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                  <text>12-The

Sentinel

•

19.5 million participate
Bylbe Assoc•a•ed Press

An estimated 19.5 m!Uion smokers nervously snapped rubber
bando;, dined on. cold turkey or
listened to telepHone pep talks from
psychiatrists Thursday as they
struggled to stub out their cigarette

habits during the seventh annual
Great American Smokeout.
The American Cancer Society,
which sponsors the anti-smoking
day on the Thursday before each
Thanksglvlng, estimated that 19.5
miiJion of the nation's 55 ml!Uon

_.. ,, (1•&gt;;. ...

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Smokeout

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress Is gon~ for a .
two-month recess, unable to heed its own pledge to
raise taxes and cut spending to help pare away at a
· $:D:l bUllon deficit.
"Look fOJward to seeing you In January,"
President Reagan told congressional leaders Friday
evening when they called him to announce the
adjournment. "I think we've all lost some and all won

Soviets float new proposals
for accord on missile issue

POINT PLEASANT - A25-yearoid Piketon mail was killed Friday
at a Mason County pallet manufacturing firm, West VIrginia State
Pollee said.
Cpl. K.R. Beckett of the Point
PleasantdetachmentsaldAibertM.
Moorediedat3:15p.m. when he and
a l!artner were attempting to unload
logs from a truck, .
. The Incident occurred at Lannes
Wtlllamson Pallet Co. In Southside,
Beckett said.
Beckett said Moore and the
partner, Ricky Lee Scowden, had
driven their log-laden truck onto the
company's property and parked It
across from the company office,
where it was to have been unloaded
with a end loader.
Moore got out of the truck and
went to its driver side. Scowden
went to the other end of the truck.
Both men were going to remove the
binder holding logs tn place on the
truck.
When Moore moved the binder,
Beckett said he attempted to_move
the chain when one of tbe top logs
fell.,s\flking Moore in the chest and
stomacharea.Mooredledlnstantly,
the trooper added.
Beckett said the falality is being
treated as an accldentaideath at this
time.

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A cocktail hour will be held at
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Resevatlons may be made by
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RepreSentative Jolynn Boster will
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DEA'l11sCENE- Lames Williamson Pallet Co., Soulh'llde, W.Va.,
was the scene of an IU'ddent Friday that ldDed Albert M. Moore, 25,
Piketon. State pollee said a log rolled ocr the top of a truck and crushed
him.

Majority Democrats felt vindicated after voters
decided to keep the taxes which they passed without
GOP help earller this year. But they were restrained,
for the most pan, from saying much about it.
Republicans who had fought for repeal were mostly
silent and subdued. An exception was Rep. Waldo
Bennett Rose, R-Lima, who WIIS ruled out of order on
the House f!Qor by Speaker Vernal C. RiffeJr:, 0 -New
Boston, after the Republican suggested a pending
tobacco Industry bill was a payoff for a $10,000
contribution to the anti-repeal campaign.
Referring to the bill which offers a potential tax
break to the cigarette Industry, Rose - with tongue
planted squarely in cheek - mentioned the

Styles felt obligated to return ·to
Columbus after the war to care for
POMEROY - Should old ac- her family.
qualntance be forgot?
While realizing their relationship
· WeU, not as far as 91-year-oid would never lead to matrimony, the
former Meigs County resident two maintained contact throughout
Hattie Styles Is concerned.
the years with hundreds of letters.
This year she and a 90-year-old"Someday our paths will cross
man - with wbom sbe had Shared again and I hope you'll be as happy
the experience of pain and tecovery to see me as I wiD to see you," he
in World War I - found a kind of wrote. That was In 19l8.
jJeaceofheartas theywerereunlted
This year, after separation of 65
years and thOusands of ·miles, the
after a SS,year separation.
As a ywitg woman, Styles twowerereunlted.. ·
attended school tn Meigs County.
The long-time nurse ~ latown
She then enlen!d nurses training In tllJ'ooghout her career as "A\Illt
Columbus. At the age of :ll, she left Hattie" - moved to Kingwood,
Columbus to serve as a nune In the Texas,ln 1982tobewtth the family of
her great-grand niece, Beverly
anned l'orces during ww !.
' While stationed In France at the Mitchell.
Hospital ADaers - a Catholic
The Mitchell family and their
friends tracked down the tanner
btstltutlon of the '75th Barracks the youna nune met a young lieutenant, who was llvtng In
American lieutenant who feU In love
Houston, and brought the two
with lier.
to&amp;ether''He was always bylng to get my ·
"They both just Sparided,'• re- ·
ilttentlon," she recalls, tetllne her merited an onlooker who viewed the
that he wanted to get slclc a leCOIId i'ellllklll.
lime In onler to- her qaln.
The lieutenant - recalling that
The two dated. became very good the youna nune had never let him ·
frlendll but married becaWte ldss her when they dated In 1918 By BOB HOEFUCH
11rnea Se dbiel Stall

·-'30 Save
'60
Reg.11U5

The Senate Finance Committee on Friday put aside
work on a $150 billion, ·four-year package of tax
increases and spending cuts, voting 16-1 Instead to
direct Its staff to draft a new bill by Feb. 15. It came a
day after the House rejected a move to even consider
a far more modest tax bill.
Also facing Congress upon Its return Is a
long-debated natural gas decontrol bill. Senate

By KEVIN KEIJ..Y
· 11rnes-Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Charges of
unfair labor practices and possible
contempt of a court order tn
negotiations for a master contract IIi
the Gallia-Jackson-VInton Jotnt
Vocational School District are being
looked into by the Buckeye Hills
Teachers Association.
AtthPsametlme, theJVSDboard
of education claims it's trying to
"accurately reflect" progress in
bargaining and said BID A' s negotiating team is interpreting the court
order in a different way.
BIDA President Norman Stewart said continuing failure to reach
agreement have led BIDA to
consult with Its legal counsel on the
validity of its charges.
Superintendent Jerome Brockway said the board isstlllwaltingfor
BHTA to present an Initial package
for Qlscusslon purposes . .
Stewart said the last bargaining
session between both sides Thursday high t was brief. He said the
board's negotiators wouldn't agree
to set ground rules to conduct
negototlatlons.
''I'm getting tired." Stewart said.
" We've been at this since
February."
"We feel that the agreement was
to develop Initial packages," Brockway noted. "Wehaveours ...we want

sponsors gave up their effort to develop a last-minute
co~promlse, saying the energy measure would have
to walt until the 1984 session.
The Senate also put off until early next year a
House-passed bill that would block a scheduled
$2-a-month "access charge" from appearing on
consumer phone bills for long distance service.

to get this thing over with."
BIDA, which won a controversial, court-overseen recognition
election among JVSD teachers Oct.
14, has been negotiating for the first
time for a mastercontractsirnllar to
those tn school districts feeding Into
the JVSD's two career centers,
Buckeye Hills and Buckeye Valley.
Stewart said his ·negotiating
team's request for ground rules are
drawnfromstatelaw.Someofthose
rules includeanewsblackout during
negotiations, appointment of a
board negotiating team chairman
by the board, selection of alternate
teammembersbybothsidesandthe
m!ed for mediation if no agreement
is reached tn 90 days.
"We have quoted the Ohio
Revised Code aU the way down,"
Stewart noted. "Thi&gt;Se are fair
ground rules, in-our interpretation."
BIDA is lookinginto thecontempt
possibility because the board is not
complying with the Oct. 4 court
order set by Judge Thomas W.
Mitchell.
The last paragraph of the order,
Sr.ewart said, ruled that after the
recognition election was held , the
board was to negotiate in good faith
with the duly-recognized representatives of the JVSD's 63 teachers.
Stewart accused Brockway of
"intimidation and coercion" in
negotiations.

contribution from R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and
said,"! certainly don't quarrel with the the timing of
this bill."
Riffe gaveled down the half-smiling Rose after Rep.
WUUarn L. Mallory, D-Cinctnnatl, objected to the
Allen County lawmaker's remarks and said
Republicans were mad "because you didn't wtn the
election."
Riffe let Rose continue, but told him to confine his
corrunents to the contenls of the blll, saying, "You
almost went too far."
But generally ihe airnosphere around the Statehouse was quiet before the Senate and House
departed for their Thanksgiving weekend. If current

BHTA President
-Nonnan Stewart
After each ' bargaining session,
Stewart alleged, a statem~nt from
Brockway expressing the superintendent' s opinion on the session
would be tn teachers' mail boxes the
following morning.
"I'm calling it Intimidation. "
Stewart charged. "There is nothing
In fair labor practices that allows the
management to write letters stating
his own opinion."
" I did put them tn their mailboxes.
(Continued on page A3)

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announcedU had taken hlm65years
to collect a kiss.
Recalling her days of nursing
during WW I, Styles conunents:
"I gave my whole Ufe to my
patients and my famlly. In the
service, you didn't have time for
yourself - I was busy and I loved
every minute of lt.
''No words under the shining sun
could describe what Itwas Hkeon the
battlefield," she says as she
l'ffi\embers retrieving the injured
from the war zone.
"And, at the hospital, we ~¥ere
only 75 miles from the big guns. ''
A private nurse for 63 yearS,
Styles still does not Hke to sit IdlE&gt;.
Before moving to Texas, she did
everything around her Columbus
!tome - including cutting the grass
and all of her own canning.
Last year she $11ffered a stroke
and was left completely paralyzed
on her right side. Shesays·a "strong
will". helped her ove~e the
effects ol the stroke.
·
She IS now a member of an
exerclae claaa at the Kingil Crossing
Apartmentl.

Collectlaa

history .books and

plans hold , the lawmakers will meet for only one or
two days at the end of the month and then qult until
after Christmas and New Year's.
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste, who has been
modest in thewakeofthetax victory-hesaid "It was
not any kind of a mandate"- added to the cooling-off
process by lnlrlting minority leaders to sit in with
Democrats on a meeting to discuss legislative goals.
He called It "a commjtment to bipartisan cooperation

..

Political maneuvering will resume for sure come
Jan. 2 when the 1984 session gets under way, in effect
opening unofficial campaigns for the 99 House seats
and 17 Senate seats which will be at stake next year.

Huntingtonian, two
Ohioans found dead

A farewell to anns: lovers who met
~d were separated by WWI, reunite

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The 98th Congress will re-convene on Jan. 23, with a
full platter of unfinished legislation before It Including major bills to deregulate natural gas, lower
long-distance telephone bills and come to grips with
ever-higher goverliment spending.
.
The adjournment was the earUest Congress has
managed in a non-election year since 196?.

JVSD board,.teachers .d ispute
court ordered 'ground rules'

By ROBERT E. MillER
A8soc!JWotl Pl'I'S8 Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -There are slgiJs of a lull
in political back-bltlngnowthat the bltterNov.8ballot
Issues light Is r:rver and the Legislature is about to call
It quits for the year.
During a two-day session last week, their first
meeting in four months, lawmakers of both parties
took a potshot or two across their opponents' bow, but
It seemed their hearts really weren't in it.
. It could be the approach of a hollday truce, a
breather after the long summer-autumn fight over
two ballot Issues which would have repealed Ohio's
1983 tax hikes and restricted Increases In the future.

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Ohio political back-biting: lull for the holiday

200110

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some."

Logging
accident
kills man

JOHN F. COLWELL

Representing the Meigs Local
School District at the 28th annual
Ohio School Boards Association's
Capital Conference held in Columbus Monday through Wednesday
were Arland King, board of education member; Dan Morris, superintendent; James Carpenter, assistant superintendent, and Jane
Wagner, treasurer.
The conference was designed to
give those attending an opportunity
to exchange ideas and gatn tnsit;ht
on the major issues that will be
facing education in thecomlngyear.
The meeting opened with the
association's delegate assembly
discussing and voting on key
legislative Issues and resolutions
aff~ting school boards and education around tbe state.
Featured speaker&gt; at the conference were Jay Sommer, 1981
national teacher of the year, New
York; Charlene Shea, a motivational education consultant; John L
Goodlad, nationally renowned education expert; Dr. LeRoy Hay,
Connecticut,1983natlonalteacherof
the year, and Dr. Jim Tunney,
president of the Institute for the
Study of Motivation an d
Achievement.

tmts•. tntint

U.S. Congress ealls it quits for '83.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

CONSEQUENCES ON SMOKING - C. Everett . General's report on The Health Consequences of
Smoking: CardlovHSCular Disease, Thursday In
\\'ashlngton. ( AP Laserphoto }"

Meigs board
represented

Ohio weather:
•
warm, damp
-PageA-3

•

Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Paint Pleasant Sunday, November 20, 1983

Koop, M.D., Surgeon General, talks to reporters
during a press conference on the 1983 Surgeon

To the Voters of Salem Township For
Your Support in the Recent Election.

Teenage runaways: a national problem with a
local impact-Page B-1

unba

Features: Automatic color control, automatic,
fleshtone correction, soid state VHF /UHF tuners,
simulated walnut fil'lish.

I li \

THANK YOU

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I

I

By The Associaled Press
Thursday and agreed to meet again Germany's Parllamentvotes on the
A top Kremlin spokesman says
deployment of the 1!ll Pershing 2
next Wednesday.
the Soviets will pull out of Geneva
He said the Soviets have indicated and 96 cruise missiles in West
arms talks UPershing 2 missiles are
a willingness to drop their key Germany.
deployed in Europe, but West
Meantime, in Britain. a group of
demand that British and French
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl
nuclear arsenals be Included in the women kept up their protests at the
says Moscow "evidently has floated
Greenham Common air base,
U.S.-Soviet talks . .
new proposals" for an accord.
"The Soviet Union evidently has where the first missile shipment
"With the deployment of the new floated new proposals at one minute arrived. Five of the protesters were
Pershings in Europe, the negotia- to twelve,".Kohlsaid lnantnterv!ew arrested Thursday, raising the
tionsmakenomoresenseandwilibe on West German television.
arrest tntal In Britain this week to
broken off," said LeonidM . ZamyaZamyattn is on a European tour 616.
~ •
ttn, a chief foreign affairs spokes- aimed atdrumm!ngupoppositlon to
Under the NATO plan, Britain
man for the Soviet Communist
eventually is to get a total of 160
the NATO deployment.
Party's Central Commltlee. He
The next Geneva meeting, Nov. cruise mlssiles,ltaly112, Belgium48
spoke at a news conference Thurs- 23, comes a day after West and the Netherlands 48.
day at the Soviet Embassy tn the
Netherlands.
r--------------------------1
The North Atlantic Treaty AI·
liance plans to deploy 464 U.S. cruise
and 108 Pershing 2 missiles over the
next five years to counter Soviet
SS-20 missiles already aimed at
western Europe.
The first shipment of cruise
missiles arrived in Britain Monday.
All lOS Pershing 2s are destined for
West Germany , with the first to
arrive next month.
In Bonn, Kohl sa id Thursday the
Soviet Union has Indicated a
Pd . p·o. Ad . by Can d.
willingness to make new conces- 1 ~======::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::~
slons at Geneva, where U.S. a nd J·
Soviet delegates met for 2 ~ hours

Inside:

An extremist has vowed retaliation against the
peacekeeping force in Lebanon-Page D-1

~----~-----------------L----------------------~----- -~----~--------~·~

Dance. Every Sat. Nile
THANKSGIVING DANCE
Wed., Nov. 23
8:00 to 12:00

I

harleston Mall: boom or .doom--Page E-1

"The Day After'
Gov. Celeste urges
Ohioans to watch
-PageD-1

RCA

UNClE BOB'S
CHICKEN PA~ACE

..

-

RCA
COLOR TV SPECIAL

smokers had tried to quit _for a day.
The society offered the advice of
The estimate was based . on a eight psychiatrists on how to quit on
random telephone survey of 2,132 a toll-free national hotllne. The
households.
, service was avallableonly through
Last year, the society estimated . mldnlghtThursday.
This year's smokeout coincided
that 19 mtlllon took part in the
with thereleaseofthegovernment's
smokeout.
latest surgeon general report on the
health effects of smoking, which
warned that cigarettes may prematurely kill 10 percent of the
American population. But It also
said that 32.6 percent of the
population smoked, sharply fewer
than the 41:7 percent In 1965.
The society declared this year's
theme "adopt-a-smoker," hoping
that non-smokers would buddy up
with smokers and help them
through the pangs of a puff-less day
- and perhaps beyond to permanent quitting.

';!fM·\T FD CIG A.Rure REL,\T EO C.ORCJ NARY
Hf &lt;\fH DISE,\SE ,\NO C:• NCER DEATHS

/

Friday, Nowmber 18, 1983

Ohio

'

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio (AP) Six hours later, he said , Clark
Two Chesapeake children who Thomas, 16, and his sister, 10-yearreturne(j from school and found lhe old Angie, carne home and found all
bodies of their mother, father ·and three bodies.
another man in their southern Ohio
Meyers said the boy was treated
home have been sent to stay with for emotional trauma at Lawrene&lt;&gt;
relatives.
County General Hospital in Ironton
Lawrence Cotlnty authorities and was released : Both children
ldentUied the dead as Linda · ·were sent to stay With relatives, he
Thomas, 40, of Chesapeake; her said.
former husband, Wheeler Thomas,· · The prosecutor also said that the
45, of nearby Huntington, W.Va., shootings climaxed a long-running
and Mrs. Thomas' fiance, James quarrel between Mrs. Thomas and
'Aunt Hatae' Styles
Cunningham, 42, of Petry, Ohio. · her former husband. He said that
antiques are -among her hobbies.
Lawrence . County · Pi-osecutor the couple had been divorced for six
Included In her collection Is a water Richard Meyers -said ThOmas years but that Mrs. Thomas had
pitcher from the White House of · apparently shot his former wife and recently ·won a court J.udgrnent
President Rutherford B. Hayes.
her fiance and then shot himself in against her former husband.
She bas saved countless treasures the bead.
·
Meyers reported that Mrs. ThoThe two victims had been shot mas' relatives said she and Cunof her past - Including all of her
young lieutenant's \ove letters, with a .3lkallber pistol found at the ntngharn had planned to marry
photographs of the war, clothes and scene, he said. He said Thomas within the next few days.
other Items of importance to her.
apparently then shot himself with a
Meyers said two other people
Revlewtng the lady's lite, a
.44-eallber pistol, also found at the were in the house at the time of the
nephew comments, "Aunt Hattie house. Meyers said the shootings shootings but apparentlll were not
not only loves history, she Is OCCUlTed Thursday morning, In a Involved and did not acutaUy see the
history."
brlckhomeowned by Mrs. Thomas. slaylngs. Theprosecutordectined to
StyleS has several relatives living He said Th&lt;mas apparently waited identity the two, who he said had
In Meigs Camty, Including Mr. and until the children left for sehool gone to the house with Thomas to
Mrs. Charles G. Sheets whom she J;lelore entering the house 1 and help him remove his belongings.
shooting both vtctlmsatciose range.
visited 1as1

spruw.
.

�'

Comment·

and perspective

------Weather:-------------,

The Sunday nme..S.ntinel

Paa•

A-2

November 20, 1983 .

Ohio: ivarm, damp

.'

The way the world works:___W_illuz_·m_F_._Bu_ck_ley__Jr.
A Division of

825 Thinl Ave., GaiUpoUs, Ohio
(614) 446-2312

..._.,

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

.... . .
,..,. "

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlshet·- Controller

A MEMBER of 1llc A..•osod:ued Press. lnland Dully Press .'\.~sociaUon and the
1\merican Newspaper Publi."ihers t\s.soclaUon.

L.ETI'ERS OF OPINION an.• "'ekoml'd. the~· should hr lfS.o,; thM 300worelo;: kmg. t\D
to edtttng and mu.~ he slgnNI with name, uddrt•ss and t.t'IL,hont&gt;nunlber. So Wliilped letaers wlU he publl,.hed. IA&gt;"t'rs should ht&gt; ill good ta.-.te, addressinJ~~: L'isues, not penonalltles.
'

~are subj ecl

-eagan aides fear
teaction
to nuclear
.
war
television
movie
-- .
.
..

The Greyhound saga, not to use a
word too heavy to describe' the
consequences for some employees
of the ongoing strike, is forcing u.s to
think back on some rudimentary
economic lessons having to do with
the elasticity of wages. According
to the model, it is as simple as this:
If an industry prospers, competition forces it to reduce prices. As
prices In that Industry lower. the,
consumer gets more and more for
his dollar, and the smiles on
everyone's faces widen, by maybe
2.8 percent per year.
That was the rate of economic
growth In the United States for &amp;J
years following the Clvll War,
during which we rose from the least
to the most developed industrial
society In the world. But even as
this happened , we began to expe·
r ie nce the difficulty of dfm!nishing

wages when business did not
prosper. If It is never a problem to
raise wages, to lower them becomes not merely an economic
event. but a social convulsio~. A
drtver for Greyhound was quoted
the other day over the radio. What
he said was both simple and
poignant. "! cannot pay my bllis on
a salary schedule proposed by
management."
Now, for some industries that get
into trouble there Is the opportunity
for Instant hobglobllnization. The
most lurld exampleofthis, in recent
months, was Har)ey-Davidson, the
motorcycle . manufacturer. When
business got really bad for HarleyDavidson, it blamed the Japanese
and wangled a recommendation
from the U.S. International Trade
Commission, and before you knew
It, a huge tariff hild been Imposed

----

The Reagan administration is apprehensive about how Americans will
react to a powerful television movie depicting nuclear war devastation.
TIM&gt; administration posture has been that it is safer to be strong militarily
whlle pursuing arms negotiations than to disarm or freeze atomic
~enais.
.
The film. ABC-1Ys "The Day After," for broadcast tonight, graphically
shGws the horrors of nuclear war and offers no hope for survivors.
Anii-nuclear groups are using the movie as a focal point for fund-raising
an{! membership drives.
0ne of President Rea!;an's political aides called the fiino "potentially the
moot emotionally powerful thing ever shown on American television."
Speaking anonymously, the aide expressed fears it could be politically
da(naging to Reagan, who has been criticized on occasion as being
trigger-happy, or too quick to use military fclrce when diplomacy might
sultice.
{ndeed, concern about Reagan's military posture is,a key ingredient of
thE! so-called "gender gap" - the tendency among women to have
gei.erally more negative feeling;; toward Reagan than men do.
"I am notsayingwewe!come this film." said David R. Gergen. the White
·House director of communications.
Robert Sims, a White House spokesman on national security matters,
said the administration is gearing up to emphasize its efforts to prevent
nuClear war.
"Anything that iS as graphic and emotionally disturbing as that film is,
which is likely to be seen by 75 million Americans or something like that, is
not: something that you would choose to ignore," Sims said.
Yet the administration purposely is taking a low key stance toward the
fllll! and plans only to respond to questions about nuclear war; rather than
initiating a debate about it "Why should we contribute to this hype of this
commercial product," one official asked . speaking privately.
Sims said t.he most Important question is how to prevent nuclear war.
"We have a policy for doing that. In the context of the public attention this
~may get, I'm sure we will want tore-explain that policy."
Secretary of State George P. Shultz will present the administration case
in im ABC-TV interview Immediately alter ("The Day After").
Kenneth Adelman, chief of the arms control and disarmament agency
will appear earlier Sunday on NBC's-"Meet -the Press."
And other administration representatives will be available to respond to
inqlliries from radio and television stations and will write editorial pieces
for newspapers , Gergen said.
Conservatives. such as columnist William F. Buckley Jr , and the Rev.
Jetry Falwell, leader of the Moral Majority, already have denounced the
flli)l as propaganda for a nuclear free7.e and disarmament

Berry's World

00

Japanese bikes, making It

.

situations. When the air controllers
were dismissed by the federal
government (for breaking the law),
the country was saddled with the

possible for the American rnanufacturer to continue to ask prices most
bike consumers would not have
been willing to pay lf given an need to come up with substitutes.
alternative.
And training an air controller is an
But who are tbe Greyhound ardrous business. The strike of the
people supposed to blame? It takes
pilots of Continental Is not easily
more even than the near infinite
handled, because It takes years and
capacity of Democratic presidenyears of training to dispose ot the
tlal candidates for sophistry to
controls of a 747. But although
driving a bus requires skill, It is not
blame foreign companies for the
a skill that requires postgraduate
plight of the Greyhound Bus Co.
There is, of course. competition;
study to master. Accordingly, in
just two weeks, Greyhound has
but It is domestic. Patronage of
Greyhound has reduced in part
announced the dismissal of 1,500
because there Is competition from . drivers, 10 percent of Its work force,
other bus companies, In part
havlngarranged toreplacethemby ·
because there is competition from
drawing from the unemployed pool
the airlines, and here and there are
of people ready and wUUng to take
stU! people who use trains.
the jobs. along with a reduced
Then you have, In Greyhound, a
paycheck.
factor not available in other
The situation iS sad, but no less
instructive, because it brings us
face to face with the anonymous
authority of the marketplace. It
seems an awiully unpleasant and
dour figure, and people In free
societies are in eternal and hectic
conspiracy against It , attempting to
devise strategems, mostlypoUtical,
for protecting themselves against
Its decress. But the marketplace Is ·
not easily mocked. And the entire
public has a stake in the integrity of
the process. It Is never a cause for
celebration when the income of
workers and tethniclans reduces.
But It Is exactly that - cause for
celebration - whenever the marketplace Is permlttect to perform Its
function: Inform the economy, via
the most highly developed senslbill·
ties of economic democracy. In this
case, Informing it what Mrs. Jones
is wllllng to pay for a bus ride from
Akron to MlamL

The nation's weather
WEATHER - Saturday's weather iateDUe picture recorded at
1:30 p.m. EST shows a band of thick layered clouds eldeDcllng lrom
New Mexico through Colorado and Nebraska Into Iowa and
Wisconoln pmducing slgnlftcant precipitation bt New Mexico and
Colorado. Low level clouds with Ugh! precipitation blank-' the lower
Ml881aslppi River valley and the upper Midwest and Great Lakes.
Partly cloudy sides cover the balallce of the nation except for the
Ea8lem seaboard and porllons of Norlh Dakota and Montana. (AI'
Laserpholo ).

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY TiffiOUGH WEDNESDAY:
A chance of showers on Monday. Fair on Tuesday and Wednesday.
lHghs 45 to 55 and low In the 30s .

a sight to behold. His bodyguards
are beautiful young women dressed
in high fashion, coordinated outfits.
His fleet of jets carries several
BMW Umouslnes. When Qaddaf1
arrives at hls destination, the
BMW s are rolled out and the
mixture of amuse ment and
Libyan strong man gets behind the
incredulity.
· wheel of one and drives off, his
They note, for example, tha t a
imperial caravan traUing behind.
few months ago he dropped Into
Once ensconced In comfort,
Rabat on a "courtesy call" to
Moroccan King Hassan. whom Qaddafl astonishes his hosts by
Qaddafi had publicly vilified a year changing costumes as often as eight
earlier. According to secret intelli- times a day. Not since Hermann
gence cables, Hassa n didn't buy Goering has a national leader
shown such a passion for sartorial
Qaddafi's new act. In fact, U.S.
diplomats were told confidentially elegance.
Though the comic-opera aspects
that the king concluded that
of the Libyan's style give our
Qaddali was crazier than ever.
· It's undeniable that the Libyan's Qaddafi-watchers a few laughs,
they are not amused by the deadly
chosen method of high-level diploserious
activities that gn on behind
macy Is a bit eccentric. More often
his
flamboyant
facade. With his
than not. tie simply files into a
commitment
to
Islamic
revolution
country without notice, like visiting
·
billions
to
support
and
his
oil
in-laws on summer vacation trips.
adventures
abroad,
Qaddafl
reThe surprised hosts have to scram·
mains
a
threat
to
governments
all
ble to provide the kind of VIP
over
the
world.
treatment that Qaddafi demands.
From a number of Intelligence
Qadd_a fl's retinue on these trips is

sources, my assoclat~ Lucetie
Lagnado has compiled a rundown
of the various guerrilla and terrorist groups supported by Qaddafl
and hiS petrodollars. Here are the
main targets of Libyan-supported
subversion:
- Eastern Caribbean: Qaddafl
supplied some of the money for the.
controversial airport the Marxist
regtme on Grenada was building
with Cuban workers. He also set up
a large "people's bureau" - the
Libyan equivalent of an embassyin St. George's, and used it as a
distribution center for funds to
leftist groups In other islands of the
region. Marxist cadres from these
smaU nations were transported to
Libya fortralning as paramUitary
underground agents.
- Lebanon: There are several
hundred Libyan troops here, and
Qaddafi recently put them directly
under command of the Syrians. He ,
is bitterly opposed to the presence
of U.S. and European peacekeeping forces and his agents are
believed to be cooperating with
Iranian terrorists In Lebanon.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)-Many that and also paid about $10,000 in
people who ask a court to declare fees for expert witnesses, Bowen
them Indigent have their requests . said.
Jackson transferred his. half·
granted as a matter of roullne. But
that's not !he case with Dr. Edward
Interest in the family home and the
F. Jackson Jr.
title to his medical office bulldingto
Jackson on Friday asked Frank- his wlfe 10 days after his arrest,
lin County Common Pleas Judge Bowen acknowledge{!. He said the
Frederick T. Wllllams to declare transferwasnotfraudulentandthat
that he is broke. But Williams said Jackson could not pay his legal
hewUimaketbatdecislononlyafter expenses even if the property had
bearing evklence_on the Columbus not been transferred.
The bouse has been listed for sale
physician's finances.
Wllllarns said he ordered the for $136,00! since June and has
hearing because of Jackson's back- attracted no offers. Bowen said. The
ground as an_Internist before his mortgage balance is $94,592 and
Sept. 5, 1982, arrest and subsequent
bouse payments are $1,00! a month,
trial In Akron.
he said.
Mrs . Jackson earns$14,1mayear
Jackson, who onoe earned$55,00!

..
"Well, have you folks from Congress been
findin 'lots of facts? "

T 0 d ay

• h•

ID

IStory

the public becomes Increasingly
curious about their spouse. I found
Horace Manley, the h~sband of
Agatha Manley, who was running
for Congress for lhe second time, at
home the other day.
He was flustered, "I wish I'd
known you were coming," he said .
"The house is a mess."
"Don't worry, Mr. Manley. I'm
not here to write about your
housekeeping. Is the candidate
home?"
'
"No, she's out talking to the
United Metalworker's Union. She
told me I could have a day off."
"Is It hard to be the husband of a

po!!~:c~~~ftsre;l~ses and minuses.

real peachy wife."
"You don't sound like you mean
it. "
"There are times when I get
discouraged. I would like Agatha all
to myself and it would be nice if she
could spare more time with the
children. But I never nag or bother
.her with family problems because I
know she's got too many Important
things on her mind. When she
comes home and we can squeeze in
a few hours together, the chlldren
and I want her to relax."
"t;&gt;oes Agatha depend on you for
political advice? "
"Yes, she's very good about that.
She lets me slt In on staff meetings
at our house after. I've served
everyone a buffet dinner. She's told
me many times I have a better
reading on the public pulse than she

But I've known ever since Agatha
completed law school she wanted to
Today is Sunday, Nov.~. the 324th day ofl983. Thereare4l days left in
the year.
· gd Into politics, and as long as she's
· Today's highlight in history:
"*
• happy I'm willing to put upwi\hO\'I~
On Nov. ~. 1979, Iran freed 13 blacks and-women among the American
public llfe ...
"What's the toughest pari of lttor
hostages in Tehran, but warned that the others would be tried as spies .
unless the United States returned the shah.
·
you?"
.
On this date:
.
·· .
"Smlling all the tlme, _and being
·In 1789, New Jersey became the first sta te·to ratify ·the Bill ol Rights.
. nice to people because Agatha says .
·rn 1914, the regulation requiring photogJ:aphs on passports took effect. they're important to ber. l also have
In 1925, Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline, Mass.
to worry about my appearance and
In 1947, Britain's Princess Elizabeth married l,.t. Philip Mountbatten.in
wonder If I'm wearing the right suit
Weslminster Abbey.
and if my shoes ·are shined."
In 197'2, the Supreme Court ruled that programs fed into computers could
"You mean the voters care what
\
the husband of a candidate looks '
not be patented.
And in 1978, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat told the Israeli parliament
like?"
that Egypt sought peace 'with justice,
"Oh, definitely, A husband plays
Ten years ago: President Richard Nixon told Republican governors he
a very Important role in a
would clear up pubUc doubts with the reiease of detalled Information about
candidate's election. Agatha says
watergate, his personal finances and other charges of scandal.
even though she does the talking,
Five years ago: Hundreds of bodies of people who had died in a mass
the electorate Is always studying
me."
suicide were found ill the Guyana Jungle camp of the People's Temple
rellgfous cult.
.
"What
they ask you?"
One year ago: ABC News correspondent Catherine Mackin died at the
"They want to know It Agatha lsa
age Or t2 after a long Ulness.
good mother, and what sbe really is
Tdday's birthdays: TV personaUty Alistair Cooke Is 75. Senate Minority
like at home. I always say she is a .
Leader Robert Bynlls 66. Actress Gene Tierney Is 63. Actress Bo Derek is
'Zl.
.

do

crimes, butclalmedhewasinnocent
by.reason of ln51!nity.
He is to be tried beginning Jan. 23
in Hamilton County Common Pleas
Court in Cincinnati on another 36
charses. includingll/counts of rape.
Tha;e crimes are alleged to have
occurred from mld·1975 to November 1978, when Ohio's Insanity
law changed.

The charges were separated for
trial because of the change in the
law.
The trials were moved out of
Franklin County because of pretrial publlc(ty.
Jackson Is in the Columbus
Correctional Facility, serving 191 to
665 yeats. He also was assessed a
$131,250 fine, which he has not paid.

- Jordan: Eanier this year. d
Libyan diplomat in Amman defected and told Western inteUigence
agents of a Qaddafi plot to
assassinate King Hussein. The plan
was to shoot down the ldng's plane
With missiles. The timing ot the plot
suggests it was intended to prevent
Hussein from supporting President
Reagan's Middle East peace plan.
Even though the assassination was
never executed, It may have been a
decisive factor In Hussein's rejection of the Reagan Initiative.

fl'om page
JVSD• • ' - - - -(Continued
----Al )

out we're just trying to accurately of teachers, representing the Vocaretlect what went on between both tional Educators Association chapter, requested the board sanction a
sides," Brockway said.
recognition election, clalmlngdissa"If that's his (Stewart's) Interpretation of it, I can't comment on it, . tlsfactlon with BfiTA's handling of
negotiations.
and I probably won't," he added.
The request .was approved, ·but
Negotiations began Feb. 28. By
Sept. 22, BHTA declared impasse BHTA went to court in early
and called for a federal mediator to October, blocking the election with a
temporary Injunction. Following
help. The Impasse hasn't been
another
hearing, Judge Mitchell
recognized by the board, which
cleared
the
way for an election.
claimS it's been waiting lor a
BIITA, which Is Ohio Education
response from BIITA to an olfer
Association-affiliated, won the electendered earller In September.
Shortly afteiWard, another group tion with a 38-23 margin.

does, because they say things to me
every time I want to change It they
that they're afraid to say to her." . say 1 could lose the election."
:•could you give m e an example
"Are you jealous of the men
of the kind of advice you give her?"
around Agatha?"
"Well, Agatha, being a woman, Is
"Not really.! know they are only
against nerve gas."
attracted to her for her power. I can ..
"And you're not?"
put up with a lot as long as she . ,
"There are a lot worse things
doesn't humlllate me or the' child- · 1
than nerve gas. But even if she
ren in public."
"
doesn't agree with me, she's vety
"But at least as a politician's
interested in what the male gender
husband you get Invited to a lot of •
is thinking. I wish I could say the
parties. That must be tun."
.•,
same thing for her staff."
"It would be If someone knew my ,
"They don't like you to talk to
name. Agatha always introduces !
Agatha about politics?"
me by saying, 'I'd like you to meet
''They treat me like a dodo."
my better half.' "
&lt;
"How is that?"
·
"I notice you're darning your ,i
"When I'm cainpalgnlng somewife's pantyhose."
1
one Is always afraid I'll make a slip
Horace said bitterly, " Have you ·
If I extemporize, so they Insist I
ever tried to live on a congresswostick with the script they've written
man's salary?"
for me. It's an awful speech, but

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The director ol the Ohio Depart·
ment of RehabUitatlon and Correction also said the state's priSon
system is jammed to about l!iO
percent of the designed capacity,
with no remedy In sight in this
decade.
As a result, inmates are sleeping
in an attic and a gymnasium at
Chllllcothe and a redone crawlspace
at Marysville.
Seiter said a $638 mlllion prison
expansion program still won't
relleve the problem by 1990.
"There are 18,000 inmates housed
In a system which is designed for

•

12,500.

,,.

..

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All

-Sudan: Qaddafl has long been
the guiding force behind Sudanese .
Insurgents trying to topple the :
pro-Western regime of President
Gaafar N1melrL As I reported
earlier, the Pentagnn is responding
to this threat by sending a special ·
counterinsurgency team to assess
the danger and to suggest ways
Nimelri can contain the rebels, who
are also getting help from the
Marxist regime In Ethiopia. Intelligence sources say Qaddafl even
planned to have Nimelri assassinated a few months ago.

...

It is a residential program lor
minimum-risk inmates who receive
Intensive counseling and training. It
will be expanded to Mahoning,
Fairfield and Licking counties,
Seiter said.

251 WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2668

a year, testified that he now earns in her full-time jobandabout$100a ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11
only $6 a month In "idle pay" as a
month tram lease of the offloe 1
state prison inmate. He also asked building, he said.
The farnlly savings have been
Wllllanns to appoint lawyers to
appeal his multiple rape convictions exhausted, and Jackson owes
and defend him in an upcoming $15,000 that was borrowed to help
pay legal expenses, Bowen
trial.
Jackson's lawyer, John W.E. · reported.
.
Bowen, gave a 20-rnlnute statement
Jackson, 39, was convicted in
on thefinanclalcondltlonofJackson September in Summit County
and his wife, Allee. Bowen said costs Common Pleas Court on 21 counts of
for the tiVO:week trtai In Akron and
rape and 39 related felonies that
pretrlalpreparationcameto"someoccurred between November 1978
thing over $00,00!."
and his arrest.
Jackson has paid about $25,00! of - -He _admitted committing the

The .candidates husband,____Ar_rB_uc_hwa_ld
As more women go into politics,

By 'The Associated l'res$
Severe thunderstorms battered the southern Plains Saturday, as
snow piled up In the mountains and eastern plains of Colorado and
thick fng blanketed the eastern Dakotas.
Showers were scattered through the Ohio Valley and across the
eastern Great Lakes on Friday, and more rain was moving into the
Pacific Northwest, the National Weather Service said.
Generally fair skies smiled on the southern halt of the Pacific
Coast, the Great Basin, the southern Plateau, the central and
southern Atlantic Coast and Florida. Partly cloudy skies were the
rule In the northern Rockies, the lower Mississippi Valley, the
Te!!flessee Valley and New England.
.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a .m. EST ranged from 15ln
Messina, N.Y., to TT In Brownsville, Texas.

Jackson seeks court appointed lawyers

Qaddafi's old tricks.______.J_ac_k_An_de_rs_on
WASHINGTON - Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi, that hardened plotter of coups and bankroller of international terrorist
groups, wants to become respectable. U.S. Intelligence sources have
been tracking his P .R. efforiswlth a

By 'l'he Associated l'resf;
Warmer air wlll surge into Ohio Saturday, but conditions will be
damp.
.
A storm centered over Nebraska· this morning was the main
reason a southerly air flow wail developing and bringing the warm,
moist air Into the state. The storm center won't pass by until late
Monday, so wintry weather wUI be kept at bay.
Highs Saturday will be mostly In the GO!, although they COUld reach
the lower 70s in the extreme southern part of lhe state. On Sunday, •
highs will range from the mld·50s in northwest Ohio to _the 60s
elSewhere in the slate. The slight drop bt temperatures will result
from a weak cold front moving across the state.
Showers are possible through Sunday.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
corrections chief Richard P. Seiter
says !he best way to reduce prison
overcrowding Is tolockuponlythose
people most in need of jailing,
Seiter said such a change in the
state's corrections philosophy
would "send the right people to
prison. The ones who are the most
dangerous or pose the most risk to
the conununity are the ones that
should be there."
For the others, the state is testing
two alternatives in a !tempts to ease
-prison overcrowding.
A pllot probation program being
tested in Lucas County provides for
an intensively supervised probation
and will be expanded soon to
Franklin, Hamilton, Summit and
Cuyahnga counties, he said.
The other alternative is the
Monda:Y Program In the workhouse
In Dayton.

Trac1o ·s
EqUipnw n t

DR . GEORGE
.

·..•

w. DAVIS

OPTOM_E',:fR I ST_- - - - - r

'

· The Three-In-One Lens
·-

him. At the same time he may
Some people . have serious
problems In seeing things
be working with a d ~s k comclearly at any distance: cloputer or adding machine a
short distance away. And he
away
far
b
0
seup, near y, r
.
If It's an astigmatism, a sinhass to be able to see across
the room when someone
gle·vlslon lens can so Ive th e
wants his attention.
Problem. The defect Is In the
Most people can get along
shape of the cornea, "t he wIn ·
well
with single lens or bifodow of t he eye." The uneven
shape causes two points of fo cals at work or at home. But If
cus Instead of one, r esulti ng In
they need trifocals to do spedblurred vision, This is just one .. alized work In com fort and
without eye strain. it's
vlslon problem.
. good to
But when someone has
know they're available .
three vision problems or
needs correction in three dlf·
1, •luJ. , , rer e~ l Ot be fl er vision
ferent areas , he may wan t to
rrom the oll•ce ol
consider a trifocal lens . For
example, take a bookkeeper
George W. Davis, O.D.
with this kind of problem. He
458Second Ave .. Gallipolis
makes entries or checks li Phone 4-i&amp;-~
gures on the records in front o(

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. . IICONO ~--- •

'

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RAX'S R'ESTAURANT, 1503 EASTERN AVE.
'•

·.

�Page

A-4- The Svnday Times-Sentinel

November 20, 1983

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

Uo • 111 obtn 20, 1983

Alleged Nazi charged with killing thousands
CLEVELAND jAP) -A retired
autoworker arrested on an extradition request from. Israel is charged
In Israeli documents wlth the
"murder of tens of thousands of
Jews" while he was allegedly a Nazi
death camp guard.
The arrest of John Demjanjuk; 63,
marked the first time an alleged
Nazi war criminal had ever been
arrested by U.S. authorities for
extradition to Israel, said Just!ce
Deparlment spokesman John Russell in Washington.
Israel papers filed in U.S. District
Court say Demjanjuk is wanted in
Israel to stand trial for the "crimes
of murder of tens of thousands of
Jews during the period of the Nazi

guard at the Trebllnka death camp
· in Poland during World War JI, was
arrested at his home in suburban
Seven Hills on Friday .
U.S. Magistrate David S. Perel·
man set bond for Demjanjuk at
$50,IXXI but released him for the
weekend on his own recognizance.
Perelman said Demjanjuk could
meet the bond on Monday by
sum?ndering the d('ed to his home,
which Demjanjuk said was worth
:SOO,IXXI,
An extradition hearing was set for
Jan . 23, 1984.
Arguing against a request from
U.S. attorneys that no bond be set,
Demjanjuk's attorneys noted that
Demjanjuk had made no attempt to
flee since he was ilCCusedof lying on
hls imrnigrat!on papers more than
seven years ago.

"(Demjanjuk ) would rather stay
and fight and prove that he is the
person he is and not the person he's
being fraudulently accused of
being," John A. GUI, one of
Demjanjuk's attorneys, told
Perelman.
.
· Demjanj uk, a native of what is
now the Soviet Ukraine, had his U.S.
citizenship revoked in 1981 when
U.S. District Judge FrankJ.Battlstl
ruled that he lied on hlsimm!gratlon
papers to conceal his past as a Nazi
guard.
Demjanjuk has maintained that
he was a Soviet soldier captured by
the German Amly in 1942 and held
prisoner until the end of the war.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
regime."
Appeals upheld Battisti's decision
Demjanjuk, who allegedly was
and the Supreme Court refused to
known as "Ivan the Terrible" as a
hear the case. Deportation hearings
against Demjanjuk began last April
and are scheduled to resume in
December.
Last week, the Israeli govern·
· m ent had formally requested that
the Unlted States surrender Demj anjuk so that he could be extradited
ONCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati
teachers. There are virtually no to stand trial in Israel. Israel has had
surplus teachers, said Orebaugh.
public schools. which have had a
a law on the books for prosecution of
"Our enrollment has stabilized Nazi war crimes since 1950.
surplus of teachers since the
and will be Increasing," 'he said.
mid·1970s, could face a serious
The Justice Department said the
teacher shortage by the end of thls
"But we're not training enough
arrest was nnadeincompliancewlth
teachers. Each year it's going to the extradition treaty between
decade because of increasing births
and better paying jobs attracting
become more difficult to recruit
Israel and the United States.
qualified people."
teachers and college students.
Neal Sber, dlr€ctor of the Office of
"We're in a comfortable Situation
The number of cenified teacher Special Investigations, said the
right now, " said Dr. · Forrest · graduates from the University of deportation proceedings will be held
Orebaugh, personnel director. "We
Cincinnati's College of Education
in abeYance until the outcome of the
has declined In the
have virtually no surplus of
teachers, a nd we are able to fill all
our vacancies. But we will be
moving back to a period of teacher
•E100 chassis
shortage. By the late 1980s, it could
•13" diagonal Dartc-Ute
picture tube
be serious." He believes the
•Two-knob
mechanical
COLOR
problem will be reflected across the
tuning
state.
PORTABLES
•Automatic fine tuning
Orebaugh said experts predict an
•T-'81CDping dipole VHF,
Starting At
bowtie UHF antennas
increase i11 student enroUment
95
•Receued carrying handle
because of a rising birth rate, a
•Optional stands available
decline in certified teacher gradu!Sold un-mblod)
ates and a burgeoning number of
eCabin8t of Walnut grain
on high-impact plastic
teachers who will be leaving
education for more lucrative
professions.
HOUSE &amp; SHOP CALLS ON ALL
Modern women are also starting
MAJOR BRANDS .
to enter traditionally male professions, cutting down the number that
normally become teachers, said
sa id Dr. Glenn Markle, assistant
dean for undergraduate students at
the Univers ity of Cincinnati's College of Education.
Teaching once was one of a few
985-3307
CHESTI
professions open to co llege-

RIDENOUR'S

"A short~ge
ofsaid.
high-quality
educated
women , he
teachers will blunt our efforts to
advance·the quality of education in
our district ," said Ray Brokamp,
assistant superintendent.. "The
recent achievements that have been
made in our schools occurred
because of theconsiderableefforton
the part of teachers."

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

i~j;i;iiiJiijji······ji·ji······;!

Effe1ctive thru Wed., Nov. 23_
We ReserVe The Riqht to

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Store Hourt: 8:30 to 1:30. M. Cloted at 1 :00 P.M.
Serving Meigs, O.lfia end MalOn Countiet

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Cottage Cheese
64 OZ. BTL.

ORANGE JUICE
PHILADELPHIA

8 OZ.

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69

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COOKING

· oNIONS

69
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¢

Federal Reserve Board said. But
the October gain was less than the
0.9 percentagE&gt;-point gains lnfactocy
use posted in September ;1nd
August.
In other news t.'lls past week:
-Industrial production rose 0.8
-HousiJlgstar'.s ?113.8 percent in
percent in October after climbing 1.3
October after dropping a revised
percent in both September and
12.2 percent in September, the August. But some economists said
Commerce Department said. But
production should continue rising In
October's level, showing construe- the months ahead because business
lion at an annual rateo!1.61 million
Inventories, while climbing 0. 7
units, still was 41 'percent above a
percent in September, trailed the 1.5
year ago.
percent September increase in
-U.S . .factories, utilities and business sales.
mines operated at 78.6 percent of .
-Anierican Telephone &amp; Telecapacity in· October, up from 78.1 graph Co. estimated that. firstpercent tbe previous month, the quarter 1984 dividends for the eight

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BAG

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TUESDAY-THURSDAY
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99

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Delicious Candies

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Choose paanut butter or chocolate
caQdy.,

Cookware lor use in microwave or conventional ovens.

•Du Ponl Aeg . TM

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imhq

A. Multimedia Newspaper

Published each Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, by the Ohio VaUey Publlshlnli:
Company· Multimedia , Inc. Second class
postage paid at GaUJpolls, Ohio 45631 .
E n tered as second class maUing matter
at Pomeroy, Ohio. Pos t Office.
Member : 'fhf&gt; Associated Press. Inland
Bally press Assocla1lon and the Amert ·
can Newspaper P ublishers Associa tion ,
Nationa l Advertising Repref:i:entatlve .
Branham, tn7 West Nine Mile Road.
~lie :JM. Detroit. Michigan. 4Sl75.
SlllJSCRIPTION RATES

By Canter or Motor Route
Ont" Week .. . ... . .
. SL~
One Month .................... ... ., ... .. $4.40
One Year ........................... ..... $52.8)
SINGLECOPV
PRICE
35 Cents
~y man P£'rmltted in
towns where home carrier service L-.
ava ilable.

No subsrr lpttoru;

17.97 ~~9~eg ~

$16Twi
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Our
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3-pc. Percale Sheet Set

Soft. easy-to-care-for banded nylon
In a chOice of colors. 66x90" size.

MAIL St!BSCRIPTIONS

· Sund,ay Only

One- ye-ar .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..... ....... $:11.81
Six months .......... . :

............. $10.40

· DaBy and SUnday
MAlL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Inside Ohio
!12 Weeks ................................ .S51.4H
~ wrek.s ........ :.. . .. . .. .. . . ... . . . .. . . .. $'17 .:11
1.1 Weeks ....................... ........ .$14 .04
Rates Outllde Ohlu •
r-Q Weeks .................... , ............. $5f..16
26 Weeks ........... ......... :............ .$~.64
1,1 Weeks ....... .. .. ......... ......... u, .. $15.21

ALBUMS

.96
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All Coupons Must Be Turned

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Polyester/cotton floral print. 1 flat .
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·FEATURING LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
EVERY FRIAY &amp;SATURDAY EVENINGS

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Assorted co lors, qualily tesred
fabr ic.

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-Domestic automakers said .
early November sales of newly built·
cars rose 5.6 percent from a year
earlier. andthedailysales rate in the
latest 10-day perlodo!22,014 was the
highest for early November since
1978, when the rate was 26,658autos
per day.

SUNDAY THRU
TUESDAY

.

10 LB.
BAG

companies that wlll result from its
Jan. 1 breakup will total $1.365 for
each pre-divesltlture share. AT&amp;T
Is now paying $1.35 a share. AT&amp;T
also predicted the eight companl~
will record 1984 total profits of $8.7
billion and revenue of $116.1 billion,
of which $56.5 billion will be revenue
of the "new" AT&amp;T.

OPEN
11 A.M.
SUNDAY

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WE WELCOME YOU
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SUGAR 2 LB. BAG

KRAFT

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89¢ t - - - - - - - - 1 ..

25 LBS.

$499

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oz.

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FLOUR

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CROUTETTES 6 oz.

GOLD MEDAL

$}29

MARGARINE

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oz.

HIRES ROOT BEER
ORANGE CRUSH

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Reynolds Wrap

STUFFING

7-UP

LIBBY'S

TAVERN HAM
WHOLE
LB.

Issued"
It willbasis.
be the biggest single-day
introduction of new securities In
NYSE history, wlth more than 1.5
bllltcm.shares of stock Involved. And
brol&lt;ei:S.across the country, hoping
for an avalanche of extra business,
are eager to answer tbe call.
Because so many of AT&amp;T's 3.1
mlllion shareholders are small
investors, the exchange has put an
extra computer on duty to handle
"odd lot" trades - those Involving
less than 100 shares. In addition, it
wUl stand ready to take orders
beginning at 8: :I!a.m. ESTMonday,
a half-hour earner than usual, to
give brokers on the floor more llme
to match up orders.
However, NYSE officials pointed
out last week that the arrival of the
new telephone stocks comes at a
time when the exchange's facilities
are being expanded anyway, to
handle anticipated future market
volume of as much as 250 million
shares a day.
While all thosepreparatlonswere
In progress, the stock marketdrl!ted
sluggishly through the past week.
The Dow Jones average of :1!
ll)dustrlal.s edged up .82 to 1,251.00..
The N!W York Stock Exchange
composite Index dropped .36to95.46,
while the American Stock Ex.change market value indell: gained
.67 to219.46.
B!gBoardvolumeaveraged&amp;'l.42
miWon shares a day, against 76.Ql
million the week before .

$189

SUPERIOR BONELESS

nur ntion and )tkJI

BULK CANDY.

FRESH GROUND

Gallipolis Daily Tribune.·: ·

Tot~ l

FRESH

99¢

LB.

Shares of the "old" American
Telephone, which wlll continue
trading through mid· Febru_ai'Y,
were heavily traded, changing
handS1llte Frfday'al '63, down %
from the week before.
Analysts said this signaled a
cautious response among investors
to the financial projections for 1984
the new companies issued on
Wednesday, which included a slight
aggregate dividend Increase.
The lengthy prospectus contain·
ing that information carne atop a
mountain of reports already pub·
lis heel by Wall Street analysts on the
likely merits anddrawbacksofeach
of the new companies as
lnvesbnents .

start ringing for Wall Street thls
week.
. Bell Atlantic, BeUSouth, Southwestern Bell and theotheroftsprlngof
the Impending breakup of American
;Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. are due
to begin trading Monday on the New
York Stock Exchange and various
regional exchanges.
. These new companies won't
.actually exist as separate entities
.until Jan. 1, the date when the
divestiture becomes official. But as
part of the plan for the huge
transformation, their stocks will
start trading early on a "when

WIENERS

CHEESE SPREAD

BIG RED®
NUGGETS••
DOG FOOD

ByCIIEI'CURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEw YORK (AP) - The Bells

SUPERIOR

HOLLYWOOD

anhually and, with about 23 million
shares outstanding, that carney; to
$19.3 mlllion a year taken from
after-tax earnings.

)lhone companies
to begin trading

PORK SHOULDER

STEAK

Boston Corp., agreed .that the
industry affords a regularcasbflow.
"I would expect the cash-flow
numbers are. adequate (in Dr
Pepper's case) to suppon the debt
service," he said.
But he added that because Dr
Pepper "leveraged its balance
sheet" inlate1982toacqulreCanada
Dey , Forstmann Little's proposal
also to inject about $150 million Into
thecompanywas cruclal to the deal.
Regardless, Romm said Dr
Pepper should bemflt from one of
the main reasons why a company
goes private - the absence of
dividends. He noted that Dr Pepper
is paying out 84 cents a share

•

$149

. 79¢

INDIAN MAID

HOMEMADE

Sale

$ 89

LB.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-A-S· '

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

r------------------------------'---------...,-----------

CUBE

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TAWNEY
JEWELERS

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AND JUICY

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Watch for our
Christmas
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insert in the
Wed., Nov . 23,

umit Ou•nt•lles

... _ . ,CLOSED THANKSGIVING

SLAB BACON

KEEP YOUR
EYES OPEN!

.

CLOSED SUNDAYS

PRE-SLICED

The shortage will be most critical
among mathematics and science
teachers, whocanworkatfarhigher
salaries in business and industry,
said Orebaugh.
Math and science teachers already are at a premiU!l) nationally,
he said .
The teacher shortage anticipated
is part of a national trend that some
cduca tors say will peak in most
pans of the country by 1~. said
Orebach
In 19&amp;1. the school system had a
surplus of about 300 teachers, said
Oreballgh. Thls forced school officials to convert some into substitute
teachers, to retrain some to teach
other subjects.
Wlt.h a student enrollment of
about 51,001, . Cincinnati public
schools now have 2,568 classroom

.Pargas Inc., an energy concern, bu t
the Pargas deal !ell through .
Theodore Forstmann, a general
partner, said ForstmaM Little's
Interest In soft-drink concerns
mainly reflects the firm's bullish·
ness on the economics of certain
companies in that industry.
In an Interview, Forstmann sald
hls flrm usually uses unsecured
financing to make the purchase,
which means Forstmann Little and
Its lenders are looking for com pan·
ies that are "predictable" and hence
can produce a strong cash .flow to
sweets.
·
help pay off the debt.
Earlier this year it paid $103
"Fundamentally, what we look
mUllan for Beverage Management for, and we look vecy hard and say ·
Inc., a leading 7:UP bottler based in'
'no thankyo_u' a lot, are predictable
Columbus, Ohio.
·bustnesses with senior manageThe firm also acquired All- ments in place that are exceptionAmerican Bottling Co .. largely an ally capable and know their
RC Cola bottler, from Beatrice businesses very well," he said.
Foods Co. for $11l&gt; million. Forst"Part of be!Qg predictable is to
roaM Little then later sold that have a niche or franchise business .
company to another investor.
Dr Pepper is a company that will be
Forstrnann Little's acquisitions 100 years old next year and has a
are done through leveraged buyouts wonderful product and is very well
- In which the purchase Is made known and so forth, and has the kind
mainly with borrowed funds.
of management that is exactly what
Forstrnann Little also has ac- we Wish tofind," ForstmaM added.
:qutred telev1islon stations, and
Martin Romm, a soft -drink ana ·
earlier this year offered to buy lyst at the investment firm First

Fri.·Sat.9 am til 10 pm

Cincy schools may
face teacher shortage

$369

By .JAMES PELTZ

AP Bn"""'u Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Forstmann
Little &amp; Co.'s sweet tooth has flared
up again.
The closely held Investment
banking firm announced this past
week It wants to buy Dr Pepper Co.,
the so!t-drlnk concern, for $512.5
mUllan. A day earUer It aMounl'ed
plans to acquire Topps Chewlng
Gwn lnc.,achewinggumandcandy
company, for$95million.
It isn't the first time the five-year
old Jrm has shown a hankering for

STORE HOURS:
.. 9 am til 10 pm
'

Middleport

Investing group may buy soft drink concern

tlon II1aJ was a forgery. The
seeking the reinstatement of Demevidence
was an SS ldenilllcatloo
janjuk's citizenship. The attorneys
·
card
fran
Soviet archives which
said they had new evidence which
would show that a .key piece of government attorneys say was
issued to Demjanjuk.
evidence used in the denaturaUza.

extradition hearing. Sher said If
Demjanjuk Is extradited, thedepor·
tatlon proceeding would be moot
Last month, Demjanjuk's attar·
ney fUed a motion with Batlistl

Pomeroy

.

...

�..
Page-A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Ncwen !Dar 20, 19,83

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Ohio-Point

Agriculture ponders frozen burger problem ·
By DoN KENDAlL

meat In the plants' pipeline turned
said.
out to be about 11 mUllen pounds.
The Community Nutrttion Instl·
Also, he said, the two plants
tute, a non-profit activist organiza·
continued to produce ground beef to
lion based In Washington, reported
fill existing, sales contracts with
in its latest newslener that thE'
USDA. That amounts to around 7 USDA has found no harmful
mUllon pounds.
amounts of "microbiological con·
Tbe work on the contract meat tamlnation" in themeatwhlchcould
which was bought before the
cause illness.
Impoundment - is expected to
McClung confirmed that report,
conclude by the end of this month, although he said some further
McClung said. Meanwhile, none of
testing remains to be done.
the 18 miUion pounds has been
The Institute .also said that Block
cleared for use by the schools, he · \\ill have to make the decision on
said.
·
whether any or all o:themeatcan be
Before USDA stopped Issuing released for schools to use and also
public reports on laboratory find - "the political question of whether he
lngs, tests showed that about 7 is exposing the admlnlstratlon to
jl('rcent of the samples tested
further controversy and criticism."
contained microscopic insect trag·
Meanwhile, the USDA continues
ments. No further results were tobuy frozengroundbeeffrcmother
available at this time, McClung companies, Including 3.5 milllon

pounds announced thls week at a
cost of$3.38mllllon.
Some of the meat bought lately 1s
being shipped to schools which had
counted on using the ground beef
being held for investigation. ·
McClung said the rerouting was
undertaken to prevent shortages In
someoftheschools.
Under the national school lunch
program, USDA buys meat and
many other commodities trom
vendors who bid for the business.
The food then is . donated to the
schools tn addition to cash alloca·
lions from the federal government.
. -WASHINGTON (AP) - Condltlotis may be shaping up for a
bumper com harvest next year,
perhaps nearly double the sharply
reduced crop oi 1983, says the

Agriculture JJepartlnent. .
Production dropped to an est!·
mated 4.12 billion bushels thls fall,
less than half of the 1!m record of8.4
billlon bushels. The cut was due
malnlytothtsyear'sdroughtandthe
government's . payment-in-kind
acreage program to curb plantings.
The department has announced

prtce the greater the partiCipation
wW likely be."
But since the requirement Is only
for a 10 percent acreage cut, even if
one-third of the farmers partlci·
paled In the 1~ program only a
small acreagewoul&lt;!.betaken from
production.
"Consequently, if planting and
growtngcondittonsarenonnalnext
year, the com crop could exceed 8
bUllon bushels," the report said.

AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agrlculfure De)lartn)ent plans to
decide soon what to· do about
mUUons .of pounds of frozen ham·
burgerimpoundedfortwomonthsto
keep it from winding up on school
menus.
"Adf,'Cisionmayhereachedlnthe
thel~feedgra!nsprogramwillnot
next 10 or 11 days, by the end of
include a PIK feature and only a
November, certainly,'' John
requirement that farmers set-aside
10 pereent of their 1111se acres to
McClung of USDA's Food Safety
qualify for prtce support and target
WASHINGTON (/I.P)- Produc·
and Inspection Service said Friday.
The Issue Involves frozen ground
prtce benefits.
tton of farm-raised catfish continues
"Participation 1n the 1984 feed to rtse sharply above year-earlier
beef that had been bought by USDA
!rom two plants - Cattle King of
grain program next sprtng wW levels, says the Agriculture
Denver and Nebraska Beef lnc. of
dependlargelyontarmers'expecta· Department.
ttons for com prtces next fall," the
Octoberproductlonwasabout11.1
Gering, Neb. - for dlsttibution to
schools.
department's Economic Research mUllon pounds, t';J 21 percent from
SeJVicesaidFrtday.
October 1982, the department said
Agriculture Secretary John R.
Block on Sept. 20 ordered the meat
. "The lower the expected com Frtday.
impounded andlaterbarri&gt;d the two r------"""-------------------------------_.;.-------------'-----------plants from selling any more to the
department until an investigation
was made Into a llegations that the
product may have come from
.substandard canle and was proPersons who have earned FEWER than 95 credits at Rio Grande Community College and are residents of Ohio, select courses from the list below.
duced under unsanitary conditions.
.
BEGIN END
The two companies, which are
IN·DIST.
OUT·DIST. LAB FEE
DISC
HUMBER SEC CREDIT HR. COURSE DESCRIPTION , DAYS HOUR HOUR
BlDG. RM. [G11ti1.
Jaekson. Other Oh10
EVENINGS ON CAMPUS
under a joint ownership, denied the
Vinton. llftip)
Commur1.
ACC
104
011
4
Inter Ace. I
24
6:D07:50 p m SB 105
I Re&amp;istration ,
allegations and said they were the
$92.00
$112.00
ART
103
121
3
3
6·00·8:50
p.m
.
Set
Top
Photo
Design
·
Registrations will be accepted thtOUih December 2, 1983 by any of the
FA
134
$69.00
$
84.00
$31.00
result of "false and slanderous"
ART
293
121
3
Inter Pholography
14
6.00-7:50 p.m. FA 141
methods listed below.
$69.00
$ 84.00
information reported by NBC
BM
104
\82
4
lotro to Bus.
3
6:00·1000 p.m. SB 102
A. PHONE-Calll·800·282·7201 (Ohio only! or 614-245·5353 Ext
$92.00
$112.00
BM
234
181
television.
4
Bus. Stahsttcs
24
6.00·7: 50 p.m. SB 106
301 between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Monday through ftlday .
$92.00 .
$112.00
BM
293
!Sl
3
Bus. law II
1
6:00·8:50 p.m. SB 103
B. IN-PERSON-On -campus 10 the E. E. Davis Career Ce.nter Room
$69.00
$ 84.00
McClung said in response to a
cs
113
222
3
13
6:00·7:50 p.m. DC 105
Adv. Data Systems
150 between 9:00a.m. and 4:00p.m. or 7:00 p.m.-8:30p.m. Mon$69.00
s 84.00 $5.00
reporter's questions that about 18
ECO
104
28 1
4.
Amencan EcOnomy
· J3
6:00-7:50 p.m. SB 106
day through Thursday.
.
$92.00
$112.00
million pounds of ground beef are
EO
103
303
3
lnlr o to Educati on
I
6:00·8 50 p.m. AN 225
C. M~ll - Use the approptiate coupon. fill in various i.nformatio.n, en$69.00 '
$
84.00
EO
253
301
3
Dec. Training Handicap
6:00·8 50 p.m. AN 114
2
being held upt il the decision is made
close fees and mail.
$69.00
$ 84.00
m
222
312
1
Semt·Prog. Controls
4
6:00·8:00 p.m. DC ll2
D. FIRST NIGHT OF Cl~SSS-11 space" m &gt;lable, registratiOns will
$46 00 .
$ 56.~0
on what to do with it . That Is nearly
m
234
321
4
TV &amp; RadiO Ptin .
be accepted on the lirst class meeting.
I
6:00·8 50 p.m. DC 114
$92.00
$112.00
$5.00
trtple the 6.4 rniUioti pounds of meat
ENG
113
345
3
Composition I
24
6:00·750 p.m AN 211
$69.00
84.00
NOTE:
Early
Registration is recommended. No registrauons will be ac
ENG
123
344
3
that USDA initially said was directly
Composition II
24
6:00-7:20 p.m. AN 224
$69.00
$ 84.00
cepted
after December 2. 1981
ENG
133
341
3
. Creative Writmg
24
6:00-7:15 p.m. AN 225
Involved In the investigation.
$69.00
$ 84.00
It
BOOKS
ENG
215
342
5
13
6:00·PO p.m. AN 221
British Literature
$115.00
$140.00
McClung said the total amount of
Required books vary from course to course. Books are available iit the
FIN
JI4
381
4
t3
6:00-7: 50 p.m. SB 104
Personal Finance
. $92.00 .,
$112.00
first class session or the College Bookstore located in Holzer Hall on cam·
•
pus. Payment for books may be made at time of purchase. To accommo·
BEGIN END
IN-DIS! .
date eveni~g/ofl·campus studenls. Bookstore will be open 6 p.m. to9 p.
OUT·DIST. LAB FEE
DISC
NUMBER SEC CREDIT HR. COURSE DESCRIPTION
DAVS HOUR HOUR
BLDG. RM. (Galli•, J1cllscn. CXher Ohi O
m
. Nov. 28 through Dec. I, 1981
Vinton . MtiiS)
Comm_.n.
FIN
294
38\
Set. lop Sav. &amp; l1me
2
til
DROPPING
ACLASS/REFUND
p.m
.
6:00·10:00
DC ll4
$9200
$112.00
FIN
294
382
Set. Top Bank Managemenl 1
Students who wishto drop a class MUST notify the Continuing Education •
6:00·1 0:00 p.m. SB 102
$9200
$112.00
FIN
294
383
Sellop An. f1n. St.
4
office. A refund of tuition only will be made according to the schedule
6:00 ·10:00 p.m. oc 125
$92.00
Sll2.00
HI S
103
461
The Ancient World
2
below .
p.m.
6:00-8:30
AN
222
$6900
$
84.00
ISO
lOlA
484
Fresh Orientation
1
6:00·7 50 p m. cc
Drop
During lsi Week of Quarter .................... ...... ......... iOO%Relund
$2300
$ 28.00
MFG
163
541
Hydraul &amp; Pneumatics
\3 · 6:00·7:50 p m. oc 133
Drop
Ounng
2nd Week of Quarter ........................................ 75% Refund
$69.00
$ 84.00 $10.00
MKT
124
561
lntro to Marketing
24
· Drop Duri ng ltd Week of Quarter ......................................... 50% Relund
6:00-1:50 p.m. SB 102
$9200
$112.00
MTH
114
583
Algebra
24
Drop During 4th Week of Quarter ......................................... 25% Refund
6:00·7:50 p m. SB 104
$91.00
$112.00
MTH
124
583
Trigonometry
13
Drop After 4th Week of Quarter. .............................................. No Refund
6:00·7:50 p.m SB 103
$92.00
$112.00
MTH
By LARRY ELKIN
124
584
Trigonometry
13
6:00.):50 o.m. AH 2
IV DATES TO REMEMBER FOR WINTER QUARTER
$92.00
$[12.00
PHY
104
742
Intra to Physics
13
Assoclatro Press Writer
7:50 o m. DC 106
6:00·
Classes Regin ............................... Tuesday. Nov. 29. 1983, 8:0il A.M.
$9200
$1l2.00
ss
204
801
Prin. ol Geography
J3
6:00·7:50 p.m. AN 222
NEW YORK (AP) - Labor
Chnstmas Break .... Monday, Dec.l9. 1983 thru Monday, Jan. 2, 1983
$92.00
$112.00
soc
104
843
Intro to Soc •ology
13
6:00 7:50p.m AN 224
Classes Resume ............................. Tuesday , January 3, 1983,8:00 A.M.
$92.00
$Jl2.00
Secretary Raymond J. Donovan
ACC
124
024
Pnn. ACCI I
13
8:00·9:50 p m. SB 105
last Day to Drop Class Without Record ...................... Fri .. Jan. 6, 1984
$9200
$112.00
A
C
C
234
02 1
Cost Acct.
24
testified Friday his blood still
8:00·9:50 p.m. SB 102
last Oayjo Drop Class ................................... ......... Fri.. Feb.17, 1984
$1l2.00
224
cs
222
Cobol
It
13
8:00-10:30 p m DC 105
" boils" at a special prosecutor's
s
5.00
End of Winter Quarter ....... ..... ,...................... ... Sat. H. 25, 1984
$Jl2.00
OSL
215
241
Diesel Engmes II
24
8:00·1 0:50 p.m. DC 119
$[1.00
statement that there was "lnsu!ft·
$115.00
$140.00
01
ANV QUESTIONS11
253
16\
Tool Design
13
8:00·10:30 p.m. DC 116
$69.00
$ 84.00
$ 4.00
Call 1·800·182·7201 (Ohio only ) Ext. 301
cien t credible evidence" to support
or
charges of wrongdoing against
IN·
DIS!
BEGIN
END
614-245·5353 Ext 301
&amp;~J;Od~~
IGallia.
JackSQO,
DISC NUMBER
Donovan.
HOUR
HOUR
SEC
DAYS
CREDIT HR. COURSE DESCRIPTION
BLDG. RM . V&gt;nlon, Metgsl ·eommun. LAB FEE
MFG
243
54!
24
8:00·10:30 p.m. DC 133
3
Quality Assurance
Donovan made the remarks as he
$ 69.00
$ 84.00 $10.00
To register lor classes Doled lor RIO GRANDE COMMUNll'Y
f'H Y
134
742
4
Applied Physics ·
B:IXJ.9:50 p.m. DC 106
13
s
92.00
testl!ied In U.S. District Court in
$[12.00
COlLEGE, use the fonn helow:
$
6
00
ENG
213
341
124
8:00-9:50 p.m FA 141
·Alfv. Report &amp; Edit
3
$ 69.00
s 84.00
Brooklyn that he knew nothing of
WEEKEND CLASSES
Name .............................................................................. .
" no-show" jobs on a Queens subway
SEC
114
782
4
lnterm ly~ng
5
600-9:30 p.m. DC136
project undertaken in the late 1970s
S
92.00
$11 2.00 $ 5.00
OSL
184
24 1
6:30-9:30 pm. DC119
Address .......... .............. ........... City ........ Zip ........County ...... .
4
Oie5el Fuef Sjsl I
5
$9200
by his old company, the Schiavone
$112.00
cs
114
224
4
6
BaSit langue~gE
1:00·5:0il p.m. DC 105
$
92.00
$Jl2.00 $ 5.00
Construction Co.
SEC
113
781
6
3
Adv. Shorthand
1:00·4:30 p.m. oc 136
Phooe (home) :............................... Phone (business) ...... .. ..
$ 69 .00
$ 84.00 $ 5.00
MFG
103
542
6 8:00 a.m.- \1:30 p.m. DC 133
Donovan, whose efforts to quash a
3
Ba•c Wodmg
$
69.00
$ 84.00 $15.00
ACC
114
022
4
Prin. ol ACC I
6 8:00 a.m.·l1:30 p.m. DC 125
defense subpoena failed , was forced
$ 92.00
Social Security No ....... ............................. llh1h Dale ......... ..
$1l2.00
OSL
205
141
5
8:00
a.m
.-2:30
p.m
.
Oie5el
En~nes I
6
oc
119
$115.00
$140.00
$II 00
to a ppear at the trial of two former
ELE
222
321
-2
6
Sem Mth. for Elec.
9:00·11:00 a.m. DC 111
$ 46.00
$ 56.00
Signature ......................................................... .
union leaders charged with lying
DISC NUMBER
SEC CREDIT HR. COURSE DESCRIPTION
DAYS
DISC
'
NO.
sEc.
last year to a special grand jury.
Off-CAMPUS CLASSES
BlDG. RM . IN-DIS!
DESC.
FEE LA.B TOTAL
OUT·OIST
ACC
114
023
That panel Investigated Donovan's
Pnn. ol ACe t
----------~-6:00·10:00 ~m. POM
ACC
124
026
I 92.00
$112.00
Pnn. of ACC I
conduct while he was a part owner
6:00·10:110
p.m
BNK
134
141
GAL
I
92.00
$112.00
Money &amp; Be~nkJng
and vice president of Schiavone.
6:00·10:0il ~m POM
BM
204
181
$ 92.00
$112.00
Prin of Bus. Management
TOTAL ENCLOSED ......... .
6:00-10:110 p.m. JAC
BM
244
181
That probe's product was a report
$ 92.00
$112.00
Small Bus Management
Muk" check or moaey order PllYilhle to:
6:0il·IO:I10
pm
MTH
104
58!
JAC
$
92.00
$112.00
Rio Grande Community Colle~~:e
Matheme~tics Review
by special prosecutor Leon Silver6:0il·10:110 ~m JAG
MTH
104
581
$ 9200
$1 12.00'
St•nd I his Form 6: F't t To:
Mathematics Review
man that there was " Insufficient
6:00·10:110
p.m
ART
203
121
POM
$ 92.00
ConllnulnK" Education
$112.00
SeL Top . landscapes
7:00·10:110 p m WEL
credible evidence" to support
R.C.C. Box ~Til
S 69.00
$ 84.00 $31 00
Rio Gr~tade, OH . .fS61.f
charges against Donovan.
"That's what it found , yes,
'Insufficient credible evidence,' "
I Re&amp;istration
Donovan said F riday. "And I've
Persons who have completed MORE than 95 credits at Rio Grande College or live out of state
RegiStrations will be accepted throuch Dmmber 2, 1983 by any of the
•
been living with that phrase since,
methods hsted below.
MUST select from the list below.
A. PHONE-Calll-800·182·7101 (Ohio onlyl or 614-245·5353 Ext
and I resent that phrase, even
DISC
NUMBER SEC CREDIT HR. COURSE DESCRIPTION
DAYS
BEGIN END
TUITION
301 between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.
EVENINGS ON CAMPUS
though I recognize It's a legal one.
HOUR HOUR
BLDG. RM.
&amp; FEES tAB FEE
B
.
IN-PERSON-On-campus tn the E. E. Davis Career Center Room
AIX
204
021
4
Inter ACC. I
24
"I had no knowledge, and that's a
6:0().7:50 p.m.
so 105
$330.00
!50 between 9:00a.m. and 4:00p.m. or 7:00 p.m.-8:30pm Moo·
ART
203
121
3
Set.
Top
Pooto
Design
3
6.00·8:50 p.m
FA 134
day through Thursday .
'
difference from insufficient credi·
$259.50 $31.00
AR~
193
121
Inter Photography
J4
3
p.m
FA
141
6:00-7:50
$259.50
C
.
MAIL-Use
the
aperopriate
coupon,
fill
in
various
information,
enble . evidence, and that's why that
BM
104
181
4
lnlro to Bus.
3
6:0Q.IO:OO p.m.
close fees and ma1l.
SB
102
$33000
.
BM
234
181
24.
4
Bus. Slai&gt;~&gt;CS
phrase bolls m y blood."
SB 106
6:01J.7:50 p.m
$330.00
D. FIRST NIGHT OF CLASSS-If space is available, registrations will
BM
293
181
3
Buslawll
2
Most of Donovan's testimony
6:00-8:50 p.m.
S8 \03
. $259.50
be accepted on the first class 1meeting. •
BM
314
181
4
Personnel Adm&lt;n.
24
6:00-7:50 p.m.
SB
107
$33000
appeared to support claims. by the
cs
213
122
NOTE:
Early
Regislration is recommended . No registrations witt be ac
3
Adv. Data Systems
13
oc 105
6:00-7:50 p.m.
$259.00 $5.00
cepted a~er December 2, 1983
ECO
104
281
defendants, Louts Sanzo a nd Ama·
4
American Economy
13
600·7:50 pm'
SB 106
$3:ll.OO
. ED
103
303
II BOOKS
3
lntro to Education
1
''
dio Petito, that while men m!IY have
6:00-8:50
p.m
AN 215
$259.50
EO
153
301
3
Dec.
Traming
HindJCap
2
~equired . boo~s vary from course to course. Books are ;vailable at the
AN
114
6:00-8:50
p.m
worked under false names at the
$259.50
ED
453
301
3
Occ Trammg Hand1cap
2
hrst class sess1on or the College Bookstore located in Holzer Hall on cam·
6:00·8:50 p.m
AN 114
$259.50
Queens subway construction site,
ED
475
301
5
Bus Ed. Methodis
24
~us, Payment for books may be made at time of purchase. To accommo6:00.):
50
p.
m
DC
136
$432.50
ElE
222
322
somebody actually did the work for
2
Sem. Pro&amp; Controls
4
date evenmg/ off.campus students, Bookstore Will be open 6 p.m. to 9 p.
6:00·8:00
p.m
DC
112
$171.00
ELE
234
321
m. Nov. 28 through Dec. \, 1983.
TV &amp; Rad10 Controls
I
4
which paychecks were issued. The
6fl0.8:50 pm
DC 114
$330.00 $~110
ENG
113
345
3
Composition
I .
24
til DROPPING A CLASS/REFUND
6:00·7:50 p.m.
AN 221
defendants, who denied to the grand
$259.50
ENG
123
344
3
Composition II
24
,.
AN 224
Students who wish to drop a class MUST notily the Continuing EduCition
6:0Q-7:20 p.m.
$259.50
ENG
133
342
jury that there were no-show jobs,
3
Crea\Jw Wnting
14
AN 215
6:00-7:15 p.m.
olhce.
A
refund
ol
tUIIton
only
wtll
be made according to the schedule
$259.50
ENG
215
342
5
Bribsh Literature
13
say these pseudonyms did not
below .
.
6:00-UJ p.m.
AN 221
$432.5()
FIN
\14
381
4
Personal Fmante
13
6:00.7:50
pm.
constitute no-show jobs.
SB
104
~rop ~ur ! Oi lsi Week ol Quarter ................:......... ............ 100% Refund
$330.00
fiN
294
381
4
Set. lop Sav. &amp; Time
2
6:1XJ.JO:OO p.m.
DC!l4
rop Dunng 2•d Week of Quarter ....................................... 75% Refund
$330.00
In an exchange with Assistant
fiN
294
382
Sel. lop Bank Management 1
4
0
6:00.10:00 p.m
SB 102
Drop unng Jrd Week of Quarter ........................................ 50% Refund
$330.00
RN
294
383
U.S. Anorney Laura Brevenl,
• I
Set. lop An. F10. St
4
4
6:00.10:00 p.m
DC 125
rop During 4th Week ol Quarter ..................................... 25% Refund
$330.00
HIS
l03
461
3
The Ancient Wor~
2
Donovan acknowledged, as hedld at
AN 222
6:00·8:30 p.m
Drop Aller 4th Week ol Quarter ......... ,., ................................... No Relund
$259.50
HIS
484
461
H•t Problems Sem.
.4
4
6:00.9:30
p.m
AN
222
his Senate confirmation hearings in
$330.00
ISO
lOl A
484
\¥--DATES
TO REMEMBER FOR WINTER QUARTER·
1
Freshman Onentation
1
6:1XJ.7:50 p.m
cc
MFG
163
541
186.50
1981, that a Teamsters worker was
l Classes Regin ........ ................... ....... Tuesday, Now. 29. 1983, 8:00A.M.
.3
HydrauL &amp; Pneumatics
13
6:1XJ.7:50 p.m.
DCl33
$259.50 $10.00
4
MKT
124
56!
Chnstmas Break .... Monday, Dec.l9, 1983 thru Mondaj. Jan. 2 1983
24
lntro to Marke!ng
paid at a Schiavone site In
p.m
.
6:().7:50
SB
102
.
$330.00
MTH
!14 .
583
Classes Resume .............................. Tuesday. Janua/y 3 1983 8·0o AM
4
~gebra
24
Manhattandurlngroughlythesame
SB 104
6:0il·7:50 p.m
$330.00
MTH
124
583
l"t ~ay to Drop Clm Without Record ...................... Fri., Jan. ·6, ·1984
4
frigonometry
13
6:00·7:50 p.m.
SB 103
period although he rarely appeared
$330.00
MTH • 114
584
East awto Drop Class ................................................ Fri.. Feb.l7. 1984
4
fng1110metry
13
6:00·7:50 p.m.
AH 2
$330.00
f'HY
104
742
nd of &gt;nter Quarter ................................................. Sat, Feb. 25, 1984
4
intro to Phr.;•c:s
13
there.
6:00·7:50 pm
DCI06
$330.00
ss
204
801
.
ANY
OUESTIONS!1
.
4
Prin.
ol
Geographj
!3
Miss Brevettl argued that theslte,
6:0il·7:50 p.m.
AN 222
$330.00
soc
104
843
4
lntro
to
Socology
13
Cali
1-800·282-7201
(Ohio
onlyl
Exl.
301
a subway tunnel at 63rd Street, was
AN 224
6:0il-7:50 p.m.
$330.00
ACC
124
024
or
Pr&lt;n. ACC. II
13
4
SBl05
8:00-~30 p.m.
$330.00
part of the same job as the Queens
ACC
234
021
614·245·5353
Ext 301
4
Cost Accounting
24
SB 101
S:Dil·~50 p.m.
$330.00
cs
224
221
4
Coballl
13
. site.
800·10:30 p.m
DC 105
To 1'1!tdoler lor c~ lloled lor RIO GRANDE COlLEGE, ,...
$330.00 $ 5.00
OSL
215
241
5
Diesel En~nes II
14 ·
.Donovan countered, "There's· a
p.m
DC 119
8:00·lfr50
the lonn below:
•
·
$432.50
DT
253
261
$11.01J
3
Tool Des&gt;go
13
. 8:00·10:30 p.m. · . DC 116 .
rtver in betWeen."
.
$15950 $ 4.00
MFG
243
541
3
Qualify Assurance
24
DC 133
8:00·10:30 p.m.
. $259.50 $10.00
. f'HV
134
742
Donoyan, testifying In oPen court
NOTE: Vou may repoter lor 12-18 ~red!~ for S8110.01 phoo SUO ·
4
Applied Phys&lt;cs
13
DCl06
8:00·9:50 pm
$330.00 -·S 6.00
ENG
213
341
.
per
credH Jl&lt;!neral.lee 111111 appraprlale lab lee.
•
3
MY. Report &amp; Ed&lt;!.
. 124
for tlie first ttme on the matters that
FA 141 '
9:00·9:50 p.m.
. $259.50
-·
. •
led to Silverman's investigation,
WEEKEND CLASSES
N8.rnei ••••••••••••• ~······•••••••• .. ••········.· 1••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • : .
said he was Involved In blddtng for
SED
Jl4
782
lnterm lypmg
5
6:00·9:30
p.m
.
DCI36
$330.00
$ 5.00
OSL
184
241
the Queens construction job but not
O.eset fu~ Syst I
5
1\ddreso .... ..... .................. Clly........Zip........County, ......
DC 119
6:30·9::ll ~m.
$330.00
cs
114
224
BaSic language
6
In carrying it out.
l:IXJ.S:OO
p.m
.
DCIOS
$331100
$
5.00
SEC
Jl3
782
Advanced Shorthand
6
.''
1:00·4::ll p.m.
DCI36
Miss Brevet!! has maintained
$:&gt;59.50 $ ~00
Phone (honte) ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Phone (h±e•)..........
MFC
103
542
Baoc Weldmg
6
a.m-12:30
pm.
8:00
DC i33
$259.50 $25.00
throUghout the two-week trtal in
ACC
ll4
022
Pnn. of ACC. t
•
6
9:00•.m·l2:30 pm.
DC 125
~.00
DSL
205
241
SoclaJ Security No.............................Bt.... JMte...........
Diesel
En~nes
I
Brooklyn federal court that four
6
9:00
a.m
.-12:30
p.m
.
DC
119
$432.50 $11.00
ElE
222
321
Sem. Math for Elec.
6
ncr~ jobs existed at the Queens
900·ll·OiJ am.
DC 112•
$17300
Slllllfllure
DISC NUIIBER' SEC CREDIT HR.
site and that Sanzo, the former
DISC' NO. Ht;c
Af[;
Jl4
023
4
Pnn. of ACC I
DEMC.
4
600-10:00 pm
president ofLocal2k of the Blasters,
FE~
LAB TOTAL
ACC
124
026
FilM'
4
Pr10. ol ACC I
$33000
2
6:00.10:00
p.m
.
Drtll-Runneq_ aqd Miners Union,
GNK
134
141
GAL
Money &amp; Bankmg
4
~.00
J
6:00·l&lt;l00 p.m.
BM
204
182
and Petlto, the unioll's secretary,
FilM
4
$33000
J
p.m
.
6:00·10.00
BM
244
181
JAC
4
~.00
treasurer, lied to the grand jury "to
Pnn. of l)us. Management
3
6:00.10:00 p.m. . JAC
MTH
104
581
4
$330.00
Mathemahcs
Review
1
6:1XJ.lOOO
p.m
.
protect friends blgb and low.''
MTH
104
582
JAC
4
~00
Mathematics Review
3
6:00-iO:OO p.m.
Donovan answered, "absolutely
~Rl .
203
122
FilM
$330.00 $31.00
3
Set. lop.Landsupes
4
7:00-10:00 p.m.
WEL
$25950 $15.00
not" wbenSanmattorney J. Jeffrey
WelseDteld asked If he had urged the
men to m1slead tbe grand jury. ·

RIO GRANDE COMMUNITY COLLEGE

GENERAL INFORMATION

..

s

Charges
• •
JJTitate
Donovan

m~~

--------------

·

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

GENERAL INFORMATION

.

.,

•• 0 •••• 0 •••• • ••••• 0 •••••••• 0. 0 •••• 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••

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•

Mistreatment led to organized cnme

Area deaths
Fonnie B. Litchfield
POINT PLEASANT - L.W.
Geny, 76, :wT Mount Vernon Ave.,
Point Pleasant, died Frtday afternoon In Holzer Medical Center.
Born April 29, 1907, In Indiana,
Pa. , son of the late Charles Wilson
and Laura Baylor Getty, he was
Mason County clerk for aJ years
until his . retirement, and was a
formerrnanageroftheG .C.Murphy.
Co. store In Point Pleasant. He
opened Getty Equipment Co.ln 1941.
He was also !lrst president of the
Mason County Public Ubrary board
of directors, theboardofdirectorsof
the Mason County Farm Museum,
and a former president of West
Virginia Association of County and .
Circuit Clerks.
SuJVivlng are his wife, Grace
McKee Getty; a daughter, Jane
Geny of Point Pleasant: a sister,
Mrs. Mildred W. Carnahan of
Detroit, Mich.; 1\fld a brother, Paul
S. of Marton Center, Pa.
Hewasalsoprecededlndeathbya
brother, Donald.
Funeral services wUl be held atl1 .
a.m. Monday in Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, with the Rev.
Malcoim c. Mciver Ill and the Rev.
Tally Hanna officiating. Burial will
be In Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at Crow·Hussell
Funeral Home from 7·9 p.m. today.
The body wW be taken to the
church one hour prior to the
services.
Masonic graveside rites wlll be
conducted.

MASON - Funeral services will
be held at 1 p.m. today In Foglesong .
Funeral Home for Fonnie B.
Litchfield, 78, Rt.1, Ll'tart, who died
Thursday night in Camden-Clark
Hospital. Parkersburg, W.Va.
The 'Rev. George Weirick will
off[CI'Ite. Burtal wUJ be In Graham
Cemetery.
• Born March 8, 1905, In Gallipolis
Ferry, son of t~ late Frank and
Mary Hoplite Litchfield, he was a
farmer and former West Virginia
Department of Highways em·
ployee. He was a member of Bread
Run Zion Lutheran Church.
He was also preceded in death by
his wife, Roma A. Litchfield, in 1976,
and by a son, Ralph.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Elmer (Bonnie) Baird of Cheshire;
two sons, Marion and John, both of
New Haven; a sister, Esta Daylong
of Middleport; eight grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren.

Robert M. Switzer Jr.
GALLIPOLIS-Gravesideservi·
ces for Robert M. Switzer Jr., 82,
Chicago, formerly of Gallipolis, wUl
be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday In Mound
Hill Cemetery.
The Rev. Albert MacKenzie wlll
o!ficlate.
'
Local arrangements are by
Waugh-Halley -Wood Funeral
Home.

Witnesses say Lavelle
used agency influence

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) -A
former New York City policeman
and expert on organized crime
blames exploltatton of immigrants
for much of the success of organized
crime in the U.S.
Ralph Salerno, the son of Italian
immigrants, told people attending a
Trumbull Town Hall gathering on
Thursday that immigrants ~re
often at the bottom of the social
heap, doing the lowest jobs and too ·
afraid to complain oftheir frequent
mistreatment.
Salerno said that Hispanic immi·
grants undergo that kind of treat·
ment now. The discontent leading to
criminality shows up in the children
of immigrants, he said.
"As a result, we have an
organized crime force that Is 100
times greater and more gpwei'illl

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Officials
of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People are
investigating whether the Toledo
chapter violated national pollcy by
endorsing a candidate In the recent
mayoral election.
The Rev. Floyd Rose, president of
the Toledo chapter, said the inquiry
apparently stems from the'results of
a straw vote taken during a
miniconvention sponsored by the
chapter last month.
"The NAAGP does not endorse
candidates," Rose said. "We did not
endorse either Donna Owens or
Peter Ujvagi. This Is just a
misunderstanding." .
Mnl. Owens won the Nov. 8
general election with 59 percent of

Foal to help
abused women

~tbeprublemlflbattered

ROYAL CROWN
COLA
.7-UP

the vote. When sworn In Dec. 1, she
wW be the first woman mayor In
Ohio's fourth-largest city.
The local NAACP said about 200
people attended the mtnlconven·
tlon, with about 55 percent voting for
Mrs. Owens, a Republican.
Supporters of Ujvagi, a Democrat, were crttlcal of the straw vote,
claiming that the NAACP did. not
spell out what It wanted !rem each
candidate In terms of representation at the miniconvention . .
Rose said the straw vote was
taken among people a !tending the
miniconvention and did not neces·
sartly represent the NAACP ct!apter's position.
Another fray over endorsements
durtng the mayoral campaign led to

the withdraw\ of the Teamsters
union from the Toledo United Labor
Council. .
Teamsters Local 20 President
Harold Ll'u said confusion over the
labor councll's joint endorsement of
Mrs. Owens and Ujvagi Jed him to
pull the northwest Ohio Teamsters
locals out of the

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Gallipolis

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Lap Desks
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Microwave Stands
Butcher Blocks
Magazine Holders
Bedroom Furniture Mall Boxes
Chairs
Oak Tables
Clothes Hampers
Peg Clothes Racks
Corner Cupboards
Roll Top Desks
Curio Cabinets
Rocking Chairs
Child's Rockers
Shelves
Child's Table &amp;
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Chairs Sets
Spice Cabinets
Dough Rollers
Trestle Tables
Deacon Benches
Towel Holders
Toy Boxes
Dry Sinks
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Foot Stools
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High Chairs
wooden Eggs
Plus Lots More

Menacing summons
issued by deputies .

quoted Ms. Lavelle as saying "we
A-odated Preu Writer
have to deliver this one tor Senator
WASHINGTON (AP) - A strtng Lugar."
.
of government witnesses has test!·
WilltamHedem&amp;Jl,a top official in
fied that Rita Lavelle used her EPA's "superfund" cleanup proposition as manager of the govern· gram, and Gene Lucero, director of
GALLIPOLIS -A summons was
.ment's$1.6 billlon hazardous waste \\laste enforcement, said that Ms. Issued on a Columbus man for
cleanup fund to help Republican Lavelle menlloned several times aggravated menacing outside of
candidates In 1982.
that Lugar was pushing for action CJ's 111· Kanauga early Saturday
Prosecutors began putting on and she wanted to see results before morning.
their case Friday - calling seven the election.
Sheriff's deputies charged Paul
current and former employees of
Other witnesses said that Ms. Edwards, 28, 5126 Maple Ridge.
the Environmental Protection Lavelle and members of her staff
Deputies were dispatched to the
Agency to testify against their workedthroughtheweekendimJne..
scene after notified that a man was
fonner colleague.
dlately pribr to the election drafting seen waving a gun. Upon arrtval,
Ms. Lavelle is facing a maximum a press release to be used by they reportedly found Edwards
25-year prison term if convicted on Danforth to announce a possible seated In his vehicle. Deputies said
all counts of an Indictment charging scientific breakthrough In cleaning theyconflscatedanautomattcplstol
ber with perjury and obstructing a
up soU contaminated by the deadly and some marijuana. Edwards was
congressional investigation.
tater released.
chemlcal dioxin.
1be govenunent is charging that
· Susan· Baldyga, Ms. Lavelle's
The sheriff's department Is inves&gt;"
Ms. Lavelle lled when she dented
special assistant and a close !rtend, tlgatlng a theft of a Honda
uslngher.poslt!on to aid Republican
said she heard Ms. Lavelle say that motorcycle from a Rt. 2, Vinton
candidates.
- she w~s going to withhold money residenceoccurrtngdurlngthepast
Various witnesses , testified that · from California's hazardous waste few days.
The sheriff's department rePie fonner assistant EPA admlnis· program as a way to "hit Jerry
trator ordered her staff to wort&lt; on a
Brown," who at the time was ported the motorcycle was taken
Seymour,lnd., wasteslteanddioxin
Democratic governor of the state.
from an unlocked garage at the
contamination in Missouri to help
Under defense questioning, home of Ronald Petrte. Petrte
the re-election bids nf Sens. Richard
another witness said no money was informed deputies Thursday at3:45
Lugar, R-Ind., and John Danforth,
ever wlthheid and Lucero and p.m.
R·Mo.
Hedeman said that It was not
Cited by city pollee Saturday for
They said Ms. Lavelle inSisted
unusual for the EPA to be prodded DWI was Paul D. Payne, 20, 906
that an agreement be reached on
hy Republican and Democratic Fourth Ave. Charged for OWl
cleaning up the Seymour site before
members of Congress to clean up Frtdaywere Kevin L. Taylor, 20, Rt.
tbe November election. Edward waste problems.
1, Point Pleasant, and Billy Patter·
Kurent, a fanner EPA attorney,
Ms. Lavelle Is also accused of . son, 39, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, who also
secretly warning Aerojet-General received a citation for speeding.
Corp. , her. former employer, that It
Officers cited on Friday Jack L.
was a potential target of a Meek, 46, Rt. 3, Gallipolls, failure to
government lawsuit during a period dlsplayvalidreglstratlon; DonaldS.
whenshelatersworeshehadnoidea Melvan, 25, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, failure
the finn had disposed of hazardous ·to appear on bench warrant;
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Feminist
wastes in the Strtngfellow Acid Pits Beverly A. Perkins, 45, Rt. 3,
Ginny Foal, disapPointed in a lack of
·In Callfornia.
Gallipolis, speeding; Marginta E.
suppport trom the National Organ!·
zatlon for Women durtng ber
successtul flght against a murder
charge, returned to California
vowing to work on her own to help
battered women.
As she arrtved In Los Angeles
from Louisiana, where her trtal was
held, Foal was greeted Friday night
by 150 IOyous supporters who
welcomed her with asongtothe tune

"Hello, Ginny, well, hello, Glllny,
it's so ntreto havt' you back where
you betong," tbe crowd sang at the
Sheraton Universal Hotel. "The ·
system works, Ginny, In spite of all
those jerks, Ginny, and Ginny, you
wW never go away again."
During the Impromptu rally, Ms.
Foat called her acquittal a freeing
''from Imprisonment.''
"But we as women livetnourown'
prisons;" she said. "Now that I've
been released, I need to work on
being released by !IJCtety."
. ·
Ms. Foat was acquitted by a
Gretna,La.,juryonWednesdayofa
.1965 murder her ex·husbBnd Jqtm
Sldole claimed sbe commtned.
Ms. Foat, f2, was p1esldent of
NOW's Callforriiacl)apterwhenshe
was IUTI!Sted last January for the
murder of Argentine businessman
MoUM Chayo during a robbery In
1965.
She decided in July not to seek
re-electloo to tbe post, and. saki
~she does not plan to resume
.her lnwiYernellt with NOW.
She said she Is deeply dlsap- .
pointed that NOW'I natlCtnll oraant·
7.aiiiiD dlole not to stalld publicly
beldDd bel' afb!l' her 8l'l8lt, blitald
she !nll!ndl to remain ectlYe In
wauen'a rllhiB taues. particularly

ferederatlon " and "The Crtme for a publlc office that only pays
Conservations." ..He also served as a $50,000 per year?" he asked. "With
consultant to the U.S. Department of· that kind of debt, he's going to owe
Justice and the Presldent's Com· people favors, favors that will be
mission on Violence. He has taken called in some day.''
part In the anti-crime planning of a , - - - - - - - - - - - "Even at the age of six," he said. nUfl)ber of large American cities.
Organized crime has played on
''part of my Instruction was that
while any kldofthat age is expected the hypocrisy of the American
to get into fights , there were some people, he said, selling alcohol
kids that you just didn't touc,h during Prohibition, playing both
because of who their parents sides of labor-management dis·
putes and entering the black market
were....
durlngWWII
rationing.
"My parents, along with a lot of
He
said
he
backs l~ali2a tlon of
other migrants, came to this
but
with tighter public
garnbllng.
country thinking it would be 'the
control,
and
higher
tobacco taxes In
land of opportunity.' What they
the
tobacco
states
to prevent
found was a group of their own
cigarette
smuggling.
He
sald he
countrymen exploiting and victim- ·
reform
election
laws.
would
also
!zing them, and the rest of the
"How can you justify a man
·
country couldn't care less.' '
conducting
a $2 m illion campaign
Salerno wrote "The Crime Con·
than when I was a child," he said.
Growing up In the1920slntheEast
Harlem section of New York,
Salerno said he·saw first-hand what
organized crime was all about .

NAACP violation checked

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

of "Hello, Dolly."

lhe Sunday Times-Sentinei--Poge-A-7

W.Va.

Melvin, 24, Rt.1, Gallipolis, failure
to appear on bench warrant; James
C. Jimenez, 52 OUve St., failure to
dlsplayvalldreglstratlonandspeed·
lng; VIvian H. Grant , 48, Galllpolls,
speeding; and Denver L. Johnson,
18, Vinton, no operator's license and
fictitious registration.

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,,

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~

OHIO

�The Sunday Times-Sentinel

State ~enate
to get holiday

•

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T)lanksglvtng.

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AN(ffliER MISSIII{_G PERSON? -·For some, running
away ., ooe eiCBpe from tbe
problEms of !He, and in Ibis
dramldlc lllu8tratlon It appears

•

~
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State law spells out salaries,
holidays and benefits for state
employees, but the Legislature sets
. the rules for its employees. Generally,leg!slators follow state law.
Under the law, Flidaylsnotapald
holiday, but Thanksgiving Is.
Jolm K. ·Mahoney, executive
secretary of the Senate, saldMeshel
declared the holiday by executive
order. The law, he said, Is silent
regarding granting leave to unclas·
sifted state employees such as
Senate staffers.
The Ohio .House of Representatives Is notcloslngFrlday. !!follows
the 10-holiday schedule that applies
to regular state employees. But
many House employees will have
thedayoffascompensatorytimefor
working the Nov. 11 Veteran's Day
holiday.
A spokesman for .the Department
of Administrative Services, which
must approve each payroll, said
only that the Senate "can set Its own
hours and wages." He referred all
other questions to the Senate.

•

-...-

that another Juvenile Is leaving
home. In 1982, lbe FBI received

0

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than 2211,000 reports ,..

missing juveniles from law
er.twwnoent agencies, wblch
also Includes the munber
kidnapped children. In the last
two weeks, the GaDia County
Probllte Court had eight rniMIInc
juvenile reports Died. 'l'ho8e

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or

'

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between the~ of 14 and 17nm
away more fr!!quently IliaD any
other age group and they come

from 1111 IIOC!al c~. Some
retum home, either oo their own
or by being arrested.

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MIDDLEPORT - Ron Ash,
manager of Ohio Power Co.'s
Pomeroy o!llce, was guest speaker
at the Friday night dinner meeting
of Middleport·Pomeroy Rotary
Club held at Heath United Methodist
Church.
Using the topic "coal by wire,"
Ash explained the operation ~t the
James M. Gavin power plant at
Cheshire using a schematic cutaway. He explained the operation of
the plant from the time coal arrives
to the time 765.00l volts of electricty
Is sent thrcugh the transmission
grid.
Ohio Power uses 21.00l,!XXl ton of
coal a year to generate electricty for
its 617,000 customers, Ash
conunented. ·
Ohio Power mines supply 40
percent of the coal used In the
company plants, Ash observed.
Coal is received by barge, truck,
overhead conveyor and train. A
75-day supply of coal is on hand a tall
times - a $ll to $40 million
inventory.
Dinner was served by ladies of the
church.

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POSSIBLE RUNAWAY
Sought in connection with being a runaway from home (GaiTia or ally other county)- Parents report child may
bein the comany of a -(boyfriend or girlfriend).
Missing Juvenile - (usually between ages of 14 and 17,
statistics show) - was last seen following argument with .
-(one or both parents)- (leaving the home by hitchhikinc or in a friend's vehicle.)
·
If you have information of the whereabouts of this missing
·child, contact local law enforcement agencies.

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Runau:ays are an increasing problem,
teens 14 to 17 most likely to l?_ave home

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ByLEEwmffiOW
Tlmes-8entlnel StaU
Many times when you're young,
life can be unbearable. For scme,
running away from home is a means
of escape.
Nationally, the FBI received
more than 225,000 missing juvenile
reports through law enforcement
agencies In 1982, according to Gallla
County 'Juvenile Probation O!licer
Gary Bane. At the local level,
approximately 25 missing juvenile
reports are filed In Gallla County
Juvenile Court each year, with
perhaps an additional 25 to 30
reported to law enforcement
agencies.
Parent's fears may be many .
They may feel their runaway Is .
vulnerable and naive enough that
the rest of the world will tak«:
advantage of him or her.
SOme hope their chUd will return
homesoon; others-frustratedbya
history of unruly behavior- aren't
sure they care.
CulTI!IIIIy missing
AccordtngtoBane, thereareelght
active files on missing juveniles. He
stressed these are the ones filed with
the prosecuting attorney , Of the
eight, four are boys and four are
girls.
In the county, according to Sheriff

James M;ontgomery , there are four
active files, all girls, ranging in age
from 14 to 17. Of these, three have
been flied with the prosecutor, while
one report was flied this past
Thursday.
Galllpolls City Police said they
had no active flies on missing
juveniles.
Mi~slng juveniles are a problem
Bane and other juvenile court
officials deal with most of the time.
Why do t~y leave?
Through his 11 years of experlence, the probation o1ficer said he
finds different reasons why children
run away. Absence of love, mlsunderstanding, discipline and hick of
conununlcatlon can create anger.
Local Probate Juvenile Court
JudgeTomMoultonsaldhebelieves
.teenagers run away for "love,"
because they want to be with their
!X&gt;yfr!end or girlbiend or· perhaps
theyareunhappy.Aiso, theymayhe
v,lct.Jms of sexual or chUd abuse and
have no alternative but to eseape.
"There Is a breakdown in communication all the way through,"
Gary Shrader, an alternative specialist said ahout parents and
children. Fl.easons for ruMing away
are often petty and he said youth
never plan their actions.
The number of juveniles running

away Is increasing, Bane noted .
• Approximately 12 percent of recidlvous, or repeat, cases before
juvenile court dealt with runaways
this year.
Among juveniles, boys commit
more offenses than girls, but girls
are the ones who mostly run away.
Fl.unaways come from all social
classes,Banesaid,andaretypically
between the ages of 14 and 17.
When runaways travel long
distance, they cause difficulties to
law enforcement of!icers who must
take additional lime searching for
them. O!llcerscan detain runaways
throughanarrestwarrantlssuedby
juvenile court. A larger problem Is
the availability of facilities for them.
In Gallla County, the Children's
Home, acounty-ownedoperationon
Ohiol60,1s the only location to house
runaways.
Children's Home
The home serves Gallla and
Meigs counties and provides coun·
sellng and therapy to a runaway and
his or her family, according to Beth
Evans, executive director of Gallla
County Children's Services.
Fl.unaways who are hostile or have
a drilg problem are referred to a
mental health center. At the home,
the children's stay may be temporary or delayed depending on the

read.iness of their fa:nily. Meals and
recreation are provided.
"We don't hav£· too many rePeaters .. . there's scme, but not a whole
lot ." Habitual repeaters are. placed
In group homes, for example,
provided by the Ohio Youth Com·
mission orin the Children ' sResldentlal Treatment Program (CRTP)
operated by Woodland Center .

Learn wlisten

Bane advises parents take counseling sessions or educate themselves on how to become better
parents. He suggests parents learn
to listen, respect and provide
explanations to their children.
Parents should not be pushovers
and expect children to be carbon
copies of themselves.
On the other hand, he said
juveniles need more employment to
enhance tbeir opportunities in life.
Some youths run away to seek work.
Wi1atever the reascn, the fact
remains that until they become
18-years old, they. are supposed to
remain with the family .
When they don't - In the legal
realm - they are "unruly children.'' For the famlly, they are
simply missing- unruly perhapsbut missing nonetheless.

;a

One mother speaks
with mixed emotion

Emergency runs

Admissions - Woodrow Hall,
Racine; Opal Barr, Middleport;
Goldie Clendenin, Long Bottom;
Lottie Leonard, Pomeroy; Bernice
Buck, Middleport.
Discharges - Charles Casto,
Nancy Neutzllng, Chester MUJI!lry,
Rlta'Stobart.

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POMEROY - A breaking and
entering occurred at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Rt. 3,
Albany, between 1: 20 p.m. and 3: 10
p.m. Friday, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
Taken from theresldencewerean
undetermined amount of money, a
gold watch and a 20-gauge shotgun.
The house had been ransacked.
Entry was gained by forcing in the
front door. The incident is under
investigation.
Jewell Hutton, New Lima Road,
Rutland, notified the sheriff's office
Friday night that his motorcycle
had been taken from his residence
sometime that night.

.

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MISSING

MeigS deputies
probing break-in

Veterans Memorial

••

" ' , . ::1:

Coal usage outlined
to Meigs Rotarians

POMEROY -Seven emergency
runs were answered by local units
Friday, the Meigs County Emer·
gency Service reported. ·
At 9:48 a.m. Pomeroy took
Martha Graham from Spring
Avenue to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 9: 58 a.m. Tuppers
Plains took Goldie Clendenin from
Ohio 248 to Veterans; at 10: 36 a.m.
Syracuse took Victor Hysell from
Vinegar Street to Veterans; at 2: 06
p.m. Racine took .James Spencer
from County Road 28 to Holzer
Medical Center; at 4:13p.m. Racine
took Charles Craig from Letart
·Falls to Veterans: at 8:06 p.m.
Middleport took Jo Ann McDonald
from the Dairy Isle to Veterans; at .
11: 55 p.m. Middleport took Sarah
Bowles from VIllage Manor Apart·
ments to Veterans.

10n~-;

Nowlnber 20, 198;1

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illLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
OhloSenate'slOOstattmembers will
get a paid holiday next Frtday,
apparently making them the only
state govenunent employees who
will. •
Senate President Harry Meshel,
D·Youngstown, decided the Senate
will be closed the Friday after

.'

Noveni!Mr 20, 1983

W.Va.

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To OOuRT -

A Wlll'l'llnt Ill

lll.ed when a juvealle Ill
m' ''&amp; aiJo!l'ldl Jaw .t!llforcelllt!llt lo ..... Ule teenapr..

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Council to meet
RACINE - Racine Village Council wt11 meet in recessed session
Monday at 7 p.m. at village hall.
-··------~

'I'm worried sick," said the mother of a teenage runaway
contacted recenUy.
She Is afraid her daughter may turn up dead somewhere. It has
happened before, it can happen again.
Through the e!lorts of Gary Bane, Gallla County juvenile officer, a
mother spoke out concerning her runaway daughter.
The girl has run away two times previously, she said. Both times,
her mother added, she would not have come home had she not been
found.
· In trouble with the law previously, the girl has a history of
shopllttlng, and a possible drug problem. Her mother stated she had
found drugs several times .In her daughter's room.
Her daughter, a senior vocational student, is 17 years old and will
oot be 18 unW next swruner.
.
"I don'f !mow why she ran away," her mother said, but she
suggested that drugs may be
.underlying motive. There is a
posslbUity her daughter may be.with one or niore boys.
PJ:evlously, she said, her daughter had been found with tWo boys
·
when she ran away.. ·
· Does she want her daughter back? She has mixed feelings. On one
side, "I'd like to wipe my hands of her," she said .
The other point Is a mother's lpve for her child. "It's hard to turn
my back on· her. ~
"She doesn'tllkecountry-Ufe,'" she added. "She'd. like to Uve .in the
city with her lather.''
1be girl's lather told her mother he had not seen her, "But I don't
really believe him."
Does she have a message for her daughter?
"Come home. I love you and I miss yoo, and please stay when you
come horne.''
A message many parents of runaways have for their children.

an

�Novet1 lber

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

20, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport-Go IIi

,., /M';{.{.r

MONDAY

Tina Duffy) David N eigler trade vows' during Pomeroy ceremony

..

P&lt;JMEROY - Ohio Valley
Cornmandery meeting, Monday, 7 p.m., . at the Pomeroy
MJisoolc Temple. Order of the
~!DPle to ~ conferred.

.'
GAu.n&gt;ous -

We Ae_,e The Right
Umit Quantities.

St. Peter's
~lscopa! Churchwomen . wlll
h&lt;;Jld their monthly luncheon
~siness meeting in tbe church
parish on Monday, noon.

.POMEROY -

'

Tina Diane Duffy and David
George Nelgler were united in
marriage on Oct. 15 at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward P . Duffy, Pomeroy, and the groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. George Neigler, Racine.
Msgr. Anthoy Glannamore officiated at the double-ring ceremony
with music being provided by Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett, organist, and Mrs.
Linda Mayer, vocalist.
· The altar was decorated with
arrangements of gladioli and mums
flanked by hurricane candelabra. A
unity candle was llgl\tedasapartof
the ceremony.
.
Given in marriage by her parents,
the bride was escorted to the altar by
her father. She wore a gown of
organza over taffeta with a Queen
Anne"l'leckline, fitted baSque bodice
trimmed with alencon and venise
lace, a nd.accented with pearls. The
long bishop sleeves were trimmed
with lace motifs. The A-line skJrt
with trellis effect flowed into a
cathedral length train edged with
venise lace.
The bride wore a fingertip veil of
illusion which fell !rom a wreath of
silk Ci!rnatlons and baby's breath.

To

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

SCnitbem High
~I Athletic Boosters meet·
Ins, 7: l:l p.m. Monday at tbe
school.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU. SAl., NOV. 26, 1983

MIDDLEPORT -The Meigs
COunty Men's Fellowship of the
M),&gt;igs County Churches of Chist
wjll meet at 7: lJ p.m. Monday at
the Dexter Church of Christ.

--·

•

TIJESDAY
· CHESHIRE - Installation of

the Cheshire chapter of the Onder
· oJ Eastern Star o!ficers wlll be
· held Tuesday, 7: lJ p.m. at the
· Masonic hall.

9¢
Steaks/Roast...•.. 9

'POMEROY- Drew Webster ,
post 39 American Legion Auxil·
iary, both junior and senior,
;potluck dinner, Tuesday, 6' lJ
;p.m., followed by 7: lJ p.m.
-meeting. Eighth District Presi·
dent wlll be the guest speaker.

FRESH .PORK _BUTT .

GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke
Club will meet 1\lesday, 8 p.m.,
at the home of Mrs. Dona ld
Warehime on Airport Road. ·

COUNTRY

GAHS concert
.set Monday

STY~E

·

·

¢

Turkeys................... ~

. $}19

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

GALLIPOLIS - There will be
a community Thanksgiving Eve
SOCvice sponsoned by the Gallia
Co\lnty Ministerial Association
at , Grace United Methodist
clnirch, . Wednesday, 7:l:l p.m.
!Oe Nazarene Teen Choir will be
f~atured. The public is invited to
timd.

Chuck Roast......l!~ ..

at
Hospital service
?~ Thanksgiving

SUPERIOR BONELESS E-Z CAVE

&gt;

$
WHOlE

Ham ..........·........l!~ ..•.

: CALL!POLIS - The chapel
~Holzer Medical Center will be
ttie setting for the lOth annual
Ttlanksgiving Eve Worship Ser·
vice, Wednesday, 7 p.m . Pa·
ti~nts, their families and guests
welcome, along with hospi~ staff and other visitors to the
h&lt;lspltal. Tbe Rev . .Arthur C.
Lund will lead the service.
J'~tients unable to attend may
welch the service on the closed
~lrcuit system at the hospital.

ate

•

Woodland to have
services
.:limited
.

.
·- •GALLIPOLIS

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

'

- Woodland
Centers will have limited servi~¢5 Thursday and Friday in
order for employees to observe
tlie Thanksgiving holiday.
:Those In need of services rnay
call tbe CRISISLINE at 446-5554
tO Gallia County; 286-5554 tn
J ackson County or 992-5554 in
Mclgs County.

.. ~ ~~o-Lo. $14 g·

Potatoes................ ·

Members of.
Post 1.28, American
Middleport are mQ·ving
with their plans
for " dedication
service to be held
at Middleport Vil·
!age Hall ilt 2
p.m. Friday,
N())l, 25 - that's
the day after ThlmkijiViiig.
The service
mark the
unveiling of a plaque placed on the
lawn of the village hail in tribute to
the late Jimmy Stewart and the late
Edward Bennett, both Middleport
residents, who were awarded the
nation's highest military award the Congressional Medal of Honor.
Bob Gllmore, active ,member of
the post who has 'been quite
involved with the P,iaq)le and the
upcoming ceremonies, has been In
touch with Robert · and John
Stewart, sons of the late Sgt.
Stewart, and ttiey Will be corfilng
for th_ll-service.
me two young men are now
~e age and wlll be arriving via
plane In Huntington, W.Va.. on
Thanksgiving evening. They wlll be
picked up there by Gilmore and
taken to the home of their grandmother, Ethel Stitt in the Racine
area, "where they will locate during
their stay here.
It's great that Sgt. Stewart's sons
are going to make it for the.
occasion.
Incidentally, General James
Hartinger, a Middleport native, wlll
be among several guest speaker
who will be taking part in the
Friday service.
Their is stU! one person to be
located. He is Delmar Logan, who
was Sgt. Stewart's stepfather.
Anyone knowing how he can be
contacted, please get in touch with
Gilmore at 992-61.281mmedlately.
. Eastern High School seniors are
· going to have a chance to cbalk up
some college credits before the end
· of the school year.
Rio Grande College wlll be
conducting some classes at the
school - providing enough Interest
Is there - and seniors are eligible to
participate. Adults are fu.vited to
take part too. We'll haY!! more
information later on and will keep

you advised.

VALLEY BELL ·: .
0l
PLASTIC GALLON $15 9
lO
.•••••••••••••••••

2 M.,.l"k .

Seniors plan
_lioliday program.

..

Bob Ashley, a graduate of Meigs
High Schoollastspring,lsattending
the University of Utah at Salt.Lake

15.5

RK

s1•n·gles·········

CANS

12

-

uen.
.-

$14 9

AMERICAN .

oz.
·
J
f$}
Kraft
,
Luc k s 8eans.... · . .

GRT. NORTHERN, PINTO, NAVY WITH

.

oz.

.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- Chris- shall University next month.
Ms. Craft is scheduled !O speak on
tine Craft, a former Kansas City
City, and Is doing well with the television news personality whose "Show Business and the News" at 9
football team. Ashley is on scholar- • sex discrimination sult against p.m. Thursday, Dec . 1, in the
ship at the school which is a long, Metromedla Inc. focused national Morris Room, Memorial Student
long way from hqme.
attention on the role of women In Center. Her campus appearance is
broadcasting, wlll speak at Mar- spottSored by the Contemporary
It's the time of the year for
bazaars and more bazaars.
Rutland wlll stage a community
event on Dec. 2 and 3 in. the EMS
GALLIPOLIS - Activities for pie, hot roll, butter, milk.
headquarters at the Rutland Civic
Wednesday - Hamburger, oven
Center and you are Invited to take the week of Nov. 2~·26 at the ·Senior
potatoes, · cheese sticks,
brown
Citizens
Center
located
at
220
part. Anyone can rent a table for $6
pickles, peaches, bun,
lettuce,
-Jackson
Pike
are
as
follows:
for one day or $10 for the two days
butter
,
milk.
21
Ceramics,
Monday,
Nov.
and hours both days will ~ from 10
Thursday - Closed.
Class, 9:30 a.m.-noon; Chorus, 1-3
a.m. to 8 p.m.
Friday - Closed.
p.m.
There wlll be gift Items, candles,
Choice of beverage served with
Nov.
22
ThanksgivTuesday,
Christmas decorations and ornaeach
meal. Meals subject to change
Dinner,
noon;
S.T.O.P.,
10:30
Ing
ments, food and whatever, plus a
without
notice.
a.m.;
Physical
Fitness,
11:
15
a.m.
bake sale:
Wednesday, Nov. 23 - Vinton
Louise Stewart fell at her Racine Bible Study, 1 p.m .; Card Games, . - - - - - - - - ' - - - - area home and broke her right arm. 1-3 p.m.; American Literature
She's calling it her . "holiday Class, 1 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 24 - Closed.
handicap" -now that's something
Friday, Nov. 25- Closed.
all of us can do without.
Saturday, Nov. 26- Yoga Class,
Students of the Meigs Local 10:30 a.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
School District will be dismissed an
hour early Wednesday due to the wlll serve the following menus;
Monday - Pork cutler, parsley
Thanksgiving hollday. Good deal,
potatoes, spinach, chocolate pud·
huh kids?
ding, bread, butter, milk .
Lance O.Uver ~ in town for a few
Tuesday - Roast turkey and
·_dfiys for a visit with his parents, d!"f&gt;sslng, mashed potatoes, green
BOb aBd Dorothy Oliver, from his r~be::ans~,~c:ran~be~rry:!!_~sa~u~ce::•..!p~um~pkl~nj_~~========~
work on a Newburgh, N.¥ .. newspaper. Lance Ukes what he' s doing
and is happy in the East. He
received his journalism training"at
Ohio Unliverslty. Lance will be
returning to Newburgh before
Thanksgiving.

Gallia Senior activities

It was announced that the
Angelairs wlll be performing at the
Antiquity Baptist Church at 7: 30
p.m. this evening. The group
appeared at the church earlier and
the announcement is in error. Sodon't plan on attending what won't

~-

With Thanksgiving approaching,
do take a minute to reflect on all you
have to be thankful for ....that you
help you to keep smiling ..... .

Many manets ·

1WO LEATHERS TOGEl'HER.
. You'll want to get together with what Connie's AOt; two .
toUchable textures in one beautiful boot. Coorinaring suede
and smooth leather uppers in colors Grey, Black or Wine.

·~-

: ;All 4-H clubs are urged to
Pf111C1pate since the proceeds
will behefit . the county-wide
prograrii. Baked goods are to be
llfought in the morning of tbe
iale between 9 and 10 a.m. while
~flit Items may either be taken
,S the sale or left at tbe
~ion ot!lce the week prior

TIDE

840z~

$299

limit One Per Customer
At Poweell's
Nov.
1983

'

•••
•••
••
••

- CAT FOOD

!-~~================~

.. 6.5 Oz.

4/$1

Limit Four Per Customer
Good Onlr AI Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 26, 1983

18.5 Oz.

3/$2

SUGAR
5 Lb. Baa

$14 9·.

~

.,

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446-9721
\!)'lelefiom
u ._.n: 11118J

r.tfl:rl • I !~.:1 ....,. .....

IJI tllllkn lro

Monday thru Friday
9 AMto9 ~M
Salurda ·; 9 /i.M to 5 PM
WA.l_"' 1,1

AN

~

. .. l·l I )II
Ml 'o 1

A~~ OI I\ 1

"

446-9510

.

.

A NEW DIREC riON IN HAIR DESIGN "

· Captain D's~

4 ean Eat For ~6.
PLUS A HOUDAY VALUE!

••••••••• ICUPTMIS COUPON ••••••••••

FISH • FRIES Two
tender fish fillets,
natural cut french fries

I

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ONLY

$1 50
1

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and 2_ southern style hush
pupptes.

I
I

FISH • FRIES Two
tender fish fillets,
natural cut french fries
II

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FOR $1 50

and 2_southern style hush 1
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FISH • FRIES COUPON I··········II

·

$1 50

FOR
and 2southern style hush I
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•
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1
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good wtltl

I·········
FISH • FRIES
I

Ofdlieount.

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CUP THIS COUPON··········
Two tender fish fillets,
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Notgoodwltharw
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i11....111•1•• CLIP THIS COUPON··········

COUPON
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$2.00 OFFVAWE •·· . I
CUPTMIS

Our Rhapsody Hues
robe is a choreography n
color blocking from yoke
ro hem. Conrrast bands
at 'hoke ana cuffs are set
up to perfection with a
mandarin collar,
· 300 Second Ave.

\

'

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PACK OR THRIFT PACK .

./

Glllipolis

•

28 Cedar Street
Gallipol.is, Ohio

r--·r t'\.tt
Ill .....r
-J

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Shevelva
Loungewear

Llf1yette M1ll

t~lhesale.

FRENCH CITY
FLORIST

I ~;:~~~:;~er-Ial
~tala D's.
I1 ord-nl.
little --•·...,., ·•·11
(otporlk:potlngCapi. O"~.
-..-•.
1••••••••1CUPTMIS
I
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I
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Warm

101. &amp; Fllllll P.l.
TUES.. WED .. THUl.
I SAT. Ill 5 P.l .

c;r_:ES

Thursday, Nov. 24.

'fHE

1

DOI.lOWN GAI.UfOUI .

c~kvE

Thanksgiving.

J.\CROSS

.

FAVORITE

1• ...,_

Send the
Bread 1i-ay Bouquet.

Issues Committee of the Student
Activities Office.
Tickets for the program will be
available to the general public at$3
each. MU students with ID and
Activity cards will be admitted free
and students with only Marshall ID
cards may purchase tickets at half
price.
The Marshall Women 's Center
will honor Ms. Craft with a
reception scheduled from 6: 30 to
7: 15 p.m. in the Alumni Lounge.

•

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PURINA

llli:ll

01

presents

NEW YORK (AP) -Billed as the
most extensive exhibi-tion of the
work of Edouard Manet since 1884,
the landmark showing of the great
French artist continues at the
Metro-politan Museum of Art
through Nov. 27.

The brkle'smotherworeagownof
blue poiyesier with a lace capelet. ir=::::::::==~====;
Mrs. Neigler was in a lavendar
~ -~
polyester crepe gown and wore
~
white rosebud corsages.
A reception was held in the church
social room. The four-tiered faun·
tain cake featured stairways lead·
ingto small tiered side cakes. Doves
and wedding bells were featured in
the decoratiottS of the cake which
was used on a table decorated with
peach ~tting, yellow mums, and
peach carnations.
!Wiee Miller, cousin of the bride,
registered the guests and Sarah
MU!er, niece of the groom, handed
out the rice bags.
The couple took a wedding trip to
Deep Cneek Lake in Oakland, Md.
They wUI reside on the Basham
Road in Racine .
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
Teleflora's new Bread
High School and Hocking Technical
College in Nelsonville .. She is a.
Tray Bouquet. A
registered nurse at Veterans Mem·
beautiful centerpiece
orial Hospital.
arrangement inside a
The groom is a graduate of
real wood bread tray.
Southern High School arid Hobart
Call or visit our shop
Welding School in Troy . He is
early to send it anyemployed by Centralized Plant
where in the country.
Maintenance.

1 :;:':'~~~~~"'""'""!
Ca~taln
D's.
1
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1I (olpallcl&gt;&lt;JIIngCopt.O
diiCOUnl.
Uttle
food
I
'oj.
a are
... p aft. I .
1••••••••1 CLIP TMIS COUPONI••••••••1 .

$85

st·uffin· - •·••60Z;••••BO~•••69¢
DETERGENT

They wore peach polyester knit
floor length gowns fashipned with
sweetheart necklines, puffed
sleeves, and flounces around the
hottom, with beige lace and ribbon
accent. Their headpieces were
wreathesmadeo!peachcarnations,
yellow mums and baby's.b reathand
they carried nosegays with matching flowers and streamers of brown
and peach.
Paul Cross served as best man
and the ushers were Gary O'Dell,
Doug Rees and John Holman. The
wedding party was in brown
tuxedoes.
The flower gtrl was Christa Jan
Lillibridge, cousin of the bride, and
she was wore a floor-length dress of
peach eyelet with beige lace and
ribbon. She wore a wreath of peach
silk rosebuds and carried a wicker
basket of peach rose petals. Charles
Legar ill, cousin of the bride, was
ring bearer.

by

STOVE TOP

aake, .craft sale

She carried a bouquetofwhiteroses,
carnatiottS and baby's breatJ;l.
Matron of honor was Betsy
Amsbiu-y Stivers, and bridesmaids
were Patricia Duffy, sister of the
bride, Julie HammHysell, cousin of
the bride, and Kim 'Jones Quinn.

Christine Craft scheduled ·at Marshall

•

:. :CALLIPOLIS - There will be
~ ;Thanksgiving program at the
~lor Citizen Center Tuesday, 1
Q.m. Speaker will be Albert
~Kenzie of St. Peter's Episco~ Church. Music will be
aiTanged by Mrs. Marjorie
sPrJegel. The Rev. Everett
Dj!laney wlll give the invocation
and Frank Claytor the benedlc·
Forrest Borden wlll be the
¢Ieee. .
-

r

Legion plans dedication

lJ109
. LB 89¢ Ground Beet......... .

swiFT BumR~~~~Bs

Community service
for Thanksgiving

.

Beat of the Bend

•

GALLIPOLIS- There will~
a Thanksgiving concert Mon·
day, 8 p.m., by the Gallia
Academy High School Symphonic choir and Madrigals. The
concert is free and the public is
· Invited to attend.

·POMEROY - Tbe Meigs
~tY 4-H Committee is spont$1ng a bake and craft sale on
bee. 3 at Krogers beginning at 10

Mr. and Mrs. David.George Nelgler

. LB.

Spare R1 bs .........~!~99

Happenings

&lt;•

The Sunday

Ohio---.:Point Pleasant, W. Va.

PACK includes: 12fllh ftiiels, nakual cut ftencll fries.
CI8CllllV cole lklw and 8 hulh puppieS. Selves 4 or mete.
n.r PACK Includes: alllh fillets, naMa! cut french fries.
creamy cole slaw and 8 hush puppieS. Selves~-

I

I
II

·

I

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Ollt"'I'IOIIIIJIR3
ala D'- 1I '.'
=~lhonvo~~onpoclal
I
IGI__.gCOpiD'II.
alftilUttJt•••l•••,._. I ..
••••••••• ICLIPTHIS COIIIOHI••••••il•l

c;aDt

-..

CaDtain D's.

'

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_______.......

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......little ...........

'

;

�Plage

B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.November 201 1983

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint PleoiCint, W. Va.

======Anniversaries======= Law for nurses seminar

scheduled in Huntington ·

HUNTINGTON,. W.Va. - A ' and lunch.
two-day continuing education seAdditional lnt~rmatlon may he
mlilar for nurses "Law for obtained by call ng Jane Fotos at
Nurses" wll.l he offered at the Marshall University School" of
Gateway HoUday Inn, here by the Nursing, (304) '696-6750. ,
Marshall University School of
This program Is approved by the
Nursing on Thursday and Frlday, West VIrginia Nurses Assocla!lon
Dec. 1·2.
and the Kentucky Board of Nursing
The sessions will be taught by for nursing continuing education

I

Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Panons

Mr. and Mrs. James Boggs

Boggs celebrate 40th anniversary Parsons note golden anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
James Boggs (Maxine Shato) .
formerly of Gallipolis and Colum·
bus, will celebrate their 40th
anniversary Nov. 20. The Boggs are
both from the Gallipolis area .
They have one daughter, J acqu.
elln Lynn Moll, and three grand·
children, Stephen, Shad and Sha·
rann, all of DeLand. Fla.

Boggs is retired from Timken
Roller Bearing in Columbus and
Mrs. Boggs is retin"t trom Western
Electtic.
•
The Boggs ma ke their home at
Rt. 2. Box 296, Hawthorne, Fla. The
family will celebrate the anniver·
sary during the Thanksgiving
holiday.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Robert M. P arso ns are observing
their 50th wedding anniversary
today.
They are the parents of nine
children and a surprlse family
gathering was held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Parsons on Oct. 16 ta
celebrate the occasion.
Their children are Mrs. James

(Pauline) Bowllng of Winchester.
Ky. ; Mrs. Paul (Leota ) Wolfe,
Racine; Irene Rhodes, Racine;
Paul, Pomeroy; Robert Jr., Chesa·
peake, Va.; Carl, Richwood; WI!·
llan\, Racine; and James, St. Parts.
One daughter, Lilly Parsons, is
deceased. They have 24 grandchild·
ren and three great-grandchildren.

Helen Creighton, noted writer and
authot1ty on legal aspects of
nursing practice. She holds a doctor
of jurisprudence degree from
George Washlngion University
Law School and an honorary doctor
of literature degree from Georgetown University . She a lso has been
recognized as a Fellow of the
American Academy of Nursing.
This program Is designed to
provide nurses with Information
about legal Implications of nursing
actions and nursing practice. ·
The program will be conducted
from ~:45 a .m. untll4: 15 p.m. each
day. Advance regist(at!Ofi fee Is $80
for the two.(lay program. Reglstra·
lion at the door will he $90 per
person. The registration fee In·
eludes the cost of Instruction,
learning materials , coffee breaks

Area bookmobiles set
Galtia County
GALLIPOLIS- The Dr. Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Llbrarv will be
at the !allowing places the week of
Nov. 21 to Nov. 25.
Monday - Ewington, 1: 15·1: 45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2·2' 30 p.m.; Adney
Rd., 2: 45·3: 15 p.m .; Vinton P.O.,
3:304:30 p.m .; BidWell, 5-6 p.m.;
Harrisburg, 6:15-6: 00 p.m.
Tuesday - E no, 2: 303 p.m .:
Rece, 3: ffi-3:20 p.m .; Africa Rd.,
3:303:45 p.m .;· Kyger I, 3:504:20
p.m.; Kyger II, 4:25-4:40 p.m.:;

Roush- Lane I, II. 4:45-5:15 p.m.;
Cheshire!, 6-6:30 p.m.; Cheshire II,
6:35-7 p.m.
Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15·2: 30
p.m.; Smith, 2:45-3:15 p.m.: Mer·
cerville, 44:30 p.m.; Burd, 4:40·5
p.m.; Crown City P.O., 5:15-6 p.m.;
Eureka, 6:15-6:45 p.m.
Thursday- Holiday Bookmobile
will not run.
Frlday- Kerr, 3-3:40p.m.; Buck
Ridge, 4-5:05 p.m.; Jay Dr.,
5:15-5:45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
Rd., 6-6: 15 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Elkins

Elkins to mark golden anniversary
PORTER- Mr. and Mrs. Lester
·Elkins. former of Port er, Ohio will
be celebrating their OOtt. wedding
anniversary Nov. 25 at their home
In Courtland, Va.
They were ma r rled In J ackson
· Nov. ·25, 1933.
, .
They have one son. Gary. Ga ry ,
hiw wife, Rosemary, and da ug hter.
Christy, live In Newsome, Va.
Mrs. E lkins Is the da ughter of the

late Ca lvin and Nellie Roberts and
Elkins is the son of the late Paris
and Myrtle Elkins. They spent their
entire life in the Gallia area, until
-moving to Virginia in April.
They attended the Cha pel Hill
Church of Christ.
Their friends may send cards for
their golden wedding anniversary
to Rt. 2. Box 22- B. Court land, Va .
23837.

MU Jazz Ensemble
will perform Dec. 6

(Civic Center), 6: 00·8 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 22 - Portland
(post office), 2:10-2:00 p.m.; Letart
Falls (Effie's Restaurant). 3: ffi.
3:50p.m.; Racine (Bank), 4:35-6: ffi
p.m.; Syracuse (Pool). 6: 2Q.7: 50
p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 23 - Tuppers
Plains (Arbaugh), 7:25-7: OS p.m.;
Rlggscrest Addition, 8: 10-8: 40 p.m.

Fox appointed education officer
RACINE - Davie W. Fox oi
Route · 2, Racine, was recently
appointed as one of two District
Educa tlon Officers in the 12th
Masonic Dlstrlct by C. Rolland
Lattanner, Grand Master of Ma·
sons of Ohio.
The 12th Masonic Dlstrlct Is
composed of 19 lodges In Meigs,
Gallla , Jackson and Lawrence
counties.
As district education officer Fox ·
will assist the Lodge Education
Officers with their duties in their
respective lodges.
Fox Is employed .as County
Executive Director of the Meigs
County Agrlcultural StabUizatlon
and Conservation Service.
In the Masonic Fraternity, Fox ts
past presiding officer and present
secretary of Racine Lodge 41i1
F&amp;AM, Pomeroy Chapter 80 RAM,
Bosworth CouncU 46 R&amp;SM and

of a duo with her husband , Kevin, in
nightclubs and restaurants in the
Cleveland area.
The Jazz Ensemble will play
literature of well-known. " big
bands" Including Harry James,
Glenn Mijler, Woody Herman, Stan
Kenton, Dizzy ·Gillespie, Duke
Ellington and Count Blsle as well .
as contemporary big band jazz that
Includes works by composer·
arranger Rob McConne ll of
Canada.

·.
·,
-,

·-

STORES

BOATERS
FOR MEN

The
Shoe Cafe

·

300 Second Ave.
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

·'

SWIFT'S ·

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

~UTTERBALL

as

.T raditional
as the

OFF

TURKEYS
WHILE

16

OUR

SUPPLY

LB
I UP

ALL ZOTOS

PERMS ·

LAST!

LB

·,

THURS., AT. NOV. 26th

4% TO 12
POUND

HURRY IN TODAY!

YOU NEVER GUESSED A
PERM COULD LOOK SO NATURAL!

$109LB

12 TO 16
POUND

ZOTOS DID!
•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

SIRLOIN

So soft yet lasting, it's The perm perfected. It's the
art of FREEDOM DESIGN a new salon perm from
Zoros, the leader in professional perms.
So get beautiful hair tha t shines, waves and behaves .
Get a beauty bonus, roo, because the Zo-os FREEDOM
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su per feel, a super natural look.
Naturally, we hope you 'll ca ll roday.

TOP OF THE·STAIRS
FITNESS &amp;
BEAUTY SALON

lll W. 2nd St.

TIP ROAST
$199LB

FRESH
GROUID BEEF

98•ll

.-.

GOLDEN
RIPE

U.S. GDYT. INSPECTED

WHOLE

BAlANAS

FRYERS

49~u

STANDARD OYSTERS

$229

4J1

Pomeroy, Oh.

PH. 992-6720

12

~79

oz.

STILI49~

SPRAY

SAUCE ·
SHURFINE
LT. BROWN DR lOX

~. . .l~COM--PLETE NEW SB ECilON OF atRisrMAS MEROIANDISE

* Christmas Arrangements

20°/o OFF

SU&amp;A11

.,

..,·-

REYIOLDS ·WRAP
HEAVY DUTY

·-·

!Live, l'e~anent &amp; Sllkl

*Door Wreaths
*Swags
*Candles &amp; Candle Rings
Polneeuiae
Potted Plants
*Terrariums

FOIL

•"

COTTAGE

18" X 25'

.
·'•
'
;

*

REG.

1.21 .·

Chri&amp;tmaB Gifts For That
liard To Buy For Penon .
You~i l see colorful, beautiful floral arrancements for · ·
the .holidays. Table ~ecorations, centerpieces, and
. our hup selection of holiday &amp;ifts. We"llalso be
servin1 refreshments alon1 with all Illest fresh
. idees. So do join us. We"d like to show you lots of
ways to make this holiday snson flourish.

20°/o OFF 20°/o OFF

BROUGHTON

.·. •

*

..-

COCA
COLA '·
'

. ,.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

THE FABRIC. SHOP

Ph. 992-2039
992·1721

Pomeroy

Serving Mei1s &amp; Gallia

W. . . _ I I tNjoroNdlt 01~1

Counties As Your Singer
Approved Dealer

STOKELY.

COFFEE

BEANS

&amp;REEN

3:•1

$599

•

~~

101 11u-.ut Ave.
Pan...o •• Oh.

a wlreflowerauuwrxltuN.

..

,
'•

MAXWELL
HOUSE
ILL IRIIIS .

'

We also have a wide assortment of pillow panels
and various craft items.

115 W. 2nd

. ~,,~

Gallipolis

* Yarde and Yarde of New• Garland

60 IN. POLYESTER BALLET

GABARDINE

3 ~~ •1

PRICES &amp;ODD MONDAY,
NOVEMBER 21 THRU
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27

1 hOO A.M. TO.5100 P.M.

20°/o OFF

BOUCLE

WHITE BREAD

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27th

60 IN. WOOL BLENDS

60 IN POLYESTFR

SUPREME

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY
OPEN 9·9 DAILY
NOON-8:00 SUNDAY

*DOOR PRIZES *FREE GIFTS *REFilESHMENTS

FABRIC SALE

60 IN. SWEATER

KRAFT
LA CREME
WHIPPED TOPPING

CRANBERRY

..
'·

-·.·

You're Invited To Our 24th Annual Christmas

on

stq&gt;.

FOOD STAMPS
WELCOME!

r-----------.1..._---------------------

Ghostly stops
NEW YORK (AP)- If they peer
closely through the fYin·dows of the
train Into lhedlrn.ly lit tunnels, rl~rs
!1'18ny of New York's subway
· Unescangllnwse.theghostlyouUine
ot abandoned subwey stations .
Although many people are not
even aware that the sta-tions
existed, those stops once bustled
with activity.
The stations were originally built
cloSe together to accom-modate
ftve-ear trains. But in the 1940s, the
plattonns were lengthened to han·
die 1().car trains. Since the longer
plat-forms would have resulted In
ooe continuous station, in some
Instances various stations a)ong the
line were closed.
Among the abandoned sta-tions Is
tbe City Hall station on the IRT
LexlngtonAvenuellne, whlchln1904
became New York's first subway

~a4l

-·.·

1.0°/o

Ohio VaUey Con\mandery 24; he Is
Patron Elect of Racine Chapter 134
OES.
Other Masonic memberships in·
chide Ohio Priory 18 KYCH, Ohio
River Valley Council 104 AMD,
Shannon Council No. 28 · Knight
Masons of Ireland, Valley of
Columbus AASR, Aladdin Temple
Shrine.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va . ~ Hollis
Soloists include Ron Emerson,
Hlbscher Dobreff will he the · Pittsburgh, and Blake Wallace,
Huntington, trumpet: James Gros·
featured soloist when the Marshall
University Jazz Ensemble, dl · cup, St. Albans ; trombone; Butch
rected by J.D. Folsom, performs in
Boggs, Huntington, and Mark
concertTuesday, Dec.6, at 8p.m. in
Turnbull, saxophone; Scolt
Smith Recital Hall.
Brosche, Wheeling, bass; Joe
Mrs. Dobreff, a native of Toledo,
Cremeans, Huntington, guitar; and
Is a graduate student majoring in
John Hopkins, Pratt, percussion.
vocal performance. She holds a
The concert i~ open free to the
l)achelor's degree from Bowling
public.
Green State University where sh e l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~~
majored in speech and . theatre,
I
She has performed in musica l

theatre, revues, and as a member

FOR CHRISTMAS

AID

·'

lllniiiMlL~ ;

Meigs County
POMEROY - Bookmobile service in Meigs County is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile service for Monday,
Nov. 21 - Carpen,ter (Laura's
Store) , 3:10-3:40 p.m.; Dexter
(Church). 4:104:40 p.m.; Danville
(Church ), 5: 20·5: 45 p.m.; Rutland

r~credl~·~t.":":~:O:::"::::=:::::~~

GALLIPOLIS

.'

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�,
Page 8-6--- The Sunday Ti~e~ .Sentinel

November 20, 1983

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipoli5, Ohio-Point Plea--.t, W. Va.

At wit's end

Pomeroy ceremony solemnizes
vows of Alicia RqushJohnJacobs
POMEROY Sacred Heart Lora Roach. New Haven; Judy
Church of Pomeroy was the setting Young, cou$in of the bride, New
lor the July 2 afternoon wedding of Haven; and Mary Jacob$, stster of
Alicia Ann Roush and John Dale .lhe groom, Rutland. Kristin Torres,
Jacooo II.
Pomeroy, cousin of the groom, was
The bride Is the daughter of flower gtrl, and the ling.bearer was
RobertE.andAgnesRoush,Mason, David Darst, Pomeroy, also a
and the groom Is the son of John and cousin of the bride.
Anita Jacob$, Rutland. The nuptial - ; ', The bride 's attendants wore long
mass and double-ring ceremony fOrmal gowns with sweetheart
was performed by the Rev. Anthony ·necklines made of pink and lilac
Glannmore at 2; 30 p.m.
. flowered emeraude material with
Music was prese~ted by Fred ,. puffed sleeves trimmed in lace.
Gaul, orgarust, and M1chael Pekar. Theyworestrandsoipearls, agiftof
soloist.
the bride, and carried bouquets of
The altar was decorated with flowers with streamers.
sptral candelabra with white bows. . . Nmma Torres. Pomeroy, gave
The Pascal candle was accented readings.
with fresh fern and white bows and . Best man·was Gregory s. Roush,
the pews and wmdows fea tured Mason. brother of the bride, and the
white bows and pink · and lilac ushers were Rick Williamson,
flowers . .
.
Columbus; StevPn Groggle, PomeThe bride wore a formal gown m roy, and Brian Jacooo. cousin of the
all-o;-oer chantilly type la.ce with a groom , Middleport.
fitted-bod1ce, fashioned Wlth a sheer . · The bride's motherworeagownin
illusion In the front and back yoke, pink with cap sleeves with, a
and Schiffll ~mbr01dery Wlth a pearl gathered sweetheart neckline and a
tnmfront yoke. The long full sleeves corsage of white carnations and -.
were made of sheer lace with fitted pink rosebuds. The groom's mother
cuffs, and the full skirt had a wore a silk lilac formal gown with a
redingote look with lace In detail in v-neckllne and tapered sleeves and
the front. Her: matching mantilla a corsage of white and lilac flowers .
flowed to the floor.
A reception was held at the Senior
She carried a large bouquet of Citizens Center. A buffet was
pink, white and lilac flowers with catered .
baby's brea th and streamers.
The bride's table had matching
Maid of honor was Susan Waid.
white candelabra with tapers. The
New Haven. Bridesmaids were
fountain cake was three-tiered with

The .underlying truth
about pho~o greetings .

I

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

~

Mr. and Mrs. John Dale Jacobs

members in miniature ons_tairways
leading to side cakes.
Chris
Richardson, New Haven, and Angela Proffitt, Mason, both cousins of
the bride, registered the guests.
The bride Is a graduate · of
Wahama High School and Parkers·

burg Beauty College.
The g'room graduated from Meigs
High School and the Hocking
·Technical College with an associate
degree In ceramic engln~ring.
The couple now resides in
Columbus.

Katie's Korner

Dick Sterre~t appointed to senior PCA post
By KATIE CROW
Ttmes-&amp;ntinel Staff
We were happy to hear of the
appointment of
Dick Sterrett to

many 18 months. Following his
service time he worked for the
Central Ohio Breeding Association
as an artificial breeding technician
for cattle.
senior vice presi·
Dick and his wife LOis, are the
dent of farmers'
parents of three sons, Matt, 22, a
Production
student at Ohio State; Mike, 20, who
'Credit Associastudies at Purdue University and
tion (PCA) of
· Max, 18, attends Vincennes
Scottsburg, Ind.
University.
An article about Dick appeared In · · His wife fills a big part of her day
the recent edition of Update, a PCA by working in the quality control
publication.
department at the Pillsbury ComThe article stated that Sterrett pany in New Albany, Ind.
came to PCA with a wealth of
·He Is a licensed basketball official
experience and expertise from for the state of Ohio.
working with the FICB for the past
Mrs. Sterrett Is the daughter of
seven years as a credit review Mr. and Mrs. Otis Knopp of Racine.
officer of the Fourth Farm Credit ·
District. Prior to that , ·he served 14
Like to send "get well" messages
years as a field office manager for to Nora Mills, Middleport, who Is a
the Jackson , Ohio, PCA
patient at Holzer Medical Center.
ln working with the FICB, Sterret and Galdys Walburn, Middleport, a
traveled extensively over Indiana, -StJ.rgical patient at Veterans MemOhto, Kentucky and Tennessee, orial Hospital, Room 125.
conducting annual credit reviews
Mrs. Jim (Lori) Warner, of Tell
and analyzing PCA loans for City, Indiana, formerly of Meigs
quality.
County, is a surgical patient at Our
As a field office manager for the Lady of Mercy Hospital, Room 402,
Jackson, Ohio, PCA Sterret served Owensboro. Ky . 42301.
the farmers in the Gallipolis area.
Ruby Hysell, Hysell Run, Is a
When he began his position, his field patient at Good Samaritan Medical
office had loaned $1,500,00J to 351 Center, Room 402,800 Forest Ave.,
farmers. After his 14 years, his field Zanesville, Ohio 43701
office was providing $12,00J,OOJ in
We send best wishes to all and
credit to 900 farmers.
hope you each have a speedy
Before starting his career with recovery. Oh yes, theY. would love to
PCA in 1962, he served in the U. S. 'hear from their friends in Meigs
Army and was stationed In Ger- County.

~roy

The Southeast Ohio Regional
Council banquet honoring Meigs
County's Bob Hoeflich was very
nice and well attended.
Carl Dahlberg, secretary of the
SEORC announced that the Thursday night event, held at the
Univer sity . Inn, was the largest
ever, .with 210 people attending.
Thirty persons from Meigs

County attended to show Bob how
much they appreciate all that he
has done.
· The pride ot the 00 from Meigs
County was evident when they gave
Bob two standing ovations.
Bill Childs, who Introduced Bob,
did a fantastic job.
Congratulations Bob, It couldn't
happen to a nicer person.

For ProfessionAl Counseling &amp; Family Services -

Woodlond Centers, Inc.
The professionals at Woodland Centers offer a wide range of high·
quality, conlidential, affordab le services:
• DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES
• INDIVIDUAL &amp; FAMILY
COUNSELING
• PSYCHOTHERAPY
• HOSPITALIZATION SERVICES
• SPECIALIZED SERVICES
FOR THE ELDERLY
• COMMUN ITY EDUCATION/
PREVENTION
GALLIPOI.IS
~12

Vinton Pike

~46-5554

one of them. I live In ignorance and
I wouldn't live In any other
neighborhood.
I don't want to know or even hear
how one of them got into the
Guinness Book of Records by
driving from Encino to Los Angeles
airport in 23 minutes in a car with
no brake fluid and no gas, and stlll
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WORDS IN GRANll'E - 'The wonls of Jolm F.
Kennedy on the day of his Inauguration as 35th
pmllrlents greet some of the three mlllloo visitors

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While the mighty of the nation and
the diplomatic community paid
their respects In the White House
East Room, 2,500 mourners wept In
St. Patrick's In New York, andl,lOO
Jews crowded a temple-to recite the
Kaddish, one of the most sacred of
Jewish prayers. ·

On an Arlington hillside, Cardinal
Richard Cushing of Boston stood at
the grave overlooking the Lincoln
Memorial and bade farewell to •'this
wonderful !nan, jack Kennedy."
Texans buried two other men that
day.
In Dallas, 4,00J relatives, friends
and fellow police officers attended
the funeral of.Offlcer J.D. Tippitt,
who was shot to death trying to
arrest Oswald after the
assassination.
Thtrty miles away, in Rose Hill
Memorial l'ark on the eastern
fringe of Fort Worth, Oswald- shot
dead by Jack Ruby as he was being
transferred from the city jall to the
county j aU - was buried in a
moleskin-covered pine b1lx at a
service . arranged by the Secret
Service. "We are not here to 'juctge
him, but to bury hlm. May God have
mercy on his soul," said the
preacher, a volunteer.
The service was anended by
Oswald's widow, Marina, and thetr
two young daughters, his mother
Marguerite and brother Roher! , 100
city policemen and 40 reporters. He
had no friends.

All that Sunday night, 250,001
people trod sllently past the coffin in
the Capitol · Rotunda. Jackie
Ke!llledy returned with Robert
Kennedy for a second time during
the evening to kneel and kiss the
coffin, and they went for a walk in
the chilly night. The next morning, a
mllllon people lined the streets as the
president's body was borne from the
Capitol to St. Matthew's Cathedral
to Arlington Cemetery.
"He was our man, and now he's

dead, " said an elderly mourner
outside his Harlem church.
All trains, subways, buses and
iaxUng atrllners came to a hall In
NewYorkatnoon.Cablecompanies
broke off most telegraphic com·
munlcatlons hetween the United
States and the rest of the world.
Ships fired 21-gun salutes, and 4,00J

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ELKINS, W.Va. (AP) - For years, Sen. Jennings Randolph,
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Hves while not In Washington. Now a piece of his past has caught up
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"When we finished remodeling, I showed the senator .his new
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' "He looked at me and said, 'What trunk?' He probably didn't know
'1'1" were moving it around for him aU that time."
lnside the trunk, found last week, were a variety of materials from
the senator's college days and 46 years In Congress.
"There was a copy of a speech by W!illam Jennings Bryan called
'The Prince of Peace.' I heard him give that address In Clarksburg
when I was a reporter there for the Clarksburg Telegram In 1924,"
Randolph, 81, said from Washington on Wednesday. "A very
lnsptratlonal speech, the way he gave it. My name comes from his,
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MONTGOMERY, Ala. lAP) - Gov. George C. Wallace, ~ho has
had his own share of hardships, told members of an advisory panel
that he hopes they never see the suffering he has encountered In
recent talks with constituents.
"It will affect you up here," Wallace told the Advisory Committee
on Humanitarian Affatrs on Friday, pointing to his head. WaUace
has been paralyzed since an assassination attempt In 197'2 and was
hospitalized for depression·last spring. ·
He said his administration has received so many calls for help
tram the dlsadv_antaged and handicapped that he created a
five-person stat! to handle the requests.
.
·
"We get more diStress calls In one month In this administration
than we dld In four years before," he said

-'

..

GALLERY
HAIR ARTS

Trunk? What trunk, Randolph asked

More distress
calls than before
•

.,

the White House, where a bunch of
chrysanthemums left by a young
gtrl hung forlornly in the bars of the
sidewalk fence .
At 4:34 a.m., John F. Kennedy
returned to the White House in a

Con~ull Jh e £\pert\ al

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7:00

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people stood in cavernous Grand
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era! on a giant TV screen.

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coffin carried by six enlisted
Marines and a junior officer. The
official mourning was beginning.

shot."

That night, while the autopsy was
performed . at Bethesda Naval
Medical Center, LyndOn Johnson
look a break from the hectic activity
in his old vice presidential offices
adjacent to the White House. He
wrote brief, personal letters to the
Kennedy chll~n, Caroline and
JohnJr.,lnlonghand.Afterward,he
'told his aides, "I wish that I cmild
reachupandbrlngdownahandfulol

Enchanted Mirror

VERE SMITH AUDIO-VISIONS

whispered In his ear. He quietly laid
the gavel on Its side and left the
chamber. ·He ealled his mother,
Rose, atHyanntsPort,Mass.Aftera
pause, she said, "We'll be all right,"
hung up, donned her coat and
walked out for a stroll alone on the
beach.
Ai ParklandMemorlalHospltalin
Dallas, after a Ro1)'1311 Catholic
priest had performed the last rights
for her husband In' Trauma One,
Jacqueline Kennedy brusquely rejected a suggestion that she wash
the dried blood and brains from her
pink wool sktrt and stockings. "No,''
she said, "I want them to see what
theyhavedone." ---· -Colleges halted classes. Theaters,
movie houses, dance halls and night
club$ locked thetr doors. Cotillions,
bingo games and football games
were canceled. Thousands of people
headed for churches. The lights In
Manhattan's gaudy Times Square
went off.
When The New YorkTimeshltthe
streets that night, it contained 22
paid obituary notices lamenting the
death of John F. Kennedy. More
thah 190 pages of retaU advertising
In the main section of the Times'
Sunday editions were canceled.
As Atr Force One flew back
toward Washingwn, carrying the
new president and the body of his
predecessor,
few people
gathered
In the dusk ata Deatey
Plaza,
below
the Texas School Book Depository
.where Lee Harvey Oswald had fired
his mail-order rifle. They jumped up
and down on the asphalt pavement
and yelled, "This Is where he was

GARLAND M. OA~S
512 Slcond Ave.
G•lllpolis, Oh.
Ph . 446·8231
HOJI1I 381·9611

Wllllam B. Kuglm
The Holy Spirit was the last agent sent from heaven to reveai'the word of truth to the
a~X"lles. It oong separable from its work in teaching the aposfles all things; bringing all
things_to thetr remembrance t~at the Lord had spoken unto them (Jnn 1426); guiding
them 1nto all truth; and slxlwing tfiem things to come Uno. 16:13), is spoken of as ''he Spiri
of truth" (Jno. 14:17; 15:26; 16:13). The "word is truth" (Jno. 17:17); the "word of God" is
''he seed" (lk. B:ll); and the seed receives life from the Splr~. --~ is the spir~ that
qu1ckeneth; the flesh profiteh nothing; the words that I speak unlo you, they are spirt, and
they are life" (Jno. 6:63).
The Ho~ Spir~ from Pentecost until the destruction of Jerusalem, revealed the word
of truth to the apdstles, conlirmina rt during the miraculous age of inspiration (A.D. :JO.A.D.
70) by m1rades. This complete revelation of truth is "the ~rtect law of liberty" Ums. 1:25)
that .reveals "unto us all things that pertain unto lffe and pllinti!IS, through the knowledge
~ h1m that hath called_us,to glory and virtue" (II Pell;3), and'is 'the faitb" that has_been
once del1veroo unto the saints (Jude 3). The ins pi roo wOfd of the Holy Spirdhas been lui~
revealed and writen in the New testament, therefore, there is no need for adirect operat~n
of the Holy Sport today!
The Holy Spirit furnishes us t"mpletely untc Mry aood wort throufih the doctrine
of inspired scripture by teaching,_rep~ng, correctinl!- and instructing "All scriptu,re is
j!l'len by mpntion ot God, and 1s profitable for doctrine, for reproof, lor correct~n. for
1nsruclion 1n n~teousness; That the man of God may be perfect through~lurn~hed unto
all IJJOd worl&lt;s' (ll Tim. 3:16). The Stirit does not do this separate and apart from the word!
The Holy Spirrt beptl through or by the word, making the new birth poosibte, "Being
born aga1n, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth
and abileth for eve(' 11 Pet. 1:23). The New Testament does net speak of anyone being.
born agam by a vague, unex~amable, spur of the moment utterances, nor any dirtct
impact of the Spirit There is not an exam~e of ~rinars coming to the altar and "praying for
parden;" "getting reli~on"; "having an experience of 1113ce;" or an '\ll!tantanoous
conversion." Such phrases are not spiritual. In Mry example ol convers~n. the col(ltl
was preachoo, the ~nners iMinl and oblyld the ppel, the Spirifs message. The new
birth is.not made possible by a direct operation of the Holy Spir~ separate and apart from
the wortl!
·
. .The HOly Spirit puriflt$ Uti! soul who obeys tiM lnlth, "Seeing ye have purffied your
souls it Obeying the trut!lthroufih the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the bretlren, seethatye
lOve one another with a po.ue heart fervently" V Pet. 1:22). The Spirrt does not purify the
soul sepa_ratt and apart fltlm the world!
.
..
. ·~
. ~ God_were to convelland save a~ ~Y by a direct Ofl81'ation of the Ho~ Spirrt by
m1racli!us intl!rvention, He wWd be igi'.:xtng the complete p~n of salvatiln as revealoo
by the Holy Spirit tltrou&amp;h the aposlles in the New Testamen~

I

· Atto~ey Gene;al Robert F.
Kennedy picked up the poolside
phone at his McLean, Va.,homeand
heard the news from FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover. Freshman Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy was presiding
over the Senate when someone

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turn around over the Pacific and
head home.
Across the country, shoppers
began weeping and praying (ogether in the aisles of department
stores. Traffic came to a halt. The
telephone system blacked out in
Washington, D.C., under an avalanche of calls that swamped the
entlre area code.
Fourth-graders in a wealthy
D_allas suburb cheered when thE:ir
distraught teacher dismissed them
for the day. A high $Chool youth In
AmarUio, Texas, ran into a restaurant and yelled, ''Hey, great,JFK's

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The first Kennedy had been assassinated,.
dreadful Dash from Dallas clattered
over hell-ringing teleprinte:-s in A man braked his car to a halt In the
newsrooms across the country at. middle of a ousy New York
1: 34 p.m., Eastern time.
intersection and ran over to a
The news raced to car radios and sidewalk luncheonette. "Is it true?"
street-corner transistors, then to he asked. Without looking up, the
television:
counterman replied, "Yes, he's
Hardly had the startled pigeons dead." The motorist,returned to his
returned to their perches In Dealey car, slumped behind the wheel and
Plaza than an entire nation was listened to the radio, oblivious to the
plunged Into mourning._ For four impatient honking around him.
agonlzlng days In late November
"My God! My God! Whatarewe
1963, Annericans wept, prayed, . com1'1g, to?" said Speaker John
shook thetr lists and stared at their McCormack, 71, the craggy DemoTV Sets, benumbed bythesighlsand. cratic warhorse from Boston who
sounds of the unthinkable.
learned from two reporters in the
Even now, 20 years later, people House restaurant that he smj,denly
who ha~ trouble remembering was next In Une of succession to the
detatls of a wedding or the btrth of a
presidency.
chUd can recall with remarkable
Secretary of State Dean Rusk,
clartty exactly where they were,
Dying with other CabiJ1et members
and what ·-they were doing, when. to Tokyo for trade talks, read the'
they first heard that John F.
Dash aloud then ordered the·plane to

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JACKSON

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By ERMA BOMBECK
Christmas to be home because ,_
Some of you may possibly that's when the rest could make it. ·
remember our Christmas card of
I remember watching a tetevi
1978. .
sionshowafewyearsagowhereEd
One son Is sitting on the sofa In a . Asner and his family came home
tie and sportcoat. He Is not wearing for Christmas. They were great.
shoes. Our daughter is looking They huddled around the fire
straight Into the camera with her toge\her and were actually all in the
eyes closed. Another son 1s hanging same room at the same time,
over my shoulder with a tempera- talkingtooneanotherandlaughing.
ture of 100. I am between them
Ours roll out of bed In different
knotting my handkerchief. With the time zones and stagger around like
exception of my daughter, all of our newborn field mice. One eats weird.
. eyes are focused left wondering If One doesn't eat at all. One hangs
my husband is go)ng to make It to onto the phone like a pacifier. One
the sofa before the camera clicks. spends the enttre time behind the
Only his nose and rtght hand are bathroom door. One puts a hand on
in the pictures.
everything in the housetndlvtdualiy
It took three weeks of planning and asks, "Do you want this?" At
and !our hOurs to get that picture. mealtime, It's like the debates at
Are you listening, Ansel Adams?
Hyde Park with chairs.
The older the kids get and the
"Do you want to have a family
more Independent they become, the picture on our Christmas card thts
1110re difficult It is to assemble the year?" asked my husband.
troops for a reunion.
"How do we get them here?'' I
There are . ~ lot .of mothers who asked:
take pride in knowing ali there ts to
"We could tell . them we're
know about their children. I'm not reading the will."

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-7

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Michigan quarterback Steve ~sed for two touchdowns and ran
for another~? l~a~ ~ Wolvertiies to a 24·21 comeback
lllgTen football victory over Ohio State Saturday and
a berth In the Sugar BowL
Michigan's defense helped set up the triumph with
two pass Interceptions and a fumble recovery In the
second half.
The eighth-ranked Wolverines , who will oppose No.
3 Auburn In their first-ever appearance In the Sugar
Bowl on Jan. 2, finished the regular season with a
record of !1-2, 8-1111 the conference. Tenth-ranked Ohio
State, which will appear In the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 2.
llnlshed 8-3 on the season, 6-3 In Big Ten' play.
_ _
· Smith, a 6-foot, 194-pound senior playing his last
game before a crowd of 106,115 - second-largest in
Michigan Stadium history - completed 11 of 20
passes for '1IJl yards and rushed for 44 yards on option
plays.
Ohio State had grabbed a 14-10 lead at 7:26 of the
third quarter on an18-yard touchdown run by tailback
Keith Byars, who also had a 1-yard m dive In the
second quarter. The effort ~ave Bvars 19 rushing

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SOUTH BEND, lnd. (AP) -Sean Wttharch-rival17th-ranked Pll.l lno
Pavlich, given a second chance, · traditional college football battle ·
kicked a tie-breaking extra point between bowl-bound teams ..
Ganc!tano's field goaj. produced
with 1:35 to play and Mike Brown
ran for 140 yards to set up two the .first tie in 'n years between the
touchdowns Saturday, llftlng Air teams and came after an error on
Force to a 23-22 upset victory over the scoreboard clock sent hundreds
of Pitt suppilrters menily onto the
Notre Dame.
The Falcons, bound for the field thinking the game had ended
Independence Bowl, tied the score one play earlier.
The kick capped a furious Penn
22·22 on Jolm Kerslmer' s 1-yard run,
State
drive from Its 16-yard line to
capping an 11-play drive. Pavlich's
tbe
Panthers'
15afterBIIIWauace's
first try- at the extra point was
third
touchdown
catch of the game
unsuccessful, but a penalty against
hau
completed
a
second-half rally
Notre DaiTif gave him another shot
that
gave
Pitt
a
24-2llead
with only
Notre Dame quarterback Blair
1:
151eft
to
play.
Klel, who came off the bench to toss
Wallace made a lunging, fingertip
lwo second-hall touchdown papses,
grab
of Jolm Congeml's pass In the
drove the Fighting Irlsh to the Air
left
rear
of the end zone after beating
Force 21-yard line with four seconds
cornerback
Mark !"ruehan for the
to play, butMikeJolmston's31·yard
field goal attempt was blocked by second time.
Wallace, whocaughtlOpassesfor
Falcons' cornerback Tom Rotella.
178 yards, also outmaneuvered
Field goal ties game
Fruehan for a 45-yard touchdewn
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Nick catch at 6: 'n of the third period that
Gancltano kicked a 32-yard field on Ignited Pitt's comeback from a 21-10
the final play of the game Saturday, deficit.
But Doug Strang, who threw
l!fvlng Penn State a wild 24-24 tie

,.
'I

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS/
.

15 ROLLS OF ~HAG CARPET
25 ROLLS OF GOLD SEAL
CUSHION FLOORING

· CHICAGO (AP) - Any assessment of college
basketball In the Midwest usually begins with the Big
Ten Conference, and any assessment of the Big Ten
lias to begin with Indiana and the Hoosiers'
!lamboyant coach, Bobby Knight.
,
The Hoosiers won the Big Ten title for the third time
in follryears last season, when they weren't supposed
IP wlli. They're not suppoSed to win again. This time
the prediction f111ght stand. But don't bet on 11.
Indiana doesn't figure to ·be dominant, but then
neither does anyone else in what could become a
wide-open race. For beginners, Mlclllgan !ilate and
!c)wa are the teams to watch.
· Purdue, Ohio State and I1Jlnols finished In a
IIECOIId·place tie last season. but Purdue's Russell
Cross and IUlnols' Derek Harper lett to go to the
Natlonal Basketball Association. Minnesota lost
7-foot-3 R8ncly Breuer lhrotgh graduation.
· Coach Jud Heathcote has his best Michigan State
learn since 19'19, when the Spartans, led by Magic
Jolmon, '111111 the NCAA title. Kevin WDJis, a 7.011!111or

LITILE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Tailback Reggie Dupard, the leading rusher in the Southwest Conference, scored two touchdowns to lead
sixth-ranked SMU to a 17-0 victory
over Arkansas Saturday. The
shutout ended an Arkansas scoring
streak ofl25 games.
Dupard, who entered the game
averaging moe than 6 yards per try,
broke for 60 yards over the right side
on the first play of the second
quarter. He scored againona1-yard
run In thecloslngsecondsofthethlrd
quarter. Hls57-yardrun In the fourth
quarter set up Jeff HarreU's 22-yard
field goal. Harrell missed three
other attempts.

.,. '

,,.

·= ·.,'"'

picks · up yardage during the first quarter of
Saturday's game with Ohio· State. The Buckeyes'

Orlando Lowry Is coming In at right for the tackle.
(AP Laserphoto).

Patriots have moved ahead;
Browns' continue to flounder
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - New
England and Cleveland have come a
long way since the sixth game of the
National Football League season.
The Patriots have taken great
· forward strides while the Browns
have headed backwards.
AI times, Cleveland quarterback
Brian Slpe appeared headed for
NewJersey.
·
Browns' Coach Sam Rutigliano
said Sipe's consideration of joining

the New Jersey Generals of the
Unlled States Football League has
hurt Cleveland.
"There's a time and place for all
that and it certainly isn't in the
middle of the football season,"
Rutigliano said.
The Browns were 3-1 and Sipe had
been playing well when ·"this whole
thing started," he added. They are
3-4 since then .
Kunguano started Paul McDo-

itald at quarterback for two games,
then returned to Sipe for last
Sunday's 20-0 victory over Tampa
Bay. The veteran who was the
NFL 's most valuable player in 1900
is expected to start again Sunday
against the Patriots.
While Cleveland is 2-3 in its· last
five games, New England has been
on a roll. It has won fourofil s last five
games and, like Cleveland, is 6-5. Its
defense has aUowed just three
touchdowns in its last four games.
Three of those opponents failed to
gain300yards .
"They .still have a great secondary," Rutigliano said. "Their pass
1"\lSh Is being helped by the fact they
are covering like heck. They rea lly
squeeze receivers."
The Patriots allowed Miam! just
'1JJ1 yards las! Sunday when they
heat the Dolphins 17-£ and jumped
from 26th to 21st in the NFL
defensive rankings. Cleveland Is
rated eighth .
Five defensive starters are in
their second year with the Browns
and one is a roo.kle. The)!'ll have
their hands full with a New England
running attack that leads the NFL
with 1,962 totalyards, 178.1 per game
and 5.2 per carry. With 870 yards,
Tony Collins is the second leading
rusher in the American Football
Conference.
Steve Grogan, enjoying one of his
finest seasons as the Patriots'
quarterback, "Is relying on a great
running game," Rutigliano said.
"We've got to stop Collins and our
receivers are going to have a tough

Stop In and Look Thtu Out
5.0 0 Selections F;om Out
Sample Books.

•

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'

time."

"

College scores
Mk'h iJ!:EIO2-i ~Li 2J
Clcm:iOfl t.! Soo lh Caroliru.J 1:\
PC'nn S!a11'2&lt;l P lft :24

Al r For"' 23 Notre&gt; Dame&gt; :?;?
l

SACKED - Holy Cross quarterback Peter
Muldoon Is brought down by IIGston College's David
Thomas during llr!it quarter action at SuDivan

Michael Payne. Steve Carflno and Andre Banks are
standouts In the backcourt.
Indiana lost Ted Kitchel and Randy Wittman, two
of the Big Ten's top four scorers. Knight will build
around 7·2 Uwe Blab, Winston Morgan and Stew
. Robinson. Knight also has a pair of outstanding
freshmen In Steve Alford and Marty Stromons.

..

starters

,__, ____ ··-- -- -

-,,.

~ "'~' ...~
f

Despite the lolis of Breuer, the Big Ten's leading
scorer, Minnesota could betler Its .!1-9 conference
reCord of last season. Coach Jim Dutcher has four
returning fi"om team that made It to the
National Invitation Tournament. · They include
Tommy Davis, Marc Wilson, Jim Petersen and
Roland Brooks.
olito State and IUinois could be factors In the race.
Coach Eldon Miller at Ohio State lost Granville
Walters, but Tony Campbell heads a returning cast
that also lndudeS Troy Taylor and Ronnie Stokes.
Coal;h Lou Henson has made a habit of producing
wlnnln&amp; teamS at IUinols but might have trouble In the
~te!',llldguard9amVIncentwlllleadtlteSpartans, '~ nllddJe, Up front will be Etrem WlntersandAnthdny
wiiOII! main llrenatb will be depth.
Welch, both who were outstanding last season. Bruce
I Iowa Coach Geoqe Ravellna Inherited 1101ne
JJoua1u will handle the backcourt.
ou~Btan~~a~ taJerll from deputed Coach Lute Olaon.
Mldllpn has· high-scoring Ertc Turner returning,
l..etldlnatbeHawlrl!yeewlllbe&amp;-lOG~Stokesand&amp;-9
· but much cll!pen&amp; on 6-11 Tim McConnlck, who has

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SMU dumps Arkansas

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BIG GAINER - Mlclllgan's Rick Rogers (left)

IU isn't suppose to ·win, but don't count on it

PICTURES * LAMPS * MIRRORS
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ROLL TOP &amp; FLAT TOP DESKS

I
"

passes of 24 and 57 yards to Kenny
Jackson for Penn State's first two
touchdowns, completed four passes
in four attempts for65yards to move
the Njttany Lions into position for
Gancitano's field goal.

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FEATURES INCLUDE:

Fighting Irish upset, 23-22;
Pitt-Penn State in 24-24 tie

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The Buckeyes drove 85 yards In six playswlth Mike
Tomczak hilling Cedric AnderSOn with 32-yard ID
toss with 1: 52 remaining.
.
Ohio State tried an onslde kick but Michigan
recovered.

CINCINNATI (AP) -The Housplay better when he's in there. He
ton Oilers, a team thaI has "lisen provides the leadership they were
sadly Jacking."
from the dead," try for a second
straight victory In Riverfront StaThe Oilers lacked something the
last time they mel the Bengals.
dlwn on Sunday against the
Cincinnati Bengals, who have more Cincinnati rolled to a 55-14 victory In
than just a foot In the grave.
the Astrodome two weeks ago- the
The Oilers recorded their first
Bengals' third straight impressive
victory In 11 trtes last Sunday, victory at tha !time, restoring hopes
beating the Detroit Lions 'n-17 of a stretch run for a playoff berth.
However, the Bengals were
behind • the cool leadership of
second-year quarterback Oliver unimpressive In a 20-15 loss last
week to Kansas City that dropped
Luck.
The victory ended a 17-game · their record to 4-7 and all but ended
losing streak and resurrected the thOughts of post-season play.
Bengals head Coach Fon-est
spirits of interim head Coach Chuck
Studley.
Gregg said his priority is to salvage
"It's only one win, It Isn't the rest of the season.
redemption," Studley said of the
"We've got five games left to
victory. "(Sunday), we literally play," Gregg sald. "!don't want to
rose from the dead . The team made finish this season 4-12 and I don't
up their mind that this thing had think they (Bengals players) do.
We'll play It until the end."
gone long enough."
Luck, who played college football
The Bengals need to win four of
at West -VIrginia, threw a pair of their last five games to avoid their
touchdown passes to engineer the first losing season since 1911), when
Oilers' first victory and impress they went 6-10 in Gregg's first year
as Cincinnati's head coach.
Studley.
However, Gregg said he's more
"He shOwed he had what I concerned with the club's outlook
consider the most important thing a than its won-loss record.
"The record has nothing to do with
quarterHack needs - to command
it,"
Gregg said. "It's the general
the respect and conlldence of his
well·betng
of this football team I'm
teammates,", Studley said. "The
concerned
about."
players respond to him. I think they

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Ex-Mountaineer
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touchdowns this season, breaking the old Big Ten
record of 18 by Michigan State's Eric Allen in 1971.
Byars' 114 points in conference games also broke
Allen's old mark of 110 in a season.
·
Smith kept the b&lt;lll and roUed left for a 1-yardiDat
2: 52 of the fourth quarter to put Michigan back on top
17-14.
With 6: 57 remaining, Smith found tight end Eric
Kallus all atone in the end zone and hit him for an
B-yard Insurance touchdown.
A 26-yard field goal by Bob Bergeron at 6: 46 of the
first quarter put Michigan on the board first.
On Michigan"s next possession, the Wolverines
went 79 yards in three plays as split end Trfando
Markray took a Smith bomb In strtde at the 30 and
outraced the Ohio State defense to complete a 67-yard
touchqown pass play that gave the Wolverines a 1().()

a

Stadium In Foxboro, Mass., Saturday. ( AP

ib;1on Coll('J:('47 Holv Crossi
MarylarM 29J'\'C S1a it•6
Mlaml 14 CincinMt i 1n
Ha~ardl6\'alr 7

Vl r.lrtnl o TI.'Ch ~VIrginia 0

Laserphoto).

had· knee surgery. Coach Bill Frieder managed to · campaign.
Seldom does the defending champion repeal in the
recruit prep sensation Antoine Joubert, considered a
rugged
Missouri Valley Conference, but Wichita State
can't miss future star_
should
capture a second straight title. XaVier
Northwestern made It to the NIT last season but lost
McDaniel,
Aubrey Sherrod and Karl Papke wil! lead
Jim Stack, Gaddis Rathel and Mike Jenkins, so It
the
way
.
could be a tough season for the Wlldcats,_;rhe same
Runner-up llllnois State lost Rick Lamb and
hOlds.true for Purdue•and Wisconsin.
'
probably
will slip In the standings; but Tulsa appears
DePaul, Marquette and Notre Dame are the to be improved and might chaUenge for the title.
·Independent powers. DePaul figures to produce the
beSt record of the three, but distractlans could be a .
BoWling Green could be another .repeat .champion
problem. Thjs is the final season for long-time Coach.
Ray Meyer, who will turn over the reins to Joey ·- in the Mid-American Conference. The Falcons lost
point guard David Greer, but have four otherstarters
Meyer, his son and top assistant.
returning from a team that was 15-3 in conference
Wherever DePaul plays, It will Qe billed as "The
play.
.
Coach's Last Trip," and that could be distracting.
Ohio
Unlverslty,
led
by
center
John
Devereaux,
will
DePaul has four starters returning from the team
be
a
strong
challenger.
The
Bobcats
defeated
Bowling
that finished second In the NIT plus outstanding
Green and won the postseason tournament. Toledo
fres~ Dallas Comegys and Lawrence West, both
and Miami of Ohio also figure to field strong teams.
of whom are expected to see a lot of playing time.
Xavier figures to be the best team In he Midwestern
City Conference. Loyola of Chicago won the title last
Marquette haS a new coacb In Rick Majerus and
season, but lost in the conference tournament to
three retumJng starters - Dwayne Jolmson, Marc
Xavier, which will have five of Its first six players
Marotta and Mandy Johnson.
returning.
Coach Illggt!r Phelps 1a1t star guard John Paxson
at Notre Dame, but the Irish are loaded with young
t-oyota will remain a fac!Or, with Alfredrlck Hughes
and Andre Battle returning.
talent and might progress rapidly during the

....

�Page

C2- lhe Sunaay Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Hoven lber 20, 1983

Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-1'1tint Pleasant, W. Va.

November 20, 1983

1he.~unday 'rimes-Sentinel

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

Page-C3 · '•
.
'

Coal Grove, Lemon-Monroe
bombed in playoffs
.

two touchdowns and Jeff WUey
GROVEPORT, OhiO (AP) recetever Terry Callihan - started
at Troy.
passed to Gary Fennlng for lw!J in that game for the Wildcats
Jewell Jackson scored a Division N
Mentor Lake Catholic, 9-1, meets
playoff record four touchdowns in more. Senior quarterback Tom sophomores .
Akron Garfield , 10.0, at the Akron
Newark Ca tholic, the defending
leading Columbus Bishop Ready to Tupa klcked two field goals, passed
R ubber Bowl and FI:emont Ross,
a 44·0 victory over previously for a touchdown and kicked the divisional champion, puts a l !J.l 1().0.1, faces Cineinnatl Prtnceton,
unbeaten Coal Grove in a state ltlgh extra' point to lead Brecksville to a
record on the line ~galhst Moga· 9-2, In a pair of Division I semltlnal
school {ootbaU semifinal playoff 13.() whitewash ot Youngstown
dore'sll-0 mark. Thewlnner ofthat games tonight. The winners of tho6e
l)rsullne in the Rubber Bowl. game will play in the division title
game Friday night ar Groveport
two contests meet Sunday afternoon
Lemon-Monroe and Ursuline fin- ma tch . next Saturday at Ohio tri the finale of a tlve-game ltlgh
High School.
Ready, 10-2 will play in the ished a t 10-2.
Stadium against either McComb, school football championship weeUrbana boosted Its record to 12.() 11-0, or Middletown Fenwick, &amp;-5. kend at the Ohlo State University
Division N state title game next
Friday at 11 a.m. in Ohio Stadium. as John Arnold scored one touch- Those two teams square off tonight horseshoe.
Coal Grove finished with an 11-1
vlctoryandover
St.another
Clairsville
at
mark.
set up
in a 22.()
down
Jackson, a 5-foot-9. 165-pound Newark. The Red Devtls, 10-1-1,
senior, rushed for 241 yards in 29 were llmlted to 79 total yards and
carries a nd broke the divisional never got past midfield.
Elytia Catholic, also 12-0, scored
record of three touchdowns, held by
DAVE GAUL
two players. Ready's 44-point tota l on Its first possession in each half to
was also a record. eclipsing the defeat Leavittsburg LaBrae 12-0 a t
mark of 36 points by Marion Berea. Junior running b;lck AI
McKinney scored both touchdowns
Pleasant in 1972.
Ready bolted to a 2J.{) halftime and ran for 226 yards In 31 canies to
lead thanks to an early 4-yard send LaBrae home at 11-1.
Orrville downed Loudonv1lle 24-15
touchdown run by senior fullback
at
Mansfield, with sophomore
Eddie Miller, .Jackson's 5-yard
Division l college or university. A scoring burst midway in the second fullback Jack Leeder scoring twice
stuqent m ust attend classes from 8 quarter and a salety. that resulted and running for 139 yards in 17
a. m.-1 p. m .. then report to practice when defensive lineman Mickey carrtes for the Red Riders. Orrville
by 2 p.m. Practice schedules Twiss tackled Coal Grove tailback and Loudonville a re both ~ .
Meanwhile, it will beacaseofdeja
Include tea m meetings. individual Joe Ross in the end zone [or a salety.
vu
Saturday night when Newark
practice, team practice and weight
Jackson completed the first half
Catholic
faces Mogadore at Can·
training that lasts each day unttl scoring with a3-yard touchdown run
ton's
Fawcett
Stadium in the s tate
8:30 or 9 o'clock p.m .
with one second remaining.
In the second half, Ready defen· Division V ltlgh school football
Gaul, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Gaul of Chester, last year, s ive back Da n Mentel blocked a Coal playoff semifinals.
Two years ago, the same schools
gained all-state honors for the Class . GI'Ove punt and tearrunate Sean
" A" Eastern Eagles, also earned O'Rourke recovered the ball in the played in the same round of the
Co-Most Valuable Lineman honors end zone to make the m argin 3().{), . playoffs a t the same site, with the
in the SVAC league. Gaul Is in ltls J ackson completed the scoring on Green Wave winning 7.()in the snow.
Mogadore's top three offensive
first year at Ohio Uni versity.
touchdown runs of 8 and 13 yard~.
·
Both Nakamoto and Judge are in
Celina blanked Lemon-Monroe players - quarterback Steve Poth,
their second year of college and 29.() at Dayton as Rick Ross ran for running back Jetf Boothe and .
were 1982 graduates of Meigs High
School. Both were football stan•
douts for Coach Charlie Chancey's
Marauders.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Central half for Kentucky State. •
State tangles with Kentucky State' ·J esse Jackson led Morgan State
Saturday In the final of the with 15 points as the Golden Bears
It's the most important gas furnace breakthrough
Cincinn at i Soul Bas ketba ll cut Kentucky State's lead to 55-51
June 19, and return for weekend
Tournament.
in
over 40 years. The Lennox Pulse furnace can
wft]j 40-seconds to play, but Kleth
visits in August and Septem ber.
Morgan Stateand Lincoln Univer· · Williamston sank three free throws
slash your heating bills with efficiency vastly
August "ill be the busiest month sity play in the consola tion.
to put the game out of reach.
superior to your present furnace. Payback on your
Bruce Davis net1ed 24 points to
at Rivertront S t adi~m with 20

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Three Meigs athletes
.. OU Bobcat team

on

!\THENS - Three Meigs Coun·
tia!)s are among "walk-on" athle tes
on:t he 1983 Ohio University foo lball
sqpad this fall . Eastern's David
Gaul , Gary Nakamoto and Chris
JWlge of Meigs are among a select
g$Jp participating.
~ometlmes, p layers f rom

smaller schools are often overloOked, however, this determined
trip was given the opportunity to
sh~w their athletic capabilities and
w.ire unanimously chosen as "walk
oO:' candidates at the school. It was
t~ough much personal pride,
determination, a nd dedication over
th&amp; past couple seasons that
ena bled these young men to develop
their skills.
The work schedule is not an easy
one for a student-athlete at a

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light the Cincinna ti Reds' 1984 home
schedule.
The season gets underway on
Monday, April 2. when the Reds
host the New · York Mets at
Rivertront Stadium at 2:05 p. m . in
the official Na tiona l League Op·
ener. The Reds and Mets play the
fir st home night ga me at 7:35 p.m.

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In J une; ll inMay; and nlne inJuiy.
The home schedule Incudes 54
single night games; 23 single day
games, including fi ve of the popular
12:35 Bus iness Day Specials; one
day doubleheader; a nd one night
doubleheader .
.
The Reds have no scheduled
dou bl e hea ders on the roa d I.n 1984,
playing their 81 games on 81 dates.

night. Fred Bowles had 18 to help
Kentucky State beat Morgan State
in the first round.
Lincoln took an early 10.0lead, but ·
Davis scored 19 and Centra l Sta te
took a 44·33 lead at halftime. Ernie
Carr, a 6-foot·2 sophomore had 32
points for Lincoln to lead all scorers.
Bred Bowles led Kentucky State
with 18 points. Freslunan Morris
Stoner added 10 points in the second

Second session set
GALLIPOLIS - The second
cbaches meeting of the 1983-1984
Rlnky Dink Basketball ·program
will be held at 7 p.m . Monday, Nov.
21, at the Senior Citizens Center on
Jackson Pike.
All coaches are urged to attend in
order to receive information rele·
t t th 1
van
o
e call
eague.
more
information
the For
Gallipolis
Parks and Recreation Department
at 446-1189, ~xtenslon 24.

BETHANY, W.Va. - Zane Bee·
gle of Racine is a mem her of
Betha ny College's junior var sity
basketball team .
The &amp;-1, 188-pound fres hman
plays guard for the Blsons. A
graduate of Southern high school,
he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Beegle, Rt. 2, Racine.
·
Coaching the jun ior vars ity
squad Is Gary Carney in hi s second
year at Bethany. The 1983·84 season
opens Dec. 3 aga inst Denison
University at Bethany's Alumni
F ield House.

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6 n. DANEX POWDER PAINTED
SPUN ALUMINUM DISH

*KLM SKY EYE V RECEIVER
•CHAPPARAL POLAROID I
*S.R.S. QUAD POD FEED SYSTEM
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initial investment takes just a few heating seasons .
If we can't convince you, your curreJ;Jt high
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1

on
Wednesday.
AprtlCincinnati
4, before the
Phlllles
move into
on fr~~~~~~~~;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::~~
('
F riday for a three-game weekend
series.
ill.
The Reds will play their 81 home
~
gam es on 79 dates at Rivertront
- ·
·
Stadium. There will be an afternoon
~
doubleheader against the Gia nts on
Sunday, Aprll 29, and a twi-night
_ _~' \. ,
Satelite ReceimOI\Systems
twinblll against Atlanta on F riday,
June 1.
"n..,.._,,.,.,.,.,_...
The Dodgers, winner of the
Western Division race, wlll m ake
their flrst1981 visit to Cincinnati-farthree games beginning Tuesday, .

Ex-Tornado star on
Bethany IV team

•

•
•

Reds announced '84 schedule
CI NCINNATI - A visit by the
National League Cham pion P hlla·
delpltla Phillies on the first weeke nd of the season; two weekend

~•

#

•

RIO GRANDE - Clarence
"Bevo" Francis, the greatest point
producer In college basketball
history, wUI be a part of ceremonies
at the Bevo Francis Classic to be
held on the campus of Rio Grande
College Dec. 9-10.
' Francis was a part of the 1952-53
Rio Grande College team that went
39-0. The following season the
Redrneo had a 21·7 record against .
some of the best major college foes.
In the first night of the tournament, Rio Grande will face Franklin University at 9 p.m , Bloomfield
College will face Indiana Uillverslty!Purdue University at 7 p.m .
Losing teams .wiD meet at 7 p.m.
The following night will be the ·
championship clash at 9 p.m.
Francis nearly rewrote the
NCAA and NAIA record books in '
his two seasons at 'Rio Grande.
Among hls outstanding laurels are
the NCAA top single season scoring
average (48.3), best two year
average (47.1), and points in a
single game (113) . HtsNA1Amarks
are slmllar-stngle season scoring
average (50.1) anf1 points in a game
116.
The set NAIA season standards
for llAI R08Is (711!) , tree throws
(538), points (1954), and sverage
(50.1) .
In a11. Francis 8C01'I!d 3,m points
In twq seuona at Rio Grande In
leadlltl tile Redn1e11 to an aabiulld·

· ·~n~ ~7 owr.u mat1c.
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79~

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¢

PRICED FIIDM

329

99t

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VALVDUNf

KITS

RESISTOR

Bevo will
return on
Dec. 9-10

MOTOR OIL

First
5 Quarts

;

BAnERY CHARGERS

GAS LINE
ANTI·FREEZE

19C

'4/IAMP
No. 91 t93 .•
REG. 24.911

1999
tO AMP MANUAL
NO. 8t08t
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Silver Bridge Plaza - Phone 446-9335
,,

MON.-FRI. ~-8;
SAT. 8-6; SUN. 9-5

Bill Kelley
Manager

•

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�No...uiber 20, 1983

November 20, 1983

Pomeroy-Middlepori-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W, VQ.

KC, Southweste~
Southern capture
•
•
•
preview
victories
By SCOTT D. WOLFE
CHESHIRE - Just around the
corner !rom a successful football
and volleyball season. SV AC con ·
terence schools went Into full s\vlng
on the Kyger Creek hardwood here
Friday evening In the annUal girls'
basketball preview at Cheshire.
In the rlval-vs.-rtval pairings host
Kyger Creek overpowered North
Gallia, Southwestern downed Hannan Trace, and defending champion Southern defeated Eastern
21~11 .

GOES IN FOR T\\'0 - Kyger Creek's Amy Roush hits one of her
eight baskets on the night against the Nortlt Gallia Pirates Friday in the
· SV)\C Girls Basketball Preview. Roush led the Bobcat gals to a 24-17
~ry. Michele George and Jayne CampbeD led the Lady Bucco
scoring with six points each.
ScOtt
photo.

\ 'oUe
s.c hlichter ruling
•
•
no maJor surpnse

ZANESVU.LE. Ohio (AP)-The
decision that prevents suspended
Baltimore Colts quarterback Art
Schlichter from playing basketball
for Qhio University-Chillicothe apparently came as no surprise to the
team's coach. ·
·we'll just have to put it together
with what we haveandgofrom there
and not let it bother us," Corky
Miller said before learning of
friday's Ohio Regional .campus
C0nference ruling. "It will be
disappointing."
Conference officials decided that
Schlichter had used up his conference eligibility by participating in
athletics for four years at Ohio State
Univer sity.
Further, they ordered Miller's
ream to forfeit the two games it has
played so far this fail.
OU-Chillicothc played in the Lee'·s
Junior College tournament at Jacksonville, Ky., iastweekend, winning
the tournament \IIlith victories over

Sue Bennett Junior College and
Lee's Community College.
Schlichter was suspended indefinitely from the Colts by the National

Football League earlier this year
after he acknowledged making bets
on professional games.
Schlichter, from Bloomingburg,
reportedly lost $389,000 In bets
placed through professional
·gamblers, three of whom have been
convicted on interstate gambling
charges.
Tom Bixler, comr'nissloner of the
ORCC and athletic director at the
OU branch here, read a statement
after the 90-minute conference
meeting called.on theOU -Zanesville
campus to discuss Schlichter's
eligibility, and cited two bylaws of
the conference.
"Our discussions focused only on
the number of years of particiJl!ltlon
in Intercollegiate athletics at the
Ohio State University, " he said.
"Our conference bylaws specifically state in article three' A student
has four yers of athletic eligibility at
one or more colleges or universlt!es

...

· Bixler noted there is some
-Pll&gt;Vision for.flexibility in the rules
but said this is typically applied to an
injured athlete unable to complete a
year of eligibilitv.

A good turnout was on hand for
the two-quarter preview, which
gave several indications that this
year's league competition will be
fairly well balanced. After a ve!Ji
close first quarter (lQ-6), Kyger
Creek turned up the wick and
outlasted North Gallla 24-17 at rhe
buzzer.
In that opening contest allleaguer Amy Roush showed that
she will be one of several names to
watch this seasori as she pou~ed In
IS points for the Lady Bobcats.
Roush also displayed a great
floor game, while Jodi Hall and
Kelly Roush rounded out the
scoring with four and two points
respectively. The Lady Bobcats are
coached by Judy Weston.
In contrast to Kyger's scoring
output. North Gallia exhibited a
well-balanced scoring attack
headed by Michele George and
Jayne Campbell with six apiece.
Diane Shllot and Missy Robie added
two each and Gina Rutan one. The
Lady Pirates are coached by David
Moore.
SW-JIT
The second contest of the
evening saw Coach Mel Carter's
Lady Highlanders shoot out of the
gate for a 12-6 first period lead,
then coas on to a 2D-15 triumph
over CoaCh John Lusher's
WUdklttens of Hannan Trace.
Another league standout, Tony a
McNeal, led Southwestern with a
10-polnt periormance and powerful
inside game. Dianna Nida added
six, and Tracey Huff. Johnna
Donta, and Sandra Patrick added
two each.
For Hannan Trace Sophomore
standout Julie Dillon kept pace wlth
the Highlanders, netting 10 points to
lead the Wlldkittens. Terri Saunders added two, Tabby Sheets two,
a nd Angie Caldwell one. HT
e njoyed a five of nine night from the
foul line.
Eastem-.Southern
A mild touch of rivalry ignited the
start of the Eastern-Southern game

By HAL BOCK
AP_SportaWrller
.
Just When D&lt;!nny White was

position to knock him off the perch.
Twoweel&lt;sago,Whitemovedinto
the top spot,- displacing Roger
Staubach, whom he replaced as
starting quarterback for the Dallas
Cowboys in198J. ButwhileStaubach
had been on top of the NFL"s passer
statistiCal evaluation list for four
years, White lasted less than a
month.
It's no reflection on White's
ability. It's just that Montana of San
Francisco is about to reach the 1,500
attempts level, minimum sfandard
for rating. He's only 11 passes away
from that plateau, and going into
Sunday's game at Atlanta, Manta'
na's89.8 passing rating is' the best in
the NFL . .five points ahead of
White's career 84.8 and Staubach's
11-year record of&amp;l5.
Montana and White could ex-

getting comfortable as the National
Football League's No. 1 career
passer,herecomesJoeMontana,in

Scoreboard ...

I

I..AKER~RetUI'TK'd

Pro basketball

MIIC'h Kupchak , forv.·ard. to lhl' &lt;lt'll\'e
!USI(If,

FOOI'BALL

Boltm

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Ptilladelph.la
NeoN Jersey
Nfw York

9
7

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6

4

6

5

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Washington

4

6

.400

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6' 5

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Atlanta

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ST. LOUI!; BLUES-Piaro;l Blllkl' Dunkip. C(&gt;l'lt('l", on Wa iver.;·.

CrurchfiC'Id, runnln,e: tack, and acth1itt'd
Ah:lul Salaam, dc'fc&gt;n.sl\'t' la&lt;'kl&lt;'.

NaUomd ih:d.U)· Ll,oltgllt&gt;
1

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Hwston

HEARING LOSS
IS FIRST
A MEDICAL PROBLEM ...
be examined by Q qualified physician.
Medica/ or surgical intervention may be indicated.

And

30

Los J\ngek5

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.5832
.5115 21,2

46

..004

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Detroit 128, Ute.h 1~
Dtnvt't' ~. Hwst~ 1Z7
Milwaukee 11.!1. Phoenix 9t
SI:Bia.J's G.-ne

Clevt'land at San Diego, 10:.11 p.m.

...........

_

N-..tlodoey ........

w.... .,.,_

W L T l"t» GF GA

Henson ().Q.{); and Kelly Roush 1.{).2. Totab

NY Ran....
NY I""

11·2-"24.

1352:llffi~
12!10248)7~

.,.

North GalHrt (1'7) - Cindy Higley ()..().();
Dia np Shllot 1·0-2: Michele- George J-0..6; Gina
Rutan 0-1-1; ,layn£&gt; Campbell 2-2-6; Missy
RobiP Hl-2. Tfllult~ 7-4-17.

Phlladelphlo

U72'M83

Washlngtce

91101867

,.

..

Dianna Nlda ;)..0.6: Tracey Huff 1.0.2: .Jonna
Donta I-0-l: and Sandra Patrick 1-0-2. Totals

Nf'W Jenpy

U.0.22.

-

Shets

2170

1341779052

,.

0.2-2:

Hol ley Whill&lt;'y .040 and Angie Caldwell Q.l-1.

Totals S.5-15.

10732374

ID

71
MontrERI

E~m

;rrace (11) - Dee DaUey l.Q-2 :
Kt'lll \Vhltlatch Q.O.O; Krts WilSon 0-0-0: 1\ng\e
Spencer 2-1-5; Melinda Mankin 1..0.2. Totals
3-1-11.
Southern (~1) - Jenny Bentk&gt;y 0-0-0: Amy
Littlefield 5-B-18; Debbie MIChaell·l -3; Laren
Wolfe 0-0-(1 arx:l .Julie Houdashelt C).{)-{), Totals

89117mn
cantclbdl Confti'Eftot
1090~74

O&gt;ic"""
· 18
MIMeSOta

8

86
Dotmll

30

Pat Underwood, The Reds opened a
June
for minor-league pitcher
spot for Krenchickl on their 40-man
winter roster by designating Infield er Kelly Paris for
reassignment.

"'

Sl . Louis

8

C.IIIOIY
Tl

8

3

1 8 '5

An~lP.i

-

v............

SOUTHWESTERN CONTROlS BALL - Southwestern's Tracy
Lewis (14) controls a jump baD against Hannan Trace's Kathy Rose
during Friday's secood contest of the SVAC Girls' Cage Preview at
Kyger Creek. The IDghiander gals took a ~15 vlclory behind Tonya
McNeal's 10 points. JuHe Dillon led the Wildldttens wlth10 points. Scott

lil 82

'

1 631l3ll9

19

..

For most domestic and import

,..SAVE$1.00
............... ,.
!lfPI m

r~aw

lim••"••,....,••..,

ntll0Df1001101HK

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cars.

Kendaii10W40

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Regular 99C limit 12 on all sale oils

.... ,rel... lkllt.-SIN 1 ~...

~-- ol P"'doN{ISfl•tWIIII'I
,,..,
.... fiMaiJI•••tlil•,..,l&lt;l,.,,..,

points and 19 rebounds and Vinnie
Johnson led a fourth-quarter rally
that carrted the Pistons past Utah.
Johnson, who finished with 15
points, scored six of his nine
fourth-quarter points as the Pistons
scored 11 of the first 17 points of the
period. That spurt turned a 92-88
deficit into a 99-98lead that Detroit
never surrendered.
Adrian Danlley and John Drew
scored 34 and28 points, respectively,
for the Jazz, whlle Isiah Thomas had
20 points and a career-high 18assists
for the Pistons.

On rookie team
CLEVELAND (AP) -Cleveland
Indians' shortstop J ullo Franco has
been elected to the 1983 Topps
Rocl&lt;leAll-Starteam, the American
League team,,announced.

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

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1.99 sale

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Nationwide 5 quart 10W30

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IIIIUfHtftiiAIIIIIHI

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Regular 3.09 Limit 2

81111783

91

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Washingkll'l7, N.Y. Islanders I

r~rW:o:U:e:photo=~·:::::;;~;:;:::::~==~

'

High School

playoffs

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

-·
-·

• Hmy-duty Vlbnm · OGle

28 88 40
37.88 ~gMR~
43.88 ~gM~~

MONTH

•

7.38 sale por 2 gal
-2.110 mig's Mbale

......~With exch. for most cars

DILES
HEARING
AID
CENTER
444 W. UNION ST., P.O. BOX 511, ATHENS, 0. 45701
.,

594-3571

HOME APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
(

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Reg. 99C

5.38

your coat
por 2 gal alter mig's rebate

2 gallons

AI Akrun Rubber Bowl

vs. Akron
GarftekllO.O
At DQb We1ume S&amp;adlum
Fmnont Ross 11).0.1 vs. CinctMatl
Pr1nl'l'fon 9-2

25C

At~ FaWl'JI'il SUAun
MORSOOre 113 vs. N~'lll'k Cat~llc 10.1

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F'rilla1's._..

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At A11roa 1W1ber Bewl
BrecksvWe 13. Yoorc. ursullnt.&gt; 0
Ai ~ Wl!bme S&amp;adlwn
Ct&gt;llna 2!1, Umon·Mmrae 0
Dlv-W

.......

GOT
THAT
"NEW CAR"
FEELING?

after mig's $2.00 rebate
on 2 gallon purc:hase

69.88

Sale price 3.69 per gallon Limit 4

Regular 77.88

Save i8.00

•'

At Newark
Urbana Z!, St.Clalrsville 0

-IV
At MIMield A* flfkl
Om1Ue 24. l.n.xtonvllk&gt; 15
AI Gnvfii'Orl

Col. Ready 44. Coal Grovt' ()

TransaCtions
a•s··ML
_,_
DETROIT TJ;ERS--Sokl Waynp Kfm..
. dlidcl, lnneidPr, ID t~ Ontt'l11.1ll Reck.
N.a..ILe..MONTREAL EXPOO-Named Blll
Maztraskl as mtnor Jeque ntl@ld tnstruclc&gt;'.

17.50

29.88 with rebuild exch lor

8.88 •hor ;;,lg'o robato

most domestic cars lor

Flex Fan

Sale price 10.!18

'.

import cars

~::er
1.99 ~=~iator Caps

From25.95
Nt==

·

Integral and Motorola except
high amp Reg. 34.88

Lg round or Rectangular

2.99 Fl!'l' most
pgpullr IPII1iCIIIon11

R~ .

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ANGELES

Ladies'
7-Diamond
Cluster ·

49C
Frosty Ice

2.99 b~do

NCb
.,.... m'fg'l rebel•

AncoSnow
Blades
15", 18". or 18",Sale price 3.49

·From
Remanufactunld

Saaoers ·.
1 inch 8~ Reg. 89e
8734 Reg.

Spring Valley

Clutch

t/2,518,314 Reg. 2.99 .... 1.88 For most

domestic cars. From

Fan Belts
tebtJi!d.l For most domeslic 2
cars Reg. 3.95-4.95..... •

exchange.

t.09

6' Heater HoSe

77

Hose Clamps
....................... .. From

-

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S,l_J"-~~~DJ _
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15.88
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DelrostiDerogge

Reg. t7.95 Model DFV· t copper

~5995

Member FDIC

From
Remanufactured

Clutch
Disc
Reg. lrom 14.50 Wllh reouiiCI.J

10 1nch----·--··7ge

~----~---+

'

9:30 TIL 5:00 P.M.

Chrysler AMC light trucks

N~...._.a

LOS

lndhHI

1011.1 FRI. TIL 8 P.l.
TUES., WED .. THUR., SAT.

Altemators
Reg. 22.88 with rebuild exch

'

New Radiator$
with exchange for GM, Ford,

for most domestic cars except
Integral and Motorola

INCIEDI81f VALUE/
Silver Bridge Plaza

Fron80.95

......,.,.,

LAYAWAY NOW
FOR CHRISTMAS
Court Street

19.88
Remanufactured

,,,.

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"
'

Reg. 33¢ limit 6 12 oz cans
p 575

Reg. 1.25 655C

Elyria Cat h. 12, L~ 0

Have your rmaneing ready 8o that you
can select "your" new car, and be out
on the road, behind the wheel, sooner
than you can &amp;ay \'wow!''
With our extended payment auto loan
plan, you get more month8 to pay, which
mean8 yoil pay le88 per month! You'D
f"md our ear ioan people prompt, con·
' eager to help. You'll re••derate .and
ceive immediate re8ponse on your appli.
cati90 and approval on your-loan within
24 hours!
"'JJether it's updating your car, your
bueineu, your home, or invest~ sur·
plue fundo - remember, what f!OOd
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what bank you have behind you!

• eu..... collar

Snap
Gasline
Anti-Freeze

Prestone Anti-Freeze
Coolant
Hollywoocl Anti--Freeze Tester........·-···· 44c

Torque Starter
Batteries
With exch. 72 month

'

If your doctor suggests that you try a hearing aid,
call the one who has been reliable since 1949...

Windshield
Washer
Solvent
,...,.....
Limit

Reg. 32.!18

Mentor Lak• CatOOllc ~~

. $70.00

•lpeldloclot

sac

Maintenance Free
Calcium Batteries

Edmontcr1 7, Burtalo 0
L..os ' M~ ~ Vana:t~ver 2
&amp;mda,y'a G.nw
Plnsburgh at Phlladf'lphla, 7:00 p.m.
Qut&gt;bec at N.Y·. Ranem. 7:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 8 .IS p.m.
l..I:B All@l!'les at Vartc."'Jvt&gt;r, tO:Ili p.m.

MEN'S
HIKING BOOT ·

IHtlllr

2.99"

"-!"k'IIINII•"".
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~

7Ull56782

Edmon!"'

l..£s

8

$ '10 2 18 8l !N
7 9 2 1 6 ' 65

n..nto

CINCINNATI (AP) - Utility
infielder Wayne Krenchickl is
returning to the Cincinnati Reds.
The Reds bought the contract of
Krenchlckl from the Detroit Tigers
Friday.
Krenchicki playeq for the Reds
before he was traded to Detroit on

2 ·22 103

---

"

Krenchicki returns
to Cincinnati bench

9

910018110

Harthrd

~21.

Purolator XSV.
Air
Filters
Sale price 1.99 Umlt 2

t50

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

Boriton
llulfolo

Julie Dillon 4-2·10;

after mig's $1.00 rebate

sn21255

Plnsbu.f'Kh

Southwestern (22)- Tanya McNeai5-0-10:

WOLVERINE~

• Welt CGIIItrucUon

.

'h

75
6 5

4 7
Games
NE!I'-· Yqrk 110, Boston 103

.

• a...... nughout cowhide

.

.Oll

sJ:m

Penland

Kyg'erCreek(24) -Amy RoushS-2-18: J OOI
Hall 2-{)4; Heidi Ca rman 0-0.0; Dee t::k'E.'

b2081

Orleans Monday night.
' •
19TI, two years before Bill Walsh
Randy
Cross,
the
49ers'
veteran
:
took over as coach.
remembers
the
frustra
!Ions
_
•
guard,
Meanwhile, the Rams, with the
team
has
experienCed
at
•
his
league's leading rusher in rookie
•
Eric Dickerson, face defending . Atlanta.
have
made
us
feel
helpless
.'
"They
Super Bowl champion Washington.
there
often,"
he
said.
"All
they
have
·
·~
The Redsklns, tied for the lead wltn
to
do
to
remember
how
good
they;
;
Dallas at 9-2 in the NFC East, wlll
are
is
to
look
at
films
of
them
·•
•
throw the league's best rushing
whenever we go there."
.
•
defense against Dickerson, who has
The
Falcons
are
comlngotfa36-13'
•;
gained 1,369 yards. · ;
loss to the Rams last Monda:y night. • ~
The Cowboys face Kansas City at
Los Angeles' performance left •
home. In other games, Seattle is at
Washington · Coach Joe Gibbs ··:
Denver, Detroit plays Green Bay at
searching for weaknesses in the · •
Milwaukee, theNewYorkGiantsat
rebuilt Rams.
- '
Philadelphia. San DiegoatSt. Louis,
The Dallas game will be a • •
the Los Angeles Raiders at Buffalo,
homecoming for new Kansas City ::
Chicago at Tampa Bay, Houston at
Cincinnati. Baltimore at Miami, Coach John Mackovic. who was an -,
assistant to Cowbcys' boss Tom
Cleveland at New England and
Landry before taking the top job
Minnesota at Pitisburgh.
with the Chiefs.
The New York Jets play at New

3 7 \ .JX)J

hcUic D6vWon
8 2

lWurdaJ'II GMneS

in the game.
Lewis Lloyd led Houston with 23
points, white Ralph Sampson added
22. Denver's T.R. Dunn, who has
played in 363 consecutive games.
injured his left ankle and will not be
able to play for the Nuggets tonight.
Bucks 109, Suns 94
Sidney Moncrief scored points,
16 of them in the first quarter, as
Milwaukee captured a road victory
at Phoenix.
The Suns missed their first 10
shots of the game and fell behind ·
17-2. They steadily narrowed the
deficit until Milwaukee led only 82-76
after three quarters, but the Bucks
pulled away again in the final
period.
Marques Johnson added 22 points
for tbe Bucks, while Maurice Lucas
led Phoenix with 25.
Pistons 128, Jazz 120
_At Detroit. Bill Lairnbeer had 22

change places again since botb are
active and their ratlpgs cah cha11ge
from week to week.
The passers' rating system,
which was introduced in · 1973,
compares quarterbacks in four
areas - percentage of touchdown
passes per attempt; perrcentage of
completions per altei'T\pt: percentage of interceptions per attempt,
and average yards gained per .
attempt.
Montana comes into Sunday's
game third among National Conference passers this season with 2,805
yards on 232-for-359 with 20 touchdowns and nine interceptions. The
49ers, tied for the lead with the Los
Angeles Rams in the National
Conference West, have won eight
straight on the road but haven't
beaten the Falrons at Atlanta since

55.5001
5 6 .&lt;l'i.'l 1~
4 7 .:lit 2%
4 7 .~ 2'h;

Kansas City

Cold night gives Knicks, 110-102 victory
trying to catch New York in the third
By Associated Press
Larry Bird, Robert Parish a na period, Cedric Maxwell missed a
Kevin McHale usually can be layup on a 2-on-1 break and then had
counted on to hit 55-60 percent of a basket nullified when called for
their shots. When they manage just .traveling on a 3-on-Jiayup.
over 34 percent, it's tough for even
New York, meanwhile, hit better
the Boston Celtics to win.
than 50 percent of its attempts,
"We were missing from the ~onnecting on 41 of 79.
outside and our big men weren't
"Our game plan was to get the ball
hitting from inside," Boston Coach
to Bernard, any place, any time, ..
K.C. Jones said after the New York said Knlcks guard Rory SpaiTOw.
Knicks beat the Celtics 110-103
"He is one of the pl'l'mier scorers in
Friday night. "Robert and McHale
the league and once he gets the ball it
missed shots they usually make, so
usually means two points or he picks
our e ntire offense really struggled.
up a foul."
Their defense didn't bother us. We
The Celtlcs rallied from a 57-53
were just missing ...
halftime deficit to pull into an 80-ilO
Bird (8-24), Parish (6-15) and tle at the three-quarter mark.
McHale (4-13\, combined for just 18 Boston led briefly when Scott
field goals In 52 a !tempts, a shooting Wedman hlt a jumper, but the
mark of 34.6 percent. And guard
Knicks pulled ahead to stay on a
Dennis Johnson, who led Boston basket by Louis Orr and two by
with 18 points, was 4-for-11 from the Ernie Grunfeld.
\
floor, sending the. Celtics to their
Boston trailed 101-100 with 1: 15
second loss in a row after a 9-1 start.
left, but the Knicks cashed nine free
Bernard King, meanwhile, hit 13 throws while holding Boston to just
of 19 shots and scored 32 points, 22 of one field goal in the final minute.
them in the first half, to lead the
Nuggets J3ol, Rockets 12'7
Knicks, 6-5.
Kil&lt;i Vandeweghe SCored 16 of his
In other National Basl&lt;ethall 32 points In the third quarter and
Association games, Denver out- Alex English added 29 points ·as
scored Houston 134-127, Milwaukee Denver won at home against
whipped Phoenix 109-94 and Detroit Houston.
defeated Utah J28.120.
The Nuggets scored 12 points in a
The Kn!cl&lt;s and Celtlcs didn't row early in the third quarter to
agree on the ·r eason why Boston hit extend an 11-polnt halftime lead to
only 38 of Its 91 of its shots.
82-&lt;i.'l, and the Rockets didn't get
In one eight-second stretch while closer than a dozen points until late

Page-C-5 ..-

64.100-

D••w.,.

\ 'oUe

son Whit~·- dl:&gt;f('llsi''f' Tacktt&gt;.

.583 -

1

Indiana
3 7 .:m
l\Miand
2 9 .182
WDJTERN OONFEREN&lt;E

FIGIIT FOR BALL- Southern's Laren WoUe (23) and Lort"Adarns
( 10) go alter a rebound against Eastern's Kris \\'ll&lt;;onduringthlnl game
action of Friday's SVAC Girls' Cage Preview at Kyger Creek High
School. Led by Amy Littlefield's 18 points, Soulhem won the two quarter
coolest, 21-11.
ScoU
pholo.

HOUSTQt\ OrLERS----RC'OCIInliC'd Wil·

-1

HOC.llEV

5

Milwaukee
Dftl'tllt

llallu

Nllllo~ Football iA&gt;II«UU'
D,\J,LA."' 00\\' DOY~SIWttd .lim Mil ·
k&gt;r, pllnTC'r.

.100

CttntnJ Dtvtslon

Box Score!

Hannan Trace (11) -

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Montana challenging Cowboys' Danny White

as Coach Susan Arnold's ,Eaglettes
quickly jumped Into a 2.() lead.
Southern started slow, but all-stater
Amy Littlefield quickly ignited the
flame as the Tornadoettes rolled to
a 144 first perlod lead.
This season Coach Hilton Wolfe
Jr. is back on the cage scene as
coac h of the Tornadoettes. His
team was led by senior Amy
Littlefield, last year's leading
scorer in the league, who netted 18
of Southern's 21 points. Littlefield
also hit eight of eight from the foul
line. while SHS as a team canned
nine of 12. ·
Debbie Michael chipped In three
points with assists from Laren
Wolfe, Jenny Bentley, and Julie
Houdashelt.
Eastern had a well-balanced
attack led by Angie Spencer's five,
while Dee Dailey, Melinda Mankin.
and MaJ:garel Horner added two.
Junior Spencer and senior Dee
Dalley will also be names to watch
this cage season.
Most teams open with non-league
teams this week before opening
league play on Dec. 1. Tlje boys'
pre\1ew was held at Kyger Creek
last night in Cheshire.

Terri Saundt'rs 1-0-2: Tabby

'
Middleport · Gallipolis,
Ohio-Point l'tea5Cinl, W. Va.

Pomeroy

COMPARE AT S125

Tawney Jewelers

nickel hell element easy to Install

HOURS: Sun.l0-5

II·F 8:30-8:00 .
Sat 8:30-6

Fron

New Heater or From
AJC Control. New Throw
Valves

209 UPPER R'VER RD.

From2.29
Thennostats

Out Bearings

Reg. from t2.95

446-3807

•
•
•

•

•

Water Outlets
.....

•

From4.QO

We will be closed
Thanksgiving Day

•

•
•

'
•••
•

••

424 Second, Glllipolls

•

\

•

•

~-'I:

�Times-Sentinel

Nowmber 20, 1983

W. Vo.

Ohio-Point

NFL Commissioner extends suspension

Highlanders seek
•
•
•
winning campaign·
PATRI&lt;Yl'- Southwestern, with
four reruming lettermen, hopes to
improveits!!-15 basketball record of
1982·83. Coach Lloyd Myers' f!lgh·
landers lack overall slze but will
~sess good shooting eyes. Rerum.
ing lettermen include 6-0 guard
Roger Wells, guard Jeff Meek and
foJWard Randy Layton, all seniors
and Steve P ellrey, at &amp;-1, the tallest
player on the team. Pellrey is a
junior.
Others vying for starting positions
include Rob Elliott, 5·9 senior; Mike
Bailey, 5-10, junior; Joe Baker, 6-0
junior and Will Haislop, a 5-8 junior.
According to veteran coach
Myers, "ThewinsandJosseswillbe
hard to predict, but we hope to be
competitive,".
Myers sees the league being
well-balanced with Southern, Kyger
Creek and Hannan Trace as the
teams having the most returnees
and best chance of taking the league
title. He feels Eastern and North
Gallia will also JJe ready when the .
season starts.

Last year, the Highlanders
Started Off good, struggled for
several games then came on strong
at the se~son' s end, particularly in
t h e Class A Sectional T ournament a t
Rio Grande. Southwestern took

Southern to thefourthquarterofthe
championship game beforerunnJng
out of gas.
Lost via graduation were all·
league performer Paul McNeal, a
&amp;-5 player, and Gary Baker, the
team's Door general.
Southwestern opens Its 198J.84
campalgn at Chesapeake Nov. 29.
Other non·leagueopponents Include
Oak HUI, Symmes Valley, Wahama
and Hannan, W.Va ..

EUiott, G · - .............. ............. ~9 Sr.

SievE' Pelb'ey. C ......... .......... ......... G-1 Jr.
Mike Bailey, F ......... .. .. ....... .. ...... ~w Jr.
Joe Bak..-, F ............... ................ &amp;1l Jr.
Will Halslop, G .............. ............... )..8

sw Schedule

Dec. 3, Symm... Vall"l/, Away
Dec. 6. Oak Hill, Away
Dec. 9, Nor-1h Gallla, Away
Dec. 16, Hannan Trace, Home
Dec. ro, Symm"" V~omo

Ga~- 29.:11· HoU~ay ·Mimament.
J an . 6, Eastern , Away
.
J an . 13, Kyger Crwk, Horne
J an . 17, Oak HUI, Home

Hrl'S JUMPER - Jay Evans (25) pumps In a jump shot during
Friday's action between the Meigs Marauders and Logan Chleftlans.
Meigs won the !Wo quarter contest, 29-25.

Jan. ro. Racine, Away
Jan. 24. Wahama, Away
Jan. 27, North GaUia, Hol'rl(!o
F~b. J. North Gallla, Home

F eb. 7. Hannan (W.Va. ), Hom e

Fe b. 10, Easter n, Home
Feb 14 . Wahama, Away ·
Peb. 17. Kyg..- c .....,k, Away

drop
Chieftians, 29-25

mo'?e. .

..

·

'

·

- The NFL Commissioner's
office was acting in a valid, loglcJJ
way by refusing to·Iet Mike Haynes
be peddled from the New England
Patriots to the Los Angeles Raiders
because the deal was consUil'\·
mated 40 minutes past the deslg·
natro deadline. All it did was invtte
more legal action.
- Mats Wilander ls another
Bjorn Borg. there's no physical
resemblance, and they don't even
.really pl~y altke except for twofisted backhand and backcourt
topspin strokes.
- Kenny Stabler still mertts
being starting quarterback of the
New Orleans Saints. Sure, Bum

.,

THE PLAINS -After j urn ping
to a quick 13-polnt lead, the Meigs
Marauder cagers held on for a•
two-period 29·25 win over bogan
here Friday In the annual Athens
Shrine Preview.

armour.
Graduation losses were Mike
Rossiter, Rick Watson and . Rlck
Barnes.
WUdcat Roster

Player - Pos.
Ht. Yr.
Rick Randolph, C ... ... ... .. ... ... ... ... .. 6-2 Sr
Jeff Barnes. F .. ..
. ..5-10 Sr.
Rob Brumfield. F .... ...... ... ..... ... ... 5-10 Sr .
Alan BaUey. G ............. .. .. .... .. :... .. 5-10 Sr.
Ellly Swain. F ..................... .......... G-0
Steve St1tt. F .... ....... .............. , .. .... 5-10
MikE' Davis. F ....... ... .... .. ..... ... .... .. S-10
Mark Sheets, G .. ....... ..
. . ...... . 5-S
Phil Ba.Uey, G ...... ...... ... .. ..... ...... .. 5.£
Deke Barnes, G ...... .. ... ....... .. , ....... 5-6
WUdcat &amp;:hedule

Jr.
Jr .
J r.
,Jr.
So.
So.

Nov. 19. Prevtev.·. A.way
Nov. 29 , Symmes VaU~·. Home
Dec. 2. North Gallia. Awa y
[)(&gt;c .

G. South Poi nt. Away

Dec. 9. Eastern. Home
Dec. 16. Sout hwestern. Away
Dec. 29. :ll. Ga llla Co. Toum .. Away
Jan 3. Falrla ncl. Away
Jan. 6. K yger Creek. Home
.
J a n. 13. Southern . Hom£&gt;
Jan. 17. Symmes Valley . Away

Jan. ~. North Gallla . Home
J an. 2~. SL J oe. Awa}'

J a n. 'li , Eastern. Away
Jan . 31. Fairland . Home
Feb. 3. Southwestern, Home
Feb. 7. St. JCX', Home
Fe b. 10. Kye:er Creek. Away
Feb. H. Hannan . W.Va .. Away
Fe b. 17. Southern. Away

Beechcroft
stops GAHS
REYNOLDSBURG _

Beech.

rro!t, defending Columbus City
League Champion, took a 12.0 lead
in the first three and one-half
minutes of play here Friday night
enroute to . a 33·18 victory over
Gallia Academy high School in a
pre·season cage preview here. The
Cougars jumped into a 16·6 first
pertod lead and finished with a 17
point secilnd quarter.
Chris E!Icessor · led the Blue
Devils wit h eight points. Wagner
topped Beechcrofl with six. Gallia
Academy had nine of 28 floor
attempts for 32 percent and was 0.3
at the foul line. Beechcroft con·
nected on 21 of 25 for 48 percent and
nl ne o f 20 a t the c h an'ty s t r 1pes.
GARS had 12 rebounds led by-Brett
Bostic's ftve. The Cougars had 22
rebounds and comm itted 13

tu~~~~~-h

~:s~~:;t~o:o~r~~~t~::

~~~~~~ce : : c l a ss
Phillips wants the wily old south·
paw around for spurts.

AAA

Gallia Academy (18) - Ellcessor 4-0-B;
Duncan 0.0-0: Carty ).(J-2: Wolfe 1-0-2: K.
Carter ()..(}.{):

Sophomore Rick Wise, wlm
opened the game with two 20-foot
jumpers, led Meigs with eight
points. Senior Jay Evans added
seven whUe sentor Ntck Riggs,
junior Jay Carpenter, and sopho·
more Mike Chancey had four each
in a balanced Marauder attack.
"We had a real good start and
played goOd defense the entire
ga me. I think we learned a lot and I
was real pleased with our play. The
key was that we outrebounded a
much bigger team and held them to
no offensive rebounds In the first
quarter, " commented Meigs'
second-year head coach Greg
Drummer.
Meigs made five of' six free
throws while Logan hit on one of
two. Meigs outrebounded the Chief·
tatns 21_13.
In other action, Federal-Hocking

Dres~l !J.O.{];

Bergdoll 1-0-2;

•
I
'

COLUMBUS- More than 250,(0} Francis, chief of the Division of
deer hunters will be looking for a Wildlife. "To hunt on private land
place -to hunt when the btg event ·requires permission of the Ian·
Ohio's deer gun season - starts downer and each year we have
Nov. 28. The Division of Wllullfe of problems with a few hunters who
the Ohio Department of Natural see m to di sregard thi s
Resources (ODNR) encourages requirement. "
hunters to consider the thousands of
Francis added that many Ohio
acres of free public hunting area counties have plentiful public huntavailable throughout Ohio.
Ing areas with easy access . Over
"Deer hunters should plan on one-half million acres of the free
exploring some of the state wildlife public hunting Is provided on state
areas and forests when looking for a wildlife areas, .state forests, the
place to hunt, " said Richard P.
Wayne National Forest and hold·

whipped Vtnton County 22-16, Alexander nipped Nelsonville-York 27·
26, and Trimble squeezed by Athens
40.39.
Meigs opens their season next
Friday at home against FederalHocking.
Meigs (29) - Chancey 1-2-4: Wise 3-2-8;
Evans n 7: Rlg!l'l 2.()4; Cafll&lt;!nter 2.()4;
Powell HJ-2: Welker IHHJ: Sbank IHHJ;
Kennety \).(}.(). Total!! J2.-S-29.
LoiM 1251 _ Mmer 5-1-11; M"l/ers ~;
conrad 1.{).2; Hood. 1.{).2; Stullebeam 1.{).2:
York H&gt;·2. Totals 12+25.
M~hq.u~~·......... .............. 28 s-29

., ,.

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•
'•

SLUGS

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ORANGE
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*Many Guns To Choose From
GUN ACCESSORIES: Cleaning Kits

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Complimentary
tickets available
for Redmen game
RIO GRANDE - Compllmen·
tary tickets are now available for
"Ohio Valley FOOdland Night" at an
upcoming Rlo Grande College
basketball game.
The tickets are avaUable for the
Dec. 3 g~me pitting the Redmen
and perennial West Virginia Con·
terence ' powerhouse Fairmont
State College. Game· time Is 7: 30
p.m .
Other promotional nights for the
remainder of the season include
Domino's Pizza Night on Dec. 7
against Pikeville College; Ohio
Valley Bank • Night on Jan . 28
against Cedarville College; Bob
Evans Farms Night on Feb. 4
against Malone College; and, ·
O'Dell Lumber Night' on Feb. 18
against Walsh College.
·
The Redrnen are coming off a
'Sle.u ar 2&amp;-11 season and advanced to ·
wniWl one game. of a berth Jn the
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POMEROY, OHIO 45769
PH: (614) 992-6737

ings of private corporations who
provide hunting through an agreement with the wlldlife division.
Lawrence County alone has
nearly 76,(0} acres of publlc land
Including large holdings of the
Wayne National F0rest.
The Sunday Creek Coal Co.
makes available nearly 20,(0} ~cres
for public hunting on Hocking and
Athens counties. These counties
also Include portions of the Mead
WUdllfe Area owned by the Mead
Paper Corporation, and state and
national forest lands totalling
nearly 75,(0} acres of public hunting
land In these counties.
VInton County has nearly 50,(0}
acres with the Zaleski State Forest,.
Wayne National Forest and Mead
. Wildlife Area lands. Scioto County
Includes portions of two state
forests, Brush Creek and Shawnee.
With Wayne National Forest In
Guernsey, Morgan, Noble and
Musklngum counties add another
92,500 acres to the llst.
The Mead WUdlife Area con·
tlnues Into Jackson and Washington
counties. Washington has nearly
50,(0} acres of public hunting, while
Jackson has 30,00 acres.

•

8:00-5:00 Mon.-Sat.
Close at Noon on Thurs.

0.3·3: Justice 1-0-2; Brooks 1.0.2. Totals 12-9-33.

An Independent Engage-A-Car"' Broker ·

The NFL said Peters' reinstatement also would depend on his
severing any "relattonship or association" with anyone involved in
drug·related misconduct and avoid·
tng any conduct "detrimental to the
integrity of professional football or
to public confidence In it."
Peters' case marked the second
time Rozelle has acted on a drug
problem this season. In July, he

~

PH. 992-2811 ·
:

case."

.••·

POMEROY. OH.

HOURS

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

Rozelle's ruling, the league said,
followed a hearing with P eters, the
player's attorney and a "thorough
review of all factors involved In this

.·....~··

HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN ST.

suspended running back Pete
Johnson and defensive end Ross
Browner of the ctnclnhatl Bengals,
linebacker E.J/ Junior of the St.
Louis Cardinals and defensive back
Greg Stemrlck of the New Orleans
Saints forfour preseasongamesand
four regular season games.

Redskins, Peters said Frtday, "I
accept CommiSsioner Rozelle's decision . I intend todedlcatemyselfto
performing my community service
and I will work as hard as possible to
gatn reinstatement into the Nattonal
Football League as soon as
possible." ·

•'

Pasquale 2-0-4; Garber 0-IJ.O; Fellw-E' 0-0-{);

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..•••

- ~·

EBE-RS BACH

Spletr 0-0-0: Boxtlc 0-0-0 and Llttlejohn 0-0.{).
Totals 5-3-18.
Beechcroft (93) - Smith H -J; Hairston
0-J.l ; Wagnt&gt;r J.0-6; Bradley 1-4-6; Rankin

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••••

•

.

8 17 25

Beechcrofi controlled
the game and both boards, veteran

•

OPENS MONDAY, NOV. 28TH

J~larauders

Jenkins belieyes the league race
will be well·balanced and tough .
According to Jenkins there will be
no easy win tn the league forHannan
Trace. "We will have to fight hard to
any wins we might get,". He sees,
Southern and Kyger Ctek fighting It
out for the top spot in tbeSVACwith
everyone else trying to dent their

·'

SEASO~

DEER

grand jury on Aug. 10. He pleaded
innocent to charges on Aug. 17 but
changed the plea toguUty onSept.2.
The Indictment saidPeterswaspald
$3,(0} by agents to act as the
middleman in a $l15,(XX) drug deal.
Last stimmer, Peters signed a
four.year, $185,®per-year · con·
tract with the Redskins. In being
suspended for two years , he forfeits
$370,txXl in salary besides having to
pay the $10,1XXJ court-ordered ftne.
Rozelle left Peters only one
chance of returning to the Ieagu&lt;'
before the 1!R5season. P eters will be
allowed to petition for reinstatement
after June 1, 1984.
·
Rozelle said the player'sreadmis·
sion would dgwn.!J on a number or
factors, tnclu!ling "satisfactory ad·
herence to the terms and Conditions
of his courl·imposed probation,
including completion of his com·
munlty service requirement."
In a statement released by the

Q\UEOUN
Free public hunting areas
pushed by ODNR personnel .

r

SEl'S UP PlAY- Before getUog ready lo set up an ollenslve play,
Meigs' lUck Wise (11) a 5-8 sophcmore, dribbles past a Logan player
during Friday's cage preview at Athens. Meigs won the two quarter
affair, 29-25. .

North

They must be kidding

a

'

Nov . 29, Chesapeake, Away
Dec. 2, Racine, Horne

ON SPORTS

They've got to be kidding when
they tell me:
- Nebraska doesn't run up the
score against hapless opponents.
When you score 60, 70 or &amp;l points.
you're not keeping the troops in
check.
- The Olympic Games in Los
Angeles are going to be held for the
glory of interna tiona ! competition
ampng youth, and . not for the
money. the only thing l ever hear
out of the LAOOC is what a great,
businesslike job, that gang of
bottom-line entrepreneurs ts doing.
- Professional basketball is a
team game. Without
Moses
Malone or Larry Bird of Julius
Erving or a young Kareem AbdutJabbar, you just don't win. And the
tempo of the game, with Its frenetic
24·second clock, is set to display
Individual brtlliance instead of
coordinated effort, unless you call
ctearing out one side of the court to
Jet \he star go one-on-one a. finesse

••

Jr.

MURRAY
OLDERMAN
By MWTay Oldennan

,,

r~ay.... - ......
Ht. Yr.
Roger Wells, G ...... ....................... 6-{) Sr.
Jorr Mook. G ... .. ......................... !Hl sr.
Randy Layton. F ........................... :&gt;-10 Sr.

Hannan Trace boasts
6 returning lettennen
MERCERVILLE - Looking for
vast improvement, Hannan Trace
Wildcat cage coach, Mike Jenkins,
has hopes forawlnnlngseasona.shis
team prepares for Its Nov. 29th
non-league engagement against
Syrmnes Valley.
Hannan Trace has six returning
lettermen from last year's squad
)llhich complied .an overall, 10.11
record. They include &amp;-2center Rick
Randolph ; 5·10 forwa rd Jeff
Barnes; Rob Brumfield , a ,5-10,
senior forward; Alan Bailey, .5-10
senior guard; B!Uy Swain, 6-0 senior
forward a nd Deke Barnes, 5-6
sophomore guard.
Others working hard for starting
berths are Steve Stitt, 5-10; 5-10,
Mike Davis , and 5-8 MarkSheets,all
juniors, and sophomore guard Phil
Bailey.
Coach J enkins, entering his fourth
year at Hannan Trace after a long
tenure as reserve coach at Ross
Southeastern, feels his clubwill1Jlay
an aggressive defense and should
have unselfish teamwork. He lists
the squad 's overall size as a major
we&gt;ikness. "We have a dedicated
group Who will work hard to
improve their weaknesses and
expand their strengths. Hopefully ,
by the end oftheseason , we can have
a veiY competitive team against
any team we might face,".

NEW YORK (AP) - Tony
Peters, an All-Prp safety for the
Washington Redskins, was paid
$3,(Xl}for his part Iii a drug deal that
may have cost him $38J,OO) and two
years of his career In '!he Nattonal
Football League.
·
On Friday, NFL Commissioner
Pete Rozelle extended Peters'
suspension, which began with this
season, through the 1984 season in
what was belleved to be the stiffest
league penalty ever levied against a
player for drug involvement .
.Peters was sentenced in federal
court on Oct. 7 to two concurrent
four·year prison terms, both . of
which were suspended, and fined ·
$10,(0} after he was convicted of two
drug charges that Included conspi·
racy to distrtbute cocaine. In
addition, Peters was ordered by the
court to perform 500 hours of
community service.
Peters was Indicted by a federal

S.uthw-m Rostei

Rob

Porneroy-Middle}lelri-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleosont

GALLIPOLIS

240 Third Avenue

446-1813
... •

. ,. Parts

1704 Ettstem Avenue
446·4204

POMEROY .

, 119 W. 2nd
992-2139

POINT PLEASANT AUTO PARTS

515 l1in St. 2611 Jackson Avenue
675-1520
675·2731
~

PIUI

outoltor•a . . .

-...J ·

MASON

Route 33

773-5511

STOP IN AND SEE
Merrill, Jay and Alan Evans
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 A.M. • 8 P.M.
SATURDAY 8 A.M. • 3 P.M.

�l'age-C-8-The Sunday Times-Se~tinel

November 20, 1983

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

State/ ational

Lousy year hasn't
tarnished Ferraro
CLEVElAND (AP) - The 1983 touching stories of spring tra!nlng
baseball season took a turn for the thlsyear.
He was hospltallzed to have hJs
worse be(ore It ever began for Mike
Ferraro, whose aborted tenn as cancerous left kidney removed in
manager of the Cleveland Imllans early February. But two weeks
did nothing to queU hls enthusiasm later, he was in Tucson, Ariz.,
dlrecting the Indians' workouts
for the game.
from
a gol!cart oo he would not have
"I'm just looking right now to get
back into basebaU," Fermrosaldby to strain Wmsel! by walking around
telephone from hJs home in Fort the !mining complex.
Lauderdale, Fla. "I was happy with
whatiwasdo!ngbefore (coaching).
There was the possibility through·
But the OpiXJrtunity to manage in the out the next few months that the
major leagues only comes along
cancer would reappear, but it has
once for some people. That's why I
not, Fermro said.
trted lt. I guess It just wasn't the right
"I'm 100 percent. No problems.
time forme."
Right now, l feel so good I'm just
Ferraro was fired by the Indians Itchy to get back," he said.
on July 31, with the team f!rtnly in
His half year at the helm of the
last place in the American League
Indians was not long enough for
East at 40-00. (They endM the
Ferraro to develop much affection
season in thedlvtsloncellar.) He had
for the team In general, although he
been hired under a two-year
kept an eye on its progress under his
contmct durtngtheoff·season, after
replacement, Pat Corrales. There
spending four years as a coach for
was modest Improvement, which
the New York Yankees.
did not surprtse him.
At the time he was fired, Fermro
"!thought the ballclub had a lot of
said IJe felt like he had been "shot in
IXJtential. I still do. It's just a matter
the back" by the Indians. Now it
ofputtlngthings together," Fermro
appears he has nieUowed. He says
said.
he holds no bitterness toward
Individually, some of the Indians.
Indians' President Gabe Paul or
turned In performances that made
General Manager Phil Seghi.
him particularly proud. even after
"When you're losing, you can
he was fired. ·
expect that sort ofthingtohappen,"
''Therearesomepeopletherethat
Ferraro said. "I'm sure Gabe and ·I cared for, and some that I didn't
Phil felt there should be a change · care for. Sol was pulling for the ones
made. No, I'm not bitter at. all."
I cared for," Ferraro said.
In fact, Ferraro said he has good
Atop the list of thooe he cared for
reason to be thankful that he was
was .left-handed rookie pitcher Neal
able to take part of the summer off.
Heaton, who finished the season
The rest, he said, allowed him to
with a record of 11· 7 and an earned
recuperate fuUyy from cancer
run avemge of 4.16.
surgery he underwent Feb. 9.
"I was happy toseeNealdothejob
"It's been a hectic year since the
that he did," Fermro said. "I was
ninth of February," he said. "I kind
the one who Installed h1m Into the
of missed It (baseball), bull also felt
starting rota tlon. I felt all along that
like I needed the rest."
he was a very capable pitcher. Any
Fermro' s bout with cancer- and
time you see a young player do well,
his refusal to let it interfere with his
you're happy. You liketoseeyoung
-job - provided one of the more
players do well.''

·Local bowling•.•.
Monday NIW Mh:ed
1!18.'1
Octolx&gt;r

:nl

W. L.. Total

'J\:!am

Pomeroy Health CarE&gt;
Center .. .. . . . . .
...... 50 Zl 15665
Par H!ll F ord .. .. .. ....
. . .42 lJ 15593
Chat ea u Beauty Salon ........ ..... 40 32 14918
Melgs-Ca llla 95 .......... , .. , ...... 32 40 12934
Slmmons-Olds ....
. ..... 30 .a2 12589
Naflonwlde Insurance .. .
. ... 22 50 14~1
Team series - Pomeroy Health CarE'
Cent er 1917: P1 Hill Ford 1763; Chatf'au
Beauty Salon 1671 .

Team game - Pomeroy Health Care
Cent er 687; Pat Hill Ford 667: Pomeroy
Health Care Center 634.

Men sertes - Raymond Smith 551: Bob
Smith 547: Rufus J("We ll 535.

women series -

Marler.~e

Wilson 492:

Doltle Nelson 460: Thelma Ost:orne 416.

Men games- Rufus Jewell ~1; Ron Smi th
197: Raymond Smlrh 193. .

women games- Marlene Wilson 171-182;

Dottle Nlehm 164-176; Lydia Smith. Thelma
'Osborne 152.
Mondl\\o' Nlte Mixed
November 1, 19&amp;3
W.
Team
•
Pom eroy Healt h Care
Cen!Pr .... .... ..... .................. 56
P at Hill Ford ... .................." .... 50
Chateau Beauty Sh0p ...... ... ... .. .42
Mel.gs-Gallla 95 ... ,. ...... ........ .... 36
S!mmolt'i-Olds .. .. .............. .... ... JO
Natonwlde 1nsurance ......... ..... 126

L. Total
24
lJ
38
44

17427
17560
16579
14440
13962

~
~ 16568

Team SE'Tles - Pa! Hill Ford 1967;
Pomeroy Health Care Center 1762: Chatea u
seauty Shop 1745.
Team games - Pat HUI Ford 675: .Pat Hill
Ford G19." 6Tl: Pomeroy Health Care Center
619.
.
Men series - Raymond Smith 553: Ron
Smith 53.1; Rufus Jewell495.
Men games - Ray mond Smith 212; Ron
Smith lm; Steve Grimm, Tim Thomas 183.
WoznE&gt;n ·series - Thelma Osbome 515:
Linda Smith 468: Dottie Nelson 459.
Women gamfS - Marlene Wilson 187:
Thelma OsOOrne 179; Dollie Nelson 176.
Pomeroy BowHng Lanes
Early Wedne.liday Mix~

League
Nove mher !1, 19R3

Team
Pis.
Tony's Carry Out ... .. ..
. .... . 52
Smit h·Ne-lson Motors .. . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . .. .. .. .. 46

. Eagles Club,... .... .. .....

.. . .. .... ............ 40

No. 5 ..
. .... ................. .40
No.3. . ..... .
.. ......... .. 34
Roac hrs Gun Shop ., . ... ........ .. .. .. ... .... 28
High serll"S · - . S~ Russell fl40, Carolyn
Bachner 529; Russ Carson 504, Pat Carson

Monday Nlte Mixlod
No"ember 14, 19&amp;1

Team
M'. L Total
lc. ,
,
Pomeroy Health Care
Cente r ....... ...........~ .. ........... 62 26 19263
Pat Hill Ford ... : ......... ....... .. .... 54 34 19248
Chatea u Beauty Salon ........... .. .46 42 18)95
Me1gs.Callla 95 ..... .. .. .......... .... 38 50 15822
Slmmons-Oids .. ............ ... .. .. ... . 34 54 15202
N&lt;:~tlo nwide Insurance .. ... ..... .. .. ]) 58 181.89
Team series - Pomeroy Health Care
Center 1836; Pai Hill Ford 1688; NaTionwide
insuranre 1611.
Team games • - Pomeroy Heallh Care
Center 661 , 634 ; Chateau Beauty Salon 625:
N&lt;:~tionwlde lnsurance 625.
Men series - Rufus Jt&gt;Well 509: Raymond
_Smith 495: Mose Norman 488 . .
Men games -Rufus Jewell179·182; Eddie
Nelson 180; Raymond Smith 176.
Women sertes - D:mle Nebon fJ09; Dottle
WUI 507; Selby Manley 417.
women ga~ - Dortk' Nelson IDT: Donie
WUI 182; Debbie Thomas 111.
Monday Nl\e Mb:ed
Oct. u. 1983
T•am
W. L.. Total
Pomeroy Health Care
Center ... ... ... ... .. ................. rl4 :;[) 1.1748
Pat Hill Ford .. ... .. ............. ,.... . 40 2-1 13818
Chateau Beaury Salon .. .... ........ 40 24 1.1247
" M.:&gt;Igs Gallla 95 ....... .. ........ .. .... 24 40 11403
Sirrunons Olds ., ...... ..... .. ... .... .. 24 «J 11oc.3
Natlonwlde.Insurai1Cf' ... ... ..... ... ';JJ 44 1.1134
Team series - Chilt&lt;'au Beauty Salon 1892;
Pat Hill Ford 1749: Pomerov Health Care
Center 1706.
•
.
Team game; -Chateau &amp;oauty Salon 667,
6.lJ; Pat HUl Ford GCti.
.
Men ~es- Rufus Jewel\571; Bob Smith
518; Ron Smith 504.
Women series - Betty Whitlatch 495;
Marlent' WilSon 48J: Selby ManlPy 43.1
Men games - Rufus Jf'V!·cll 211 . Wl: Ron
,Smith 189.
Women ~ames- Betty Whitlatch 181, 119;
Marlene Wilson 174.

No. 3 .......

..- .... .......... .. .28

Roach 's Gun Si'lop ... , .......... .. .. ...... .. .... .. 26
Hi,gh series - Bob Couch 546, Pat Carsoo
5.ll; Speed RusseU 536, Isabelle Couch 482.
High game - Speed Russell 221, Candy
VanMeter 198; Russ Carson 201. Pat Carson
18!1
Skyline BowUnc Lanes
Momlng Glories

No". 8, 1183

Team
Pt.-;.
The.Fabrlc Shop ....... .. ... .......... .... .. ........ -14
Simmons Olds. Cadillac
and Chev.' ........ .' .... ..... .... .......... .. ........ :E
Francis Flor\St .............. .. .. ;.......... ... ...... 36
Herald OU &amp; Gas Co.. .... .. .... .................. 36

521,
Hlghgame -Ron Cooc ht!!!i. HI'IffiPhelps _ CustornPrlnt ., .= .. .......... ............ .. ...... .. 32
190: Speed Russell 182, Pat Carson 189.

Team series_ Tony's Carry Outt9:11

Team game- Smith-Nelson Motors®.

GaUer)• Aatr Arts , ......... ... ... ........ .. .........ll

High lndlvklual game - Junel.am,.,.tt93;,

Fran Matthews 182; DorL'i Gruf'Ser 181.'
High Individual three-games - Darts
. Grueser 500: June Lambet1 498: Fcan
Team ·
Pts. Matthews 477.
Tony's Carry Out ..... ......... ......... .......... 44
High team game- Gallery Hair Arts 823.
Nov. 5 .. ....................... .... ... .. ... .... ...... .40 ~: Herald'sOll&amp;GasCo.B10.
No\'ember 2. ltt82

Smith-Nelson
Motors.. .....
...... ....... . .........
...........
. 40
Eagles Club.......
.. ......
38

Celeste say$ he'II watch nuclear war 01ovie
By JOHN CHALFANT
ABICiatecl Press Writer
COLUMBUS, OhiO (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste
· won't be home Sunday night when ABC-TV telecasts
"The Day After," a controversial !lim about nuclear
war. But he's made arrangements to watch It at a
meeting of Democratic governors.
" I'm going to be with Democratic governors In
Washington and at my request we will all be watching
It together .with an opiXJrtunlty of discussing It
afterWards," Celeste said.
Celeste, who will be accompanied by hJs wl!e
Dagmar on the trip, said up to a dozen state chief
executives are expected to view the motion picture at
the Democratic Governors Association meeting.
The Celestes and Secretary of State Sherrod Brown
have joined church, union and c!v!c groups In urging.

VINTON - Eleven returning
lettermen form the nucleus for the
1983 wrestling team at)'lorth Gallla
High SchooL The 29 member squad
hopes to better last year's 13-7
record under fourth year coach Ted
Lehew. ·
Leading this season's team are
Matt Kemper, 265 IXJund senior;
Mark Foreman atl75IXJunds; Scott
Roush, 138 IXJunder and Todd
Regan, 105 pounder. Other letter·
men Include Jim Sowards, Lee
Booth, Blll Harder, Chuck Easter,
Eric Downey, Kevin Burnett and
Joe Moore.
Other team members Include
Kelly Ghapman, Scott Donahue,
Eddie Doppie, Dave harless, Rl·
• chard Hurt, Mike Jackson, Jim
Jenkins, John Kinney, ' Randy
Geiser, Mark Bowen, Dennis May,

Chuck Lewis, Kevin Pope, Tim
Neekamp. Mark Ritemeyer, Dan
Smallwood, Mike Spears, and Tim
Taylor.
The Pirates open their season
Dec. 6 with a scrimmage against
Federal Hocking.

SUN., NOV. 27, 1983
12:00 TO 5:00 P.M.

Pirate Schedule
Dec. 6, Federal Hocking scrimmage, away
Dec. 10, VInton, sway
Dec. 13, Gallla Academy, away •

Please stop by. We'll have
wall-to-wall ideas for the
season awaiting you.

Dec. 17, Coal Grove, away
Dec. 21, Pt. Pleasant, away
Dec. 27·28. Meigs Tournament, away
Jan. 7, Gallipolis tournament, away
Jan. 14, Pt . Pleasant, Federal Hocking,

Gl FTS, unique &amp; colorful.

home

Jan. 18, Me igs , Vinton, away
Jan. 21, Fairland, away
Jan. 28, Gallla Academy, Coal Grove, home

DECORATIONS,

Feb. 11, Fairland, Federal Hoddng , home
Feb. 2ol-25, Dlstrlct, U cking Helghts, ~way
March 2·3, Regional, Washlnglon Coun

CHEER,

in every corner to add
more fun and enjoyment to your
holiday.

House
March 9-10, St.ate, Columbus

Watson, the 1983 British Open
champion and second·round leader
of the 72-hole tournament, had three

birdies against two bogeys for a 71,
his best score in the IJlree.day play.
Larry Nelson, the first round
leader, was lied forthlrdplareat216
withfeUow AmericanFredCo.uples,
Japan's Isao Aokl, the ' 1983 Ha, wailan Open and Japan Open
winner, and Taiwan's Chen Tze
M!ng.
Aoki, who dropped a hole-In-one
on the third hole Frtday and
recelved$1,28Jfortheseventhace!n
hJs professional career, shot a 71.
Couples had 68 and Ming 71.
Johnny Miller, winner of the
Inverrary Classic, was tied for
seventh place with ,Japan's Fujio
Kobayashi at 219.

"We Look forward to Seeing You!"

AQ~Wt4...J FLORIST
·~a

~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

scored three assist.
Univel'!\ity of llilno!s at Chicago
center Mike Rucinski, another
freshman, scored one goal and one
assists.
Ohio State holds a 12.0 record
ovemll and 9.() In theCen tral College
Hockey Association.
University of Illinois at Chicago Is
2·9 overall and 2-7ln the league.

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)- Here are
results and pairings for the first round of the
slate high school football playof[S as released
by the West Virginia Secondary School 1 ~~==
· :F:Iel=d==::::::::::;l
Activities Commission.
Class 1\AA
FJ1day, Nov. 18
Morgantown 24. Fairmont West 8
Charlt&gt;Ston 10. Parkersburg 0
BarboursvtJle 24, East Bank 15
•

GERN IE'S

No. 4 Weir i9·1) vs . No. 5 Beckley !8-l J
Class AA
Friday, Nov. 18

cerem.Kenova 14, Greenbrier wests
Class A
Friday,Nov.18

Heating &amp; C00 J"mg

.

AHf!ur'A'Siitt.aUIE
lb.&amp;E-\\QMER

.Wood/Coal
Stove
BestQUauty
In A Cebinetl

. o.\
c"
~\le, .
SAM PO

SAM PO

New Interior Secretary confinned
.WASHINGTON (AP) - The
immlnee was William P . Clark, but
the style and substance - and
controversy - of the depart
James G. Wait held sway over th
Senate as it voted to approve the
president's choice for secretary of
the Interior.

WORKER INJURED- A poUceman kneels over an Injured man
Identified as Roberi Glenn, a 113-yeal'&lt;lld construction worker who was
stnrok by a bus, seen upper right, as it left the Boston terminal of the
Greyhound Bus Complljl)' Friday. It was the seoond day of
demonstrations at the site as the oompany continued to roll buses
despite a drivers' strike. ( AP Laserphoto).

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Clark was praised by sup
and opiXJnent alike as a dec
likeable sort, one who was ling to
listen to all views and who obviously
had the supiXJrt and confidence of
the president.
But nearly one-fifth of the Senate,
all Democrats, voted against con-

firming Clark for the post, citing
their lingering distaste for his
predecesoor. Clark was confirmed
71-18on Frtday.
' "Th~ Issue before us !las much
less to do with the individUal than
with the destructive natural resource policies of this adm!nistra ·
tlon," said Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo.,
in urging his colleagues to opiXJse
Clark.
Clark, formerly President Rea·
gan's natlooal securtty adviser, was
chosen to take the hot seat that Watt
vacated. Wati, probably the most
controversial and confrontational
secretary ever to hold the post,

resigned Oct. 9 In the Oap that
followed his description of a coal
advisory commission as consisting
of "a black, ... a woman , two Jews
and a cripple."
In Friday's debate, however, the
focus was on the substance of Watt's
tenure, Including his aggressive
drive to open public lands and
offshore tracts to mineral exploration and his supiXJsed hostility
toward preservation of natumi
resources. OpiXJnents said the
Senate made a mistake by con!irming Watt in 1981, and that it should
not repeat the error simply because
Clark is more likeable.

Vacaton
Breathless
10 to Midnight
The Survivors
Yor
Dolly Parton (live)
Harry Tracy
Daffy Duck
"'uscle Motion
Private School
Dark Crystal

n.a...m-

SEND RESUME TO:
PAUL A. BARKER
CIRCULATION MANAGER
%THE DAILY SENTINEL
P.O. BOX 729
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

or

OPEN
MON. thru FRI. til 8
SATURDAY til 5

',

Extremist vows retaliation
against peacekeeping !orce

0

Upper Rt. 7
Just South of the
·Holiday Inn

Hjpootl:-)'
•Beo&amp;Corop"3)' lecbdG-la

Marines from the 28th Marine Arilphibious Unit and
three companies from the 4th Hondumn Infantry
Battalion.
About 3,500 U.S. troops already are in Hondums In
the Big Pine II exercl~ that started in August and
could last until March. The exercises, which include
training of Hondumn troops and construction of
airstrips and other facUlties, emphasize the Reagan
adminlstmtion's SUPIXJrt for Honduras In the
turbulent region.
The landing force and its supiXJrt came from six
U.S. ships waiting offshore since Monday. The troops
went In against a "rebel force" made up of two U.S.
companies and a Honduran company already in

- {:---.

position a few miles inland.
One of the American companies came in from
Panama and parachuted into Honduran territory
Monday.
The landing in Honduras kicks off two weeks of
maneuvers.
Part of the force came ashore in landing craft with
the supiXJlt of MOO tanks, while the rest were airU!ted
by helicopters into a landing zone on the beach. The force will split toward four different objectives where
the "rebel force" is holding out.
The landlDg force musi advance through a swampy
term!n along the coast before moving toward higher
ground.

Huge Chilean crowd demands
President Pinochet step do~

'I'RlPOLI, Lebanon (AP) - PLO Nov. 3 againSt Arafat forces In and
loyaUsts and mutineers battled at around Tripoli- his last foothold in
the Baddawi refugee camp In north the Middle East.
Lebanon Saturday, whilealeaderof
Meanwhile, Hussein Milsawi, the
pro-Iranian eXtremists vowed ''new head of the Amai Islamic Movemethods of suicide retaliation" ment, a pro-Iranian group of Shiite
against the multinational peace- Moslems, Issued this threat to the
keeping force in Beirut.
multinational force:
Loyalist officials of Yasser Am"Plenty of our suiCide men,
fat, chalrntan of · the Palestine wearing their death shrouds, shall
Liberation Organization, claimed . chase them around. the cl.ock. The
thJs morning to control all of the ~rs willlaste new metltod;;
Baddawl camp, on the northeaStern of silicide I1!1allatlon that they
outsldrts of thJs northern port city.
haven't experienced before."
But JoYallstflghters told reporters
Musawi, 44, spoke. Friday night at
their force recaptured . only the a newaConterem:e !neastLebimon's
siluQiern section of the embattled. Bekaa Valley !oWn' of Baalbek. His
camp In a CllUllter·attack launched commentswerepubllshedbyBelrut
Friday aaalnstSyrian·backedmutl· newspapers Saturday.
neers seeking to depose Amfat.
Israeli and French warplanes
A srurce among the loyalists saki bombed Amal Islamic Movement
Arafat's fot'CI!I, led by their 54-year- bases In the Syrlan·held valley
old chiel, took 68 pl1aoners In the Wednesday and Thursday In retail·
counter-attack. Insisting on aiJo. tlatlon for the Oct. 23 suicide ·
nymlty, he saki the loyalists fed
truck·bomblngS the French and '
supplies throoah the Manlroubln U.S. bases In Beirut and an Identical
nelablxtl bood Just oulllde Tripoli, attacll Nov. 4 against an Israeli
whlcb tbi!y bad IIIIIIIIIfled to retain mllltary.post at Tyre:
wileD the mutineers captured Bid·
'Ibe multlnatlollal force Includes
dawl on Wednelday.
U.S. Marlnel and troops from
'1be miatlneen ad:u8e Anltat of France, Italy and Brittan.
............ llle umed ltnlale
Mulawl dllclalmedresponsiblllty
18raellll favor f1 IW&amp;:otia· for the attacks.
.They Iauuch¢ the cb1ve on

•Ill" Doop FIN 8os

•Aa-.tlo Dcnra Jlnft Coalnlll Far

U.S. forces Invaded Grenada Oct. 25 with the
declared mission of rescuing hundreds of Americans
following a bloody coup on the Marxist-ruled island.
The result was that the junta was toppled.
The Nicaraguan goveniment , warned of an
"Imminent" U.S. invasion and announced a massive
war mobilization after the U.S. invasion of Grenada.
ordering 40,000 reservists and militiamen to reiXJrl for
military training.
Repeated denials by U.S. officials of any invasion
plans have faUed to dispel the spreading war jitters In ,.
Nicaragua.
The landing force for the simulated counterguerrilla offenslve here included almost 1,000

PUERTO CASrn...LA, Hondums (AP) - About
l,OOl U.S. Marines and 500 Hondumn infantrYmen
landed on the Caribbean beach east of Puerto Castilla
Frtday In maneuvers that neighboring Nicaragua
con5lders a prelude to an ll)vasion.
Nicaragua's leftist goverrunent has moblilzed
reserves and stepped up war preparations. But the
U.S. ambassador in Nicaragua, AnthonY Quainton,
said Thursday that Nicaragua's fears were "exaggerated" and there will be no invasion.
Col. James Strachan, a u.s. anny spdkesman, said
the landing near Puerto CastU!a WS$ "similar to the
amphibious operation carried out in Grenada ·
recently."

dio System • Walnut grain high impact plas·
tic cabinet

0

Friday in Boston, one hit by a bus
and another stepped on by a IXJlice
horse as mounted patrolmen escorted buses out and tried to keep
order.'
In San Francisco, where two
people were arrested and three ·
Injured Thursday as riot IXJllce .
stepped in, Mayor Dianne Feinstein
cited potential · harm to "innocent .
bystanders" in seeking suspension
of Greyhound service through
California.
In Phoenix, where negotiations
resumed Tuesday, union leaders
wllo earlier refused to put Greyhound's new three-year contract
offer to a vote unless the company ,
halted service changed their minds
and agreed to let the rank and file
vote anyway.
Neither side releaseddetallsofthe
new offer, on which union members
must vote by Nov. 29, but some union
sources who requested anonymity
said the new versionsel thewagecut
a I 6.5 percent.

Honduras exercise: Marines stor01 beaches

MODEL K·1921
• 19" tdiagl Color TV • MIRA-BRITE
picture tube • Ml RA·COLOA Circuit •

'

Greyhound drivers made an aver·
By The Associated Press
San Francisco's mayor sought a age of $27,000 a year under a
halt to Greyhound service .in contmct that expired bet. 31.
"I don't believe our people wlll
California for safety reasons and a
volley of eggs greeted buses In take It, but I've been wrong before
Boston as scattered violence con· and in our union, the membership is
tinued for a second day against supreme," said Ellis Franklin.
union international vice president.
non.strlklng drtvers.
But only 11 arrests - one . In
Greyhound, using 1.300 replaceLouisiana and 10 in Boston, where ment employees and 1,410 union
members of non·Greyhound unions members who crossed picket lines,
joined an egg-throwing demonstmresumed service Thursday in 27
tion as buses left the terminal states for the first time since the
were reported nationwide Frtday,
strike began.
compared with more than 100 the
Greyhound could not provide
previous day.
figures on ridership Frtday. The
In Phoenix, leaders of the previous day the company said
Amalgamated Transit Union pre- -'nearly 6,000 passengers rode on
dicted the 12,700 member8 of the about 500 buses- about 50 percent
rank and file would defeat an of a nonnalloact.
amended contract proposal that still
In Boston, a federal judge
calls for cuts in wages and benefits.
declined to Issue an order limiting
An earlier version, whose rejec· pickets after union leaders said
lion led to the walkout Nov. 2, called demonstrators would be limited to
for wage cuts the company said 80 at the terminal doors and would
totaled 9.5 percent, but which the not interfere with people or buses.
union said were closer to 30 percent.
At least two people were hurt

NEW YORK (AP) - AdveJ:(lsers
bought all the avallablecorrunercial
time for "The Day After,'' ABC's
controversial drama about nuclear
war, but at rates far below the
original asking price, a network
executive says.
H. Weller Keever, ABC's vice
president for sales, denied, how·
ever, that the network had offered
SIXJnsors preferential trealment on
future programs.
"No promises were made that ·
anyone gets pre!erentlal treat·
men!," Keever said Frtday In
resiXJnse to a reiXJrt from Madison
Avenue. He conceded thatcomnner·
cial SIXJts were sold for an average of
$100,&lt;XXl, about Ui,OOJ below the
network's first asking price for a
:.J-second SIXJI.
"The Day After," produced for $7
mtillon, graphically depicts death,
tlestructlon and despair from a
nuclear attack on Kansas. Most of
the 25 commercials durtng the
2\4·hour movie will be shown during
the first half of the film- before the
attack scenes.
One advertising agency execu·
tlve, who asked that his name not be '
used, said, "I've never felt this kind
of pressure to buy an ABC program
in my life.
"They're telling us !hat purchasers in this program will be given
favored treatment and will be
remembered by ABC for a long
time, thalwe'ilhave (he inside track
for ABC's top programs," he said.
That means SIXJDSOrs could pay
now and get time later on ABC's
most popular programs, like
"Three's Company" and "Dynasty;" which have more advertiser
interest thali time available, the ad
agency executive said .

Churches and the MetroiXJlitan Area Church Board of
Columbus.
.
President Don Wilson of the statewide teachers
group said "The Day After" was "not just another
horror movie" but should be taken seriously,
•
especially Its effect on children.
"The OEA and the (National Education Association) are not opiXJsed to the fllm but are urging
parental discretion and Involvement with their
cl)lidren In Its viewing," Wlison said.
"I would suggest that if used properl:{the film can
be used as a starting IXJlnt for building hope in the
minds of young people rather than despair. It should
be used as a starting IXJinl for strengthening our
resolve to work for peace and pr~ent nuclear
proUferatlon and a destructtve arms race," he said . .

•

*COmmerCI• al
1
*Resl'dentia

CALL 446"" 3217

~116'

Helping you s4y it right

Saturday, Nov. lB
No. 1Grafton [9-1\ vs. No. 8CalhounCounry
19-11 at Mountaineer Fteld
No. 3 Winfield (9·11 vs. No.6 Magnolia j8-21

at Wheeling Island, 1:30 p.m.

I. t'IAIN • POI'tEROr, otiiO
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

W.Va. playoffs at a glance

Satunlay,No,. l9

.

PH.. 992-2644 lOW

.

Buckyes skate past Illini, 8-2
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - The
freshmen, led bydefensemanShane
Erickson who scored two goals, took
over in another winning hockey
match for Ohio State Fridaynightas
the Buckeyes skated past the
University of Illinois at Chicago, 8-2.
Freshman center Dave Beaudin
scored one goal and one assist, and
freshman defenseman Andy Brown

•

festive and

imaginative.

Feb. 4, Glouster, Federal Hocking, hotlle'

Simpson shares tourney lead
MIYAZAKI, Japan (AP)- Scott
Simpson birdied five holes on his
way to a 5·under-par 67 Saturday to
share the third-round lead with
fellow American Tom Watson in the
~.500 Dunlop Phoenix Golf
Tournament.
Slmpoon ~nd Watson, a four-time
leading money-winner on the PGA
Tour, each finished with 54 hole
scores of 1·under-par 215 over the
6,991·yard, par· 72 course '{)f the
Phoenix Country Club In southern
Japan.

\

and to really do thls," she said.
"Don't just watch. Don't be passive. Be empowered
by lt. Do something right away and thengoondo!ngit
until we get thJs problem \lcked," she said.
The Celestes took part In a news conference Friday
orgahlzed by the Reverse the Anns Race Federation
of the Ohio-Nuclear WeaiXJns Freeze Campaign.
Brown said the TV program should serve as a call
to action.
"I am here today to lend my supiXJrt to this effort to
head off what could be mankind's final great mistake
- a nuclear war," Brown said. "It's not hopeless.
There are things we can do."
Also at the session were representatives of Ohio
CouncilS of the American Fedemtlon of State, County
and Municipal Employees, the Ohio Education
Association, Corrunon Cause Ohio, the Ohto Omnctl of

Pickets limited in Boston;
California suspension urged

'The Day After'
sold out at less
than asking price

Pirate wrestling team
features 11 lettermen

Halr·-1-;:S;t~.F;r~an~cls;9.~M~ea~do~w~B;rl~d~ge~8~:;:::;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~

·RESPONSIBILITIES WILL INCLUDE ·SALES.
·. CARRIER RECRUITMENT, COLLECTIONS AND
IMPROVEMENT OF SERVICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.
-EXPERIENCE IN SALES OR WITH YOUTH ORGANIZATIONS HELPFUL BUT NOT NECESSARY.
Only Persons qf Good Character Need Apply.

Pirates are led by 6-~. 28.'1 pound senior Malt Kemper. Coach Ted
Lehew's Pirates posted a 13-7 record Jut season.

PREPARES FOR OPENER- North Gallla's wrestling team led
by 11 returning lettennen has begun pre-season conditioning for the
team's practice scrimmage Dec. 6 against Federal Hocking. The

H.Jgh2400:
teamHerald's
three-games
Gallery
Arts
01.1 &amp; - Gas
Co. 2119:
Simmons Olds. ~dillac and Chev. 22'74.

District Circulation Manager
Wanted for Area Newspaper

all Ohioans to tune in the program which depicts the
effect of a nuclear attack on Kansas City.
Celeste said he hoped viewers would not be silenced
by the film but moved to speak out and share their
personal concerns.
"Not to be paralyzed by it but rather to be
galavanlzed to act in ways tha t will allow us as
concerned citizens, as communities across this state
and across this nation, to mobilize effectively to find ..
finally, a way to begin to wind down the nuclear arms
race and make this a safer world ," he said.
Mrs. CeleSte said that in addition to watching,
viewers should envision a world without nuclear
weapoi\S.
"Envision it differently , rename this horror story
and put a happy ending of our own to it for our
chUdren, for ourselves, for our sisters and brothers,

'

REilEJ B m FORT AREA- Ruse eloudo .. b1ac1t: 1111101u! rile up
from the Trlpol pori area Saturday after It was hit by artillery and
IIIOiiar llllelll from PLO Rebels. 'l1le Syrian backed rebels were firing
at J'ro.Arafllt Pill !"Milot• tllat are localed In the pori area. Two aNpe
are 11ee11 lmallllllder IIIIOke ln.center of pholo. (AP ~) .

unison, "Murderers! Murderer·
SANTIAGO, Chile · (AP) s! "At other times they chanted,
Hundreds of thousands of demon"The government will fall."
strators jammed a downtown park
to denounce the mllitary govern·
They filled a mile-long, block- .
ment of President Augusto Pinochet
wide
section of the park and
and demand the return of democoncrete grandstand normally used
cratic rule. .
_
for military parades.
Police tear-gassed people who
The main speaker, Enrique Silva
tried to raUy outside the park as the
Clnuna, president of the Democtemonstmt!on ·F riday ended, and
cratic Aliiance.coalition that organone teen·ager died while being
Ized the demonstation , called for
chased by officers.
'
Pinochet to · step ·aside for a
But the main rally, described by
transition government.
.organizers as the largest in Chile's
"The country is bankrupt," he ,
. iilstory, was calm in comparloon
said.
''This Immense catastrophe is . •
. with previous demonstrations .
d\Je
tp
the nbst!nacy of our IXJiitlcal •
where clashes with police have left
and
eeonomlc
authorities, but they :
70people dead.
are
Incapable
of recognizing their
Organizer's estlmated the cro)Yd .
!allure.
That's
the way authoritaiin O'Higgins Park, outside the city
ian
regimes
are.
·•
center, atonemllUoo people, which
He
urged
an
end to torture Qf
would be one-fourth Santiago's ·
dissidents,
the
disbanding
of the
IXJpulatlon. There was no estimate
secret polk:\! and rejection of a :
by the govenunent.
recent law giving mining conces.
Green·unlfonned national IXJiice
slons to foreign companies.
stood Impassively at the park's
It Willi the latest In a series of
entrances as speakers on an outdoor
anti·govemment demonstrations
stage, under a huge banner reading
that began In May. Plnochet since
"Democracy," denounced Plhas promised to consider reopening
nochet's government to the wild
cheers nf the demonstrators who ·congress and legalizing political
partll!s, but vowed torema!nhelldof
waved red, white and blue Chilean
government ~tD 1!189 as provided
ilags.
.by
a voter-approved 1980
When a pollee helicoptel' flew
·
constitution.
overhead, the crowd yell~ in

-.

••

�!

'tl••

IU-11te Sunday n.,_Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

~lo,.nibar

Gallipolis, Ohio--PoinH'Ieasant, W. Va. ·

20, 1983

November 20, 1983

'Smokescreen' effect- means
_of isolating American allies
By BARRY SCHWEID
Associated Press Writer
. WASHINGTON (AP) -Reagan

. TUNE IT DOWN - Thomas Fay, professor of
audiology ai Columbia University, tells reporters that
~pie should tum their music down ta protect their

hearing during a press conference Friday afternoon.

Fay Is a member of the Environmental Control Board
In New York City. (AP LaserphoCo).

right by the ear, Fay sa id.
"You bring a sourceclosertoyour
ear, and you are compounding the
problem because it'sgetting agreat
deal more powerful," Fay said.
"And you deliver it right down the
ear canal and shut off other sounds
"It makes It a lot easier to hear
(the music) and a lot .easier to shut
off the world. If that's what you' re
about, maybe there are less
self-destructive ways of doing it."
Fay is a professor of audiology
and speech language pathology at
Columbia University College of
Physicians and Surgeons in New
York. But Fay said he has used
portable headphones and enjoyed
them.
Asked whether fans of loud rock ·
music will suffer a decline in hearing
In the next 10 to 20 years. Fay

9.(XX) to 7,:m.

responded, "I don 't think we'll have
to wait that long.
"The levels they're using, deliverIng directly to their ears, are quite
sufficient to cause permanent and
Irreversible damage in a much
shorter period of time than that. " ·
Hearing impairment develops
over a long period of time, although
researchers aren 't certain exactly
how the problems are caused, he
said.
"Every time you' re exposed to a
high-level noise, you recover after a
whlle this sensltivlty loss: But you
don't recover It exactly to whereyoll
were before," he said. "I liken it to
walking down 12 steps and back up
11. And the next time you go downl2
more and backupll. You get farther
and farther and farther away from
the top of the stairs."

1,100-page report. No date has been
set for tlle meeting.
The report, "Police and People In
London," severely tarnished the
image of the benign, unarmed and
helpful London bobby, or
policeman.
It was compiled over three years
by the Policy Studies Institute, an
independent research group, at the
request of Newman's predecessor,

.

Will do aewing, mending and
alteration• by the place . Call

Boat club manager- Const. or Heavy Equip. All
caretlker, live on Premises. phans no experience necesHous4ng , utilities, hospital ury. For information call
in1 . fumished . Paid vaca- · 1 -~ 19 - 227 - 8169 , 1-919tion, perfect for rasponaible 227-8140 or 1-919-227couple who enjoy working 8131. 8:30AM-9PM Mon .
with people. Mechanical ap- thru Wed.
pitude, river experience
helpful. not necesaary. Base 1-::-::-- -=-o-----,----.!_-

McDaniel Custom Bu"t cher·
i ng . Open si.: days a week.

2 1"......_.

[ ~"'d on od•- .. 1

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nn""'"''"'"""
•a
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1 J M G.,.fi H - .
1 I ' "'''"'o '"' So"'"'' '

51 "'""'~nlol Goado
&amp;I Cl . T\1 I Rt40&gt;h • ltlflt nl

71

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Hvon oiOWD

ll Ha mool "' Sol•

51Pooo lo• Sol o
~ 7 Muoo&lt; ol lnol&lt;- n h
11 r....., 1. vo~o "b'"•

~i~~.:~r

HMGb~oM-IO&lt; Salo

ll ''''"''"' So lo
lt l~ om oul .,.don.a
J SLo UIA to t"'o

a

CARD OF THANKS

Dump Truck Service will
haul anything anywhere .

Your kindness at lhe d,.th of
-our beloved husband and folhor.
Harry DIVis, will never be fOI&amp;OIten . Sptelol thanks to the staffs

Dears skinned. cut and
wrapped. Call · Cisco 304-

~

the ernera:ency team. Pastars

Middleswarth and lund, the Ew-

13

in&amp; Funen11 Home.
For the food, flowers. visits.
prayers, memorial contributions

SANDY AND BEAVER In-

and cards wo thank our filonds

Paul lutheran Church, American
Lecion Junior and Senior AUxili-

ary. Moles Salon 710. Eipt and
Forty, our Sprina Ave. neilh·
bors, members ollho Rock Sprinp and Forest Run MetMdist
Churches. the American

..

-

....... w. .

~ O· M.ooc

M O&lt; Ij! OIIdii O

S l· Ou;lol"''!lu ~~h"'

,,r, .s.t.o ... r.. ,.

l l '' ""~• lOt

70

Solo

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41 Fu'""''"" Aoomo
41 Spooo l oo "-too
4J w... oodt o Aonl

Ml&gt;t ~•&lt; f&lt;loo

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

..

"'.. c...,..u
(I.., .. c.~"

will always remember your kindness. God Bless you all.

Veda Davis, Wife
Thelma Jeffers, daughter
&amp; Robert Davis, son

-

'

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Rel~able
and dependal)le. c,n 446·
3159 between 9 anD 6.

YEAR-END
TRACTOR SALE

Effective Nov. 1 ·
thru Dec. 31
And Check The Sale Price
On "long Backhoes"

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small . Reliable and depan ~
dable. For estimate call

446-3159, 9 to 5.

64 Misc. Merchandise

61 " f ao ..,l~u",..." '

&amp;I· W..,.dl"ll"f
IJ· LnM .. D&lt;I

17·AVIORop oM

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

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11 "-•""•-•-10

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15· hetll

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11·UD. .Illtn"

Refrigerator

"- c... t u

... .aa-......

11Comp"'•h-fl1

11 ••u'"''-"1 &amp; 11.......

446-0294. .

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club .
Eyery Sunday
i
p.m . Factory
only.·

v.......,

HOTPOINT

l · - lhe Gt.,dl
JM · Ouw.,Ot~o
UJ lorot,.OIII
HI - W.t roul

·--o;-··
lU
l47
loU

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lM.,UIIO
Jta a •

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11• . . , _ ,_

17.2 cu. ft.
Model CTFI7-AC
REG . 1624.95

..

.... ... .
Hl
lal

""
""
""

•

..

Your nooriJy Yonnoer farm Doalor
is hlvin&amp; • 'Supor Sale"! A
ace to loot at tho now "Sups(
0110 ..., hay systom fiom Vormeer, new artten, balers, rates.
f-., .,d bole 11-.dlin&amp;lll•il&gt;ment. Special S..inp lhru Nov.
31. 13. In fac1 you can soo it all
on SaiiKdaJ, Nov. 26 at

ON.LY

$525°

0

Pomeroy
landmark

Jividen•s
Farm Equipment
From B:dO to 5 :00

614-992-2181

614-446·1675

CARPET FOR LE$$

Uconood • bonded In Ohio •
WVa. 304-773-6786 or
304-773-9186.

SAVINGS OF 20 PERCENT, 30 PERCENT AND
EVEN 40 PERCENT ARE NOT UNCOMMON.
LOW OVERHEAD AND DIRtCT BUYING CONTRIBUTE TO A GOOD SAVINGS, BUT WE ALSO ,
SHOP FOR SPECIAL DEALS TO BRING YOU
GREATER SAVINGS . WE CAN SELL YOL! A
HEAVY WEIGHT CARPET FOR THE PRICE OF A
LIGHTWEIGHT CARPET.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchandiM every week.
Con1igment1 of new Mid
UMd merchandl1e atwaya
welcome. Richard Reynold•

Auction-. 276·30119.

Mt.Aho auction ovory Sot.
night. 8 p.m. Starting

' WANT TO DRIVE A FEW MILES AND
SO IF YOU
HAVE $200, $300 OR $400 COME AND SEE US,
WE HAVE ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS
IN THE AREA .

Chrlatmet 1e10n. No more
conaignment1 will be taken ·
until after Chrittmu. Emn111

Boll

3

Giveaway.
5 Australian Border C.oll'-•·

Taking orders for Thanksgiv-

ing pieo. Call 6d1 4-992·

7364 - Virginia Wyatt or
Max' s Rest. Inc . 614·992·

2804.

Shooting Match: Coma one
· come all, Sat .• 10:00 p.m.,
Nov . 19 and 20 . Sundey,
1:00 p.m. The Men't Auxii iary are holding 1 1hootlng

match ot Bill Stanley's form.

8Va miles above Hender1on.

Alfie match. Pleau bring
own arm1. 1hoe guna, 12
gauge. 16 gauge, 20 gauge,
1110 Bleck Powder Match .
_Shoe gun 1hall1 ere fur~
ni1hed, at email price. Prizes
era to be given awe~ .
Conceaeion ltand . No alcoholic beverage allow,d.
Bring all your family to thl1
outing. If raining. will be

the red. This season, subscriptions
are up 24 percent, he said . .
No hunting ortreipa11ing on
SchoeQbawn cited more sophisti- Manin WilCoxen property'. hold Nov. 28 end 27.
cated and professional telephone 124 Ealt of Recine.
Absolutley no hunting or
·marketing and solicitation In recent Vacancy:'. Julie'• P•110n11 tre1puslng
on A.L. Phllpa
·
years.
Care H.oml. Formerly Jr. Tin Can Hollow. Weet
Elsewhere, In the worst years of Mercer Canvele1ence Columbia. Wv. TreapaiMI'
Home. 18 yeare llllpadenoe. will be proaeouted.
the slump, money was raised to Clifton.
W.V. 304· 773butld new multimillion-dollar theat· 6873.
No Hunting, Old Town
ers that opened this fall In Seattle
c. c. lowll.
and Cleveland.
No hunting ortreiPIIIIfttl on
following property. R.H . ~
Andrew Win, In his first season as Boatright. Junior Hunt Keith 4
GiY88Wey
managing dlrec!tor of Alliance Rldonour. Gary 0111, John 1-:---------2 yr. old timid mole laoglo
Theater In Atlanta, says season 0uinthor.
jual
allahota, Ploylulond
subL!Icrlptlons went tram 3,400 In MANY THANKS FOR THE goodhad
wltll kido. Call 81 4·
1976-TT to more than 20,!KJlthis year. SUPPORT OF THE VOTERS 3117-01187 olt0&lt; 4PM .
The Seattle Repertory Theater TO GUY ROSE. THANK -:-:---:---:----.,--Motol Hondo crotlng. Col
saw attendance slump more than 2 YOU. GUV ROSE.
448-2240.
'
percent during 19111-82 nnd no No Hunting or T,.aopoooing
on Roymond D. Smith-Coli llt4-3117·
recovery last season, said produc- erty.
Golllpolia Forr:y. WV.
Ing director Peter DonneOy,

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

428-8t77.·

Alto

Auction

Bam.

Business Route
Middleport. Ohio
Open 10 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
Ph. (614) 992-6173

evening. FrH coffH, Mm •
2 month old part alamen
k!ttena. i black long haired, 1
silk white with black long

turkey

aondwlchos while

they l11t. Pop and other
conceealona wiU be aold. Do
your Chrl1tfria1 ehopping
early. F,.. drawing. Terma

'

Oive'away. platform rocker, of aale CASH .. Emmo Boll,
double manreaa, 304-87&amp;- ouctlonoer. Lie. No. 429-84.
6689 .
Two y,etlow male kltten1,

good homo, 304-8766174.

Block femolo kitten, litter
treinod. 304-875-3834.

6 lost and Found
LOST Gray • white ki&amp;n
-eround Pic·Pac ar... Re·

ward. Coli oftor 5:00. 448·
7488. ·.·
Loat ~ Coon type dog .
Female~..,ayed , White with

.black ilnd brown apot1. Lolt
near Barton ,.rm In Aull1nd

Thuroday.IM1 4· 742·3014.

bl....

night, Pt. Plooaant. WVo.

Auction every Tuaadey

"Thanksgiving Special"

Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St.

AT

814-387-710t .

-.
9

Wantlld To Buy

Riversi.de Trade Center
Purchase a vehicle before the 24th
. ~nd get a ."FREE T\.IRKEY ."

We pay caeh tor late model
clun u1ed arw.

WAS NOW

Jim Mink Chiv.-Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johneon

448-3872

Wontod to buy uold cool •
Wood hooton. Swoln Furnl'
441·3111; 3rd. •
Olivo St.. Oolllpollo, Oh.

tu,..

•

'79 T-Bird ...... :.... .-............-'4595 s4195

-.

.78 Mercury Cougar XR 7...... 13995 s3495
Sharp, low mileage

'77 Cutlass Supreme ........ '3195 S2395
loaded, 69,000 miles.

'76 F-250 Ford Truck ........ 11095 S895
Auto., AM-FM-slereo.

.

'76 Datsun Pickup .... ;......... 1996 s795
4 sp., 4 cyL, topper.

TAl - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
448-7672.

Cigarette Distri butorship .
lnsjant cash flow l We are a
Bonded national firm exU5 I'll
pending into the area. If you
are 1eeking a secure busi· ~~===~=
na~s opportuinty . We pro·

vide all ••tail locations and

r

31

77

Homes for Sale

all necessary training . Full or
Part time. lnvestmen·t from
$2 1 000.00. Winston Salem-Koots. 1 · 800-241~

Owner MUst Sell Home!
Unbellevablepricellowutil ·
itieslbuyitnow1Middleport,

2288.

coll992-6941 .

22 Money to Loan

House in Eureka recently
remodeled, 32 acrea.

$37.500. Coll446-2205.

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12Y2% purchase or
refinance, 1 H'a% adjustable
rate. Leader Mortgage ,

Nice clean 2 bedroom utility
room. new furnance, fenced

3 .1

2 bdr. 12x50, $3,500. 3
Located in Syracuse- Near bdr .. 12x70, total electric, 2
.achool &amp; •wimmingpool. 3 -baths 87,500. Call 614bedroom situated on one· 446-0176 .

third aero lot. 824,500. or - - - - - - - - will rent for 8275 mo. 1970 Vindale. living room
304·866-3934.
oxpondo 12x63, 2 OR. tota_l
Baum Addition . 3 bed ·
iooms. 21h batha. a.c., fam·
ily room, with fireplace, 2
acres. $66 .000. firm. Loan
assumption possible. 614·

in yard. ohubbery. Call4461431 or 446-1685.
986-4387.

Professional
Services

WANTED

prices-regular tuninga discounts to Senior Citizens.
Churches&amp;: schools . Ward's

Keyboard. 304-676-3824 .

Northland Park Homes is seeking sub·
contractor and supplier bids on the Maples Project. Pomeroy, Ohio. Project
concists of 16 rehab units and 30 new
units. Contact Gary Dunn for bid information:

614-846-3400
Equal Employment Op portunty
4 bdr . ranch home. large LA.
full basement, with garage.
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town.

Call 446-0276.

ENT TRAINEE

Completely remodeled. 3
bdr., 6 rooms . Bath. Eat- in
kitchen. Diningroom .
Carpet. Large lot. 3 porches :
Large basement, carport.
Must sell . Immediate pos·
aaasion. Only $17.600. Lest
house away from River on
Henderaon St., Henderson.
WV . Phone number in yard .

For loco! Cloltllnll C.ro Center, OKeenent opon lndlvlduol who Is highly
motlvoted; his 1 hith energy love! ond ·1s lnfereslod In urnr gn&gt;wth. Exce.llent campens.otlon pion ond benefit packtll" ovalloble.
SEND RESUME TO:

jlar1unlty for

Box 110

c-o Golllpolls Dally Tribune
125 Third Avenue

One of the finer homes in ,
- O.lllpolls, Ohio 45631
Galllpolil. For 1ale by owner.
Modern design, tri level.
Cuttom design kitchen. A11 1.__ _~------!---------,
appliance• go with home. 11
three bath's, two fireplace•,
be1ement. laundry room.
WS-DR. garage. Owner will
finance with proper down
payment . For appointment

WANTED

coll814-379-2141 .

.15 Acre, A-frame house in

w. Vo, 895·3935.

4 bdr. "hi-laval, aat-in, kit·
chen. LR. dining area. family
room , 217 bath, 2 car
garage, ga• heat, central air.

Northland Park Homes is seeking subcontractor and supplier bids on the Maples Project, Pomeroy, Ohio. ·Project
concists of 16 rehab units and 30 new
units. Contact Gary Dunn for bid information:

RELEASED
FOR

PUBLIC SALE
NECCHI Education Department placed orders anticipating
school orders. Due to budget cuts, these orders were not
sold. Necchi has released for sale to the public a limited
. number of these HEAVY DUTY ALL METAL SPECIAL SEWING
MACHINES that sew on all fabrics - Levi's. canvas.
upholstery, nylon. stretch, vinyl. silk, AND EVEN SEW ON
LEATHER. These machines are new. All carry Necchi's 25
year warranty.
' Manufacturer's Suggested Price $599.95

NOW ONLY $199a95
Limited Supply -

No Dealers Please

SORRY, NO TRADE-INS OR LAYAWAYS

BRING THIS AD

14x70 2 bdr., family room.
totalelec .. cantralair. underpinning, on rented lot . Cal

Toys of all kinds, electronics, lamps, recliners,
smokers , stereos, tools, western boots, Silverstone.
This is only a partial listing.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY KENNETH SWAIN

Caii614-3BB-9360.

614-246-9225.
By owner 1972 trailer . 2
bdr., unfurnished , good
cond. Call446· 7171 , after
5 446· B2BB.
Nice

2

bdr. trailer.

9th AnnualCampbell Cattle Company
Club-Calf Sale

Call

614-256-6261 . after-6:30.

1982 14K70 Governor mo ·
bile home, porch. sliding
glass door, completely un·

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1983

derpinnod. Call 614-3677419.

7:00 P.M.
50 Chianina and Simmental Cross Steers
10 Registered Chianina Cross Heifers

4 mobile hOmei. 10' and 12 '
ft . wide . 2 bedroom furnished . Low priced .
Brown's Trailer Park . 614·

Calves are halter broke and on feed.
Featuring Steers from these outstanding sires :
lldeno, Power Play, lombard, lgiso, Super Per·
former. Gray Gallant, Angelo .
Sale will be held at the farm , located 3 miles south
of Cedarville. Take S.R. 72 South Side of Road, Cedarville, Ohio.
Calves may be seen at the farm after November 1..

992-3324.

12x60 New Moon trailer,
very clean with eKpando
living room in Middleport.
Priced to sell. 614 · 992-

2101 or 614-992-2319 .

1976 14x70 trailer, 3 bed·
room , 2 baths. large kitchen,

$10,000. 304·773-6023.

. AUCTIONEERS :
MERLIN WOODRUFF
Urbana. Ohio
513-789-3711
KEITH SHERIDAN
Cedarville, Ohio
513-766-2021
4549 Federal Pike
Cedarville. Ohio 45314
513·766·5629

cc c

1981 14x70. Shultz limited
mobile home, microwave.
dishwasher, central air, underpen ning. th rae bed·
rooms. 1 1h baths, excellent
condition, $15 ,500. Call

A A
M T

p T

0
M

p

B L A

E E N
L
L

304-675 -6049 after 5 p.m.

y

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

PUBLIC AUCTION
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1983
2 P.M. TIL 8 P.M.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1983
10 A.M. UNTIL CONCLUSION
Selling the following contents of GALLIA ROLLER MILLS, INC .. Case#
2-83-00525, located at the corner of Grape Street and Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
TRUCK and TRAILERS: 1976 G.M.C. Cab and Chassis w1t h b u l ~ loadmg eq uipmenl,
1963 Fruehauf sem i traile r, 28' Fruehauf tr•iler.
POWER TOOLS: Electric arc welder, aceta line torch outfit, ai r compressor, drill press,
auto. power tru ck washer, bandsaw, battery chargers, 10 hp and 5 hp motors, tool cabinet, Lawn Boy mower, two McCu llough cha in saws, wilh extensive line of repa ir andrepla ce men t paris, Model 1900 Green Mach ine weeder, Mode11700 Green Mach ine
weeder, and lin e of replace ment parts.
SMALL HAND TOOLS: Scoop shovels, snow sho vel s, spades, hand scraper s, rakes.
pitchforks, silage forks brooms, axes, hay hoo ks, tobacco kn 1ves, hedge clippers, Hu d- ·
son sprayers, hand ca rts, lawn fert iliz er spreade rs, assorted rep lacement handles, ·
many more ite ms too numerous to me ntion.
HARDWARE: Metal gales, aluminum gates, ma ny different power electricc fe nce
chargers, electric fence wire, insulators, fasteners ,_ plastic posts, metal posts, woven ·
wire, shelv ing, small scales. bol t an d nail ben, vanous SIZes of na1ls, wedges, much
more.
FEED and WATER EQUIPMENT: Large calf creep Ieeder, pig creep feed ers, hog feed er s. co mbo hay and grain fe eder, corner feeders, chicken feeders, feed, pans, rubber .
pai ls, se ve ral assorted nursing buckets, bottles and n1ppels, all type an 1mal waterers .
and water warmers, and more.
SHOW EQUIPMENT: Horse and cattle show ha lters, lead straps, cotton rope , bridle,
nose leads, wooden show canes and sticks, whips, wands, hotshot spurs, curry
brushes, dog collars, cleaning brushes and wide range of cl eanin g and filling suppli es, ·
and more.
.._
FEED . SEED, FERT.. and GRAIN: Cal food, dog fo od, rabbit pellet s, chicken feed , hog •
feed, da iry feed , sheep and goal feed, ca lf feed , steer leed , horse feed, egg mash, m1- ,
neral blocks, protein blocks, sa il blocks, milk repla.cer, plastic and burlap feed sacks.
various gard en seed s, grass seeds, agriculture l1me, pott1ng so1l, vano us fertilizer, 500
· bu. wheat 125 bu . barley 100 bu. corn , 25 bu . oats, plusmo re.
GENERAL,FARM SUPPLIES: Extensive line of her bicides, pesticide s, and insecticides,
cattle du st bags and oilers, plant bed covers, roof ce me nt, pam t, twine, tarps, cloth.
leather and rubber work gloves, wide range, and various sizes of rubber work boots. ex tenslve line of veterinarian supp lies, all types of li vetock identificatiOn tags and markers) and more.

·

.

.

OFFICE EQUIMENT: Several desks, fili ng ~abi nets, chairs, one fi le cabinel with shelv es
&amp; safe, medium size oflice safe, large antique safe Xerox 660 Icop ier, G.E. refngerator,
cash regiSter, adding machines, ca lculators, sweepe rs, many more small office sup -

.~~~if:
Thi s is only a partial listing as itwould be impracti~al to lisl all the different Da ine '.
brands and Items included in the inventory to be-sold . All announcements made the .

(2 DAYS ONLY)

day of_sale shall take precedence over all advertisingand / or statements made by any
••n••'•'nto.tiv• of lhe court the tr uslee, or the auct1oneer. Con cessiO n stand day of

Place: Holiday Inn-Room A

Cash, checks with positive I.D. and a letter of credit if making a large
purchase.

State Rt. 7Gallipolis, OH.

Logan, Ohio

446-9740

LOCATION: Donald Holley's Auction House one mile
from Glenwood on the Hannan Trace Rd. (Gallia
County, Oh.)

Date: Friday, Nov. .25 &amp; Saturday, Nov. 26

Necchi Educati"on Department
'

Trai18r on 2 acre lot $19.000
and trailer on 1 acre lot
$11,000 on Kerr-Bethel Rd .

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS

NOV. 25 &amp; DEC. 2-9-16
STARTING AT 7 P.M.

614-245-9222.

Equal Employment Op portu nty

= = = = =-

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

electric. central air. awning,
underpinning . deck . Call

614-846-3400
8·

NOV. 26, 1983, SAT., 10:00 A.M.

Large farm machinery sale, trucks &amp; stock trailers. ifyou have anything to sell on consignment weekend
after Thanksiving call Valley lmp!ement Sales 446-7598 or 1·304-576-2438 or auctioneer, L. E.
Neal 367-7101, Gallipolis. Ohio across from Honda ,
Shop on Rt. 7.

Homes for Sale

Athens. 1-B00-34 1-8564

PIANO TUNING Lower

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
61M01
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES •
~~~~~~=;~~~~ 4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 446- 7274.

·• -SALE SPONSORED BY
1220 Elmm Ave.

197B Two bedroom 12x60

aU electric mobile home, on
approx . one acre of ground,
ready to move in , $2,000.
down, monthly payment• on
home and ground. only

·8

Time: 11:00-A.M. lo 6:00 P.M.

• VIcinity ,·

----- - ~ - --

·

-MOBILE HOME FOR SALE·

for Sale

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do busineas with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering .

Letart.

for Sale

32 Mobile Homes

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB-

23

32 Mobile Homes

Homes for Sale

8264.73 par month . 304576-2711.

1 owner, air, stereo.

LOST
white. tan.
female booglo, lim Robblt WMtod to buy. N-. uood • ·
low. 8otwoen Chorteaton Mtlquo fUrniture. Will buy 1
ond Ripley Rou. 304·171- ~ or _.,.._ houae- •
holda. Alao pollllllete Auatl2847. '
onMmng~.~IOo~
Lon moll, block~ tan and A. M - 114·112·1370.
'whlto IRtilo. R-nl. 304•
luylng dilly ....... oliver
8711·11072.
aolna, rtnao. jewelry, aterllnt
7
· old'
.-..
T...............
. . - . Ill. lur·
Yard Sal•
lteltlortler lhop, 2nd. Avo.
Mltllloport. oh. 1114·111·
.------ ·ftif ' iiltiiiiiiifiit''''' 3478.

...

fOR.

Odds &amp;Ends carpet Shop

Spociol Chriatmoo Auction.
Mt.

2 monthaald. Coll8t4-379- Thonkagiving Day. Starts
2404.
1 :OOo'clock and throughout

SALE I 20-30-40 percent off haired. Coli 889-4706.
cake decorating supp1ie1.
Anna Cake Decorating &amp;
Supplies In Tuppara Plaint.

Au~ionoer.

WVo. lie. No. 429-84.

I'M

~o;i'((, To "'""

868,900 Jay Dr. Coli 614448-7923.

Rick Peerson Auctioneer
Service. E1tate, firm. An~
tique &amp; liquidation aalea.

~l'f'oSe

Business
Opportunity

304·675-2931 ;, 6:30 to
B:30.

:18 Wanted to Do

I

lHi ~.

21

31

•4&amp;,000. 814·892-6868 .

\'&gt;~M\eD

54 Misc. Merchandise 1 - - - - - - - ' - - -

Moog• C •~"'•

nJ - CI••~•·

41-l'&lt;t••••"-"' "'' '"-"'
09f noL oooo

--::-~--:-~----- ' I
Balloons for Binhday1, Gat
. Well. Annlveraerys, Swee.
thearta. partial. Call Balloona ·S.. Co., 446 ~ 4313.

,

School lriatruc::tion. Learn
how to earn photography
and its applications. Sat.
1-4. at Brick building next to
old Marietta Pjant gate.
2221 N . Main St . or call

Larry Wright

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-D-3.

W.Va.

; 3 bedroom ranch
home. carpeted, full
basement. 1 car garage, in
. ground pool 18x32 .

7:30 to 6:00p.m. 304-8B23224.

where Harry had worl&lt;od

for 38 years before retirinc. We

75 Buool.-ln"
]

Schools
instruction

15

in our time of sorrow. Our special thanks to the men of Philip

(••"···· i•t )ll••' •'l'h '"''' ,., ,.,,,,.ll'"' ..

:--....,F~~

SWEEPER and sewing me·
chine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half miht ·-up
Georg•• Creek Rd .
Call

__

Phone 448-1427.

·lutheran Church Women.· the
Middleport Amateur Gardenii'S,
and others who remembered us

Sporn

Insurance

surance Co. has offered
services for fire insur'ance
coverage in Gallia County
for almo1t a century. Farm ,
home and personal _property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Con•
tact Harry Pitchford, agent.

t "/n,$; (.,.,1 ,,,11,. .,.,.,.,., tlw

· ~

In 1982, theGuthrleran$632,!XXlln

675-1498 .

and relatives, members of St.

Their report said the force Is
reluctant to recruit women and Is
dominated by all-male values of
hard drinking, sex and violence.

-··............... ...

come back.''

Call 304-675-3190.

• · and the Holllr Medical Cenlor.

and all."

A ul&lt;lo lo o~olo

~··•h•noYI&lt;onoo d

Public Notice
·Some examples:
"LEGAL NOTICE
- The fact that the economic
TO BIDDERS"
NOtiCP. 13 hP.reby g•ven th at
letter Is moving ahead at all,
btdS wtlt be fP.CRIVP.d by
apparently unslowed by conserva- SP.a!P.d
the Cnv Manager of lhP. C1 1y of
tive Catholics' fears that it will be ·GallipOliS. Oh10 at hts Off1ce 1n
"too liberal," or by complaints that the M un1c1pal Building fo r 600
It of 2 W' Prflm1um Grade f1re
the bishops are unqmilified In such hose.
and 1.600 ft of 1•h"'
matters.
PrP.m1um Grade f1re hose
The bishops stood up to the
81ds wil l be rece1ved ill thP.
The head of the drafting group,
administration's objections. The
Archbishop Rembert Wea kl and, above named Qff,ce until
12 00 Noon. on ThUisday,
official teaching letter for more than
said bluntly: "A nation 's economy December 1. 1983 and publicly
50 million American Catholics has
shouW serve Its soeiety and not vice ODRned and read at th at hour
since been published, supporting a
versa. We feel the church has and placP. 81d forms may be
tn the OffiCe of thP. C1ty
" freeze" on nuclear weapons prosomething to say about how people obtatnP.d
Manager. 518 SP.cond AvP.nue.
duction and condemning even the are treated." He said the bishops C1ty of Gatllpohs. Oh to.
threatoftheirusetodeteranenemy. will take a hard look at whether, for
rosiness.
This year, the bishops voted to example, it is worth pushing No, 20. 25
: the National Conference of elevate a noted foe of that letter to unemployment uP In order to bring
..... . . ... . .....' . .'. . . .
Cafbolic Bishops spent much of last
the chairmanship of the committee down Inflation, the tradeoff that
week's annual meeting debating that drafted It And they said the occurred in the 1981-82 recession. .
1 Card of Thanks
and deciding such traditional
letter on the economy would be
-The decision to undertake a
chlirch issues as the number of withheld until after next year's major study of women In society and
would like to thank eve"h91Y days of obligation" _ .. political elections, a move some felt · the church, again despite opposition Iryone
who sent me cards
~ll·SundaydaysonwhichCathollcs ' could lessen its impact.
from conservative, more tradi- and flowers during my stay
arli required to attend mass.
However, if those were steps tional, Ca tholics. Objectorspointout in Holzer hospitaL Again,
Thank Youl
Dorothy
· Thelrdeclslonwasaconservatlve awayfromcontrcversy-andsome
that Pope John Paul II himself Young.
on!: Keep the current six rather
bishops argued they 'l'~re not, recently reiterated the ban on
Uuin cutting the list in haU as some
regardless of appearance - there female priests and warned U.S. 3 Announcements
bls)lops had suggested.
were also obvious steps to maintain
bishops against supporting groups
And the mood among the nearly a high public profile.
that
want tt overturned.
- .

; $EA'ITLE (AP) -While Broad- executive director of the New
1\'a:Y and big·tlrile touring compan- York-based Foundation for the
le&amp; su!!er the slings. and arrows of · Extension and Development_ of the
econon\ic misfortune, . regloqal
American Professional Theater.
t~aters are thriving with aggres- HI$ · group provides consulting
sive marketing .techniques not services for administrators of
lil1like "selling Saran Wrap," man- nonprofit performing arts grouPS .
llg!?rs say.
''I think we can no longer assume
• Despite sharp declines In federal the position that because we are the
sullsldies and greater competition arts, that everybody is going to rally
!Qi privatefoundatlondollars,many around to support us," Vogel said.
attl!ndlng the annual ran meelfng ol
"We have to use the same
the League of Resident Theaters technlqiJe!i .. . as selling Saran
shlct thelroperationsareasstrongas Wrap," he said. "We have to start
~thlnldng like the nuirketingdirector
. But to keep up with changing of .General Motors."
I '
ecenomlc times, regional theater
The last part of the 1981-82 season
haS needed to adapt both onstagi! and all of J.982.3'l at the Guthrie
anjl backstage, said tbJee lnterTheater In Mlnl\eapolls were "the
..&amp;tewed at the meeting Friday.
most difficult tlnanclal times for us
: 1be key to survival h8s been the In our 21-year history," said
.4()llng of age of theater l'!lallllgemanaging director Donald Scboen1111!111,. said Fredertc B. Vogel,
baum. "However, we've Seen that

992-619B .

of Veterans Memorial Hospitll

Sir Davld McNee. McNee ordered
that the four-volume report should
depict the27,oo:l-memberMetropol·
!tan Pollee Force, wltli headquarters at New Scotland Yard, exactly
as the researchers found It, "warts

300bishopswasfarcatmerthisyear
than at tile electric meeting a year
ago. During that meeting, Reagan
administration officials cajoled,
pleaded and warned the bishops
against approving a basically
anti-nuclear pastoral letter.

.

Pomeroy lady will do sitting
in home or hospital. Call

Card of Tha(lks

'

·n roadway it isn't, .but local·
.~eater has strong showing

8040 or 614-949-2129.

wv 26304.

614·446·, 675
C o t d~I T~o . . &lt; [ po o ~ on od w o neo l

l l · lnwoo""o
1 4 &amp;~"""" hou••a

.

Tree trimming and removaL
Free eatimates. 614-992·

by

6, 4-446-2070.

Wanted

income above 1ala.rv poasible doing boat melntence.
Write giving work experience, family . haelth status
and character reference .
.P.O. Box 4221, Charleston,

1

Situations

12

Jividen's .
Farm Equipment
I

.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

18 Wanted to Do

Sell AVON. You - can make
lot• of money for Christmas.

aolory 8600 month, oKtra

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 67S.l333

Qespite
criticisms,
Catholic
..
•
bishops
tackle moral Issues
.
: WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Jlll!lon's Catholic bishops, who
refused last year to back down In
their battle with the government
ov~r nuclear weapons, now are
ta~kllng women's rights and the
mOrality of economic decisions.
. Critics, many of them Catholics,
1\llye suggested that nuclear weapollS, women's complaints a nd
e(,OnomJc policy are none of the
lil$ops' business and that they
sheuW stick to religion.
But the church leaders' answer
~ms firm: They are moral issues
Involved and that makeS it our

1.1 Help Wanted

Coli 614-268-8689 oftor Coli 448-3358.
8PM .
.

Scotland Yard allegations probed
LONDON (AP) - Home Secretary Leon Brittan says he will meet
with the head of Scotland Yard to
discuss an independent report
accusing the London police force of
racism, brutality and dishonesty.
Brittan said Friday night he and
Sir Kenneth Newman, London's
Metropolitan Police Commissioner,
will decide whether further action Is
needed in response to Friday's

Help Wanted

Need 4 people to cut fire·
wood 8200-$250 a week.

Another official, woo also re- '
quested anonymity, stressed the
Soviets were still trying to block the
deployment of all U.S. intermedlaterange missiles while retaining their
own "subsiantlal monopoly,''
He said, "They have repackaged
their proposal but with the saine
bottom line" whlle afso sending "a
fairly clear signal they were never
serlous about needing or wanting
C!I'IIpensa tfon" for the French and
Brltlsh missiles.
But even though U.S. ot!lclals
gave Kvltsinsky's suggestion the
brushoff, they clearly took It
seriously.
Under the arrangement he suggested, the Soviets would cut back to
120 SS-20misstles, eachofwhlch has
three warheads.
Currently, the Sovlets have 253 of
these missiles deployed west of the·
Ural mountains ru1!1 another 117 In
their Asian region. Some ~ older
SS-4 mlsstles are also believed to be
targeted on Western, Europe.
The latest U.S. proposal, which
was made Monday, woul1 set a
ceiling of 420 warheads for the
Unit!'!~ Siat.es and the Soviet Union
worldwide.

United States lor equal levels, the
Soviets would be entitled to 162
administration officials siz.e up the
abqve the ceiling. ·
latest Soviet move In the arms
The stalemate In Geneva poses
control talks as a ''smokescreen"
severe political problems within the
designed tolsolatetheUnitedStates . NATO alliance.
West Germany, which Is due to
from its European allies.
They say they find no concession receive 1111 U.S. Pershing 2 ballistic
in .n egotiator Yuli Kvitslnsky's
rockets and 96 ground-hugging
Informal offer to accept the right of cruise missiles through l!lll8, Is
France and Britain to have an bracing for a parliamentary debate
independent nuclear missile fQ)"ce.
on the subject.
But whatever purpose Kviisinsky
Anti-nuclea r demonstrations
had In sounding out chief U.S. greeted the arrival of the first wave
negotiator Paul Nitze, tbe Soviets of American cruise missiles in
denied making any formal change Britain last Monday, and Belgium
In their position. Officially, Soviet . and the Netherlands have not yet
Defense Minister Dmitri F. Ust!nov given final approval to the. scherepeated his government's Insist- duled deployment of 48 missiles
ence that the French and Britl'sh each.
missiles are part ofNATO's _nuclear
A U.S. official, taking a critical
view of KVJtslilsky's move, said
sirength.
When Kvitsinksy made the sug- Friday it was Intended to "decougestion on missiles last Sunday ple" the United States from Its allies
during a chat with Nltze, the Soviet and was a "smokescreen" rather
negotiator appeared to be givlng than a breakthrough.
ground on a major roadJ:&gt;lock to any
Besides, said the official, who
pact. Until then, the Soviets had declined to be Identified, the 162
insisted on the right to match the 162 French and British missiles are
sea and ground-based missiles that dwarted bY the commanding Soviet
France and Britain are aiming at lead over the United States In !ill
Sovlet territory. That would mean If types of nuclear warheads- about

Environmental official says
rock music causes damage
CINCINNATI (AP) - Fans of
high-level rock'n'roll should be
wary of permanent damage to their
ear's, says Thomas Fay, a member
of the Envlronmntal Cointrol Board
in;New York City.
Fay, here for the American
SJ)eech Language Hearing Associa·tidn Convention, said music lovers
who put on portable head phones and
tum up the volume are probably
C!I'IIpoundlng the problem.
"I happen to think that if you
expose yourself to 65 decibels of .
soond for seven or eight hours a day
you will ultimately at the age of 50 or
60 have a noise-induced' hearing
impairment of some kind," Fay said
on Friday.
An additional problem with the
now-popular portable headphones Is
thlit they put the source of the sound

an agreement were struck with the

11

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio--Point

1

'

"

STEPHEN K. YODER
TRUSTEE IN BANKRUPTCY
100 EAST BROAD STREET
COLUMBUS , OHIO 43215
(614) 228-6136
Sale Conducted by:
George E. Woodward Jr.
(614) 228-446-9466- (614) 379-2697
And Tommy Joe St•wert-Auctioneer

..
.·

'

..

"
I'

'.

..

�'

D-4-The

Page

Su.Way

Times-Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes

44

for Sale
Small 2 bdr house in coun -

Mobile Home Moving, U-

cenMd and lnaured. Free
Etotlm81tls •too. per hookup minimum. Phone 304-

Apartment
for f;lont

Call 446 -0924.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-678-27t 1.

neighborhood . Security
deposit requtred Also refer-

ATTENTION! Is there such a

thing as a Classici In mobile
home? When you view th•s
Holly Park we think you will

1111ree

there lo

A 1969

1 2x85 Holly Park with 2
bdr. , 6x10 tip out in livingroom, completely set up in
nice perk. It includes 40 ft .
patio cover, 2 sets of steps
with railings, central air, nice
furnishing. even a washer &amp;
dryer, comp,etelv sktrted
and ready to occupy. Ther
isn't a cleaner or well kept
home in the area Just hke
br•nd new. located in Gallipolis area. You must see tO
appreciate, all of th•s
t12,900. Financing availa·
ble. low down payment. and
low monthly payments For
information call 992-7034

or 992-6284.

33

Farms for Sale

88 acres on Bulaville-Porter
Co . Rd . 3 Old farm house
for sale by owner. asking
•&amp;6,000 . Interested partv
please call 446- 724 7· or

&amp;13-293-7270.

garage,

nice

ences. 6t4 -992 -2517.
For rent -2 loVely Riverfront
houses. 3 bedroom and 2
bedroom. Each has 1%
baths. fireplace and garage
References exchanged .

304-882-2836.

3 bedroom house for rent .
Garage and pool. $300.

614-992 -5858 .

2 bedroom un fu rnished

11· 1 acre river1Jont lots,
low down payments, low
monthly payments . 614·

378-6278.

3 rooms and bath. 142 4th
Ave .• S160 mo . S100 dep ,
8 mos. lease required Call

446-3667 after 5.
House beautiful 3 bdr • 2
bath. LR. FR . wall to wall
carpet , dtshwasher . ges
heat, air cond ., in Gallipolts

Rof. req . Call 446-1409
after 6 .
Two storv house, 4 bdr ..
$260 per mo $250 dep .
req . Call 446 -4222, 9 :30-

5:00.
Nearly new 2 bdr., 2'/z m1.

from HMC. S195 mo .. S100
dap. Coli 446 -3617.
5 rms., bath, carpeted, gas
heat. $180 mo plus dep.
Neighborhood Rd . 446 ·

4767 after 5.30.
Newly redecorated home.
nice neighborhood, Gallipolis. 3 bdr .. 2 baths. wall -wall
carpet, stove, refrigerator.
weaher·dryer. $350 mo ,
deposit 8. ref . requird . can

446-0186 after 5.

Call446 -1519.

2 bdr. apt. , utilities partially
paid . 3 room apti. utilties
paid . Call 304-675·51 04 or

Cell 304-675·5545 or 675 2371 .
Two lovely riverfront
houses, three bedroom and
two bedroom. each has 1 Y2
bath . fireplace and garage.
References exchanged .

304·882-283 6.
Attractrve 3 bedroom home
for rent , Park Drive , $300 .
monthly Call 304-675 6270 weedkays before

4:30.

for Rent
Nice 2 bdr. trailer, Hannan
Trace School area , Rt 218
S100 dep , S174 mo. Call

256-6251 after 5:30.
1 2x60 2 bdr modern furntshed trailer, convenient
location. Upper Atver Ad,
deposit req Call 614 -446·

2 bdr apt .. 1 mi., North of
8rrdge

Call 446·9386 or

446-4154.

N1ce 2 bdr. apt. for rent 16

mm
fromGallipolisonRt 7
Ca11614 -256· 1198 .
1 bed room Apt. S 196 mo
includmg utilities . Equal
housing opponunity . Con tact Village Manor Apts
Aputments

304 · 675·

5548.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 614 · 446-

8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .

8558 .

Apartments now avatlableto
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of less than
$12.300 . Ren1ing for 30
percent of adjusted income-

2 bl!r trarlers Apartments 1

.Phone 304-675-6679.

bdr. Beautiful river view 1n
Kanauga Fosters Tra1ler
Park 446 -1602

388 9760.

2 bdr trailer for rent in
Cheshire. Furn ., $160 mo ..
$100 depos1t Call 614-

+QJt086

-.-

VA&lt;

Duplex 6 rooms. bath, basth

25 Road.
Pleasant.
ment,
waterPoint
furnished,
Lock
1-614-446-0239.

playmg in a rubber br1dge
game in Houston, but his
double was certainly effeclive He didn't really expect

to pick up 1100 points, but he
felt from the bidding that he
was sure of a two-trick set.
Ol course, he did like the
bidding, since it let him

t K&lt;

+K IU 8 5
Vulnerable: Both.

Dealer: South
West

Nortb.

East

Soutb

Pass
Pass
Obi

2•
3•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

3+
4•
Pass

t+

Opening lead: +2

256-t 529

614-992-7787.

42 Mobile Homes

.

7 52

SOUTH
.K J963

ut1lities paid, aduhs only, no

N1ce 2 bedroom apt .. &amp;43
Second Ave ., Gallipolis .
Ref and deposit. Call 614-

Today's West wasn't Mike

.. 9 752

t A 753
+76432

noted for his inspired bus!~
ness double! of freely bid
contracts. He would say, "I
didn't like their biddmg"

Gottlieb. He was Dan Morse,

EAST

•a

••
" KJ 3

3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.

446 -2236 or 614 -446 2581

ll -lt-83

'IQI086 .
• 9 %'
+AQJ9

304-675-73Q6.

Completely fu .rn1shed .
newly decora ted, all electric.
centrally located. at $200
mo . plus deposrt Call 614·

3 bdr 2 baths , heat pump, 2
car garage, ntce location .

NORTH
+QIO&lt;

WEST

port Call 614-992·3457.
Full basement, 1 1h story
with city water, double
garage. garden . 1 small child
accepted 304-675 - 1076.

early days of contract, WCJ:S

Furnished aptl., 1·2 rm &amp; .
bath down &amp; 1 up. Also 1· 4
rm &amp; bath up Clean, no
pets. adults only . Ref . req

pets Call 446.3437

141170 3 bdr , 1 % bath ,
close to hosp1tal. Call 61 4·
36 acres at Rodney on W. T.
Watson Rd . Owner ftnancing available. Ca11446 -822 1
after 6 weekdays.

3 rooms,

tors. TV sets.

By Oswald
Jacoby
aod
James Jacoby

Mike Gottheb, one of the
really great players of the

know that his partner was
very hkely void of~elubs
Sure
enough,
East
trumped the club lead and
returned the queen of
diamonds. Dan's ace took
South's king and Dan gave
hiS partner a second ruff.
East cashed a h1gh d1amond and shifted to a heart.

It didn't matter what South

did. He bad already lost four
tricks and slill had to lose a
heart, the ace of trumps and
a th.ird club ruff.
Note tbat North and South
had been most un 1ucky, but
the1r bidding had drawn a
diagram for the defense.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

t::::::::::::~~~~~~r---:;;:;:;----1

Furn1shed mobile home,
adults only, dap . &amp; ref. No
pets. Call after 5. 614 -3672 bedroom tra1ler . Real mce .
Brown ' s Trailer Park. 614·

992 ·3324 .
2 bdr mobile home 12x60
furnished, S1 75 plus deposit &amp; uttlit1es . No pets, lot
No 20 , Country Mobile
home in Darwtn , 992 -6836

or 992 -7479

2 bedroom mobile home .
Utilities furnished . No pets.
Depostt and references re quired. Adults or couple
with one child Located 2
m1les out Rt 43 Call after 5
p m 614-992-3647.

992-7479 .

In Middleport· nice trailer
space. any stze All utilities
available. 614 -992 -2101 or

614 -992 -2319.

$99 .• to 435. 7 pc. $189

and up. Wood table with sue
chairs $425 to $745. Desk
$110 up to 8226 . Hutches.
8650. and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bad complete
h
260 . an d
wit manresses. $
up to &amp;395 . Baby beds,
S 1 1 0 . Mattresses or box
springs, 1ull or twin, $58 ••
firm. $68. and 878. Queen
sets, 8195 . 4 dr. chests,

MIDGET FARM - Eastern
schools. 9 acres, some woods,
pood and 3 beylroom home.
Only $32,500,

Bllwln organ with learning
tapes and lassona. like new .

NICE - Remodeled 6 rm.
home, 3 bedrooms, modem
k!chen, central hea\ good
carpeting and garaga Asktng
$35,000

tor . Retail $699. ulo S399.
304-675-3099

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rm family
home near schooo on qu;et
streel lots of mce carpetin&amp;
I ~ baths, central heat, swim
pool &amp; new garage $45,900.

Antique Hoosier cupboard
all orginal mint cond. Call
448· 3945 evenings.

PRIME LOCATION

5 bedroom Georgian Colonial Brick- entry hall w/beautiful open stairway, den. 21\ baths. Chandler kitchen
w/oodles of gorgeous cherry cabinets &amp; new appliances.
Extra large. living room w/wood burning fireplace, formal
dmina w/butlt-in china hutch. full basement w/fueplace.
fiflished attics, 2 car garage, beautiful finished natural
wood floors &amp; woodwork throughout.
BONUS: Attached 7 room office w/1\ bath- seller financ ing could be considered.

Phone 513-793-2783 or 446-8223

6245.

Limestone, Send, Gravel. Sofa $100, chair $40,
Delivered In Mason. Meigs. Whirlpool waaher $100 full
Gallla or pick up at Richards size maple bed S90, di~ette
,
$26, large book shelf
Son. Coli 446-7785.
lamp $15. drapes S7

Westinghouse electric dryer,
older model, workl fine,

840.00. 676-4439.

e.

Firepl•ce insert·atill in fac ·
tory carton·automatic
controls·2 blowers · glass
door· ash pan -fits 30 in. to
48 in. fireplace-burns wood

8799 304-876-3099.

16in. Quater TV, color,
remote control. demoatra-

53

COUNTRY HOME - Aqualrty
5 yr old ranch home. near 5
Pis. 3 bedrooms, large fam;ly
room wtth fireplace, sundeck &amp;
2 car fimshed garage for
$59 900
WALK TO THE STORE - Th1s
lg home has ;ncome wtth v;ew
of the nver central hea\ bath,
par~ng and mce lot.
A-FRAME - The ownerS w;ll
sacnfice th1s like new home
Peaceful country lot. Comoact
and lovely loft Call to see at rust
$30,000
We advertise all properties 4
times a mooth. Want to sell,
Call 992-3876.

Housing
Headquartets

'--a.wt•

Broker-Auctioneer
Call 446-0552 Aflytime
Beth Null.£45-9507

BMR 426- OWNER SAYS SEll - It has an assumable loan with
on~ 9\l% interesf:'We are tal~ng about a •ery clean, 3 BR home
s!uated oo n;ce Nat lot lfl a family oriented ne;ghborhood.
REDUCEIJI $3,000 down and assume loan!

~'AR 435- IDEAL sTARTIR HOME- 3 BR, brge kttchen. LR,
carport natural gas heal, new root: located w;thm Gallipolis city
l;m!s. Pnced at $31,900. Be the first to see th~ one1 .
BMR436 - EXCELLENT STARTER HOME with 2 BRs.LR, DR, mce
kitchen, utility and new bathroom Carpeted throughout Screenoo
pam, carport Large lot Call tor appo1 0tmenl
BMR 389 - OWNER SAYS SELL TODAY! Your fam;ly wtll enjoy lhe
roornin,;s of th~ hmre lndudes 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR, DR, bui~in
kttchen Situated on large corner lot. Oore to town m crty school
di~rict. !Green Elem I Call to see tho one!
BIIR 440- 2 STORY FRAME t&lt;&gt;me for ooly $10,500. Rent tor
l ~e 1n It Etther way lhe value 1s thert Can now for appo1ntmenl

Antiques

Sewing Machine, zig -u gs, ! - - - -- - - - - monograms. sews on but· Antique mahogany sec tons, mekes button holes. tiona! book ca11. Green 6h
makes
New 198'3 Nechi Free Arm
hristmas tree. silver . 6ft.
Christmas tree with rev9lv~
Sewing Machine, zig·zags, tng light. Humidifier and
monograms. sews on but- misc . furniture . Call 446·
tons, makes button holes, 37 86 .
mali:ea design stitches, also 1- - - - - - - - - heming and overcast. must 1 983 Be nco room mat,
sell by December. Retails 12x32 addition for trailer.

c

$349.95. now $130. Car- Call 614-379-2712 .

riel

E. MaittW
POMEROY,

0.

992-2259
NEW LISTING-- Rutland One floor plan home wtth 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms, dimng
room, and a garage wrth 2
bedrooms and a bath also
$24,900
NEW LISTING - Middleport
- 1'h st&lt;ry home oo a &amp;000
~reel Plus a mce garage on a
level ~l $14,900
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
ranch home on a QUiet street.
cute kttchen. large ublrty room,
outstand;flg storage $32,500.

Phone ....... ......... .. .............................. ...... ·············

Umbaugh Building Co., Inc.
P.O. Box 7 •

Reno, .Ohio 45n3

(614) 373-0130

'

'

WOODBURNING STOVES,

Briarwood .,ool table. slate
top, regulation size. with cue

sdcko &amp; balls $250. Call
614-367-0638.

MIDDLEPORT - Spacious 2
st&lt;ry home w11h 3 bedrooms,
large liv;ng room, formal dming
room, kitchen, and one &amp;
oneth;rd baths. Has a lull
basemen\ front &amp; rear porches
and a mce back yard with
storage budding $26,500

300 larg_a evergreen Japanese yeulls. 200 small Japanese yeulles cuspidat capi-

New 1983 Nechl Free Arm
Sewing Machine, zig -zags,
monograms, sews on buttons, makes button holes.
makes design stitches, also
heming and overcast, must

John Duerr Hammer mill. 30
1-30 caliber, !1-Stevens 12 h.p. Allis Chalmers electric
gauge ahotglJn. both exc. motor. Call 614·992·701 5
cond. with ammo . Also
handmade gun rack . Call la_ft_e_r_5.:._P_.m_._ _ _ _ _.:_

NEAR POMEORY -1'A acres
ollevel ground for a big garden
and yard Plus a nice 3
bedroom ranch with new
carpet. equipped kilchen.
woodburner, storage build;ng
and a paM $36,900

·&amp;14-446-8039.

1000 gallon Skid tank with

Firewood for ule $35 a

electric meter and pump.
Kept inside garage. 614-

lime 1tona delivered

30in. Electric Range, 4
young hogs, hay mixed with

for

New wood bu11ning stove
w1th firebrtck S325. each .

vered. Call before 3:00PM

LINCOLN HEIGHTS - A mce
and neat one floor [Jan home
wtth 2·3 bedrooms. full basemen( and alum ~ding
$22,500

448·9200, after 4 call 446·

7660.

304 -675-1578 or 6757896.
gal.

275

fuel

304·675· 3443.

011

tank.

Computer Commadore
Vic20 Super E11pander with
JKRAM cartrtdge. Adven·
ture Land cartridge. pro·
grammer manual. 304-675·

2290.

Weight bench with barbel land dumbell set. Call 304·

882-2664.

have papers. Call 446-0291

D Cell 614-246-5121

Dog, 7 weeks old., good
with children . Wetzel Bailey
742-2705 .

56

Pets for Safe

1- - - - - - - - - HILLCREST KENNELS
Barding all breeds Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies· Stud
Service. Cell 446 · 7795
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

614-367 -7220.

Golf cart Cushman. gas.
$300 .00 . 304· 273-21 05 .

1- - - - - -- - - -

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All -breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa ·
citittes. EngllshCockelSpaniel puppies. Call 614-388-

New insulated coveralls.
$27 . 50 ; Heavy dentm
jackets. S21; Army tiel~
jackets, S46; Camouflaged 1 .:_97_9_0_.__·_ _ _ _ __
armv clothing. orange clo· •·
thtng. in'sulated heavy boots Dragonwynd Cattery ·
S18. Sam Somerville , East Kennels. AKC Chow pupRavenswood . Open 1:00· pies, CFA Himalayan, Per7 :00PM . Saturday, Sunday, sian and Siamese kittens.
other days after 5PM . ::104· _
c_a_ll_4_4_6_
-3_8_4_4_a_f_t_er_6_.__

1

675-3334.

Delivery free, Potnt Pleasant. Sand Hill Road, Rt. 2
Nor1h. Sam Somerville' s

Buy Chnstmas pups now,
Airedales, AKC from private
home with lots of TLC. exc .
family oriented pet . Ready

sets starting at $49.96 . 14K
gold diamond pendant &amp;
earring sets $66. Large
section of sterling 1ilvar
charms s 6 each. We take
trade ina. Frankl Pawn
Shop. 430 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis\ oh 446-0840.

REALTORS
Henty E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692

OPEN SUNDAY 1-to 5,
·wood World, 2506 Grand
Central Ave., Vienna, WV.

m

Jo Hill 985-4466

Oak tables &amp;. chairs, corner
cupboards, buffltt1 &amp; etc.

Wood World, 2506 Grand

Central Ave .• Vienna, WV.

1£.11.1011

Morning heating
ahotgun $1 00. 2
trailer $400. Call

UTES
REAL· ESTATE
446-4206

Bonnie Stutes, Realtor

m
~
Auuo',

TWENTY ACRES, no house, Chester Township. Reibel Road.
'

LOT in Racine Villace, 75xl50, M.H. facilities, ·Yellow Bush Road.
APPROXIMATELY 2'/z ACRES and house
needs extensive repairs. Racine Village ..
'

Home National Bank
"949~2210

TINGY

(]

I K)

AKC regi stered Doberman
pups, black &amp;. rust , 2 males,
1 female , $50 each . 304·

458-1513.

IRAYNPTj
tJ r

Dryer flr"hOod · delivered.

1""1'5 5HELL?

tMESHECI

XJ I

Now arrange the cird&amp;d letters to
torm lha ~rprisa answer, as sug·

(J

Answsrhoro: "(

gested by lhe above car1oon.

I XXI I l I Xr

(Answenl Monday)

·. I Juml&gt;es: ITCHY
Yesterdays

FLAKE CEFILE WALRUS

Answer: After another woman had "turned'' his head,
he obviously couldn't do this anymore -

Just in time for Christmas,
beginners banjo with ca·
se,two antique guns,baby
furnishings. 304-675-

7770.

,,

'' .

VERY PERSONAL HOME
IN CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Warm and ;nviting w;th convenient location. close to fac;l~es.
Large liv;ng room, 3 bedrooms,
country kitchen , family room
wtth fireplace, laundry room
and pat;o Beau~ful luxunous
crpet througllout and best of all
pnced in the $40s. Call for
pee;onal shoW;ng today.
#588

NEW BRICK
APPROX. I YEAR OLD
Whtte bnck Iron~ 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms 2 baths mce modern
step-saver krtchen. Eloctnc
heat pump wrth A.C. Two car
garage. N1ce landscaped shady
back yard Beautiful home, you
must see th~ one.

#581

NICE COUNTRY HNOME &amp; 2 ACRES
1728 sq. ft. 11vmg space plus 2 bathrooms Full basement unfimshed, front porch 15ft by 32 fl2 car garage 32 fl by 32ft
all under one roof, 2 acres more or less, 400 fl frontage by 216ft
deep, all useable. New home not com~elely fm~hed. Hasa garden
bath tub - Is own water system ldnlled well), Buck Stove heater,
plus elednc healing sy:;tem, has about everyth;ngyou would wanl
Pnced af $59,900 00. Phone nowll
#587

Radio Shack stero casseHe

tape deck. Call 304-6753658
Misc. ·merchandise. 4hp
generator 1500 watt. 8360.
304-676-6429 .

2 twin beds, complete. good
Upholstered head ..

IN GALLIPOLIS -WALK TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
Price reduced for qu;ck sale. $29,900. 6 rooms. 3 BR, lull
basemen\ mce large front porch No upkeep N;ce large shade
trees. low taxes Home you should be check on
#530

board 875 . aach. 304-6755604.

RODNEY- HOME AND BUSINESS OR RENTAL.- Co•;ole·
tely reflmshed older 2 story. Large bu1id1ng Storage
schools Make us an otter' Jusl move'"- there ;sn't any·
thing that needs to be done before you move. You should
really look at lh1s home It 1s a very mce home

ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses' See the fenced·m pa~ure wtth 4 acres more or k!ss
;nclud;ng a three bedroom home, just a few miles from Gallipol•.
Excellent land for farm;ng as well as new home construct;on. l.arge
barn plus two storage bwld;ngs, pond slacked with catl1sh bass
and blue~lls, large concrete dnve Call for a showing and be
surpnsed.
#4317

25 ACRES - 8 ROOM HOUSE
N;ce remodeled home Bilwn·tnmsulatiOn 2 storage bu;ld;ngs.
ch;cken house. M1m farm. Cheshire Townsh; p. New country
krtchen
#558

THE MOST ELABORATE HOMES tN THE
- SOLID CEDAR, 3 INDIANA ' STONE
FIREPlACES, ONE IS LOCATED IN THE MASTER
SUITE, PULLMAN KITCHEN, DINETIE PlUS
FORMAL DINING. SUNKEN CONVERSTION PIT IN
I ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS. LOCATIO ON 112
I ACRES.

FRESH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
Move nght 1n 1h1s fully furmshed Mob1!eHome wtth approx 7acres
of beautiful woOdland. Pertocl for rellrement Call for mformation.
#583
VACATION CAMP BY BLUE lAKE
Owner flnacin&amp; sundeck, rural water, septic system, electnc Buy 11
w;th campmg tra;ler or wtthou~ concrete pad. Great flsh;ng! Buy
and move righl m
#584
LOW DOWN PAYMENT. OWNER FINANCING
Are you lookmg for a 2 bedroom oome overlookmg the OhiO R1ver
w;th little maintenance. Beginner home or retirement home We
have rt.
#260

#1252

JUST LISTED - Remodeled home wtth aluminum sidtn&amp; 3
bedrooms. bath. 2 outbUIId;ngs plus 2 acres.
#0022
'

NEW LISTING- Cozy home w~h 3 bedrooms, eat·mk~chen, mce
~ city schools Th·~ home may be ·the one for you

#1295 '

-

SURROUNDED IT BEAUliFUI COUIITRYSIDEEXC£1100 NEIGHBORHOOD. THREE BEDROOM
RANOi HOM£ HAS 2 BATHS. LARGE LIVING
ROOM WITH STONE AREI.ACE, SCHEIRICH 1\000
CABINETS IN EAT·IN KfTOiEN. KYGER CREEK
SCHOOLS. COULD OOILY BE THE BEST BUY ON
THE MARKET

'
NEED A HOME YOU'U Ill PIOUD OF - AT A
PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD? 3 BEDROOM BRICK
HOME 11! BATHS, FAMILY ROOM W/FIREI'lACE,
PlUS WOOD BURNER IN LIVING ROOM.
EQUIPPED KITCHEN, 2 CAR GARAGE. POSSIBLE
LOAN ASSUMPTION. $48,000.

~udM'~ Ca11adaq CReaQ to~ 25 ~ocusf gbeel, QoQQlpoQir. ~ki9

._
(it

7 ACRES~ Large brick &amp;frame oome. has new roof andspoutih&amp;
Large berf\ owner will f;nance, city school d~tnct.
.'
#1145
150 ACRES - Good fn, beautiful rol~ng land, 3 barns, tobacco
bose. pond. Rl 141
#1012
MOBIL£ HOllE - 1973 Holly Pari&lt;, one owner, excellent
canllition, 14x&amp;l, 2 bedrooms, extras, storage budd;ng located 1n

Quail Creetc.

'

#1099
lii!ESillR'S SPECIAL - Two bedroom home wlth llummum·
IMI tt Out of town ownersaystosefllmmedill!ly,16,500.

•

FACE HIS WIFE

WHAT A DEAL! $17,000
Come see for yourself Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washer, dryer,
d;shwashr, refngerator, woodburner, and all l1ke new Storage
bwldmg and 2 car carport Kyger Creek Schools
#551

CaH 304-67&amp;-777t.

t&lt;&gt;me.

...

HOW DOES A 6AE!IY
C.HfCK FIT INTO

IN CITY
3 bedrooms, ~orm doors and windows, 6 room ranch stylew;lh no
upkeep, ~nyl ~din&amp; Nal gas furnace N;ce modern k;tchen Price
ooly $29.900 00
#590

OUTSTANDING BUY - Large ranch oome, 3 bedroms, 2 baths,
larmly rm., celltral ar, 2 car garage, beaubful carpet you'll love this

Three acres with a nicely constructed concrete block home 26x60, 3 bedrooms, one
bath, 12xl5 livina room and 24x24 family
room. Partially carpeted, fuel oil furnace
with facilities for wood burner. 12xl5 block
storage building, 20x30 block garage. ~ight
off Rt. 248, country setting. Y'2 mile east of
Chester, Ohio.

AKC registered Dachshund
puppies. also en adul ~ Dachshund 304·895 · 3958

Fish Terk and Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave .• Point
Pleasant. Phone 304 - 675 2063 . Hours Mon -Sat. 11 ·
6, Sun . 1-5 . Tt!n per cent off
Dog and Cat floa eolian . 10
gallon tank set up, 826.99 .
Get $5 .00 free ftsh with a
tank, any tank . Green
Swords, 2 for $1 .25. Gold
fish , 4 for s 1 00 . Many more
flsh specials in shop .

fam;ly room, penty of garden space Lots of dwart frwt trees,
wood burner ~ove, fuel oil FA furnace, thermopane windows and
storm Windows Beautful seU;ng on State H;ghway No. 160 at
junction of old Rt 160. See 11 now.
#591

Firewood. 304-882-2537.

For Sale
Phone 446-8221

·-·------

.

THE PERFECT SffiiNG

2-cabbaga patch dolllook~a­

.

-'''•

992-7138.
Full blooded English Bull 1- - - - - - - - - . , . - -

4]Jedrooms, 2 baths, 2211 acres more or less. formal d;mng room,

Real Estate General

.

1 CFA registered mala seal point Himalayan kitten. 6
Wlonths old. Good pedigree .
Hold for Christmas. 614·

liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliili~R~e~a~l~.E~s~t~a~t~e~G~e~n~e~r~a~liiiiiliiii;;;;~

large oil field electric radiator heater. Permanently
•ealed with thermostat control. Evenings·814-992-

cond.

Pets for Sale

61~i~~~~~:i~~~~~i~~~~ii

stove with fon S300. 12 ga. 1 - - - - - - - - - -

pump
horse

wtth information .

56

Surplus
clothing,
army for
wks..new
old.loving
Call homes,
after 5 ,
Army
- Denrm
- Rental·
leather boots. insulated !..:6_1_4_-2_4_6_-9_2_6
_4_._ _ __
coveralls $27 50 304-6753334 after 9PM
Jack's Tropical Fish Thank·
giving Specials. Baby paraCable TV sales Reps keet $5.99, pearl cocka1iels
needed!!l Due· to heavy $42.95, blk. gerbils .99,
demand, we are expanding fancy hampsters .99, button
our direct-sales . force in quail S2 50. female canarys
Potnt Pleasant and sur- $8.99. 1-9 mo. old Chihuarounding areas. We have hua puppy $40 . 55 gal.
immediate openings for 8 combo aquarium $166 42,
professional, carrer - 10 gal. blk ag . I tank only)
oriented
sales 68 .99 . 10% disc . on other
representatives -proven. Ag . · 5% disc off fish Rt
successful, dtrect-sales ex- 160, Evergreen . Call 446perience required . For more 0198 Hrs. 1O:P0-8:00.
information apply at the
Ceblantertainment Offtce, AKC Chow Chow puppies.
141 0 Jefferson Blvd, Point Call 614-256-1271 .
Pleasant,WV .

jewelry. 10K-14K-18K yel- llkes. t22, a piece. Regular
low !o white gold. Wedding 825. Call 614-992-3792.

N.AR DEXTER- 30 acres of
.lltnd w;th approx 7 acres
"tillable Gas and 011 nghls go
w;lh land. Ask;ng $15.000

Pots for Sale

Building materials
block, bf•ck, sewer pipes ,
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande ,

7352.

Jewelry-new and praowned

56

Wanted to buv Pekingese
puppy.· Does not have to

810. a ton. Coli 614-256- grass. 6t4-949-2237.
!-=-=..:...:..:....:.____
1427.

House Coal pickup or deli-

The Sunday

W. Va.

54 Misc. Merchandise 1-::--:::-:::--::.,..-,--,---...,.,...55 Building Supplies

plckup load delivered, 1 742-2125.
loads for 8300. Call 514· 1- - - - - - - - - 256-1427.
Ha,vest gold Kalv1nator 1 ·

BALD K~OB ROAD - Beauti·
ful 12 acre bu;ld;ng slle tn the
country - on a paved road
and much polenflal. rocla;med
spnn&amp; could have gas. $7,000.

A
~

614-992-7617.

by December. Retails
tapi Call 446-2906. You 1nll
$349.96, now $130. Car·
dig.
ries a 26 yr. factory warranty, 614-385-4635.
Cedar and walnut lumber.
Call614-379-21t6,
"h: ton mixer with motor.

REAL ESTATE

State ........................................................ Zip ....... .

25 yr. factory war- 1----~----­

Ditch Witch 2200 trenching freestanding. fireplace insEnts, mobile home apmachine 1-614-694-7842 . proved. &amp; furnance ad-ons
J1videns Farm Equipment,
Meat equipment digttal 4 46- 1 675 .
scala, cash register, cubar,
mea1 case. meat table. ReaAntiques, oak furniture re·
sonably priced. Call 6 t 4- production,
misc. items. Use
266-6880.
our Christmas layaway plan
Conkels, Tuppers Plains.
Youth bed. s1roller. babv &amp;
maternity clothing, infant
3·heavv truck tarpaulinsseat. &amp; tub, etc. Call 814825. each. 3 -16 ft . tow
388-9767.
chains. $15. ea. 10 speed
bike ~ t30 . 2· air compressor
Firewood- cut up, slabs, $16
hoscls, 26ft . with hardwarepickup load. Call 614-245- $12. ea. Truck battery-$26 .
5804.
Yankee screwdriver- S1 0 .

Real Estate General

Name .............................. ··········~ ·························· ·················· ·············
Address ............... :..... ...................................... ,.......... Ci~y ......... .............. .

a

ranty. 614-386-4635.

6t4-245-5096 aftOt' 5.

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes,
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 12 acres with stable, rail
fences, swimming pool, ~&amp;rage­
workshop. Immediate possess1on.

0 I wanr more info(mation

10:30 AM. Call 614-2561487.

Now 1983 Nochi Free Arm lu;;ad~~~es . Calt446-8648

Real Estate General

UMBAUGH

Rapid construction by Umbaugh "SUPER CREWS".
Highest quality material for a. long duuble life and attractive appearance.
.
·
Add a valuable asset to your ·property ... at a very rea,sonable cost.
Mail Coupon or Call Anytime

11ero $20, rocking chair
$20. Ca1h &amp; carry. Nov . 26.

boots size 6,

Warm

51 Household Goods
In Middleport-trailer with
e11pendo livingroom Vafy
clean, corner lot . 12 x 60 . 2 small refrtgerators, 2 gas
Adults onlv. 614 - 992 -2101 ranges, 1 Mayt8g wringer
or 614 -992·23 19
washer, automatic washers
8t dryer. All guaranteed
Mobil&amp; home for rent. two Glassware &amp; what nots for
bedroom, deposrt and refer· Christmas . Hupp's Apence required . 304 - 675 ~ pliance &amp; Glassware, Corner
4045 .
Rt 7 &amp; Rt. 141, 446-8033 .

e,a ., block !o white TV 820,

or coal. t690. Call 6 t 4Upholstered chair, 4x7
266-1216.
carpet. lamp, car radio . Call
614-446-0429.
New ctozar. very reasonable . ID;;i;;;i;;;~~;;;;~~::-;~
Call 446•8038 .

3 APTS. - You can buy and
INe free by rennng lhe other
two Just $19,500

BMR 443- NEW LISTING - FIRST TIME ON MAR~ET! BHevel
locted lust mmule$ from town on Debby Dr Includes LR, eat·ln
krtchen w;th d~hwasher &amp; disposal, d1mng room 1oins kitchen, 3
BRs, I bath plus 2 half baths Famijy room ;n basemenl I car
gMage. Heat pump. $99 mo. budget City school d;st Call for an
appoinlmentl

'41f'Bhlilrllll

GARAGES

VIRGIL B. SR .
116 ~ . lnd Sl.
Phone
1-( 614)-992-3325

BMR 442 - OWNER SAYS REDUCE! 974 Shultz mo~le home
112x651 T1p Out ;ncfudes 3 BRs, new carpet awmng &amp; paiiD,
sttuated on I acre m·l. Washer &amp;dryer ;ncluded Crty schools. Was
$20,000, now $17,900. ~II for deta;ls!

ONE OF THE FINEST HOMES IN GALLIA COUNTY

Call 742·

2352.

V

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Knauff Fltewood Pickup or More than a Bruth11t's fullftt.
Delivered. 12'' · 22 .. stocked brush . A representative i1 in
in yard. HEAP vender, your area. Call 675· 6825
between 1 and 4, Mon. and
prompt delivery. 614-256- lues

wllhar-$1 00

• ... , ..

Call 446 -0766

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North of
PomerOy. Large lots . Call

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, otto man, 3 tables. (extra heavy
by Frohttar), $686 Sofa,
chair and loveseat, 8275.
Sofas and chairs priced from
8285 . to $896 . Tables. 846
and up to $1 25 . Hide-abeds,$440. and up to
$525 .• Recliners, $175, to
8375 .• Lamps from S28 . to
$75 .6 pc. dinenes from

I;;C:e:ll:::6~-~5~:3~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ II ..,._GHEE

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

Furnished office for rent
Close to city building and
court house Call 446-0855
days, S125. mo

446-7398.

gun • Gun cabinets, $360.
Gat or electric ranges &amp;375.
Baby mattresses, $25 &amp;
$35. bed frames S20, 826.
8t $30, king frame $60.
Good selection o1 bedroom
suites , cedar chests,
rockers , metal cabinets,
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture .• bookcase,
rangea, chairs, drvers, re·
frigera1ors and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulavtlle Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. 1hru Fri., 9am
to 6pm, Sat .
446-0322

Furnished Rooms

7743

Washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges. Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Creat Motel

82 Olive St .. Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat erma 8399,
St75. Csll446-2205.
bunk beds complete with
bunkie• $199, 2 piece anFor sale good used livintron livingroom suite• 8199,
groom furniture and dinette
antron recliners $99, other
set. Call 614-256-6691 or recliners
$80. maple dinette
614-256-1196.
set• $179, love seats 870,
hidu·a·bed &amp;260, box
Washert It dryers rebuilt &amp;
springs 8t mattrast twin or
guaranteed 30 days. Clean
full $100 sat regular-firm
late models Call anytime
$120, maple dinette chairs
614-256-1207.
$36, wa1h standi $34,
maple rockers $69, 7 piece
3 piece bedroom suit, maple
chrome dinette set $149, 6
bunk beds. Call 446-4 t 1 8 piece
dinette aet $89, used
or 446-6677.
bedroom suites. refirgeratora, ranges, chest, dressers,
Franklin stove good cond ., wringer washers. TV's,
$65. 2 chest of drawers. 1 dryeres. &amp; shoes. Call 446doubleovengasstove$100. 3169.
44 1 7
Couch excellent condition.
Blue &amp; beige pin striped,

675 -7112 .

46 Space for Rent

GOODUSED APPLIANCES

$42 . 5 dr. chests, $54. Bed
frames, $20.and $25 ., 10

367-7898
Syracuse 3 bedroom
mobile home, total electJic.
ce ntral air, across from
London Pool. 992 -2 659

446-9301

51 H OUSO h 0 ld G 00 d S AUCTION SWAIN
&amp; FURNITURE

Nice 1 bedrom apt. 304·

45

Singer sewing nachine
makes designs, etc. Cost
$500 new, exc . cond . $89
cash or $6 per weak. Call

e1 00. Ken-

w•sher~

40 inch natural ga1 rang•S46 . Heavy duty G . E .

refrigera-

Ohio-Point

54 Misc. Merchandise 64 Misc. Merchandise

mora washer.dryw-e 1 50.

Ave .• Gallipolis, 446-1699.
Spin washert, g .. &amp; electric
electric ranges,

November 20, 1983

1983

61 Household Goods
Wringer

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third

dryer1. auto washers. g11 &amp;

Handing out diagrams

with
privata bath. Reference preferred . Call 446-2215 .
Furnished

house close to General Har·
tinger parkwav in Middle-

Nicly furnrshed modern mobtle home, m city . 1 or 2
adults only Csll 448-0338 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

'

adults only, no pets. Call

ll76· 27t t or 678-2816.

CLEARING LOT SALE
SAVE t4,000 OR MORE
PER HOME 1Ox 50 2BOR.
t2 , 995 . 1978 t 2x65
2BOR. ALL ELECTRIC
t7.89fi . t984 14x60 ALL
ELECTRIC ONLY $1 ,050
DOWN tt41.04 PER MO.
ENERGY EFFICIENT
HOMES NEW 14FT WIDE 3
BDR tV. BATH ALL ELECTRIC WITH 6 IN OUTSIDE
WALLS 81,500 DOWN
MONTHLY PAYMENTS
tt8fi.t9 PER MO. PLUS
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE
FROM. IF VOU DO NOT
HAVE DOWN PAYMENT,
WILL TAKE ANYTHING OF
EQUAL VALUE AS YOUR
DOWN PAYMENT. ALL
STATE MODULAR HOMES
V. WAY BETWEEN HUNTINGTON !o PT PLEASANT
ON ST. RT ~ 304-5762711 .

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Small furn . hQuse 1 or 2

Middlepon. $295. 3 bed- 446-0338 .
room, dining room, fulll - - - - -- - - - -

51 Household Goods I' __R_e_a_l-E-s-ta_t_e_G=-o-n_o_r--,al:-

BRIDGE

1- - ---....:_____

try, adults only. $160 mo.

basement,

November

Ohio-Point Plea5Cint, W. Va.

.J...~a~
BUHL-MORTON RD. - 16,340 acres. Tenms court lllx.l£U.
pool, pofld Contemporary home. 2.272 sq . tt. plus
ment. City schools: E1cellent locatiOn!
POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT- ROUND HOME- I A.
woodland . Basement. Pomeroy. $65,000 Lots of glass
. and decking. Let's make a deal'!
WHITE BRICK - 3 bedrooms, 21! baths, formalllv1ng
and dlmng, family room w/wb fireplace, large kitchen,
lots of eKtras. Bushels of trees, shrubs and flowers. A
must to see!
1981 KINGSLEY MOBILE HOME with 7x24 expando, liv·
ing room, w.b. fireplace, formal dinmg room with patiO
doors, k~chen wit~ all appliances, side-by-s1de refng.,
dishwasher, 2 bedrooms, laundry room , 2 full baths, gar·
den tub, 2 showers. Total electric, central air:. All under·
pmned. large covered palto. All th1s for only $18,900

MULTI PURPOSE PROPERTY
located on Qh1o Rt 7 near Gallipolis. Walk·m cooler, display
cab;nets, three rental mobile homes - 1ncome now $660 00 per
mo. Could be 6 room bnck front home plus2 rooms for busmess,
whatever you have in mind Flower soop, small grocery store,
carry-Out. etc. los of uses. Phone for appo;ntment to
live in
part - business ;n olher part Rent mobile homes. Great
Opportunity!

see.

#580
6.95 ACRES VACANT LAND OFF RT. 35
Roll;ng land - Bes1de Old U.S. Highway 35 In an area that is
developmg fasl Rl35, short d~tance west of Gan;polis. Get~ now.

#544
8 ACRES
Wrth;n 10 m;nute dnve to downtown Gallipolis. City School System.
Has hookup tOr motile home. Gallia Rural Water. electnc and septic
tan~ Night light on pole, 200 ft frontage on Graham Schoof Rd.
Timber. Bwld;ng sites Call now.

BEAUTIFULLY RESTORED Coloma! home sttuafed m
.Gallipolis 3 bedrms., library, fam;!y room. formal dmmg rm ,
ebaths, New Orleanstype cou;tyard, 3 wb !~replaces Call for more
.1nformat10n

• 2 BEORM. COTIAGE convemently located along 100 block of 2nd.
.Avenue One ftoor. 1deal·for newlyweds or ret1rement persons .
• $28,000 00
•
COMMERCIAL BUILDING- 7,000 sq. tt bu;ld;ng ~cated along.
•
Second Ave_, Galhp~IS Plenty ot park;ngspace Owner w;lllease or .
• sell
.NEW LISTING - 4 bedrm home s;tuated along old Rt 7, Lower .
.RIVer Rd. Galhprn;s City School D1st, c;ty water, good locat10n for .
children and adults, fireplace Pnce $37,500 DO. Call for .
• app~ ntme nl
• NEW LISTING- 3 bed rm ranch home. s;tuated near North Galli a.
e School, nice lot laces Rt 160 Pnce $37,500 00
• 2 BEORM. COTIAGE s;tuated along Vmton Ave Nat. Ras hea( •
I ~ baths. si• rooms, family room, 2 car garage Pnce •
• $32,DOO 00
•
•
•
COlONIAl DUTCH, 2 or 3 bedrm , 2 full ba!hs, convemently
•
located across from new court house 4: liVIng rm. w/ w b. •
!~replace, lg krrchen and formal d;mng rrn Call for e
••
appo;ntment $82,000.00.
•

e
•

~ ••,

2 ACRES. more or less, with 3 Bedrms., lam;ly rm .. attached •
garage, Pnvacy w;th in ground pool Near City !;mils. •
$59,000 00

•
•

••

.'

Galhpol~

•• NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm. home 1n Eureka near
••
dam. Be ready !or construct1on boom l1ve 1n or rent
•
$22,DOO 00
•

....·,
-.

•• QUALITY BRICK HOME s;tuated on approx 2acres, w;thln city ••
ol Galhpol;s Solid cherry woodwork and panel, 3 WB
fireplaces, full basement (f;n;shed). constructed dur~ng late •
•
•• 40's Amenit;es too numerous to list. Call Ken Morgan

--

.•

APPROX. SAC RES wrth 2·3 bedrm. home. all modern, eleclnc •
heat w~h wood or coal aux;hary, fa heat;ng system, hard road -~
on lhree · s;des of property Room for additional bU1Id;ng ~Is
Owner may help lmance qual;fied purchase r Call for more W
mtormat10n.
•

•
•
•
•

..'

..'
'
-.

4 BEDRMS., 8 RM . HOME s;tuated along Garl;eld Ave A •
conve.ment place to live Overlooks the beauliul Oh10 R;ver •
$30,000 00.
•

•
•

• t"ce
e• socked
10 UNIT MOTEL w;th house and approx 8 acres f;sh;ngpond e
Wlth f1sh. Relax and en1oy life wh;le mak;ng a hv;ng!' •
•

151 ACRE FARM near Vmton Has 3 bedrm house, lg •
equ;pment shed, bottomland, paslure and some wooded area . . •

.•

~~~~~~00

fam1~

:

•••
••
••
••
•
•

•'

..--

•

3 BEDRM HOME,
rm . adapted for w.b heater •
ln·grou nd pool, lg carporJ. fenced·tn yard, Madison Ave Pnce •
$46,900.00.

~.

d

•

•'
•

•

INVESTMENT PROPERTY!! 2apartment home·w;th 2 bedrms
each. located wrth1n 2 blocks lrom schoo5. Plenty park;n&amp;
&amp;000 locat~n $65,000.00.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Approx 4,000 sq. ft , located m
downlown Gallipol• Can be leased or purchased Across from
crty park;ng lot.

PREPARE FOR WINTER and move 1nlo th' 2 bedrm. cotlage
across from Foodland Grocery Nat gas heal. Buy now
$25,000 00

.."

COMMERCIAl PROPERTY - Ac~ve restaurant bus;ness
focaled on corner ~tin Kanauga Purchase and get ;mmed;ate
"Cash Flow" owner may finance some to qualif;ed purchaser
Calf fnr more information
·

•

••••

:.~

LAND. LOTS -;-

;;

BUILDING SITE-S

,.

r

- •

&lt;

- . .... f'.

�'

-·-

The Sunday Times-sentinel
56

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, c;&gt;hio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
71

Pets for Sale

1 female Blue Tick 1 1
month• old PCA~UKC regis·

tered. Started $250. 1 fe·

61

Farm Equipment

~ale welk~r

PCA-UKC reg·
S1u1 H1ckory Hill

•stared.
Jack 1 50. Red Bone Bench

*
champion

14 month• old.
Started e300 304-B82·
3590 . 9-5 .

John Deere model 70 trac·
tor. Ohwer model 60 row
crop S. cultivators All new
rubber Massie Ferguson 6
ft. 3 point -'de mower Call

61 4-379-t424

AKC

registered Weimare -

mer

pupa,

outstanding

bloodline, $100 - 8125
each. on remainder of liner.
304-4B9· 1719 .

57

Musical
Instruments

War.ted old pianos. Paying

$21JOO and 840 .00 each
First floor only. Wrute grving
directions Witten Pianos
Box 1 88. Sardis, Ohio

43946 .
1605.

P~one

614 -483

Wurlitzer Organ, excellent

condition. Phone 304 676

2150.

.62 Wanted to Buy

Autos for Sale

1971 Volkswagen 411 stationwagon, not running Call

1983 VW Rabbit . 614 ·992·
3517 aher 5p .m . or 614446 -7389 sny11me

1981 Z- 28 Camero T-top,

1980 Firebird Esprit, V6,
A.T.. A C .. P B , excellent

air cond ., PS, PB. auto .. 4
new tires, 43.000 m ... 81(C
cond • $7,900 or best offer

Coil 614-379-2726

1971 Dodge new tires, 6
cyl . good work car. $300

Coil alter 4, 304-675 -6384

1983 Oldsmob1le F1renza
Coupe, under 7 ,000 m1. , 5
spd ,

air,

PS.

PB .

cond•t~on

Must sell Phone

61 4-949-2052 , 61 4-949-

Call

top club cai\I&amp;S for sale 446-1 110 or 446-9245
Butler hereford farm lower
R1\let Rd,. Call 614·256- 1976 Ford Elite exc cond ,

1974 Tort no

843-5311

Autos for Sale

1 978 Mercury Cougar, good

condition. loaded with ex-

304-675-4550.
1976 Pinto Station Wagon,
good condition, 304·876-

6930

S400

614-

992-6249

1981 4 · door Crtation . Auto·

matic. PS. PB, AC $4000
Call 992 · 7403
1 9~0 Ponttac Sunb1rd,
phone 304-773-9143

'76 Che\lett, 2 door. auto·
matic, $1 ,295 RCA floor
model TV, 8200 Cell 304-

576-2989 or 576·2372 .

'69 Volkswagen, for part•.
Wtll run , cheap. 304-676·

2578

'75 Bu1ck leaabre. 4 door
hard top, s:outhern car, exc.

cond. 304-675-1769 .

Real Estate General

loadod . Call614-367·7224.
Pure bred S1mmental bull 1-:-1-:-9cc7-:-8--:T-:-r-an_s_·_A_M_.- T
---t-op .

27?4

Call 446· 7322

Beef cows for

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Apples from German Rtdge
Handpicked and drops
Golden Delicious, Red Deli·
cious. Crown Beautys, and
Wine Saps and Ctder Call

446-8598 or 614 -379 ·
2303

1978 Nova hatchback . r.JS.
PB, AC. auto , $500 or best
offer, body rough . Call 446 Four sow pigs. one boar Call 8061

304·895-3059 otter 6pm

6298 .

59 For Sale or Trade

64

Hay &amp; Grain

14:~~60 ,

2 bd room
furmshed, washer

Buddy

and dryer, gas, financing
aVBllable 614 -992 7479

4
spd ., AM -FM tape, sunroof.
real sporty, was $3,595 now
$3, 195 John's Auto Sales.
Sunbtrd

Ponttac

very goodiTthced hay . S30 a
bale
742-2038 , or 742·

2521

1- - - - - - - - - 1979 Toyota SR -5 coupe,
PS , PB air. 5 spd , S3 500
Call 614-367-7547 eve.
71 Chevrolet SJOO
446-2 857 after 3PM

extras.

Cell

448·0649.
1----,-----------43,000 mi. , 12ft. flotbod, 1
owner, axe . cond .• •3.960
Coil 446· 7322 .
1 - - - . , - - - - -- - 1 972 White tractor, single
axle w1th sleeper. 50,000
mi. major . Oood tir.., new
clutch. new PI'HIUN plate.
new p1lot bearing. Can be
seen at Ken. Stables, Oelll·

1976 Truck Ford F1 00. Exc.

cond. Mutt see 81 drive to
appreciete. $3,000. 814-

1979 Chevy Luv 4x4, AC.

2 PU toppers 8ft.. 866, 6'n
ft .. 8110 Coll446 -7322.

good tires. good cond. Call

$600. Coil 446· 7322.

1 982 VJ ton Dodge Pick -up

1979 CJ 6 Jeep meroon
with bl•ck top, white with

with topper. Standard 11)ift

Poy off. 614-992 -6434 or
614-992-6914.
Jeep excellent condi·

tion. '71 luv truck, VB con ·

gold •trlpe1, many extras.

304-882-3664.

I:::=:::::;:;:==:::::;===
74 Motorcycles

1980 Chevy pickup truck.
JAton, all original. 30.000

mlloo, $1,JOO. Phone 304·
937·2t8e.

covers, red bucket aeets 8a
console for Chevy truck or
blazer, Holley carbt, misc.
Chevy 73-80 truck perttt (no

1977 Nomad trave• trailer,
18 ft . lelf contained with

54~6 .

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
model ua;ed cars. Sm1th
Bu1ck -Pontiac, 1911 East ern Ave , Galhpohs. 446-

Improvements
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commer cial and reaidant1af. free
estimates. Call 614-256 ·

awning . 614-992-3194.

1182.

25 foot camper. Excellent
condition. $1 BOO. May be
seen at 874 Plum St. In
Middleport or call 992-

New end used tires.

Marcum Roof1ng &amp; Spout·
ing 30 years experience,
speciali:~ing

6163.

"

g,..ot $1100 882-2461

VW Super Beetle, 1971 . 1
VW bus-1974 614 -992·
3517 after 5p.m or 614·

446-7389 anytime

'73 Chevy Capuce 66.000
mtles, good work ca r. $475 .
I

304-675-1828

112.95 ACRE FARM - ThiS older couple would
conSider tradtng for a mce ranch style home Parttally
remodeled home 2 large barns. machmery shed. 3
other outbutk1tngs all '" excellent condttton 2670 lb
tobacco bse, pond 30 cares bottom land
#474

REALTY
446-0008

#460

-·----

GOOD LIVING FOR SAL£1 78\? acres mi l Lovely
bnck and lrame ranch diSplays 2 baths 2 BRs ,
16x24 kmohen wi washer. dryer, double oven
range. refng, OW, diSp Large hvtng room, arttclal
ltreplace Master bedroom IS 16x 18 Cellar house,
shed and 30x50 barn. 44 acres of pasture wrth
spring and pond Located tn Cheshtre Twp

TOO BIG FOR PRESENT OWNER - May be lUSt
nght lor you' ThiS home lealures 2 baths 3 BRs
krtchen wi range oven, r:NI,drsp andrelng. dtnong
room. hvtng room, lamtly room, ltreplace, 16&lt;32
pool. attached dou~e garage. carport and a paM
KC schools
ADRIAN AVE. _ 3 BR ranch wtth eat-1n
PRICE REDUCED TO $27.900 - Modern ranch 1104
krtchen.lwtng room. bath, carpeting and hardwood
wrth 3 BRs, hvtng room. krtchen. bath. carpel.
lloors. carport. Very convemen~ $39.500 •
electnc 88 heat an attched garage Localed '"
RodneyVtllage II Excellent buy lor ftrsl time home FARMER'S FARM - Approx 50 acres, near
ow ner'
Vinton All clean crllfl &amp; pasture land. remodeled 3
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING NEAR THE LAKE7 BR home 60x80 barn 2 Silos llormer dat!Y farm),
ThiS IS rt 3 BR modular wtlh 2 baths. hvtng room. lronls on '2 rds, large pond SEE THIS ONE BEFORE
dintng area, krtchen wrth stove and rein~" PLOWINGTIME $49,900
Comlortable screened porch wood burntngslave:
24x60 block garage and lots ol treBS

YOUR FAMILY tnlo lh• neat and attractive
belore wtnter. 3 bedroom ranch, 2 baths, eat-on
krtchen, hvtng room, famtly room Wtlh wood burner tn
basement, 2 car garage. vtnyl sodtng All thiS on a 1acre
lot

#462

THIS ONE HAS IT ALU Exceptional home near
· town leatures 2 famt~ rooms, one with large stone
room lamoly room one lull and fireplace and patiO doors. other has a bar. 3 BRs.
IWo nail baths, 2
garage ce~tral alf. 1ust dream krtchen nas cook lop. mocrowave, eye level
mmutes lrom shoppong and hospital Good buy oven. DW, diS p and range, 14x24 livong room,
' . dinette. carpeltng and 2 car garage
BEAUTV IN THE WOODS - Attraclwe bt·lelleiiS UREEN TOWNSHIP -CENTRALLY LOCATEDnestled on a 1.21 acre rolling lract'" ltio Kyger 112 acre larm has lronlage on State Route 588
Creek School DIS!flct. Features are 3 BRs, bath,LR Fatrfield Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fatrtteld Rd
kitchen and dmmg area. range, washer, dryer, ~ce Excelent lor larmong or develoment Older 5
carpet and WB slave 9\!% loan can be assumed batn also mcluded Owners wtll conSider Ill
wrth approx $11.000 down
smaller tracts ol short term financmg Call lor
FOLLOW THE CIRCUlAR DRIVE and you w.. tnlormatton
ltnd thiS eye-catchong home that leatures a roomy WANT SOMETHING AFFORDABlE? Make an
famtly room. 5 BRs, 2 baths, but~·tn range and apiJ(inment lo see this 5 room home Features 2 '
dishwasbet, 2 l11eplaces, S patiOS, woodbumtng ! BRs bat~ klehen, l~mg room, panamg carpet.
sto:~e, central alf, a~o has a pond and ulih!y ·lront and rear p&lt;Jches, with 1 acre m/1 on Kerr
buddmg
·
Belhei'Road.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD
- 12 acres mi l. approx 720 It level Rd !rootage, BRING YOUR HAMMER &amp; NAILS - And go to
rural water avatlable. excellent for butldtng or. work on thiS unfimshed home near Rodney Has a
mobtle homes . Call lor more tnlormation
•• full basement and over 11 acres ol rolling to level
• land Price has been re duced to $34.000
HEY MR. INVESTOR ... you can move into thiS
and pay your payments wrth the rent lrom tbe WILl BE YOUR PROUDEST POSSESSION! Beauti·
other IWo Duplex, double wide &amp;alenced pro can tul~ landscaped. Sp~ndid whrte bnck home
be yours Rear duplex unit IS absolutely lovely. ·exhibits approx 3100 sq It of ltvmg area wnh 3 or
Rustoc wal~. 3 BRs, loft, woodburryer, beamed 4 SR. 3" baths. 20x40 famt~ room, dtmng room.
cedong&gt; 3 BRs, avatlable m Iron! uri! w/ kitchen. beauttlul carpet, kttchen oilers OW , dtspo&gt;al
liVIng room. chomney lor woodburner, basement m1crowave and trash compactor, mtercom. atr
batn Doublewtde has 3 BRs.' kitchen.ltvtng room condit~ntng 2 car garage, 10x20 lutllt!y bUIIdmg

ooe·

- ~~~---

FIRST QUALITV BRICK ol French des1gn Thts home
has 2,o58 sq It of livmg space, pi"' lull basement
Large atti~ 3 bedrooms. 2\? baths, family room, dtntng
room, k~chen complete, breakfast room, 2 fireplaces.
Ntce 1~e lawn at Tara Estates
#&lt;U;9

1973 RANCH STYLE HOME - It has rt all One stO!Y
three bedroom large eat-m kttchen, formal dtntng
room. ltvmg room farn1ly room Wllh fireplace, ulthty
room, large concrete patiO. Approx 8 mtles from
GallipoliS $36,000

30's
#379
NEW LISTING - COME TO TH£ COUNTRY and get
away lrom ~ all 3 bedroom ranch. 1\l acres
Woodburner Storage building Only $21,500.
11477
I ACRE LOT - Mostly flat and located at Route 141 '""
Green Townshtp Rural waler available

#481
lAND CONTRACT - Wrth very reasonable down
payment 7 year old home wtth 2 bedrooms, bath,
eat-m kitchen tncludtng range and relrigerafol, living
room, 19 acres. more or less $25.600.
11451

Call
304 -675-2088 or 6754680.
BISSELL FLOORS ·' 1 - -- - - - - - -

Profe~tional floor •ending
and refinilhing. Keep that
natural look in your home

Water Wella. Commercial
and Domeatlc . Teat holea .
Pumps Sales end Sarvice

Cell 378-6349.

304-895·3802.

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, Ono

Motorola,

Quaz·•r, •nd

houoe calls. Coil 676-2398
or 446-2454.

tor. IDoy 614-692-4068,1
Inight 61 4·698-8205.1

I
I WATCH
THE SUN GO DOWN -from lhiS roomy 3 BR
ranch 1220
of enJoyablehllmg space,
21arge
I bedrooms part1al basement,
large eai·IO k1tcllen w1th all
appliances and a spac1ous bath mak.e t~ IS llome 11ery atI tractive
to sell, so don't he·
1 111 $37,900 Owner
AFFORDABLE- $3200 OOWN- And only
$325 MONTHLY PAYMENT oncludong laxes and onsur
I EASILY
redecorated 6 rooms and bath ranch wtth
SQ ft

w1th

IS anKJOus

•

SOMETHING
ALMOST NOTHI~G - In thiS well
cared for home you can get 5 bedrooons lor what you'd
expect lo pay for many ol the 2 or 3 bedroom homes
Bnck, 1\? baths, full basement N1ce lawn Pnced tn the
40's

PRICED FOR QUICK SALE - 134 Acre larm. Stale
Route 681. Tuppers Platns. Approx 20 acres crop land,
mc61 all level The rest~ wooded Has streams on iand
Gas well, past royatttes approx $750 per year. County
water ""labia $38,800 all yours
#367

#&lt;U17

.·
-·
.·
,.

..•

3 BEDROOM MODERN HOME- BUI~·in kmohen w~h
refngerator, stov~ range hood. deep lreezer Luge
livmg room and lamtly room With woodbumer. Dnlled
well wtth pump Garage and oth"' outbuildings Old
Route 35, Thurman area $34,000.
#390

·'

4ACRES OF NICE LAND to butld on. Ntce oomes tn the

area VefY good locatiOn. Wrthtn 3 mtles of GallipoliS
Buy all and use lor budding Ioili or butld your own
spectal home.

•

..

...

OWNER SAYS SEll -ThiS ntce oome tn Mtddleport
has been drastically reduced from $42,500 to
$32,000. lovtng room, 16rmal dtntng room, bath, 2
bedrooms, full basement. 1 car garage, alummum
Sldtng
11476

-·

....

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ancelll Newly

carport, fully fenced ,yard and gas heal Excellenl starter

home. $32.200
1st TIME BUYER- ThiS IS yauroppartunoly to buy your
OWN home mstead of paymg rent low ut1hty b1lls, mce
lot, steel s1dma, 3 bedroom s bath kitchen, l1vmg room,
and garage C1ty school d1stnct $30s

REDUCED TO $34,500 - low maontenance, clean and
neat 3 bedroom home on a !I at we ll kept lot C1ty school
d1stnct. convement to R1o Grande and/or c1ty. VA or
FHA
108 VINTON CT -CITY- Vacant and needs owner
Well bmll, good conditiOn, 2 BR home , gas furnace, cen·
tral a1r, \ car gar1!ge attached,

conve~ 1ent

to grocery

store Proced at $43,000
MOBilE HOllE - ALMOST NEW - Very nocely de
co rated 14x70 homewtth a 14x18 add~10n 11232 sq fi
J ~ou'll

appreciate the care am:! mamtenance this home
has had when you see 1t And you'll not1ce all the e11tras
like. a very eff1c1ent woodburmng stove, extra ntce
sheiYes, h1deaway bed. console TV. and very mce furnt ·
ture tnroughout Deluxe kitchen, coyered fron~ porch

and t2xl5 sundeck m back, 2 lull baths. cenlral mr.
washer and dryer, 2 storage bldgs, all on 1 acre II at
ground and all lor $26,500

POMEROY - 2 story frame house on 1 acre lot. 2
bedrooms, bath, living room, 2 car garage Pnced mthe
teens. ·
11441

#360

'

FARMERS FARM - 92 Acres produCing farm wtlh
tobacco base, mature wood~ creek runs through land.
Suitable for cattle or sheep or truck farming. Modem 2
or .3 bedroom oouse. Tobacco and stock bams. Guyan
Townshtp
·
•
·

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE! - Take a looli at thiS ntce
home. 3 bedrooms, large krtchen, bath, utility room
garage, area for workshop I &gt;I acres. cham link dog
pen . Ctty sclm distnct Priced tn the 30s
11413

11436
SMALL FARM - 57 Acres 2 bedroom motile home,
large barn tn good condition. A ijflle far111ng, a little
hunting a little fooling around. Free gas. Rural water.
Apprort. 45 acres wooded. 6 m~es from Cheshire.
$34.900

USE YOUR IMAGINATION - '8UIIdtng site 2\! acres
close lo RiO Grande. 28x48 basemen! shell just watting
to be fin~hed. Call for roore detaHs

11401

M:l!lll

PICTURE YOURSELF in th~ roomy tri·level. 3 large
bedrooms, 2 baths, lamtly room wtth ftreplace
eqwpped kitchen, breakfast area plus formal dtntng
area. 2 car page. Yery desirable location

PRICED REDUCED- Brlnd 11M home. 3 bedrooms,
1\? baths, large living fOOl!\ kitchen with dtntng area tn
one end, formal entry, extra wide hallway. Utility room.
Anderson wtndows. lot size apprux. 100 It x 120 It
Priced in lhe 40'1

11446

#461

136 ACRE DAIRY FARM - In active production until
this lpnng Step-down milktng parlor, barns sheds 2
sias, 5 ~ Tobla:o base. 1680 sq It modubr
home wtlh 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, kitchen with
eye-1M! double CMtiS and dishwasher, lieplac:e. For
men inbmalion
us a cal

LOOK AT All YOU GET FOR $21,(0) - 3 bedroom •
hom~ main balh, large kitchen, very nice IIVtng room,
good carpet, natural gas heat. aM new windows. lronl
porch, recenlly built garage 4Qx1501ot.Localedtn city
school district

eve

!456

'

EACH O,tCE II INDI,ENDEN'IY OWNID AND ONIIATID.

a 1118:1 Cetltu.ry 21 Real E1t1t• Corporuoa u trv11M lor U• NAI'• ud 111-~- o1
Ceni\IJ)' 21 ~all!,tatl Corporation lqulllorulq Oppart....,

A·

11412

..

.-.

..,.
.·

.

land w1th nver frontage. Go l1sh1ng, sw1mmmg, boatmg,
and.skung hom your front yard Oon't wa1t for mterest
rates to go h1gher, now 1s the t1me to buy

$59,900

BARGAIN! BARGAIN! BARGAIN I - Morlgage company

RIO CENTRES ESJATES- Beautoful wooded buoldmg

repossesSton Pnce redu ced down past bare bonus
$27,500 and we are look1ng lor an after 3 bedroom 2
story w1th family room, formal dmmg, bu11t m kitchen,
ce ntral air cond1t1omng has some new wall to wall car·
pet, new bath, lots of storage Th1s has to'be one of the
best buys In the co unty

I YEAR IIIARRANTY - On lhis 3 BR ranch makes ot
worry free for you to buy. Excellent house. pnced r1ght
at $44 900 vtlth mamtenance free alummum s1dmg, 2
baths, llv1ng roam, dmmg room, eqmpped kitchen , utilIty room, and mce screened m parch. Central a1r, gas
heat. c1ty s~hools, close to shoppmg

IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR SPACE - You should see
how much ltvmg s~ce th 1s home has. This 3 bedroom

ranch offers you afull basement w1th family room, sum·
mer kitchen , rec room, bath plus 2 extra bedrooms The
main level has an equipped kitchen, 3 bedrooms, bath
and fam1ly room and dmmg room. Nat gas heat and cen ·
tral a1r located on Rt 141 JUS! mmutes from town
lar1e acreage w1th a rernotteled ~ bedroom home Ap·
prox 10-20 acres crop, w1th balance mwoods and pas·
ture Has some bwldings and barns Home has f1replace,

carport and garage 011 Rt 554 Call Jtm Cochran
COIIVENIENCE OF TOIIIN - Nice well maontaoned 3
bedroom home on 2nd Ave lh1~ home features an eat·
10 kitchen, din1ng room. woodburner, 1!lz bBths nat gas

heattng and noce tree shaded yard Pnced at $41,500
I

1~ ACRES - RACCOON CREEK - 3 IIOBIL.E HOllE
HOOKUPS! _ lAvery attractiVe home or mobile home

site w1th large creek frontage ~nd access to Oh1o R1ver

Good locatiOn for boat dock buildong site; oul of llood
area. 3 water, sewer. and electnc hookups

•

BRICK TRI-1EVEL- 2ACRES- 5)earold, 3 bedroom
home off Rt 218 mcludes a family room w1th fireplace
1'h baths large kitchen, heat pump central a1r, and 2
car garage Pnced to sell at $59,000

'Re 's'1i'h~~~fi'~!~i:: -

Peaceful setbng,
country an, lots
, wonde~ul place to
ratse ch11dren You git 1 II
attract1ve 3 bed·
room home on a 1 3 acre
Youll
~ntoy a very mce cabmet J
1
baths,
large ut1hty room, 2 car garage Alarge
1 malles
room for a fam1/y room . enlarge dd1mng and rec room

Proced al $67.900 and has a 10~% assumable loan
9% LOAN ASSUMPTION - Recent IISitng ol home. 40 8
A C1ty schools, only ~ m1le, mce C¥1181 area to live, good
roads County water, level front la;.vn. space for garden,
modern quality bu1lt home, full basement. Recent 1m·
provements
$65,000! -I DON'T BELIEVE IT- Before you buy see
th1s Includes 4 large BR, tormal dmmg, fam1ly room. 3
baths, fireplace, 2 car gange. R111er v1ew Edge at town

1101 TEODORA - Ahoney for the money on lhe coly
Fme cond1hon, 3 BR, hv1ng room, fam1ly room, ut1hty
room new bath changes Cham lmk fenced back and

Iron! lawn Reduced lrom $46,500 down to $44,900
OeSLres offer Partial 10% loan assumpt1on poss1ble

have a really nice roomy three bedroom home w1 th full
basement and garage tn the c1ty school d1str1ctthat I bel
you can buy. Call us, we w111 help you own th1s house
now Includes woodburning fireplace, good neiRhbor·
hood hardWood fklors, and tust a mmute or two from
town

OIIINER MOVING TO COLUMBUS- Check the feature
ol th1s outstandmg 2story coloma! Has been completely
remodeled New metal s1dmg, new roof, new mcxtern basement co mpletely new kitchen w1th nearly 30 It of
cabmets, 2 woodburners plus forced au furnace, 3 big
bedrooms, 2 full baths, forma l entrance formal dmmg,
pat1o doors leadmg to a huge new su ndeck located
near Rm and Buckeye Hills on 2'h acres flat lot Owner

wants 11 sold Pnced al

~72.000

PRICE REDUCEO -AN OLD FRENCH CITY ORIGINAL
- You owe 1t to yourself to look. You'll agree that th1s 15
a mulch mcer home that you had 1m agmed An el!cellent
locatiOn, absoMely great 111eW, walk to everythmg and
remember almost everything IS new and done 1n very
good taste New roof, new furnace. new w1nng, new
plumbing, n.ew kitchen, new appliances. new carpet.
new paint. 2 new baths -a new life for you 1f only you

wtll come and see 1t for yoursell $99.000

IMPECCABLE MANNER - Situated on a large llat lei
w1th mature trees and QUiet neighborly surrounds Th1s
wonderfully decorated bnck ranctl hBs unbeatable fea
tures: large equ1pped etl;·in kitchen. d1mne room,
ut1l1ty room, enormous h~o~1rtg"'rea w1th warm bnck fireplace 2·3 BRs 3 baths, 2 car garage w/edra space and
att1c Storage, Central alf, and much more OWNER Wll

LING TO FINANCE APORTION OF DOWN PAYMENt Call

Dave W1seman

CUSTOM BUILT- Bnck ranch tn Crown City Very at

tract1ve and well mamtalned 3 bedroom home w1th over
1580 sq ft of flv lnQ area
Includes an equ1pped
k1tchen w1th dmmg area, 2 full baths, fam1ly room 2
n1ce covered porches plus a large IBndscaped yard

.... IIIlTH RIVER FRONIAGE - Cozy 3 BR home on
lower R1ver Rd Has beautiful hardwood floors that
match the bu11t-1n bookcase and tnm very well Formal
dm1nQ roam, charm1ng krlchen, playroom or TV room
Alsetlra1ler hookup on opposite s1de of road 2 roam cottaQe m rear N1ce, landscaped yard $48.900.

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be mtmmal, N1cely decorated ms1de w/warm
eat-in kitchen, d1ntng room. larce basemenl excellent I
for a workshop or other crafts (has 2 outs1de doors)
large att1c Buyf!rs Protection covers components for a I
,hxed mt as little as 5%down Why nol have alllhiS lor
after you buy Gzuden spot myard Call for more I
your
own
mfo
ATTRACTIVE 3 AC. SElliNG - Th iS 3 bedroom vmyl
37 ACRE MINI FARM FOR ONLY $29.9001 - You I
ranch
mmutes from H MC. Has 2 baths. eal·m
sho).lld
at th1s 11 you are mterested '" setme wooded
k1tchen, 2 car gaage, workshop _and a nice 3acre Jot .w1th
pnvacy. A remodeled 2 or 3 bedroom home that has a ·I
a mce v1ew Pr,1vate settmg $49,000
large warfning fireplace, b1g .kolchen, garage plus 37
acres w1th to~cco base located mHannan School Dis· 1
CEDAR SIDING ON THIS HOI£
one of the
most attrtct1Ye houses. on the street EKtra large lot altrict.
·
I
lows you'•to
garden1n1
prov.des pnwacy Well
. .
decorated tnterior. furnishod
3 BRs, and 2 car
..
garage make thiS home a .,od bur at $47,500. Wr1p
.
I
oround deck. c.orpeted
perennial flotien and excellent
City schools.
•
CALL
T~DA
513 2nd AVE.- Very intereslmg end booutWul homo in .
toytn lmmedtate possession on th1s stort hotu.OtJt.
ENJOY THE COVERED DECK OYERLOOKifi.G THE IN
GROUND 16'x32' SWIMMING POOL- Have an abun

dance of qualtty built cab1nets 111 ~our k1tchen w1th d1s
hwasher, range, d1sposal and trash compactor. AI! lh1s
w1th full basement, partly d1v1ded Two baths, fueplace,
located near City Also owner flnancmg 30 yr 1U%

OIIINER DOESN'T IIIANT TO LEAVE THIS LOVELY 3 BR
HOllE JUY MUST -In etty hmtls so your traveling wtll
flreplac~

~e~r

ver~

I

.

•

IS JUSt

-.-·.

loo~

~Makos"

e~JOY

.-

THE SMALl FARM YOU. HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR-

Just 2 miles north of Rm Grande Wooded area along
w1th crop and pasture land Tobacco base Also 10'~~:50'
mobile home County water and sept1c system 19 5
acres M/l m all

GETIING FINANC£0 IS NOT SUCH A BIG DEAL- We

·-,.

.-

lots from 2to 5 acres each !deallocatmn near college m
good res1dent1al area $6,800 to $11,000 La nd lays
very good lots of pmacy

Includes t2x64 mob1le home wtth wood stove. $32,000

,·

.--·
'-

mce landscaped yard Conventent to everythmg Only

and JUSt plam elbow room. then you II want to see thiS

161 ACRE FARM- $48.500 - Excellent buy on lhos

•.
•'·

621 JACKSON PIKE - !1% ASSUMPTION- Thos 6 yr
old bnck on RT 35 offers 3 bedrooms, 1!lz baths, d1mng
room, fBmly room, equipped k1tchen, 2 car garage and

70 ACRES - MOBILE HOllE - If you en1oy lots ol
woods. plenty of wildlife, streams, sprmgs, a large cover

$58,500

OLDER FRAME 2 story oome with 4 bedrooms,
I
fOOl!\ k~chen, family room, dtmng room, bath,
cellar house, garage with attached carport Could be
used for bugnes PriCed tn the 30'~
#377

sq tt of h~o~mg space plus afull basement, bwlt

'

~.

'·.

12~8

REALTOR

you the delatls Clyde Walker

!;'

..

has

mk1tchen w1th apphances, l 'h baths and o~o~er an acre of

....

you w1U hnd Located 1n Spring Valley- A cho1ce area
to ltve. And good re-sale value a1 homes Fmancmg avail
able w1th small percentage of down payment let us g1ve

.

"

RIVER FRONTAGE &amp; HOlE- ThiS 6 yr. old 3 bedroom

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
llI

~~r;;i~~~.~

GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY- Let 1! be yours to en1oy gra
c1ous llvmg mone of the best move-m cond1tmn homes

..

COMMERCIAL ACREAGE - 7 acres Corner of Old Rt
35 and New Rt 35 al Rodney. Springfteld and Green
Townshtp County water, lltnch ltne, natural gas and
elecbic are avatlable. AltematiVt! finandng posstble
.
11425

Business Services

Home
Improvements

GET

carpet

yOur

THE STAN-SHOR CO.

SHIP

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

Houle rei sing, leveling, resil ·

EJu:avaflng. Swimming Pool
Sales &amp; Service. Winter Covers,
Winterizing Kns, Domes, SP,s,
Pool Wtnterlling ·A.,ilable.
Dozor. Bacllhoe. Dump Truck

ling, concrete work, bese·

388-8869

STEAMER. Weter removal .
fumiture cleaning, free eat1·

motoo. 814·446-2107.

ment water proofing , foun dation work. free estimates .

.US 10¥£0 - ANIIDUS TO SELL-large remo·
~ed 2 story home 1n lown. There 'l' 3 bedroom1, 2
baths, IoriO encfosod porches, famoly room. overs~ed
pralf, natural gas heat basement and larp prlv~te
yard. The ownen llave done cansiderable redecorating

and repairin, You tnust s.. $49.600
.
OVOLOOIIHG THE OHIO RIVER NEAR ADDISON ..,Attnctwe 4 bedroom tn·level on Upper RIVer Road in
Kypr Cr..k School Oistrtct S1tualed on over 3 ltres
lh~ home inchHies 1 fully equipped knchen, famtly
10011\ I~ baths, carport plus 1 9~% assumptiOn.
$53:1100.
~
WAIT A liTtLE 10111 JO STRETCH_ Here~ 1 2 bed·
roM! home on 9* ocros 0 ~ 1111 1e from City limits. 2
d2
borhom with full bllllftonl t. ps Iurnace an cor
Plflf. Ra1so your own beef and vegetlble Rarden and
bt tfoso to everylhon1. $49,901)

1_1_1_1_1___
•
•

nt~Rfiborholltf

and
~!Chen,

patio,

2~

stondtni hardwolltf floors Forll ftoor has been r,do.
corated in good tasste. Breakfast room, dmrnQ room, 4

BR~ 2~ botht full basomenl Plenty of stora1e space.
House coultl be eastly adaptable to professional oHice,
antique store, etc Offered 11 $59,977.

167 ACIEFARM ..,. located 2mile south of Rio Grandt.
~ mH• wost of S,R 325 on Cora-Centllrpoint Road Ap·
prox . 70 A. nico loyin( rtdieland for crop and psoture
wnh '"""brush deanna. Balonce ~ golltf aro\lnna tim·
ber with soma ready for hlrvest HIS llrlf fnmt biun
with partlll butft slleds on two tides Has two cth11
butldln~~S tnd sio, small tobacco bose No house but
soveraltdetllocations to build.·Good woter supply and
GAS WELL Priced Ill $85,1100.

.us

yI

PHON.E
446-36_ 4~

·

J

------• -------------------

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO.

Lon..,. Hllftlll &amp; Au Conditionifli. All types lnsulttion,
Electritol Wiring.
Coli 446-8515 or 446-11445

304·117ti· 390B

BELL

Houn1 moved or raited,
b11emenu dug benath
free

houaes.

piece cullom fit your home.
Guarentnd. Advanced Gut-

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
AGENCY

s1tage

170 ACR£ GRASS AND BEEF FARM - 57 Acres
permanent lime 'and trealed pasture 60 Acres
reclatmed, treated and seeded tn affalla, clover.
orchard grass Woods, tobacco base, 2200 Christmas
trees. 2 years old Modern 7 room house, good barn.
Buy whtle farm pnces are low.

HUNTERS PARADISE - Any hunter or nature lover
would appreCiate the beauty of th~ property. 64 acres
with true log cabtn Pond, road frontage Secluded.
Wtkll~e Get back lo nalure wrth lh~ on~ pnced mthe

ter. electriclen, me1on.

~----Ea•c•h--of.ft•c•e·'·"·de·pe--n•d•e•n•tl•y•o•w•n•e•d--an·d--o•pe•r•a•ted ~~:;~~----

lARGE 4 BEDROOM HOME masoemc settmg. Tobacco
base, barn and other outbuddmgs Just large enough
.,.- 20 acres, most all blable Present crop, alfa~a and
orchard grass. Harrison Twp
#356

VACANT lAND - Oh10 Township. 20 Acres. woods.
pasture. Appro"mately 2 level acres, tobacco ground
Home srte
#463

Gellla Refrlgeretion Co. Cell
61 4-446-4066

ELECTRONIC REAL
ASSOCIATES

.·

THAT COZV RANCH AWAITS YOU - Its sharp brief&lt;
extenor o only the begtnlng lns~e 1t offers a large
krtchen and dtntng area. 3 bedrooms,ltvtng room, balh.
garag~ 2 large lois, storage butldmg. concrete dnve
Pnced tn the 40s wtth possible klan assumpfion
#439

98 ACRE FARM - READ CAREFULLY! Older full
story bnck home 5 bedrooms 2 stalfCases also
one to attic Parttal basement good condilllln
County water. lalf barn 10 acres crop land 63
Acres pasture 25 acres woods Good larm, exctttn~
locat~n $78.700
#368

including
hot tar appllcltion. carpen-

rienced roofing,

to·know in - - - ·
Real EstateT:

REALTOR®.

JACKSON COUNTY - 105 Acre farm. 2 story older
home, 3 bedrooms, bath, ~!chen WJth buttt·tn range
and oven, diShwasher, hYing room Barns. cellar and
cellar house.
11449

SMALL FARM - lmmedtately takes your eye 5 room
modern ranch style home 3 bedrooms. barn lobacoo
base, 6 acres most all crop land Several different type
frurt trees Better look - one low pnce $25,000
#357

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpe·

All you need

#465

ca;

F 8t K Tree Trimming, 1tump
romovol . Coil 676 -1331 .

__.____

WEEKEND RETREAT - Aeetwood 2 bedroom mobile
home on a wooded lot Utility bid~ on concrete
Screenoouse 16 ft. by 20 It, cemenllloor. SuperiOr
conditKJn, strong dnlled well County waler available.
Tycoon lake $12.900
#387

81

85

CONTRACTING

General Hauling

Gallipolis Oh.

All types of consfruction and

estimate•.

remodeling. roofina. plumb1ne
and heatinc

Houn Movere. Inc. 304·
JONES BOYS WATER SER ·
576-2711.
VICE Call 614·367-7471
or 614-367 -0591 .

82

Plumbing

NO JOB TOO SMAll

446-4002

Need something hauled
away or something moved?

&amp; Heating

Real E1tate General

lARGE VACANT LOT - Perry Township County water
and electnc avatlable. level lot Hard road

LOOKING FOR A NICE HOME PLUS ACRE:AGE7
Tnen take a look at tniS 3 bedroom home. large lwmg
rm . kitchen with plenty ol cabtnet space, 2 baths, 2car
garage Basement Vtnyl and br~ck. 25 acres Wrthm 5
moles of Holzer Medocal Center
#351

range• .

Home
Improvements

-il

PRICE REDUCED - Owner says sell oow lovely 3
bedroom ranch Silualed on 127 acre lot n Baum
Addmon near Pomeroy Kttchen, dtmng room, ltvmg
room, full basement with famoly room and lireplace
11430

7 ACRES - Close lo R10 Grande Several leet ol
lrontage on State Rt 325. Rural water avatlable. No
restnctions Ctty schools
11428

NEW LISTING - UEOROOM RANCH - t II baths
shower modern kttchen. diVtded basement lands
caped yard Cheshire area Prtced nght - low 40's

dryer•.

81

Real Estate General

HURRY TODAY and take a look at thiS famtly home 3bedroorn ranch wtth lam tly room, fivmg room. eat-In
kitchen bath. uttltty In-ground swtmmmg pool, 2
storage buildmgs, 2 level lots Call for an appomtment
today $39.900
11478

•&lt;

Appliance Service All makes
8t models refrigerator•.

tion. 304-675-4146.

#388

BLACKBURN

in built up roof.

Coil 61 4-388·9867

Honda CR 80. Good condi-

HoMES AFFORDABLE:M.lDE US NUMBER I, CENTURY 21;

1973 VW Superbeetle New
t1res Good condition , runs

Home
Improvements

waahers,

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

1979 Pontiac Ftreb1rd. V-8 .
AT. PS, PB. AC , excellent
condttton
Contact 446 1195 after 5 p m

eves .

81

compactors, diahw..hers,
microwavea. Heetlng &amp;
Cooling, Sh"t Metal Work.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Sales. 1603 Jefferaon Ave.,
Pt. Pleuant. 304-675·

Call 992-6956 .

Jocko. UOO. Coil 446· 2075

675-3084.

Billy lee's Tires 8t Battery
1970 BSA 660 all chrome.

8 h . 11ide In Clmper wrth

tirea

$16 each . Two snow tire~
on rima, $20. each. 304·

body porto!. Call 614-388 ·
9684.

\leralon, blazer wheels. roll
bar, auto. transmiu1on .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; ·c ampers

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Four P156·80013

2 Muncia 4 apd . transmia.
sions. Chrysler 4 spd tras mlslion Ia bellhouslng .
Hurst ahlftara, 2-4 small
block Intake; 2·4 Pontiac
intake. M &amp;. T big block valve

1976 GMC van, rune good.
needs aome body work,

949-2644.

'•7s

76

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

446·4292.

304-876-3388 .
1----------Rt.7.

polio. Int. lit. 36 •
$6,500. Coil 1176·3008 or
614-367·0831 .

73

Call

Real Estate General

Mdb~

other

77 Datsun PU K. cab Call

f.48·9273.

Judy DIIWitt. ..... 31Ul55
J. lltrrill Clrtlr, lliltur, 379-2114
Wy Lilli. Auocilte. 446-0451
Clthy Pope, Auocilte, 379-2748

large round bales of hay Bulaville Rd. 446 -478 2

2282

1982

m1ny

Trucks for Sale
•

1- - - - - - - - - 980

bushel

Candy ,
sorghum, homemade apple
butter, honey . peanuts &amp;
etc Hard to fmd 91ft Items
1 · 6 daily St RT 681 South
of Albany. Call 614-698-

1979 Chevrolet Sconod•lo
4x4 PU. Chevy Sport pock·
ogo . PS. PB. olr, lilt whool.
AM·FM tope, 30,000 mi.
Must seel to appreciate,

72

446-6610

sale, Call

6 variettes of apples prtced

$6-$10

Trucks for Sale

wt 600 lbs. also baled hay auto . PS, tilt, PW. a1r, new
and dmet.t• set Call 446- tires, good cond., $3.900

388-8592

58

72

1 977 Ford 1 ton truck.

1972 Che'lly Impala work
car $125 00 As 1s 614·

1113 or 6'fll-256-651 8.

71

tras, 83,500 callafter6PM,

2225 evenings

7786 alter 6PM

livestock

Autos for Sale

614-379-2424

Wtll buy tobacco poundage 1983 VW Rabbit GT -1 less
Please call 446 -9 777 or than 2,000 m• , $8,000
f1rm Gary Hood, 614-446446-3692.

63

71

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-1).7

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

November 20, 1983

SHEET METAL WORK
We make custom duet
work. We Repalf Furances
&amp; Heat Pumps
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO.
614-446-4066

We'll do it Call 446-3159
between 9 and 6.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

Water hauling, Fast Serv1co.
IO\'If rates . Call 614-256 ·

Cor. Fourth and P1ne

Phone 446,3888 or 446·
4477

1743.

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
JIM'S PLUMBING tlo HEAT· Call Jim Lanier. 304-675 lNG . Fomarly Dewitt's 7397 .
Plumbing. Coil 614·367·
0676 .

83

87

Excavating

DOZER

f"

Upholstery

windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Alum1num &amp; vinyl
sid1ng
How met Patio Covers
How met screen rooms

1163 Sec. Ave, Gallipolis

446-7B33 or 446-1833

Transportation.

Mobile home awnings
Alum1num ut11itV

do quality reupholster·
in g. make new custom made
reupholstered furmture. R &amp;
We

Cat 215 hoe, dozers. crane,
loaders. dump truck. Call
614-446-1142 between
7:00AM. 6:00PM.

buildings

691 Miller Drive
446·2642

M Manufactunng, Crown
Coty. 614 -256-1470

Free Estimates

1-- - - - - - - -

Good· 1 Excavating, basementa, footers. driveways,
septic tanks, landsc•ping

r

Bill's

Nu· Pr1me replacement

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

WORK By Ted
ponds, ditches.

,Hanna.
basements. ate. Call 4464907 . Carter &amp;. Evans

Coil

,_r.~ IMPROVEMENTS

SOLUTION

anytime 446 -4637 .
l.

Jamea
owner.

Davison,

Jr .

J . A.R.

Construction Co .
Lines, Footers ,
Drains. All kind• of Ditching

Water

Rutland. Oh.
2903.

84

614-742·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

-

Pasquale Electric Co all
phaees of electric work, all
work guaranteed Aerial
truck rentaL Call 614-446 ·

2716.
SEWING Machine repairs.
aervlce. Authorized Singer
Salas &amp;. Service Sharpen

• I

Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

•

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
broadcast
latch
10 Pronoun
14 TurkJC

tribesman
19 Thorough·
tare
21 Entreaty
22 At this

the soil

32 Cnpples

33 Sword
handle
34 Small rug
35 Strike
37 Baseball

team
39 Prefix

before

40Wan
4115 ill
42 Break
suddenly
44 P-Aore frigid
413 Source of

water
47 Flees
48 Allowance
for waste

50 Pertaining
10 a tailor

52 Chinese
factiOn

53 Note of
scale

55 Electnc
call ish
57 Negative
58 Tolled
59 Jog
60 Title ot

respect
abbr

62 High
mountain

130

69 English
streetcar
70 Tibetan
gazelle
71 Female
horse
73 Dash
75 Continued
story
77 Wollhoun d
76 Place tor

1:12 Tw1st

80 Wash ltghtly
81 Period of

tome
82 Intent
84 Attaches
with

·

House

66 Pronoun
68 That one

combat

28 Hurrtes
29 Transfix
30 Run easily

128 Blathers

plant

6 Kind Of

place
23 Calm
24 Command
26 Tillers of

dev1ces

64 woody

1 Recorded
for

mucilage

86 Repeals

87 Attains
89 Greek

letter

92 Sun-dried
brick
95 Hinder
98 Mete deer

99 Bars legall~
101 Revolutionaries

103 Bris11e
104 Before

105 Stalk
106 Pronoun

107 Member ol
Par11ament
abbr
108 Meadows
110 Negative
111Man s
nickname
112 Hurrted
11J bact
115 Bone
117 Narcotic
119 Compass

point
120 Scorch
121 Apartments
124 Bedoutn
126 Food
program
127 Cooling

t5 Sk1ll

16 Aboundtng
17 H1stonca1
records

addit1ons

133 Fearless
134 Toll
135 Male moose
137 Vehicle
colloq .

t39 100 000
rupees
140 Trade for
money
141

18 Remai ns at
ease
Short Jack et
I ransact 1on
Hero1c event
l oolong
glass
28 Mound
31 Man 's name
20
23
25
27

33 Mee t1 ng
room

F1:~~ed

periods tor

time
143 Dev1ce fo r
separating
animals
145 Baby's
napktn

146 Put on

one's

games
153 Dry
154 Girl's name
ISS Items ol

proper!)'
157 Handle
158 Cleamng
dBVlCBS
159 One of two
160 Bttef

DOWN

1 Packs ftrmly

2 Ullhzes
3 Banner
4 Goal
5 Twofold
6 Horsepower· abbr.
7 Man's

nrckname

8 Juncture

43 Fue l
45 Submerges

93 Testify
94 R1ver 1n

S1bena
96 Short 1acket
97 E11aluate

l OS Quarrel

46 Season of

"""'

47 Space
49 Sailors
colloq
51 lift
52 lnsh seaporl
53 Tibeta n
pnesl
54 Wtngllk e

56 Ol splnted
59 Hampered
60 Groan
61 Tolled
63 Make ready
65 Goddess o f

discord
67

Fren ch tor
'summer "

69 Note of
scale
70 Shme
72 Make mto
law

tree
83 ConJunctiOn

•

coals
116 Pierce

.,•

1 HI Festive
Honest

H1gh
lngred 1ent
Blunt end

125 Whale fat

126 Trader
127

Embraces

129 Narrow
str1p

'.••'
.,

..,•

'-J

131 LOng·

legged bttd s
132

..
•• f

114 GlowJng

120
121
122
123

•

.''

113 Care for

m water

77 Mountau'\s
of South
America
79 Hard-WOOd

14 Trial

ostrtch
88 Nobleman
89 R1ver m Italy
90 Re1ects
9 1 Send lorth
92 L1m b

109 Cer1am
112 Sow

discourse

13 Myself

87 Amencan

40 Wamp um
41 Female
relative

74 Prepos1Uon
76 Sun god

12 Biller vetch

Adam

3B Verve

9 Breastwork
tO Subject of
11 Possessl\le
pronoun

.,

BS Seesaw
86 Son of

100 Symbol lor
tMIIlum
102 G1rl's name

36 Young
salmon

guard
148 G1rt
150 Unrest
152 Set or

••

Explosion

-,._,
•

1331nsects

134 G1ve rood to
136 Unit Of
llahan
currency
138 Fat
140 Let 11 stand
141 Journey
142 Winter pre-

ctpltatlon
144 MISplaced
147 Inlet
~48 In favo r of
149 Preh:~~ three
15 1 Employ

153 Part or
" to be"
155 Art1cle

·

••

..:;.
..-..•

-.--.

�Page D B The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 20, 1983

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

Business

jail
term
·- --Local Briefs:---... Out-of-season hunting brings
s.
'

,Liquor
license issued
•
GALLIPOLIS- A C-1 (beer for canyoul) liqour license has been
Issued. by the Ohio Department of Liquor Control to Ted Brabham,
doing business as Red's Rollen Garage, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
The C-lllcense is Issued on a quota basis based on population, the
department advised.
Applications for C-1 licenses have been flied with the department
by Lewis and Jenny Bodimer, doing business as L &amp; J Grocery,
Eureka Star Route, and G.C. Murphy Co., doing business as
Murphy's Mart, 600 Silver Bridge Plaza.
.
Transfer applications being processed include one from James R
Haskins, doing business as Haskins Lounge, 312 Second Ave. Haskins
seeks to transfer his D-1 (beer for on-premises consumption or
carryout), D-2 (wine for on-premises consumption or carryout ). D-3
(restaurant, splritous liquor sale until! a.m.) and D-3X (wine for
on-premises consumption ) to a .new location at 47 Court St.

Limited services on holiday
GALLIPOLIS- Woodland Centers Inc . will have limited services
on Thursday and Friday in order for its employees to observe the
ThanksgiVIng holiday.
Those persons In need of services may receive them by calljlg
Crlslsline at 44&amp;55541n Gallla County. 286-5554 in Jackson County or
992-5554 In Meigs County.

who was fined UXJ. sentenced to ~0
days In jail, given a J.2!)-day driver s
license_ suspension and 18 months
probatton. Fine and costs were
suspendedloraleftofcentercharge
brought against Dray.
Alfo~so L. Thompson, ro, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, charged with DWI, was
reduced I~ reckless operation and
fined $100.
.
Charged with no operator's IIcense and fined $12 was Curtis L.
Holliday, 919 Second Ave .. He was
also given a suspended six-month
jail sentence and one year
probation.

GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallla
County men received jail time on
hunting-related charges brought
against them Friday in Galllp6lls
Municipal Court by the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources'
wlldlidedlvlsion.
CitedwereVirgilR.Roush,52,Rt.
4. Gallipolis, and Wayne B. Roush.
41, Rt. 3. Gallipolis.
Wayne Roush was fined $nl,
received a seven-day jail sentence
and 18months probation for hunting
out of seas6n. That Is toPe served
concurrently with three days in jail,
a SlOO fine , a year-long hunting
Ucense suspension and 18 months
probation for spotlighting.
Also charged with spotlighting,
Virgil Roush was fined $100,
sentenced to three days In jail,
received a one-year hunting license
su spension a nd 18 months
probatlon.
y;·ound guilty of DWI in court was
Vance E . Dray, 23, 62 Sycamore St.,

In other traffic cases, B. June
Davis, 57, Columbus, forfeited $40
bond for failure to obey a stop sign,
and l,lazel M. Boston, 42, Rt . 2,
Patriot, forfelted$40bondforfallure
todlsplayvalldreglstratlon.
Forfeiting bond for speedlngwere
Lee R. Taylor, 28, Hillsdale, Mich.,
$37; Janie Caldwell, 20, Rt. 1,

Bidwell, $38; Leo
Hart, 51,
Elkhart, Ind., $39; Michael L.
Tyree, 33, Galloway, $39; Dwayne
A. Williams, ro. Nelsonville, $39; ·
Harold E . Young,38,Guysv111e,$39;
Robert K. Zlrnmerman, :rr, Rt. 2,
Galllpolls,$38; RlchardL.Casey,lB,
~ First Ave., $40; Danny C.
Russell, 32, New Haven, $41; Jesse
J . Saunders, 57, 2w.t Eastern 'Ave.,

$43.
Robert · J. JohnSon, 26, Rio
Grande, pleaded not guilty to DWI
Thursday ·In Gallipolis Municipal
Court.
His bond was rontlnued and he
was scheduled toappearataNov.28
pretrial.
The· coUrt fined Russell w.
Putney, 65, Apple Grove, for DWI.
Putney was fined $.'m, sentenced to
three days In jail, given a 6!klay
driver's license suspension and 18
months probation.
Charged witllleav!ng tlle scene of

Ohio campuses ready for high-tech competition
By The Associated Press

There's no shortage of ideas for
what to do with S32.4 n:&gt;llllon in state
money that 's going to be used to help
create high-technology development centers.
A medical technology center is
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans Farms Restaurants will open its 100th
·being discussed in Cleveland, while
restaurant Monday in Schaumberg, Ill.
Akron developers are Interested In a
A company spokestn~ n said the opening marks a milestone In the
research facility for polymer
firm's 15-year history . It operates restaurants in Ohio, Michigan,
science. Cincinnati wants to expand
Pennsylvania, Indiana. Illinois, Kentucky and West Virginia.
centers already under way to
The company will also open a restaurant in Parkersburg, W.Va ..
. . develop new m an ufacturing
on Monday, and will open another one in Franklin, Ohio, northwest of
technologies.
Middletown, on Dec. 5. Restaurants are now under construction in
Battle Creek. Mich., Naperville, Ill., Lexington, Ky., and Anderson,
At Ohio State University, there is
discussion of new centers for
Ind.
genetics and biotechnology, computer and information science, materials science, welding, computeraided design and manufacturing
and medical technology.
POINT PLEASANT - Six city laborers were laid off Friday,
Such "advanced technology apMayor Jtmrny Joe Wedge said.
plication centers" would be part of a
Wedge said the city hopes to call workers back In the spring, but
$32.4 million Thomas Alva Edison ·
that possibility is "subject to finances ."
· Partnership Pro~Varn being adminDespite tlle layoffs, Wedge said the city is not In a dangerous
Istered by the Ohio Industrial
finlilllclal situation.
Technology an.d Enterprise Advi"Well, we are holding our own," Wedge said. "We are not dealing
sory Board.
with a lot of surplus. If It looked like we were gotng to have a lot of
Board members agreed in princisurplus, we wouldn 't he laying them off. It's strictly an economic
ple Thursday on guidelines for the
move and for no other reason."
centers, allowing interested universities to file their bids by next spring.
The Idea Is to provide 50 percent
state financing for centers which
promise to become world centers In
specialized technologies, thus encouraging the growth of new
high-tech Industries In the state.
The state Is proposing grants In
the range of$2.5 million to$4mllllon,
GALLIPOLIS - Billed as the deducted in . advance, McDaniel
with interested campuses and
~ 'tnodern answer to soaring new Car added.
costs,'' Ray McDa niel has opened
"By doing this, we are able to
ter's funding.
an Engage-A-Car brokerage In dr~matically reduce the . monthly
industries
providingRobert
half the
Board chairman
N. ShaGallla COunty.
payment s,'' he explained. " In other
mansky of Columbus, a fanner
The brokerage will be active In words, if the book says your SlO,OOl
congressman, has vow'ed to keep
leasing new cars. vans and light car will be worth $5,00l atlhe end of
politics out of the hlgh-techdeveloptrucks, both foreign and dQmestlc, three years, we simply deduct that
ment program, but his board
on an Individual basis and to local $5,1XXl Immediately."
members disagreed on the criteria
companies.
A 12-page brochure on the
for distributing such plums.
McDaniel, in pannership with Engage-A-Car program is available
"We've got to consider the factor
Bob Blackston, who opened the first at request by wrriting to McDaniel
of need,'_' said state Rep. Judy
area Engage-A-Car outlet in Pome- at P .O. Box SOl, Gallipolis, Ohio
Sheerer, D-Shaker Heights, one of
roy, said the Engage-A-Car system 45631. or by calling 388-9003.
two legislative m embers. Centers
I.S different from other programs In
that tt includes the best features of
~ and closed-end leasing and
introduces additional benefits. People will be allowed to get the kind of
vehicle they want with no down
payment a nd lower monthly
payments.
A protection option plan offering
clients a " no-lose" opportunity
anows the person leasing the car to
• dispOse of it on his or her own and
pocket the profits If the used car
market Is up'.
But If the market Is down, the
leasee can return the 9&lt;'r to the
Exotic end affordable dining
Engage-A-Car brokerage and walk
~~~\~
In the Ortental trodltlon.
•away.
\(\~\\ ~\,\.)~~ Somplo &lt;M Cantonew ond
Mondorln cuisines, prepared
McDaniel said that with the
'$1to t,~our order by our ex·
skyrocketing cost of new cars- it's
cellent &lt;hef. Reservations.
been predicted by industry experts
DAILY
!hat the average Chevrolet, Ford or
Ori~Zntal
~antonue
rlymouth will be sticker-priced at
LUNCHEON
nearly $15,000 by the mid-80s SPEOALS
something had to be developed to
COMPLETE DtNNEI MENU
CARRY OUT
RESERVATIONS
lielp potential buyers .
ORIENTAL DICOR
With Engage-A-Car, low monthly
lliiiiOAY THMJ
fiUll'll
OPEN ! DAYS A WIEK
TNUHDolY
SATUaDAY
payments are put into effect so,that
11:)(1 ... .
11:30
TM t :JO 1'.1.
(Uture trade-In value of a new car Is
446-7227 Tl llO:IOl .lP.M. .

Bob Evans' lOOth opens Monday

must be encouraged In cities witll
high unemployment rates, she said ~
''I don't want tllls io become a
function of which university knows
how to hustle and has the best
contacts,' ' she said.
But another board member, OSU
engineering dean Donald D.
Glower, said the qual!ty of each
applicant's faculty and development plan should determine the
winners.

-f..," HAPPYFROMTHANKSGIVING
it . .
-THE FOLKS AT

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2&amp;01 JIICUOI'\ A'411~
Point P I - t , W. Yt.

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The $100 million Charleston Town
Cent€~', billed as the nation's largest
urban shopping mall, has opened Its
doors and Initiated what some
downtown merchants fear will he
the end of business as usual.
·- "A§ we figure 1\, .Capitol Street

~oliLO~

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n

FRUTH
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hUddiiPOft, Ol'llo

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Murphy store .has new. manager
GALLIPOLIS - J .W. Garrett has been named manager of the
G.C. Murphy Co. store In Galllpolls.
Garrett moves to this new location from New Martinsville, W.Va.,
where he served as first assistant of the Murphy's Mart on W.Va. 2
North.
Garrett started with Murphy as a management-trainee at the
Parkersburg, W.Va. Murphy \IIIII on Market Street and c&lt;;&gt;ntlnued as
assistant manager at the Parkersburg store in the Grand Central
Mall and at the Logan, Ohio store, where 1te advanced to first
assistant status In June 1979.
He has served in his present capacity a t New Martinsville since
November 198J.
A Jackson native, Garrett, his wife and two children reside In
Gallipolis.

-sLEEP

AT TREMENOOl65AVINGS!!f

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---1

. Local Pepsi bottler wins award
'

ATIIENS - Pepsi-Cola announced the Athens· Bottling Co. has
been awarded the 1983 Caleb Bradham Award, presented to local
Pepsi bottlers that exceed standards of quality, plant cleanliness and
product integrity set forth by Pepsi.
·
Duffy Walton Is pla~t manager. The plant serves Athens, Hocking,
Vinton, Meigs, Gall!a and Morgan counties.

a Taste of the

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Chow Mein

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Physician attends seminar

OPEN
SUNDAY
12 'TIL S,

GALLIPOL:f; ·-Dr. Donald R. Warehune, 151 Upper River Road,
atlendecl the recent American Osteopathic Association annual/
convention and sclent!llc seminar in New Orleans.
Pllyslc!ans earned up to 22 conlinulng medical education credits
for attending scientific seminars. Osteopathic physicians are
required to earn 150 CME credits every three years to gain
membership in AOA.
Nearly 2,00losteopathlc physicians, wives and guests attended the.
five-day postgraduate sesslon ,sponsored by AOA ll!'d 11 specialty
practice affiliates.

Plu·s One Year To Pay - No Interest
No Down Payment.
.

WILLIAM N. EACHUS

will disintegrate," said David Bass
of Bass Jewelers, which is abandonIng Its home of 50 years for a nearby
hlghrtse.
Narrow, bustling Capitol Street
was once West VIrginia's retaU
centerpiece, attracting shoppers
and . their money from throughout

..--Business Briefs:--

BACKID.

OPEN
SUNDAY
12 'TIL 5

ONLY

$3333
. PER MONTH

Includes: Plain Pedestal- Deck - Heater- Full Wave Mattress- Fill Kit- Patch
Kit. Delivered and Set Up.

FORT WORTH ; Texas - Tandy Corp. announced that
consolidated sales for October Were f!)7,352,00l, an increase of 10
· percent over October 1982 sales of $189,324,00). ,
Tandy'§ Radio Shack divlslon recorded an ll'percent gain of
$162,5:rl,OOl during October from $145,913,00lln October 1982. Radio
Shack stores In existence for more than. a~year Increased 10 percent
over last year.

•

Engine parts clinic held at I(GC-CC

EACHUS AND EVANS
LAW OFFICES
SEE THE WATERBED SUPPORTED. ON EMPTY McDONALD CUPS
Gallipolis, Ohio

PHONE: 446-8575 or 446-2129

1 83

..

FRIDAY 9 TO &amp;-SATURDAY 9 TO 5-SUNDAY 12 TO 5-MONDAY 9 TO 8
'

·
Wayside
Furniture
.
\·
THIRD AVE.
:·
·
. GALLIPOLIS

southerh West VIrginia.
But some of the oldest names In
capital city retailing have closed
their doors for the three-block move
to the new mall. Others - !Ike the
Diamond department store, almost
as much of a Charleston landmark
as tbe state Capitol - simply went
out of business.
Those left behind are busy
making adjustments . Stone &amp;
Thomas - the only remaining
maj or downtown department store
-Is undergoing a $1 m!lllon face lift
and has extended operating hours
In an effort to attract shoppers who
mig ht otherwise take their money
down the street.
"We have to give the shopper. as
good a n opportunity to shop with us
as with the new girl In town," said
Ted Armbrecht, a city councilman
and Stone &amp; Thomas executive vice
president.
Construction of the three-story
mall, a hotel and accompanying
park\ng buildings on 26 acres of
urban renewal-cleared land ·has
prompted a flurry of acl!vlty
among city leaders and businessmen. At least three new downtown
bulldln~ with 490.00l s(Juate feet of
office space wUI be opening by the
end of 1984.
But not all of the activity Is in
central Charleston. A group of

RIO GRANDE - Motor Parts Co. of Dana Corp. sponsored an
.engine parts cUnlc at Rio Grande COllege and Community College
recently that drew more than 40 students and Independent repair
: shop owners fran tbrooghout the area.
Dave Erb, coordlnalor of tlle-etCHilesel technology ~am at
· RGC-CC, said the program allOW$ studmts to meet Industrial
peJ'SOIIIIe! and better HelVe the community.
·
The dlesel-euloiaKIIM! tec!lnoloKY program at RGC Ia a two-year
tedlnlcal PI'OfP'am providing proteulonal training In service and
management BkiiiB of t1te automotive Industry.

.

"

"A lot or people who have
downtown .
developers Is bu\1ding another mall,
criticized Town Center don't realize
In one move to prompt shoppers
to open next year with 70 to 80 stores
wha t it's doing for Charleston. The
to patronize both the new mall and
and restaurants, in the Kanawha
money
that these people are putti ng
the other stores it threatens, the city
City area several miles from the
In
to
town is absol u te l y
is spending $3.75 million on a bus
downtown section. That mall promastronomical.''
station and walkw.ay con necting ·
Ises both to compete with Town
THE MALL'S FOUR "anchor"
Center and drain even more
Town Center with Capitol Street.
department
stores ha ve been open
shoppers from the established
Bass says he opted against
since
early
August,
but wben the
·
downtown district.
moving his jewelry store, on Capitol
mail
itself
opened
Monday.
only
One response to the ma ll mania
Street since the 1930s, Into Town
about 80 of its 180 specialty shops
Center because mall shops stay
has been a $200,00l private study
will be occupied.
open too long, the rent is too high.
cal.Ung lor renovation of the central
Workers have spent the final few
and ''I'm not ready for it. I don't
business district, development of an
weeks frantically finishing the
need it. "
"Old Charleston" theme and reviinterior, designed . to reflec:t ....a
talization of the Kanawha River
Instead, Bass said , he i~eliminat ­
levee.
lng most of his retail triide at his street-like a tmosphere -.ith 18-foot
fig trees. hanging plants. a threeArmbrecht sees that $72 million
new location and will specia lize in
story watetiall. park benches and
·specia l o rd ers "strictly by
plan, to be overseen by the
plenty of natural light.
appointment."
non-profit Charleston Renaissance
But Armbrecht says Charleston
Corp.• as a key to Charleston's ·
City officials are excited a bout
needs more than just an attractive
economic survivaL
the mall because of the money it
new mall to survive.
wtll bring in. Projections caus for
" Charleston Is going to change,"
"Unless we get more jobs, more
Armbrecht said. " We've already
ToWn Center to create 2,1XXl jobs
eco(lomic rejuvenation, Town Cengot 350,00l square feet of retail
wtt h an annual payroll of$.1.1 mllllon
space empty. The market simply · and chip In nearly $1 mlllion a year ter is going to be in just as much
cannot suppol1 adding one million
in local business and occupation trouble as the rest of Charleston,''
he sa id .
taxes.
square feet of retail space."
Unlike some others. though.
Qne of the stores moving from
In Huntington, Wheeling, ParArmbrecht
doesn't agree that the
downtown int o the m alJ .JsSchwabekersburg and other towns across
birth
of
Town
' Center means the
West VIrginia, the opening of .May, an upscale clothing store
death
of
downtown
.
opened by a German tailor 103
suburban malls has prompted an
"If we thought that the traditional
years ago.
exodus of downtown stores.
"We've hired about ll new people Charleston was going to disinteCharleston off!c!ats are hoping
grate," h.e sa id . "we would have
so far ," . said company president
that the opposite will occur In their
moved."
Albert Schwabe. " I think It's a
city - that an urban shopping
positive change.
center will attract new business to

Uncle Sam rapped for housing blues
NEW YORK (AP) - In spite of
the recovery tn home building,
home selling and home financing,
these are worrisome days In the
housing Industry.

Tandy sales reported

WISH TO ANNOUNCE THE
CONSOLIDATION OF THEIR
LAW PRACTICES

Are Now Located At 417 Second Avenue

Nove~r20,

Is the mall dooming Charleston's downtown?

cen· ~-~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~============~=======~;;;i

~

'

'I

Don't forget to reserve Movies to help entertain the
crowd during the holidays.

PREVIEW OR RENT
VIDEO

Tawney Jewelers

I

.j

Section

Madge Boggs, vice
president- a~d
controller of Ohio
Valley Bank,
presented her
views on women
in business to an
introductory
-rbusiness class at
Rio Grande
College and
Community College.
Boggs also outlined
her duties at the ...
bank and
addressed
questions posed
by students. The
presentation was
in conjun_ction
with National
Business and
Professional
Women Week

.;:• . i

..

'Itt~ .

1rimes· ~eutintt

STITIGI

City laborers receive layoffs

Engage-A-Car firm
opens near Gallipolis

' "'

~~~-tit

r::::=========:::::l

-.

an accident, Jack E . Dray, 43,
Crown City, was fined $'15, and
WU!larn E. Cochran, ro, Rt. 1,
Vinton, was fined $12 for assured,
clear distance .
Kralg W. Lemley, 21, 935 Third
Ave., was _fined $12 for overbelght
rearbumper,andwasa)soflned$46
on a speeding charge. Phillip W.
Price, 23, 148 Portsmouth Road,
forfelted$40bondforexp!redllce!ISI:
plate, and · Delbert E. Legg, 23,
Columbus, forfeited $40 bond for
unsafe vehicle.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Jeffrey L. Halley, 28, 2106 Chathano
Ave., Hurley W. Randolph, 24,
Charleston.,. W.Va ., $38; Robert W.
Crooks,25,Columbus,$38; CorulleJ.
Warner, 25, Columbus, $10; Barbara S. Morris, 41,1811 Chestnut St.,
$43; Charles E. Francis, 44, Dayton,
$48; Billy R. Clendenen, 29, Ketterlng, $10; Richard Steele IT, 19, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, $11.

.

f.'.
~

;;

'2,' '~\
1. '
.' '

Pi•

I

~

J)JOOREE RECEIVED -Stepheli Snowden, Cbiclnnati, liOn of
Mr. Blld Mrs . Caroll K.
. Snowden, Rt. 2, BldweD, re-

centlY

relumed from the Ch&amp;r-

lered Life Underwriter's coil:
veallon where he Willi awarded
hill CLU delree In Insurance.
Snowden Is a 1969 Gallla
Academy IIJ&amp;h School graduate
and a l9'l3 graduate ofl\forehead
Slate Ulllvenlly, where he
recel\led 1111 clepee In J:oot±esa

admlnlllnlllaa. Be II JJllllllllrt!l'
lor !Male Jl'vm IIIMJl'BMe.llornpanlal In tlie Clndnnatl area.

Worries about the big federal
budget deficit, worries about the
level of interest rates, worries about
tlle availability of financing.
To makemattersworse, thereare
even some concerns about the
demographics that support the
Industry - about the 42 million
people who will pass age 30 in this
decade, considered the prime age
for thinking about buying a nest . As
It turns out, not all ot'those young
people have been out there In the
marketplace where the housing
people would like them to Qe .
Instead , they've been staying home
with tlie older folks and saving their
money Instead.
Even the statisticians at the
Census Bureau were a bit surprised ·
bysorneofthenumberstheysaw: A,
decline of more than :nl,OOl .
under-JJ households In 1981, fol-·.
lowed by another 450,00l a year
later.
·
. Another worry re-emerged at the .
San Francisco meeting this week of
tbe U.S. League of Savings Instltu . lions. This won-Y, as so many other
housing worries, Involved Uncle
Sam and his behavior on finances .
The housing, financing and real
estate people consider the old
spendthrift's behavior to be both
outlandish and dangerous, especially when he sends lip llttleslgJ)als
suggesting the hOUSing people have
It too good.
Too
In the sense of having a
disproportionate share of the

gooo,

market for funds, which they cla im
is an exaggeration. Uncle Sam, the
cause of our pproblems, is blaming
us, the housing people say.

NEW AT SPORI'ABOUT -

AU .S. League study suggests that
the old spendthrift has become a
monster in the marketplace. ·

A compulerlzed mOODgl'aiiUJllnc

machine, Melco Star I, has been added at the Spottabout, 248 Seclond
Ave., Galllpolla. One of only 20 In Ohio, the machine does lettertng 011
any garment, ICI'Ipt or blocII, and Is allo the only device locally that wm
illOIIOIP am the btlclas of Jackels. lJemonstratbqJ; the 111acldne are
Sporiabout employees Sandy Blackburn, left, and Sara Cline.
•I

�•

Page E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

No,.ntber 20, 1983

November 20, 1983

•

•

•

Farm financial management
sessions to start December 6
'

,
GUESS AGE OF PHOTO to be 68·years. James C. Myerslound thl&lt;i old picture, and he guesses It was taken about 1925.

,

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

Thanksgiving Day coming, as usual,
during November; Jim Myers has turkey picture
By J . MYERS PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Thanksgi;ing
Day Is corning, as usual, during the
month of November- !'lov. 23, in
fact - and Jim Myers (J ames C.
Myers, 171 Portsmouth Road) has
brought in a picture of turkeys
rounded up to go east to market.
· MYERS GUESSES that the
probable date of the photograph is
1915. The building on the left is Gill
Produce. now G &amp; J Auto Parts. He
says that the one on the right is no
longer in existence.
IF YOU CAN

see an

X near the

one bare-headed man in the photo
- the X next to man center right;

the late Joe Miller told Jim Myers
that the man with the X was his
father, Bill Miller.
-·"THE ONLY WOMAN in the
picture can be seen looking out the
wi ndow. She was Willie Martin ,
bOOkkeeper, future sister-in-law of
Jim Myers at the time, wife of his
brother CarL

MYERS WROTE THAT turkeys
were driven to tOwn a nd later
shipped to eastern markets, and he
continued, "[f my memory serves
me right I had a geography book
that stated more turkeys were
shipped from Gallipolis than any
other place in America. The raising
of turkeys declined because of
grasshoppers."
Seems
wheat ·
farmers in the sout hwest were-

plagued by "hoppers."

To protect their crops they raised
tur keys which fed on them. J ust
tum the turkeys loose a nd let them
help themselves. When frost killed
off the " hoppers " it would be close
to Thanksgiving time so the turkeys
were sent to the eastern markets by
the thousa nds. This forced the price
-dowit. Local raisers could not
compete as they had to grain feed
their birds . So - the market here
-was finis hed to the extent of
producing enough lor local demand
plus some export to nearby c ities

not covered by southwest export.

this Peeps coium!J.

I can well remember that my
father took me a nd the late Reuben
Seeley and Barney Hively to make
a turkey drive. We got as far as
Centenary about dusk a nd the
turkeys went to roost. We spent the
night in the field just uphill and to
t he r ight as you come to town on this
side of Centenary. You stayed with
the flock to prevent theft.

Kind of unusual sequel to the
election is the statement of thanks
to the voters tiy Hannan Trace
elementary pupils for the vlctory of
the bond levy. Specifically, It's the
pupils In the first grade room 201 of
Hannan Trace, Rt. I, Crown City
45623.

At sunrise the turkeys left the
roost and we continued the drive.
Small boys were often used as they
could run alongside the flock and
herd those l:!irds back that wanted
to leave the flock. This drive was
about 1925 that I was on. Should
there be a ny descendant of any
person In this picture that would
like to have It I wUI gtve It to him If
he wlli agree to have a negative
made and make It available to any
other person(s) who would like to
have it.
James C. Myers wrote most of

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Exlenslon Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
Gallla County
GALLIPOLIS - On Tuesday
afternoon, Dec. 6, starting aU p.m.,
we will be havlngtbeflrstofaserles
of meetings on the subject of
"Farm Fl,nanclal Management' at
the Production Credit Association
Building, Upper River Road ,
Gallipolis.
"We" means me. Gregg Beachy,
Field Cltflee Manager- Production
Credit, and Terry Murnane, FHA
Supervisor. We wUI be doing the
teaching most of the time, however,
we will, on occasion. have area
Extension Agents and perhaps
others from the financial community helping out with the meetings.
These meetings are open to any
farmer and larm wife in Gallla a nd
neighboring counties.
Our purpose is to provide mroe
financial management educational
assistance to farm families as they
move Into 1984 and beyond.
Much of our Extension work
Involves Production Agriculture that Is growing more corn, more
pouilds of tobacco, producing more
mUk and meat. We wUI continue to
do this as part of our regular
program of work. But farmers are
facing a new climate In agriculture
where as an example, lenders such
a~ lf!U&gt;i re&lt;\uesi more effort on the
part of farmers to oornplete things
like balance sheets, cash flow
estimates, etc.
We're In an age where farming
requires more and more time spent
with the books and records "pencil pushing" to make farm
management decisions.
Our Dec. 6 meeting and the one
we have scheduled for Dec. 27, will
center on taking Inventories a nd
completing the balance sheets.
Come on out - see what we'-re
doing a nd if you like what you '¥·

A patent day

George Tahit built Lafayette · Hotel in 1927-28 in Gallipolis r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
ASSOC lATE D
By JAMES SANDS
over 12.000 celebrants. The proCorrespondent
gram included maneuvers by u,s.
FAB Rl CATORS
GALLIPOLIS - Wha t is today Army planes that nu mbered 15 that
ca lled the Lafayette Mall was built
day.
George
as a hotel in 1927·28
INC•
Judge H. W. Cherrington was
Tabit. The opening of the hotel in
Special

by

the spring of 1928

the

~
, .... ..,..

came In the midst
·
of three other irn·
portant ~ents in
t
~ rl. 1
1927-28:
1. the pavlng In
1927 of the high·
way along the
· 2. the building of the Silver
Bridge; and
3. the construction of the Gallipo·
lis Municipal Airport.
With Gallipolis more accessi ble
to the outside world it made sense
that the town cou ld expect more
visitors.
The Silver Bridge was olficiaily
opened lo the public on May 26, 1928,
.at 5:25 p.m. with Dr. Charles E'.
Holzer Sr. and Walter Windsor,
board members of the bridge
company, being the first two ' to
cross the span. Tim Lewis was the
first customer. At 6 p.m. that same
day the ferry boatAun Bailey made
its last trip across the Ohio River.
DEDICATION ceremonies of the
Sliver Bridge were held on May 30,
!928 with over 25,000 people present.
Included in the day's activities were
airpla nes that did stunt flying a nd
on)? man parachuted in with a
message from Gover nor . Vic
Doriahey.
After
number of political
speeches, a historical pagell!lt was
per1ormed 'lrorn the deck girder of
the bridge. At the conclusion Ned
Hamilton, dressed In a French
CO!Irtler's costume, ·marched to thti
middle of the briqge and met Julia
Lewis Roseberry, who, as Miss
Point Pleasant, broke the bottle of
chainpagne as tbe br\dge was
chrlstened.
That evening tbe f.lteworks show
was a "gorgeous exhibition" (Tribune) and the grand ball was held at
the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics
( now GDC) with over 2,000 attendIng. Most of those assembled saw
thiS event as the dawning of a bright
luture lor Gallipolis and Point
&lt;

· -

a

P~t.

.

THE MUNICIPAL Airport was
dedl!'ated 1n August of 1928 wlth
(.

principal speaker a nd he predicted
a "great future for aviation, 'the
most modern methodoftransporta4
tion'," and asserted tha t "in this
development the comm unities
which will benefit the most In the
modern competition a·re those who
fun her this means of travel."
The airport was a project of the
Gallipolis Community Association
in general and of Dr. Charles E.
Holzer Sr. in paziicular.
The Lafayette Hotel was dedi·
cated on May 7, 1928. with a bullet
lunch held at the Lafayette bailroom with members of the Elks
Club presiding, a long with ,Judge
W. R. White. The hotel was opened
to the public before this· as a dinner
dance was hosted by. George Tablt

Ta ste Orchestra providing the
on May 3 with Pete Sullivan's King
music.

(formerly fulton-Thompson)

110 Spring Ave., Pomeroy)
PH . 992· 5101

Used Class 6

jj,E;ffir~DiJW,~~;:;t
Architect
Adams, tbe Lal~ay•!Ue' M&gt;lll
(lonnerly the Lafayette Hotel) was lntUt lor George Tahlt and
completed in thesprlngol1928wlthdedlcatlonexere~ be!ngheld May
3 to 7, 1928. The hotel was built with aline restaurant and aballroomtlllil
served the town lor many years under the management ol Ed Sullivan,
Earl Smith and others. It was 1n the early 1970s the Lafayette became a

~

stay with us for future meetings In
1984.
Jf.you would like more Information about this series of meetings
then call me, Gregg or Terry.

There will be an "OhloNo-TUlage
Crop Conference" on Dec. 21, over
In Jackson County, Ohio, at the
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp (five miles
northwest of Jackson, off U.S. Rt.
35).

A similar event wsa held at the
4-H Camp last year. Farmers In
Gallia and neighboring counties 1n
Ohio, West VIrginia and Kentucky
are encouraged to attend .
The program gets underway at 9
a.m. with discussions on cover
crops and conservation tillage, soli
compaction and controlling field
traffic, economic consideration In
conservation tillage systems.
There will be a lunch at 11: 30 a.m.
and in the afternoon at 1 o'clock
they will talk about forage production, no-tillage soybean production
and Insect problems and control In
no-tilL
Be sure to make your reservations by Dec. 7. You may call us at
446-7007 or send In one of the
registration cards on the meeting

POLES-all sizes
Good, ...... $1.75
Fair ......... $1.50
Poor ....... $1.25

OHM headquarters, the business
also is very serious. The company's

-~

useofbacterla IDbreakdown wastes
for on-site destruction fmdergoes

ANALYZING HAZARDOUS WASTES- O.H.
Materials' chemist Ben Shapiro uses an atomic
absorption s~eter 1n tbe company's wet lab

constant refinement
!abora !Dries.

located near Findlay, Ohio. The only wastes stored by
O.H, are those used as samples 1n testing. (AP
Laserphoto).

There w.lll be an $.8 per persori
registration fee, which Includes
your meal and If you prefer not to
Include the meal, the registraton
lee is $5 per person.

ANOTHER TRUCKLOAD SALE
'ON

KEROSENE HEATERS
'

1/2 PRICE
.KERO-SUN
Retail
Director ....... $310.00

··Omni 15 ...... $180.00

.,.,.,.. It's so
it goes
over
)Our old roof, with.'
JA.:'IOI•t having to tear
~~~~!I old roofing off.

Retail
Sale
SALE
$ 93,50
$155 GRB ............. $187
$129.50
$ 90 GRF9 .......... $259
GR9 ............ $235
$117.95
6C I L ...... $229
$114.50

HOTPOINT MICROWAVE!

SQUARE
REBATE
DIRI!CI'

FROM
OI'IDUUNE.

$52 5
Mode l CTF 17

insu lation 1111 Covered da iry ·
comoartment

strong.
sheets are totally impregnated
with asphalt. So they can't rust
or oorrodc, ever. In fact, Onduline is backed by the industry's
only lifetime limited warranty.
Best of all, now's the best
time to buy Onduline. For a
limited time only, you can put
onOndulineandgetback$3.00
per square.
Hurry in and take advantage of this special rebate offet.
$3.00PER '

ill 17.2 Cu . ft. refrigeratorfreezer tm 12.41 Cu . ft. fr esh
food capacity Iii 4.74 Cu. ft.
freezer section ill Energy-Saver
sWitch li!l Rugged Triton H door
and ca binet liner ill Foamed-in

ON LV
17.2 CU. FT.

~~~~~d

·

25" Diagonal
COLOR
CONSOLE

COMFORT-GLO

DEL!~~~~

NO-FROSf REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER~!=':":"':":=
STARTS AS AVALUE
, •. STAYS A VALUE!

'Model
25PC484 tl

• S~arpness Control • Dig ital Channel Nu mbers
• Set-And-Forget Vo)ume Control • Early
American Styling .. . Cabinet Constructed of
Genuine Pine Solids, Wood Composition Board
and Simulated Wood Accents

·.

'Including 42 unscrambled cab le channels

GENERAL ELECTRIC
ALL CONSOLES
$100 DISCOUNT DURING
OUR BIG TV SALE

OFFER
EXPIRES
NOVEMBER
. 30

974 Chevy

$695.00 .

V2 . Ton

Pic:kupJ
•

BLDG
. SALE
&lt;

'

.

&lt;

HOOVER

BIG SALE ON GAS, KEROSENE, COAL
&amp; WOOD HEATERS
LOWEST PRICE, BIGGEST STOO&lt;
65,000 VENTED GAS HEATER
ALL
35,000 VENTED GAS HEATER
SA~E
40,000 UNVENTED GAS HEATER
PRICED
20,000 UNVENTED GAS HEATER

BUY NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS
LAY~AWAYS

AND
FINANCING AVILABLE

·COAL &amp; WOOD HEATERS
OLD FASHiONED KEROSENE HEATER. ........ 129.95
.30,000 BTU SPACE HEATERS .................... 1198.95
KING WOOD BURN~R STOVES .... ,. ONLY 1399.95

WE HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES

.UPRIGHT
WITH ATTACHMENTS
NOW ONLY

,.

RIDENOUR
.

SUPPLY
Chester, Ohio

l-15'x8' Sliding Door, l-3.'x6'8" Service Door, 29 GA .
Painted Steel Siding (Choice' of 12 Colors) with 5-Year
Warranty, 29 G.A Galvalume Steel Roofing with 20-Year
Warranty, 2 Skylites.
·

$5,23600

•

FINANCING .AVAILABLE -

614-9?2-2181

IRON 15140
HORSE
BLDRS.
MIQDLIFoRK RD.

WE WILL NOT
BE 'UNDERSOLD

LAURELVW, OHIO 43135

'

&lt;

TOTAL ERECTED PRICE

Many Other Bldg. Sizes &amp; Options Available

I,

,,

90 DAYS

SAME AS CASH WITH APPROVED CREDIT

POMEROY
LANDMARK
•
Jock w. cars.,, lp.

Dr!Vo 1 iiftio ond .,.. 1 tot - froo dot ivory wHb mloiiiUII ordor •""" 75 mil11
Yll wt IIIVICI will! WI 1111. Wo oro JHr locoi Hotpoint Oollor.
' 1tar1 HHII: 1:30 to 5:30. lUI dolltlll S:DD P.l .
Sorvt.. lolp, Goltlo ond ....., Coontioo

614-992-2181

WE WILL NOT·
BE l)NDERSOLD
'

$89 9 5

SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICES AT
POMEROY lANDMARK ON ALUMINUM ASPHALT ROOF CRAT·
lNG, BlACK ASPHALT, ROOF
COATING, ROLL ROOFING, ALL
KINDS OF ALUMINUM ROOFING.

30'x40'x8'-9' QEARANCE
.

•16"·24" Guide Bars available
•Automatic and manual chain oiling
. ,olsplacement 3.55 cu:. in . (57.4 cc)
•Chromed chain
•Full'racllus handle .,.r
•Heavy duty

Its

Need a Firewood Hauler?

.SX·L Chal"n Saw

HOMEUTE SUPER XL

In

announcement brochure.

rim;all~.~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=;~~h~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t

THE TOASTMASTER was
Alonzo
Safford
· speeches
were
made by
Judgeand
H. W.
Cherrington
and Reno Hoag who was the owner
of the hotel by the same name In
Marietta, Ohio.
The architect of the Lafayette
was John Quincy Adams, who also
designated the Columbus City Ha ll,
the Majestic in Athens, a nd severa l
bulldlngs on the campus of Ohio
University. Among the early speculators of the Lafayette Hotel were
Ed Sulliva n and Earl Smith.
Two of the long time businesses In
the Lafayette · Hotel . were . the
Gallipolis Department Store (1928
to. 1972) a.nd the CommerCial a nd
Savings Bank (1928 to 1965).
The Gallipolis Department Store
under George Tablt dates to 1928.
but five years later It went bankrupt
and C. A. JaiVis started there In
1934 a new business with an old
name. The Gallipolis Department
Store was one of the first stores In
town to Initiate the Idea ol a
"bargain basement."
THE COMMERCIAL and SavIngs Bank opened lor business tD
the Lafayette In September oll928,
moving lrorn the Deardorff Build·
!ng (tbe srone-laced lntUdlng at
326-30 Second) .

FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) -CleanMost hazardoUs waste, handling hemoiThold operation," Van Dyne
lnguphazardouswastecloesn'thave firms grew Into the businesS from
said. "On a business level for our
a lot of glamour, .but It has brought trash hauling, Van Dyne said. clleilts,lt's almost the same thing."
O.H. Materials the distinction of OHM's progression carne from Its
OHM's role in the recent cleartup
being the tlrst called to the site of construction of w.Ste water treatof 8,600 drums of hazardous wastes
some of the nation's l:!iggest toxic ment plants, which It stUI does.
at the Chemdyne Inc., site at
messes.
"Hindslghl Is great, but It was
Hamilton, Ohio, was a big job for
" It's an Image we've always had very, very smart for the Kirks to . which it wUI collect $1.74 million.
and we're fond ol that," said James move lnlo this area," Van Dyne
Groundwater contamination !rom
Kirk', 34-year-old president of what said.
',
waste at 't he site is another area
many environmental officials call
James Kirk and his brother,
one of the country's most efficient Joseph, 32, are the top officers of
In which OHM has expertise.
·oHM. James Kirk wUJ talk some
"When we get Involved with a
hazardous waste-handling finns.
waste site, we want to do the whole
"OHM - The Envirorunental about the business these days, but a
SeiVIces Firm" is the name the long-standing policy of not speaking
job/' Van Dyne said. "WewantiDgo
canpany now wants to use and io reporters has died hard. Granting
in, do the wholl' thing and do it
.
company offlctals say OHM Is lnterviewslspartofanewcorporate right" .
unique.
stance.
That's one reason OHM draws
"We don't think there's anybody
" I think It will help the environaccolades from the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency.
who does what we do," said Randy mentallrnageoltherompanies that
VanDyne, manager of marketing we deal with," Klrksald. " It shows a
"They're very competent and
development. for the private corn- willingness to deal with their
good to work with," Ohio EPA
spokesman Allan Franks said.
pany located three miles east of problems and that they aren'tafrald
"There's a certain garbage mentalFindlay.
.
of having a lot of skeletons In the
''We're not rnarrted to any one closet."
Ity when It comes tD cleanup
companies. I think they've gone past
technology. We can come !n, look at
· Van Dyne and kirk said policies
that. OHM has tried to adopt a very
a client's problem and then provide against disclosing OHM clients,
prot~sional attitude and, as a
thepartlcularsolutlonthatbestsuits company · sales - or earni,ngs still
result, people have said, 'Yes,
h1&lt;i problem," Van Dyne said.
holds. He said a pledge of sUence has
hazardous waste is .a 'legitimate
"The real corporate philosophy is been written Into many client
on-site treatment.lfyoucandestroy contracts.
business,"' he said.
the waste where it is, it's finished
"You don't want everybody to
Judging from the chemical labor·
aiDries and massive computers \'t
forever."
know"you went tD the doctor for· a

.

HEADING THE F1RST column
MURRAY HILL, N.J. (AP) BellLaboratories,AT&amp;T'sresearch
is the name of the. teacher, Miss
Ollie M. Barry, with these students: . and development branch, was
Amy Bevan, Donlvan Blake, Goble · recently gral)ted its ID,OOlth patent,
Brumfield, Stepha nle Bryan,
according to a management lnlorJohnny Caldwell, April Carpenter,
matlon systems journal. ·
Gwe n Fulks, Kristl Greene,
MIS Week says the research unit
Jeremy Halley, an d Heath
hasthusaverageclnearlyapatenta
Hutchinson.
day since its founding in 1925. The
journa l reports that many of tbe
patents have been shared with the
THE SECOND column of na mes
world and have had " substantial
contains t hese: Jimmy Lundsford,
Impact both within and out of the
Misty Martin, Brian McClellan,
field
of telecommunications·."
Chrlsst McGuire, Jell Northup,
The
latest patent was for a new
Brandon Roberts, Leanna Sanders,
etching
technique that could further
Jennifer Taylor, Jimmy WOOdle,
advancethetechnologyoftransmit·
and Nikki BelL
tlng voice, data and video informalion on pulses of laser light through
hair-thin glass fibers.

•
(OXIC llleSS

Findlay firm first to clean up big

Agriculture and our column .
ji

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pa~E-3

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

,,

�•

November 20, 1983
~E-4-The

November 20, 1983

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THORN APPLE VALLEY, ROUND OR BUFFET ~TYLE
.

&amp;;~;~~ss

r

U.S .D.A. GRADE A FROZEN
16·22·LB. AVG .

89 ·

Smoked Hams. ..

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-E-5

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

Wishbone
Young Turkeys

lb .

lb.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Ea ch ol the•• adve rt! ted Items It required to be readily
avoile~ble lot tole In each KroV•r Store . except at
tpecificolly noted In th it ad . If we do run auf of on
odw-erlited it•m we will oHer you you r ct.olc• of a
co mparable item . when ava ilab le . reftect in9 the ; ome
1ov i ng~ or a rgincheck which w ill entitle 'f'DU t o purchase

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

1h• advetf i.1ed it em at th• adve!1 1ted pr iu with in 30

day, . Only one wendor coupon will be
purct.a.ed .
·

auept•~

p•r it•m

TOTAL SA TIS FACTION GUARANTEE
h•ryth in g you buy at Kroger I ' go,~ara nt e•d for yo1.1 r to tal
sat isfaction rega rdl•n · of monufa ctur• r . If yo1.1 Ofe not
satisf ied tt: rog er witl replace ya ur item with the some
bra nd or o comparable brand or refund yo1.1r purchase
price .

U.S.D.A. FROZEN
18·22: L8 . AVG.

@/C)The(3'9

WHOLE 14·17·LB. A

AMERICAN
TRADITION
v

\... I

Gra.de A
Young Turkeys

~

18

CO PYRIGHT 1983 . THE KROGER CO . ITE M ~ AND PRI C E~

c

GOOD SUNDAY NOV . 20 THROUGH SATU RDA Y NOV
26 1983 IN POME ROY' AND GALLIPOliS
W E RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTI TIES . NONE

lb.

SOlO TO DEALERS

LIMIT 1 WITH

ADDITIONAL FOOD

PURCHASES

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE WILL BE .

CLOSED

KROGER

THANKSGIVING DAY

$

MargariQe
Quarters .. ... .. .

•

Re·Open 7am Friday November 25th .
And Remain Open Regular Hours

lJ.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, BEEF
7-INCH CUT
CANNED

Harmel
_3 1 ~
Hams .... .... ...

1-lb.
Pkgs.

99
SLICED
FREE

can .

All GRINDS VAC.PACK

PLAIN. SELF-RISING .
BREAD OR UNBLEACHED

·Maxwell House

Pillsbury

Coffee.

Flour·

aS

88

5-LB . CAN ...

Whole
Fresh Hams

-lb.
Bag

Con

c

Country
Hams .. . ..

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

lb.

Fresh Turkey
Breast ..........

$
lb.

Boneless Boston
Roll Roast

88

lb .

HICKORY MOUNTAIN FARMS
12·15-LB. AVG . WHOLE

$ 99

U.S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE ,
BEEF CHUCK

14-17-LB. AVG .

5

-lb.

$11.49

Standing
Rib Roast.... .

KROGER U.S.D.A . GRADE A
4·7-LB. AVG. YOUNG

$ 59

USDA
CHOICE

lb.

lb .

READY TO SPREAD

KR'OGER

Cranberry
Sauce ..

ASSORTED FLAVORS

16-oz.
. . Con

Pillsbury Plus

$ 39

Pillsbury
f ros t•1ng.......

..

•' .
•

16.5-o:r.
Ctnr.

''•
.•

Cake Mix
KROGER

c

Golden
Pumpkin .

av

~

18.5-oz.
Boxes
LIMIT 2 PLEASE

Deli DO It
AVAILABlE ON lY IN
STORES WITH DHI BA KE RIE S
HOT FOODS AVAilABl E

fbr

DiT~t Scl~k.e

Ice Cream

or Coca Cola

Kroger 0.5% $
Lowfat Milk .. ~~!· ·

·49

88

' ''
•

ift

a es
Let The

Natural Flavor

•

16-oi.
Cans

PINT RETURNA.BLE BOTTlES

KROGER

•

•

f

•

'

II:; -~al.

I

Ctn. ·

'

38

8

PLUS
DEPOSIT

Pak

••

from holiday turkeys and hams to fruit cakes . gift car·
tilicatasln any dollar amount ... Kroger holiday gilt car·
tllicatas make .o great holiday gilt.

CONTACT YOUR STORE MANAGER
OR CAROL BUSH .1·304·347-2641 .

I I ani TIL 7pm DA II 'f

Tur~_,ey

.fROZEN

Ban~uet

Dinner

~sl9

88

~

· Each

.

;~ . ;l

••

INClUDES : ONE 10· 12 -l&amp; .
FUllY COOt&lt; ED TURWE Y
2-l BS DRESSING
24 -0Z . TURKEY GIBLET GRAV Y
AND 1-lb . t RAN8UR Y AELISH

"'

..:-\~ . \

Pumpkm Pie

176

SIZE

Tangerines
OR 125' SIZE
_ Tangelos
'

20-oz.
Pkg.
California

Ham · Dinner

Ea!24

88

FRESH BAKED '

FRESH BAKED

Pumpkin

Dinner

Pies

Rolls

$188_

ggc
""•·

i2-Ct.

•

Layer
$.
Cake ..... .... .... ..
17•0%.
Pkg.

and

KROGER

FROZEN PEPPERIDGE FARM

1-00Z . DINNER ROllS

8-lnch
Pie

Fr.u it Baskets ·

Cranberries

iNCLUDES : 5·7-ll!. .
SARATOGA STVLE HAM
2·l8S SW EfT POTA TO ES AND

·

Celery

Fresh

59

Whole Sweet
.Potatoes ..... ~::·

Pkg •. '

2

CHILlED

KROGER

Kroger
Orange Juice 'l·c,n.

Cream
Cheese ... ... ..
•

1·01.
Pkg.

Fruit Bowls

12-oz.
'

.,

$485 .

· fresh

c
'I ,

.

.Yams

\

To

$14
,..

IN THE HUSK

85 .

Sweet
yeHow Corn

Ear

�November 20, 1983

Pomeroy- Middlefx&gt;rt- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page-E-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Queen City gambling casino·
opposed by police officials
CINCINNATI (AP) - A state . Tenninal into a gambling casino
might financially revive the half·
legislator who supports a proposal to
century-old ~rmlnal. It was conturn a historic Clnclnnati railroad
verted lnl 98l to a shopplng center,
terminal lnto a gambling caslno
but has been stru~gllng to attract
says he still wants voters to consider
shoppers a nd survive.
it , despite the loss of a vocal
Britton, m arketing manager lor
supporter on the Clnclnnatl City
Cincinnati
Bell.lost his Clty Councu ·
Council .
bid,
but
not
before he persuaded
But Clncinnati police, for one,
state
Sen.
William
F . Bowen to
wouldn 't welcome a gambling
publicly
endo
rse
· the casino
cas ino ln the Queen City. Ina report
proposal.
for City Councilman J . Ken neth
Bowen, a Clnclnnatl Democrat
Blackwell , an opponent of the
who
chairs the Senate Flnance
proposa l, pollee officials predicted
that the cas ino would attract Committee, said he plans to
organized crime, lnvlte political introduce a bill in the Ohio General
Assembly that would allow local
corruption and woo prostitutes.
Sa muel T. Britton, an unsuccess- governments, and then !he voters, in
ful Democratic candidate for City Cleveland, Columbus and ClnclnCouncil in the Nov. 8 election, natl, to decide whether to allow
•,
attracted some publicity when he gambling casinos.
But, please note the semantics
suggested that transfonning Union

•

a

That's when Borla nd, who had
spent 13 year s with Interlake. a nd
three other m3J\agers started
pulling together a $43.6 million

Mayor's race
takes another
strange twist

UNION TERMINAL · - Business Is slow at SeoatorWJDiamF.Bowenhasendorsedtheuseofthe
Cinclnnatl's historic Union Tennlnal. Ohio state site as a gambling casino. (AL Laserphoto).

come through unscathed.
survived lor several reasons: its
"We're still ' lean. We're still
streamlined operations, workers'
streamlined.
Our people are still
pride In what they make and
very
dedicated
people. I thlnk you
conunilment by buyers.
those
things
up, and you can't
add
Although Borland didn't foresee
come
up
with
any
conclusion but
such tough economic times ahead
that we are going to be su~l
lor the steel industry in 198:l, he said
NewportSteelwasin good condltlon and have a good future ahead of us."
to weather the times because of its
structure.
Chemical energy
"I thlnk part of our success in
gettlng throughl1lisperiodhas tobe
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
attributed to the fact that we did nation 's chemical manufacturing
start Ina very austere fashion with a
industry expects to achieve a 30
very streamllned organization that percent increase in energy effi·
was · geared to really produce 'and · cifency by 198.'1 over the base year of
per1onn as well under the circum- 1972, reports Energy User News.
stances as just about any organizaThe energy-oriented journal prelion 1 could hope to put together ,"
viously recorded a 24 · percent
Borland said. " That'sarealplus . . Increase in 1981 and 1982. Steps
"It may seem that we ran into ta ken by the industry to conserve
dlllicult times shortly after getting energy include improving prointo business, but you couldn't have cesses and plant equ)pt'nent and
been better prepared lor it than we changing the chemical composition
were. Fortunately, we didn't suffer of substances so they require Jess
to the polnt where we were literally energy to manufacture.
wiped out by it. We were successful rr;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
in surviving thls period. I thlnk we
are going to be stronger for it."
Borland predicts a long, slow,
steady economic recovery, and he
f1llnks !he country hqs turned the
corner. Already, the $28 million
pipe-mill expansion plans tabled in
1982 are getting new considera tion.
1 f yo u home is less than
The expansion would allow New 7 years old . yo u c ould save
port Steel to produce pipe with a
on your ins urance .
larger diameter, a ca pability that
Ca ll for detai ls
Borland l1llnks is important to the
film's future prosperity.
And Borland is optimistic that
prosperity will come.
"To have survived through this
period with the turn-up and the
recovery that we're starting to see,
I've got to be tremendously optlmis·
tic," Borland said. "We've really

state Farm's
Newer Home
. Discount

rt====================~:J

TO ALL WHO SUPPORTED ME

THANK-YOU!

Won't increase pay
YOUNGSTOWN ; Ohio (AP)·
Mayor-eJect Patrick J . Ungaro has
turned down the outgoing mayor's
suggestion that the mayor's !jalary
be lncreased , citing the city's
!tnancial condition.
Ungaro told City Council Wednes·
day he was "not Interested at ail" in
a higher salary. The city charter
allows Council to Increase the pay
for the mayor's job only before a
new mayoral term begins.

Anew concept
in saving money
•
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Gallia·
County.

Tailor-made
certificates.
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AND YOUR INDIVIDUAL
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417 Second Ave.

Friendship
year ahead

Gallipolis, Oh.
Phane 446·4290
~ome

446·4518
L1ke a gooa ne•QhOor ,
Srare Farm 15 there

DARLENE NEWELL

4·11 Sc&gt;mnd Avenm•
G ulli poli~

CLERK-TREASURER, CHESTER TWP.
Paid Pol. Adv. by the Candidate

The
strange race Ohio
for m(AP)
ayor -of
CIRCLEVilLE,
Circle,~ ll e has taken a nother twist
with the certifiation by the P!cka·
way County Board of E lections of its
election results from Nov. 8.
Sue Roan, director of the board of
elections, said Thursday incumbent
John J e nkins retained his 1,721-1,720
wlnning m argin over Republican
w. E . Christopher , who has requested a recount.
However, a m istake by a pol·
!worker could affect the results.
Ms. Rnan said the presiding judge
at one city precinct m istakenly cast
one or more votes while testing a
votlng m achine ln a church .on
election day. As a result, the
machine registered 301 voters,
although only 300 people were
· registered as, having voted at the
preclnct.
Christopher submitted his written
request for a recount on Thursday
mornlng. The recount was to begin
this morning.
Regardless of the outcome of the
recount. the loslng candidate . will
have 10days to contest theelectlon in
Plckaway County Common .Pleas
Court. If contested, the judge coulq
. rule in ·favor of the board .dr order a
·new election be held ln either the
e ntire city or Ward 2C. .
·

WASHINGTON (AP ) -TheOhio
Clock took a llck!ng but kept on
ticking. And, stW, no one can ~llyou
why it's called the "Ohio Clock."
Last week's bombing ln tbe
Capitol focused attention on !he
ancient timepiece, a tall mahongony case clock located no1 more
!han ·to feet from the blast site near
the Senate chamber.
Its glass face was demolished and
its 00se fragmented in the explosion
but the clock's mechanism was left
undamaged. After workers cleared
the debris from the corridor, the
clock still stood, proudly and
defiantly.
At first workers thought the old
clock was broken. But a little
tinkering got its pendulum swinging
once agaln. ~ And today, it's still
ticking off the minutes , just as it 's
done In the same spot since 1859. ·
For as long as anyone can
remember, the clock has been
called the "Ohio Clock." That's
always seemed strange, since. the
word "Philadelphia" is printed
behind its hands. It was just another
mystery of the Capitol - one tbat
!hat didn~t seem to bear too close a
scrutiny.
But the bomb blast sent the office
of the Capitol curator scurrying into
its records for the history of the
clock.
Seems it was ordered by the
Senate in 1815from Thomas Voigt, a
Philadelphia ciockmaker, for just
over $.lX). The clock, which Is topped
by an ornate, wing-spread carved
eagle, was delivered to the Senate in
1816 and placed ou tslde what was
!hen tbe Senate chamber.
It was rnoved to its present
location - after the Capftol was
expanded . and a new Senate
chamber built- in 1&amp;59.
But, alas, the curator's office can
·come up wlth no clues as to.why the
clock Is called the Ohio clock.
Some historians offer a suggestion for its nickname. A carved
shield on the lower portion of the
case contains 17 stars - and Ohio
was the 17th state admitted to the
union.
But ether historians scoff at that
· notion, noting that Ohio was
admltted in 1803and thatbythetime
the clock was Installed; the 18th and
19th states had already been
admltted.
So the clock remains a mystery.
But, wound once a week, Its
continues to do allthatanyonecould
ask of a clock -it keeps good time. ·

themselves.''
But Blackwell·. a Republican, said
a casino would hurt Clnclnnatlln a
variety of ways. He said he had
research done by contacting
Gamblers Anonymous and was
mfonned that areas where gambling is permitted suffer from " an
Increase i~ broken homes, divorces
... that could be attributed In part to
gambling."

GALLI

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -After
a year ln which taxes were raised
and a tax rebellion rejected, the Ohio
General Assembly likely will spend
1984 trying to make friends Instead
of enemies .
Although there will be exceptions,
most of the legislation churned out is
expected to be relatively mUd
compared to this year's product.
It would be difficult to top a 90
percent boost In the income tax,
record $27.6 billion state budget and
a public employee collective bargaining bill.
And 1984, after all, is an election
year for all members of the House
and half the Senate.
That likelywlllresuitlnpassageof
a host of special bills to help boost the
standing of Incumbents in their local
districts.
But there will also be some
substantive measures as well that
could benefit many Ohioans.
Sena~ Prf&gt;llldent Harry Meshel
said the Senate probably will tackle
the problem of Increased hoine and
farm mortgage foreclosures.
One proposal toimposeamoratQrium on forecl&lt;;&gt;suies in certain
cases has been rumbling around the
House this year but no compromise
agreement has been reached.
"We hope to be able to do
something ln that direction," said

PRICES IN OUR NOV. 13TH CIRCULAR
STILL IN EFFECT

HAPPY

ofcrtmealsoisonthe
.
i
said the Senate will sperid
time on economic
Including an attempt
businesses by simpllylng
i n&lt;&gt;nmlio and licensing fees.
'
"We're trying to review all this
1,1rocess imd all the fees
and where it is
as opposed to encoumaklng llfe a
simpler for them," Meshel

OPEN
THANKSGIVING

oREDW~

YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY:
SAVING COUPONS AT JOH!lSON'S AND RECEIVE .
DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PURCHASE THE
SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER !TIM. NO
EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE RE·
DEMPTION OFFER' DOES NOT APPLY TO "FREE
MERCHANDIS£'. COUPONS OR COUPONS OYER
49' IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN
DOUBLE COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF
ITEM. CIGAREITES ANO CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS
ARE EXCLUDED BY lAW. TO INSURE PRODUCTTO
All OUR CUSTOMERS. WE ARE LIMITING OUR
"DOUBLE COUPON' OFFER TO ONE JAR OF
INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE CAN OF GROUND
COFFEE PER SHOPPING FAMllY. DOUBU
COUPON OFFER GOOD . FRIDAY. NOV. 26

DOUBLE
COU.PONS

bOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC~
TURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49C· IN FA£E VALUE.

SAVE DOUBL.E $$ .
·AT JOHNSON'S

FRIDAY, NOV. 26TH

Budget
Pleaser
Specwl

Budget
Pleaser'
Specwl

GOLF CREST

-YOUNG
TURKEY
10 to 14 LB. Average

¢
LB.

DAY
9 AM to 5 PM
' DUE TO THE
HOLIDAY, FRIDAY
WILL BE OUR
DOUBLE COUPON
DAY FOR THIS
WI!I!K 'ONLY

Bud.get
Pleaser

SpecU:rl

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

~~~~~OlE HAM.$

5·5
LB.

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EXTRA LEAN

GROUND
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Across the Rolunda. represenla·
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bW aponaored
House

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;,

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ln~~~oo~!tbe:!mellllll'e
before the
8 electiDD In wbicll 'IIOten

N

rejected two anti-tax~ .

••

$ 39
LB.

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Pleaser
Specwl

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USDA

CHOICE
BONELESS

SWIFT
BUTTERBALL
SELF BASTING

TURKEY
12 LB. UP

¢

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SUPERIOR .·
SEMI-BONELESS

HAM WHOLE HAM

$ 29
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USDA CHOICE

WHOLE BONELESS

·SIRLOIN Tl PS

~

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$199
LB.

HAM

LB.$2

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TURKEY BREAST

LB. $ } 4 9

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SLICED BACONt2 oz.

49

$}19
PKG.
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¢

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CELERY
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SWEET POTATOES

LB .

29¢

LB.

FRESH

CRANBERRIES 12 OZ. BA.G

79¢

GOLD
MEDAL
FLOUR
PLAIN OR

$

SELF RISING

SpecU:rl

ROYAL
CREST
2% MILK

FRESH

ROASTING HENS

79¢

GOLDEN
RIPE

¢

BANANAS
1

a·AKJNG

LB.

POTATOEs

10

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$1

59

BROWN &amp;
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ROLLS PKG.

5-LB '
BAG

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LIBBY
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46 OZ.

PUMPKIN CUSTARD
PIE
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IPPED TOPPING

ICE
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HALF GALLON

9
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¢

37.5xl89'9¢

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4 STICK

PHILADELPHIA

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8 OZ. P,KG.

$ 39

REYNOLDS' FOil

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HOLSUM

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I~~~n':~D~--~Y!oungstown. Legislation

Ia

Times-Sentinei- Page-E-7

The Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

~.

KIDDIE·SAV PIIOGRAM-10o/o DISCOUNT
(Far 6 and Under)

PHONE
446-6620- 992-6491 .

1983

Ohio clock
'
took licking,
but still
'
kept ticking

involved. Bowen dislikes the term
"gambling caslno."
'T prefer to call lt an entertain·
ment center," Bowen ,;aid. " I think
It needs to ha· ·~ theaters. live
theaters, live er.t ~ tt" Lment. We're
talking about expanding tourism.
"Cincinnati isn't a New Yo rk, it's
not a New Orleans, a San Fran·
cisco, " he said. " You need to have
something to liven it up, to m ake it
competitive, so people can enjoy

Steel venture brought several sleepless nights
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP ) - There financial package to buy the works
werepienty of sleepless nights when and r eopen them on a limlted basis.
Clifford Borland and three other The other 11lree principals in the
managers went in pursuit of a group are Vice Presidents Rnnald
dream threeyearsago- resurrect- Noel, Denrils Eggleston and Raying a closed steel m ill.
mond Bittner.
Borland , president of the Newport
Spirits were high when Kentucky
Steel Corp. that grew out of those Cov. John Y. Brown formally
restles s nights. said he hasn't slept dedicated the fledgling corporation
much better lately, with the steel ln Wilder on April24, 1981, calling it
industry as a whole sweating "a great day lor, northern Ken·.
1hroug h one of its worst economic lucky." The Wilder plant started
produclng steel pipe for use as
nightmares.
But 2 ~ years after a group of casing, drllltng andtransportlnggas
employees bought and reopened the and liquids.
plant in a grand experiment.
Employment rose to 575 workers
Borland sa id they're proud to say in late 1981, and Borland announced
they're still turning out steel.
plans for a $28 million pipe mill
" I lost a n awful lot of sleep in the expansion ln early 1982.
cightmonthsorsotha t it took us to
Then the economy took Its toll.
put the whole thlng together, and About 250 workers were laid oil in
cer talnly the last 18 months have following months, and the expan·
very trying period _ not sion plans were put on hold . Newport
been
knowlng when we were going to hit Steel suffered losses, although
bott om or when the economy might Borland declines to say how much.
tum itself around," Borland said.
" ! would have to say we've been
"Sure, 1•ve lost a Jot of sleep. 1've very fortunate to have achieved as
had an awfu l lot of second !hough is much as we haveintherecentperlod
about whether the whole venture we've gone through, " Borland said.
was goi ng to be successful or "We've suffered through certalnly
whether we'd cont inue down and go 12 very dtfflcult months, and rea lly
belly-up ." or hO\~ever you want to more like 18 months of recession or
refer to failu re .
depression orwhateveryou'dpreler
"l' m ha ppy to say we 're here to call it.
today. We're fin ancially sound."
"We cut back through the last
That's more lhan could be said 12-18 months to a point where we
three years ago, whe n Interlake were producing at about 50 percent
Steel Co. closed its1vorks in Newport of our full pipe-making capacity at
and Wilder, idling 1.200 workers .
the lowest polnt of our sales and
Interlake closed after two United production levels. We're gradually ·
Steel Workers Union loca ls held out bulldlng back now."
for a wage package like those
About440 people work for the film
granted by larger U.S. steelmakers. _now. Borland said that despite
The 'compa ny said it couldn' t m eet eConomic trouble, Newpot1 Steel
the demands and that the two plants has met ail its debt obligations on
lost more tha n $~ million in the few dme.
previous years.
Borland thlnks Newport Steel has

November

RAN&amp;E
Jtt1CE
64 OZ JUG

POUND

9
5

�•

'

•

November 20, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport......:Gallipolia, Ohio-Paint Pleaaant, W. Va.

E-8- The Sunday nmet-Sentinel

Ohio Penitentiary has another life
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Penitentiary has yet another
extension on Its lo'ng and controver·
s!alll!e.
The 149-year-old prison has taken
more political salvos than Fort
Sumter did shrapnel, but, unll)&lt;e the
fortress in Charleston Harbor, it
continues as a bastion of
confinement.
While Sumter Is only a monument
to Its purpose, OP Is still a prison by any name - despite complaints
from federal and state authorities
and private civil rights grouups.
For the past 11 years. OP has
served as an inmate hospital,
convict reception center, a place to
discipline troublesome Inmates
from other prisons, or to protect
some inmates from their peers and
to provide limited duty for aged and
infirm prisoners.
The latest order from U.s . District
Judge Robert Duncan Is to close OP
by Dec. 31,1984. He initially ruled In
1979 on a suit l;lrought by the Ohio
chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union that It close by DeC.
31, 1983. But state officials said they
couldn't meet that deadline because
of Ohio· s growing prison population.
Crowding was one argumen,t used
by the ACLU to close OP. ACLU
lawyers also sa.id it' was vermln
ridden, falling apart and generally

unhealthy.
groups,
"A number of times In the 1llXJs It
CollBultants told the Department
was characterized as a disgrace,"
of Rehabilitation and Correction In
saidACLUL.awyerEIInorAlger. "A
1979 that lt ,could renovate the area
. number of times in this century,
Inside OP walls 'for $&lt;13.3 million .
there were indica tlons It should be
Recently, the population of the
closed. But each time it was
1,243-cell Institution has been
resurrected ."
around 2.1XXJ. About 5,!XXJ!nmates a
In the mld·l840s, the Ohio General
year are processed · through the
reception center.
·
Assembly heard complaints that the
prison couldn't continue to operate
OP was enlarged several times In
because it was In the red . In that era,
Its first 40 years of existence,
several annual warden's reports
reaching Its presentsizeof24.7 acres
complained of the cost of using
byl877 .
inmate labor to quarry granite for
. Political turbulence over the
building the Ohio Statehouse.
prison was such that between 1850
In 1888, a book by Warden E.G.
and 1800 It operated under five
Coffin compared OP to the Bastille different boards of directors and
of France. He charged visitors 25 eight different wardens.
cents for a giJided tour of the prison.
In 1860, Gov. Saimon P . Chase
OP was authori1Ed by the ordered extensive reforms at OP . .
LegislatUre In 1832. The ortglnal
But he left office that year. and the
!().acre site cost the state $800.
Civil War started the next year.
Thirty-six years later, another ' None of Chase's ideas were ever
$~.lXX) was paid for land to expand
enforced.
it.
On July 30, 1863, the U)lited States
The then-new prison's. main
government ordered Confederate ·
building was 400 feet long, built to
Gen. John H. Morgan, 33, and 30 of
accommodate 700 prisoners, and
his troops, captured at New-Lisbon,
cost $93,370 plus 1,113,462 days of
Ohio. detained atOP until suitable
convict labor. In1&amp;'J4. the first year it· quarters could be found. Morgan
was in use, the state Usted 934
and six of his officers escaped
inmates. Complaints of overcrowd- through a tunnel on Nov . 7. Prison
ing have been regular fare since
management was such \hat another
· then - from wardens, inmates and
convict used the same tunnel to
more recently from clvll rights
escape two years later.

Another federal prisoner was
Wllllarn Sidney Porter, an alcohoUc
sent up in ual from the (louthem
Iilstrtct of Texas to serve five years
for embezzlement. He began writ·
lng short stories In prison under the
byline of "0. Henry." Rumors
persist that he wrote "The Gift of the
Magi" at OP although the work 1
wasn't published untill!llG - five
years after Porter's release.
In more modern Urnes. other ·
well-known convicts have included
mobster George "Bugs" Moran;
Toledo bootlegger Yonnle Licavoli
arid Dr. SamSheppardofCieveland.
In J8811, the state abolished 'the
practice of contracting with private
industry for prison labor and the
next year declared that legal
hangings would take place only at
OP. Valentine Wagner, 56, was )he
state's first gallows guest.
In an, 28 men were hanged there'
before one Inmate butlt an electric
chair for the state. It was Installed
directly under the gallows aitd
remained there untll1972. The state
electrocuted 312 men and three
womeri, the last in 1963, but fire and
disease took far more.Uves atOP.
In 1849, a cholera epidemlc kllled
121 Inmates and some medical
personnel. In 1873, another cholera
epidemic kllled 21 convicts.

A guide to local
Television programming
November 20 thru November 26

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-~~

This beautiful sedan is finished in two-tone burgundy with custom
CL burgundy cloth 50-50 interior. Air cond., cruise. tilt, power win·
dows. power door locks. AM·FM·Stereo with cassette tape, locking
wire wheel covers, power antenna and much, much more. Only •
9,068 low mires. New Car Trade.

Hollywood
Page 4

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Station listings

ONE OF VERY FEW AROUND!
Light green fin ish with contrasting vinyl trim, air cond., power steer·
ing and brakes and much more. Only 44,360 actual miles. Must see
to

This cab and-chassis is a new truck trade·in. 4 speed, Big Six en·
gine, 84" cab to axle. one local owner. Come in and inspect this one .

Sharp and Ready to Go- This sporty coupe has air, tilt wheel, AM·
FM·Stereo, Rallye wheels and much more. Only 36,835 actual

1980 Mercury Zephyr

1977 Chev. Caprice Classic
Sedan
.... . . .
-- ~

:-

Huntington, WV
Home Bolill Office

MAX .

Cine max

CBN
Christian Netwrl&lt;
ESPN
Spom Network
WTBS
Atlanta. GA
WTVN Columbuo. OH
Parkersburg, WV
WTAP
WCHS Charleston, WV
WPBY
Hunti1191M. WV
WBNS Columbuo , OH
WOUB Athena. OH
WOWK HuntingtOn, WV
WVAH HurriCane, WV

appreciate·----------------l--------~-----------....,...,..4--m-il-es_._Lo-ca_u_v_ow_n_e_d·- - - - - - - - - - - - -

1980 Chev. Monza, 2 Dr. Coupe

WSAZ
HBO

,

~~- •' ~

APPEALING APPARmON - Ana Jllllan, atar a! the new NBc comedy series "Jennifer
Slept Here," Nrlke8 a cute - · Mia! Jllllan pblys lhe part of a ghO!II In lhe oertes. ( AP
Luoerplloto \.•
.

Filmeter
Page6

·.

•
Red, Red, Red! This new Chevette trade 1s very attractive. Auto.
trans., power steering and AM-FM-Cassette tape. Save on this one.

Medium blue exterior with matching cloth custom interior.
Equipped with tilt, cruise. AM·B·Track·Stereo and lots more it's a
new Caprice trade and deserves your close inspection.

1984 Chevrolet Van Conversion

Watch For Our
Grand Opening
At Our
New Facilities
At
1616 Eastern Ave.

..

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

This
wagon is ready to go. engine, auto. trans.
• air condition . power steering, local trade. Compare anywhere.
.'

200 .Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH..
446~3672
'

SEE:

The Ultimate in
i
with 4 reclining captain chairs, AM·FM·Cassette·Seek &amp; Scan with Dig·
itat Clock, cruise control, tilt wheel, power windows, power door locks. sliding side door, bay windows with
blinds, indirect lighting, mopd lights, rear folding couch, lighted running ~oard and man~ other options.
You will enjoy the elegant anq distinctive decor of this top of the line conversion. Unmatched in loday's

••

MORRIS SHEETS; TERRY HAMILTOIIIIJ
MIKE SICKfLS OR ROGER DIUA1D

BILL

JIM
MINK

GENE .
JOHNSON,__...

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile; Inc.
I
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