshments were served ~
Middleport, who were present for
money. foliage from member.s of the women of the church from · a
the ocqaston. They also have three
the church.
table covered with a gold cloth aiid
grandchildren, two step · L.W. McComas gave a tribute to
centered with an arrangement :0!
grandchildren and one great- Bechtle with Nan Moore giving a
yellow mums a nd baby's breaJh
grandchtld. The Bechtles are longtribute to Mrs. Bechtle. Remarks of
flanked by yellow tapers on either
tlme memberS of Heath Church.
appreciation were given by Mr. and
stde. The decorated anniversary
Rev. Robert Robinson pres· Mrs. Bechtle. The program con- cake was served
ApproJII·
.ented Mrs. Bechtle with a yellow
eluded with a prayer by Robinson. mately 75 per;;ons attended.
silk rosebud corsage with money ,......;;=;;:...;.:..:.::::...:...;::.:..:::..:::..:::...:..::..::::=:=......:.:::..::..:::....:.~=::::.=:::=::.:::..-~

'

SKIP SAYS:

Ups, were wed on Oct. 9, 1982 at the
:Ftrst Church of the Nazarene.
:Point Pleasant, W.Va.
ThebrldetsthedaughterotMr.
·aitd Mrs. David L. Reynolds, 8

MIDDLEPORT - Open house
was held at Heath Untied Methodist
Church, Mtddtepert, Jan. 9 honor-.'
.
'
ing Mr. and Mrs . Jack Bechtle ofl
their 50th wedding anniversary.
Friends and relatives called
from 2 to 4 p.m. and during the
afternoon plano and organ mustc
was played by Mrs. Michael Chtlds,
Mrs. Robert RobinSon and Mrs.
Stephen Jenkins. Vernon Weber
presented several vocal selections.
Mr. and Mrs. Bechtle were
married by the Rev. Gary Martin
at Point' Pleasant on Jan. 5, 1933.
They are the parents of thi-ee
children: , Mrs. Russel Klontz
(Sarah, Lal)caster; John Bechtle,

.'

'

Suits vALuEs TO 'l8o
.:Boys Sweaters &amp;Vests ·
'

$69 95

$9995 &amp; $8995

·

Y2 Price ·

CAMPUS, IZOD AND-OTHER BRANDS

Dress Shirts sMALL GRouP FANcY PATTERNs
AND flLAIDS. VALUES TO

121.00

I*Q.

WINTER STORE HOURS
.
MONDAY THRU SAT.lO:OO TO 8:00
SUNDAY 1:00 TO 5:00

'•

Y2 Price

�1983

Times-Sentinel

Wayland wedding...

Engagements
Bailey-Venoy

4.• 6: 30 p.m. candlelight ceremony
at. Trinity Church. Rev. W. H.
Perrin pedormed the do!.lble-rlng
ceremony.
'
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles W. Legar Sr.,
PoinQI'O)', and the groom Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Wayland,
Middleport.
Music was presented by Mary
Haggerty, Athens, orgalilst and
pianiSt, ·and Joseilh Struble, uncle
of the bride, vocalist. Brass urns of
silk mauve and white rosebuds;
fern, baby's breath and burgundy
stephanotis, fianked by brllliS ninebranch ·candelabra decorat,eq the
altar. Hu!Ticane lamps with rose
tapers .tied with mauve and
burgundy were use(! In the windows
and matching bows marked the
family pews.
The bride wore a formal gown of
wlilte sa tin with Basqqe bodice and
Juliet sleeves with Alencon lace
Bl)d pearl accent. The Uluslon ylke
·was trimmed wlthSchlffllembrold·
ery and the skirt flowed Into a .
chapel train. Her waltz length veU
wtth lace accent was attached to a
camelot headpiece of -lace and
pearls. SIN! ' calTied a bouquet of ·
mauve and white l'O!Iebuds, miniature white carnations, Illy of the
valley and baby's breath In silk,
and a llandkerchlef carried by her
aunt, Martha Struble, at her ,

STORE.HOURS: '
Mon.·Sat. 8 am·10 pm · _

Sunday 10 am·lD pm ,, ·

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
THRU JANUARY 22, 1983

PRICES EFF
.-'Bailey, Venoy
, POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. ·
!Wger Bailey, Route 3, Pomeroy,
4re announcing the engagement
and a pproaching marriage of their
daughter, Brenda Kay, to Craig
Edward Venoy,sonofMr. and Mrs .
Ed Venoy, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
: The bride-elect Is a gradua te of
Eastern High School, class of 1981.
f:ler fiance graduated from Eastern
High School tn 1977 and Is employed
at Kroger's, Pomeroy.
: Weddlng plans are Incomplete.

Mixed

F~er Parts~ ........~~

Cheesebrew-Eads
•

'·

Superior's Frankie

.

Cheesebrew, Eads
: GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
tenstl Cheesebrew, Upper River
!'toad, Gallipolis, announce the
of their daughter,
to Pvt. Brian Eads, Fort
Va., son of Mr. and Mrs. LaiTy
,._&lt;
Rt. 3, GalUpolls.
• Cheesebrew ls a senior at Gallla
.A.cademy H:lgh School and Buck&amp;e HlUs Career Center. Pvt. Eads,
a 1982 graduate of Gallla Academy
and Buckeye Htlls Career Center,
Is with the United States Army.
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

··•··A.

..~

$ ·59

USDA Choice Bon~less

Chuck Roast .....L!·••.•
.Bucket .
.
$

Cube Steak ....... ~·...

nm

·'

~!J
L
'

-.

$towers-Roxburgh

$ 99
6

MaiJI! U.S. No. 1

Potatoes....... ~.~~!~ ••••
r

FlaYorite

PLASTIC .GAL

. BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
)!:dward Stowers, Rt. 3, Bidwell,
and Ml'· and Mrs. James R.
Roxburgh, Ft. Myers, Fla., have
announced th • engagement of their
· daughter and son, Teresa Sue
Stowers · and · ~tchael Andrew
Roxburgh ..
The bride-elect ls a 1!179 graduate
of GaUla Academy High School and
a student at Ohio State University.
She Is employed at lnternatlonal
H:ouse of Pancakes In Columbus.
·Roxburgh ts presldeqtofRoxburgh
EnterPrises. lnc., Ff Myers.
A September wedding ts being
planned.

•

Parkay
.

Margarine ........~~

GALLIPOLIS -

' Coming eyents are as follows:
.Jan. 16 - ~ptlon · to meet
' ruVI'!rby's new dtrector, Connie
Campbell-Eaton, from 2 to 4 p.m.
Jan. 18 - Indepartmental meet·
·~ng at8 p .tn. atRlverby. ·

Meigs bookmobile

.

• POMEROY - Bookmobile service 111 Meigs County 1s brouaht by
the Meigs County Public Ubrary
under constrict with the Ohio
Valley_Area Libraries.

3:lm.1:50 p.m.; Racine (Bank),
4:3U:M p.m., 111ort mm will be

SUGAR

llboWn 1li ndnutel after boollmobDe .
!IITivel; Syracule (Fool), 6:31-7:!!0
p.m., 11m mm
11e llhowu 5
llllmdel after boOianoblle arrlW!S.
Wedneaclay, Jan. 19 - Tuppei-s
Plallll (ArtJauab), ,7!'25-7: !Ill p.m.; .
ftlaiti:eet Addition; 8: l0-8: 40 p.m.

'$139

5 LB.

BAG

..w

Customer

. Jan. 25 -Trustees meeting at 8
p.m. at RlvefbY.
Feb. 24- Annual dinner.

.
I

· SYRAGUSE -The marriage of
Emmogene Holstein, Syracuse,
and Dana A.. Congo, Portland, Is
hetng announced by Mrs. Congo's
ruiughters, Diana MWs and Teresa
Holstein.
The private ceremony took place
Nov. 16 at the home of Rev. Stanley
Merrifield, Syracuse. The couple
reside on College Road, Syracuse.

bookmobile arrives. 1
Tuesday, Jan. 18 - Portland
(Post OffiCe), 2: 10-2:40 p.m.; I.e:
tart Falls (Effie's Restaurant),

FLAVORiTE

.,

8~ Vine Street

Gallipoll, OJtio . Phone 446-9593
"ffie Resene the Rigfll to l)n~ Quantity"
.

DOUBLE
COUPONS
DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAcTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE .VAlUE.
.

SAVE DOUBLE $$

·THURSDAY
JANUARY 20, 1983 ·

AT JOHNSON'S
&amp; MARK V

:re:~:!

-.:c---=-so=...s:-;....E~:Y.~~~u.
~·~-..:

Special

:.· : ·.· · . :

~

I

~J

-- .. · _..

BOB EVANS

SAUSAGE

Pleaser
Special

09

GROUND
BEEF

REG., HOT, SAGE

ROLL
GRADE A

IXED FRYER ·PARTS
SUPERIOR

lB.

$

U.S. NO.1

IDAHO

29

BAKING
POTATOES ~~GLB.
CAMPBEU.'S

.

•

LB.

FARM FRESH MUSHROOMS $}39

-PEPSI-COLA .

8

16 OZ.
BOTTLES

99

¢PiusTax
&amp;-~po~t

WHOLE TRIMMED
BONELESS
--

.

$ 99
LB.

~.

SIRLOIN
TIPS
USDA CHOICE

GROUND CHUCK

BEEF CUBE STEAK

La.99¢. DART BACON
SUPERIOR'S

POLISH SAUSAGE

Budget
Pleaser
Special

locally Owned
and Operated

EXTRA LEAN

SUPERIOR

·FRANKIES

Your
Hometown
Supermarket

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budg~t

FRESH. LEAN

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

ROME BEAUTY

FRESH GREEN

APPLES

CASBAGE

10 LB.
BAG

GOlDEN RIPE
-

BANANAS

LB.

29¢

LB .
,,,.

TOMATOES

Budget
Pleaser
Special

WALDORF .

ROYAL CREST

2% MILK

4 ROLL
PAK

¢

RE.D RIPE

Budget
· Pl.easer
Special·

TOILET
TISSUE

LB.

HALF
GALLON

Pleaser
Special
THRIFT KING

CR~MED .

GREEN
BEANS

CORN

16 oz.

THRIFT KING
,.

SPINAC~

EX-LARGE EGGS

CAN

Budget .

Pleaser
. Special

,FRIED
CHICKEN

SUNNY MORN GRADE A

14 oz.
Budget

Budget

Pleas8r

Pleaser
Special

Special

.

TYSON

15.5 OZ.
CAN

OJT

99¢

Budget
Pleaser
Special

~udget

THRIFT KING
WHOlE KERNR

49¢

$

GALLON
PLASTIC

BUTTERMILK
Budget
Pleaser
Special

$}29

LB.
PKG.

ROYAL CREST

DOZEN

69¢

VALLEY BELL
PREMIUM QUAUTY

. ICE CREAM

Budget
Pleaser
Specktl

HB. '
BOX

~troN $}79
Budget
· Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special .

j.

KRAR

MAXWELL HOUSE .

:-.v.:r~·

INSTANT ·
COFFEE

. SLICES"

~r, $14 g.

10

· SCOT
RTOWELS

oz;$ 419 J~:~

69¢

~==~==

.

1

•REDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEYSAVING COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V
AND RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU
PURCHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON
PER lltM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED.
DOUBLE REDEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY
fO · "FREE MERCHANDISE' . CO~PONS OR
COUPONS OVER 49' IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH
REFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE COUPONS VALUE
EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM. CIGAREITES AND
CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE EXCLUDED BY lAW.
ro INSURE PRODUCT TO All OUR CUSTOMERS•
NE ARE liMITING OUR "DOUBLE COUPON" .
OFFER JO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE
CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
.FAMILY. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1983.

Holstein-Congo wed

Bookmobile schedule, for Monday, Jan. 17 ...,.·Carpenter (Laura's
Store); 3:1G-3:4o p.m.; Dexter
(Church), 4: 10-4: 40.p.m .; Danvlllf\
(Oiurch) , 5:»5:45 p.m.; Rutland
(Civic Center) , 6::JI.8 p.m., lhort
111m will be' shown 1li mirlutes after

Riverby calendar
The January
exhibit at The French Arl Colony's
RJverby, 530 First Ave., Gallipolis,
1s comprised of 17 posters entitled
' 'Surrealism" from the Ohio Foundation on the Arls, Columbus.

$ 59

201zo· M.II k••••••••••••••••

Roxburgh, Stowers

Shari Mitch was maid of honor
her cousin. Other attendants
were Cherie Wl)llamson, Rutland,
Linda Kovalchik, Newburg, Ind.,
bridesmaids; Courtney MldklH,
~of the bride, Hemlock Grove,
lunior bridesmaid, arid Heldt
LegU.r, -Middleport, · also a nice,
flowerglrl.
The attendants wore gowns of
Identical design with, square neck·
Unes, elbow-length puffed sleeves,
and run gathered skirts. The maid
of honor and flowerglrl were In
mauve while the others wore
Wrgundy crepe satin. They wore
floral headpieces In the wedding ·
colors and gold necklaces gifts of
the brtde. The attendants carried
colonial bouquets of mauve carnations and burgundy roses and the
flowerglr!' canied a white lace
basket wtth bows In ihe wedding
colors.
- Jeff Wayland , Middleport ,
served as his brother's best man.
Ushers were Mark Mitch, cousin of
tile bride, and
Hood, Pomeory.
Charles Legar Ill, the bride's
nl!pbew. was rlngbearer. All wore
· sUver grey tuxedal and carnation
boutonnieres. The groom's boutonniere was a mauve rosebud and
baby's breath. ,
Mrs. Struble and LOa Mitch,
aunts of the bride, MUUe Midkiff,
~r s!Jter, Arny Legar, her sister. 'In-law, and Cathy Blaettnar, whb
also ri!glstered the guests, were
hostesses for the reception In the
sOcial room. Assisting were
members or Friendly Circle.
- The three-tiered aU-white wedding cake had ptllar tier separatloris, was decorated wtthWyofthe
valley, and topped with a silk fioral
nosegay In the wl'ddtng colors.
Crystal candelabra with mauve
tapers completed the table decor.
The couple took a weddln&amp; trlp to
Canaan Valley Resort. Davis, W.
Va .
They will reside In Homestead,
F1a., where the groom lias accepted employment as assistant
plant e~r with Florida Power
and Light. The groom received a
bachelor of science tn electrlcal
engineering from Ohio University
In November.
·'

for

Columbia

Round Steak.........

SUPER .MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

wedding.

Bacon.: ..·............. ~~

I.

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY '
JANUARY 16
THROUGH
'
SATURDAY
,JANUARY 22.

(continued trom B-2)

...

I

THRIFT KING

FRUIT
COCKTAil

ROYAL CREST

COTTAGE
CHEESE

DAWN
DISHWASHING
LIQUID

16 OZ. CAN

2~99¢

$}19

240Z. .
CAN

_22 oz.

BTL

$}29
.

.,.

~==~====~==~
'.

�,·
~eroy-Middll!port-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Plea10nt, W. Va.

Page 8-6-The Sund(ly Times-Sentinel

Fowler wedding...

January 16, 1983

Gallipolis.
T he church was decorated with
two seven-bra nch candelabra and
bouquets of white gladlolas and
pink a nd white mums. The pews
were adorned with whiU! satin
bows.
The bride wore a full-le ngthgown
of white organza with a modified
Queen Anne neckline. The bodice
was adorned with re-embroldered
cha ntilly lace. The · full bishop

sleeves -w ere trimmed with the
same lace. The organza skirt was
trimmed with chant!Uy lace and a
pleated front panel. A plea U!d Inset
graced the cathedral length train.
Her fingertip vell was edged In the
same lace sectired to a camelot C&lt;J.P
with attached blusher ·veil. :rhe
bride's bouquet was pink roses
accented with miniature carnations, baby's breath and rose
colored statlce.

Maid of honor was Carol Silver· of the groom, Randy Hertzell,
Randy I;avender, Robbie Keyes,
wood. Bridesmaids were Gall
and Bruce Ludlow. The groom
WUUams and Sharon Smallman.
both sl$ters of the bride, Patty · wore a sliver-gray tuxedo and p!nk
Chapman, Michelle HertzeU and · =boutonnlere.Bestmanand
s Wllre Identical tuxedos and
Brenda Joseph. The maid of
bo
res.
honor's gown was fitted burgund)&lt;
Guests were niglsiered by Heidi
with a chlffon jacket. The brides·
Smallman.
maids' outfits were frosted rose
styled Uke the maid of honor.
FoDowlng the cere!l)ony, a recepBest man was Tom Chapman.
tion was held at the L &amp; K
Ushers were Mark Fowler, brot)!er

Restaurant and a Jlglll bullet was.
served. At the center of the bride's
table was a tbree-tiered cake atop a
pink fountain baSe. Two side cakes
were attached by tiny stairway to
the cake.· Kelly Betts and Debbie
McKean · presided at the bride's
table.
AtU!r a short boneymoon, the
Fowlers now reside at ·their new
home at 211 Fatrvlew Av.e.,
Wadsworth.

·OSU laser used to remove eye merribrane ·cf Meigs Countian
I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'J'Imes.Sentlael Staff
POMEROY - Modem medical
technology Is making Its mark on
many , lives Including one Meigs
_ Countian who
week
membrane . re·
moved from her
eye with the new

...

.. sbock· wave"
·
.

•

--

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
._
•

OF Of our Pc»meroy, Ohio

.

required to
iti!I!N
for 18M in each Kroger Store, except •
..,.;r.catr r1DC8d Wl tha ld. tt M do run out of an ~i1am, we will ofiet you your choice of I comp~rllbie item,
'lttlen avlillble. reflec:ting the seme saving~ Of a reincheck

Eoch of

,...oty

h"ai~M:*t

KROGER
WELCOMES
YOUR
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

which will entitle vou to purcha:le me adven'-d i1em 11 the
ldWIIIilltd price within :l&gt;dtvs.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Ever,1hing you buy at Kroger is 'guan!lntaed fOf .,.our tot.tl
utiefec:tion rQrdlesl of rnanuf&amp;elurer. If you are not setta..

fled, Kroger will replace VO\Jf itam with 1.~ same brand or 11
oorrc*able br~nd or refund yOur pur chase pt"ice.

Grade A.
Large Eggs

COPYRIGHT 1n3 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD 5UNDA.Y . JAN . 1r.. THROUGH SAT URDA Y, JAN .
22 , 198:1 . IN POMERO Y . WE RESERVE THE RICHT TO LIMIT

QUANTITIES . NONE SOlO TO DEAlERS .

•

Doz.

al

Gal.

...
.•

To The First 500 CustoMe.r.s
·16-oz. Pkg. Of · .
·KROGER WIENERt

e

Kroger 0.5%
-lowfat Milk

· ~·

.

· FREE~

KROGER

'

'

JANUARY 16th STARTING
AT 9:00•m

(POMEROY KROGER ONL

..
-.

vJ

0

.PINT RETURNABLE' aOnLES, .
DIET PEPSI,

...
.-

·· ··"'&lt;i,' .. ·

Decaffeinated RC
or R.C. Col-.

48

II
8-

Ctn.

Spotlight.
Bean
-Coffee

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
BONE IN

Fu.ll Cut
Round Ste

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

Holly Farms
Pick Of The Chix

Sliced
Bacon
1-lb.

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

·sec
~~

LIMIT 2 WITH AOOITION,.L rUitCHAU

Snyders
Potato Chips... ~:::

58

FREE·

B~king

..

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

••

GOUIMIT IIAND , SliCID

I
I

Cookttd Ham

•.•. ,$ 281
"'•· 3 PKGS. IIlii COUPON
LIIIT

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMIL V
-~~~ - Ill. It-loll. Ill. II. 1111
- I I lmiCIIIIITITIIII t.ICil IUD

Fresh
Broccoli

California
Navel Oranges

.·

(0000 ONLY AT 'f'OUIPO...OW kiOOH)

Potatoes .... :.. .. .20Ba~b.
113 SIZE

89C

BUY ONE
HI. CTJIIIt.
Deli
Potato Salad
AT fHIIIIOULAlii'IICI
GE'f.ONE
l ·l8. DILIJIOTATOIAI.AD

$

Schedule of acUvlties for the .
week of Jan. 17-2115 as follows: '·
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11:ll a .m .; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
11: ll a.m.; Chorus Practice, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
11: ll a.m.; Bingo, 1·2 p.m .
Thursday - Physical Fitness,
11: ll a.m.; Ceramic lnstructlon , 10
a.m.-noon.
Frlc:fay - Physical Fitness, 11: 30
a .m .; Bowling, 1-3 p.m. · '
The Senilr Nutrition Program
served a hot meal at noon each day.
CaD 92-2161 to make a reservation
for a meal no later than 9 a.m. the
day of the .reservatlon. The follow·
lng menu Is planned.for the week of
Jan. 17-21.
Monday - New•England boDed
dinner (ham, cabbage wedge,
carrots, potato ), applesauce with
cinnamon, biscuits, hot fudge
sundae.
Tuesday Vegetable soup/ crackers, grilled cheese sand·
. wich, sliced bananas and orange
sections, cookie.
I
Wednesday - Chicken livers
:with seasoned wild rice PUaf,
·three-bean salad, glazed carrots,

c

Donations sought &lt;

Each

GalUa County Welfare Depart. !111!1!1 Is asking for donation&amp;· of
; c~ and bousehOld Items tor
JohnJ!m family Their
..' tbe Qaren(e
,.
•bbrile was recently destroyed by
~

,me.

Fresh
.
$14$
Mushrooms .... ._c~-~~" .
.

.

.

&lt;W£N DlllY t.:JJ TO 9:JO

I

n

446-9510 .

PRICES IN EFFECT
THRU TUESDAY, JAN. 18
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

• SUNDAI t-7

OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 9:30
SUNDAY 1-7

The reel that

CLOTHING
CLEARANCE

popularized
no·backlash
flahlngl

•115
•315
•336
•415

GAR~GE

DOOR
OPENER

f ""'" '"' I 1 l HP IlOl A lo~M do1lultl _ J hu~ut~ ltyht h lltf
dtl ily oA i t• ot n itty lhllll , ~~~ S1l 1 -T C1 ~ 11 All lllerroal

::·; : :;:. ::·. sis888"'

25°/o
Off
HECK'S RE.GULAR PRICE

~·

HA•.ow.u r

PRICES IN EFFECT QNLY ~HILE QUANTITIES lAST!

t""·.

DEPT .

25°/o Off
HECK'S
2· 1 !tOUR fiU lDIO

REGULAR PRICE

AMBER GLO II

FIREPLACE LOG

'":.:·: ·:, ·,. .s·sc.Mak~ a 11 itte Ol!lhl mag1t Wll llAmber Glo Burns tll1~h l l~

ASSORTED LATCH HOOK
RUG .KITS

100% lllonsanta acrilln f'UI )'Jm. Suplrtexed process
lor bcJik ond twist Nttntioo. Desicnod printed in lull
color. I.Jtctt hook CIIMS.
to follow instructions.

FALL &amp;
WINTER
CLOTHING
(BlUE TAG ONLY)
.

0

~

• •

•SORRY, NO LAY-AWAY .ON.
r
QEARANCE MERCHANDISE ·
•ALL SALES FINAL
•

-

. ON THE HUNTING.
CLOTHES
,
.
IN RSPORTING GOODS DEPT.
c.~:

be

: Welfare Department's sbclal service 111111 at f46.3222.

.,'

'

·r

I

.

*4()0/o OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE

• obta'-1 by calling Gallla County

•

-

' '"' •

SPECIALS!!

!

'"

0

, informatiOn on clothiJI&amp; can

.I

\

.

t

•

o

'

,,, '

DOORBUSTER

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

.plums.
,_,...VIf ThursdaY .;... Glazed ham loaf,
sweet . potatoes,- Walforf salad,
rainbOW slterbet.
.
, .FridaY "'- Pork chops.,.mashed
P,Otatoel1 lima beans, hot rolls,

PeiCh oobbler.

0

I

~ r.

lb ...

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
rtPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

POMEROY - Meigs County ..
Senior Citizens Cent~r. Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Invites au elderly of the county to take pari In
activities at the center. The center
Is open Monday through Friday
from 8: 1:Kl a.m. to 4:ll p.m.

· Clorox·
Liquid Bleach

Pkg.

c

.'Jr-·r· .•\ t r·r
t

,M

Meigs senior center

Fresh Made
Pizzas

U.S. NO . 1 WISCONSIN
RUSSET

9 AM t o9 PM
Sa lu t d dv 9 A M to S PM

··r•tr
rt

The winter has been mUd - so
far - and reports continue to come
In on shrubs and flowers which ·
have lleen fooled by Mother.
Nature.
Mary Skinner reports tlia t she
had azalea blossoms on Dec. 1, and
a flowering quince on Christmas
Day.

FALL &amp;-WINTER.

Monda v thr u Fnda y

·J.\CROSS

a

.

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES
WITH DEll-BAKERIES ..
CHEESE, PEPPERONI.
MUSHROOM, SAUSAGE
OR DELUXE

SERVE 'N' SAVE

U.S. GOV'T INo;P~C~UD
FRESH GROUND

.

The Rutland EMS 1s planning an
open bouse sometime soon to give
Efrat Mort, an exchange student
residents a look at the newly
from Israel who has spent the past
renovated headquarters In the
six months here with Mrs. Gloria
Rutland Clvlc Genter.
Whlle most of the work has been · Riggs :and her family, . wUl be
completed by the volunteers, . returning home Mon~ay.
.
A farewell dinner ln"•her honor
there's still some pa~ting . to he
was held at the home of Mrs. Siella
finished and a little carpenter work
to be done.
, ·
Atkins and Miss Ruby Diehl with
Mrs. Riggs, Mark, Danny, Paul,
Lots of money was contributed on

Linda and Lisa Riggs attending.
Efrat showed pictures of her native
land and played and sang songs In
He"rew. Mr. and Mrs . Felix Alkire
joined the group for the social tllrne.

expect a lmock on your door by
neighbOrhood scout.
·
The scouts will be taking orders
only through Feb. 5 and then wli. :&lt;&gt;
• : returning with the cookies the week
• : &lt;)! •March 7. Residents pay for the
• · coclJdes when they are delivered,
: not when _they place their orders.'
: : The scouts earn badges and
· : premiums for cookie sales along
; : with 25 cents a box for their troop
- treasury. that money helps finance
trips, pay for parties, weekend .
outings, and special projects.
The ·cookie sale Is the scouts'

age
lb.

the proJect and the Rutland EMS
members now feel that It's about
lime residents had a look at just
what wsa done. We'D advise you of
the date for the open house.

·- beginning Friday at 4 p.m. 'you can

.

.

0

laser developed
by Richard H.
Keates, a Urtlverslty Hospitsl oph,thalmollog~J;t.
Dorothy Douglas, Lincoln
Heights, went to Columbus on
referred !rom a local spectaUst,
with cloudy v.lslon due to the
membrane, and returned later In
the day having dear vlslon fbr the
fi{st time In weekS.
~~u was a miracle! " exclaimed
Dorothy. Anyone with visUal problems can certainly appreciate her
enthusiasm. ·
· According to Dr. Keates, theOSU
laser Is Used prlmarlly for patients
ho beveiOp blinding membranes
following cataract surgery. The
laser clears away the membranes
more safely, · comtorlably, and
expensively than ever before, . .
~~~rna~ny patients a trip to the
01
room ar)d bll!s lor
overnight hospital stays.
The uswil procedure, we're told,
for removing the membranes Is
anesthetlzlng the patient and slit·
ling the membranes.
Usfug the new laser takes less •
than a second and Is a painless
procedure with the patient .being
able to see almost Instantly. Whlle
lasers are regularly used to burn ·
and srhlnk ~~$sue In eye surgery,
the new type developed by Dr.
Keates depends on a shock wave to
burst the membrane and push the
pieces aside.
It has been used at University
Hn$1tal since June. Incidentally,
Mrs. DouglaS was accompanied to
ColumbUs by WWa Maude Coates
who watched the whole procedure
on a monitor .

major tund-ralslng activity and
they would Uke to say In advance•'Than lis fqr your help! "

Tills Is girl scout cookie time and

PLUS DEPOSIT

'

The Sunday Times-Sentine i- Page- 8-7

Community corner

(contlnued fromB-2)

p.m. a t St. Phillip's Episcopal
Church. Clrclevllle , with Rev .
J ames Slack officiating the doublering ceremony.
The bride Is the daught er of J an
Sm a1 1ma n. Willi a m s port, and
Ke ith Smallman, Cincinna ti. The
groom Is the son of Donna Fowler,
Mason, a nd the late Richard S.
Fowler. He Is also the grandson of
Mr . a nd Mrs. Howard Bra nnon,

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipalis, Ohio-Paint Pleas.ant, W. Va.

January 16, 1983

.,
•

.... .

·.....$3799

#T0-79
REG. $49.96

MUNSEY DB.UXE
TOASTER OVEN

.

tlllllf so you
for fist ewn
up. to 6 slices
"i.Oi::iiolkl"!i~.~:~--tnd~ broils up to

Solid 1t1t1
don't hM

#25

\

.

1

REG. 113.96

NORTHERN 1200 POCKET

Plf!'Ol BLOW

DRYE~~~

�f.

· Ohi~Poi~t

Times-Sentinel

Phiasqnt,

w.. v~. .

Jcinuary 16•. 1983.

Calendar

orts

SUNDAY .

POMEROY - A yearly con- .
gregatlonal mt'etlng followed by .
a potluck dinner WUl be held.
Sunday following the 10; 30.a.m. .
service at Grace Episcopal
church, Pomeroy.

men's Monday noon luncheon
business meettng .
. . CHE;SHIRE .-c A revival will
begin Monday a t Poplar Ridge
Church with Norman Taylor.
There wlil be singing njghUy.
The public ls Invited tD attend.

POMEROY ~ Meigs Genealogical Society .wlll meet at 2
p.m. Suilday a t Meigs Museum.
A work session
will be heln
,;;_

__

is ·having a

•
Winter Clearance '
.

.

735 2ND AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OijiO
. . PHONE 446-2601
.·
STORE HOURS: ·
8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. · ·
l
PRICES EFFECTIVE
,. SUN.• JAN. 16th THRU SAT., .JAN. 22nd ·

--- &amp;tc. o

MIDDLEPORT Business a nd
Professional Women's Club wlll
meet Monday at 7: lJ p.m. a t
Middleport Library. The program will he on the found ation
with Farte Kennedy, chairman
and her committee In charge:

LECI'A - Essie and Lewis
Lee w111 hold serviCes Sunday at
7 p.m. at Lecta Tabernacle. Ttle
Public Is Invited.
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Jotln
Fellure will speak at Bailey
Chapel Church, S.R. 218, at 7
' p.m . Sunday. There w111 be
singing by John and Wan·da
Fellure. The public is Invited to
. attend.

·--- ·

North .Carolina ·tops
Virginia five, 101~95

I '

. MONDAY- CHESTER PTO
will not meet due to the schools
- being Closed · In observance of
Martin Luther King Day. The
next regular m eeting will be
Feb. 21.

CROWN CITY -'- Rev. Jay
Jarvis will be guest speaker at
VIctory Baptist Ghurch Sunday
at 7 p.m .

1t"imts· jentintl

.'

ranked

.· EleventhNorth. Carolina
handed host VIrginia Its first home
court defeat In nearly four years .
Saturday, 101-95
VIrginia was rail ked second In the
most recent Associated Press poll.
The win.left the Tar Heels wtth a
11-3 record,lncludlngnln~ triumphs
In a row. VIrginia dropped to 11-2 on
the year.

"QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

.

Kent!IQ, CMU67
KENT, Ohlo{AP) -Dave Zeigler
pumped In 24 points and Kent State
held the Mid-American Conference's No. 1 scorer, Melvin McLaughlin, to 8 points Saturday, trtnUntng
Central Michigan,~ In coUege
basketball.
The Flashes, 2-2 ln theconfetence'
and 8-5 overall, pulled away In the
second half behind the scoring of
Zeigler and subs\ltute Anthony
Grier, who had 16 pointS.

POMEROY ~ Winding TraU
Garden Club will meet Monday
at 7: 30 p.m. at Meigs Museum .
Margaret Parker · will be
hostess.

GALLIPOLIS - Bell Cbapel
church will have guest speakers
. Sunday. Rev. Alven Carico will
speak at the 10: 30 a .m. service
and Rev. Tommy Kincaid at ttle
· 7 p.m. service. The publlc Is
Invited to attend.

•

Hair Remedies
i I
like to
their staff
to you .
•
First. Lisa Brooks from Wellston. a former graduote of Buckeye Hills
Career Center. Lisa is highly trained in permanent waving and precision
cutting.
Second is Chris Reynolds, she has had 13 years of eiptirience as a
cosmetologist and is a former salon owner. She is trained in hair color- 1
ing.and trend cuttin&amp; for men and women. Chris would like'to welcome
all her former clients to Raphael's and invite new ones in to get acquainted .
Third .is Cindy Sexton, a graduate of Nationwide Beauty Academy, and
now is manager and instructor of Raphoel's. Cindy is also a substitute
,instructor of cosmetology at Buckeye Hills Career Center. She special·
izes in unisex haircutting, perms and colorin&amp;. - .
Last is Suzanne Hall, also .a former craduate of Nationwide Buuty
Academy, Clllumbus, and Fredrick's Buuty Academy in Sprincfield,
where she was formerly employed. Suzanne has just joined the sblff at
Raphael's and is highly trained in hair paintincand precision cuttinc.
The next time you are down to the mall in Gallipolis, stop by et 44
Court St. to visit the stylists at Raphael's or call at 446-7090. Open
·MOn.-Sat.
~

FRONTIER
Family Restaurant
Next to Hulze.r Medical .
Center on Rt '36 West

. GALLIPOLIS Gallla
· County Historical Society w111
meet at 2: 30 p.m. Sunday at St.
· Peter's Episcopal Church: The
bQard of directors will meet at 1
· p.m. Sunday. The group will
·hold Its annual business meeting
with a election of o!ficers. Paul
· Mossman will present "Down
Memory Lane." The public Is
welcome to .attend .

Special
Breolclost Specials
Ea. Three Wagon Wheel

#l. One

· Pancakes, Bacon or Sausage ..... l.79

2. Two £us, llashbrowns.
Bi scurt. or Toast .... .......... ....... 1.79
N3. Two £us, Bacon. Hashbrowns,

GALLIPOLIS - Trledstone
· Baptist Ctlurctl will observe
Youth Sunday this week with
music and devotions at 10: 45
a.m. and a talent program at
6:45p.m.

-_i:2

114. Two fQ:s, Bacon or Sausage,
Two pieces of French Toast ...... 2.49 ·

Ball Slate 91, WMU 68

CAROIJNA STEAL - University of North
Carolina's Jim Braddock (24) steals the ball from
Unlvenlty o! VIrginia center, Jim Braddock (24)
atea11 the bill !rom Unlvenrlty o! VIrginia cenlel',

~

· WASHINGTON (AP) -

i1f,\.-t:N,

, - -f.·'·'

l

POMEROY - Meigs County
Association ot Township Trustees and Clerks will meet
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at Salls-·
bury Elementary ~hoot. Retrestunents will be served and
all county elected o!ficlals are
Invited to be guests.
GALLIPOILS -, Dr. M. Suzanne Mlze will speak . at the
Business and Professional
Women's Club meeting Monday
at 6::.! p.m. at Duffs. She will ,.
address "General
.
Related Risk Factors and Coronary H~ Djseases.'' This .
. marks the ' group'~ annual
"~ ..rnee\llli-" 11GU€S! ~:'tbe .'·"'' 1'• •·1'· ~
meettng wlii'Jie Pam Simmon!, ,
district &amp;Jordlnator for the
HeBrt ASsocla tlon.
--~

GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Stephen WUIIamson, east region
executive o!ficer of Diocese of
Southern Ohio, will speak at St.
Peter's Episcopal Churchwo-

] Gallia bookmobile

period.
The Vlklngs, who had the ball for
barely 1 ~ mlnut~ to that time, then
scored when Ted Brown swept
around len end for 18 yards and a
touchdown.
·

1·

I

GALLIPOLIS- The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library will
be at the following places the week
of Jan. 18 to Jan. 22.
Monday - Ewtngton, 1: 15-1:45 .
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m.; Adney
Rd., 2: 45-J: 15 p.m .; Vinton P.O.,
' 3: '10-4: 30 p.m.; Bidwell, 5-6 p .m.;
. Harrisburg, 6: 1lHl: 30 p.m.
· Tuesday - Eno, 2: 30-3 p.rrt,;
Rece, 3: lli-3:.20 p.m .; A!rlca Rd. ,
3: 3(},1: 45 p.m.; Kyger I, 3:504: 20;
Kyger U, 4:.254: 40; Roush Lane I,
n, 4: 45-5: 15; , Cheshire I, 6-6::.!
p,m.; Cheshire n,.6:35-7 p.m .
Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15-2: 30
p;m .; Smith, 2: 45-3: 15. p.m,.; My3:3(),3;45 p.m.; Mercervllle,
4-4: 00 p.m.; Burd, 4:40-5 p.m.; ·
Crown City P .O., 5:15-6 p.m .;
Eureka, 6: 15-6: 45· p:m: ~ .. ·-~Thufsday - Watts, 2: 30-2: 45
p.m.; Brick School Rd., 2:~3: 10
p.m.; ·Addavllle Elementary, 3: 153:45 p.m.; St. Rt. 7 - Roadside
Rest), 3: 155-4:10 p.m.; Georges Cr.
Rd . I, U, 4:15-5 p.m.; Bulavllle Tr.
Ct., ~:30-6 p.m .; Plantz Subdv.,
6: :IJI.G: 45 p.m. .
·.
• Friday - Kerr, 3-3:(10 p.m.;
Buell Ridge, 4-5:.M p.m.; Kay Dr. I,
U, 5: 15-5: 45 p.m .; Bob McCormick
Rd., U: 15 p.m.
.
'Pre«hooo storytlme will begin
Jan. l9 and 20. 'The prosram will be
held at 7 p.tn. Wednesda)'ll and
:Ill: 30 a.m. 1bursdays.
. Tile Ilbrary II accepting SUUHtklal llr praent P~· Con·t lct. Kendra Copn, at 446-~AD
wtth•W I~""·
·

FRANKIE WIENERS

$7499

12

oz. ggc

·

,

' ;

,.

1$4499
Over 40 late models to choose from
SPEOAL AT

.

WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS. SEE:,
TODAY 446-0069 or ~91
,,.

Bill Gene Johnson
or Terry Hamilton .

1640 EASTERN AVE.

WATCH FOR

.

GRA&amp;'! PAM·- Washington JWolrlns' Alvin Garrett (89) grabe a
paM lor another Redsldns' score In NFC playoff adlon II* RFKStadlum
Saturday In Wuhlngton agalnM &amp;he Minnesota Vlldnp. The'Sidnswon
the game 21·7. VIking Jarvis Redwine (22) aUempts to defend. (AP

Laaerpltoto).

(~)

MIAMI
- San Diego
quarterback Dan Fouts doesn't
claim to be a defensive genius, but
he offers a simple .solution to
stopping the Chargers offense one he's already proven is easter
sald thandone.
"No. 1, I'd stop the quarterback,'~
said Fouts, who averaged a record
325.9 yards per game during the

By CHUCK MELVIN

.

·

Thewtnner~pl~t!J~wljmero!

Saturday's Mlnriesiii'a-Washlngton
game In the~ National Football
Conference championship game
Jan. 22.Tbe NFC wtnner plays the
America n Football ' Conference
champlonJan.30·1 ntheSuperBowl
at Pasadena, eaut'.
.

~

·'

Am~an

strike-shortened NationaiFoootball
Diego In in
Conference
League season. " After that, I'd try to
playoff semifinal , . 12: 00 p.m . EST
find a way to stop (running back)
Sunday.
"
ChuckMun.cte. I!youcandoboth~f
"1bis, of cou~ . w91 be the big
those, you re going to stop this
test, toseeourlmp~ementagalnst
Chargers offense."
the No. 1 o!!ensl~ team, " sald
The .task of shutting down, or a t
Mlaml CoachDonSll~la.whoseclub
least containing, the NFL 's most
dropped a memorJ lile 41-38 overpotent offense this weekend lleswtttl ' time decisiOn to the'Chargers 1n an
the Miami Dolphins, who host San
AFC semifinal a year ago.

·

r

tw:

,OUR FULL PAGE AD '
IN WEDNESDAY'S PAPER
•

·,

.

Steelers.
"1bere are a lot of good receivers
In the league and I'd say Jefferson
and Lofton are right up there,"
Thurman said. "We'll be OK If we
get a good pass rush on (quarterback) Lynn Dickey."
DaUas Is a touchdown favorite
over the Packers, who are In the
playoffs for the first time since 1972.
It Is Dallas' 16th playo!! a!lPelu-ance In the past17 years.

Dolphins set to stop·NFIJ.'s
most potent _off~nse todat \

you,:'

renchtoWn Car .Co..

about 11. Those guys (Jefferson and ·
Lofton) can burn you."
Asked lf he thought Green Bay
would stay •away from his area
because of his 171nterceptlons In two
years, ·w alls said, "A team like
Green Bay wUI ·come at you
regardless of who you are. Sure,
they'll come at me without wonderlng who I am."
Walls, a free agent out of
Grambling in 1981, said, "It won't be
a boring game."
.. ;.i•., f.,
Walls will be covering Jefferson
most of the game, whlle Dennis
Thurman will be responsible for
Lofton.
Thurman said the pair remmded
hlm of Lynn Swann and John
Stallworth of _the Pittsburgh

DALLAS (AP)-UtheGreenBay
Packers.tryfor the big play Sunday
against the Dallas Cowboys In their
National Football League secondround playoff game, they must deal
with a secondary, led by Everson
Walls, thathaslntercepted18paSses ·
this season.
And cornerback Walls expects
them· to try.
"Why shouldn't they?" asked
. Walls. "1bey have two of the best
recelversofalltlme (JotlnJefferson
and James LoftOn) . I'q~ sure they
WUl go deep at any time during the
game."
Walls, who Intercepted seven.
. passes to lead the NfL In that
categoryforthesecondcor\secutive
season, said, ','We can't be dumb

AP Sports Wrller
Impossible, particularly In ttle case of the $3.5 million
that can do the things that McDonald cando, plus they
CLEVELAND (AP) _ 1'be Cleveland Browns
~~slneau, Rutigliano said.
tlave the necessary experience when they get Into the
entered the 1982 football season hoping a pair of prized
I think he ~xpected too muctl 0f himself," • ·playoffs to win the big games,'' Rutigliano said.
young Unebackers ,would tum their defense Into a
Rutigliano said. "He could never have lived l'lp to
Another blg challenge on offense next seasOn, as on
teared anlmal. They'll enter the 1!183 season with the · everything we expected of hlm, and I think the salary· deiense, rests along thellne. O'nterTom DeLeone, 33,
same hope.
· ·
·
made It aU the more dramatic. I think hewas trylngt9
and tackle Doug D~eken, 34, both suffered through the
Browns o!fictals, like many others around the learn so muc~. he lost the lnstlnctlveness you need as
year. DeLeone was ill throughout most of the
National Football League, are writing off 1982 the
a linebacker.
post-strike period, and Dleken played wlth a broken
Year of the Strike, ayearthatgaverookle linebackers
So, the coach sald, the best Is yet to come for both
hand.
P 1 ~yers.
"I think we're going to have to ?,"aft a couple young
Tom Cousineau and Chip Banks IJttie opportunity to
learn about Ufe In the NFL.
, .
I see linebackers coming back next year and
offet\slye linemen for the future, Rutigliano said.
"We really didn't cross as many bridges as we hopefully giving us the kind of d6mlrtance that the
Aside from the Intriguing quarterllack decision,
would like to,'' said Coach Sam Rutigltano. "As you
position_can give
he s&amp;ld. "The defense, for the
RutiglianO seems to be planning on returning, his
look at It ~fenslvely~ there we!'!'! a lot of things that very first Ume since I ve been here In five years, has
starters to the otfenslve· glamour positions. Mike ·
. hurt us. Most o! lhiltwils players who didn't get the
an opportunity to be the klndofdo~!"antdefen~that
Pniltt, na~ by Injuries In 1982, will start at
necessary experience, and some key players who .wlns!or~?uyear~.andyearout..
fu~back,andCharlesWhltewlllconttnueathalfback.
were hurt."
·
.
Some tinkering wfil be needed on defense,
RlckyFeacherandDaveLoganarebelngeounted ·
The!llostdevastatlnglnjurywastolinebackerCiay Rutigliano said, particularly al~ the line, where
on as starting wide receivers agalrt, whlje Ozzie
Matthews, a former No. 1 pick who was supposed to
Marstlall Hl!l"rls played well sporadically and former
Newsome will return at tight end.
anchor tbe Browns' young llnebacklng corps. He
Notre . Dame linebacker Bob Golic became a
"I think we have to bolster the (offenSf) wlth
broke his ankle 1n the season opeQer against Seattle . s~rprlsingly good nosetackle. .
·
speed," Rutlgltano said. "1bat doesn't mean we' re
. The offensive picture, how_ever, ts much less clear,
not satisEed with everybody that we have now. But I
and did not return untU late li\ the year,
With Dick Ap'lbrose as the only ptoven veteran starting at quarterback. Barring a trade of veteran · relate Co the· Pittsburgh Steelers, who have Walter
among Cleveland's tront seven defenders, Cousineau, Brlail S!pe, which Rutigllano currently does not
Abercrombie and Greg Hawtliome to replace Frank
who came to the NFL after three'seasons In Canada, fore;ee. the Browns wUl have to ,choose between
PoUard, or Jim Smith and Calvbl Sweeney to replace
and Banks, who came to Cleveland as the third person Slpe s heritage and Paul McDonald s potential.
Lynn Swann or John ~~llworth. I think we need that
chosen In the l982 draft, were left to fend for ·
The edge belongs to McDonald, who tookoverwhep
·kind of quality depth.
themselves.
Slpe sputtered @!~r tbe strike and then helped slip the
As he reviews 1982, though, Rutigliano sees one
Cousineau responded by leading the team In tackles . Browns Into a II!Jyo!t spot at 4-5 with two victories In .
even more glating weakness on both offense and
1 three game~.
and Banks was named the league's Defensive Rookie · th~
.
aefense: .
~
.· of the Year, "but neltber played up to his preseason
You n notice Richard Todd and Dan Fouts and
"We. haY!! to rontlnue to. Improve the overall
billing. Uvtng up to that. however, would have been Terry Bradshaw and ,D annyWhlte- tb?_se are guys
strenglhandphyslcalcoJtd!t~of.ourteam ," heS&lt;lld.

ers,

•

Packers, Cowboys square off

as

•

half and never traDed In sending
Ohio to Its fii'St MAC defeat. Mjaml
Is &amp;-7 overall and 3-1 In the MAC,
whlle Ohio falls to 8-3 overall and 3-1
In the conference.

Cleveland Browns looking ahead to 1983 campaign~

This beautiful intermediate is dark red with matching 50-50 seating. Equipped w~h
cruise control, /tilt whee!, AM-FM-Stereo, wire wheel covers and' only 18429 miles
Compare.. The Pnce IS Rtght
'
·
.

I

University to a 73-60 victory over
Ohio University In a Mld-Ainerlcan
Conference basketball game
Saturday.
Miami built a five-point lead at the

OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Guard
CralgTubbs pumped Ina game-high
22 points to. lead Miami {Ohio)
•

John

sota's defense for 185 yards and a
touchdown and set up two scoring
passes by. Joe The.lsrnann as the
Washington Redsklns beat the
VIkings 21-7 Saturday, and advanced Into the National Football
·Conference chaqrpionshlp game.
Rigglns carried 37 times, one
short of the National · Football
League playoff record, and gave a
deep bow·to the crowd as he left the
field · seamds before !he -game
en~. Tbelsmann completed 17 of
28 ' passes for 213 yards, 11\cludlng
touchdowns of 3 yards to tight end
Don Warren and 18 yards to wide
receiver Alvin Garrett.
· 'Fhe Redsklns, WhoSe only loss
during the strike-shortened ninegame season was to Dallas, will play
either the Cowboys or Green Bay In
next Saturday's conference ctlam·
plonshlp game. The Packers play In
Dallas Sun!lay In the NFC' s other
second-round playo!! game.
Riggins, who had rolled up a
playoff- record 119 yards on 25
carries a week ago, when the
.Redsklns opened their pursuit of the
Super Bowl with a 31-7 romp over
Detroit, was virtually unstoppable
In the first half against the Vlklngs.
He gained 75 yards on 19.rustles as
the Redsklns opened a 21-7 lead.
Two of the yards came on a
scoring plunge on !oilrth-and-inches
situation for Washington's second
touchdown and a 14-0 lead with one
minute remaining In tbe opening

116. Any Omelette ....................... 2.50

REJECT - Eddie Williams of the Unlvel'lllty of Connecticut has a •
two point attempt at the basket knocked from hiB hands by Fred JII'Own
o! Georgetown during the flrat haU o! their game at the Capital Centre IIi
Landov~r, Md., Saturday aftemooo. The Hoyas got }IQI!IIessloo of the
baD and tumed It Into a two point Georgetown play. GeorcetowJi won ~
74-53 after leaving the court at half time with a 33-a3 tie. (AP
Laserphoto ).

Tubbs Nets 221n Win

. RlgglJrs thundered throughoMlnne-

POMEROY - Meigs County
Association o! Township Trustees and Clerks will meet
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at Salisbury Elementary School.
/. 1

Ralph SamJIIIOII (110) during 11rst haU action o! the
UJI!C-UVA Atlantic Coast Coo!erence oollege basketball game In Cllarloltesvllle, Saturday. NC won,
101-911. (AP Laserphoto) ...

MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Ray
McCallum scored 25 points and
moved Into fourth place on the Mld
American -Conference's all-time
• scorlngleaders.llst Saturday as Ball
State crushed Western Michigan
91-68.
McCaUum now has scored 1,774
points during his career. That puts
hlm just 12 behind Paul Dawkins of
. Northern Illinois for third place on
the conference scoring ttst.

Washington advances, 21-7

Y

1-N. REMEDII:S

#5. Two fQ:s, Honey Bun,
and Small Juice ........ ........... .. 1.79

MONDAY

0

~"i \i.lft-lj&gt;

and Toast ......... .............. ...... 2.49

POMEROY - Meigs County
· Church of Christ Men's Fellow. ship will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m . at Zion Church of Christ.

'

.

. -

,,

--

-

~ ·'"':-

-"":

.. .

"I~ was quite obvious against Pittsburgh and Los ·
Angeles ... we were physically outplayed." .
The powerful running of Los Angeles rookie Marcus
Allen in Cleveland's27-10 playoffloss.and the Raiders'
constant pressure on McDonald signaled the Browns'
lack of strength In the trenches.
"We need to .be a lot bigger, a lot stronger,"
Rutigliano said . .
. OVershadowing all of 1982's ups and downs was the
strike, which Rutlgltino believes took the fun out of
the game for many people closer to the game than
fans. The emotional burnout expressed by San
Francisco Coach Bill Walsh and Philadelphia c~ch
Dick Vermeil can be traced directly to ttiE' strike, he
said.
.
_ ·
·~You can 't !!!ll me that BUI Walsh hasn't been
through hard times before," Rutigliano said·. "He
knows trial and trtbulatlon.- So does Dick Vermeil.
"It's tougher now. There's a lot more pressure on
coaches now than five years ago. The strike- would
you ever believe that we would go through that kind of
ex~lence? And for us (the Browns), somebody blew·
the whistle and we went .and played New England,
and then two days later we played Dallas, a nd then we
played San Diego, and then we played Cincinnati, and
then we played Pittsburgh, and then we played .
Houston, and !ben they tossed a coin and we played
Pittsburgh.
·
·
·
" And then everybody said, 'You backed Into the
playo!!s.' That's tough on coach~hen people don't
have more Intelligence and understanding than that.
It's unfair."
•
· ..

-

_::._•~----+'·,·.-.,.--~-.'

--~-

-

'

•

..

,

,.,

�--

.'

. Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

Bulldog~

.Jan.-y 16, 1983

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

beat Big .fllue at h~zzer, 50-48

GALLIPOLIS - Woody Mayle, 12-8, Md outscored the home team,
Lane's layup (3: ll} gaveGaWa a
Athens' 64 senior center, .was
15-8, In, the second stanza. .
46-44 advantage. Mayle's 't!pln
supposed to 11ft the ball inside for a
With GaWa's starting live backln (3: 16} tied It once ag~
layup at the buzzer.
the lineup In the third qUarter,
Baker got a two-pointer followln,g
It didn't Work out that way.
GAHS, behind Tim Madison, Lynn a steal (2: 42). Sheets popped In a
Good defense by host Gallipolis,
Sheets and Laile, caml! stOnning long jumper (2: 19) and that set the
with the score tied 48-au; forced 5-8
back from a stx point defiCit (:n-24,
stage for the game's winning goal,
senior guard Brad Baker to shoot a
with 6: 19 left In the quarter} to take · ·
Excbange Tumovel'!l
15·foot jumper ~;~s time r&lt;~n out.
a 36-34 adv&lt;~ntage.
·
Athens called·time with 2:071eft.
It was all net.
Sheets' tlpln (3: 18) and Lai1e's Tlf'Bulldogs, however, Jostthe b!ln
Thus; !\!hens came from behind · layup (1:54} gaveGAHS the upper on a turnover. GAHS worked the
late in the game to hand Coach Jim
hand. Chris Ellcessor's 20 footer. clock down to 1: 00, but lost It on a
Osborne's Blue · Qevils a 50-48
from the corner at the buzzer gave ,tlirnover.
Southeast~rn :Ohio League basketGAll$ a 40-36 advantage going into
Athetls ran the clock down to 12
ball loss before an overflow crowd
the final eight minutes.
seconds, called time &lt;~nd set up an
In the GARS gym Friday night.
Redic Fourth Period
Inside pllly for Mayle.
The victory left 'Coach· Fred .
When Mayle or Bruning couldn't
In that hectic fourth perlixl·,
Gibson's Bulldogs with a 7·5 season
here's what happened.
' get open, Baker becanie the
record . ARS moved within a
Steve Bruning, who was stx of 17 game's hero with hJs 15-footer at
half-game of league·leading Iron·
for !be night (he was guarded by
the buzzer.
ton ·.by Improving its conference
Tim M~n the first half before
Mayle . led all scorers with 21
mark to 6-2.
GAHS switched to zone In the
points. Bruning was held to 14, but ·
Gallipolis, now 3\2 games out of
second half} popped one In from · led the Bulldogs on the boards with
first pli!Ce with only four left in . downtown to .make It 4().38, Lane 13.
·
league play, dropped to 3-5 In the · countered with a layup at the 7: 02
Athens hit 21 of 49 field goal
SEOAL and 55 overall.
mark.
attempts for 42 percent. The
Exciting Contest
Bl'll1lln.g got a tlpln (S: 36j and Bulldogs were eight of16 at the foul
The score was tied eight times
Carl Matheny a short Jumper line for 50 percent. Athens picked
.and the lead exchanged hands 10 ' (4: 43) to lalot the count at 42-all.
off 27 rebounds and had seven
times during the 32-minute defenMadison's short jumper gave turnovers.
sive struggle.
' GAHS a 4442 le;~d (4:25). Leon
,Lane, despite missing a quarter'
Gallipolis led 12-11 after one
Allen hit a baseline. Jumper (3: 47} and two minutes becau~ of foul
period.
and It was 44-all.
trouble, finished with H points. He
Jamie Lane, Gallla's 6-6 senior
center, picked up.his third personal
foul with 1:58 left in the first period.
Lane sat out t!tr next 10 minutes.
During that tiine, Athens came
from one down to take a 26-20
halftime lead into the lockerroom.
The visitors controlled the boards,
GALLIPOLIS - j)omebody up
Gallla on top, 32-ll, but Gerig's two
there must like Coach Jack Payton
charity tosses (: 17) tied It at 32-all.
and his Gallipolis Blue Imps.
Then came Carcy's winning goal.
For the third consecutive game,
Athens had a chance to win It In
the GAHS reserves won 1n over·
regulation play when GARS called
,time, this time a 34-32 decision at · time with no time outs remaining . .
the buzzer over Athens' visiting
Athens missed the technical shot
Bulldogs here Friday night.
with one second left, sendln,g the
ALL GAMES
Kev Carty, 6-1sophomorecenter,
game Into overtime.
TEAM
. W L P OP
scored as the final horn sounded to
Gerig paced Athens with is
Wheelersburg
10 I 812 623
give the Blue Imps their eighth win
Pt . Pleasa nt
points. Bostic had 14 for Gallipolis.
'1~Portsmouth
in 10 starts. The victory left GAHS
Box score:
Ironton
7 5 644 630
In u11disputed first place in the
ATHENS (:Ill) .7 O.an 3·2..1: Gerig &amp;;J.J5;
Athens
7 '5 731 7ffi
Northwest
7 6 752 132 reserve standings with a 6-2 mark. McCalllster 1.{).2; Leonard 2.{).4; Abdella ·
Bllcklo ~. TOT.U.S ~
Gallipolis
5 5 558 512
The defeat left Athens 7-5 overall
GAJlli'OUS (S4) - Bostic 7.().14: Berg.
UJgan
6 7 T15 757
ooU - ; Carty J..Q.6; DressellH : Pasquale
and 44 in league play.
Jackson
5 7 712 707
1.0.2; --Bmver 1.0.2. TOTALS 1&amp;-~34.
WaVPrly
5 7 723 761
Ga!llpolls
led
10-li
after
one
Byquarteno:
Alexander
4 6 G39 67Q
period, and 16-11 after two quar·
Athens
6 5 6U 4-32 ·
Washington CH
2 10674 797
Meigs
1 10 504 700
10, 6 ' 8 lh1&lt;
U.rs. The Imps were stili on top, Galllpolls
Non.SEOAL resuiL"i:
2().17, goln,g Into the final stanza.
Alexander 79 FederaJ.Hocklng 78 (OI)

Imps win third straight
overtinle contest, 34 to 32

FINAL ~IEETING - After six years and some '12 games ot
hard-nosed basketball, Athens' Steve Bruning (42) and Gallla's Jamie
Lane (33) completea their high school competition aga!Mt each other
Friday night. Both tallied 14 points In the SEOAL contest. Athens won,
5048. - Keith WUson photos.

Cage
Standings

i :; :

=:

Circ\evUie 86 Washington CH. 51
Wheelersburg i1 Northwest 5B
Pt. Pleasant 67 Barboursville 60
TEAM

\\'LPOP

Ironton
A.thens
Ulgan

6 I 375 319
6 2 501 440

53~454
4 4 515 523

Waverly
Galllpolls

3 5 4Z7 4lf&gt;
3 5 446 4o1i
0 7 :ll4 475
!7 27 3051 3051

Jackson
Meigs

TOTAU;
Fl;day's results:

Athens 50 Gallipolis

~

Jackson 70 Waverly 69

l.ogiin rio Meigs tj8
SEO!\L lill!ERVES
W ·L
Gallipolis
6 2
Ulgan
5 3
Ironton
!I 3
Athens
4 4
Waverly
4 4

TEAM

P OP

318 310
377 332
266 2li4
321 2!16
284 783

4 4 306 319

Jackson

Meigs
0 7 267 •345
!'7 2'1 !139 !139
TO'I'AL'i
Friday's results:
GalllpolJs 31. Athens 32 (ot )
Jackson 40 Waverly 37
Logan 55 Meigs 32
Tuesday's games:
Boyd County at Ironto n
Fairland at Non hwest
Alexander at Belpre ·

Frtday's games:
Jackson at Meigs

Logan at Athens
lronton at Waverly
Pt. Pleasant at H uJTtcane
Madison Pla1ns at Washingt OO"i':H
Northwest at VaUey
~...
Nelsonville-Y ork at Alexander

Jap.

BEST GAME OF YEAR - Gallla's Tim Madison drives with a .
detennined look against visiting Athen,s Friday: Madison lallied 12
points, picked oft stx rebounds and played his best defensive game of

~~wwn.

·

:COLUMBUS- A new 19-lnch
color TV will be given away as a
gr;tnd prize dur~ng Bob Evans
Farms Family Night a( Rio
Giande College Saturday. Jan. 22.
The Rio Grande Redmen cagers
take on Tiffin University at 7:30
p.Jn. In Lyne Center on the Rio
Gr&lt;~nde College campus.
. ·There will be a special halftime
competition, especially for chlid·
ren, and approximately 40 aMItional prizes from meals-on-thehouse at a Bob Evans Farms
Restaurant to free ·canoeing at the
Bob Evans Farm will be awarded
to Rio Grande fa ns during the
s~lalhalftlme ceremony.
,
Free tickets · for this night of
tarhlly enterlalnment are stlil
av;lllable at the Bob Evans Saus- ·
.•age Shop on the Bob Evans Farm·
n~ar Rlo · Grande ·or 'at the
Sleakho)ISe on Eastern Avenue in
Gallipolis.
'
.

'ciaims
World CuJ,
.
:5amUNs.TSCBAGGuNS, Austl!la (AP) -Italy'sDorlsdeAgostlnl
was timed in 1 minute, 24.57 seconds
ai·SIIe won the seventh Worki.Cup
race of h~r career, edging
.I?fince' s Elesabeth Chaud and he;:_
·coimtrywoman, CarollneAttla, who
~third.

had four rebounds.
''Madison and Sheets added 12
points apiece. Sheets led GAHS on
the boards with eight rebounds. ,
'
Madison had six.
· GAHS was 23 of 45 from the field
lor 51 percent. The Devils were two
of five at the foul line. GAHS had 29
rebounds and 10 turnovers.
·Wheelersburg Nexl
,·
Gallipolis played' Northwest Sat·
!lfday night. Next game Is at
Wbeelersburg on Jan. 22. '
Athens wilt host Logan Friday.
Box score:

REGULAR TO S75,

-r

Wilderness' bods
by \\OLVERINE'

Skidmore 1.().2; Clark~ Edelmann 1.().2.
TOT.U.S IS-H&amp;

Leather lined
Insulation. Full
c ushion comfort.

Byquarie"'
Athens
Galllpolls

11 15 10 14-50
12 8 :II J!-ol8

'

OXFORD (AP) .,-Miami Unlver- .
slty handed Ohio University Its first
Mid-American Conference hard·
wood ~tbackhereSaturday, 73-ID
The loss left the Bobcats with an
8-3 season record. OU dropPed to 3-1
In conference play.
·

Mbn. &amp; Fri. 'til 8 p.m.
Tues.-Wed.-Tbur. &amp; Sat.

•

.!!

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Men's . i(~t
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FRYE .
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BOOTS
S}S to $5Q

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300 Second, Gallipolis

Gl
II

Cl.le Sale • Sale • Sale • Sale

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HELP ME our HERE- Toulh defense by North
Anttiony Blackburn (11), at left, 8nd Ken

5 C• 0 F

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15.00

the Pirales Friday nlghl.

·llannan Trace in
~4-50 loop victory
MERCERVILLE - Host Han·
nan Trace kept pace with North
GaWa, reversed the visitors' lead In
tPe fourth quarter, then posted a
~ Southerq. Valley Athletic
Conference basketball win here
Friday night.
. The Wildcats' scortngsurgecame
prlrfl&lt;lrlly !rom free-throws as liT
netted 10 consecu11ve points !rom
the charity line in the final minutes
ar !he game. Eight or those were
mactebyWUdcatJeffBarnes, whose
II Pmtsled liT In scoring.
','It was a good, total team effort,"
said liT mentor Mike Jenkins after
the contest. "Everyone did their job.
We had to beat this team, because
North GaWa is a quality team."
: With five seconds Ielt·ln the hall.
the Pirates tied It up, 21:21. A
!1-ee-tlltow before the closln,gbuzzer
put the Pirates 011 top 22-21.
• NG's Mike Mays led all scorers
Wlth ~ points on 10 ·field goals.
Teammate Matt Kemper was
~ponslble for 12 Pirate points.
· Kemper,whohadbeenaveraglng
:&amp;! points a game In the Pirates' last
two wins over Eastern Md Hannan,
W.Va., was held down by dogged
work by liT's Rick Randolph.
• Double-flgUre scoring for HT was
also supplled by Robbie Brumfield's
12 and Mike Rossiter's 10.
; Goln,g into the third period, the
Wildcats began narrowing the
NGHS margin. NG led midway
· tiJrough the final period, 46-39, but
Jenkins' squad carne back to take.a
4S-46Jeed. AMaysbasketat2: 29tled

It, 4&amp;48.

0

However, liT started scoring

!Ium the charity line, recording an

eventn,g tolal of13 one-pointers on 17
~ttempts

for 76 percent. Fouls and
Barnes' accurate free-throw shoot·

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

N~al (15) force Hannan Trace's Robbie Brumlleld,
center, tomakeaJumppa!!SdurlngHJ''sSUOupeeto! ·

GaDia's

luarct

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t
a Sanders AU t0 S.a Ies
Save On Price - Save on Sales TaxFirst &amp; Sycamore .

Phone 446-8640

1983

HANNAN TIIAVE (51) - _ , . . . 5.().10;
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071x15. 30.81
H71x15. 32.81
'L71x15. 32.81

446. 3801

209~pper River·Rd. :

IILVEIIItDIE PLAIA
. IOIIEIVICE
PHOIE441-zt02

.IUIIIII, IIM)(IIJCI AND CC .

·-

1.19Reg.1 .39

27.88 :--~:=.:.1':.~
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Stti1l.otion GuaranrnO' or Your Monwr Baclf

11

Trutment

orRafllla

f,lkjrOft:ntiiNITAWD PflliCII

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Interiors. Pre·sanded . Hinges
included.

,.,n.,.
-- --·
--

Cat '145

Middleport, 0 .

·•

flog . 1.09

·u nasiembled cabinets with
wOod veneer fronts, tinlshed

~

· ·· PAT HILL FORD, INC. ·.

4615 5. 3rd Ave.

OJT
. unfinished kitchen
cabinets ... ready to stain... '
ready to beautify your home.

, X20141A

WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS
_

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Cut .140

0.. boll oiono

. .
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.
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.
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Home Ott1ce· Bloomington. Illinois

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snap

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•
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Gallipolis, Ohio

CAROLLSNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.
Golllpoll•, Oh.

Resletor

Umlt2

. INCLUDES AM/FII'RADIO, STEP BUMPER, 4 SPEED TRANS., PLUS MORE.
WE ALSO HAVE AVAILABLE TO QUALIFIED BUYERS 11.9 ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
RAJE .fiNANCING·AND OUR GREAr'OmR DOESNT STOP HERE. WE WILl ~LSO
. KEEP YOUR NEW TRUCK OILED &amp; LUBED FOR mE .FIRST, YEAR (per factory
specifications). • .
.
(The abovl price does not include tax, title and destination chlqes.)

1~

J. Barnes

•

figures .

79•Reg.94•
Non·Reelatar
·.' .
99•Reg.1.18

NORTII' GAJ.UA (10) - Mays 10.().:11;
PeniCk 346: · Kl!mper 5-2-12: Holllngtiheatl
1-2~: Blackburn W4; Neal 2~H. To&lt;olo
13+10.

,'

Stop in arid let's talk facts and ·

. -.

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

lng provlded th~ winning points.
Jenkins used his bench to help In
the win. Alan Batley and Billy Swain
went Into action in the second
quarter.and both scored blg.baskets
hefore ihe end of the first half.
The Pirates had an impresslve
night, led by Mays, Kemper and
Eric Penick, with all-around assist·
ance by starters Ken Neal and Paul
Hollingshead and aggressive drlv·
ing by Anthony Blackburn.
Shooting-wiSe, the Pirates were31
percent from the field, slnkln,g 23 of
61 tries, while liT hit 21 of 54
altempts for 38 percent. On free. ,
throws, the Pirates were good for 36
percent on four of 11 tries.
liT totaled 30 rebounds, seven of
them by Brum!leld. The Wildcats
also had eight turnovers and 15
assists. NG recorded 45 rebounds, 19
by Kemper Md li by Mays. The
Pirates had 14 turnovers and seven
assists.
El\l'ller, Ron Twyman's Pirate
resel'Ves defeated Larry Carter's
WUdcat squad, 66-22. Tim Smith led
the scoring for NG wlth 16, while
Brian Hawks recorded 13. For liT,
Terry Cline was top scorer with
nine.
The Wildcats are now 6-6 overall
and 2-31n the SVAC. NG Is 2-7 on the
season and 1-4 in league play. HT
will host Symmes VaUey Tuesday
and Eastern Friday.
. The Pirates were scheduled to
play ·Waharna at home Saturday,
and host Southwestern Frtdav.

Across from the .Silver Bridge Plaza

4X4 Ranger

'

1il 5 p.m.

..
•0 '

COME HILL OR HIGH WATER
PAT HILL FORD IS
YOUR 4x4 HEADQUARTERS

.• 1 ·-

•

Miami stops OU

GalllpoUs at Wbee~rsburg
Columbus East at Portsmouth

Buy Your Ccir or Truck
· Wholesale

· feet•••

3480

ATIIENII (II) - Flnnearty ~1-1;
3-2-8; ljrunlng 0&gt;2·14: Mayle 9-3-21: Matheny
Z.().4; Allen 1.().2. TOTAUI- D-341. 1
GALUI'OUII (411) - Madison 6-0-12;
Ellc....,r - : Lane 0&gt;2·14: SlleOrs 2.().12;

Magnavox VR-8316

Upper Rt. 7

••

fOrYQUJ'

While· They Last!

': ~~'1

ssgoo

NOW

r•·-~·------~··•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College's R.i.dwomen have three of
the top 10 scorers In the Greater
Ohio Athletic Conference, accord·
lng to statistics released Saturday.
. Guard Kathy Detllllon Is pacln,g
the league and is seventh In the
nation in scoring with an average of ·
22.6 points per outing. Backcourt
mate Robin Hagen is rated seventh
In the loop with an average of 15.6
markers per outing ·while Sue
Camp is eighth at 13.9.
The Redwomen are tied with
Malone College for first In the
GOAC with a 3-1 mark, while
sporting a 6-4 overall slate. Malone
ls 2.0 In the league and 1().2 overall.

SAVE :$$$

·

•

Redwomen rank high
in league statistics

r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

Rio to observe
&amp;b Evans Night
o~ January 22

dOWnhw

2'l~:

Vinton County at Jack:son
Buffalo at P1 . Pleasant
Wahama at Meigs
. Circleville at Waverl y

Athens
ahead and
23-22held
mid·a .
way
in theforged
final period,
28-26 advantage with 30 seconds left
in regulation play.
Dan Dressel's short Jumper tied
It at 28-all with : 19left, sending the
game Into overtime.
Dressel's two free throws gave
Gallla a 3Q.28 lead (2: 15} , · in
overtime. Big Chris Gertg knotted
the count at JO.all on a layup
(1:01). Brett Bostic's goal (:40) put

The Sunday Times-sentinei-Page-C-3 ·

W.Va.

.•
'

•.

�Pa e

C-4

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

,

· ;..

Jackson ·edges
Waverly, 70-69

J

.k

• ac son.

Wyant picked up the loose ball
a nd was fouled, brlng)ng him to the
foul circle for the winning point.
The Jac kson victory and a
balanced scoring attack oversha-

dowed a 32-polnt pertormance by
Waverly's Robbie Lewis.
The 5-8 guard did not score a
point In the final quarter to lift the
Tigers Into a 39-33 lead at
Intermission.
As the fourth period opened the
Tigers held a 53-49 advantage.
Jackson tallied the first six points of
the fourth period to go up 55-53.
The score was deadlocked ltve
times in the final three nninutes, but
starting with a 57-57 tie, neither
team missed a field goal attempt
en route to the 69-69 standoff In the
final seconds.
J ackson finished with 30 of 67
fielders, 10 of 20 at the line, and
snared 28 rebounds, 10 by Wyant
Waverly hit 26 of 64 from the
floor, converted 17 of27free throws,
and claimed 28 rebounds with Ed
Shargenaker grabbing nine.
'
• AI CoiUns paced the winners wi.th

.

qol1!il
· Cot MLfllln 56.

~ron ~t. \' ·SI.M 84 , Ca(IIOn Cath.

LOS ANGELES lAP) -Gibby

Gilbert shot a 5-under-par 66 on his
42nd birthday Jor an il-under-par
131 tha t put him threeshotsaheadof
Fuzzy Zoeller after two rounds of the
$300,000Gien Campbeli-LosAngetes
Open.
Zoeller shot a 70 in the second
round. Arnold Palmer, with a
2-under-par 69, COfl1pleted two trips
over the 6,655-yard Ranc ho Park
Municipal course in 135, 7-underpar, and was four back of Gilbert.
Tied with Palmer were Tom
Wa.tson, Lanny Wadkins, Canadian
Jim Nelford and Payne Stewart
Watson shot a 69,.\l'adkins had a 67,
Nelford s hot 66 and Stewart 69. ·

"-'i

AJc-xan.rr 79. F'edt'ral H01 ·klng 7R. OT
Art'htnld 67. Mont pf'I.IN" &amp;'I
Tlnora 411
Ik'lk&gt;fo ntalnf' '•1, Spring. Non h£&gt;ast&lt;&gt;r n

~. OT

~ raM

4R
Burk~'f' Val. 51. W. Jl:'fff'rsoo 46
Caldw&lt;&gt;ll Sl. Bl'all!iv!UC&gt; .11

w.

"'

Door

Edison 84. BIIK'k River 65 ·
Elyria W. 53, Lorain &amp;x!.thvie¥1' 38
Emanuel Ou-. Gf., Baptist Park 51
Faltl»m 79. Day. Nonhridge 51
Faltfk:old 79, ctn. Prtncelon 50
Falrtl.{)ld Uti!On lli. Amanda ·Cie~nnrk

C1l"'"- E. T{'('h 'r.l, Clevt'. Adams 74
C'l!'\'f'. K('flnedy m . Cle;.'&lt;'. ~th ~
Coldw!lt('r ~- Mlnst('r ~2
Collii:'S W. R('5('1'\'f' !'i7, S. Crnt rai 5.'1
Colon('( CrJv.1ord !'i7, Rldg('dal£&gt; S:l
Columbian a r.. Ja&lt;"kson-MIII'on r.t
C'OJ. BriJ.~Wi 61. Col. lnck&gt;pencrnre 59
Col. Bl'ooldl&lt;Wlfl 57. Col. Northland :;4
Col. Dt-Sales i{!: Col. Rl&gt;ady 4G
Col. Ea~t &amp;l Col. Ccntrrmfal 64
Col. LlniX'n · M c K lnl~· &amp;1 , Col. Elc'(&gt;ch·

Chtangy ~ NPN Albaey 62:
~ 18, 1\tt!caraWM Val.
Harvey '12 . ..... Qotll. a;

m

PaincsvWc

~vers&amp;Ck'

n, Cortftea\11 m

Fos,loita 58, Sylvania Nortttvlew 49
Fran knn-Monroe w, TWin Valley s, 47
Fremont Ro&amp;s :il, Tol Whitmer f9
Gahanna 62, fWyool!ioi:JW'g 51
Geneva 61, AshtaOOJa St. Jom 4()
Goshen 61, &amp;-t.IIP.I·Tatto +I
GrandVIew ·67. Marysvtlko Q)
Grtrvcp(rr1 72, Col. Westland 47
Hamlltoo RoSs ~ . Blanchester n
Harrison 00, C1n. Wyoming 54
Healh 49, Granvllle 47

"

' '

..

. 't .
·-.

•New

·elz I op

•

· ?Uo

·' '
Closed

I

CLEARANCE

,

· 11-;- 13"x8' Slidirig [)Jar, 1- 3'x6'8" Service Door, 29 Ga. Pcl(nfud Steel
. Siding (Choce of 9 Colors} w~h 5 Year Warranty, 28 Ga. Gal~altime Steel
Roofing w~h 20 Year Warranty, 2 Skylites.
.
.

· TOTAL ERECTED PRICE
$399900
Price Includes Tax, Delivery and Unloading
TIQval EKpe- Will Be Added If Yo~r Site Is More
Than 40 Air Miles From ConsiNdion Office

IRON HORSE . BLDRSe
.

°

1514'0 M
' IDDLEFORK RD.
LAURELVILLE, OHIO 43145

614-332-9745

are

Mowery and Dan Curry
tied r.:_pe_ree_n_t_
. _..:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Log
_an_ __:__ _..__s.,..l2_!3_
22_-_55.J.=============~~~~~====::!
for sixth In the MOC In scoring with
~easeQ Saturday by the leaglle
Identical averages of 15.6 points per
~- •
·
game, while Bob Shaw is eighth In
, ..
~ statistics show that Rick
rebounding at 7.3.
•
.
Ftttz leads the loop with 16 free
Mowery Is also ranked fifth ·in
thfilws In 18 attempts for an 88.8 ~ field goal percentage at 55.1.
~ntage. At one !JOint, Frltz
Tlie Redmen are currently 12-6
rn¥e 16 consecutive attempts.
on the season and 1-0 in Mid-Ohio
. ,Uck Penrod Is second In the Conference play.
league at 82.9, Kent Wolfe third at
•
.
82~, and John Maisch fourth at82.2. Mowery 18 honoree
~ Grande also haS the sixth
RIOGRAl'ffiE.-JerryMowery,
r~ed charity shooter In Jerry a 5-8 sophomore guard on the Rio
'. Local bowling
Gr~e College basketball team,
·
has been named District 28 Player
of the Week by the Natloruil
w.
Association of Intercollegiate
6
Atlllettcs.
6
Mowery Is· corning off a ste)lar
6
6
performanee against league foe
~
Ohio Dominican College In wlllch
s
he scored 38 ponts. He connected on
3
16 of 18 shots from the floor, six of
.~
seven at the free throw line and
2
dished out seven assists.

We're

7-9 p.m.- College Swtm

Closed

~EE

7-9 p.m.-College Swtm
7-9 p.m. ,Open Swim

ONE AT

RIDENOUR SlJPPLY

Closed
1,4 p.IIL.()pen Swim

MOC
' 00und er ·
.
re

'!'rft! throw shooters In the Mid-Ohio

1-4 p.m .-Open Swim

• t

l

: ~erenee, acrording to statistics

POOL

Jan. 16 1-4 p.m.-Open Recreation
Jan. 17 7:30 p.m .·Redrnen vs. W.V. State
(Foodland Booster Night)
Jan. 18 6-10 p.in. -Intramurals
Jan. 19 7:30 p.m .-Redrilen vs. Urbana
(Holzer Clinic Ltd. Booster Night)
Jan. 20 7-10 p.m.-Intramurals
Jan. 21 7-9 p.m.-Open Recreation
J a n. 22 7: 30 p.m .·Redmen vs. Tlf!ln
(Bob Evans Farms Booster Night)
Jan. 23 1-4 p.m.-Open Recreation

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C.S .

WINTER BLDG. SALE

LOGAN -Jumptngouttoa!lrst In 10 of 14 free throws along with
droppedln18 of32!reethrpwsfor55
Logan grabbed 24 rebounds 10
Q'!Arter 14-2 lead, the Logan
five field goalsfor a career· hlgh 20
pereent
Meigs' 18. Meigs had 20 turnovers
Chleftaltis remalnE:d In the sou. . points to grab . game scoring
Log~n dominaled the boards
and Logan 13.
.,
theastem Olllq AthletjC Leag\ie
honors.
•31-17 with VanVoorhees grabbing' . · Melgs fell to 2·9 overall and toM·.
._ :cture with a ~ Win over the
Senior Rick Edwards toUowed
six and Gill and Fraswe five
inside league play while the Logan
· ,feigs Marall&lt;leh,, , ' ' Fpday
with 12 whjlli "Ilk&gt;! .G.r!!IJ Tay~;· ~W~ece. Other'~raylo~itnlne, no
reserves are 5-3 in loop action.
Aight.
, 1&gt;·1'~ · , "··
added n!pll rebo~ ~~~!,X~-!&gt; •.othe,t .M r11uder .11a(j !)}Ore · than
With the Mai'aqders' 'five-game
The , ''surprllje,. '
.· of , the
Senlo~J~~re·~ Jiwl~ , ~t' ~:-: '
road trtp hls~ory, the locals return ·
~e Chiefs llliJV!Mi . Into sole paced the ~1'1! ~ 19 ~ j . ' . -~· ·¢Om~ . 20 ~overs ·to Larry )VlorrtsOp q ymnastum
·~ion of third pJace at ~' 1 ~espe.ctively; ~J8Iille V~Vqorh~ · : ~rtii!a'Wct to Logan's 26. .
both Friday and 'S aturday nights
.,IJehJnd flrsl·place Ironton (6-1) and
added 10. ·
1
•.
i
Coach Mlck Childs' Marauder
against Jackson and Wahama. , 1
' runner-up Athens (1&gt;-2) . MelliS
"ll we$~ ~e story~ .all of : reservi!S stayed wit~! the Papooses ·
Log3;11 plays at A\!Jens. il'
· -remains winless In Slill!!ll $0AL our 1e. a~e gaines jhus far, w~ ga~e : for thiee quarters before being
(V....,&gt;
·
'ftW · •~
' 110
· ·-~&lt;md .$hots. We , outscOred 22. ·g In the final
·
Melg!l (48) ~ Edwards H-12; Riggs .
·litarts
.
. whlle dropp.,~
" '·'
·
ilp , too 1)1llllY
six
5-10-211;
Taytor2-2.ti; Chancey1-0-2; Hotromb
· ~alll.ogan Is G-'7·01) ~~- - ,, mls$ed_a lot ,of ·ltisld'esMts Jind had
minute period to drop a 55-32
2-0-4: Evans 1-2-4: 1&lt;11M!!dY IJ.D&lt;J: Robson
.Trailing 27-9 midway through
too many unforced tul'l)overs. We
decision.
~':'~':.~c~~: ~~an Z~-4 ;
s!i,Cond quarter, Coach Greg played decent defensively," com·
The little Marauders trailed by
vanvoorhees 4-2-111; Frasure'll-3-19; PatterQrurnmer's Marauders caught !Ire . mented Drummer after the game. . l!lne heading for the final quarter san H-3; Dickens 2-1-5; York 2-0!4; Miller
· to; outscore the Chiefs 11-2 to trail
Coach Kirk Hardman's Chiefs and were forced to go man-to-man
2-0-4; Conrad 1-0-2; Hosler Hl·2· TOI'AIS
~.
~
~20 at the half.
canned a fine 29 of. 58 shots for 50 on defense. Logan's size then
By quarie'"'
:~gan salted the game away In pereent but managed only eight of dominated play.
Meigs
~~1 ~
1
~ third period by outscOring · ·16
the foul line for 50 percent.
Mike Chancey led tbe Utile
Logan
(Re..rveo)
~s 14-7.
Meigs fired a chilly 26 percent from
Marauders with 10. Wright topped
MEIGS I:Ill- Chancey 4-2·10: Wtse2-0-4;
: junlorguardNickR!ggstossed the field, l)'laking 15 of 27, and
Loganwithl5.
~~~r.J.-:!"t~l~?.::;.~~-4~~
•'
..
.
·
Mel~ cpnverted 11 of 32 field
11·111-32.
·
Eli
oal I 34
t d10 f21f
LOGAN(35)-Wrlght&amp;.3-15; Myers4-3-U;
lln
g s or percen an
ree
York ' 4·3-ll; Farrar J-Z-8; Conrad I-Z-4;
· ,,
.
throws for 48 percent. Logan made
Stetflebeam 2M: Hood 0-2-2. TOI'AIS
'GRANDE - .Rio Grande Mowery,wbolsconnectlngata:79.6
20of48fromthefieldfor42pere&lt;o•nt
Ill-IS-It.
· ~ege's Redmenhavethetopfour rate.
and a torrid 5o!l9 foul sbots for 79
~~quarto~
6 9 9 1!-32

from

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
Week of January 16, 1983

DATE - GYMNASRJM

Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. .Va.

tire

'

The ld..l high production IN. ''FoH S.fe;' vibqtlon loolation cuohlona
the hendlea from the power h..d. reduceo operatM fltlgue. •Low noloe
lev~ tllanko to Homellte' a Sottone duet chamber muffler
'3.11 cubic
Inch heml-head engine. •Capechy di1Chorg 0 ignitlon.' •Adlultoble tluto·
metlc otter. •Unique chain tenoloning. •Rubber ooeted hondle ..., lnd
II~P- •Bor lengtho from 18" to 28". •Advanced deolgn for hlgti produc.
tlo~ with low operator fatigue.

•·

• ., : ,

HOME LITE'S
·3 60

' ~
Fairless 44, AJcron ManChester
,.. Farmln8foo·4l, Bloomlleld 40
Fon Jennfngs· 91, 0100 City t7

'

· Newark 72. MaMt:na :II
N. ~ fDH ftl, Gn!lt'fthllls 63
N!rW'alk 'i'll, ~by S7
Nawood M. C1n. Tl,arpln §
Olk 11art:1or -m. woocrr.ore 70
OberliD 69, N . ' ~8)
Ohio DE&gt;at 51, DNware Oar. 38 _.

rr--~~~~~'"• '

"

re

\

~aln King m, Etyrla 41
Mans. Madlscll n, New PhUadelphla 6l
~ Hts. M, Bedford 49, OT
~59, Loveland 56
1 ,t.!arllngton 61, -N. Canton 4ti

D(&gt;tptps St. John !B. Mark&gt;n--Loc:al $J
Ooy~t ow n 75:
salem NW 61
Dublin ~. Col. Academy 48

..

M&lt;qan 89, $1
Mt. Vermn f5. Pk'terlnlllCII 41
Nels&lt;ln\'llle-York '15. Belpre 72

w:

Deflanre Iii, Bath 40

7", fk&gt;llain• &amp;I
Ca nal Windw"'itf'r :.1, l..arlailstr&gt;r 'F'ishf'r
.
Ca nlon McKlnlc~- SR, Mru;.-;likm Pc&gt;rry :w
Cln. Eld&lt;'r 69, On. St . Xavl&lt;'r "!1
Ctn. M cNJdlola~ itl , Hamlhoo Badin 61
·c ln. Pum.•ll 'ii, Cln_ MOl'llrr 75. OT
C!n. Rradlrtj:! 7.1, Flnrtt:&gt;ytown .a.3
Cln. Wnlnut Hills 7fl. Cln. llugh~ ~
Cln. Wrstcrn Hills 6!1 . Cln. Alkf'il ;,.j
Of'ar Fork 49, Loudonvillr 43

Opm

m

LeeWola JOt Spina. !0
Lexinaton 55. Mans. Malai:IU M
UbertY-Unl0n-7t, MWerspon 5tl
Lk:kJria.Val. 53. Jol'rlS1oWn 42
lJma Shawlft 75, Van Wert 55 ·
l.lnsiY. Va. 49: Barle)oe W. &lt;16
Lockland H. ctn. L.arDnark ~
Logan Elm 77, Bernt Union 40 •
Loodoll 71, Uma Shawnee Ql
I.aain M. ~dlay Ill
I..craln Ca th. &amp;1, Elyrla C.th. •61

Day. White 57, Day. Belmom 40

Camlrl~

Elyria

, ~~- lloielll'e Tf, ClzyahOp Hts. 43
Jom Can 77, w. MusldnirUm n
~ f¥1, w. carrollton

C&lt;Nington 58, Grabam t1
Cuya~ga l'alls !11, Akron Spreng. !!ll
Crook.'IVU}e !56. Philo 51
DaHoo Eli. Hlllsdale !66
Da;.o. Dunbar 9!, Day: Meadowdale 51
Day. NorthtnOnt 58, Piqua M. OT
Day. Panerson Tl, oay: Jeffl"f901'1 'iti

Elf&gt;rt&gt;a !12. Clbvl'r ll'ar .'iCI
Bl·:d (')' 7'2. Jonathan A.kil'r 5i
Big Walnut ffi. N. UniOn 6.3
BIOOm.-Carroll 75, Col. Hnmillon Th·p. ,17
Bu:'ke.n~ Cmtr-.11 ·~ . R"'£&gt;r Val. 2fl
Buckcyf' N. ~ . Retlain• St. Jolin !'i l

n.

Seneca E . 55
Howllhd Olr. 62, Grand Rtver 58

Ccsiocton £9, Asttland 61

f

Duckcyt' Trail fk1.

~l..oJdon ~.

62. G"""'"""'

A.~l'f"S\' IIIf' ~ .

0('1,'('. Baptist

Gilbert takes lead

1983

•
•
._lngan remains
tn race with 66-48 win

MayMlk&gt; rJ, Trl·Valk&gt;y &lt;18
MrD:::nald 66, Pl&gt;lersWrx:, Spma. 52
Mradowbrnok n. Fort ~ fi7
'Melltor +t. Euclid U
Miami 'h'ace 5t, GreeftneJd MCCJatn M
Midl:lll't:CIWII 90, HamUton T1 '
'Miller Oty S&amp;. OJntnental t8
MonroevWe 19, .w.a.d erevvtew m

HUUard ?0, WntMViUe N. fll

w . Whetsto::me !!ll

Cot sc. dWics 5t. Col. Hartle)' S2
Col . Watterson'&amp;!, Col. Wehrle fB
Col. We&amp;t ~. Col. SWtb 19
Columtus Cn:M' ·76. Allen E. 58
{;q&gt;ley
Gr&lt;on &lt;5
o:n·-Rawaon 53. Liberty Bl!nton 51

Fftdil.Y'II Ht'fiUM:ol
Ada til, Ol.&gt;lphOti .J£'ff!'rsoo 5I!

JACKSON ('20) - AJ Col lins U '3-25; ·.Todd
Davts l -3-5: F'rank F.dgington 6.{}-12: J on Clay
7·3-17: Joey Wyaot. H7; Pat Stevens 2M .
1'0'rALS 31J.Hm.
&amp;'Ore by quartt&gt;rs:
""'~"Y ·
14 25 14 ·1&lt;;-&lt;;9
Jackson
Hi 17 16 21-70
~rvf&gt; st:ore: Jackson 40. Wa\'erly :n.

1~3,

FridaY's high school basketball results .
Ohio HIA:h Sf.,hool Boy11 ~kt!ttNdl
8y The t\.'liOCWltd Prm.o.

JACKSON - Joey Wyant's free
25 markers, Jon Clay hit for 17, ana .
throw wtlh four S€COnds remaining · Frank Edgington added 12·.
carried the Jackson Ironmen t6 a
Jerry Miller was theonlyTtger In
70-69 victory over Waverly Friday
double digit scoring with r:ewts as
night.
he added 14.
J'he box score:
With the score deadlocked a! ·~·
69,()9, JackSOn 's AI Collins missed a
llAVERL\ ' lffll - Hobble LewJJ; J:J-6-~l;
jump shot, Waverly's. Jerry Miller
Jim Trlmble H3; Jim Thomas H 3; Tim
.1 Btictcnbach 2-4-8; Tom Thompson 1.0-2:
had
grabbed the rebound , but
I
Jerry Miller &amp;-2- 14: Ed SharfenakPr 2-.l-7.
knocked away by Pat Stevens of TOT~LS ::&amp;IH9.
·

January 16,

leport-Gallipalis, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

915.3301

.."

CHESTER, OH.

GOODfi'EAR

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The 4t27 is listed and tested by
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REG. 1726.00'

REG. $75500
_SALE

All combustion air is drawn from
the outside thro ugh an intake in
ihe home's floor, entering the
firebox through a thermo ·
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SALE

$59500'

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chimneys.

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REG.

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THE HOMESTEADER
Thermostat-controlled , circulating ~eater with glass win - .
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Available f()r private or group lessons
·Afternoons or late evenings ·
Call·446-3362 for more..information
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$37000

$37.00
45.00
55.00
63.00
66.00
67.00
70.00

Oty

interested in joining a .new mixed
.doubles league is invited to attend
a meeting at Skyline Lanes
Jan. 26 at 8:00 p.m.

Sl&lt;e E7Bx14 Tubeless
Ptus$2 .08 F .E;T.
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featuring The Colonel.&amp; Clai~

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SALE

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power

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Bums wood or coaL

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WONDER
SALE

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REG. 1410°0

Uft- Top - Pr9 vides
auxilary cooking
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From U.S. Stove Compan11

.SALE

WONDERCOAL®

.,

Versatility .makes the
FORESTER as attractive as
it is efficient, featuring a
choice of six different door
styles and either matte black
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coal, the FORESTER is the '
innovative fireplace insert

featuring
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The WONDERCOAL C0279
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AREPLACE INSERT HEATf.R

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HOURS: .

PH. 992.- 6611

MON. THRU FRt 17:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

1 ••

sAT. 9:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P

· Wednesday after 9 p~m. is Ladies' Night

Saturday after 9 p:~raft Beer/Pizza Night
· ·Every Friday Ni · ·nnine JanuatY 21 .
"Red Brick" Dance CQntest
'I

21 STORES TO SERVE YOU .

426 Viand Street

·Point Pleasant

675-3930

•
•

•
•

•

,

.

�. Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

.

-1

w:v~:

.lanUCIIY 16, 1983_

..
16, 1983

'

Ohio:-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

.

,•
•••"
•

Kyger Creek drops Eastern-, ...
63~49 .for lith hardwood win
-

'

.

'

.

.

, .

.,

NHL Resqlts

I-

. I

By soon' WOLFE
Newell again came through with a
tremendous defensive press, but ::
. .
EAST MEIGS - The Kyger 12 point effort.
Carpenter, Probert, Newell and ::
Creek Bobcats, uti!Jzlng their JnSlde
KY&amp;er Creek easUy controlled TroY Guthrie exhibited tine llall ·:
.,.st.ze.all,d ~trengtb. placed !brei! meil • the tip from the tlngertlpe ci 6-5
controlm keeping Eastern close at 'I
in dol!ble:t~res here Friday
center J. D: Bradbury, but came up
the bal!,31-21.
:•
evening enroute to an Important · short of . a score . on. Its first
'l,'hrough an e!lort by Jay Carpen-•:
634% SVAC biwnpb over the pmsm·lnn.
.
· let and overaU team hustle by the :•
•'
Eastern Eagles.
I After 1'UIUiing through Its offense .entire E;agle squad, the hosts cut .•
BesideS controlling the board,
Sevei-81 ticks
the clock,
the KC lead down tontne, ~Coac)l Keith Carter's Bobcats were
Eastern point gwird Tim Probert
was during this comeback stint that ;;
led by senior foiWard Jet! Moles' 16
canned the game'$ nrSt $COre on a
Kyger's Inside control played a :;
points, juillor J. D. Bradbury had
15 foot jwnper. After another crucial role In the game as the•,
. their way •,'•
15, and Brent Love 14. Senior
.unsuccesstul KC drive, EHs had a bigger Bobcats pered
playmaker Keith Clark guided the
chance to go up by four, but It too
Bobcat attack while dumping in
and
came ·up short. Brent Martin put
eight points.
KC up 3-2 with 5: 46 lett in the canto
Love, Brad~ny, and Moles ~
The win lUted ~ger Creek to an · after draWing a foul on a driving conbibuted to a victory march with ~
11·2 overall record and 4-1 In the
steal attempt. • .
control of the offensive and defen- •
SVAC. Eastern dropped to G-12 and
"" .
Anotbel' steal off the KC tuU court slve boards.
G-5.
press gave Martin another unchalAccording. to the charts, both ;:
Although Eastern played another
limged goal and the Bobcats a 5-2 clubs exhibited tlnesbootlngpertor- •:
aggressive game, untimely
lead. While KC was olf alid running mances as KC dumped in 28 ol 5li !·
miscues took many ~ring opportoward another victory, Eastern. _ attempts !or 50 percent and EHS ~
• tun!ties away from the young Eagle
settled down Its offensive game and clllliiEd 22 of 48 tor 45 percent, The ~
attack.
·
kept the score close at 17·11 when winners sank 7 ot 12 free throws, :
· Sophomore Jay Cl!J'penter led
time ran out.
collected 40 rebounds, 9 steals, 5 •
Eastern with 19 points. and eight
Second round action saw KC turnovers; and 6 assists. Bradbury :
rebounds, while junior Jimmy
continue Its tuU court press and and Love each had 8 rebounds each :
forKC.
~
· Eastern canned 5of12 at the line, ,
while clalmlng:Urebounds; 4 steals, ; ·
14 turnovers, and 9 assists. Jay •
RACINE -The Southern Torna· doettes with a game-high 25 points Carpenter and Mike CoWns had 8 :
doettes continued their domination
and collected 15 reboullds. Mel and 6 rebounds respectively.
:
of the SVAC leag1,1e here Thursday
WeeseandTonyaSalserpolll'l!dln17
In the reserve tUt, the llttle :
.evenlngbyroUingtoa6&amp;37winover
and 18 points respectively with great Bobcatsrolledtoa36-26biumph,led .
the Southwestern litghlanders In a
floor games.
by Steve Waugh with 12 and Chuck ;.
girls high school basketball contest.
Michelle Johnson added 4 and Vogel with 10 'points. Eastern's :
The win left Southern with a 11-1 Jenny Bentley added 2. Ctody Evans Johnny MIUer netted 8; and Kev1Q •
record.
collected 8 reboullds, while Debbie Barber?.
Southern rolled to a 17-10 first
Michael, Laren Wolfe, and Evans
Eastero hosts Waterford on '
quarter advantage, then held a
~e credited with playing tine
Thesday In a non-league battle.
narrow29-~lead at the halt.
defensive games.
t•&gt; - Mike eow.. ~ Troy ,.
The third quarter proved to the
Tonya McNeal led Southwestern Guthne3-t-7: TimProbert448; Jbn·N....,n :
spark that Coach Connee Enslen's with 21 points, Dtana Nlda added 12 !&gt;2-12; Jay Carpenter 9-H9; Robert M.....
1100; David Gaull-1-3. 'roi'.U.S•
gals needed as they scored 2lpoints and Tonya Adkins added 4.
JlnwO-eell (.,),-Keith &lt;lar1t WI; Jet! •
to Southwestern's 9~ That particular
Southern hit. 'rl of 75 field goal- Moles 7-2-J'; J. D. Brad!Jury 6-3-JD; Breul '
LoveG-2-14; RqjorSiroud2.0.: i&gt;av14Martln
spurt gave ·Southern a 51-29 lead attempts for 36 pe1w1t and canned
:W.; Jolin Ranegar IHHJ; Steve WaUIII (H)ll.
going into the final period:
'roi'.U.S ..,....
'
12 of 19 tree throws for 63 percent.
Amy . Littlefield led the :rorna-

·or

WLTGFGA.Pta

I

PlttsWrgh

12

Nl"4' Jerse)l

9 'l1

.

n::

::ea~~~ ~r:econd

Friday's SVAC cage battle. Kyger Creek won, 63-49.
- KeUy Whitlatch llhoto.
·

·Southem remains unbeaten
•
ID loop with 67-53 triumph
BY SCO'IT WOLFE •
PA'ffil&lt;YT - Behind a 29 point

Schultz ll. Mike Bailey netted 9 for
Southwestern. The young Whirlwinds, now 8-2, are coached by
HOwle Caldwell.
Souihern played Symmes Valley
last night.

Dennls Teaford 1·24 ; Zane Beegle 12·5-l5;
Wade Connolly GM; ROO Llnlelleld 5-5-15:
J a9Jn Hill 0..().0; Trevor Cardone 0.0.0.

performance by Southpaw Zane
TOTALS 211-17-61.
SOUTHWESTERN (113) - Paul McNeal
Beegle, the Southern Tornadoes
11-4-36;
Ro..,r Wells 14-6: Raody Layinn
outgunned Southwestern, 67-53, 1n a
244: GarY Baker0-3-3; Je!f Meek 2-3-7: !Wn
rugged SVAC sl)owdown .on the
Carr 2-3-7; Sieve PeUrey Q-0.0. TOTALSSOU'111ERN (6'l) - Nick Bostick 3-2-8:
Patrtot hardwood here Friday
LHl-53.
Tooy Deem 0.0..0; Tyrone Brtnagel" 2-1-5;
So::~by
qual1ero:
H 26 J6 11--67
night.
Kevin CUrlman 2-2-6; Chris Bostic)&lt; IHHI:
SOuthwestern
9 10 23 11-53
In a personal " du~l" Beegle
outgunned a performance by tal·
ented Southwestern center PaUl
McNeal, who poured In 26 Highlander markers, sharing top billing .
with the Southern ace for outstand·
Ing individual efforts.
The w1n botiSts Southern to !l-1
overall and :;.o In the SVAC:
Southwestern fell to 4-6 overall and
1-41n theSVAC.
In ,_ spirited, but yet sluggish first
. period. Soutliern sputtered Into gear
and led 14-9. Unlike the initial round
when the pace was slowed to a near
standsttll, tlie Tornadoes erupted in
the second round lor 26 points.
The explosive effort, combined .
with an agresslve defensive 's tand,
put the lOth ranked Class A
(Associated Press) Whlrlwlnds of
Coach Carl Wolfe in thedrlver'sseat
lor the remainder of the game. At
the conclusion of the first half,
Southern le&lt;i40-19.
An offensive burst by both clubs In
the third round livened up the action,
butatltsconcluslonSHSmalntained
a healthy 56-4.2 advantage. ·
Both clubs battled to a 11-11 draw
In the llist round.
Besides Beegie's 29, Rod Little:
field had a 15 point outing, anci Nick
Bostick added 8. Besides McNeal's
26 markers Jeff Meek and Ron Carr
had duel 7 point efforts. Highscoring Roger Wells was Umited to
just 6 points on the night.
Southern hit 25 of 68 field goals for
36 percent, and canned 17 of~at the
Itnefor~ percent. SWzlpped 18om
from the Ooor for 35 percent and
sank17 of27 atthellnefor62percent.
Southern won the battle of the
boards 41·29 as Beegle hauled down
10 and McNeal 12 for their
respective clubs. Southern had 14
steals, ~6 turnovers, 16 assists, and
23 fouls, while SW had 7, 21, 5, and 19
In those respective dlvi.$1ons.
Southern bombarded SouthwestGAUL SIJDES INSIDE- Ea&amp;tern's David Gaul (M) sllpslnidcte
ern In the reserve contest liS-30, led
lor a tw~pobtter aplnst Kyger Creek In Friday's SVAC contest. KC
by Greg Nease with 19, Darin Roush
won, 83-49. Bobcat defenders areJ. D. B~ury (45) andRolierStroud
(35).
.
17, Kevin Teaford 14, and Scott

s om

156

M

ButfalO

21 1t
18 :11

9 173 14.1
6 I8i 00

.4:!

.'

COLUMBUS. Ohio I API- How

...

U~ top-"

E·~~ ~ n:.~-:.:.~"':

~

CLASS AM

,

third~:

Kin~

beat Young-

6, Akron Central -Hower, .'-L beat Akron
K e n m o r £' E&amp;S2. plays ~d
Sl . lgnat ills Satunlay.
'1. Cincinnati Mount Hf'althy. 13-0. beai
West ~f('l' Lakota ?HJ, ar ,beat ar).
rlnnatl fot'{'Sf Park 64-11.
8, East Qkw.•pland Shaw, J(l.{), beat Par·
rna Valkoy For2@ w-62.
9, Manstk&gt;ld Malabar, 8-2, lol&gt;t to LeK·
ln ~on ~..~ . play-' Akron l&lt;ml"TliTt' Setur·
da,\'.
10. AJI\an~. 11·2. beat Hubbard 59-:B.
!LASSM

1. Willard, 10.1. beat Bclk&gt;vul:&gt; $55.
2. Coldll.·ater, 12..(), bf:oat Minster !9-52.
jUys lJma Cffitra l Cattolk Sa.turday.
J. Qak Harbor, ]2.(1, beat Wooctnol't El
more'lr).?O.
4, Columbus WhlteNJU, U..O, tx&gt;at Upper
ArtlnRfon ffi.-511, tx&gt;at Chllllrothl' 63-M.
5, Akron St . Vlncent·St. Macy , 9-1, bloat
Ca nton Central Catlnllc ~6, Columbus Bexle)i. 13-1. beat Plain
OIY Jonathan Alder 7'l.sl.
7, YOO!l$:SICMin Ra)'l'n , 8-2, t:rat Et1e
t Pa . I Academy !\642,
8. &amp;&gt;UPvue, 9-2. kJst to WW.ard !ifi.SI.
!t. Nelsoovtik'-York, 10.1. lost to Cblstt&gt;r Trimble RMG, beat Belprt&gt; '15-'1'l.
10. Ottawa.Clandorf. 9-2. klll.to Celina

""''·

Calgacy
WlnniM

~-~!ii!,\,-;;..:-..=:-v~

MONUMENT
"COMPANY, INC.-·

VINTON, OHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.

PH. 388 8603 .

POMEROY, OHIO
·.LEO VAUQIWI, Mar.
PH. 992·2588

(~
- .
\~

Sletn Mar1oo Local"'"'
l. New W&amp;sbiD!llon B~ CentnLJ(}.
0. beet Manon Rl'm" Valley M-1:1. pUy$
at North RoblliiCil Colorrl Crawf&lt;ni Sit·
u.rday.
t. Mojpdore. 10,0, be,~&amp;t Rootstown 81-55,
plll)'l Mantua Crestwood SatunJay.
5. ~llJEo. S.0. plays at L.elpsk- Salur·
day.
6, Kallda. '-1. pays . Pai\CIOra-CIIIh

~
~
11
\

·

at Roddunl Parkway Satwday.
· II, Okl WuiiJrl«ton 8~ TtaU. 10-D,
beat F'reepcrt l..akel.and &amp;11-!'19, bfoal Zane.

~

v1Ue Roaettans ~
9. 8ucyr\ll W)Word. XH. beat Ma.non
ArMan! 82-7t.
10, Racme Soul hem, S.l, beat Pa.mt
Swthweslem 17&amp;. p4ays WllkJw Wood
Symrnn Valley Satwtl.ay.
10. Zanesv1lle Roaecnm, 7-3.. lost to Old
Wuhlngt:IXI ~ Tral.l 5.l41 plays
Howard Eut Knca: Saturday.

~

14 21'
15 n

s

g 157 l iB
t4B 181

.TT
36

J

• ··'"NEW JERSEY GENEitft.l..S.!';amf'd Bill
ALlStin ofteru~ lvt&gt; llnf' coaC"h
PHILADELP HIA STARS-Named
Jim
,
Mora head cooc h.
JIOCJ&lt;E&gt;•
NaUoRal Hock(')' IA&gt;llfi\Jf'
NEW
YORK
ISLANDF.:RSR('(alled

"""""

Mi lwa u~e«&gt;

'l:i 13
18 U1

~rot.!

19 21

coJnlln alor a nd olfrnslve lim.&gt;

roach.

,.,_

Atlanta

NFL Playoffs

.!DB _.., 6
,rn; 1

h'Fl.. Pl~t,\'olf :-ktli!Wle
&amp;&lt;..-ond Roo hd

Chk~

L1 l1
.lSI 1J
tndlana
11 D
.3&amp;.'1 ll Yz
C lf'vf'land
' 5 :IJ .1-13 18 Y.r
WE211Ett~ CONFEHENCE

MhlweM Dh1181on
)I 15
Ka11Sai C'try
n 14
DmVff
18, 21
Dallas
L~ 21

San Antookl

..Lilah

t...c.-

1

.462

6
7~

.417

15 24

.:'RS

s 31

.t.JJ

Houslon

PadDc Dl\tWot!
Aflji!{'lt'S

Phlmix
Portland

n:

AFC

su...,,

e

NFf
St!ada..l'. ,Jan. 16
Gl"f!(&gt;n Bay 1:11 at Da llas 121, 4 g.m.

(' ONFEK ENC E

t \\'klnen ol JIUI. 1 ~18 KHffleo&lt; •·
at hoRM': of~ renalnln~ ~I
NFC Ch.npiool.hlp
Saturday, oiiUI. 22
Ai&lt;"C L'hllmpiOifihiP

9

11n

.TTl -

)I

Suooay, Jan. ·u
SUPER BOWL XVD.

Sun., J an . 30. Pasadrna
p.m . EST
AFC

\ "S.

.......... NIM '64.00
'110.00 ........ NIM '18.00
1115.00 ........ NOW '92.00
..
.

NFC champkHlS, ror Vlnre

PRO 80\\'L

'

Su n.. FP.b. 6, Honolu lu
AFC Ali-S1ars vs. NFC Ali·Sta"

San Diego i27. Kansas Clry 100
· Portland 102. St&gt;allk&gt; 99

Meigs junior high
girls win, I 7•I 5

~~

Indiana at PhllaiPlphla. 1n1
• Los Anafles at AtJanta . 1n 1
'= New Yoill•t New Jt&gt;ney. tn l
', Boston at Ck-.'t'l.and 1n1
Washlngtc.~ at San Afltoruo. t nl
1, • Mllwaullft&gt; at Chk-• . l nl

I

C"lirYnt-y St. m, Merryhu~t &amp;I
Elmira fA. Mansfif.td 63. CYT'
Mou nt St. Mary·s !fl. Mllier":5\1llf' ~t . 9) '.

Akron 73, Austin Peay TI
Central, Iowa 72. DutlUQIJC &amp;J
LawrmCI' 74. Knox 68
B~twn Young 96, Salt Dl~ St. 7'l
Utah R.l HawaU M
.

Dallas at Utah. tnl
.. San DleaO at P!nenlx. lnl

I

~

Kansas Ci ty at Portland. t n 1
SU....,.11 G.-nm
Goid.&gt;n Sta te at Milwau keE&gt;, t n \

t

~®~~~~· ~ :

Bllt('kb.Jrn lill, M t. Smarlo 61i.

,.. Utah at San Dit110, !nl
~ , KanMS City at St&gt;atlko. rnJ

'

St . Amtrost&gt; 1111. Pa rkll 4.1
Columbia -18, Dartmouth 46
CornPII 61. Harvard 59. OT
Akron 7:\ Au.~! ln Pt&gt;~ 71
MJ!IIkln IJT, CaiTO!! 74

Monda,y:" Gaml'l'li

Chlcaao at Nt&gt;Y.· York. In \
AUanta at Nt"W Jf'f"S£'Y. l nl

...

..

Local bowling
Pamer., Bowlnc l...aael
Early W-1\V Mixed
Le..-

•

2
0

Hteh serta;- Ray R.Mch 5.ll , Pal Carson
581: Russ carson 536, Be1 ty Wilson 499.
High game- Russ Carson 192, Pat Carson
211; Bob hmsley and Ray Roach 191, Pat
Carson 190.
Team sl3"ies -No. 61956.

PI&amp;

8

.6
6
2

Spar! Sll&gt;p
Club

•

Smtth-NeJson Motcrs
FcJJy's Tree Service

De«nat •· 1182

Teom
Tl"iy's Carry Oul
No.6

n

GALUPOLIS

Mary WashlnJ(fOII 79, Shmanooah ~
Me!IDd.lst Ill, Va . Wt'Sic;fan 91. OT •

1• Denver at Hou..Qoo, In\

I

'~

College Scores

~ ·~ Gllme!l

oo•

;_ The

Gall1a

Academy
high girls'
ball team Junior
was defeated
by basketMeigs,
17-15, last week.
The little Angels, now 4-4 after
the loss, were led In scoring by Kate
MacKenzie with nine points.
Teresa Combs added four the
Natalie Wright two.
Teresa Combs pulled down 13
rebounds to lead the Angels, while
Mandy Pope collected eight missed
shots.
The Marauders, now 9-0, were
led In scoring by Julia Mlller with
eight points.
The II tile Angels' next game w.111
be Jan. lV when they host Wellston
In the Washlngton gym.

ran their way to a 46-23 advantage.
Statistics show the Defenders
shooting 34 for 57 from the floor for
59 percent. They had a total of 34
rebounds and 15 turnoverS. LeadIng the scoring were Brian O'Dell
with 3, Terry Van Meter with 22,
Todd Wooten with 15, David
Bfevins with 11, Chris Wood had
eight, and Phillip Archer and Greg
Niehoff had·four each.
In the junior high contest the
Little Defenders w~nt down to a
21·9 defeat. Scoring for Ohio Valley
was Scott Blevins with eight points
and Chrts Patterson with one point.
The next contest for Ohio Valley
Christian Scbool Is Frfday at
MI!Iietta.
Volleyball
The OVCS Girls' Volleyball team
captured Its third straight victory
In an emotion-packed game against
Herttage Chrtstlan Academy.
After losing a close first game
13-15, the Defenders battled back to
win the second game ~5-11.
In the match game OVCS' hustle
and desire paid off In a 15-4 victory.
Paclljg the Defenders In spikes
were Nancy Godwin with seven
and Valerie Miller' with six. Also
'playing well were Tara Trelble,
Susan Archer, Cynthia Niehoff,
Gina Jamora, and Rachel Danner.

·DALE HILL FORD TRACTOR
.

251 WEST MAIN

Tra ctors

POMEROY, OH.

EqUipmenl

PH. 992-6441

V.A. &amp; F.H.A.

FINANCING
NOW AVAILABLE

AT
K&amp;K
MOBILE HOME
I A I'll ~nu

lA11

AU~

675-3000
ftl'\ I 1.1 T

1'!111 I"

a 1'1 a._.,..

r~-:---_:_.....,..______1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Team game - No. 6 EB3.

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
Savings Up To 50%

I

I

,_

SPORT
.' COATS

Housewares • Yard &amp; Garden Supplies
• Paneling
• Ceiling Tile
• Paint •- Ruff-X·Siding
• Bathroom Cabinets ·
• Sleds • Range Hoods
• Miscellaneous Items,.
• 1 Lot Pocket ·Knives

'•

. I

'.'

.
.
-•
'.
·I
'

.

,.

WINTER JACKETS

·'l

REG. 149.95 .......... NOW '40.00
REG. •11.00 .......... NOW '64.00 •
R£0.195.00 ............ NOW 76.00

'

have p!enly of reserve power Ia slarl your
car, time after time. And they never need water.

AND

675-1 -160

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Hours - Monday thru Friday a a.m.-5:00 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-12 noon
\.

•

'.

...

SAVE
$25.00
.

0~~
-$4995
-~Q~\,

WITH
TRADE·IN

·

"

'.

'•
•.

..••••,
..,

REGULAR
.:............. $74.95
.
.
PART NUMBERS:
. 49-50 59-50 81-50 87-50
55·50 71-5p 85·50 89-50

50 MONTH
GUARANTEE
Ac-Delco is the way to go,

'•.,

.,

'.•
·-'•
•
•
;,'

G

~,,

General MOtors C&lt;Jopooalloi I
SALE ENDS 1-29 -83

CAROLINA LUMBER
312 Sixth Street

,.

DASH LIGHTS
POWER DOOR LOCKS
POWER ANTENNA ~ WINOSHiaD WIPERS
REAR WINDOW DEFOGGER
Delco Fr-.,:U:Batteries do alllhese jobs
supeltlly and, oh yes, one other: They

All Sales Final

SUPPLY COMPANY

_,

.,

In today's cars and lrucks. lhe battOf}' has
many jobs lo do:
RADIO
POWER WINDOWS
TAPE bECK
. POWER MIRRORS
HEADLIGHTS
CRUISE CONTROL

•

Reg. 1125.00 ........ NOW 1100.00 REG. 185.00 ,_ .......Na, 168.00
REG. 1140.00 ... ,.. NOW 1112.00 REG. '90.00 ........ ,.NOW '72.00
REG. 1170.00 ...... NOW *136.00 REG. '95.00 .......... NOW .175.00 ·
REG. 1250.00 ...... NOW 1200.00

IREG.

Bowl , G

-~ [laUM 1t9, Dt-n~er LJ9

HASKINS-TANNER'S SEMI-ANNUAL

180.00

Ra;(o

Lombitrdl'T'rophy

,

ALL-WEATHER COATS

CHAMPION SHIP

GAMES

15 .til~ 5
23 IS ,8)5 .\J,tl
Seatt.lfo
23 l!i .flli .'j~
Golden Sta tf'
lli 22
421 12\\
San Dit'r:o
10 28
W.1 lB'h
FrldQ"'" Gan'lftil
Bos19n l.U, New Jel'!l('y }(IS
" Oikagu ~. I ndlana 123. OT
AUanla Ill!, New York fiJ
Philadf'lphl .a 115. llP1 rolt li6
Goldrn Stat~ ll6. w a.,hlngron 104
• San AntoniO 96.. Hous ton 92

King Day:

·Open Mo.nday Til 8 P.M.

"*"·16

San Dlc&gt;RO II'll at M l aml 12\, ti :;JI p.m.

..615 .OXI

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Christian .School plit together a
·team effort to coast to an easy 87 to
49 victory over visiting Heritage
Chrlstla.n Academy of Ravenswood
recently. The Defenders placed
four men in double figures.
Ohio Valley started off In a full
court press that Immediately
caused Heritage problems. The
Defenders worked the ball inside
well to jqmp to a 22-8 first ·qllarter
lead. Terry VanMeter controlled
the Inside with fourreboundsand10
first quarter points.
With VanMeter having to sit out
the entire second quarter ·with
·three fouls, fi4 Mark Chrtstian
began to make his presence knoWn
for Heritage. Heritage was able to
match the Defenders with 1l! points
to 19 points during the second
quarter. The halftime score was
41-26.
.
During the final two quarters,
Ohio Valley's fast break proved too
much for Heritage to handle as they

softball roach.
MISSOURI-Naml'd ~rry Beightol of.
fen~lve

Free Hat With a
$50 Cash Purchase

Defenders humble HCA team

Mats Hallin. lf'ft win~. rrom Tndlana poll;
of the Cen tral HOOtey L&lt;'&lt;U!"IK' .
NEW YORK RAJ",' CERS-Assl.'!1lf'd Srot
Klt&gt;lnendorst, dclensE'ITian, to 1\llsa Of tile
Central H ock~· le&lt;~KUI' .
COlLEGE
CALIFORNIA-Namf'd Bill l...avemnl a-..
sista nt coach.
HOFS'TRA- Named Lou Vo lpato worn·
en's IO'fl\l\aSflcs coach an d Ray Boglloll

eb't•'IIJ Aalot.&lt;iat.._;

""'"'"

PARTS ·SPECIAL
10°/o OFF AU PARTS

1'rumalnf'

MICHIGAN PANTHER..'h.'ll,imed David
Grwnwood, df!f(lft;&gt;IVc&gt; back. a·nd JOhn .
Y.'llllams. nmnlng back.
·
·

. s...,•,.oami!JII

8

AT~N'TA F'ALffiNS-Fired \.A'('fllan .
Bennett, head roach.
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLE~NMrlN
.
Fred J3runey nss.istant roach.
ST. LOutS CARDINALS--SIWI«i Jim
Hart, quartl'lback. lo a Of'l('o~'t'ar CfJnlract.
Unl&amp;ed ~Football l.eagul!

CH ICAGO BLI'lZ-SII(ned
Jol\n.'iOfl, v.1ci&gt; «'«'h-er.

"tiMik: DtvWoa
W LPd. GB
Phlladelptda
.11 5 .!67 211 8 ·,718 2Yt
New Jf'I'SE'V
)I 14
.632 7 ~
Was hlnlilf~
1'1 18 .&lt;116 13
,New York
t 1 ZJ
.:lil 17 ~

••

The following Gallipolis Financial Institutions will be closed
Monday, . January 17th, in
obseMnce of Martin Luther

58
IJ
tl

F.AS'IDtN CONFERENCE

·~
: :.
~~
FEBRUARY 19-26
;.

4:~~~:,

8 242 182
1 187 1118
5 172 Jj;

Fl'lday's Gaml!!l

NldlooNI

~;

PORTS OF. CALL
•REGENT HOTEL

25 13
1.8 21
18 n

NBA Results

"'

!§.. •fii(E

FOOI'BAI,L
Natkmal· Footbllll l..eQPt•

Mond-¥• Gllllll!8

~·sEVEN DAYS CRUISING ~ ::

6, Anna, lO·I , bt&gt;al Fatrlawn 72-49, plays

ciOS('d amount of cash.

Minnesota at Doston, lnl
St. Lou.lS at Toronto. 1n 1

,._ :

"

BOSTON CEl.TICS-Traded Damt1 Til ·

Us. J~:Uar!Horv.ilrd. and their -19&amp;1 No. I
draft "pick to lhf Ciewlund Cavalk&gt;rS for
Scott Wcdman, forward. and an undls·

Winnipeg at Vanrou\'l'r, 1111

~

1

NatiORal Bw:ikftball A!fiOdallon

Los AnaeleS at New Jersey. In)
F'tllladelphla a t New Yor k Rangt"rs. tn J
DPtroU a t Chk':JRO, · tnl

~- •ROUND TRIP AIRLINE ~ l:

Sstunlay.

.

~ LOGAN

~

BA~KI!,11li\LL

11

C&lt;~lgmy at~. 1n 1

UlDlfl~

CRUISE
HA W~II

~I

Los Ange1es at New York Isl anders, (nt
&amp;rralo at Was tllngton. 1n1
Edmonton at Minnesota, Jnl

•

MEN'S SUITS

OPEN EVENINGS AND .S UNDAY BY APPOINTMENT

~

pltchPr
NEW YORK METS-De!ilgna tffl BruCf'
Bochy, !'atchcr. fa- rt&gt;U.'!..'1hmrnc:t11.

BUffalo). Washington 2
St. Louis 4, Win~ 2
Sidunby'11 Games
New York Rangen;; a t Ib;ton
Chlca,o at1 Ph.Ud lphlli
Toronto t~ tbetroit , 1n1
New Jcrsty a t Hartford , lnl
Montl'Nl at Plnsbur'1d\ (nt

{§ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~,., .
~

,...les

Vancou~r

Los

BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN
COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; lOAN
OHIO VALLEY'BANK

A TOT AUY UNIQUE DESIGN .
IN MEMORIALS
NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS LASTING AS
PERSONAUZED MEMORIAL FROM WGAN
MONUMENT CO. IT IS A WORTHY
EXPRESSION OF LOVE AND RESPECT.

aA8S A

61

Sml'llle Qh'Won
Edmontcn

.mo. .mo.~ ~ ~ . '

2, Delplu St. Jot.l's. U.O, bfoat Marla

1, Lornln
U.(), boa&gt; EJyna 51-08. .
2. Dayton Dunbar, ~- bPat Wapai«DN
1&amp;51. beat Dayton Meadowdale !!41,
pla,vs at Day ton StebblM S.turday.
J. Cantoo McKlriie)'. lO.l. beat Massu:
IOn Perry r;8.34 , plays at Findlay Satur·
day.
4, Columbus Northland. 10.1, beat ~
lumOO.S !b.J.th n.m. lmt to Cnlumt.s
Brookhaven 5'1·54.
5. Warren Western Reser.,..e, UHI. beat
You~town Urs\libe $.71,
stown Moo~ 97..&amp;5.

1

CHICAGO Cllffi:-SlJlllcod. Paul Moskau,

Nof'I"W Dtl'hbn
' Chlrago
''11 ll
6 193 152
til
Mlhncsota 'n 12
9 lll6 l5!t
f6
St. l..D.IIs
~ 25
6 162 181
36
Detroit
10 2.1' 12 140 192
32
Toronto W :13
fl 151 188
:111

17 lf 13 1!1-41
T-------------------------.
. ,
,-------------

How they fared...

m

~ 149
• Cmptw,U c.....fer81~

111

.
SEATfi.E MARINERS-SIJ!!H.&gt;d AJ Cow·
ens, outl'lelm'r. to a thr(.('·.\'t'ar ronrraC'I .
1\"W;Ional i.c.'ll(Uf'

23 tJ

u

}v:n, sOOrtslop. '\

'!1

Boston

Hartfo(d

' contract.
,
MJNNn"i(JJ'A 1WTNs-Signf'd Da\·ltl Co-

,'W)

9 126 191 ·

MontrtaJ

Qoobl&gt;C

_by...,_,

Easlem
Ky..,- Cn!ek

6 137 :DI

:l)

four- ye;~r

.... _, Quisenberry, relief pitCher, to a

59
fl,l
49 ·
49

A.I¥1111DhrWGn
'11 10
7 llli 124

SHS girls roll over SW

.
'
BOBCAT DEFENDER ,Jeff Moles (21, left)
keeps close watch on Eastern's '11m Probert (22) In,

..............

KANSAS CITY ROY A.1..5-Slgnrd Dan

Phil'dc:lphla 2'1 12
5 1f9 13.1
NY lsies
23 16
7 165 1J7
NYRanReni 22 16
~ 00 152
Was hlnRton 19 14 11 100 liD

,,

· ror

_

Friday'!J SplrCA ~
BASEBALL

,.,._..._

I

POINT PLEASANT - Coach tempo of the game, the local cage '
csroms to PPHS's 30. The Big
pointed out that sophomore forward
Lennie Barnett's Pt. Pleasant Btg
squad opened its biggest lead at the ' Blacks had the edge in turnovers
Shawn
Nibert did a real fine job
Blacks defeated visiting Barbours- 5:49 mark, 46-28. Barboursv!Ue then
committing seven while the Pirates
With eight caroms,
rebounding,
ville, 67-60, to post their fourth
app)led full court pressure on the
had five. All seven: PPHS miscues
after
PPHS's
two big men got in
victory In five ha rdwood startS here
Big Blacks and was able to nin off
dune in the second half.
Simpkins picked
foul
trouble
.
Todd
Friday evening.
four WJanswered points before the
Following Gibson In the scoring
up his fourth personal with 1: 17
end of the quarter, leaving the Big
The Pioneer Athlectic Conference
column fOf Point Pleasant are
remaining in t'le second ~ua rter
Blacks with a )4-point lead going
contest upped the local's conDonnie Jones and ShaW.. Nibert,
and John Hammack picked up his
into the final ·period.
fe rence record •to 2-1, while Bar- both with ·seven points . John
fourth
with 7:02 remaining in the
The Pirates mounted their
boursville dropped fo 2-3 and an
Hammack, Kevin Smith, David
final ·period.
biggest threat in the contest In the
overall mark of 3-3. . . .
.
L!unbert and Scott Rutherford all
BAIIIIOUliSVIJ..LE (fiO) - Jciey Angalel
Senior guard Todd Gibson tickled final stanza. With PPHS playing
chipped in with four markers each
1·24; Dale Kirk 2·2-6: Bren1 Rooewall 7-1-15:
the twine for 14 of his game-high :n ball control, Barboursville was
for the locals.
Doug Larson !&gt;2-12: Tim Nash 4-ifli; John
forced to foul into taking their
Sang 1-3-5; Tod~ Chapman 2-0-4 : Jay Bailey
points, In the first stanza.
PPHS Coach ~nnle Barnette
~- TOTALSD-11-«1.
With
the
Big
Blacks
at
the
chances
·In t)le second canto , Barsaid his team didn't play very inPOINT PLEASANT (671 - Todd GibsOn
free throw line. It was there the
14·9-37; Donnie Jone~ l -5-7; Todd Simpkins
boursville managed to cut the
tellegently after 'openfng up their
()..().0; Shawn Nibert 2·3-7: J ohn Hammack
locals were able to stsve off any
PPHS lead by one point, outscoring
IS-point lead. "We had alot of
1·24; Kevin Smith 2-Mj David Lam bert
Pirate
comeback.
attempt
of
a
04-4; Scott Rutherford 1·24 . TOI'AlS
the locals, 22-21, In the period. The
mistakes defensively and we got in
21·23-67.
•
PPHS hlton 11 of 15 of their free
balanced Pirate scoring trio of
foul trouble. But hey ! ,we're 4·1 and
Score by quarler'fl:
throws
in
the
·
fourth
quarter
,
Doug Larson, Tim Nash and John
we'll win 'em any way we can"., Barboursville
6 22 10 22-'0
enabling them to hanl! on for the 67Point Pleasant
19 21 12 1.5-67
Barnette- said. Barnette also
Sang helped keep them within
60 victory.
'
slriklng distance, but it was PPHS
Team
statistics
show
Point
leading, 40-28, at the intermission
Pleasant biting on 44 percent from
break.
the
floor (21-48) and a blazing 78
By halftime Gibson, Point's
percent
at the free throw Une (25leading scorer. had 24 markers to
32)
.
Barboursville
hit on 32 percent
his credit .. Gibson hit on 10 of 13
of
their
shots
from
the floor (23-71)
shots from the floor and dropped In
JAN. 17, 1983-FEB. 1, 1983
and
53
percent
at
the
foul line (10four of five free throws in the first
half alone.
.
, 19). The Pirates held the edge in the
. ·In the third stanza, in slowing the rebounding department with, 36

Trafisactions

NM-... Jlodl.ey l.ell'le
8)' n.e Allodllk4 P1EM
Wala Coalera.ce

I

.•

Pt. ·Ple~sant outlasts Barboursville, 67-60

Scoreboard ...

.

The Sunday

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
GALLIPOLIS

POMEROY

240 Third Ave.
446-1113

119 W. 2nd
992-2139 .

1704 Eestern Ave.

446-4204

...'t"

515 Main St.
675-1520 . .

•••
•••
•

2611 Jackson Ave.

'.'
••

PT. PLEASANT AUTO PARTS

MASON
Route 33
773-5511

'

:.

·''

~AUTO PARTS
PRDFFESSIONALS

.,

.,.,

675-2731

•

Parts r. '"• autctlitct..... ..

•

.,,''
••
••

,,I,
':)

,,

�•

Page C-8- The Sundoy Times-Sentinel

Pan MII"Oy-Midd,r.polt-Gailipolis, Ohio

Mt!igs County agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE

r
BOB EVANS HIDDEN VALLEY RANCH TOPS AT KEYSTONE
INTEKNA110NAL ~TOCK EXPOSmON CH,\KOLAJS SHOW

- Bob Evans Hidden Valley Ranch of Bidwell, 0100, won the premier
.breeder and premier exhibitor awards during the Keyslone
Jntemattonal Uvestock Expo8111on Cbarolals show at lla!Tisburg, Pa.
Farm Show Complex. Evans' entry, HVR Map Innovation 1132, was .
named bolh Grand and Junior Champion bull of the show. Evans also
won both the Champion Bull calf title with HVK ElqiCCtatlon Jr. 11"12,
and the Reserve Champion Bull calf title with HVR Expect 246. The
Reserve Junior Champion femaie was also shown by Bob Evans
Hldden Valley Ranch. First Prize Herdsman Award was won by
Hldden Valley's herdsmen, Jeff Winkle, Tbe Charoiats Show was
judged by Randall Reed of cOlumbus. The Keystone lntematlonal
Livestock Exposition Is sponsored by the PeiUISylvanla Livestock
Association In cooperation with the PeiiiiSylvanla Departmenl o.f
Agriculture and the StBte Fair Show Commission.

Agriculture and. our community

· Market Risk Managment
classes begin January 27
By Bryson R. Carter
County Extension Agent
GAI..UPOLIS - Our First Annual Farm Marketing . Risk
Management School gets underway Jan. 27. The school Is
sponsored by the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service and consists of
15 hours of Instruction (3 classes on
Thursday afternoon and 3 classes
on Thursday evening with the last
class sesstdn being on March 10.)
To benelll the most from the
school, farmers should attend all
six sessions or as many as possible:
The topics are all related ·to each
other and hopefully will gtve area
. farmers some new Ideas In market·
lng, methods to cut their losses and
a greater awareness of price and
outlook Information available to
them.
Each of the sessions will be held
at the Jackson Production Credit
Association Building, Upper Route
7, Gallipolis.
All farmers, farm wives, family
·members and ~-business per·
sonnet In Gallla and surrounding
Olllo and West VIrginia counties
are invited to participate.
Each family and/or Orm Is

Invited to pay a $15.00 registration
fee ro help defray expenses for
refreshments, publicity, telephone.
computer hook-ups and out-ofcounty spaker travel expense.
Folks may register at the door,
!rut It would help a lot with our
planning If you would return your
registration slip by January20, 1983
to th~ Gallla County Extension
Office.
Call us at 446-7007 or stop by the
1502 Eastern Avenue for more of
the program details.
Local farmers and others helping
plan the school are: Jim Baughman, Buzz, Mills, Alden Wedemeyer, Bob Bateman, Terry Murnarne, Rick Altizer, C. A. Duncan,
Marton Caldwell, Fred Vollborn,
Tom Stump, Lawrence Burdell and
Glerm Graham.
Extension staff
All educational programs and

activities conducted by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service are
available to all potential clientele
on a nondiscriminatory basis with·
out regard to race, color, natural
origin, sex, handicap or rellglous
affiliation.

·club began activities in ·'76
By FRED J. DEEL
Extension Agept, f.H
GaiDa County

GALLIPOLIS - The featured
· 4·H Club for the week Is the K C and
the Sunshine Kids. This formerly
was called K C and the 'sunshine
Girls which was started In 1976. •
This year the name will be changed
because they will be Including boys
. In the membership. The advisors
; are Karen Tucker and Nancy
· Lemley, and the club officers are:
president, Krlsti Lemley; - vice
', president, Mellssa Tucker, secretary, Racbael Saxon; news repor·
ter, Jodi Hall; recreation leader,
. Sharon Bachtel; treasurer, Jodi
; Saunders; health chairman, Eliza; beth Fetty; safety chairman, andy
' Lemley. .
.
; Although 4-H members In this
; club enrolled In many different
projects the emphasis In the past
years bave been on Home Econom·
: lcs projects. The club Is Involved to
: many different community activity
· projects Including: Litter Drive,
: Achievement Tea for Parents,
: Camp F'li-e Skits and a hotdog roast
for 4·H members and their .
families.
The history of this club shows a
: very su&lt;;cessful story as the club
• bas grown to 50 members at the
: beginning of 1982 and was split up
: Into four (4) clubs because of the
large number of members and the
need for more clubs In that area.
: The goal for 1983 for the K C and
: the Sunshine Kids IS to reach out to
; every cbUd In the area · all\1 give
, them _the opportunity to grow_with
~ many activities and optiorlwil·
ties that are avall!ible through 4-H,.
The present members of the K C
and the SunShine Kids are: Terry
' Corbin. Ainanda COx, Elizabeth
· Fetty, Linda Fulton; Brenda
; Gourcher, Cindy Lemley, Rene!
: Lemley, Krist! Lemley, Liz Pres·
' ton, Jodi Saunders, Racbael Saxon•.
April Shoemaker, MissY Tucker
.· and Rose We~t. Most of their
members live In the Bulavl!le area.
0

!Meer WeiP-In
We would also Uke to remind all ·
, 4-H members with steers regis. tered for the 1983 Gallla County
Junior Fait of the Weigh·In on ·
Satur!lay, Jan. 22. All steers which
will be shown at the Gallla County

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·January 16, 1983

Point Pleatant, W. Va.

beans so they are more completely
~...
digested. Unllkepoultryandswtne,
~
ruminant animals can use the
Melp CIJuJay
protein In soybeans without heat
POMEROY - Income Tax · treatment.
School - Meigs Inn Tllesday, Jan.
Raw beans can make up 10
18, si!U"tlng at 10 a.m. Everyone. percent pf the total dry matter
welcome. Therewlllbeachargefor Intake In remtnant rations or 20
lunch.
percent of the concentrate mixture
Olllce Oosed - The· Extension without a serious · decrease 1n
office will be closed on Monday, digestibility of the protein. u this
Jan. 17, In observance of Martin does not proVIde enough protein 1n ·
Luther King.
the concentrate mixture, more
Soybeans Can Be Fed To Dairy protein should be given a soybean
Cattle- Lowerprlcesforsoybeans meal or some . other preform
make money dairymen consider protein supplement.
feeding beans to their cattle. Used
Studies have shown that a 2().25
properly soybeans are a good high peicent of the Concentrate mixture,
energy protein supplement In dairy cattle will eat mixtures containing
feed, according to John Staubus, soybeans very weq. Feed only high
our Extension ~peclallst.
quality beans, ~ be sure they are
Price Is a big factor In deciding stored properly so no mold devel·
whether or not to .feed soybeans. ops during storage.
Usually, dairymen sell soybeans
Dairymen may see an Increase
and buy back soybean aU meal;
In butterfat percentage (1110 to3/10
soybean oil bas higher value as , percent) . when they begin to feed
human food or In lndqstrlal uses raw soybeans, but most of this ·
than as cow feed.
Increase disappear within six
Dairymen .can afford to buy weeks.
Staubus warns agalns mixing ·
soybeanstofeedat54percentofthe
·value of a hundred pounds of rawsoybeanswithurealnthesame
. concentrate mixture. "Raw soysoybean oil meal.
SoybeanS contain about 38 per· beans contain an eiizyme called
cent crude protein and about 88 urease, which breaks down urea
percent total digeStible nutrients. · Into amrnoilla and carbon dioxide
Staubus recommended grinding and makes the I)Uxture unpatata·

ble," he explains.
·
Also, grind fresh batches of
concentrate mix every three to tlve
·days In warm weather. Grinding
breaks the seed coat and exposes
the oil In the bean to oxygen and the
oUbejpnstoturnrancld. The higher
the'· temperature, the faster the
reacilon takes place.
Remember to provide the cor·
reel minerals In each dairy ration,
primarily calCium al!d phosphorus,
and the correct amounts. The Ohio
Livestock Ration Evaluation Program available through our o!flce,
can make this task easier.
Finally, feed lodtzed salt If you
plan to feed raw soybeans, Staubus
says.
'· Creoslte and Chimney Fires H ere are s ll m e o t b e r
eonslderatlons.
Stovepipes. Keep this generally
.unJnsulated pipe as short as
possible, and always Jess than 10
I feet. A long stovepipe, radiates
more beat to the room, but It will
cool flue gases enough to Increase
creosote formation. Three lengths
(six feet) of stovepipe have more
surfaCe area ' than many small

;Urtlght. Secure all stovepipe jolnlll
andtheconnectiontotheslovewtth
a,t leaSt three sheets metal scres
(No. 8 self.tapping, ')I" to %"long)
,per joint. Be sure that ~
stovepipe that cannot be Inspected
In place can be disassembled fQr
cleaning..;.. after the fli"e Is out.
Stack Heater Reclalmers. Stack
heat reclalmers (heat savers), are
heat exchangers that transfer hel(t
from the fiue grass In the stovepl~
Into the room. The heat these
devices extract usually will lower
fiue gas temperature enough .to
cause excessive creosote.
formation. '
•
Chimneys. Higher chimney
temperature~ not only redu~
creosote formation but also helP.
maintain~ draft. Wbeli
deciding whether to use an exlstli!g
chltnliey, consider factors thllt
affect heat loss. Exterior cblt;il·
neys, part!cutarly on north walls; l
are colder than Interior chlmn~
In winter, cold, strong winds ~~
drastically .cool the chimney
enough for creosote to form.
An oversize chimney fiue can
alsocoolgasestoomucb.An8"x8:
stoves.
x 8" x 12" chlmmey Is the best size
Properly fitted pipe sections, for most wood stoves. A stalnl~
with smaller (male) ends iaclne steel liner can be fitted Inside
the stoce, tend to keep creosote · over-sized or unlined stralgbl
Inside. Be sure all cormectlons are chimneys.

Coping with the supennarket

Homemakers ·circle

State/ ational

Price always factor

By BeUie Clark
slmllar nutrient content can offer
Gallla County Extensloo Agent
substantial sa11iru!S.
Home Economlcs .
GALLIPOLIS - In our col!lmn.
last week we told you about some of
the subtle ways supermarket
owners try to Induce you to buy
their products. Today we offer you
some hints that may help you at the
supermarket.
The cost of food Is always a major
concern fur consumers on a limited
budget. Making Intelligent selections from the thousands of available food . products Is essential In
obtaining optimum nutritive value
for the p~e paid. Follnwtng are
some general guidelines to help you
become a better food shopper.
-Prepare a shopping list. Include basic supplies that ni&gt;ed
restocking aild Ingredients needed
for recipes in the menu plan. '
-Check newspapers for adver·
tlsed specials and coupons.
-Follow1tbe shopping Ust but be
sufficiently Oexlble to take advantage of unadvertised store specials
that offer savings.
-Avoid Impulse buying.
-Seek assistance as needed
from the store and department
managers, consumer representa·
lives, and clerks.
-Check handout leaflet and
posted product Information:
Buy only the quantity of food
suited to your needs and storage
facllltie;.
. -Study unit priCing to compare
cost per unit of slmllar foods. U the
unit price Is not listed, divide the
total cost .by the number of basic
units (ounces, grams, pounds,
pints, quarts, liters, etc.).
-Select foods for Intended use,
considering alternatives In form
(fresh, frozen , refrigerated,
carmed, dried), brand, grade,
quality, size and convenience.
Interchanging foods that have

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.
.
By DEAN FOSDICK
except for the courage of King and other civil rights
activiSts In the '1960s, Pryor said.
Assoclared Press Writer
As the nation today marked the Mth birthday of the
North Carolina on Friday became the 18th state to
Rev. Martin Luther Klllg Jr., the son of the slain civil
make King's birthday an official holiday.
Ceremonies today at King's hometown of Atlanta
rights leader said America "still has some rivers to
cross" In the quest for racial equality.
·
· we~e to Include presentation of the Martin Luther
Marlin Lu!her King III, only 10 years old when his
King Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize to movie
father was assassinated on a Memphis motel balcony
producer-director Richard Attenborough and to
on April 4, 1968, made the comment Friday In
King's father, Martin Luther King Sr.
Philadelphia at one of niany observances held acroS$
A march and rally was schliduied. for the state
capitol, while VI~ President Gecrge Bushwas to lay
the nation this weekend to mark King's birthday.
"We have people In this nation who go hungry each
a wre.ath at the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for
day. Yet, we seem to want. to spend our money on
Nonviolent Social Change before giving a speech
missiles, bombs and guns for self-destruction," siild
tonight.
King, 25. "This nation baS Its priorities mixed up."
Los Angeles planned to rename_a street·for King
Elsewhere Fl'lday, public schools were closed In while officials 'with the New Jersey chapter of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored
several states, lt)cludlng California, and metropolitan
People called on pe0pfe to wear a black ribbon or tie ro
counties In Maryllind. ·
commemorate the occasion.
In Washington, D.C., a parade wound down Martin
. As part of an effort to rejuvenate the civil rights
Luther King Avenue ln the Anacostla neighborhood,
movement that his father helped lead In the
an oak tree was planted In King's memory on the.mall
near the Washington Monument and a rally was held
early-1960s, a march on ,Washington Is planned for
Aug. 27, said King. That will bethe20thannlversaryof
at the Agriculture Department wliere comedian
the march In VJhlch the late civil rights leader gave his
Richard Pryor was visibly overcome by emotion.
" ] know In my heart I W01Jldn't be heJ:"e today" . "I have a d)"eam" speech. ·

Buicks &amp; Pontiacs
at Discount Prices
11~9°/o
REAGAN GETS CKEDR- Larry Rumdlsplaya tbe Reacanonilcs "credll" card he Invented
and Is selling for St. The caution at the botiom warns

card holders that Reaganomics "may lake a bite out

THE MONEY MARKET DEPOSIT ACCOUNT

16, 1983

TEAKS FOR KING- Comedian Klcharcl Pcyor .leader, whO would have been Mloday, asagreatmaa ·
wipes a tear from his eye during a speech · of lalth and hope. Telling reporters the eve11t marked
commemorallng the Rev. Marlin Luther King Jr., his first and last serious speech, Pryor said, '1'mjust
before an andlence of 1,500 federal worlrers Friday )II doing thiS for Dr. King today. Today only." (AP
·
Washington. Pry9r described the late civil rights Laserphoto ).

Reagan gets 'credit'
for polic~es in c·a rd

'

Junior Fair must have already
been registered, must be Identified
and weighed on Jan. 22. This will
take place at the old EEE Ranch
located on the O.J. White Road, the
second road to the right, north of
Holzer Medical Center, going to
VInton on St. Rt. 160.
The Weigh-In wUI be from 9 a.m.
until 3!30 p.m. It Is the members'
responmbllity ro make sure lhM ~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;=:::::::::::::::::::::==::=:::=~::::::::::::~
they have their steer (steers) there
between 9 a.m. and 3: 30 p.m.
·
Here are the details concerning
the Weigh-In:
1) Members must have steers
that they are feeding lor their
project at Weigh-In to be weighed
and Identified. Members may feed
'
more than one steer for their
project and then select the steer
they plan to exhibit on the July
~
Entry Form.
2) Identification will be ear
tattoo.
3) It is recommended that steers
be J1roperly castrated and de,__
horned by Jan. 22, this Is a must by
Fair time.
4) There wUI be a Rate-of-Gain
COntest for all steers based upon
this weight and the amount that
they weigh-In at the Fair.
5) There will also be a Breeders'
' ·Rate-of-Gain COntest for members
with calves that were bred, born
and raised on the member's farm.
If there Is any question as to what
will be done If the weather Is bad
then the members should listen to
the radio statJon that morning and
I .
It WUI be .announced periodically.!!
It Is decided that the Welgll·In will
.PrOm~ confusioo,
bonuses . you'll hear I al Ieday ... what 500!l financial
1
be postponed. ·
.
institutions are gling to do for you. But once again, !Miio Valley Bank, the fri.County's
-Members who do not·presently
inoovafllr of tile best in IDtal banking service, ~one slep ahead. Easily proven when you
have a · Steer Project Book may
check oor ~ra retord since we introdoom Daiy Investment I way back in
purchase one on J~n. 22 and also
pick up a Feed Record Sheets. U
•
1981, when many insliluUis either didn1 koow' what consumer daiy interest
members. h11ve any questions
investment saW. wete cr simply diln1 care il offer lhis rustaner ~. ~. our
concerning the We!gh·In or . the
llaiy lnvesln)ent II t.bley Ma~ ~ ~ 001 mlelhing new.lfs sim~y somellting
steer prject tn general they should
1*1. .
.
.
call the COunty Extension Office a
soon as possible.
For more Information concern·
lng all 4·H programs and projects
contact the County Extension ·
Off!~ at 1500 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis, OH 45631, phone 446-71XJ7.
All f. H actlvltles are open to all
potential clientele on a nondlscrlml·
fOI!I' locatloM to ~ JOU better.
natory basis ·without regai-d to.
.
Member:
FDIC
race, color, national ·orlgln, sex,
handicap·or rellglous llfflllatlon.

Janua

&lt;

~83

*
*

Sunda

King's ·birthday
celebrated nationwide

1

*10 REGALS
*13 LeSABRES
-* 3 SKYLARKS
* 4.SKYHAWKS
* 2 CENTURY LIMITEDS
* 2 PARK AVENUE ELECTRAS
* 2 BONNEVILLES
2 FIREBIR[J TRANS .AMS
* 3 PONTIAC 1000's
2 PONTIAC 2000's
* 5 GRAND PRIX

~imt!l- -ennuet Section D

Ill YOU!' Iamme." KasmU88enls also P'!"hlng bumper

stickers of a stmUar nature. He said .most of his
orders !leelll to be coming from Florida. (AP
._rp!loto)
0

LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) -Larry Rasmussen Is an
ad man who says he has found a way for President
Reagan to get the "credit" for his administration's
economic policies.
. .
Rasmussen has produced a red, white and blue
Reaganomics credit card.
"Reaganomics" appears in bold print across the
1 front, and for effect, a large bite Is taken out of one
side.
The bottom half a! the card says: "The bearer of
-this card Is entitled to all rights and privileges ·
Reaganomics can provide, Including loss of jobs,
reduced wages, closed plants, loss of social programs
and general economic disorder."
Across the bottom Is a warning that "Reaganomics
may take a bite out of your Income." Rasmussen
designed a bumper sticker that bears a similar
·
warning.
Rasmussen. ·40, bas been art director for three
Cleveland·area advertising firms for the past 12
years, but he said his attack on Reaganomics is hiS
own bit of entrepreneurship.
Although he Identifies himself as a· Democrat, he ·
said be voted lor Reagan In the 19ffi presidential
election,
"I voted for Reagan ~a use I agreed with him that

we had to start to.cut back," Rasmussen said. "But
when your ship Is headed for an iceberg, you have to
change your course."
He said that so far, the greatest Interest in his
product has come !rom FlorJda . He said retired senior .
citizens seem to have liked the idea and ·have been
ordering batches of the cards and biltnper s~. .,
"Reaganomics is a non-entity, so it's not an attack
on the president or anything personal," Rasmussen
said. "It:s really kind of a tongue-ln-cb\.'(!k thing,
especially With the credit card. I encliurage people to
go out and charge something against it."
,
He said be mailed 4QO news releases to television
stations, newspapers and news agencies on !l!ew
Year's Eve. Since then, he's had orders lor about 4oo
cards and bumper stickers.
He sells the Items for $1 each, and'he sal~ that as of
now he considers the sales a source of lrleome.'
"I have to admit I bad been looking f\)r,§omethlng
that would have enormous public . response,"
Rasmussen said. "People who have been at wor~ for
20 or 30 years are suddenly finding out their·)obS no
longer exiSt." ·
. He said Reagan's policies "affect unfed Democrats
and fed-up Republicans."
·

THE BIG PICTURE - Ohio Governor Richard
Celeste gestures as he. answers qul!ltlona at the

arrangement as a "loaned executive." Dietzel, ·
currently president of the Columbus Cluunber of
Commerce, wiD draw his salary fi"Om the Oblo
Metropolitan Chambers of Conunerce and not tlie
· state. (AP Laserphoto).

Development director:/
'I expected some flak'
By BRIAN TUCKER
AssoCiated Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP ) :-: Alfred Dietzel says be
expected some criticism of Gov. Richard Celeste's
decision to name him development director and allow
private groups to pay Dietzel's salary.
'
On Friday. alter Celeste's speech at the City Club of
Cleveland, the former COlumbus Area Chamber o!
COJ;lliTierce president got what he expected. .
Celeste said Friday that Dietzel would be paid by
the state's eight largest chambers of commerce.
During a question-and-answer session after the
speech, one man asked, "Do you really think It's a
·· good Idea for .government ro be owing favors to the
private sector?"
.
Another man explained that he didn't know Dietzel
but was concerned with the future ramifications of the
move.
"Is It a case of the eight chambers of commerce
getting together and saying, 'The state ought to have a
director of development, so we'll pay his salary'?" the
·· man asked. "Or are they saying, 'We ought to have a
director of development and we'll pay hiS salary If we

can dictate who it will be'?"
The governor said It "was a fortunate coincidence
of interests. Dick Celeste wants AI Dietzel as director
of development. Period." He said Dietzel was the man
recommended by his own advisers, and the chamber
executives agreed.
To provide for the move, Celeste ~aid he would
present .1!\e Legislature an amendment on Tuesday
that would provide for "loaned executives" to serve In
state posts while being paid in whole or in part by
outside sources.
,... ·
Celeste said Dietzel, 51, will serve as chairman of a
rejuvenated Ohio Development Advisory COuncil and
at the same 'time as director of the state development
departme'nt.
"My conviction Is that the one obligation that
government has Is to be determined to build a healthy
economy;- ·and that Is an l~terest shared by the
chambers of cornmerc" of this state," Celeste said.
"It would be wrong If we tailored a program for a
chamber of commerce or eight chainbers of
commerce and that was lt.

Cleveland City Club Friday. Celeste, a Cleveland
'resident, · was forrnaDy swom In as Ohio's 64th
governor Monday and Friday announced applntment
· of Alfred Dietzel to a cabinet po!lt In a unl9ue

'

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.,

• $100 000 P.D.I.C. Insurance
·• ·Check Writing p,rlvlleges
,
• DaiJy Interest Rate
• No Withdrawal Pen-lty
·• $2500 Minimum De polIt

Tears, hugs during
final day of 1\1-A-S-H

;mics,

"TIIA'rs A WR.\1'" - dulmemllln tram the Jl·)'elll' I'UII. Fnm lei .ltre: LoreUa 8wlt, Mike
tlelevllloe 1erte. ''M-A--8-11'' reid to euctBIYe Farrell, wl&amp;b anna araund Swll, David ()plea !lllers,
producer Burt Mefclllle'a IIDil wrap call FJtdar Ill Harry Morpl and AlU Aida. (AP Lue~).
. Los Aaples. u tbe llnal o« the llbow'l

The cast and crew traded autographs and hugs; .
By JERKY BUCK .
and
during rehearsal, Miss Swit broke Into tears and
AP Television Writer
was
comforted by Metcalfe and actor Harry Morgan,
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Following a day of tension
who
played COl. Sherman Potter.
•
and tears, autographs and hugs, "Hawkeye" and
"The tension was so high for all of us on the set,"
''Hot Lips,'.' left .the "M·A·S·H" set for the last time
said Aida at a press conference after completion of .
after ffimlng the final scene of the popular TV series.
filming. '"MAS.H'changed my life. It gave me the ,
."Prlntlt! That's a wrap," called producer-director
opportunity to develop as a director and a writer. It's
Burt Metcalfe at 6:00p.m. Friday alter actor Alan
allowed me to grow. How much will 11111ss It? How
Aida, who played the surgeon nicknamed.Hawkeye,
.
much would you miss your arm? "
uttered the show's last words to Loretta Swlt, who
Morgan broke down at the coriference and cried. ,
played Maj. Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan. ·
·
''I'm
feeling very sad and sentlniental," he said. "I
The scene bad the medical staff of the40'T7th Mobile
don't know If 'M·A·S-H' made me a better actor but! .
Army Surgical Hospital burying· a footlocker of
know lt'made me a better human belilg.:•
mementos from their service In the Korean War.
Miss Swlt, wiping tears from her eyes, said "We
"Well, I figured since' we're burying everything
loved being with each other .. : I thin\( I'm going to
else, wily not the hatchet?" said Hawkeye, referring
need a mourning period after this. "
. to his longstanding feud With the volatOe ~ot l,lps.
"Today It's really hitting me," said Metcalfe. ." .. .I
A somber mood prevailed Friday on . 20th
thought post production would keep ll1Y mind off of it. .
Century-Fox Studios' Stage~ during the Onallllmlng
But I was wr:ong."
for the the offbeat ll·year-old, anti-war series that
drew honors and higb ratings.

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Page-0-2-The Sunday Timii5-Sentinel

•

Pameroy Middleport-Gallipolis, a-.io--Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Spectacular fire. sweeps 1
four buildings in 1895 ·

January 16, 1983

· January 16, 1983

Fire destroys· secti9n ·.
MURPHYsaoRO, Ill. (AP) -A
fire that began above a dOwntown
tavern spread through a block of the
Murphysboro business section today, destroying half a dozen
businesses and kllllni: at least one
person, authorities-said.
: The blaze, whlchbrokeoutshortly
before 2::1l a.m., destroyed onethird of the. block and .damaged
other buildings before " It · was
brought under control ~t 7 a.m..
authorities said.
State pollee closed all highways
leading through thesoutherniiilnols
city, and fire departments from
Carbondale,. Marlon and other
nearby cities \\'ere called to assist.
One person. belleved to be a
handicapped man, died alter hev,:as
tra~ In the fire, pollee" said.
Pollee said atleast one other person
might have been trapped, but they
said they could not search the ruins
until the fire was put out.

Industrial medicine program
opens at Veterans Memorial

Jlm

Ensign, who llved In a
building destroy;by the tire, said
.he and his roo
ate were awakened shortly at ':j a:m. by nlilses
outside:
· "We heard peoPle yelling, and we
saw a llttle flash 'pf Ught outslde,"
Ensign said. "W~ looked out the
window and SdW firemen ·going up
the ladder to get p!;!!ple out of the
building next door. •
"Then we opened the door and
smelled smoke, so we just grabbed a
few personal items and got oyt,"
A sheriffs deputy and a flreflgh-'
ter suffered smoke Inhalation while
rescuing residents of apartinents
above the ll!Jslnesses, officials said.
Winds ot as much as 25 mph
fanned the fire, and sub-freezing
temperatures created Ice that
hampered firefighters.
·
The cause of the fire was not
known.

By JAMES SANDS
hangout for the teenager of . a
Special Correspondent
bygone era. Fqntana also sold
GALLIPOLIS - "About 12 'o'c· , radios In the 1930s. One could buy
lock Tuesday night, fire broke out
here In 19:1l for $169 the Temple
In the middle of E , T. Moore's book
High Boy with a 14 Inch speaker.
store, supposed to have caught bl
The City Loan has been In the
Nevlus-Roedell building since the
fire rolling out of
the stove on to the
1940s when Gaylord Delong, Glori·
floo•r. lt had
ana Foster, and Charlotte Uoyd
burn e d some
ran the place. Thec,ttyLoan,whlch
tlme before dis·
Is a state-wide organization, dates .
covery and was
to 1912 when attorney John Schoon·
over started The City Loan near
pretty well under
way. the wall papers
Lima, Ohio.
Inflammable material being on fire
After Fontana left 360 Second,
.and lUling the whole room with a
White's Confectionery, Willis Tire
blaze. Mr. and Mrs. Moore, the two
and Appllance, R&amp;J Lunch. and ·
Rocchi's Luncheonette used the
Moore sons. and Frank Sargent
occupied the upstairs. When they
room until AAA moved here about
awakened they could not get d.own
five years ago.
the stairs within the store. Mrs.
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115ls
THIS Second Avenue buDding CUJTenUy houslllg City Loan and
Moore and Sargent escaped by the
James Sands' mailing address.
American Auto AMoclaUon, originally was known as the NeviusRoedeU building wben II was erected In 11195.
back statts while E. T. and his two
sonswentdownaladderatthefront r-------------------------------------~----------------~------------------------------~_:------~~~-------------------------Of a building, They had few clothes
on, leaving everything behind.
Moore saved nothing but his ·cash
register and there ls.nothing left of
the building but the walls.':
THE ABOVE IS the Tribune's
aescription of a fire In 1895 on the
corner of Second and State. Destroyed by this fire were four
buildings then occupied by J. M..
Kerr Hardware, E. T. Moore Boqk
Store, J . W. Garlington Book Store,
and Roedell Drugs. These four
buildings covered the space now
occupied by three buildings - the
building that holds one-ha lf of
Thomas Clothiers; the building
that houses The City Loan a nd
AAA; and the old Ohio Valley Bank
building on the corner. All those
buildings were erected after this
fire In 1895. ••
The owner of the Moore building
was Capt. J. H. Nevius, and he went
Into partnership with Gus Roedell
to build one building where before
there had been two. So the building
at 358-360 Second when built In 1895
'
.
.
was known as the Nevius· Roedell
building.
ROEDELL DRUGS was founded
qbout 1892 although for several ·
years prior to that Gus Roedel! had
worked In partnership with Charles ·
Regnier, whose family ran a drug
store on this spot from the 1830s to
1892.
· Charles Regnier was one of
Gallipolis' most Interesting charac·
ters as he was a steamboat captain
during the Civil War and served
with distinction at the battle of
Mobile. In February of 1863
Regnier, then commanding the
government steamboat B. C. Levi
(home port was Gallipolis). was
dispatched to carry General Scam·
mon and his staff from Point
Pleasant to Charleston.
WHEN .THE BOAT arrived at
Red House (Putnam County, W. ·
Va.) It was forced to . lay up
overnight since the shoals there on
ihe Kanawha River were tricky at
dark. General Scammoo Informed
Captain Regnier that there were no
Confederates In the area, so no
guard was needed. That night a
band of 28 Confederates under
Major Downing quietly boarded the
boat ;md made prisoners of General Scammon his entire staff along
with 13 other Federal soldiers. The
boat was then run to Winfield and to
Vlntroux Landing. All but General
Scammon and his stjff were
IYIM~IuURADER
l
released and given five nltnutes to
FULL SIZE
FULL SIZE
QUEEN SIZE
FULL SIZE
clear out. The B. C. Levi was then
f 0
burned. General Scammon laced
REG.
F F
the embarrassment of ' being
1980
5
p A
':I
draped over the back of an old mule
arid led by that form of transportation all the way to Richmond.
AF1'ER ROEDELL took over
FLORAL 1
BEIGE PLAID
from Regnier about 1892 he stayed
REG.
REG.
REG.
on this spot until about 1910. Later
1
980
1
1699.95
at least lour clothing stores would
920
be In the Nevius-Roedel! block at
348 Second: Deardorf-Tanner; J .
BROWN
M. Kaufman Clothes; The Clothll]g
FLORAL
REG.
REG.
REG.
Store; and Brumfield· Thomas
1899.95
1
11010
920
(19Il-1940).
The other room In this building at
360 Second in the early 1!0ls was a
BEIGE SOFA &amp;
REG.
confectlonary, first under the Del- '
REG.
Checcola family and then from 1900
1 129995
11010
REG. 11299.95
to about 1950 under another Italian
lnunlgrant family by the naine of
STRIPE
Fontana.
~
REG.
A FONTANA, BEITER known
1890
186991
REG. 1129U5
as Boss, was born In San Qulrioo
Lucca. Italy, and came to the U . S.
In 1898. Boss' place 'was a fruit
FLORAL
REG.
stand orlglnally with armloads of
REG.
WING BACK CHAIR . RfG.
11040
ked c&lt;ild watermelon toted out of
1999.95
&amp; SWIVEL CHAIR
'1999.95
here through many summers. Boss '
also sold cigars, pape· ;, and foods,
FLORAL
and his place w;. , a popular

.

'

r
.I

..

-... .

.••,..·--.

••
• · RYDER .FRANCIDSE - Riverside Volkswagen
Inc., 195 Upper River Rd., GaUlpolls, .has acquired the
• franchise fo~ Ryder Rental Truck!~. Above, In lrorrt of

-..

a 22-foot Ryder truck, are Jan Johnson, secretary,

'
and Tlin LeWis, service adviSor. The pair
handle
all rentals and Inquiries of Ryder Rental Trucks .
Truck sizes are 1.2-foot, JS.foot and 22-foot. Special
rates are available now.

•
RAVENSWOOD , W.Va. (AP);: Oscar Bush says 1 all Jackson
• countlans have to do to survive their
considerable economic problems is
to go back to their roots - and
farms .
~
The Ohio River county has been
; beset with by financial difficulty
ever since the local Kaiser Alum!·
num &amp; Chemical Corp. plant began
having problems and taytng off
some of its 4,!XXl workers.
, Jackson County, with a popula·
: lion of about 21,!XXl, had come to
; depend on the Ravenswood Works
· as its single largest employer. But
: the layoffs reached 2,!XXl a nd
• remaining employees the n signed
: an agreement conceding some
• provisions won in their last contract
talks with Kaiser. Jackson's unemployment now surpasses 20 percent.
No matter, says Bush, Jackson
' countians were successful farmers
' long tif&gt;fore aluminum became a
glirruner In Henry J. Kaiser's mind:

And Bush, himself a former Kaiser
employee, says he's trying to take
his neighbors back to the soil with an
export business he -says Is bound to
succeed.
"This should re/&gt;resent more
Incentive for people to return to the
farm in Jackson County. People
have been lulled to sleep for 30 years
by Kaiser. Our county Is one that's
adaptable to farming. It's what we
were until Kaiser Introduced pie In
the sky. There's ito pie In the sky
anymore," Bush said.
Bush said he came to Jackson
CountY in 1978 to work for Kaiser but
bought a farm a long the Ohio River,
moonfightlng as a dealer for a grain
company.
Wilen he saw that Kaiser was
h~vlngproblems, he said, he started
le"!lrntng how the grain export
business worked and meeting
people in the Industry . And he 5ald
he found that grain industry gtants
don't want to bothe r with gathering

s

$49995

$49995

sgso

$49995

REG.
890

$69995
·

SOFA

SOFA

SOFA

Emergency runs
Three emergency runs were
answered by local unit~ Th.u rsday
the Meigs Couniy Emergency
Medical Senitce reported.
·At 1:24 p.m. the Pomerey s· ~d
was called to Long l!Qllow Roa . ior
LOla Roberts who was taken · to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; · at
5:12&amp; p.m. Pomeroy was called to
Wet/gall Street for Ronnle DUes
wiJo was taken to Veterans Memor·
laiHospltal; at9:13p.m.Raclnewas
swrunoned to SR 124 for Maxine
.WlDgett who was taken to Holzer

CHAIR

SOFA &amp;
LOVE SEAT
SOFA, LOVESEAT

SOFA

CHAIR

REG. '\

$54995

SOFA

SOFA&amp;
CHAIR

.$54995. RECLINER

''

J

A&amp;

EVERY ITEM
IN .THE STORE
REDUCED

, APPLE GROVE- Employees at Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.'s :
'· Mason County pla nt at Apple Grove received more than $7.3 million .
In wages In 1982, r eported E. William Campbell, plant manager.
· Plant employment averaged 385 1ast year, about the same In 1981, ·
Campbell said.
,
He said the plant also contributed to local economy through the
purchase of about $7 million In goods and services from abOut 140'
companies located within a 50-mlleradlusofthe plant. The plant patct:
more than $1.2 million In county taxes during the year.
A. highlight of the year was the signing of a new three-year labor'
aireement with United Rubber Workers Local 644.
The plant maslUfactures polyester resin, most of which Is used In ·
the botlllng Industry. During 1982, the federal government approved
Ulle of polyester bottles for liquor, which could result In the additional"
sales of 60-70 million pounds of resin by 1985.
Cup-ently, bottle r esin sales are about 450mllllon pounds annuaJ!y,
most of which is used ln soft' drink bottles.
·

Files for stock split
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans Farms, Inc. has filed a registration of'
600,!XXl common shares, after adjustment for a 4-for-3 stock spllt:
effective J aJ1. 18. with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The offering will be ma de after the effective date of the stock split
through an underwriting group headed by The Ohio Company, Alex.
Brown &amp; Sons and Wllliam Blair &amp; Co.
Board Chairman Daniel E. Evans said proceeds from the
following will be used/for financing future restaurant site acquistlon
and construction, for expansion of the company's sausage buslnes&amp;
and for other cor::porate purposes.

'

Int roduces caffeine1ree Pepsi
ATHENS- P epsi-Cola's new caffeine-free cola, Pepsi Free, will
be Introduced Into the southern Ohio marketing area of Athens,
Hocking, Vinton. Morgan, Meigs ,a nd Gallla counties on Monday.
according to Bud Miller, Athens Bottling Co. marketing manager.
Miller reported the soft drink will be available In both regular and
sugar-free br ands. A media advertising campaign Is also planned.

,.

·•

By BOB HOEFUCH
'
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY ~Ever wonder what you would do if your car stalls In
the middle of the night In Meigs County? · ·• ~
Fred Heldreth of Pomeroy says he has the answer In his new
business - a 24-hour road service which will offer m embership
· cards entitling holders to discounts on labor and parts, If needed,
when thell"cars break down.
To be knoWn as "Fred's Road Service," Heldreth will operate the
new business out of hls residence at 104 New St.
What are the charges involved? In-town service charges are $3and
out-of-town, $6 fron\6 a.m. to 6p.m.Anylaborchargesare$6an·hour
or 10 cents a mlnu te. That charge doesn 'I start until Heldreth arrives
·and begins any work required on the vehicle.
Price strcutures Increase from 6 p.m. to midnight and the highest
charge w~l!J!! Invoked from midnight to 6 a.m.
Residents holding membersship cards will receive discounts of
from 10 to 25 percent oft the price of any parts needed and labor.
C;u-ds sen for $5 foi: six months, and $10 a yept w)th Income from
lhembershiPII being used to stockpile parts that would be needed.In
lllli1dng repairs.
Vehlt;teowners ~mlng members will supply lnfoimatlon on the
vehicle imd the Ucense plates. The phone number for anyone needing
more lnfonnatlon or wishing to use the service Is 992-689?.

'"

1 Cord
1 1~

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2 I 811tol&gt;ell Ol!donuMv
ll "-'~• "'Loon
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~ 1 H OUAII~d Gooao
ti2 •CII . lV • Rodou (quo~mont

54-M;..: M.. o~a ndooe
5 &amp;·8wddtn'll

5l,..r ~ ndF.,...nd

I '"' ~ S"'~ II'~•~ •• •~• o n e~ I
I Pub&gt;&lt; So l~

...... ......
~

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ll h •m• h&gt;r Salt
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J S Loll a

'Wontod tollu '

s..pp~,

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5'-"""'"' Solo

J ~ Homo lor Solo

'"'"""'ulo

57 Muooc~
51 FtutU lo llog.tabi..

se.F"' Solo"' r, ....

11

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Wonted

?4 Mo;ooooc , c l ..

7$ ,..., ,, . Mot o••

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11-Mrw:ol'-nuuo

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49 foo L. .H

43Forrno l otflet&gt;~

4 &amp; Fwon,._ 111-0

4t

~q ... pmon r

tnr

4- 19 70 Internationa l bus

G ...•pol;,

3i7
311

CM •~••

4511

\lonlon

511

1,/ptoli,..ood ~
Upto l i-·~•

Up lo 15W,..d•

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"Would you rather watch

good program we've seen

Public Notice

_d.,..,,...,

t1t10

-

1959 Wayne SHeet Sweeper

MOdel No

460270 - -

Dodge Motor (6) cvl• nder 5(11d
sweeper can be v•evved at
V• llage Ma•menance Bu tld• n9
B1ds w111 be accepted by the
V1llage Clerk until noon. Sa fur d ay. Feb 5. 1983. at wh•ch
t1 me bid S will b e ope ned and
pubh clv read The Vil lage C01.,1 f1o.
c1 1w1ll act on b1ds at the regular
council meeting. Feb. 7, 198~ ,·

at

~7 : 30

PM

,.

7-1975 International bus

8- 1960 Ford 1h ton pickup
truck

9-1963 Int. 1b ton ,pic kup ·
truck , ,
Additional Information on
these veh icles
be obtained
at the Meigs Loca Bus Garage.

may

Rutland; Oh1o,. 742-2990, ·

Terms of sale will be cash or
check with positive I.D.
Said Board reserves the nght ·
to waive informalities. to accept
or .eject any and,all or parts of
any end all b1 ~s .

Me1gs Local
School District

Jane Wagner·. Treasurer

(t) 2. 9.t6 3tc
. 165 - t~20

I

•

The Village reserves ~he nght
to reJect any and all b1ds.
.'

W S Lucas
M ayor
V1lla ge a l Ch esh, re

- #00822EH83'7750

I ,

tlOO
HOG

ADVERTISEMEI\IT
FOR SEALED BIDS
The Village ol Cheshtre W111
offer lor sale by seale d b1ds a
used S\l eet sweeper'
.

times or a lousy program
E. KloeS, haven't seen?' ~ ~·· ,...... ~·.. ~·
.
Sec retary
112) 27.1 11 t O. t6, t 8: 4tc

Public Notice

_,..,

Public Notice

LAFF-A-DAY
,_,_.
, ____

Paul

6 ....... 1972 Chevro let bus _:_

On.~ay .. ...nTlo•ooDr,•nMt•.,..
Sioda, in..,ooon

·· ~ ... g.~

·5- 197 5 Internationa l bus

...,...o:.....

... _

IM l.ol-

!tl7

Jn -""'

,. ,. ,,...

l-

.... .._..__
77]

GujuDiit
AtoDil Om

LEGAL NOTICE

#CSE522V11352 7

Bl'!o l'"if'le_,

- Ro~~O tonde

~ ont

Not1ce •s hereby g1ven that
the annual meel!ng of th e
stockholders of The Farmers
Bank and Sav1ngs ·cOmpany of
2 1 1 West Second Street.
Pomeroy. Oh10. wtll be held at
the offiCe ot sa1d Bank 1n
Pomeroy. Ohto. acco rd1ng to •ts
bylaws. on the th1rd Wedn es day of January. 1983. at 4:00
p.m. for the purpose of electmg
d1rectors and the tra nsac!IOn of
such other b us•ness as may
properl y come before sa1d
meet•ng .

- #1 3672EHA33747

A,.oCodo81t

445

IJ ·h.,..,odo
14 M.,ll Gtttn
IS S...ctlo Fottdoott

Public Notice

Public Notice ··'·

Mo10n Co . wv
AiooCodo J()lt

lill•'llt COIInly

Aooo Co4o614

2U
156
Ill

- #416370H01 1242

or

Jollom·ill ;f l o•lo·p /i.,l l&lt;' ,.,·, ·lt flll!l&lt; "• ...

lloc:to~ 1

4 2 M..Wo Hom" IO&lt; Aonr

U , ,,...,, ... Wont ed
llln ourOOM:o

- #416370H01 1227

h'!l".,.,

I .'1 '"' ·~ if;, , ,, flrllf&lt; ".• , .,., ., .,. 1/w

Aulnll~tSMe

;;,'o ..ii-§!1

3- 19 70 International bus

(l()MPLEl'ES TRAINING Alter exlal8lve training In
travel tourism, Pamela Sue
~ of NQrthup Is a receut
graduate ol . Southeastern
ACIIdemy, Kl
Fla. She
. · mel requirements In areaa ol
' c:aner and peiWDIII devetqp.
meat In addition to apeclaltUd
oocupa&amp;lonal tralnlnl· Sla.)1on II
. qUalllled lor entry.Jevel
pollitloa In 1111 lll'ell8 ol the'
alrlne, travel
tourism

71

7~ Ttuc l t roo Sill
73 v,, •• ~wo

2 1 flutiEototoW.ntod

1- 197t Chevrolet bus ~
#SF521PI12519
· 2-1972 Chevrolet bus -'#CSE522V1 13547

1ndwllry.

Medical Center.

Register - 675-1333

LEGAL NOTICE

'

CHAIR

REG.
1999.95

. Goodyear releases progress report

Tribune . .:. . 446-2342
Sentinel - 992~2156

Not1Ce Is hereby giVen that
the Board o f Educatio n of the
Me1gs Local School D1strict.
Me1gs County, Ohto. Will offer
for sale by ·sealed bids seven (7)
cancelled buses and two (2)
p1ckup trucks at the Treasu rer's
olf 1ce. Me•gs jocal School
D istrict. 62 1 South Thtrd
Avenue. Middleport Ohio. at
12 .00 noon. January 18,
t 983.
The veh tc(es are as fo llows:

Auto service center
,opens in Pomeroy

SOFA&amp;

REG.
1829.95

B·u siness. Briefs:

'

service.

CHAI·R

REG .
1910

Elect president

SERVICE- Fred Heldreth checks out a set ofbat1ery cables which
be hopes he will be using often In his new, 24-hour automobile road

SOFA, lOVESEAT

SOFA &amp;

OAK HILL - Improvements In
emergency medicine are · being
offered by Oak Hill Community
Medical Center as a specialty to ·
Jackson and Gallta area residents.
The service Is being provided
througMiie hospital 's contract with
Medical E mergency Associates
Inc . .
The service, which Is part of the
the harvests of small farmers for
required
tra.lnlng .for emergency
countries that can't afford to buy ·
rooms
physicians
at Oak Hlll,
entire shiploads.
Include
the
Advanced
Cardiac Life
"That'sthe,k eytosuccess. Yougo
ACLS)
and
Advanced
Support
(
Into an area the big guy's too· big to
serve," he said. "Thls has a very . Trauma Life Support (ATLS).
These courses train physicians In
humble beginning, but It has a
the most advanced medical tech·
tremendous future."
Diques
available for treatment of
Bush said he began vlsltlng ·
heart
attacks and serious
both
Jackson County farmers to buy corn
Injuries.
and arranging for a barge to pick up
a load and take It to New Orleans.
Some of the farmers weren't very
keen on the Idea at first, though.
ATHENS- Dr. Wl)liam }{, Allen
"A farmer Is just like a coal
Jr.
of Athens was elected president
miner: they're a hard-headed breed
Ohio Valley Health Services
of
of men. A lot of people told me It"
Foundation,
Athens, at the agency's
couldn't be done," he said.
recent
meeting.
Bu~ they were wrong, Bush said.
Other officers eiected (or the
Last month, he sent a barge loaded
coming
year were Judge John L.
with 52,(XX) tons of corn to New
Beckley,
vice president, VInton
Orleans. And he said he's buying
more for another shipment next County; Bernard Fultz, vice presi·
dent, Meigs County; Dr. A. Burton
month.
Bush said the farmers can sell Payne, v ice president, Lawrence
their corn to him and get a hjgher County; _Merrill B. Haney, vice
president, Hocking County; Joseph
price than the current rate at major
Yanity Jr., vice president, Athens
B.
grain elevators In Ohio, across the
County;
Elnon }{. Plummer,
river. And he said he still makes a
secretary-executive
director; Max
profit.
W.
Morrow,
vice
president
and
"It's a small ripple in what I hope
treasurer, Jackson County; and Dr.
to be a large Industry in Jack~on
Frank
W. Myers, vice president,
C&lt;runty," he said.
Athens County.
Officers wlll· serve as the execu·
live oommlttee in 1983.

'

CHAIR

SOFA

SOFA

SOFA

SOFA &amp;

SOFA :

Offer specialty

.

EXAMPLES OF SOME OF THE ·SAVINGS

SOFA

will

CINCINNATI (APl- The board
of directors of the Kroger Co. have
ca lled a spec ial shareholders'
meeting for Jan. 25 to approve
· issuing up to 16.7 mllllon shares of
common stock to complete the
merger with the Dillon Co., H u !chinson. Kan.
Directors also propose to increase
the number of Kroger's a uthorized
shares to 125 mllllon , from 50
mllllon. About 28.5 mllllon shares
are currently outstanding.
Shareholders of record Dec. 14
will be allowed to vote on the
proposals. the company said.
Kroger had gross sales of some
$12 billion last year. It claims to be
the nation's second-largest grocery
retailer with more than 1,250 stores
in 20 states, and more than 500
SupeRx drug stores In 21 states.

MASQUR

REG.

a

Card )," Lucas said.'
This Involves gathering baste
Information in advance a boUt the
employee for hospital files and
issuing the Med-Card to the em·
ployee. The employee then would
present. the Med-Card to Veterans'
emergencydepartmentandrece(ve
treatment without having to go
through any processing.
,
The em ergency department
would be available to wor·k with
Industries on such programs 'a s
cardiopulmonary r es usclatlon
(CPR) training, flu vaccinations
and blood pressure screeni ngs. '
Veterans' emergency room ltas
been sta!fed by physicians provided
. !ly Medical Associates lnc., Louisa ,
Ky., according to a contract the
hospital signed with 'the service last
year.
Lucas said the hospital plans
c;ontactlng area businesses ooncern·
lng the program and that additional
Information may be obtained by
calling him at 992-2104. '
·

Kroger sets
special meeting

OVER 50 LIVING ROOM SUITES ON SALE
MASQURADER

will treat employment-related In·
.Juries on an around-the-clock basts.
",T here is virtually no time wasted
waiting In our emergency room so
the empleyee can be treated and be
back on the Job in a short amount of
time," he said.
Second, In addition to treating
wor)anen's compensation cases,
the emergency room will also
complete employee physicals or
executive physicals. These exam!·
nations · would be done Monday
throughFrldaybetween8a.m. and5
p.m. on non·appoiJ1tment basis.
"We plan to discount all of our
charges with these examinations,"
Lucas noted, "and consequently the•
total examination, Including any lab
or X-ray work, will be the most
reasonable.''
Third, the hospital plans to work
with companies on special programs for their employees.
''One ·program that I feel most
companies wlll have a particular
Interest In wlll be our medical
emergency .data card (Med·

to farm could be
~ J~ckson County's salvation

BROOKWOOD

MASQUR.ADER

· POMEROY- Plans have been
Initiated for an Industrial medicine
prograrri- ·t or area-wide businesses
to assist them In providing tor
employee health:
A program· will be conducted In
connection with Veterans Memorial
Hospital's new, 24-houremergency
department, according to Admlnls·
trator W. Scott Lucas.
·
"The success of our new emer·
gency service has prompted us to
expand our services still further,"
Lucas said. "Consequently, we
decided to create a n Industrial
medicine program · that would
specifically benefit the Industries In
ourarea.''
Lucas said the program should
enablelndustrlesto lnsurethatthelr
e mployees willrecelvehigh.quallty.
prompthealthcarewitharnlnlmum
amount of paperwork and at
reasonable costs.
, The.programhas a three-pronged
direction, Lucas explained. First,
Veterans' emergency department

·~

~ Return

AFTER 3(fYEARS OF SERVING THE TRI-COUNTY AREA
WE ARE GOING OUT OF BUSINESS. EVERYTHING WILL
BE SOLD TO THE BARE WALLS REGARDLESS OF COST.
HURRY FOR 'BEST SELECTION.

s

The Sunda~ TimerSentinel Page D-3

f'Oinen1y-Middleport-Gallipolis, a-.io--Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

�,

•
:
'

3 Announcements

Lost ~nd

•

W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

9

K;-I_T_'N_'_C_A_A_L_Y._LE_'_"_ _ _ _ _ _ _~~Y..;_t.any_;..w_rlgltt~l 23

Wanted To Buy

delivery . Davis Vacuum

Cleaner. one half· mila up
Georges Creek Rd.

Found-Black tom cat on
Wehe lferrace. Burl Windon .

6 4

9_9_2_·2_2_7_3_.- - - 1 __,_ _·_
1
FOUND: item &amp;t Pleeaant

Call

446-0294 ..

Vatley Hospital. Owner Identify and pay for ad . 304·

Gun shout, Racine Gun
Club. Every Sundly atlrting

773·6660.

1.;==::::::'::=;::::=::::::=
Yard Sale

1 p.m. Factory choked guns 7
only .

Garage Sale (Warm) 108

Song feat Jan .22. 7:30'p.m.
·s ilver Run, Free Will Baptist
Church . Singers-The Unroe

Vine St. Gallipolis, next to
North Produce. Ant. furni-

tUre, floor lampe •. pole
larrips, 5' patio door, new
Family, The Gabriel Quartet. and old tool I. glauwa~e. g11
LOIIIG 1 DAY SALE JANU · logsandtomanyother~ema
1 ARY
mention . Jan 12 to Jan
22 • 0 &amp; 0 EQUIP- · to
19.
MENT, ALBANY OH I0 .
- ''
BIN GO

CherOkee.

trip ,

North Caro lina. 20 games,

8

Buying Gold, Sliver. Plotl·

Professional

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

S. motel. Cal Lucas Tours.

Charlet on, WV. 304·346·
7542 .
4

Giveaway

anything to give away and
does not offer br attempt to
offer any othBf thing foF aale
may place an ad In this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

Wa Sta~e Champion Aucti·
oneer Rick Pearson. Estates,

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old
furriiture . gold, ailver dollars, wood ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques, etc., Complete household s. Write :
M. D. Miller, At. 4 , Pomeroy.

Oh. Or 992· 7760.

licensed Ohio-WVa. 304·
773 · 5785 or 304-773·
9186.

the Hartford Community
Center. Trucldoads of new
merchandise every week.
Conaigment's of new and
used me'F chandiaa alwavs
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276 -3069 .

9 . Wanted To Buy

Puppy, girl part German

WANTED TO BUY Oldlurnl·
ture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.
446-;!159 or 256-1967 in

Shepherd . Inquire bes ide
Green Gables in green &amp;
white trailer.

the evenings.

Sh op, Midd·loport .. 992·
3476.

wormad1 3-tan

houi-11 By appointment,

304-876-6234.

Help Wantlid
11

Ucensad Administrator for

Help Wanted

100 bed skilled nu roing
home in Southeast OhiO . . HAVE' FUN paying you r

Salary comensurated with
experience. Send reSume to

Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn· good •••· meet nice

SHMC, P.O.B.ox 1088, Gal·
lipolis, Oh 45631.

people. Call 614 -843 ·
2982. 61 4·388·9048, 81 4·
992·3690.

DIIIEGTOR lor Sheltered
Wbrkshop. Gallia Co . Board

Clothing Store Manager, to
supervise. rylanega ' inven~

of MR-DD . Must meet certification requirements of the
Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation and Develop·
mental dlaabilitiea . BA degree a muat, experianca and
background in business. industrial productiofl and u ·
ktsmenship ia e11entlal. Applicatiolj'l may be obtained

tory and oaK. MARCH OP·
ENING. Send reoumo w~h

salary requirements to -

:GINZA . 2068 Broawlck
Dr ., Akron. Ohio. 4431 3.

elderly
malo. Do light houoawork It

Housekeeper

for

oversee medication . 304·
882·2456 or · 304· 882·
2810.

by writi1g P.O. Box 1

614·367·0102 .

females . Call Cheshire, 61 4·
367·7506.
rier &amp; Peek-a -poo. 4 months

old. 614·992-6619!_

Wanted to buy Square Danc ing outfits. All sb:es, men's

General Haulng end Truh
removll .8orviCII. Reliable
and dapend•ble. C•l 4~

4537.

Will kAI• p,....,ool child·
ran In my homo, Spring
Valley •r.ee. Cell ottor 1,
446·83211.
Babylittlng ., my home or
will do houn cfeonlng. Call
448-e2Z1.

Free

eltft1•••· Re••orwble

pay cash for used
mobile homes. pamages,
reponed or insurance
claims considered. Caii446-

Will

El GHT cute puppiea to good
home. Mother is black, 3A

0176.

Collie; father is unknown.
Puppies are long haired . Can
1eeat home on Milton Rd . in

Old stoneware jars, jugs,
crocks ~ milk pitcJuws. also
old wicher baskets. Call

Camp Conley. Cell 304·
875·2056.
- - -- - - -lc SMALL mixed breed puppin. mother is small, father
unknown. 304· 896·624 or
895·3807
6

weekends 12 noon to 9PM .
deer hides and ginseng and

trapping supplies. Rt . 2,

Need ·lady to live in w;th

Athens .• Oh .

elderly ledy . Call 614·256·

Dissolutions or Uncon·
tested Divorces $350.00
(Costs included).
Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

LOST-Wooden rocker with

up hol.tered seats . Lost on
; the Racine and Portland Rd.

446-0855 .

bel oe

Racine. If found
pleaoe call614·949·2826 .

~

IN LOVING MEMORY
In loving memory of Sher·
man I. Roberts on his 74th
birthday, January 16.
1983.
For you have made your trip
of life and found a resting

ploce, God took your soul and
ano:horod it. fast to the throne
of "'"· God always was your
pilot on this storm~ sea of life.
and now I know you rest in

peace free from pain and
strife. We didn't got to soy
"IOod·bye". or say "Wo laved
you so' . ,With tear dimmed
ewes 1nd achina hearts we had

eo.

But someday

soon ·we'll meet apin on that
far distant shore. And whsn we
roaeh to touch your hand , we'll
never part no more.
Sodly mised by Wife Dorothy
Roberts, Children and
Grandchildren.

512 Second Ave .. Gallipol~
Serving Galli&gt; &amp; Meigs
Counties

~

12

WANTED : Part ·time Li ·
cansed Practical NurM (29

Hourst to dispense medication to residents of an
intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded. Hours
vary ~ depending on when
medication needs to be
dispensed. 66,75 hr. Conteet John LJthew at 4461642, e:llt. 332 . Buckeye
CommUnity Services is a
equa,l opportunity employer.

Art leseona. Joni Carring-

ton. 698·3290.
Will cera for elderly woman
man in my priwate home.
•--·~--

Need a ride to Perkaraburg
from Tuppers Plains area 6
days a week. Call614·985·
4217.

seeking twenty ~ five (26)
persons to perticipate in a
food

service paraprofBI·
clas•oom trlinlng

13

~~~~~====~program.
son shouldUnemployed
contact the local
par·
ASHWORTH
CARPET
INSTALLMENT
Carpet $1.50 yd .;
Vinyl $2.50 yd.; Celllmic Wall Tile $1.25
ft. All wortc guallln·
teed. Bathrooms
$25.00.
Phone 446-~019

MID-WINTER SPECIAL .
4 MONTHS RENT FREE ·
At Green Terrace · Mobile
Home Community on any
in-stock new home or late
model used horne pur·
chased through Feb.

28th.

experience, rwao,.ble
call 1nytlme. 187or 661-3402 .

The Rio Grande College
C.E.T.A. office is currently

sional

Situations
Wanted

GINGER BREAD STUDIO.

Bureau of EmplOyment 5er·
vices for further deteb and
to arrange for an interview.

Insurance

T,he GaD ill County Junvanile

Court is in need of foster
homea for unruly youth . tact Eugene Holley, agent .
These youth need love. Phone 388· 8690.
strong guidance. and a piace
where they can sort out their
lival.·-aecome a foster par- 15
Schools
ent and help Gallie County' a
Instruction
future. For more Information, call the Juvenile Coun

•• 446-3842.

on Teen'a Run Rd. Write to

863 Allen Ave ..

Kerate the ultimate in soli
d81anoa all private lessens.

'

Sell Avon where you live or
where you work. Call 446·
3368.
\.·

54 Misc.

Financing available up to

15 years with 10% down.
14% APR on New HOmes
16% APR on Used Homes
JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOMES, INC.
2110 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

(614) 446-3547

S~LL OUT OF-WOOD
&amp; COAL HEATERS
ONE ATLANTA-REG. '229.95

WOOD HEATER
ONLY

SllOOO

·

11

Help Wentlid

3 2-HOLE-REG. '99.95

LAUNDRY STOVES
HELP. WANTED

RN POSITION
ATTRACTIVE SALARY &amp; BENEFITS
,

•

acr11 in prime location St.. 18rge'llltehan wtth,aU built In
Rt. 124 It Rt. 180. Wilko· oppi.,CM; w~h built In

crete

drive~

"Working In t..tth relltld
market
For detala 8!111d resume to:

CONTACT: OREDIA SCH~OEDER
DIRECTOR OF NURSING

·~ine Crest Care Center
S~SJA~PIKE

GALUPOIJS, OH.
446-7112 .
Equal Opportunity Employer

ONLY

vinyl aiding.

lnsulttlon. $715.000. 814·
992-3962.

S6400

1 WARM MORNING WOOD OR COAL
·100 LB. CAPACITY-REG. '699.95

HEATER With BLOWER
Now$49995

10.3 ocroo 12x60 mobile

With new c8rpet,

home

po-lly furnlohed. tobacco
3 bedroom houll for ule. bell. Ham• Trace Rd.,
New carpeting throughout . 118.000 .111 or 112,000 for
Located on Ba•han Rd. and land only. Cal 614·266·
1it1 on 3 acres of land. 6704 or 814·256· 1 139.
term a to

Dr. Abela.,, P.O. lio•
1880, · Chltllco)ho. Ohio
46601 or coll&amp;-8:30, 814'· ·TR( · STATE M'O BILE 35 Lots &amp;. Acre~ge
774·1949 .
HOMES . , USED· CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
Will ••• Penn1ol Station CHECK OUR PRICES . 315AenutRodnoyonW. T.
on buoy Rt. 7 In Oolllpollo. CAlL 448·71572 .
WatMft Ad. Ow,.r finlnCFor informlltloon wrho: J .
Sinor. P.O. llorc 114t, Per· CLEAN USED MOBILE Ing owlfobfo. 4411·8221 .
keroburv: WVo. 28101 .
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· 21ototn Ohio Volley Momory
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES, · Gorden, UOO. Will pew for
4 MI. WEST, GAUIPOLIS. tronofer. Col 448 · 1391 .
22 Money to Loan
RT 36. PHONE 448-7274.
Two..,,. lot•150 ft . road
HOME LOANS 12% fixed For tale ~r rent 1 2x80
city wot•. bohlnd
rota. Lloder Mortgoga, 1 · mobile home. gao heat. N!al 84 Lumbar. Col 304·8715·
water. clOse to town, avlll· 8873 or 875-3618.
614· 692·30151.
blo Jan . 1st. Cal446·1 240.

front-.

Setvlces

Mobile home &amp; lote for ule
1087 Buddy mobile home
12x60, 2 bdr .. g01 helt.
ntral water. set up with 2 or

4 loll . CaH 446· 1240.
Mobile homo 1981 2 bod·
room 14x60, with 21 ft. roll
out, extrn incl .. 114,000or
13,000 down &amp; lllko over
peymants. Call448·2082.

CloL look-oping
Boclcfcoeplng • we •vice
lor al typeO of -ln11111. 78 Noshuo mobile home
14x70 excellent aond. Coli
Corol No!lf 448·3882
814·387· 7469 lftar C!'M.
Call
111 Ward for
1979 · unlumiahad WlndPIANO'TUNtNG~II~RE~PAEtf:RII~ff~~~~~
mont, •Word'•
Troilor w~h lot. 118,&amp;00.

J' .
.,..

I
I

!

l
41 . Houses for Rent ·
Good loCIItlon 1126 mo.
A-0 no Real Eototes. Corol
Yeager Rooltor, 676·6104
or 87&amp;-6388.
· '

4 bdr. houoe, flreploce, .ful ·'
bliaement, 3 ·mUll out of
mwn, city ochool. Co11446.1815 or 448·1 244 . . ·
'

~

64 MIIC.

54 Miac. Merchandise

SALE ON
SPACE HEATERS
30,000 BTU
90,000 BTU
150,000 BTU
Prices Start At

Sl99 95
.

•

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614·992·2181

'----~-----'

f.:===================::l..---------,

CONSTRUCTION SALES
Na,ional builder,of a varied line ~~ pre-,ngineered
bull,ilngs has a lOcal opening for experienced sales
person • .
v

·I

2 bdr. houoo unlurnlohod on
Lowar R1. 7. Dep. req. Cen ·
81'4·2liB· 1413.

..

3 bdr., total elec. hQu•• in

'

6 room hom'! It botfl n9
petl. one child accepted.; .•
Bob McCormick Rd. Clift
446·2650.
Pomoroy· 2 bd .ooom unlu ~
nlohad hou• . 11915. mo.
Security depciolt. 1100. pluo '
utHitiao. After &amp;·cell 814.992·2288.
4 room houee. PreferablY
adults, no poll. 814·892·
3981 .
unfur~
required ~

6 rooms and beth,
niahed,

dapoai•

'

Th.is Position Offers:
· T~a·ining Sal.a ry
- C~mmission~Program
Paid Vacation
Group Life Insurance
Group Hospital'ization
&amp; Expenses
Company Ceil:
.
Excellent Training Program

New p\tint end oerpatlng.
614-992·3090.
.
In Pomoroy -2 ·bd.room
houee. Equipped ' kitchen. ·
carpeted. forced •lr furnace.
Call814·992·2918.
Reel Estate General

LOT &amp; ltCREAGE
Owner Financina. 5-20
wooded acres overlookilll
O~io River. City Schools.
446·3554

8GIWIZA

.BUILDINGS

)

Wt are looking for. aggreasive self starters that appreci~te a .srowth. :..;pp·orhinity.
·. · .
.

Call or wlile oUr SOles Manager at (614)

373~130 fciran

int.view appointment.

·· Rt. 7 rr. Box 7r Reno,'.Ohio 45713
Equal Opportu_nlty Employer M.F.R.O.H

44

Apartment
for Rent

5 bod'!'Om flou•. Equipped
ki1Chen, oarplll,.. R-on·
alble p.-11• only. Phone
'14·992-3418- 8 p.m.

'

M

61 HouHhold Goods

2 bdr. Rogoncy Inc. Apart· APARTMENTS, mobile
LAYNE 'S FURNih.IRE
.,.nta t200 per mo. or If homea, hou111. Pt. Ple11ant Sofl! . .ch1lr. roc:::lter. otto·
Income Ia 110.000 e&gt;r IMo end Gollpollo. 814-448· man, 3 tobleo. (extra hoovy
HUD oVCIIIobfo. A·One Rool 8221. ·
by Frontier), $686 . Solo,
I bockoom, mtored Vlcto· Eotetu, Corol Yeoger, Rool·
choir ·and lovooeot, 82711.
,..,, AC. IDw heot. booutlful tor. Cell 304· 575·15104 or 2 room e.lflcloncy ope. 1· Solaundchelropricedlrom
C.rpot, •15150 mo.. 304· 8715-1381.
304-882·21188 or 1-814· t2.5. to 1895. Teblao, 146
117&amp;-11104.
.
992·7208.
and up lo 1126. Hide·• ·
Brodbury oflciancy, apt..
be~a.l440 . · on.d ~p to
THREE bedroom houoo 'lor 2nd. floor, adulto only, 7.29
•partment 8526 .. Recliners. 8176 . to
rent, nice locotiOn, 304· 2nd. AVo.; Oolllpollo. Coli
bedroom, 8360 .. lompo from $28. to
875-1090.
448·0867.
Automotive H5. 5 pc. dinette• liom
• ,.: ,:;;. .. 304-675· t99., to 143&amp;. 7 pc .. 8189.
FOUR room flou• OliO 2 Furnlohod ipt . 1 bdr .. 920
•17 0
end up. Wood table with six
bedroom mobile h!'lmt. 4111 Avo.Oallpoflo. Ad~ho. 1 - - - - - --'-- -- l-chllirs8425. to $746. Daok
304·1115·40415.
woter a. electric 'P!f, 1200 FURNISHED 4 room COl•
1,0 :u p to 8225. Hutches.
mo. Coli 448·4418 altar tlge, adulto, no pots. 304· 1560. and up, maple or pine
TW08bodroom hou•. Pt. 7PM.
875·1463.
finish . Bunk bed complete
P6eeunt. 'WV. Ret.rences,
l
·u,;;i;;;,~~i;;;t,ik.-;;;~
with mattrea.es, $250 . and
304-8715·13115.
111. floor part. lurnlohod I Unlurniohod
wp to 8396. Boby bedo.
ljOt. Utlhleo pol d. refomce rent. good location,
11 10. · Mattras10s or box
roqulrod. Inquire at 631 4th 8715·1302 .
opringa, lull or twin , $68.,
42 Mol!ile Homes
AVo .. Gollpcllo.
firm, 888. ond 8'78. Queen
for Rent
MASON WV, 2 bedroom . 10t1, $196 . 4 dr. cheats,
Furnl .... d apt . $146 no apartment, unfurnished, $42. 6 dr. chelt:a. $64 . Bad
ut•tin pel, 3 --raomo. · 701 carpet, air, 1180. pluo utili· lrwmeo, UO.and 825., 10
'
gun . Gun cabinets, $350 ..
Eurika 2 bdr., fumlohed, 4111 Aw., Oolllpollo. Call tin, 304·882·3356.
dinette chairs $20. end 825.
· rivorlr""t lot, ref. • dop. CoM ,.48·4418 oft• 7PM.
FURNISHED one bedroom Gas or electric range~. $326
814·843·2844.
2 bdr. unfurnlohod apt. in apartment In 1'1. Pleosant. · up to 1375: Baby me·
12x80 lumlthod , oonvo· Crown City. Call 614-266· Extra nice, no peu. Phone tresses, 825 a. 835, bed
304·876·1 388.lramao 820, 826, 8. .830,
nlont location, U - River 81520.
king frame $60. Good selec:Rd. Sec. dep. req. Coli
Gorwge Apartment, 3 rm . a. OPTIONAL 2 or 3 bedroom tion of bedroom suites.
448-8&amp;158.
blth, furniahld Including apartment, etove &amp; refriger- cedar chests, roCkers, metal
· 2 ixt~ .. unfum. mobile homo Wlaher &amp; dryer, adults only, ator fumllhed. Near Fla· cebine''· swivel roCkers .
trod&lt;. 304·8715·1248
· .Used Furniture .. bookcase.
on lob MoColllllck Rd. no pato. Coll446-1619.
1'1815, wet• tuml .. 1110 depl
1-:;::;::::::;====:;::== ranges. chair's, end tables,
1 bedroom ApM1ment _for I·
washers, 'dryers, refrigeraCell &lt;t48·3817.
ront. Coli 446-0.390.
45 Fumlahed Rooms taro and TV's. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
2 bodroom 10.110. Aduha
Slooping roo111 112~. utili· 6pm, Mon . thru Fri .. 9am to
o,..y, Brown'o Trolor Pori&lt;. Unfurnlohed apt .. 48
Mlneravlllo. 011. 114-992· St, GaiNpolio, , 11 .1 0 mo., tioa pel, olnglo mole, 1hare 5pm, Set.
1100 - · dop . lriqulro ot both . 979 2nd Ava .. Golllpo- 446·0322
'
3324.
'
Dudley' a Aorist or call 446· 111. Call 448· 4416 otter
Nlco 3 bedroom mobile. 1777.
7PM.
SWAIN
homo-rHorrloonvllo.Un· 1 - - - - - - - - - AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
fu'!llallod. 2 ohlldron, no POMEROY ·2 ~room un·
STORE 62 Oliva St .. Galli·
lnoidll peto. HelOt furnlohed . 'lumlohed apt.. 1.1 80. 2 46 Space for Rent
polio . King cool a. wood
814·742-3033.
bodroom houea 1185. Dep·
heaters with fan 1469, sot
olit 1100. Coil 614·992 ·
boxaprlngltmattress$100,
' ' TWO mobile homootor rent 2288.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home firm $120. sofa·loveaeot a.
on Rt. 2 obaut 5 minutes I - - - - - - - - - - Park, Route 33, North of chair $199 , 1ove seats $70,
~-11 oft- 6. Apt . for rent. Hell doubfa.'2
new coal It wood heaters as
from town. ....,
Pomeroy. Lorge Iota. Call 1ow as ·8399 w11
· h bl owers,
304·875·8277.
bel. mom Apt. Adulto fii'B· 992 •7479 .
f.,.ed. No pets. 814-992used coal &amp; wood heatere.
2749.
new dlnet seta 176 It up,
refrigeratore, ranges. l:tunk
43 Farms for Rent
In Mlddlepor1 2 bdr. fur· 48
Equipment
beds complete 1179, bun·
nllhad op1 .. 304·882·21186
for Rent
kiea mattroasea 140. chests.
or 992· 7206·.
dro11ero. TV's. Call 446·
40 ocroo. 2 bodroomo, oil
3168.
electric. HUD Approved, Furnlahod Apt., tufty car·
oncloadar
digs
8
Backhoe
304·372·8488.
peted bedroom, living room, ft ., lerge bed pick· up haulakUchen, bath. Gange . ble, operate yourself. $90 . cycle also
temp ., 890 ea.
1188. month. Bt4-992· per day. 304-895-3841 .
258-1207.
2382
alter
4
p.m.
44 Apartment
for Rent
For rent·• 3 bd .mom apart·
Real Estate General
mont
In
Middleport.
1150
I:==:::;:======;:=~=====:;
Aportmento. 304·876 · por month. Coli 514·992; 11
1892.
~«
'
151548 .
'

Real Estate General

R&lt;;Dir~M.~:S=Etc·~:."*e'

\

Country living, city
schools, large con·
temporary custom
home on acreage overlooking Ohio River.
Tennis court, woods .
Owner-Agent

OFFICE

and' HOllE - 992-$739
Pomeooy, Ohio 45760

•

VElMA NICINSKY
Associate

CHERYl LEMlfY

Associate
Phone 742·3111

· Home Ph. 742·ll92

446-3554
216-238-7633

US AN OFFER ER~ HAVE MOVED
TO FLORIDA &amp; woudl like their home sold this
month. Like new split level is located on Debby
Drive &amp; offers approx. 3,000 sq. ft. of I iving
area plus 2 car garage &amp; one of the area's nicest
pools. Over $100,000. Call RANNY BLACK·
BURN ~I STROUT REALTY 446-0008.

tblnp were less likely to go
wrong·In a bear! contract.

NORTH

.AQ

t KJ7 3
•I!K QJ
EAST

WEST

.+K2.

CENTRAL REALTY
Residential Investments
Rentals: $175·$220 - Racine
1200-Middleport
MOBILE HOllE - with large add-on building. also asphalt
driveway. Locatd on quiet clean street out of high water in .
Racine. The livin&amp; room is extra large. There is a cement walk
111d fjrge covered porch, also a inetal storage building. You
can be in

thi~A~e~~~"r:~u;~:ss~~~

only $16,\K)O.

tAQ I0 84
+A 6 4 2

+s 3

SOOTH

..

+Ai &amp;

.lJ.IDtll

1

-:. -.
+10]!8 7
Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: East
Norlb Ease
PasS
Pass

3 NT
Paa

Pass

HEAP Vouchers. Call 814· '
266·6816 .

Seven piece living room
suite. 8300. Coll446·0696 . Firewood

52 CB,TV, Rad io

So lib

t•·
••

O~ning lead: 4'2 ··
By Oswoid Jacoby
ud Jameo.Jocoby
Pessimlstlc Pete decided
not to let bio partaer play in
three no-trump. He felt that

cards. Call 614·256·6245.

~quipment

ONE Zenith 23" color TV.
flo ci r model, 304~ 675 -

2816 .
Real Estate General

Then he saw that be was

still sure of his contract.
He ran -off the rest of the
lrtm1J&gt;5 and carefully. dis- ·
carded tbe king-queen-jack
of clubs from dummy.
Now he led his 10 of clubs.
East tock bis ace and led a
s~de, but Pete was now
able to score three club
tricks aad the rubber.
Note that If Pete .bad not
chucked all three of
dummts nice clubs lhere
woul.d bave been no way to
get more than two club
tricks.
. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ..SSN-1

split. cut to '
length. you pick up . We
deliver. We a'ccept HEAP •

'•

l'

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY
OFFICE 446-7013

Real Estate General

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259
NEW LISTING - 10% fixed rate available. This 2 bedroom home
in Pomeroy can be yours w~h $2.400 down. Paymenls of $92.66
monthly for 20 years. Good condition! Total price $12,000.00.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT -Thin! Ave. - Neat home in
good IQCation. 3 bedrooms, bath, ,range-ref., fireplace. Asking
$37,500.00.
NEW LISTIN~ . ..:. 30 acres of vacant ~nd with all minerals.
Excellent hunting. Some timber. $7,000.00
.
NEW LISTING - RUTLAND - Modular with acreage. Plen!j of
garden space plus a 3 booroom, 24'x58' modular, 2 baths, lully
eq~pped ~!chen, fireplace, central air, FA Electr~ heat Rear
endrm:l porch. Approximately 5-6 acres. $38,225.00.
.
NEW LISTING ·- RUTLAND - 'A nice ranch home with 3
bedrooms, basement forced air fumace, insulated. Deck.

112800
SUPER LOCATION - Nice.ranch with 3 bedroom~ vinvl ~ding.
close to golf course. lmmediale pose~on.

#4350
IN.TEREST FREE LOAN - Owne r will carry w~h no interest with
down paymenl or La nd Contractat 12% intetest. Two story Colon~ I
in town, beautiful entry, lormal dinin!'. brick pi!tio.

#1149
OUTSTANDING BUY. -Frame home with aluminum ~dini 2
bedrooms, bath, located in town. Onlv $8 ,500.

#0085 ·

$38,90000
lhe Right Home For You! - POMEROY - 3 bedrooms w~h
carpeting. Separate dining room, nice kitchen with range,
insulated, storms, free standing fi'replace. Secluded, quietl just
$22,500.00.

150 ACRE FARM - )1as barn; lobacco base, timber, and large
pond, good

loct~n.

#0021
EVENINGS CALL
Nella Smith, Assoc. 388·8251
Bob Fmnce, Assoc:. 446-1162
· John Fuller. Realtor 446-4327

m

A.
~

RI.AlTOR

Real Estate General

·REALT:'f, INC.
446-1066

25 Locust St., Gallipolis; Obio

Broker-Auctioneer

LIFE
INSI:IRANCE

CaD M&amp;-jl552 AnyUme
Beth NuU m-950'7

BIR i_27 - $30s. maintenance .nee siding. fenced back nrd,
tamly orieoted neiiftluhoorl Th~ ~a Vtrf clean 3 BR home Call
for apprjntmfint

Real Estate General

ha~

and ~ 1,J;~

a.R 389 - This-fine horne
4 bedroo,&gt;1S
close
kl town. Y6u VII hbave a large lot witl1 a countri atmosphere and
have an the cily conveniences. CaH now!
· ·
·

VIRGIL B. SR .
il6 E . 2nd 51.
Phone

• • 413fJ - Mini farm liXateO just off the Appalaehmn hlgl1wav
11e11 .Jac:kson. 3\1 acm m/1 witl1 an older two BR home, several
rutbuldi~ just ri&amp;ht for leisure lime or lui time !'ling.
\

WMM, WELi:oiiiNG AND SPACIOUS RANCH - Exceptional
zoring makes 4 possible for an active famly to ive in this home
without having to ti~ around each othef. Family room with
fireplace is well separated from formal dining. ,living room and
' bed roo~ EV«)day traffic enters from the gara'ge lo the family
100m and k~. Master suite has privaE bath, there are 3 other
bedrooms on first floor pus bedroom and storaee on secood floor.
2 car 111111111! 16lf32 pool. Near city. $78,~. JUST LIST£01 .

BIIR 414 -. 12xfi0, mobile home siluated on I acre plus ~t
Includes furniture, h.as rear patid w/ cover, conyerted froot dec~
12x24 prage wih storage.
BIIR 422 - .Nice ranch localed on Roush Lane is priced lo sell at
$38,1m. urge LR, 2 BR, kitchen includeS range, eye-level ~en,
dishwasher and disf)06111. Cal. to see.
•··

RUTlAND - Reasonable · 2 .
sto&lt;y, nice size, 3 bedroom'
home. 1\\ bath~ fireplace, 2
porches, dining and 2 level lots.
Just $26.000.

LISTING..:.Tara Estates. Modern bi·~vel overlooking a la1ae
lake. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living ioan &amp; dinN1groom. Over
2,500 sq. ft. of living space Enjfl\' the .use ol lhe club house,
swinimillg pod antl basketball coorts.

BIIR 423 - In town locaUon. Walk ID school. Large two story
iocludes 4 bedrooms. ivirw 100m, dining 100m, formal
, entrance. lg. coontry lill:hen, full basement with family room, 2
: fireplaces, pus rmre. Reduced to $53.000.00. Cal for details.

home

SYRACUSE - 1975 Kirkwood 1
14x65, furniture, equip~
kitchen, 2 EVl!llols and block,
garage-shop. Natuml .gas FA
Furnace. NOW !28,500.
·

.

,ISSUmlfut.

-a•·425-ExeaJ!We .typf brick hom~

in French Pr,!!J~I ·
' teatilring 2.100 square lee! of livitig area oil the main loor plus a .
'ful ~ basemeut. This fine horne is one of a kind in !his area.
. Be the fils! Ill see lhis one. Call now.

~ ri_. ~I $37,500~

loa~

:Bill 426 - ·
It has an assumaPie
' with only 911'lb inlllesl. W, are talkini about a WIY clean, 3'BR
horne siultiJd on nice ftat Itt in a family oriented netfiborhood.
Cal
for complete
details.
!
•

r

!IIIDOL£PORT - SmaM block
gravel Hill
Nat. ps F~
fumace, biiSI!rnen~ mod. lei!.,
and ~ce for. small prden: ,

home:

·~

• BIIR

;· .

3t1 - PRICE GREATlY REouCEill Owner transferred and

THE AliNE. CALL HELIN.

' mus1 Ill this 3 BR ranch. Dose to IDwn inCludes dtJiuxe 1&amp;36
· U.Ound pod. ileduced Ill $44,500 - PLUS owneB wll PlY
' F.HA·YA · jlinls and cUsilg C1J!1s.
.

Ho11sli1[1

' Ill 42t - M flltl:tiE bHew11 il Kypr Creek School !illrid
*-ted on 12IICIIS with 1SSU1111~ 911% loan, Cal for complele

YOU CAll AfFORD OIIE Of'

IRUCl OR VIII.

•!

•

tlalllls!

..

· GIGMTlC FAMILY ROOM- 3 BR L-shaped ranch on niq! comer
lilt I\! bllhs, ilone ~replace in iving room Dlus wood burner in
, famly 100111. Move-in condition and beautifully decorated. Few
miles from city. $53,500.

32 ACR£S - Vel'f private location. 2 ponds, lots and lots of trees .
Spacious 3 bedroom hOme, formal dining. family room, large living
room llld library, deck, carpeted throughout Home h.as·furance
· but present' owners heal with woodburner. Best buy we have seen
for $55.000. .
·
TWO S10III' FIWIE -New comb. wood/electric furnace. 3 BR;
dining IIIIIITI, ful blsement, Ia rae deck with great view. Kyger Creek
Schods. $42.000. PoSsible mortpge assumption. ....: .

COIIIIEICIAL BUILDING - Excellent downtown location. Over
1400 iq. It bu!lness area floNq on main street plus over 1300
sq. It buildill suitable for Alrlae. •uto repair, e\:, fronting on
alleY. 2 BR •11· on second lloor. $69,900. OWner will consider
financing.

·.

LISTING- POMEiillY- ROUND CEDAR HOME - Lois of
and a lovely v~w. Wooded lot. 3 or 4 bedrooms kitchen ·
room · dining area . AI wooden beamed ceilings. FuU
base111J!nt Select your owg carpet ~ decor. Circled rustic r011nd
completelv around the Home. The only round home in the
Take a look at this home!
NEW LISTING-BRICK HOME- Very well kept oome. Features
3 bedrooms, large kitchen, lots ot cabinets. Formal living room,
large ,lam. room, extra room could be used for slora~. office or
sewing room. Gas heat and central air. Has 2 slorage buidings.
Lilre lot and nice garden space. Ltts of planls and shrubs. locale
din city school d ~trict, Washington Elementary. AI this and
~~ch more. Pnced onlv in th.e lower 4Q's.

.

BIIR 424 - 2·plus acres witl1 a very nice 3 bedroom ranch style
home. Y011 wil love the coonlty atmospohere. Possible loan

RACINE - Renovated 6 rooni
residence next to store and
!l:hools. Modern bath, nat ps
heat and' large nat Itt for only'
$18,500

Headquarters

Pass'

GOOD USED APPLIANCES For 11le lump coal &amp;. fire· washers. dry8fs, refrigere· wood. Zlnn Coal Co .. Inc. "
Call 446· 1408.
•
tor~ , ranl!l••· Skaggs Ap·
' pllances, Upper River Rd .,'
beside Stone Crest Motel. House coal $24 ton. Higher
if delivered . Will accept Ohio ·
446.7398.

Diana Pearson. AssQ!!.

1-614·593-5571

.

t+ '

East covered dummy's
jack of dlamonds with the
queen and Pete ruffed.
.
A quick study of dummy
ehowed Pete tbat there
could be nothing wrong with
the lead of a trump to
dummy's ace. Then East dis·
carded a diamond and Pete
stopped to think things over.
· His first tboul!ht was t)lat
be should have tllrdwn a low
spade at trick one to guard
agalnst that five-zero trump
break.
He said to hlmself, "I will
be more careful In the
future."

54 Misc.' MerchandiH

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

Real Estate General

. RCS
REALTORS -'

.

•Q!"I i .

f9152

CANADAY .
REALTY

NAIICY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 143·2075

'CALL

H 614 l-992-3325

... .

.7 5tsl

Real Estate General

EXECUTIVE HOME- Rent·
Sale - This contemporary
4 bedroom, 2 bath home
with finished family room1
attached gafage locateo
near Pomeroy is available
for immediate occupancy. A
lease and/or option to
purchase can be arranged.

1-1~11

•to s s 3

Real Estate Gerwral

Real Estfie General

FAMILY FARM -with 149
acres, 3 bedroom hOuse,
barn. garage, and outbulld·
ings. This farm is just right
tor vour family . All mineral
rights transler to the lucky
new owners. Available tor
immediate occupancy.
Priced-to sell. Call lor tour \O·
day.

61 Household Goods

REALTORS
.
Henry E. Cleland , Jr., GRI ................................. 992-6191
Jean Trussell ........... ................. ...................... 949·2660
Dottie Turner .......... ...... ~ .......... .. .................... 992-5692
Office .... ... ................. ..... ... :....... ................ ... 992·2259

HOBSTEIIER REALTY

SPECIAL
FINANCING

BRIDGE

hi dlw

Real Estate Genera(

'$21,

BUILDING COMPANY

Apartment
for f'8nt

216-238-7633

NEW USTING - 3 bedroom .
home with large lot on quiet
&amp;feet lias rural water and
modern' ~tchen. Onlj $13,500.

·

44

'---------:--.

----~----''

The

Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

HouMa for Rent

right

perty. MAKE AN OFFER. 30 ADJACENT POMEROY . 27
year finarlcing awailable. acrM w•h old ro1d to former
ContiiCt Bank One of Pome· home &amp;ite with excellent
view Of Pomerv. dug well,
roy. 614·992·2133.
crop 18nd, p11ture 1: wood e.
K5. Located betwoon Pome· Poallta. no dOw~ paymen~.
roy and Athens . Jult: off SR 38 ocro farm with good 2
33. 3 point 6 acres. 5 amry Dutch otylt barn.
bd. room home. 165,000. hou•. wooda. paature. Excellent horse farm .
Coli Sheryl at 594-3543.
t39,000. Poolible no down
payment. 3 ,ocre buldlng
olte
13,1500. Thelma Mont·
32 Mobile Homes
gomory Reelty. Inc . 614·
for Sale
3815·7419.

I

_,

With another mobile homu

~;,;,,;~:;'~;., •b1 ~~~~d~~~: f·:44=e:.4372=;·=~;i~~j~8~1~4~-9~9;2~·~8~3~8&amp;;=M:Icl:cl:•:pc=n:.~
Aloo ovoiloblo Karole unl·

torm1 puching and klclllng
baga. and piO•ctive equipmel'd. Jerry
Lowery
&amp; Auo~
ciates
Karate
Studio.
143
Burlington Rd.. J•ckson.
Oh. Call 614-286·3074 or
614·384-6160.

Chillicothe, OH . . 46601 q·r

coll614·772' 4296 .

•unlimltlld e•ni1g pctantlll

Buain•• &amp; Second Mort·
surance Co. has offered gage loono. Equity Re·
services for fire lnsl.l'ance sour101. In Ohio 1·800·
cqverage in Gallia County . ~92·23111. out of Ohio
for almolt: a century. Far'm,
1·513·2158·0112.
.
'
home and .personal property
coverages are availabh to
meat individual n•da. Con23 ProfeSiionel

AN EQUAl OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER .
P.O. No. 25040 .

Hixon.

•Receuion proof health related field
•Proven 10 yair tr1c:krecord

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

WANTED
: Someone
raze
IL:::=======~
r
end
remove
a concretetoblock
house, by contract. Located•

In Memoriam

to let you

Expan•ti 'Notional Com~
pany Ilea un~o oppcrtun~y
available for Oallipolia.

1590, salary neOotlable.

lOST - STRAYED or
STOlEN . Malo Collie dog·
BENJI. Brown &amp; white. JOe
6chultr. Jr. Story Run Rd ..
;1.387-7738.

buement, gar~ge.

Excel ktnt

4761 . Weekdays 5 to 9,

HAMLIN KING
ATIORNEY-AHAW

CARD OF THANKS
1 would like to thank Bob
Hoeflich for puttin&amp; my ad·
dress in His "Beat of the
Bend".
I received 45 cards, letters ,
and aifts from many nice
people at Christmas.
May God Bless all of you
for your kindness .
William A. Watson
167-704 Fl Dorm
15802 St. Route 104
I. Chillicothe, OH . 45601

BABYSITTING In my homo.
Hava ,... ...,.,.,, 304-675·
2570 .

George Buckley, 614-664-

3 Announcements

Card of Thanks

304· 773·&amp;228.

Buy raw fur and bea1 hides.

LOST Manilla envelope with
pertonll · papen. Reward
Call 446· 1279 or 446·
4080 .

1

WANT to do hollaecleaning.

I I

M20. l!xcolltn.t condition. 3
Hoiloe for ula on lond bodroom, 19811 Skyline mo·
contioc1, · Cheshire, Oh, 7 bllo holne. ~lght ., Rlolne:

ville, Oh. l.oko, 3 Iorge cloh-lher. n- corpot flo
buikUnga needed aome re- draper••~ •xcellent con·
pair. Priced to ooll. Poulble dillon. 4th Strwot, Maoon,
terms . VlrginioL. Sm~hReal WV. 304·773·15713 after 6
' - ~E-••_._••_._6_1_4_·3_8_8_·_8&amp;_2_5_.__ p.m.
,. 3 bdr. home In town, • • • 1
1-;:;::;:~=;:::;:;:::::::::
ment, large lot. moriy •••· 33 Ferms for Sale
woodburrwr. qui.-: neighborhood, 832,500. Call
448-4999.
.
2&amp; et. flirm, fenoed, to·
Exceptionally built Cope bocco bose, pond, 1980
Cod ·home over lodtlng the Wlr'llleor trailor lumlohed,
Big Bend. Six rooma, h•d- bom. tood well. off Rt. 776,
wood floorS, 1 1h t.ths. air. 128,1100. Cell 614·446·
t.aement, gas belt. con· 0844.

614· 367-0138 .

Lost and Found

AcrM, rolling lend. Reply to
Box 6000, In c·O Galllpollo
Dolly Tribune, 82&amp;3n1Ave.,
Galljpollo 415831 .. ·

Very nice 2 bdr. duplex
homo, lurnlohod. Main St.
Chashire, Oh. Cell· 61 4· •
.
I;
246,5818.

rm•-

rates, over 115 yn. expe-

roltl. c.tl814-388·8880.

614· 992·5265 .
FOUR kittins. 3 cots, 304·
676·5419 after 5.

w..ted : Farm ol100to1150

Hendorji&gt;n, WV. $226 mo..
Cell 448·9682.
·

3169ofter8P.M2116·1981: ,workohop, 911 lum.,ce. hook.,.Onlong'lucrelot.
814·388·8276.
Prlood In t•ha. Coli Sheryl.
694-3&amp;43.
Special Window Tinting.
Auto, rooldontlol. commor· GREAT BUY
.
cial It R.V. wlndowo. Free ZV• acres, 5 rmo, recently USED' MOBILE HOME.
estimatll, 448·3100 or r.modalod, well to wall 571-2711,
4 4 6. 712 2, K o to II c corpot, forced oir, 113,000. 1---------l.ondo..,mg.
Crown City, Oh. Coli 304·· 14xlll TWO bedroom, Holly
738·8439.
'
Pork, wltfl 100ft. x 200ft.
lol fncfudod . Wuhor It
Plumbing 8-IDo new wotlt
or "'poln. v.-y low earvlco 96 ACRES Beautiful rolling dryer, z olr condltloonoro,
rienco. Rolloblo Plumbing
Co . Cell 814·379-2'700.

41

Real Efiate
Wanted

1978 lfluhz mobile home.
Llnduy Lyono , Tuppeu
Plolno, Oh . 867·3303.

18 Wanted to Do

Dry weD honglng end flnlall·
ing. u · _.. oxparlonco,

and women's. Cell 446 10 Ducks to give away. Call

Good u•d 2 bedroom mo·
bllo flom01. Furnlohed.
124, Mln. .vlllt, Oh . 814·
992·3324.
.

main. 2

Puppies. Part Highland Ter-

12xl0 two bodroom Vin·
dale. two large awnings.
very Oood, partiolly lu r·
nllllod, will help finance.
Coli '4 48· 7384 or 448·
oezz.
·
·

36

Brown"i Trel• Parle:, Rt.

Cheshire. Oh 46620 or

1 wk . old pups, have been

CrMit. Coll814 · ~46·9283 .

"·!I®·

Gold, silver, sterling .. je w~lry . rings. old coins &amp;
currency : Ed Burkett Barber

11

1981 Folrmon.t mobile
home, 12x52 on lot at Quoll

197114x84Aaotwood.mo·
bllo homo, i.7x7 ft. front
Piano leasons. •call Merv porch. 1wnlng, front win·
dow awningl. central •lr,
lucas 446·97B7,
gu hMI, A·1 cond .. price
PER' MANENT HAIR
Call448·4844.
REMOVAl- Profeiolonel
Elootrofyoio C.n•. Inc .. 8x20 Mobllo Homo. Romo·
A.M .A. Approved, Dr. lief· doled. UOO . 814·949·
arrolo.· Gift Ca01Hicotoo, new 21141.

antiques .•farm, households.

Part Terrier part Collie dog .

.3 mos. old . Call 614-266·
1343.'

rioricod In wide orrory of
ovnomo lncludlrig lund oc·
counting and doublo entry.
AH phoooo of payroll and
rolotod tuoo. Strictly ~onfi·
dantlol.- Excellent ratoo...,ceo
l.·~~·~la~l! upon requeot. Coli
Vlddlah ot 814-379·

lrnplp ""'"'

Auction every Fri . night at
ANY PERSON who has

-to hum'tl\~. . ·

•ookkeeplng lervlcea ... Bogln 1983 with · noot
1ccurate records. ~xpe·

a~

Public Sale
l!t Auction

16.000.00 plus 4 jackpot
reon includes tir'!sportation

· w"'a-t Soap opc~H

Valley Piau, 448-8025 or
446 ·8028.

games. January 22nd . &amp;

23rd. 1983. 176. per pe ·

CA'f FACTS: W;nt!ows a~to e~ts,

num. old coins. scrap rings
&amp; silverware. D1ily quotaa
available . Also coins &amp; coin
aupplles for aale. Spring· ·
Valley Trading Co .• Spring

1983

1983

Service•
SWEEPER and sewirij ma -··· chine repair, parts, i nd
supplies.
Ph:k up and

\

•

·

3 BEDRII. HOME along Rt. 588. Modem kit., 4-bay garage.
$45,000.00.
'
2-2 BEDRII. APTS. for rent, adjacent to golf course. adults only,

no pels.
Wood Realty, l~c.
32 Locust St. GaHipolls

.

446- 1~

LOAN ASSUMPTION- 81i1NT. - $3,900 OOWN PAYMENT Monlhlj payments $348.24 including laxes &amp; Ins. Nice 3 bedroom
ranch . Large modern kitchen. This home would be an eKcelient
starter horne.
lARGE SPACIOUS HOME - This home ~ new. Features 3
bedrooms, 2\\ baths, living room, formal dining room, family room
modern klchen and .2 car garage in city' sthool district
'
IIODEAN. RANCH !lOME - 3 or 4 bedrooms, ni:e hving room,
eat·m kilthen, famiv room, lui basement. This home has been
very well kept 2 car garge. .Priced only in the 40s.

�-~· --~

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.

Times-Sentinel
54 Misc . Merchandise
8 ft . del i case end gonda loes. Produce ease &amp; 8 ft .
freezer &amp; 6 ft . freeze r .

Contact 367 -0378.

S te r ~ o
fo r sale, cabinet
model. 2 gu wall furna ces,
electric cook stove, gun rack
and mise . items. Call 614-

992 -6969.

Matching 1ofa and chan like

now. (;all446·2316.
GRAIN FED BEEF
614-266 -6518.

54 Misc . Merchandise 56 Pets·tor Sale

Call

Reg. Dobermana pups and
Doberman Stud Service .

Call 446-7796.

McDANIEL CUSTOM BUT·
CHERING , cutting &amp; wrapping, 6 days a week. phone

304 -882 -3224.

8 ft . aluminum topp er for THREE

HilLCREST KENNEL Boarding all broods. AKC

piece

sec tional
Ford pickup, full length too l couch, 8 months old Phone

box. loft side. Call614-446- 304 -615 -5058 .
1420.
TOBACCO quota for sale,
1 walnut c h ina cupboard 304-675 -1126.
S1 50 . 1 Sears frost-free
ref ri g . $150. treadle type
sewing mach•ne S50, 1
upright piano $100. Call

PDDDL~ GROOMING .

Call
Judy Taylor at 614-367·
7220.
DRAGONWVND CATTERY
- KENNEL. AKC Chow pupplea, CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kinens :

Call 446-3844 after 4PM .

AKC Lheaa Apso puppy,
female , 6 wks. old, 8200 .

Call 446 -0706.

]!l-lMAT ICIIIIIILI!O- GAME
~ ~ ~~·
byHerlt"""*'ordBobl•

71 ·

Livestock

sam
(

Coli 304-&amp;76-7772.
FOR 11le or tr1d1 : brown

storo-radlo. 12.096. Call
448-4664!,

64

l..-!;;r~r:.!!:l0:r-l-+..t""""D"""" I· !-'&lt;~~~ :

t
) I I )

tGALEGH

.1976

aft~r

Chevrolet

6PM.

laguana

Coolville. 1800 J&gt;olos ti- good running cond . $300.
mqthy orchord gran 1&lt; llrm. Coli 1114-246:9278
clover at Rutiorld. Call Cool- ,_•ft_o_r_&amp;_P_M_._ _:__ __
ville1-61 4-8f7-3831tovon- , ~
lngo or wHk-dpyo.
1976 Buick Electra 2 bdr ..
t
PS. Pi!, AC. AM-FM storo
Hay-weed tree. 76 centl, $1,9150 or trade for cattle,

O~c:&gt;EII:

TO A..Ole:&gt;
IIIITIN6 1N5!CT&amp;.

*1 .76 per bale. Glenridge
Farm, Redmond Riqge. Gal·
II polls ·Forry . 304-875 .

Now arrange tile drCiecl IOittro. to
loom tile aurprlao _ , , u !Mig.
gollod~tho---

axle c ar trailer.
fender1 . ramps, spare t1re &amp;
carrier. electr ic brakes .
$1 ,000. Welkin topper, 6ft,

1981 Honda Civic euto .• air
cond., AM -FM stero. Cell

61,4-246-6267

Hay llo Grain ·

Hay - for ..... 400 balea
orchard gr. . and clover at

WHAT TO I&lt;UP IN

Tandem

Autos for Sale

12 pa11enager Ford van
1976 model, auto. . air.

laying hons ..304 -896 3319.

448.4&gt;274.

fleetside bed, $100

1983

21ft year 0(d Ponv stallion.

Un•(nmble thul tour JumbiU,
one tatter to eacn square, to form
four Ofdi.,.,y word1.

I

Va.

63

itfti}N} f&amp;)it

--

11970.

farm equipment, or mobile
home . of equal "alue . Call

448-4637.
80 Model Pinto Railey Sport

HAY. wheat. oats, atraw,

With

everything,

good

304 ·675-2B17 or 876 - ahapo. Call 446-6290 altar
4:30.
.
3927.

Call

81 4-3BB -BB03

71"

Autoa for Sale

71

1968 GTO. 8260. Caii814388·B707.

Autos for Sele

11711 · VW BHtlo. good
condltiop, 304-882·27111.

1976 Chryoloir Newport
good cond. tot ••• •Boo or
trade for canle or hor~es .
Call 446-4288.

71

Autos for Sale

.72

72

Truck• for Sale

11711 Corvem U,200firm: 1978 Ford F-100 PU truck.
Clill 8711-7&amp;47 alter 7.
Call448-4186 .

'

------WISEMAN

tirea. runa goad. sh,rt V'fh&amp;el

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

CARS $1001 trucks $751

· PHONE 446-"3643

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Available at local govern ·
mant aales.Call (refundable)

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Ike Wisemin, BrokeJ, 446-3796. Eve.
Jim Cochran; Associate, 446-7881 Eve.

1-619-569-0241 .
- - - - - - - - l en CHEVROLET Caprice
Classic, 4 door, clean ,
NAO'JI Blu8 · Boo·k
$3,300.00 lirm. Call 304675-3445.
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• Willis 1-:-LNilinghlm. l!oaltor, Ph. Home 446-t539
• Phyllis Loveuy, Phono446-2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446-3294

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PH. OFFICE 446-7699

·B. J. Haiiston. Assoc. - 446-4240 Eve. ·.'f IIALIOII :
Clyde Walker, Assoc. 245-5276

Firewood for sale . Split &amp;
delivered $36 . pickup load .
Call 614-24 7-21 92 or 61 4 -

949 -2029.

REPOSSESSED SIGNI No·

thing ~own I Take over pay-

menta $58.00 monthly. 4 x

8 flashing arrow sign. New
bulbs. letters. Hale Signs .

1-800 -626 -

2419.

55 Building Supplies

Electric dryer·$100 . 30 in .

LP gas range. $65. Cali
814-742 -2362.

Franklin free standing wood
or coal burnar. with bu1lt in
B-B-0 grillfand heat saver(b-

loworl . &amp;160. Call 614·
992-6266.
New s1x -piece livJng room

suite. 304-675 -5162 after
5:30p.m.

Building materials block,
brick. sewer pipes, w i ndows . lintels, etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. 0 . Call

304-~76 ·
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BJ:ST BUY 011
- You can't beat the
price ollh~ 2100SQ.It bnck r_
anch located in town
in a
neighborhood. Has ~ !Edrooms
suite), 3 ba\hs, 24' living ioom,
10om. formal dining room, verY
, nat gas heat cent air and
1ard. C!yde Walker. $69,500.

Musical
Instruments

614-245 -5121 .

Build your own garage or
workshop, 24.-:24, 1$650.
Lumber furnished . Call now,

304-675-5295.

8Yo% ASSUMPTION -

Judy DeWitt, Broker-388-8155
J. Merrill Carter, Broker-379-2184
Becky Lane, Assoc.-446-0458
Don Blake, Assoc.-675-1460

59 For Sale or Trade

1-614-886-7311 .

BUILDING MATERIAL. Flat

1975 Buick Electra 2 bdr ..

metal

sheets porcelan enamel coated , 4ft . by 8ft.

PS. PB. AC . AM-FM stero

thru 4 ft by 12ft. 87.00 to

$1,950 or trade for cattle ,
farm equipment, or mobile
t,ome o1 eq"ual value. Call

$9 .60, odd sizes $3 .00 to

$5.00. 614-667-3085

446 -4537.

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SOUTHERN HILLs R.E.,'INC.

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Good

Location! 4 bedroom home in Pleasanl VaNev

Estates off Rt 35. Over 1450 SQ. It of liv. area

. ircludes dining room. fully eqUipped l&lt;itcheri, N
baths. ubi. room, nat RBS. cent air.•oversized
gara&amp;e &amp; farge yard. Owners anxious to sel. Call
Jm Cochran.
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HOMES FOR RENT, lEASE, lEASE WITH OPTION TO
BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO AND THREE
BEDROOM STARTING AT $200 PER MONTH.

Th~ IS a marvelous

stone
home
bui~ to . last a lifetime. 2 stones 'decorated in
excelenl taste. lrcludes 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,defuxe kitchen, formal dining, fireplace. den, study
plus fu" basement w~h family room &amp; fireplace
Nat gas H.W. heat 2 car garage has walk-in loft
(excellent slorage) pius all city utilitle~ 81A% mtg.
assumJtion. You must see this one at $79,500.

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ARE YOU LOOKING FOR SMALL ACREAGE?- Then
look no further. 13.90 acres. 3 bedroom ranch style
home only 6 years old 2Dx60 tobacto bam. Tobacco
base. Tractor. Farm pnced at only $37,500. · M21J

theeOl! of
town with th1s 3
remodeled
11
acres. Srna! bam. Mobile home 1rcluded for edra
income. Priced in teh 40's.

NEW LISTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
aooro~ 4 mi. north of HMC on old route 160
Modern tri-level has bnck &amp; vinyl construction, 3
BR's, 2 baths. equipped kitchen, d1n1ng area,
laundry &amp; 2 car garage. Can be boughl w1th or
without acreage.
PRICE REDUCED TO $55,900! OWNER Will.
FINANCE. This lovely 1st01y home hasa l5x2llR,
formal dinm~ 14x27 family rm., fin1shed 1n knotty
pine, 2 fireplaces, lull basement, 42 It screened 1n
rear porch, garage and large lot 300 It deep Thos
home ISvacant and needsto be'sold beforethe lsi
of the year locatei:l in Mills V1llage.
BEST BUY IN TOW~ - Stylish 2 story home was
bu1n in 1894 and must be seen to a pprec ~ate .
large open foyer and stairway, l R, dining rm .
partlr, completely eQuipped modern kitchen, 4
BRs, 2\l baths, new ~din&amp; garage, near sc hoo~.
shoppmg. etc.

-NEW LISTING. $49.500-0wners have moved &amp;,
have their lovely 3 BR brick ranch priced to sell.
SpeCial features are l \l bths, family rm. with WB
fireplace, carpet throughout lull basement, garage,
covered rear porch &amp; large lot on the Buiavilte Rd
VACANT LAND NEAR TOWN - Approx. 45 acres
on the Graham School Rd. 1n Green Twp. Some flat
land, m~tly woods &amp; hills. ideal lor building,
county water available $21,000
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STYLE ... ElEGANCE .: A WAY OF liFE - First
limeon the market for lh1s like new contemporary,
3 or 4 BR's. 2 baths, large open LR wrth lire place&amp;
bea.med ce1hngs, l&lt;itchen InCludes range, OW &amp;
relng., full basement wra p-around deck, cedar
s1d1ng, l2x24 allove ground pool, garage. barn &amp;
10 acres near Eureka City sc hoo~

RODNEY-CORA ROAD ;__ App10 x 30 acres_
Woodland iocateo 3m1 !10m Rodney. Counly water
available. $12.000

PRICE REDUCED TO $32,900- 50 acres more
or less near Eurelol, approx 15 A grassland,
' ba~ nce wooded, n~ely remode~ 6 rm. and bath
home. WB fireplace, stove, refrig., several
'OWNER WilL FINANCE - Great family home
outbwlding&gt; Owners leaving the area and w:Juld
with 3 Brs .. 2 baths. 15x27 lR With gas firejiace.
like a Quick sale.
~rge modern kitchen wnh range. seH-clean~ng
oven, OW and disp.. laundry and washer and dryer,
part basement and.over 6 acresofland attheedge
of town. Call Ranny Blackburn, 446-0008
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LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCHER plus78 acres
SECLUDED COUNTRY SETTING. LOOKING FOR
ol land 1n Cheshwe Twp offers lotsof good living ilr
SOIIEI,HING SPECIAl? let us show you this new
your growing fam1ly. Home1sjustlikenewwith 1438
3 BR, 2 bath double garage home w1th over 1700
g:;. ft. ol INing area pius an attached garage 2
SQ. It (j living area. Just nght for lhe large fa moly
spac1ousBRs. 2 baths, 8x27lR, 10x24kitchen wrth
that needs·amjie space Other featuresare natural
refng, oisp., OW, double oven and range, washer
wood ~d ing. heat pump, range, refng., OW&amp;d1sp.
and dryer &gt;lays in laurdry .land IS ma;tly rolling
Can be purchased w1lh 2 acres or 40. l ocated in
pasture~nd v.ith approx. 25acres wooled Cali llr
Green Townlhip
ap;:KJintment.
lOCATION PLUS QUALITY should descnbe this
lovely 3 BR bnck ranch. Spec1ai features are a
large lR &amp; 01n1n g1m. equipped knchen. l \\ baths.
laundry, quality carpet, cent. ' " &amp; an oversoed 2
car garage located on U.S 35 West &amp; shown by
appantment.
P!f'CEFUl COUNTRY-LIKE SETTING. Excellent
buy at $45,900. Owners have been transfeo-ed &amp;
are anxious to sen fh~ lovely brick &amp; frame ranch
with 3 BRs. large ~IGherl , LR w~h 'Ml flrejiace,
nice carpet throughout. attached garage &amp; 1 acre
pine-studded lot. Possible blended mortgage for
qtJi!lified buyers
OWN YOUR oWN CAIIIP SITE - in the wilderness
of the Wayne National Forest. 5 to 9 acre tractsof
-land now ava1lalJe, adjoining thousands of
acres of government 1~0&lt;1-. Public hunting. fishing
and camping permitted Plices start at $3500 w~h
financing available

GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY LOCATED112 ac1e farm has frontage on State Route 588.
Fa~rlielo Centenary Roao &amp; Vanco Fairtield Rd.
Ecellent for farmingor de&gt;elopment Older 5 rm. &amp; •
bath also Included. Owners will consider sell1ng
smaller tracts of short term financing Call for more
information.
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BARGAIN PlilCED AT $10,500 - lOx 55 mobi~
home w.~h lOx18 adoilion, several buildings, over
6 acres of ~nd on Sand Hollow Rd. 1n Green Twp.
Owner Will help finance.
BEEF CATILE COUNTRY - 134 acres, mostly
clean hill pasture, good fences, I II storY home,
large barn, tob. base, fronts on 3 roads ·near
Mudsock. Price reduced to $64,000.

$1,000 DOWit PAYMENT - on thJS Ohio RiVer
LAIID - 25 acres m/1, most~
v18w property. Approx 8 acres wooded land on RECREATION
woods, fronts on Ultle RaCMon Creek &amp; Stat~ ·
llcxE 7 and 5 mi. south of town. Ownerwilfinance . Route 325 near Tycoon lake. $15,000.
blllnce 11 10%.
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condition. 2 story w~h 3 bedrooms and large bath up.
Main level foyer, liv1ng room, all modern k~chen and a
beaut~ul dining room. This home has a full basement
3 car garage and nice big lot
#247
VICTORIAN STYlE WITH LOTS OF ClASS - Home
has been partly restored. Could be a beautiful home.
New ~tchen, new bath, formal dining room, family
room, li,ing room, 3 bedrooms Basement and attic.
Approx. l acre. Priced m the 20s
#189
REDUCED $2,!ro- Owner w1il provide thefinancing
on this ~der ranch home. 3 bedrooms, hvmg room,
d1nmg bath, uti1ty. Needs repair. N~e lot. Priced at
only $15,000.
1'lz STORY FRAME with a~rox. 21h acres. Home has 3
bedrooms, large knchen, INing room with fireplace, I
bath and part basement This home overtooks the nver
and priced at $25,000.
#256
CROWN CITY frame ano brick ranch home well
ma1ntained. ·Spacious lawn with lots of fru~ trees in
back. 3 bedrooms. I lui and 2 hatt baths. large
k~chen , livmg room, family room, full basement and
oversized 2 car garage. Approx. I \l acres!
#240
· SUPERB SfrriNG - Five acres of wooded area
surrounds this natural wood ~ded home. 3 bedrooms,
2 lui baths. Flfeptace. Cathedral ceiling and wood
beams. Tastefully decorated. Minutes of Holzer
Medical Center. Priced lo sell.
NEW LlsnNG - En;oy easy living without destroying
your budget 3 bedroom older home. Remod~ed. 3
acres plus mobile hol]le hook-up Just off llt. 160. .
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11255
INVEST IN LAIID - You'll be ahead In the future. 70
acres, approx. 3 mi. from Gallipolis. 6 room house, 2
barns, tool shed, farm shop. County water. Green Twp.
We inv~e offers now. Usting price $50,000.
11248
DRASTICALLY REDUCED ..:. 3 bedroom mobile
home. Expando plus family room with woodburner.
Covered patio. Garage. Cellar, I% acres appro!.
Excellent financing terms.
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Hl65
BUILDING lOTS - located off uper Rout!! 7 and
priced at $5,000. Lot s1ze left Side 120' front and 100'
deep. Right side 100' front and 120' deep.
#222
REMODELED 2 STORY HOME - ~ated in
Middleport. There are 3 bedrooms. _lleth, IMrll! room,
krtchen and dining room. Older b~ment front porch
and pnced at $40,000.
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11226
CDIIIIEIICIAllOT - Super location. Approximaty 7
aces, Stale Route 35.
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COIIII£11CIAl BUilDING·· PlUS ADDITIONAL .
INCDIIE - lt!eallocalioo for 'your bUsiness, plus 3
motile homes. ail reol!d for extra income Two lo1s. Off
street parkin~ Founerty a floral shop. Owners anxioos
to sell Can for more informabon.
~233
COZV! is the word tD descnbe thiS darflng_2 bedroom
home. Newly remodeled, one car garage Wllh attached
canllll'l and summer Joitchen, alummum sid1ng.
therr1lO!)ane windows and storm doors. NICe fam1ly
home. .
#228

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LOW INTEREST AssUMPTION
town in Galipois School Disl Over 1700 g:;. It ot
SELLER FINANCING
tastefully decoratl!d living area iocludes 3 The terms are eKcellent on th~ 1r10st attractive
bedrooms (rnastefsuite has walk&lt;n closet &amp; bath), brick home on Oak Drive but thats not aiL This is'
2 lui baths, large equipped kil!:hen, fireplace, an energy efficient 3 or 4 bedroom home wfth
woodbumer. famiy room and 2 ar garage. 1.7 those speciaiiDuches that tlie owners added that
Acre settng in quiet location. $65,000.
makes this an outstanding place to live. The yard~
large and private with eKceptional landscafin~
ill% ASSUMPTION - lOW DOWNPYITS. large in-ground pool and a ~~ely view. The home
Very rnce 4 yr. old brick &amp; frame rarch.lndudes 2 has 2 fireplaces, wood burner, finished basement
baths, 3 bedrooms. equipJled knchen.. fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, dinin~ 2 baths, hardwood
central air, 2 car garage w/workshop pius over 1 floors &amp; w~l to wall carpelin!. Nat 1as, central air
ace tree shaded yard. Cal jm Cochran ~tiers &amp; much more Immediate possession. Let us show
mUll sel.
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you one d Spring Valey's finest

EXCELL£NT RETIREMENT or stlrter home! $22,500 is
the price of this 2 bedroom home situated at the edge
of town. Full basement Garage EneriiY efficient natural
gas fumace)nsulatl!d storm doors and windows.
Priced to sell.
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#235
LOVELY SURROUNDINGS - Approx. l acre of trees
and shrubs. Newer rarch horne / 1300 SQ.It of living
space. Home has famiy room, large kitchen, bath,
living room and 3 bedrooms, covered patio, front
porch. Pnced at $45,000.
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11224

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BRICK RANCH - COMPlETELY FURNISHED Lovely 3 bedroom rnrch featuQng a living room, den,
dining - kitthen comb1ned, 2 baths. Thermopane
windows w~h marble window sit~ and "many more
extras. A to~y home with many fine features. CALL
NOW.
11227
3 ACRES -located along lower Route 7. Nice land for
building a home. Land lays ftat aoo overloolls the ri01er.
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11252
BEAUTIFUL VIEW- 2 acres and home has 1,728sQ.
ft. of living space. Beautiful fireplace m liv1ng room,
formal d1nong room. Kitchen complete. 3 bedrooms, 2
~ths, covered patio breezeway. Large garage This
home needs some worfl to be completed.
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$22.100 IS THE ASKING PRICE of this 3 bedroom
home1in RUIIaoo. livmg room, formal d1ning room,
bath, litJ:ren, enclosed heated front porch. Basement
.Natllral ' gas. large slora&amp;e area. Owner financing
available.
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#209 .
POSSIBILITY OWNER FINANCING -Two story well
constructed home. 5 rooms, bath, julllasement fuel
oil furnace, fireplace. Good lcj approximately 'A acre.
BlacktDP road. close to grade school &amp; grocery store.
Listed $29,000, $5,000 down, I yrs., 10% A.P.R
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#181
THIS AD ISN1 FOR YOU unll!ss Yoo're looking for a3
bedroom 2 bath home priced in the 30's.Woodburner,
111 acreS. aose to Addaville School. NICe flat lawn.
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#172
OPEN WOODED AREA- 756surveyed acres close to
Ohio River. can be used lor lots. $6,000. \

Hl64

61100MS and bath, 2or 3' bedrooms, wood burner, and
·tillpiac:e. Drilled wei. -County water avaiable. '1.50
ams. Cbie 1D WayPe National FQJeSt. $24,900. •
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liT THE SIIOW FALL! You'll be r:m:r warm tllis winter
1n th~ cute, easy to heat 3 bedroom home. Bath, denj
partial basement unattached 2 ar garage, sma
workshop rural water and much mCJe. (lose to •
schoo~. church and grocery store. Call toda~ #215
LOAN ASSUMPTION - 3 bedroom home. &amp;it 1975,
klcated on ~rie lot More laf111 available. large livini
room lage ~tchen Combination. Patio and dec~ lO
mmuies to hospital or Gallipois. priced in the tow $40s.

OLD _ WITif MUCH Tli OFFER _
Attradive 3bedroo\11 home with l\l baths, efficient
klcherl area, flll basement !could be ea~ly
finished), large garage, 1acre yard and many other
feaiUres that you must see. CiliUm Cochran to see
th~ one mdaj.

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BUILDING LOT - Johns Creek Road. Guyan Twp.,
dnlld well, electric School bus and mail route. $2.000.
#239
632 KRISTY DRIVE - Reduced ID $59,500.
BLEN0£0 RATE mortgase available ID qua_
lifiid periOO ·
purchasing this charmmg 3 bedroom br~ ranc~ •. 2
baths, family room with fireplace. 2 car (!llrage. City
~hools.
H205

c'ROWN CITY LOCATION - Small neat older home

with lovely ~ew of the ri01er. Home has 2 bedrooms,
iving room dinin~ room, ~tchen, bath and enclosed
porch. 2 o~lbu1ldmgs m good shape and a big lawn
with lots of trees and shrubs.
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11212
YOI1LL BE COMFY year aroUI1d with a fireplace an~
central air in th1s immaculatE 3 bedroom ranch. 2
baths family room d1vided basement garaee, natural
&amp;aS FA furnace. Large coverfed patio.. Clo!e Ill city
conveniences.
#2 14•
FRINGE BENEFIIS - Buy this home and en;oy Ire!
natural gas for heating and a monthly clleck from :
royalties. This 'farm home is in exteffent Cllnditio~ with·
all modem facil'llies and 48 acres of land.

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FRAME HOME with lin~hed basement located in city ;
school district Home has alum. sidmg. iv1ng room: .
kitchen, 2 bedrooms on main level. Bllsement hfs .
family room and 2 bedrooms.
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fll ACRES included wnh the sale of th1s older home ,
with basement 30.-m barn. Tobacco base. Priced io •
the mid 20s.
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FINISH THIS ONEI and have a.beautiful home at hi '
ed&amp;e of woods. 5 ac~ more or le!E. 3 bedrooms, ~ :
fireplaces. lots iJf posSibilities.
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2\1 ACRES kJcated at Bladen, 2. miles bebll Eurelai .
Excelent mobile horne site ~nd priced 'at $3,500
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concrte ftoor in barn with ap~x. 4,000 SQ. It
loafing area. Highway frontage on Rt 75. Also
includes an attractive 4 bedroom home with pool.
Call ayde Walker for info
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PfiiCE RBlUCEO TO $55.000- Owne~ are anxbusID
sell &amp;have drll)ped ~rice over $10,COO.lovely 4oodroom
roiorial on40 acres m/ l Hoose has ~u~iJ!d kilchen. 2
fill baths, llf!!lilt~ basement. master bedroom •a huge
14'1&lt;21' woooiJuming fu~nc~ thermo wi11llw&gt;elcAiso
has ~50 bam. smol mbaa:o illse, and 30 ac wCIXIs.
Secklded setting w~h a lovely IIII!W. Call Cljde wa•er.

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HOME WITH ALOVELY VIEW
ASSUIIABLI LOAN 11\1%
If l-floor liv1n1 suits your life style th~ brick &amp; frame rancher 1s
for you. 3 bedrooms, 1\l baths. oining area, well equipped k~coon
with bult&lt;n cabinets, living room with bric~ fireplace, garage,
redwood porch, and a large above ground pool, with an acre of
. land more or less. City schools.
#563
DON'T FENCE liE IN
~
Give. me land lots of land. 49 acres. more or less, wnh clean l2'K70'
mobile horne. large barri with 20 A tillable, appro~ 3500 lb.
'!Jbacco base and pond. BONUS'! Older 7-room house could be
remodeled goes wnh this property. Uve in one wh1le you remodel
lhe olher if you w1sh. Low 30's.
#487
1 25 ACRES - B·ROOII HOME
Nice remodeled home. Blown-in Insulation. 2 storage bUilding!!,
chicken house: M1ni farm. Cheshire Township Nice country
k~c hen
#558
PACKED WITII POTENTIAL
HOME &amp; 6 ACRES
SITS CLOSE TO TOWN
Just a skip and a hop to Green Schod. 2 or 3 bedrooms, living
room. dining room or den, lar&amp;e country krtchen with appl(ances,
bath, ut1lity room, and storage room.You will like this one! Only
$26,900 with a land contract awilable.
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#564
COUNTRY HIQIIE
&amp; 40 ACRES II. &amp; L
8 room country home- 5 bedrooms, bat~ soower, some carpeting drlled well wnh pump. Nice tobacco barn. Two corn crioo
Garage. Ali minerai nghts goes. Several natural springs; some fru~
trees. l ocated on State Highway Pr~ed only $30,00 00.
#543
6.94 ACRES
VACANT LAND OFF RT. 35
Rollin g lano - bes~e Old U.S. Highway 35. In an area· that is
develop1ng fast Rt 35, short d1stance west of Galhpol5. Get nnow,

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#544

ONE ACRE PLUS - HAS ASSUMABLE LOAN
K1ger Creek School Dfst. 4 room home with lull basement Wrth
small down payment po~ble to assume the present klan. Phone
for detail&gt;
#556
· WHAT A DEAL!! $27,000
Come see for yourself. Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washer, dryer,
dishwasher, refngerator, woodburner and all l1ke new. Storage
building ano 2 car carport Kyger erfek Schools.
#552
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LOOKING FOR PRIVACY!
WE WOULD LIKE TO SHOW YOU THIS ONE
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Wooded setting at Char(jais H1Us overlook1ni the lake. Step into the
entry lin the second level and vrew the beautiful atrium from the
~vel below. This contemporary unique design is a decorator's
dream come true. tntloor pool, office, well equipped kitchen wnh
built-in food island, extra large liv. room. imported lie floor grace
the spacious lam. room. 2 fireplaces, 2\? baths, balcony on front of
both levels. Call for a persOnal show1ng and find out the many
details too numerous to mention in th1s ad .
3.85 ACRES OR 18
In Green Twp. close to GalipOis. farm home. Screened in front
porch, glassed-in back porch. Perm stone ~ding. chicken house, 2
storage lJdgs Lots cl shrubbery and trees. Priced to sell. See th~
lovely land and country home.
N534
1 ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
N1ce comfortable home wnh nee large shaoe trees. Concrete front
porch, lotS of !run trees (app~. cherry, plum and peach), grape
arbor, raspberry vines, good garden land, all level. In Green Twp.
RUJai water, 2 car garag~ fuel oil FA furnace. Basernmt, barn
••;appnox. 16'x24'. Priced in the $20's.
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#491
8 ACRES
W~t;n 10 min. drNe to downtown Galipols 01y School Syst~.
Has hookup for the mobile homa Gall1a Rural Water, elwic and
septic ~n~ nne hght on pole, 200 It frontage.on Graham SclloQr
Rd. Timber. Building s~es. Call Now.

#4n

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OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk into format entrance with operi' slllircase to this love~
completely redeoorated home located 1n the city. Wnt;n walkilg
distance lnshopPifl~ area. 3 bedrooms, 2 lui balm and charming ·
lar~ krtchen. Spaaous INing room with·V(OOdbuming firep!Q
ThiS w:ac11us home has a naluial gas F.A. furnace like new.
lmmedrate posession. Wer~ wailing lor your call
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1146
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Nu-Prime feplacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Call 614 -367-7471
or 614-367-0691 .

oltimotoo. Coli 814-26611B2.

Need something hauled
away or something moved?

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We'll do~ . Call446-3169 or
614·256:1967 after 6.

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 yeer1 exper~nce,

1pecializing In built up roof .

Call 814-3B8-9867.

GENE 'S CARPET CLEAN·
lNG. Doop otoam cleaning,
Scotchgeurd . Free esti-

matoo. Low retoa. 614-9926309 .

RON'S Televiaio_n Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and

houto cello. Coli 576-2398
or 446·2464. •

F &amp; K Troo Trimming. •lump
removal . Call 675-1331.
RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. InCluding
hot tar application, carpen·
ter, electrician, mason. Call

304-876-2088 or 875 4660.

~322

1
I
115 AC. FARM - Possible land contract to 1
quaifled buyer. Good beef &amp;tobacco farm, approx.
50 ac. crop, balance in pas\ure &amp; woods. large 1
tobacco base, 60K90 barn. 24x38 barn, l8x65 s1lo,

BIIICI( &amp; CEDAR - PINE TREE SETTlNG - A
lovely 5 at. jlictllresque setting really_enhaoc~the
beauty olth1s 4 yr. old oome. The home has 001er
1750 S.F., with 3bedrooms. 2 baths. n~e =I ,
fireplace. large eq11IJI)ed k1therl, 2car garage plus
a 911 assumable mottga&amp;e. located on Rtl60, 7
mi. from tDwn. Cal ayde Walker.
4 BEDIOOIIS - $34,900 - Aoo located in city
school district I \1 silry home that has afireplace,
eat•n Mchen, lui basement &amp; garage. A great CHEAPER THAN RENT - Payments of $242 mo.
farniy home located 1ust off Rt 11ust 3miles south including taxes &amp; instJrance. 9\\% mortgage .
assumJtjon with $4500 down pymt 2 -bedroom
of town. Cal Ike Wiseman
home located in the City school dist Has fireplace,
CHANCE Of A liFETIME - RESIDENTIAL PRo- eatj~ _kitchen, new paint \1 acre yard and priced
FESSIONAl OFFICES·OR BOTH- Attractive 2\l at $26,500 Call Jim Cochan.
story, 12 room house on 2nll A01e. in the heart of CLOSE TO TOWN - Convenient tocaoon, l 'h mites
the professional business community. Includes 2 west of town. Attractive &amp; spacious 3 bedroom
klchens, 2'1z bath~ lull basement 2 car garage. ranch. Has full basement warm &amp; oozy firejiace.
Top quaity construction when built and good famiy &amp; recreation r09ffiS, ~nty of storage area-.
rnaintenarce makes this a solid invesbnent A Nat gas &amp; central air plus garage &amp;fenced yard
stately atmosprere IS pr001ided by the large rooms, Priced to sell. call Jim Cochran.
hardwood ~. fireplaces. etc. Call Ike W1seman.
.
.
I
U.S. 35 - Very well constructed 3 bedroom brick
NO INTEREST CHARGED FOR 5 YEARS - Can with lull basement Very nice k1tchen, nat gas,cen.
you beat that! Sellers anxilus llr quick sale and w1ll air, large flat lot. 2 car gara&amp;e. Homes has had
finance with r~asonable down payment and pay- excellent care. $57,000. Call Ike WISeman.
ments of $375 mo. Brick and frame ranch located
w~hln walking d~tance of downtown, school;, etc. 2\1 ACRES- I MILE FROM HIIC- Very niCe 3
Has 3 bedrooms. family rdom, f~reptac~ den._or 4th bedroom brick in Char(ja~ Hit~. This brick ranch
bedroom. 2 baths, deluxe kitchen, oining roorn. offers 001er 1650 sq. It ov l1v1ng in a quality
nat. gas heal central a~r, 2 car garage and large neighborhood. Has family room with wood burner,
wooded yard. l Year Buyer Pntect[ln, $65,000. , eqUipped Joitchen, 3 bedroom~ 2 bath ~ heat
Call Ike WISI!Illan.
· . pump, 2 car garage and o01er 2 acres yard.
1611 ACRES - Attradive remodel ill' home • ' $69,900. Cal Ike Wiseman.
IGCD!d I mie sooth of Rio Grande 3 bedrooms.
flrniy room, 2 bat~. arge dln~ngrOCJrl , Fla. rOCJrl, ''WilL TRADE FOR FARM" - PRICED UNDER
ful basement. woo!llurner, 2 car gara&amp;e, plus . MARKET VALUE - ~tiers anKious to move to
sane sceni: rolng land with 60!1 higl1way country. WID trade for your farm or sell at only
lriJltage, stocked pond &amp; tarfe bam. ~I consider $43,500. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room,
fireplace, full basement, formal dinin~ nat gas
selilg less acreage. ·call B. . Hairslon lai8)'!
heat plus 3car garage and exira largelolw/mobile
EVERYTHING lOU'Ll NEED - A PRICE YOU horne hook-up. Rt 7, 1 mie from bridge. Call Jim
CAll AfFORD - Yo~ must see all the extras thiS Cochran.
fine 3 bedroom home offl!rs. LDcated in city school
district. this rarch has a beautiful Joitchen with NEW LISTING - ~Iter will p;iy VA-FHA points
qualty catioots, range &amp; oven. dishwasher · closing costori this home so you can assume sefle(S
compactor, fireplace in iYm~ room, I \1 bths. fuH present morlpge. 3 bedroom brick and frame
.basement famly room. garage and 18x36 ranch on M1ll Creek. Has equipped Joitchen, beth,
irljll!und pod, huge covered deck and I' ac. Only cent: air aoo garnge. Gootllocation. $49,900. Call
Jm Cochran.
$53.~IIM'LE
DRIVE - Very altracti01e 3 bedroom
10 Ac•s'- MOBILE HOME- ff you eniOY lots
·
ranch
in
Sprilg Vale•r )Vatk to slllres, theatre
of wood~ plenty of wiklife, streams. springs. a
189 cover and just plain elboi! r001l1, then you'll Targrourids, etc. Th~ ~,t,t\l' has- ilefuxe kit·
want Ill see this. lnclllles 12x64 rrobile horne cherl, 2 baths, tjt\)'u ..., famly room, fireplace, bar, nat g;:_, ~t air, garag11, ~rge deck
w/WOIYJ stove. C81 Qyde Walker for info.
-~nd corner lot Priced ID sell. Catl ike Wiseman.
$25,000- Not a bad pririe to pay lor a4yr. old 3
bedloom home with vinyl siding, woodburner, BEST BARGAIN EVER ON A FIX IT UP SPECIAl
1J11io door~ l2x24 carport and a large yard. - 7 room, 2 baths, posta&amp;e stlmp lot - Needs
locilad off Rt 3!i in Jackson Co. Call Clyde Walker. roof ~ ~r aoo kichen · cabinets. Priced at
_ 4 bedroom home StuatBd on·I \I acres $14,000. We need an ctler. Excellent location in
~=;:: ~ney Road. Has alum. sifil&amp; new · Rio G-ande. Make a perfect rental. can Ike
watEr, ~r. plus 3 outbuildi!¥1, cellar Wisem_an.
and trailer pad and hook-up. CaH Clyde 590 JAY ORIV£ - . Yoo'l be pleased when you
'
bill inside this 10 yr.old bHevel off Rt 35.
Attracti'leiY dotll!aled this 4 bedroom hotne ollln
: $12.11110 -l..otllal in IDwn. 4 rooms &amp;beth. Nat • 15124_lanily rocJm• 2\1 baths, fuly eq~
.bid&amp;- and tree. shaded yard. ilill:hen, dlriiiiPOOm, nat ps heat, cent air &amp;2 c
Ill d!ildend slrellt. CliiAci be good lor llr&amp;a Assumable rnor1l!ilie with re.ISDIIIIble down
or sillier home. Call
Wdrer.
payment priced 11 $69,900.
·
.

'
I

#532

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. nice size building lots wnh all uti1ties there. lot size
1018 by l7L2. Better get 'um now
#456
DUTCH STYlE COUNTRY HOME
4 bedr0011!~ 2\l bath~ fully eouiloed eat-In krtchen. form&gt;l rlinin2
room,_1am1 1L room with wood burner, two car garage w1th auto.
opener. &amp;vi~ beauty, charm &amp; col]ltOrt -all deocriliis th~ home.
Priced $74,900.
.

JUST LISTED - 9% ASSUMPTION ·- Very
attractive cofon~ai brock home located 5 mies from

z YIS.

NEW LISTNG- COUifTRY COIIfOtiJ- Escape to
Peace. qu;et and carefree liYine 1n th~ fantastiC
contemporary horne. Beautiful Quaker rnad!l cabinets
in Joitchen, sunken living room with fi~ace and
cathedral ceil1n~ formal dinin&amp; 3 or 4 bedrooms, den,
2\1 bath~ fam1ly room. basement 30'x60' gara&amp;e.
ApproXImately lO acres. Owner ,.U consider fmancing.
City schools
#241
40 ACRES.more or less. BHevel home, 5 yea~ okl with
3 bedrooms _aoo 2 lull baths. Large separate garage. .
Coal sh·ed. Tobacco base. ApprOJ&lt;. 5 acres cleared.This •
property is mostly wooded and located 1n Perry
Township.
11237

54.

·. Bill's. .

EO 'S APPLIANCE REPAIR

86

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING .

#407

·•

PUT IT BACK IN THE LAND- 92 Acres. 4 Bednm
tri-le01el house. Basement Heat pump Central a1r.
Remote area. Very private but samery is great
Pasture. woods. Open to offer. LP. $50,000.

1 Box 124, Pt. PleaNnt,
304 - 676 -4 ~

Machine repairs,

textured ceiling• c~mmer­
ciel and realdential, free

MODERN RANCH WITH APP. HI ACRES
•·
VA ASSUMABLE LOAN
large living room. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, utility room, well equipped
el!t-in kitchen. home carpeted l!lroughout and a 2-car garage.
Near Gallipolis on a blacktop roao. CaH for mformabon.
#557
.
GRACIOUS liVING IN A COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
Truly Rracious familv livin~ can be vnur; in !hi&lt; lv&gt;~uliful 4
bedroom home approK. 8 mi. from GaRipolls. The kitchen ~ a
gourmet's del1ght Un!Eiievilble oining room and fam1ly room. Suitt
for the most discriminating horne owner. 20 acres. Pasture Iano. ·
Horse stable Another 73 acres a&gt;ailable. Many, many amenities.
#542
WOW! $39,900.00
WOW! 911 owner financing. Wow! 3 BR. 2 baths; centrnl air,garage,
storage bu!din~ all furnitUre induded. 5 minutes to downtown
Gallipoli&amp; City schools. large lel'ellot.

Real Estate General

TROUT., REALTV Inc.

81

-

AMERICA'S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER, CENTURY 21.

tY1ll ~
Anwuca
'

MOWREVS Upholstery Rt.

Plumbing
llo Heating

304-676-260B.

#533

446-6610

stands. 81500 firm . Phone

1163 Sac . Ave., Gallipolil.·

446 -7833 or 446-1833. •

CAI\T~R ' S PLUMSINQ,j .
AND HEAJIHI!! •oif4'&lt; 1,,.._______111(
1981 Yamah,o Maxim 860.
Cor. Fourth ana' Pine
8hoft drive. Uko11ew. ExcelRUSS AND MAX
lent condition . 1.646 actual Phone 446-3B8JI or 446 4477
.. ·- EL.LIOTT
miles. 614-992-6864.
Heating &amp;
All T
81. 660 HONDA Custom 84
Electrr'cal
Eleclr '
304-896 -3012.
&amp;· Refrigeration

outomotlc, 8 track. 304882-2730.

'

Multivox MX-20 electronic
piano, brand new cond . Call
8 piece ludwig drum set
1ncludes ell cymbals and

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

low mileage, nlf contained,

GOOD HOUSE
RETIREIIEifT OR
STARTER HOME
Comfortable, neat home with
~rge tiving roorn. eat&lt;n kitchen
with buiH-in kitcherl with
buitt40 cabinets. 2 bedrooms.
storage room, bath and
carport Very con01en1ent loction. Call for further details.

675 -7196.

7446, anytime .

Heavyduty washer &amp; dryerS186. 30 in . electric range .
S86. Kenmore wast-.er· $65 .

57·

good. e360. lor quick solo.
814-742-2602 .

Upholatery

1ei9 ·Motor homo. clean,

FIREWOOD. $15 . your
pickup. 304 -676-2010.
TWO grave lots at Kirkland
Memorial for sale. 304-882·

82

good. look•

79 Motors Homes
· llo Campers

autom.tic tt.,..iuion, ·air
conditio9j~g. tn11ftY oxt;os..

Call of• 6;00,
2766 .
.#--

87

Get your carpet in ship
shape. Water removal. FREE

19711 Kowooaki 600 st&lt;oot
bike : Run1

.'

1--'-'--- - -- - -

ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-446-2107.

Motorcycles

General Hauling

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
-304
~)~/m Lenior,
-67p-

1---- - - - - -

booa. Call 814-992-8072.

.

HARTS Uaad ' Cara, New
Hav9n Weat Virginia . Over
20 leu expen1ive .._, ra In
stock .

86

Home
Improvements

·77 Jeap-noodt pointed •1.850. Aloo 71 J•p-hord Wotor Wells . Commercial
top-•1.300. Collll14-949- ond Domostic. Test holea.
2732. WIM trado.
Pumps Salas and Service.
304-896-3802.
118 Chevy Van. 8 cyt .. good

.

949 -2180 or 614 -742 2834.

'

pickup, run• good.., body

rough. Coll61 4-2116·84118.

Real Estate General

77 Ford Granada. Standard
with 4 a,..cl 011 tilt floor.
• 1200 2 cle-lllver oolor.
Call 614 - 7~--2312 .

81

Vena llo 4 W.O;

Ford Ronchero

1980 Fiat X18. Call 304675-3089 mar 4:00.

Firewood delivered 860 a
cord . Coal delivered S45 .
ton. Call Tom Hoskini 614-

FREE

73

·-

19BO CHEVETTE, 4 door.

Coil

1973

Truck• for Sale

·' Time$-Senti

The

W.Va.

Ohio-Point

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

beloved
68 Abo!Je .

1 Author
Anya 6 Clothed
10 Enormous
14 Most
unpleasant
19 Woodwork-

er's toolt
21 Solicitude

22 Century
plant

23 Cylindrical
24- Pe!aco
in Flome
26 Judged lhe
quality
28 1nventor
29 Siamese

coin

30 Above

32Mis-

represent

33 Hike
34 Federal
ogcy.
35 Shout
37Wickod

39 Spread for

drying

40 ~alter's
products
4 I Liberate'

42 Circus performer
44 Wing-fooled
48 Rational

47 Fool tea-

turea
48 Make a -

(lry)
50 Conllngency

52 Urge on
53 Righirain

55 Wllhoul ond
57 Teutonic

dolly
58 Lomb's pon
name

. . ..58M«ry

USMAgrad.
62Nic:knamo
for Margorol
64 On tho
ocoan

66 Zl!rl'o

69 Apolhecary's

weight
70 Cry like

a dove
71lampreys
73 Seaman

75 ton

17 Verve

78 Walchod
secretly

80 Self~teem
81 Before

82 Individuals
64 Doea.
nouaohold
chore

86 Pinafores
87 Earnest
89 High moun·
lain

92 Oar
95 Vogelablos
98 Prophet

99 Sartor

101 Spring 1...
tlval

132 Young
salmon

133 Pa~ofa
ladder

abbr.

117 Stalk
t19 Robert
-Niro~o

120 Abound
121 Suo
124 Spinnaker
128 Food fish
127 College
olllcill!

1280-protactor
130 Mark loll
by wound

Soolhlng

portrait

28 Alg.;mqulan

92 Black or

141 Savage

143 Room, in
Barcelona
145 Greek letter

146 Educational
Institution
148 InCinerate

150Spas
152.Medller-

Indian

33Woo
36 Tardy

of-

38 Citrus fruit

40 Soulh
American
rodent

41 Caterer's

43 Volcanic

154 Oolphlnllke

45 Punctuation

cetacean
156 Sliver·

white
metal

159 Fal
160 "Lileol -"

concern
emanation
marl&lt;
46 One wtlo
shoots from
cover

47 English

streetcar

49 Girl's ni c k ~
name

51 Avoid
52 Race track
also-ran

DOWN

1 Spread our

2 Brlghlens

54' Leek

5 Roman
tyrant
6 Parts

59 Wrestlers
60 Grant use of
61 COal mea-

through
the scene

7 Vegas or
Palmas

surea
63 Shine
65 Ventilates

8 Dooert

67 Copen·

. dweller

9 Goddoos ol
agriculture
10 Sound
11 Toward
shelter

12 Turf

13 Tetlurlum

symbol
14 Onoot52
15 Money

hagen coin

89 Ea~h

goddess
70 Cupboards
72 99 Across
at times

74 Chinoso
mile

76 Sanla 77 Slaves
79 Cozy room

~~~

102 Rodents
105 Hastened
109 Meadows
112 Loved one
113 Haul
114 Boredom
116 Premlnger
1tB Rodents
120 Menaces
121 Writes
122 Shorten
123 Lampreys
125 Toward

. lhe side
126 Gives zest
127 Obligation
131 Layette

56 Returns to

of bks.

96 Frog's
cousin
97 TransactiOn
100 Exist~

129 Raise

53 Imitates

3 Gosslpg
4 "- or these

days ... "

~o

White
93 Moeling
94 The two

311rrltate

ranean
vessels
153 Conjunction

106 Note of
gOld
108 Spoken
110 Gal of song
111 Pater or
Paul: Abbr.
112 Expires
113 Counl
calories
115Bull!nou

Mod rid

ointment
91 Snoops

157 Worms

107 Symbol for

18 Brief
20 Rescue
23 Three, in

140 Poses for a

139 Tinl

158 Helps

scale

17 Bouliques

83 A Reiner
85 Hold in high
regard
86 Choir voice
87 Doctrines
88 Tidy
89 Actor
Paclno

25 Leningrad's
river
27 Promise

settlement

103 Portico

a towel

lation

,

134 Evergreen
135 Genus of
oUves
137 Greenland

104 Male

105 Word on

ot old
, ~ 6 Out of circu-

Item

132 Aspecl

133~Edges .
134 Chai&amp;Sr'
136 Gutnness

J,

138 Rash
140 Obaorves
141 Wire nail
142 Sicilian
YOicano
144 Hebrew
lyre
147 River In
Scotland
148 Greek letter

149 Goddess of
healing
151 Japanese
saoh
153 Byel
155 Paid nollce

~~~~

1

�Pometoy Mi¥1eport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page [).8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

.

'

Lansky's death.: 'he beat
MIAMI ·BEACH, Fla. (AP ) Meyer Lansky. the reputed underworld patriarch who claimed that
organiZed crime was a myth and
never senied a major prison term, .
dledSaturdayofcancer. Hewas81.
"Hebeatuslhehardway,"sald
Assistant FBI Director Roger .
Young In Washington.

January 16, 1983

'•

u~

the hard Way' . .

The Russian-born Lansky died at
Lansky began hlsc!lmhupward In Lansky Insisted there 1s ~?. su~h
Funeral arrangements were not re!uge tn Israel for a time In the ~
Mount Sinai Me&lt;;!lcal Center at 6 the underworld In the early 19211&lt;1,, thing as organiZed crime. But
Immediately known.
•
early 1970s, hut- was eventually
a.m. , said spokeswoman Judy when he was harelyoutof his teens. congressional committees and law
Lansky, who was Jewish, took expelled. ·
Stanton . He was admitted to the Over the next decades he accumu- enforcement o!flclals wllo pad
llospital Dec. 31 suqer!ng from
lated valuable properties .In the traced his I!Ctivltllei In Nevada, f":iiiiiir;wiiii;;;~liij~liij;;;;;;,;~M~;t;;diijiftiil
dehydration. His physician, Dr.
United States and Cuba, fncludlng CubaandNewYorklabeledLansky
Awnue
Howard Grumer, has re!used to casinos and hotels, and became atopflgure lnorganiZedcrime.
release a ny · Information on ljls known as a financial genius fo~ his
In Francis Ford Coppola's 1974
•
. ,; "
patient.
•
· lucrative Investment advice to film "Godfather II," the late Lee
....,
underworld figures.
Strasberg portrayed Lansky as a
. , _ Authorities tried repeatedly to put big man In organiZed crime.
hlmbehlndharsforalongtermbut
"IneversaW·It,"Lanskysaldof
never succeeded. Lansky used to the movie.
Donnally of Gallipolis.
complain that agents taUed hlm
Lansky lived In a hlgh-rlse
Galllpolls firefighters were also even when he walked hls dog.
waterfront condomlnlum In Miami
.
J
'
'
'
•
"'
.
'
called to put out a chlmrriney fire on
Young said the FBI " had been Beach, the Imperial House, wlthhlS
Crouse-Beck Road at 10:57 p.m .. looking at (Lansky's) activities on second wife, Thelma. Hls fttst
Etc~
Friday.
andotfforqultesometlme."
marrtage, which produced two
.
'
A wood burning stove apparently
1n a rare Interview six years ago, sons, ended 1n divorce.
Ignited soot In the"clilinmney at the .--~::..:.::::..:.::=~_:._:_ _:~_:======---:--L.:::~~=~~~~~!!!~~!! :::!!!!~!!
Esta Snodgrass residence, flreflgh·
ters say.
The fire caused no damage.

SeCond

having a

Firemen extinguish car fire

'
o

Winter Clearance

GALLIPOLIS A backfire
through the carburetor apparently
caused a fire which did $100~age
to a Chevrolet Impala, the Gallipolis
Fire Department reports. ·
The fire department was called to
the Holzer Medical Center parking
lot at 8:17p.m. Friday to put out the
fire.

1

,_ __

.

_

·

The car Is owned by Brian

'

•

. 4

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

Paul Mossman reminisces
for historical society

.

.

·--

SHEw~ GRADUATED from
Rio
Grande High School In 1930.
GALLIPOLIS - Paul Moss(Peeps
was graduated from Lex·
man, a Galllpolltan who made
lngton
Senio~
High School In 1927;
· good with the chamber of
likely
Is
three
years older than
he
· commerce, will be the principal
Mrs. Robbins). Mrs. Robbins Is the
' speaker .at 2:30 thls (Sunday)
afternoon at St. Peter's Episcopal daughter of John Lanier, who
· fanned what is now knoWn as the
Church assembly hall for the
Bob Evans farm . Her family lived
regular meeting of the GalUa
on
the farm, and her brothers and
. County Histortcal Society.
•·
she walked toschool. H. A. Wood
· H1S SUBJECI' will be, "Down owned the farm then .
Memory's Lane." You older folk '
. ___ _
will get a kick out of the manner In
BETTY TIIITE, 33427 Or~ngewhlch Mossman hrlngs hack the 1awn, LlvonIa, Ml . 48150 , asks,
- old days for you to re-rellsh.
"Can you please print a query that
may help me cllmh further on my
WHILE MOST of the crowd of 30 famil y tree?" Her greatta 50 who attend meetings every
grandfather, A C. Donaldson,
third Sunday· of the Gallla County
manied Hannah Sims In Gallia
Historical Society are elderly, there
County July 1, 1860.
Is a liberal attendance of younger
' adults. They have a distinguished · AF"l'ER HIS DEATH in 1875 she
· presiding officer In the person of
married Gahrtei Comer, according
Two-Star Gen. George Bush.
to the letter from Betty Tuite.
Hannah's parents were Joseph
. WHAT WE'RE drtvlng at Ill this Sims and Elizabeth Cheeseman
wrtd!lg Is that you who are reading
Sims, whose wedding date was
these lines are Invited. Do come out
Aug. 18, 1842. That also Is the
. this afternoon and listen as Paul
weddillg date for EmUy Susan
Mossman unwinds the past of the
Cheesem an and Washington
Old Prench City.
Glassburn.
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS

MRS. ROBERT ROBBINS, 235
Main St., Mecbanlcsburg, Ohio
Ul44, says that · she has been

receiving the Galllpolls newspaper
lor 40 years - "and aU of those
' years the paper came to m e ... but
lately I~ has been Robert Robbins.
!{ow that bappened I'll never know.
J'm the one from Gallla County. My .
husband was born and lived all of
his life In Mechanicsburg."

...

'

.

A guide to local
television programming
January 16 thru January 22
Includes complete

A. C. DONALDSON (the "A"
stood for Alexander) was a li~ n sed
steamboat engineer, who died from
lnjurtes he suffered whlle working
on a motor: E;llzaheth Cheeseman
Sims and Emily Susan Cheeseman
GlasshurnJ;ere slsfers, Betty Tuite
says. She has the original marriage
certlfl~ate of Alexander and Han·
nab, measuring a bout 10 hy ' 14
Inches .

listings

..
··&lt;

l
)

I

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
-VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

HOW TO BUILD IT BE'ITER.
I'

·Showheat
Pages 4, 5

EASY CARE ·AND
VERY DURABLE NYLON
AND HERCU~ON
COVERS

OHice Hours by Appointment Only
.

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

-~!!!!!!

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

~tul£&gt;J!!~JJ·

~tt£RAL ALlERGIST

:

Patty Astin
Pages 3, 4

Now you can have Kroehler's
outstanding quality and comfort ·
at unbelievably great savings!

i

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT

'

'

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~

Private Eye
Page 5
II

Beautiful · Floral Prints,. Stripes, ·
Plaids, ·Early American Prints,
· Tweeds, Solid Colnrs and
Matta lasses.

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FAMILY AFFAIR - Mlmll!! ~· Fox, who J11aJa a e~e leei~A«f!' 011 the NBC
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Hollywood ·
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~ounties

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