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                  <text>Friday, o.c.mber 2, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Cihio

Judge ends 35 _c ourt cases
Twenty-lf"en defendants were drivers license, $150 and costs, 40 overload, $228 and costs, failed to
display commercial vehicle reglsfined and eight others fortelted days confinement, speeding,S:IJ&gt;and
trat!on cerilflcate, costs only; Terry
bonds in Meigs County Couri costs, disorderly conduct, $.'il and
Walker, RuUand, crlmlnaldamage,
Wednesday.
costs; Laura Davis, Middleport,
Fined by Judge Patrlck O'Brien speed, $22 and costs; RickY Tate, - $25 and costs, restitution; Adam
Brown, Lucasville, failed to yield,
were Becky Eichinger, Pomeroy, Newark,leftofcenter,$10andcosts;
$10 and costs; Gladys Huddleston,
le!t of center, $10 and costs; Debra Floyd Porter lll, Athens, speed, $21
Minersville, speed. $23 and costs;
Dalley, Middleport, speed, S!aJ and and costs.
EDen ·Stewart, Pomeroy, flctlclous
' eosts; Timothy Moles, Cbeshire,
registration, $10 and costs, nq
speed, $22 and costs; Daniel Talbott, · James Nibert, Gallipolls, speed.
drivers license, $75 and costs, three
Jr., Portland, DWI,lldayscontlne- $aJ and costs; Clifford Roseberry,
daysconflncmcnt,jallsentenceand .
ment, $350 and costs, license Racine, speed, $:1J&gt; and costs; Carl
Hunt,
Gallipolis,
speed,
$25
and
$50
of fl!le suspended If obtall!
suspended one year, fleeing a pollee
operators license; Brian Oeland,
officer, .SlU) and costs, ll days costs; 'Donald Keffer, Albany,
~!pre, · speed, $23 and costs;
confinement, one year probation, no speed, $23 and "costs; Bruce
Murphy, Portsmouth, speed, $22
Kenneth Hughes, · Chesapeake;
and costs; Ralph Parker, Reedsspeed,$25andcosts.
ville, insecure load, $15 and costs;
Forfeiting bonds were Ronald .
Weather forecast
John Mart!n, Galllpolls, speed, $aJ
Masters, Columbus, speed, $50;
and costs; Tammy Johnson, Shade,
Dennis Butcher, Pomeroy. and
Cloudy tonight with s.:attered speed, $27 and costs; KKaU Knapp,
Tammy Johnson, Middleport, exptred operators license, $70 each;
showers. Low32-37. 0ccasionalraln Langsville, speed, $25 and costs;
Saturday. High 38-43.· Chance of John Watkins, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
DannyPritt,SisSOQvllle,andShtrley
snow 50 percent tonight and 9l Va .. speed, $22 and costs; Harry
Wiles, Parkersburg, speed, $42
percent Sab.imay.
Lodwick, Chester, speed, $21 and
each; Michael Harrison, MlddM!Extended Ohio Forecast
costs; Pamela Marshall, Pt. Plea- port, and Guy Schuler, Rutland, no
Sunday through 'l'uesday:
sant, speed, $22 and roo;ts; David
operators license, $70 each;. Earl
Fair oo Sunday. Chance of rain Mann, Pomeroy, speed, $10 and
Kautf, Jr., I.J(ng Bottom, no valld
MondayandTuesdl\v.Hlghsmostly
·
costs;
Richard
Darst,
Cheshire,
operatorsilcense,$70.
_ _ _ _:__ _.:___:___________ .
inthe40s.Lows21&gt;-35.
~_:_

pr.:~-~-r.:~-----~-~~----~
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-LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMASBl·~·fi

Suspects sought

BANKS - This Is part of the coUectlon of antique
coin banks, owned by Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
Pomeroy, being displayed at the Meigs County
Museum as a part of the holiday "Traditlons of
Christmas" exhibit. A variety of doUs, wooden toys

and other antique Items signlllcant to the holiday
season are being featured. The exhibit will be open to
pubUc viewing from 1 IAl 5 p.m. Sunday. Other tlmes
for pubUc viewing will be announced later.

Emergency runs

Five calls for assistance were
· answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical SerCorbett J. Roberts, 81. Rt. 4,
Charline Sisler, 78, Ironton, died
vice Thursday.
GaUipoiis, died Thursday night in Thursday morning at the residence
At 10:47 a.m. the Syracuse unit
Holzer Medical Cente r.
of Jean Kelly, Syracuse.
was
called to the Third Street
Born Aug. 18. 1902. in Mason
Mrs. Sisler has resided in Meigs
residenceofCharllneSislerwhowas
County, son of the late Edward R . County since leaving lronton in1982.
dead on arrival; at 5: 31 p.m. the
and Cordelia Roberts, he was a
She was born Oct. 18, 1905 at
. TuppersPiainsunltwascalledtothe
retired carpenter am) painter and a
Ironton the daughter of the late
residence of Grace Meeks who was
member of Mina Chapel Church.
Josiah and Nettle Lambert. ln
treated
but not transported; at 7:03
He married Virgie DeWitt. who addition to her parents she was
p.m.
the
Rutland unit went to
survives, onDec. 10,1934, atEureka.
preceded in death by four brothers.
Danville
for
Harry Knotts who was
Also sunrlving are a son, Robet1 She was a homemaker and a
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial HospiL of Racine; two daughters, Mary member of Central Christian
tal;
a\10:
48
p.m.
the
Middleport unit
Corbetta Robet1s of Gallipolis. and Church, Ironton.
went
to
North
Second
for Robin
Mrs. Dan (Brenda Lou) Morgan of
She Is survived by one son and
Ohlinger
who
was
taken
to VeteRio Grande; five grandchildren and daughter-in- law. Bobby Joe and
rans,
and
at
11:
54
p.m.
the
three grea !-grandchildren; and four Debbie Mlller, Pomeroy; two
to
the
MlddM!Middleport
unit
went
brothers, Russell of Texas , Boyce sisters, MariP Dodgion, Ironton;
port Lunch Room where Dwayne
and Myrl, both of Gallipolis, and Nancy O'Barr, Ashiand, Ky.; two
QuaUs
was treated but not
Darren of Bidwell.
brothers. Joe Lambert, Ashland;
transpot1ed
Hew as aisopreceded in death by a Elliott Lambert , Orlando, Fla.; one
brother and sister.
grandson, Robert C. Miller, San Veterans Memorial
Funeral services will be held at 2 Diego, Calif.
p.m. Sunday in Willis Funeral
Funeral senrices will be held
Admitted: F loyd Reynolds, MldHome, with the Rev.JosephGodwin Saturday at 2p.m. at Ewing Funeral dlepot1; Elsie Cross, Racine; Wtlotflciating. Burial will be on Ohio Home with the Rev. William H. liam N. Pickens, Racine.
VaUey Memory Gardens. Friends Middleswarth officiating. Burial
Discharged: Warren Black, Jimmay call at the funeral home from wUl be in Meigs Memory Gardens. mie Dyer, and Kimberlee Mayle.
7-9 p.m. Saturday.
the7funeral
Friendsfrom
may 2call
Friday
to 4atand
to 9. hme

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CONVERSE

71

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PONY

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by Thorn MeAn

AI~ Jox JOo/o Off ~
Men•Women•Children

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Vehicle license
'reminder issued

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2"50170 OFF ALL

'FOOT -JOY .

(Our New~st Brand)
Off

- ~ 'KANGAROO'S
W

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20%

Women • Children

- ~ · 20% OFF ALL

-~

ENDICOTI JOtiNSON

!" GOLF SHOES

~

Including Aerobic Shoe!

SJ Off all Gym Bags
$2 Off All Apparel
T-Shirts/Sweat Pants
Zip Hoods/Gym shorts

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.Imboden heads Syracuse department
Gene Imboden was elected Syracuse Fire Chief, Eber Pickens,
president and- Wanda Imboden,
squad chief at a .recent meeting of
the Syracuse Fire Deparlme!Jt.
Other officers elected for 1984
were Clyde Triplett, assistant fire
chief, Karen Guinther. capta in, a nd
David Smith and Danny Riffle ,
lieutenants.
Chris Jacks, assistant squad
chief, Donna Alshire, captain, and
Jeff hubbard, lieutenant.
David Smith, vice president,

Donna Aleshire, secreU!ry, and
Wanda !(Tlboden, treasure.
EMS trustees elected were
Wanda lmboden, David Smith and
Chris Jacks . Named to the depen·
dency board were Donna Aleshire,
Karen Guinther and William
Guinther, council metnber.

ISee Our
PARADE
i
VA LuEs' !

RESTAURANT

Itf

•Restaurant
Has At
Moved
fromRestaurant
the Dome to the Main Building
*Elegant
Dining
A Famity

1t. 62

Ph . 304-676-6278
•Only 8 Miles from Pomeroy Bridge

HOURS : Mon .-Sat. Ooen at 5. Sun II' m tn? n m
·
SPECIAl THIS SUNDAY: a.oice of Baked Sleak or Veal Cutlet, Mashed htat..,
and G..,vy, Com, Hot Rail &amp; Bo....,P ....................................... Only '3.95

l-ift
.::.::::....-9

Wi.r\ners of the grand opening

prizes at Gallery Hair Arts were
Denise Williams, Langsville, a
televison set, and Martie Ferguson,
Middleport, the tape player. Ron
Ash drew the winning tickets. No
purchase was necessary to
participate.

SECOND ONLY TO

f

We Have A Large
Selection Of
'Wearing Apparel
tt:re~f'fA~:~~~~~~
For
~·
MAKE ELBERFELDS
~~
Christmas
'\j~Your Christmas Shopping CenterJ·~
Darrell Dugan Is a surgica I
patient at University Hospilfll,
Columbus, Oh. His room number is
983for those who wish to send cards.

r.

{}~~ *Quality Merchandise

··bf.t.

~0

*friendly Salespeople
*Plenty of Free Parking
*Convenient lay-Away &amp;
Credit Plans

Gift Giving

•Layaway Now
r!r_•Y"f..
For Christmas
~.0
••&lt;,.(
•Free Gift
~~
~~ ,
Wrapping
{}•,Chri~mas Sale Prices on Man~ Quality&amp;~ .•We Will Do
~~ G1fts from Now through Chnstmas!
Alterations

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.......

11-'1! .

t'Y ~. ~ I

~lr ·:~:~~··a~·~&amp;¢:~ .
(JT ....,

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT

If

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SATURDAY ONLY!

.....

Name winners

Surgical patient

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~~~~~~~~p,;~·· ~
1 12

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II:

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DECEMBER 3RD
;;__

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71

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ON ALL WOMEN'S

!

DRESS-SHOES
~ 200/o D~:~~ 20% AL~~~~~
1--------~B~OO~TS~-----------71

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3no1
·
U70 EX~RF soi.'E's

SML
U70

Girls &amp; Women's
LEATHER

~------------~--------C~L~O~G~S

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II 50o/o Sport
wo~!!·~~~~! 200/o.
Shoes·
I1 h.er1tage
• . house

.OFF Children's

and Women's

FASHION
BOOTS

I1

...:. . . .

OF SHOES
MIDOI.IPORT

,.l......,..!iiiiiiiii~-.;

~. . . . . . . ., . .!. . . . . .

'•

1-aga--in_s_td_a_ng_ero_u_s_g._'fts-_P_!l_g_e_A_-4
_ _ _ _•_ _~
James j. Kilpatrick calls the breakup of AT&amp;T a.
'disaster'-Page A-2 .

Along the River ............. B-1
Bnslness ....................... E-1
ctassllleds ....... --- ........ D-2-7
Fartn ...•••....•. ............. E-2,3
Deaths ......................... D-l!
Editorials ..................... A-2
Sports ........................ C-1-8
State-Natlonai ............... D-1

Ohio weather:
warming trend
through Sunday
-PageA-3-

.-

tntint
II Sections. 11£ PIPS ,
A Multimedia Inc. N~

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, December 4, 1983

Jobless rate: down in Gallia,
steady
in
Meigs
.
Unemployment--------.

11.0•

Seasonally Adjusted
Percent of Work Force

By lARRY EWING
TIJnes.Sentlnel staff
GALLIPOLJS - Unemployment in Gallla County
registered a healthy decHne of more than one full
percent from September through October. Whlle, in
Meigs County, the jobless rate - whlle decilnlng
slightly - held nearly steady ·during that same
period.

The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services posted
· an October jobless rateof11.9percent!orGallia- the
fourth straight rnonthiy decline for the county.
October's
represents a reduction of 1.2 percent,
down from the September rate of 13.1 percent.
Since May, when the county posted a jobless rate of

flliiire

UNEMPLOYMENT - Cluut shows the nation's
clvWan unemploymEnt joblei8 rate dW'Ing the period .
from November, 1981 to Nov., 1983. Recent OBE;
ftguft'8 allow GaiDa County's jobless rate declining,
while Melp County's rate appears to be lioldlng

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NIKE

~ 200
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Yo Off Leathers
~ 30% Off All Others

The Meigs High School girls'
basketball team which Is currently
2-0 under head coach Ron Logan,
will play Miller Saturday night at
Meigs. The resenre game will start
at 6 p.m . with the varsity to come.

·~.

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10% Off Leathers 20% Off All Leathers ~
20% Off All Others . 30% Off Select Group ~

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Faces Miller Saturday

Vol. 18 Nil. 40

C.prtiVhltd 1983

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ONLvl.

jsATURDAY

Inside:
Bob . Hoeflich, playing Santa's helper, advises

tmts·

If

"Your Headquarters /or Athletic Footwear''

won't weaken law--Pae-e D-l

DWI:

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Letart TownShip ·T rustees will
meet Monday, Dec. 5, at the Letart
Falls Community Building at 7 p.m.

Persons whose last name begins
with the letters U,V,W,X, Y and Z
may now purchase lhetr auto·
license Sue Maison, deputy _reg'istrar announced today.
The license bureau Is located at
186Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, and is
open Monday, Wednesday and
Friday from 9 a.m. untll4 p.m., on
Tuesday from 10 a.m. untll 8 p.m.,
and Thursday and Saturday from 9
a.m. untll1 p.m

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Meet Monday

Charline Sisler

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71

Meigs County happenings..

Area deaths
Corbett J, Roberts

W- ~~~

CRESTLINE, Ohio (AP) -Two
suspects are being sought in the
sbootingdeathofMarvinCarroll.25,
who was shot and killed In his trailer
home Wednestiay night while his
wife and child slept.
Crestline PoUcc Chief Gerald
Dowell said Carroll was shot twice in
the chest and once in the head with a
.2$-callber handgun. Dowen said
Caroll's wife and child reportedly
were sleeping in the trailer when the
killing took place.

s"4V!Nt;s
G

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It's beginning
to look a lot
like Christmas

Ap

Sou&lt;ce Deol ol l.abo&lt;

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

steady near 12.7 pel"CEEIt.

16.9 percent, Gallla unemployment has declined by 5
percent
Meigs County, with a reported October rate of 12.7
percent, registered modest one-tenth of one percent
reduction over the September figure of 12.8 percent.
Unemployment In Meigs County registered a
steady decline from May through August. ln August ,
the county posted its .lowest jobless rate of the year,
coming in at 12.2 percent. ln September, that figure
rose to 12.8 percent.
According to OBESreports,1,758 of Gallla'scivilian
labor ' force of 14,779 were without work during
October. OBES figures show nearly :&lt;ro Gallla
Countlans found work during the month.
In Meigs, 1,5JJ of that county's labor force of 12,00
were jobless during the October.
Both GaUia and Meigs counties had jobless rates
above Ohio's October figure of 11 percent.
Unemployment percentages for surrounding counties during October were reported by the OBES as
follows: Lawrence, 16.4; Jackson, 12.6; Vinton, 11.5;

a

and, Athens, 9.3.
While declining, unemployment in Ohio continues
to hover above the national average. Nationwide, the
seasonally adjusted jobless rate feU to 8.4 percent In
November, the lowest in two years, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The federal Bureau of Labor SU!t!stics on Friday
released monthly statistics showing that Ohio's
seasonally adjusted jobless rate feUfrom 11 percent in
October to 10.8 percent In November - the lowest
level since July's 10.9 percent.
However, Ohio's jobless rate continues to rank
among the highest of the 10 largest industrial states,
second only to Michigan's 11.9 percent . Massachusetts' rate of 6.6 percent Is lowest among the large
states.
· Dixie Sommers, director of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services' Division of Marketing, said
the seasonally adjusted rates do not reflect actual
unemployment but calculate it by taking into account
seasonal fluctuations.

Proposal will
raise Gallia,
Meigs funds
-GALLIPOLJSarea legisla·

Furst tells of
her 'rotnantic
relationship~

with accused
asked.
By The 1bnes-Senllnel Staff
"No," she replied, "he said he
GALLIPOLJS - Dislike of the
cteceased Barbara Twyman and didn't want to go anymore... that he
dldn 't !Ike anybody there."
love for 41-year-old Shirley Furst"Why did he leave (her home)?"
a key prosecution witness - were
King
asked during crossalleged by Furst as motives behind
examination.
the slaying of the 17-year-old victim
"To go back to scliool," Furst
as the trial of Charles Lee II,17, Pt.
answered, "he said he was going
Pleasant continued Friday.
back forme .. .! had convinced him It
"He said he had killed her because
was best to finish his education. ·• ,
of me," Furst testified durtng
Furst testified they had lalked
prosecution questioning. "Because ·
after he returned home. Shesaldshe
he loved me .. . and then one time he
couldn't remember I! she had said
said that she was nothing, that she
during those talks she "loved" him.
was a nobody and that he didn't !Ike
her.··
She den led ; under crossexamination, to ever pleading,
During a full day ol testimony and
" ... please don't leave me ...don't
cross-examination, Furst swore to a
break-upwith me.".
range of Incidents regarding h!"r
'Card from Twyman?'
relationship with Lee.
She
further denied ever finding
Toward the end of November,
and
destroying
a Christmas card,
1982, Let!. Furst and another person,
allegedly
sent
by
Twyman to Lee.
Identified as Dale Cook, went to the
Furst
testl!led
she had seen
Entertainer in Point Pleasant. At
Barbara Twyman only once. She
that time, she said, she gave Lee
said that on one of their outings Lee
perrnlssion to call her. Furst said
haq pointed the Twyman girl out.
she could not remember when he
"All I seen was brown hair and a
first came to her home. She did
· reeall introducing him to her son, green jacket...! didn't see her up
close...
John Furst Jr.
She further denied ever speaking
'&amp;mantle Relationship?'
"Did you have a romantic to Twyman oil the telephone.
Aller March ~. the date of
relationship · with Charles Lee?"
Twyman's disappearance, Furst
Hamlin King, defense attorney
saJ,d Lee had related to her - on at
asked during cross-examination.
least
two occasions- that he killed
"Later on, but not right at first,"
Twyman. "I kept 8sking him (If he
Furst replied.
murdered the teen-ager) from time
"Hewouldn'tleavemealone ... he
to
time.". She said Lee remarked
kept calftng and calling and coming
once,
"What.do I have to do, write it
and coming," she said. "He would
500
times
on a blackboard."
'
get very UiJS!'t and lear up things,"
·On
March
24,
four
days
after
the
she added, I! he could not accomsuspected date of the allegtld
pany her If she went out.
homlclde, Furst tesUfled Lee told
FurstchargedLeehadonceraped
tier tn the basement of his home. She herdur11i"g a telephone conversation
that he had ldlled the girl.
she was -J}i!lg on the floor
On cross-examination, defense
watching TV. Lee, standing above
attorney Hamlin King asked Furst If
her said; "I think I'll rape you."
"I thought he was just teasing," she had gone to the "Black Knight
she told the court. King asked her If Revue" with i.ee on March 25.Furst
he &amp;!finitely did rape her and she responded that she had attended a
"play" with the IICCIIIed at Pt. ·
an$WI!red aftlrmatlvely.
Pleasant
High School, but said she
After that, Furst said she attempwas
uncertJI!n
d. the exact date.
1 ted to break olf her relationship with
Alleep
wllh
IDU'dererT
Lee, although he apologized to her.
.
AboiUGa
Furst further testified that on
On or around Dec. ll, 1982, Furst April 5Lee had again told her he had
Silk! she told Lee she was pregnant. . committed the mUrder. She also
On Jan. 14, ihe test111ed during saU;l that on that same day she had
CI'OS8Gilllllnatlon, Lee came to her. gone to the lee home to collect
home and spent the nlebt- The next paymem for ''bl:lne Interior decora· C\8-Y. Jan.15, she and Lee traveled to tions" the boy's mother had
Cincinnati, wherP an abw tloo was . orclered.
Furst said when ... entleied the
Petbtiwd, according to Furst's
house, Lee had said be WBIIt8l to
teltlmllly.
· On Jan. 19, Funt said, lee quit talk to her, t.oot ber bytbeann,llld
aCbool. He therelfter came to pulled her tnto bla bedlcu11.
Funt feiiHied abe had laid down
Funt'a ~· whl're he spent tbree
011
the bed llld l'fllle tollelp.
days and two nflhts, she feiiHied
"So,
)'OU're II.YIII dowll with th1s ·
"Did heqult lleca- heWIIltedto
on PIP A3) .
spend aU day with you?" KID&amp;
~

.aw

1

(Cm!tnuttd

AS THE PARADE GOI!J'I BY- A young spectator
at Saturda,y's Chrlllmas parade through dowmown
GaDipolls waves to nne of lhe parade's parilclpants.

Santa tmnself were all Included In the annual event,
which helps kick olf the Christmas season. For
additional photos, see page -A-6 of today's edition.

· Service ualiB, IIW'Chlag bands, baton groups and

An
tor said GaUia and M eigs counties
will receive "at least" as much
rnoney inlocalgovernmentfundlng
from the state as they did this year,
thanks to changes in 'the fund's
distrtbutlon formula.
Problems In the fund resulted fron
an oversight in the state budget bill
passed this year which repealed the
state deposits tax that had fed the
local government fund .
In a late-night session Wednesday, the Senate passed a bill
designed to change the formula by
which the state's local government
fund is dlstrlbuted.
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R-Ironton, ·
said he suppot1ed legislation that
revised that formula. ·
Both GaUl and Meigs - and two
other counties represented by
Collins - stood to lose thousands of
doUars in fundingund erthe exist!ng
means of determining distribution,
be added.
" It was lmpot1ant that thecurrent
distribution formula be changed
because as its stands, 50ofthestate" s
88 counties would lose money from
the local government fund next
year," he said.
•
"The revised formula is fair and
gu¥antees that no county will lose
local government funds next year, ••
he added.
To illustrate his point, Collins
pointed out that while Gallia County
got S5ffi,OOO in 1983, that amount
would be reduced to $351,1XXlln 1984.
Meigs County would get $250,000 in
1984 - down $141,000 from the
$39&lt;1,000 It had this year .
Jackson County would have lost
$60,000 and Vinton County $74,000,
the senator said.
But wtth the new legislation,
Collins said that in 1984 Gallla will
get $5W,OOO; Meigs, $405,1XXJ; .Jack(Conttnued on page A3)

County, schools win 'major' tax victory
By KEVIN KElLY

'J.bnes-8entmel Stall
GALLIPOLJS - A finding bythe
Ohio Board of Tax Appeals for
Gauta Coonty Is being seen as "a ·
major victory" for the county andlts
tocaJ scbool system.
The board Issued a ruling Friday
that revenies a 1981. Ohio Department of Taxation decision dlstrtbutlng 70 percent of property tax
l'E'IImue fran the Kyger Creek and
James M. Gavinelectrtc generatlllg
plants at Cheshire out nf the county.
The i-evmue was dlstrlbuted to 65
other countieS where there was
"sltused" (fixed pbyslcallocatlon)
property owned by uUUtles operatIng Kyaer Creek llld Gavin. It
meant the loss of S'76 miDlon In
8Sfteed evaluation for GaUla
Coonty.
That decision was appealed by the
.cowity llld the Gallla Coonty Local
Scbool Dlltrlct In October 1981. A
heu'lngwlth a boanhepr
ttat!V1!
wea ~a year later In ~bus.

The board decided that the state's
decision to approprtatethatrevenue
from Gallla County seems " unreasonable and arbitrary" and said the
county's "speclflcatlonsof error are
meritorious to the extent heretofore
determined, II
The board sllld the tax commlssloner'sdeclslonrelat!ngtodlstrlbuttonofrevenuefromOhioPowerCo.
and Ohio Valley Electrlc Corp.
property Is "reversed and the cause
remanded to the tax commfssloner
to give effect to this decision and
order and to Issue new certificates of

value."
Gallla County Local Schools
Superintendent Gary Toothaker,
who was Informed of the decision
Frlday momf)tg In a meeting with ·
the district's attorneys, said this
decision, which. he said contains
"ramifications far and wide," could
possibly result in abatement tootiWr
counties that have received Kyger
Creek and Gavin tax revenue.

Toothaker was visibly pleased
with the decision, which may mean
end-year shortfalls the district has
predicted won't happen. Thedlstrlct
has lost in excess of $1 million In
revenue in the past two years.
"Our attorneys are to begin in
earnest exploring the question of
how the state will comply with the
board's order," he said. "The state
may have to adjust revenues not
given to us up, and adjust revenues
given to other counties down."
Both Toothaker .and Prosecutor
Joseph Cain noted that the decision
could be appealed within !Kklay
period after It was issued. Until that
period passes, nothing Is expected to
happen.
Toothaker said the dlstrlct will
continue preparing what he called a
"bare bones" budget for 19M to
present to the board of education.
"Untilweareassuredwehavethe
money available, we can't adjust
any of our appropriation decisions,"

a

he said.
But if the money is available, the
superintendent noted that the payoff
period for the recently-approved
4-mlll bond issue to build new
elementary schools could be' de- ·
creased because of regained
valuat;ion.
Toothaker said there was no
Indication given as to why the appeal
took two years to be decided.
The superintendent noted that he
hoped the decision would serve as an
"example" for southeastern Ohlo to
fight "unfair" decisions and "give
them cause to think that there Is
something that they can do abrlut it.
"We have demonstrated that an
Intuitive analysis of the problem
Involved here was accurate when
bolstered with appropriate legal
research and argument The power
plants are located In Ga!Ua County '
and there Is no reasonable justl!lcalion tor taking the tax base from us "
•
be added.

�I
December 4, 1983

Comment

and perspective

The Sunday Timn-~ntinel
Page A·2
D.c.m~Mr

The AT&amp;T breakup_____,_.t_am_e_s

Flash·flood warnings
,___Weather:-------------,
Ohio: wanning trend

4, 1983

By The Associated Press
. Warmer air Is moving into !he state, and roost precipitation will be
In the form or rain. The movement of a weak high from t~e plains to
north of Ohio and the passing of a front over the state to !he
Appalachians will add up to a gradual warrn\pg trend. Wet weather
Is expected through Sunday.

_K_._ile_at_ric_k

..;__J.

,.,~

A Division of

~m~:;~

~~

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PublishPr
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publishet··Controller

A ,\IEMBER of 11w A!'IISOt..i:Ut&gt;d Pl't'!\.&lt;s, ln111nd DaHy

American Newspapt.'t" Pilbli.sheno t\...•~odatlon .

~o;

Assocla!lon and the

Lt.TI'ERS OF OPNO~ IU't' weleoml&gt;d. the)' Mould bt&gt; ll'SS I han lOOwordoi long. AD
letten JU'f' !luhjN"l to editin,; ar1d must ht• !Oigned with nwne, address lll1d k'lr.phonenunl~ ber. No unsigned letters will he publMlt'd.l..etkrs should ht• In good ~. ilddr~'ilng W.

sues, not personalities.

No magic {Qrmula
to return Soviets
lo arms talks

SCRABBLE, Va. -A couple of
Sundays ago, 70 million Americans
watched a fictional disaster on TV.
In anotherthree or four weeks, as of
January 1, they will experience a
real one. We have had the finest
telephone service In the world.
Those happy days are gone, If not
forever, at least for the foreseeable
future.
The newspapers and magazines
have been filled with stories about
the breakup of the giant American
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. The
figures are Impressive. AT&amp;T has
$155 billion in assets. It has been
handling roughly 650 million telephone calls a ·day through 150
mllllonl of its own leased telephones. With nearly one million
employees, it Is the second largest
employer In the country. Only the
federal governmert Is larger.
Never mind all these millions and
bllllons. For an example of what we
can now expect, let me olfer !he
wall telephone In my kitchen. This
past Monday it would not ring.

We husbands and fathers know
how to take care of such things. I
dialed the number listed In our local
directory for residential repair
service. After a considerable time,
this put methroughtoayounglady
In Richmond, a hundred · miles
away. She Inquired of my age,
height, weight, Identifying marks
and mother's malden name before
asking what trouble I was having.
"It's the phone In the kitchen ," I
said. "It won't rfug."
"We no longer fool with that kind
of thing," said she. ':You must call
AT&amp;T at 1·800-555-8111."
So I did . Some awful sense of
foreboding caused me to take a
stopwatch frommydeskdrawer. A
recorded voice Informed me that I
had reached the telephone equipment office, but !hat all lines were
busy. The first available agent
would discuss my problem with me.
Me"!)whlle, I could llsten to Strauss
waltzes in the background. The
watch ticked off 16 minutes and 22
seconds without further action. 1

If you are looking for the United States to produce a l)lag1c fonnula to

·sweet-talk the Soviets back to !he negotiating iable In Geneva, forget It.
There Isn't any in the works.
Nor Is there a foreboding of calamity if the anns talks are not resumed
soon.
The prevaUJng attitude Is that It's up to the Soviets to end the walkout.
The United States Is not about to produce any sweeteners or Inducements.
The Soviets will simply have to come back to the table. Having left In a
huff, !hat means rlSklng humlltation. But !he administration Isn't going to
help !hem with a face-saving formula.
At.!he same IInne, there Is no lack of resolve about going ahead with the
U.S. cruise and Pershing 2 missiles. They will be lnstallell in western
Europe, right on schedule.
.The anxiety that grips many Europeans and even Americans over the
suspension, and the creepy feeling that !he anns race Is taking a nasty
turn, is slnnply not reflected in !he U.S. government.
Instead, there Is a conviction that the United States has done its level best
to strike a fair deal with the Russians and has kept faith with the West
Europeans.
After all, officials say, the Europeans requested the 572. American
l]llssiles in the first place. The United States promised in 1979 to try to
forestall deployment with a settlement - and It made tile elfort.
Ambassador Paul Nitze tried hard, but ran into time-wasting Soviet
tactics and indecision.
Having clearly indicated In the SALT talks In the 1970s that ltdoesn'tfeel
menaced by French and British missiles, the Soviets wasted months
arguing· about them with Nltze, officials here say.
: Then, abruptly, they dropped their derhand to Include tile weapons in any
agreement with the United States but still wanted to count the 162 mfsslles
against the U.S. total.
The result could be 140 Soviet missiles aimed at western Europe and no
new cruise or Pershing 2 rockets to balance them.
Soviet Indecision also frustrated the adminiStration.
Even li1 Leonid Brezhnev's decllnlng years his cornmltment to detente
frequently influenced discussions between the superpowers.
The Soviets would take a hard line, but then glve ground.
· Andropov's mysterious illness has produced a vacuum at the top in the
Kremlin.

Berry's World
•

hung up, breathing hard, and tried In most instances !hey· will go way
again. This time I waited 21 up. Our service will get worse, and
minutes and 10 seconds; and I In most instances It will get much
passed the lime by swearing at the worse. This Is because the gtant
office dog and reading magazine AT&amp;T truly cannot waste time, pr
pieces about our changing tele- . he much concerned, with repairing
phone service.
·
the phones It leases to us; this Is
The young lady who at last came penny-ante stuff. Hence forth, we
on the line was in Maryland, 110 subscribers must decide whether a
miles away. She could not have given problem Is In the telephone
been more pleasant. A repair crew Instrument or in the line. If It's In the
would come out the following Instrument; It will take hours and
Friday, five days later. She was days to get service from AT&amp;T. If
sorry for the delay In fielding my we think the problem Is In the line,
call. And toodle·oo.
and It proves not to be In the line,
Before the madness known as our local Bell company will impose
divestiture, we had a telephone a charge of up to $25 for our
repair office just 16 miles away. misjudgment.
Our phones got repaired in a jl!fY.
How did we bring this disaster
Our experience 1n the Blue Ridge upon ·ourselves? It Is because
Mountains of Vlrglnla was the Ideologues of both the left and the
universal American expertence. right successfully trumpeted !heir
The Bell System, up to this causes. On the left, zealots. crted
melancholy moment, has been the "Down with monopoly! " On the
enyy of the civilized world. No right, my crowd hollered "Up with
more.
competition!" Intoxicated by our
This ts !he certain prospect: Our own oratory, we bought the ldealls·
local telephone bllls will go up, and tic notion that under deregulation
things would he better. We Ignored
the homely maxim that tells us, " U
It ain't broke, don't fix it."
Well, things doubtless will be
better for the top brass of AT&amp;T,
who now can romp In the play·
gmunds of computer technology. ·
Doubtless this Is a great thing for
the stockbrokers also, but It
promises to lie pure hell for all of us
who have a telephone in tbe kitchen.
Here Is the biggest corporation in
the world, American Telephone &amp;
Telegraph, and It lacks either lhEi
resources, thP heads-up management or the willingness to hire 20
. additional operators to man repair
lines In the Washington area.
But the thought crosses my miind
that maybe some supervisors at
AT&amp;T tried to get 20 additional lines
Installed, and after waiting ~
minutes and 32 seconds for the
equlpment office to answer, gave
up In disgust. If so, !hey heard a lot
of Strauss waltzes.

Deaf ear to rebels

Jack Anderson

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

Instead· of encouraging him,
Pastora told me his conditions for
WASHINGTON- EdenPastora, commands approximately 2,000
guerrillas.
·
'Pastora
said,
the
CIA
Is
actively
joining
ranks with the FDN: "They
the Nicaraguan guerrilla leader,
trying
to
sabotage
his
efforts
to
The
charismatic
rebel
leader
was
must
get
rid of all !he e~·Natlonal
visited Washing1on recently. He
raise
funds.
"They
are
afraid
I
wlll
in
Washington
soliciting
support
Guardsmen.
They must also agree
stopped by my office for a visit.
eclipse
their
Somoclsta
army,"
that what comes to Nicaragua after
Though It 'Vas the first time we had from the Reagan adr)'llnistration
Pastora said. "But they want me victory must be revolutionary as
actually met, we knew of each for his financially strapped troops.
around to legitimize the . FDN,
well as democratic."
other.
He didn't have much luck.
The reason Is simple: For all his which has no popular appeal In
It's that kind of talk that scares
· I've reported the legendary
the ~eagan admlhlstratlon, and
exploits of the revolutionary "Com· rugged. charm and the glamour of Nicaragua."
Pastora ts right about the last causes It to sling mud at hfrn.
mander Zero" since the days when his ,past adventures, Pastora Is a
point: The FDN's civilized leaders "Pastora Is no different from his
be first took up anns against the political maverick whom the CIA
U.S.·backed di~tatorship of Anasfa· doesn't trust. He Is an outspoken are conservative businessmen and ex-buddies now In power," Jald one
sto Somoza. In 1978 and 1979 my revolutionary; the CIA suspects politicians , and Its top military administration source. "He just
officers are almost all former ' wanted the power for himself."
former associate Bob Shennan him of leaning too far to the lefi.
National Guard members. This
spent some time with Pastora at his
taints
the whole group as far as . The administration has spread
jungle hide-out. Not long afterward,
So Pastora has received only a
most Nicaraguans are concerned.
Pastora and his Sandlnlsta fighters token offering of CIA money and
the rumor that Pastora has a Castro
captured the presidential palace In guns - nothing like the support ' Pastora's group, on the other connection. Though he denies It, he
hand, Is led. mainly by former does adll)lt !hat one of his top aldes
Managua. Somoza had already . enjoyed by the CIA's . anti·
fled.
'
Sandlnlstas.
Their .quatTel with the has talked recently to the Cuban
. Sandlnlsta creation, the Nicara·
Now Pastora Is fighting !he guan Democratic Force (FDN) . Managua junta Is simply that It dtctator. Pastor a evidently feels It's
Sandlnista regime he helped to The CIA Is trying to coerce Past ora betrayed the revolution. They are a good tactic to make the Reagan
anti-communist, but ttiey favor people worry about hts opening to
bring to power. Several months ago
to join the FDN, which he says .he
more soclall•m than the Reagan Cuba's Fidel Castro - a warning
I sent my roving reporter, Jon Lee
will never do as long as Its military
AnderSon, to travel with Pastora In
that he ~an get help elsewhere If
leadership Includes former officers administration wants:
When we spoke the other day, Washington turns him down.
the Nlcaranguan bush, where he
of Somoza's National Guard.

to

•

...

"''ve decided to get a jump on the fattening
holiday season "

:·Today in)tistory

'

•
By The Associated Pre9s
-; Today Is Sunday; Dec. 4, the338thdayofl~ . Thereare27 days left in the
. year.
: ... Today's highlight In history:
. ;: On Dec. 4,1816, James Monroe of VIrginia was elected the fifth president
. of the United States, defeating Rufus King of New York.
~ . On this date:
·! · In 1783, George Washlngton - quitting as commander In chief of the
lunerlcan armed forces - had a farewell dinner at Fraunces Tavern in
:r-ew York.
· In 1843, John Mark and Lyman Hollingsworth of South Braintree, Mass.
~P,atented Manila paper, made from hemp salis, canvas and rope. · '
· : In 1875, William Marcy Tweed, "boss" of New York City's Tammany
.tJall political organization, escaped jail and Oed to Spain.
, ·· In 1918, Woodrow Wilson left Washington for France, becoming the first
•lJ.S. president to visit a European country whlle in ottlce.
.
.
-~ And in 1945, Congress approved U.S. participation tn the United Nations.
. ·· Ten years ago: Congress passed legislation to put the country on
year· round dayllght savings time for two years to help ease the ener!gy
Shortage.
· Five years ago: The State Departm€11t said the 4G,IXXI or more
·Americans in Iran should be "particularly discreet" in their behaVIor
during the Moslem holy month to avoid attracting any demonstrations
against forelgne~ .
One year ago: Barney Clark, in his third day with an artlllclal heart, was
operated on In Salt Lake City to seal air leaks In his lungs.
· Today's birthday: Actor Jetf Bridges Is 34.

"Where's Bill Casey?"

"He's going over the results with
his lai)'Yers of the one he took
yesterday.''
· "All right. Let's begin. Who
leaked the story to Evans and
Novak that we were deploying a
Pershing II missUe In the Rose
Garden?''
"It wasn't me, slr. I haven't
talked to Evans and Novak in a

month."

."You're lying, Meese. I saw you
having lunc&amp; with Novak last
week.''

"Don't call me a llar, Denver. I'm
telling the truth."
"Tell It to the polygraph rna·
chine," Denver snarled.
The president said, "All rtght,
gentlemen. Let's cool down. How
many people know about the Rose
Garden deployment?"
.
Robert McFarlane, lhe presl·
dent's national securtty adviser,
said, "There was Secretary of
Defense Weinberger, you, myself,
Meese, Bakel', Deaver and the
gardener. You didn't teU Mrs.
Reagan, did you? "

The president replled, "No. I
didn't want to upset her until they
started pouring the concrete over
the roses, I'd llke everyone to take a
test as soon as this meeting Is over.
A leak like this could start a panic in
the country."

•

Everyone looked at Casey. He
said. "My lawyers assure me when
I told the lie detector I couldn't
remember seeing the briefing book
I was telling the truth."
Baker said, "I'll bet."
"All right," said tbe president,
"let's knock If off. We all know !here
Is a mole In the White House and
I'm going to find out who It Is If It's
the last thing I do. Are there any
other methods of getting the truth
out of people besides a polygraph

"Sir, wouldn't it be easier to have
a lie detector machine In the
Cabinet room so we ·cou)d find out
who was lying rtght on the spot?"
Deaver suggested.
·
"No," the president replied.
"We'd be so busy taking tests we'd test?"
never get any work done. Were
there any results on the leak to !he
Washington Post of what the deficit
was reaUy going to be In 1985?"
'"Nothing concrete. The FBI
· polygraph director said he caught
people lying about other things, but
everyone came out clean on the
budget deficit," Meese reported.
"Well, someone leaked It," the
president said.
Deaver said, "The director was
wondering 11 you might consent to
taking a test to make his investlga.
tlon complete."
"I've never leaked anything to
the Post in· my life, \' Mr. Reagan .
thundered . "Besides, whoever
heard of a president of the United
.States submitting to a lie detector
test?"
I
"It would be very bad politl·
cally," Meese agreed. "Parttcu. .
larly since the media would demand the reSults of the test."
Jim Baker and BW Casey came
Into the room.
"How did you do?" Deaver asked
them.
Baker was smiling. "I passed
with flying colOI'li."

WEATHER FORECAST ~ The National Weather Service
predicts rain Sunday in New England. Snow Is predicted for the
eastern Rocldes to the wesCem Great Plains. (AP Laserphoto) ,

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
A chance or rain Monday and rain or snow Tuesday and mostly fair
Wedinesday. Highs In the 50s Monday and In the 40s Tuesday and
Wedinesday. Lows in the 30s Mondaymorqtngcoollngtothemld-20s
to mld·30s Tuesday and to the 20s Wedinesday.

(Continued from page Al)
person you believe to be a
murderer," King asked, " ...andyou
wentto sleep?''
. ''Yes,''Furstresponded, "butl'm
not sure he was !here (onthebed)."
Marchl9
On the evening (March19) prior to
Twyman's disappearance, Furst
testified, shehadgoneto!heFrench
Quarter following a skating party
!or her son.
She denied trylngtogetLee "Into"
the tavern.
"Had you ever gotten Charlie ln
!he French Quarter on other
occasions by telling the bouncer he
was your son'? "'King asked.
"No," Furst answered, "I never
dld try to ·get Charlie in."
"But, on that night dldn'tyou loan
Charlie !he keys to your house so he
could get a'shlrt so he could get in !he

ci\IP?" King continued.
' uyes, .. Furst replied.
Referring to an alleged alterca·
tton between Furst and Lee in !he
tavern's parking lot on that night,
the witness denied being upset.
"I crted when be slapped me," she
said, 11 1thurt."
Furst said she could not remember how much she had to drink
on that night.
"Were you !here atcloslngtime,"
King asked.

,.Yes/' Furst ansWered.
"Feeling pretty good?" King
inquired.
1 wasn't drunk," Furst
responded.
Furst said she had left the tavern
with Bob Wood, Racine, and gone to
hlshome.
·
"Did you have sex with hfrn?"
King asked.
''Yes,'' sbe replied.
0

Proposal will raise
Gallia, Meigs funds
'(Continued from page All
· son, $520,000; and Vinton, $299,000.
Gallla, Jackson and Meigs received
Increases, while Vinton's funding
level remains the same as this
year's.
"It ts Ironic !hat over halfo!Ohto's
counties were looking at a reduction
in local government funds despite
recent state tax Increases," Collins
remarked. "In fact, several of the
counties slated lor reductions would
have received less in 1984 than !hey
got before !he tax increase went into
effect.' '
An inequality In the local govern·
ment formula was discovered last
summer when It was revealed
smaller counties woold be cut in
1984, while !hosecountlescontalnlng
!he state's major cities would have
been Increased by more !han $1
lnllllon.

The baptism of the Holy

S~nt

HAVE YOUR PICTURE
TAKEN WITH ·SANTA

was not a command but a promiSe. It was not

wrOO! "1horr is one bttptism" (Eph. 4:5).let us observe some facts roncermng the one
bapt~ 111 :• (1)-H ~commanded by Christ (Mtt. 28:19; Mrk 16:15, 16). (2)-H •to be
administered in the name ofthe Father, Son and Holy Ghost (Mtt. 28:19). (3)-lt •lor the
remission of ~ns (Acts 2:38· Acts 22:16). (41-lt ~ w!h water (Acts 8:36. 38; I Pet. 3:21).
(5)-H saves (Mrk. 16:16; t' Pel 3:21). (6)-" puts one into Christ His OOdy, the church
(Gal. 3:27; 1 Cor. 12:13). (7)-lt completes lhe new birth (Jno. 3:3, 5). ·(8) - It ts
administered by men and not by the lord (Jno. 4: 1,2).
·
.
The "one baptism" differs greatly hom Ho~ S~rit baJJtism: (1)-11was for all1n
. .,ery age, not just for a chosen lew. (2)-" was for salv.atton, not to gwe mtracuklus
power. (3)-~ was divine~ commanded lor all, not a promiSe lot aselect few. (4)-11 was
administmd by men. not by the lord.
.
.
.
1realize that many seek to dodge there being "one baptism" (Eph. 4:5) by say1ng that
one is baptized wtth the Holy Spirit in mder to be saved and os then baptized wrth watet to
show he is saved. This WIJUid stiH ronslitute two baptisms, and acrord~ngtothescnptures
there are not two but one!
.
f' .. .
Holy Spirit baptism is not the baptism of fire." The "baptism of tre ts yet to coma
therefore, ! was not promised to the apostles. Had rt been prom~ to the apa;tles and was
lo have been administered by the lord at the same~me, Jesus woold have spoken on th os , ~
wise in Acts 1:7, "But ·ye shalf receive power, after .the Holy Gh~ ts come. ur,on you. ,
Nothi~ is mentioned about tile "baptism of fire!" '1he baptiSm of ftre was the
"unqUIIIChalllt fire'' to be administered by the lord at the end of lime upon the w1cked,
the unfnitful, and chaff, "Whose fan is in his hand, an~ gather.h~ wheat tnto the garner.
but he will burn up !he chaff wrth unqueocilable fire (Mtt. 312)
1can only preach the JlSpel. The ~spel declares there is "one baptism" and ! ~ a
burial in 111111r (Acts 8:38; Rm. 6:3, 4) tlr tile remission of sins (Mr~ 16:16; Acts 2:38) so
as to make the obedient believer a·rw Cltllurt. a child of God. (Rm.6:4;II Cor. 5:17;Gal.
3:26, 37). ij is deceo~ng to preach that baptism of the Holy Sp~rit • the om;, baptism, -~
tum right around preach and practice wale!' baptism. To preachmore than onebapttsm
is to preach another JlSpel' To preach another JlSpel is indeed a serious offence! To
preach another JlSpel ~to stand accursed of (Gal. 1:8, 9)!

19"
COLOR TV
83 Channels
•solid State ·
•AfT Control

REG. 1399.95

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Nl1ht Till
1:00 P.II.

Chirp
&amp;
. VIsa

Bul•vHie A011d • P.O. Box 308
OALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4&amp;831
lundtiy Morning
..... ltudyi :JO
Worlhlp 10 :30

Suncs.y hening
Won! hlp 1:00

WedneMI•v
E.,.,.,irlg

7 :00

R1411o

p.m.-4:00
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Gallipolis
Middleport
Point Plesant
Gall ipolis
Middleport
Point Pleasant
Middleport
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Middleport
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Middleport
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Middleport

( llt\®

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

laster

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BRING YOUR CAMERA OR WE
WILl TAKE. PICTURES FOR stso EACH

(For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write ...)

Open Every

'ftNtlt r;J/taemacf1
tJ/ 0/titJ, ·!J11c.

" M-.. trcm
the liltole"
Delfwo-WJf:tl

pH()NI 44~7186

•

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

prom~ to every belif!'ler but JUst a chosen lew, the apostles Wews) .and Cornelius
(Gentiles). The three scriptural refetence where the baptism of the Ho~ Sptr! ~found are
Matthew 3:11, Acts 1:5, and Acts 11:15. 16. Ifthe baptism ofthe Ho~ Sp11! was a part of
the plan of salvation in sa~ng man then ! woukl have been for everyooe. Acrordtng to the
scriptures the baptism of the Ho~ Spirit fulfilled its purpose 1n the aposlol1c days (A.D. 30
until A.D. 70), and ~ not for us today!
..
" was after the last rej:orded incident ollhe baptism of the Ho~ Sp1nt, that.fauf

Everyone looked at the president
In hoiTOr.
·

'

Assodaled Press Writer
A cold front arcing from New
Mexico to Maine walloped most of
the na lion with snow and freezing
rain Saturday, whlle spawning
By The Assocll!led Press
fierce
storms !hat drenched !he
Flood watches and warnings were posted over much of Arkansas,
South
with
up to 7 inches of rain and
Tennessee, northern Alabama, northern Mississippi and northeast·
carried
the
threat of "serious.
ern Texas Saturday as heavy rain w lted !he Southeast.
flooding."
Freezing rain fell over the Texas Panhandle and southeastern
The National Weather Service
Kansas north of the cold front that caused the heavy rain in the
said
travel was "highly dlscour·
Southeast. Travelers' advisories and winler stonn watches were
aged"
in seven northern Alabama
posted along an arc from New Me:tlco to Maine, with rain, Ice and
counties early Saturday because of'
snow in parts of Kansils, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Ohio,
an "extremely dangerous flash
Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and New England.
flood situation." Just hours earlier,
A winter stonn warning for heavy snow was Issued for parts of
a severe thunderstonn in Monroe,
Oregon and northern Calllornla as a new stonn system moved In
La ., injured two people, partly
from lhe Pacific. Storm watches were also Issued for parts of
destroyed
a house and downed
Nevada and Arizona.
trees.
· The National Weather Service said up to 7 Inches of rain had
already fallen by early Saturday in sections of northern Alabama
Meanwhile, a new threat to the
Rocky Mountain states, still stag·
and northern Mississippi. Some street flooding occurred In
· gerlng from foor storms that
Birmingham, Ala., after 31nches of rain leU. Severe thunderstor'ms
dropped a r~ord 12 feet of snow In
toppled trees In Monroe, La., and two•people were injured when a
spots, was developing as a storm
bouse was partly destroyed by a falling tree.
·
packing up to 8 more frosty Inches
WE'RE THE
Slid in from the Pacific over
southeastern Oregon and Callfor·
STORE
nla's Sierra Nevadas.
"It's a big one," said Nolan Duke,
a
meteorologist at the National
'
Weather
Service's Severe Storms
"Yes," Furst replted, "he borMarchOO
Center in Kansas City, Mo.
rowed it."
Furst testified she bad returned to
Utah, in !he mldst of what
"Let's get this straight now," King
herhome!henext&lt;hly-March20continued, "who Is the owner of the forecaster Harry Gordon called "Its
at 1: 15 p.m. She said Lee anived at
real sloppy season," got a brtef
gun?"
her residence at 2:15p.m.
breather Friday after being socked
''I am,'' Furst answered:
"Did you tell Charlie about Bob
"Who gave that gun to Charlie?" with 15 Inches of new snow the day
Wood?" King asked, "That you had
· before. But more heavy snow was
King asked.
spent !he night with Bob Wood?"
expected by tonight.
"I
did,"
Furst
replied
.
"No," Furst answered.
Furst denied that she had ever
King then quoted from the
Sleet, snow and freezing rain feU
carrted a gun.
transcript of Lee's prellminary
In a broad band to the north of the
Show him how special he
hearlngdurlngwhlchFursttestlfled
Alle«es Bribery Attempt
long cold front. Winter storm
is with a handsome diaWhUe at a Point Pleasant bar, watches and travelers' advisories
Lee was " ... upset because I had
mond ring. Paul Davies
Furst said she met Charles Lee Sr., warning of extremely dangerous
spent !he night with Bob Wood."
know what men like
"I don't- remember ever telling
Point Pleasant, the accused's fa· driving conditions were posted
diamond
rings wt1PfhP1rl
him," Furst testified Friday.
!her, after Lee's arrest. Shesaldshe Saturday in !he Texas and Okla·
Furst said she and Lee had left her
agreed to speak with him. "He homa panhandles, Kansas, Mts·
be a cluster or ~"'6."' 1
Georges Creek residence atapprox·
offered me $1,000 to go to Florida or souri, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio,
stone- Paul Davies
anywhere ... so I wouldn' t testify Pennsylvania, New J ersey, New
imately3::llp.m., onMarch20, togo
have just the r ight one.
against his son."
to the home of Kathy Bias on
York, Connectlcu t and Rhode
The elder Lee; Furst sa id is Island.
Starting at S195.00
tackson Pike.
divorced from Marsha Lee, the
Furst said she and Bias had
VIsibility was severely cut in
.accused's mother.
discussed blood Furst had seen on
snowy Rhode Island . • "A tittle
Cain Inquired abo~! the relation· caution and less speed on the roads
!he front of Lee's car. ·
ship between Lee and his parents. could easily make the difference
She testified Lee had left the Bias
Furst said Lee told her he hated his between a safe trtp ... and a lousy
·residence between 4: :ll p.m. and 5
father because he never visited him. weekend," a forecaster said.
p.rn.
According to Fun;t, she had told
"He said he hated his mother ... that
The southern rains prompted
she doesn't care."
Lee sbe and Bias planned to do
flash flood watches and warnings In
laundry.
"No, she didn't disapprove to much of Arkansas and Tennessee,
Inst~ad, !he two went to a tavern
me," Furst explained after questiin Pt. Pleasant, where !hey met two
oned about what Mrs. Lee thought of .------------j__ _:~::::::_ _:::~===~
men and then traveled to Hunting·
her. She added Mrs. Lee discussed
the age difference of Lee and Furst
ton. Furst testlfed she had spent the
once during a conversation. "I was
night in Huntington with a man she
welcomed toberhouseanytlmewith
could Identify only as "Tim."
or without her being there."
"Yoo dldn'tcomehomeatall that
night, dldyou?" King asked.
On cro!&gt;'H'xaminatlon, Furst said
her ex-husband had not objected to
"I spent the night with Tim," she
her relationship with Lee.
replied. Furst said she had returned
"He sald he (Lee) was a little
home on March 21, at approxt· .
young,"
Furst testified.
mall!Iy 5: ll p.m.
Furst's testimony ended Friday
The GIBlin Question
afternoon shortly after 4 p.m., when
"You testified you had loaned
the witness complained of physical
Charlle a gun?" King asked on
distress. Furst Is scheduled to return
cros~H?xarntnatlon, referring to a
to the stand Monday morning, when
.22-ealiber revolver previously en·
the trial reconvenes at 9 a.m.
tered as evidence.

Added to the bW which revised the
fonnula were.provisions that:
-Appropriated $818,IXXI to the
Public UtWties Conunlsslon of Ohio
to belpdealwithAT&amp;T'sbreakupo!
Its telephone subsidiaries and in·
crease the panel's responslbWI!es
Involving hazardous waste
matertals.
- REquired the tax commtsstoner
to prepare a report on state
revenues . and expen,dltures, to be
distributed with tax returns .
-Appropriated $527,964 to Con·
neaut City Schools to cover costs
artslrig hum an erroneous industrial
tax payment.
TheHousealsoconcuiTedwlththe
Senate In changing a bill increasing fl:;:~;:::::=-:::::;:;:;;;;;::;;:~;;;:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;:;~~
the stze of tractor (raUer · rigs
allowed on state highways, while
A Message From The Bible . • .
Sen. Neal Zjmrners Jr., O.Dayton,
won final passage of a bill on
HOLY SPIRIT OR WATER BAPTISM
operation of migrant labor camps.
William B. Kughn

body."

...-.

northern Alabama, northern Mls·
slsslppl, northeast Texas and !he
mountains of South Caronna.
The National Weather Service in
Blrmfngham, Ala., said the Black
Wanior River was at 136 feet- just
4 feet below flood stage- and rising
rapidly at the Holt Lock '!nd Dam.
With continued rainfall, !heweather
service said the river would likely
reach 150 feet and produce "serioos
fiood!J;)g" In nearby Industries.
Birmingham's streets were
flooded by 3 Inches of fast·falllng
rain, and Greenwood, Miss ., was hit
by 6lnches ofraln -4 ~ inchesoflt In
just six hours .
Pollee in San Antonio, Texas,
urged people not to drive there late
Friday night until streets drained.

By DANA F1Eiffl

Furst tells of.romantic relationship

Casey said, "The CIA has other
methods."
"What are they?" the president
asked.
"WeU, for one thing, we could put
the electrodes on other parts of the

· "I'd rather not go that route at !he :
moment," Mr. Reagan said. "If !he :
niedla got wind of It they would say
I didn't trust my staff."
·

in South, snow and
ice in the North

The nation's weather

All the President's men____. .:;. : ;Ar~tB::.. .;. uc;.. ;. . ;h.;.;. :tva=ld
Ever since President Reagan
gave his okay to allow the use of lle
detector tests to find out who was
leaking to the press, the at.mos·
phere In the White House has been
heavy with mistrust and suspicion.
I know this because someone
leaked me what took place during
a recent meeting in the president's
Cabinet room.
The president came ln. "Where's
Jim Baker?:'
"He's In the lle . detector room
taJdng a test concerning tbe Carter
briefing book investigation."

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page---A-3

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

. .

''The Churall with the Me-ge"

11 :1115 A.M .

._..,. CIIIIM U. !iurlaly, 7:J0 Ul.

Rt. 35 &amp; 160

·

Gallipolis, Ohio

Acrofs from Holzer Medical Center

�December 4, 1983

: Bob's Beat of the Bend

Dangero~s
By BOB HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
As Santa's he lper. you're In the
driver's seat as far as taking

precautions towards safety are
concerned.
The Ohio AffiJ.
!ate, National Soc iety to Prevent
Blindn ess, ha s
com p i l·e d a
"danget· c heck
list" which indi·
cates that so-called projectile toys
are a special concern . This includes

BB, air a nd spring-operated guns,
sling shots, bows and arrows and

darts. Nearly 1.500 children : between five and 14, will have suffered
eye inj uries from projectile type
toys this year.
. You should avoid toys toys that
shatt e r or break easily: toys that
launch projectiles: items wit h
sharp exposed edges. points. nalls.

screws or pins; parts thar ca n
become detached a nd expose sharp
edges.
So for your chldren's sake, play it
cool.
Middleport Village officials Monday nig ht offered commendations
to members of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, An;terican Legion, for its
work a nd recognition service for
the late Jtr:n my Stewart a nd
Edward Bennett . both Congressional Medal of Honor winners .

The project of the plaque a nd all
was a lot of work and expense for
the post, but the community was
helpful with the expense phase of
the recognition. Pitching in to help
the post with the costs were Hea th
United Methodist Church. Middleport Village. Middleport Fire Depanme nl. Ed's sisters, Mrs .
Thelma Bennett Stobart and children, An na Bennett Brown. Ethe l
Bennett Kimes. Frances E. Bennett
Hixon. Ed's brot her. Herman,
Hackett Roofing, Ben Batey, Mr.
and Mrs . Robet1 Lewis. Mr. a nd
Mrs. Robert Tweksbary, Sadie S.
Turner. Mr. a nd Mrs . Jack Hawley.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Edwa rds. Mr.
and Mrs. Judson White. Ha llie and
Nollie Zerkle. James David !Hudson. Capt . and Mrs. Randy Bkker.
Mr. and Mrs . Myron Miller. Mr.
and Mrs . Gordon K. Harris, Mr.
and Mrs. Ca r! Horky, Ruth B.
Arnold a nd Judy A. Arnold.
It was great that Stewart 's two
sons. John a nd Robert, were able to
travel all the way from Texas to be
on hand for the dedication of the
plaque to the two medal winners.
Incidenta lly, Middleport Council
ha s a lw sent a letter of tha nks to
Mr. a nd Mrs. Roger Morgan. who
prov ided a flag a nd flag pole nea r
the plaque in memory of the late
Jeanne Morgan.

Mr. and Mrs. Morgan worked
over the Thanksgiving holiday to
ma ke sure the pole was set a nd
ready for the ded ication, · a nice
gest ure.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Otto Mortzfeld , the
former Myrtle Sm ith who worked
in 1 he Stansbury Drug Store In
Middleport for several years, observed their 50t h wedding anniversary on Nov. 30.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Mortzfeld reside a t
722 43rd St., Kenosha, Wis.
A g roup oJ a rea es!de nts, related
· to Mrs. Mortzfeld , made the tr ip to
Ke n osha to atten d a pr eann iversary celebration for the
couple. The group Included Mrs.
Mabel Moore. Mrs. Marlene Wilson. Mrs. Li nda Jett, Mrs. Flora
Ellenbach of Jupiter, Mr. and Mrs.

gifts

Dan Smit h a nd :VIrs. Dale Saupders . Mrs. Moore. Mrs . Smith .1nd
M rs. Ellen bach are niC'C'cs of :vlrs.
Mortzfrkl. Isn't it g-rr.aat that su
many would make suc h a long trip
to help thf' couptr observe thf'ir
special day?
Paul L. Johnso n. who with his
wile manages the Stonewood Aprt m ent Complrx in ::vtiddiE'(X)rt , has
been awa rded the 0 hioComm0nda,
lion Medal by Ohio's gO\-ernor for
m c ritoriou~ achirvemem in the
pe1~ formance

of o ut standing

servire.
Johnson I'CC£'ived the an·ard for
work whUe undergoing Ohio f'a ·

tiona! Guard training at Camp
Perry this year. He belongs to
headquat1ers unit in A ll;tens.
The com mendation reads;

Gallian
injured
GAl .LIPOI. IS- A GaHia County
man

\~· as

Just think, if we, as indiv iduals,
can mangle each other for expensive Cabbage Patch dolls (from the
Orient , yet) -boy!, what we can do
as a nation.. Do keep smiling ...

STORE HOURS:
.. 9 am til 10

Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm

---

'.

GALLIPOLIS - An 18-year-old
hunting deer witllout a tag.
man was ordered lnearcerated In · Trafiic-related fines went to
the Gallla County Jan for five days Barry Munson; 28, Wooster, !allure
forassaultlngapcllceofflcer.
to register vehicle; Ernestine
Pleading guilty to the charge In Rhodes. 35, 2216 Eastern Ave.,
Galllpclls Municipal Court was !allure to yield; Martin Matthews,
Donald L. Martin Jr. , 18, Court 20, Scottown, fallureto stop at stop
Street
sign a nd exptred license, all $40; and
He was fined $50 and placed on 18 Arlie R . Frye, 27, Gallipolis,
months probation. He also pleaded squealing tires, $12.
gu!ltytodlsorderlyconduct,butwas
Fined for speeding were StE've
not fined. A charge of resisting Potter, 22, P omeroy, $13, and Roger
arrestwasdmppedattllerequestof D. Ashworth, 18. Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
thearrestlngofflcer.
$14 .
' Forfeiting $128 bonds Thursday
ForfE'Iting bond for speeding were
were Wayne Fillinger, 28, Akron,
William J . Harrison, 33, Cincinnati,
hunting for deer witll a gun after. $47, Richard D. Darst', 22, Rt. 2,
faking and checking one during the Cheshire, $37, Marian A. Briggs, 51,
current deer hunting season, and Rt. 3, Galllpclls, John D. Larson, 64 ,
Richard Shaddeau, Tl, Rt. 1, Sprlng!!eld, Ill., Terry N. Waugh, 25,
Gallipolis, and Michael Mulllns , 29, Rt. 2, Crown City, all $39; Mark J.
Kanauga, for tile same offense. Abbott, 19, Point Pleasant, $40 and
Mullins had a$103bond forfeited for Willie Harrell , 35, Detroit , Mich.,

CLOSED SUNDAYS

' ; OUR tOWN'S fiNESt SUrEI MAIItU
GO TO CHURCH [V[RV SUNDAY

Good thru Dec. U. 1 983
We Reuwve The Riqht to limit Ou•ntities

The patrol ci ted Mildred Barry,
69. Rt. 2. Bidwell, forfailure to yield
in a two-ear coll!sion on Ohio 160
near Bulaville Road at 4:05 p.m .
Friday.
Bart)' ' was reportedly pulling
from a private dnveway when she
collided with a northbound vehic le
driven by Patsy A. Estep. 39, Rt. 2.
Bidwell. Beth vchtcles.weresllghUy
damaged .
In Meigs County, tile patrol also
.&lt;;ited Terry L. Smitb. 27, Rt. 1,
Racine, ror !allure to yie ld In'another

WHOLE SIDES
HIND
QUARTERS

$139
LB.
BOB EVANS

SAUSAGE

D

STEAK
SUPERIOR

BOILED HAM

Fired empl~ye gets $287.,000

KAHN'S

PEPPER LOAF
SUPERIOR

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$}69

SUPERIOR

LOIN END

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:n,

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BOLOGNA ·
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We Welcome
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HAM

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Christina Beegle, Mid·
dleport; Leonard Sheppard, Coolville: Rhea Bean, Pome roy: Barbara Smith, Middleport.
Discharged--Sa ndy Luckeydoo,
Ellen Couch, Lowell McNickle.

LB.

$ 99
•
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ELEC. PERK

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REG.'IIJ.OO

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me tal Of plastic . Double

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Shoper/ joi nter type fence.
Pl r:ntic g uard raises auto·
motkotly. 17\'4"ll 12't ."•l0 11J ''.

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ThC&gt; Sundav Ttml's-&amp;&gt;n finel wUl not lx&gt;
rt·· swnslble' ror ad\·ance ~ ~Tm•lit!fmade
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1\-1&lt;\ll. SlJB..'iCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only

tlnC' yE'ar ........ .. ........................ Sl).8J
Six m onths ...... . ......................... $10.40
OaUy and SUnday
MAIL SU!ISCRIP110NS

Inside OIUo
'i2 Wet&gt;ks ........ , ........... , ............ ,$!)1.48
26 Weeks ............. .. .·......... ,........ S27.;JJ
1.1 Wf"'f'ks .............. .. ......... , ....... 114 .01
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:i2 Wt&gt;eks ....... ........ ................. $~ .16
:.!6 Weeks ..........................., ... s~.64
1.1 Weeks ................ ... ......... ,,., .. $15.21

FRESH
CABBAGE

¢
LB.

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ORANGES TANGERINES
5 LB. BAG

$ 29
"

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ann-•u

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Infinite 1peed lock . 1/ , "
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mode eosilv. Powef lock~ ff button . Model 7308 .

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$}19

: ~ · .. tugr&gt; paid ;Jt &lt;;alllrnll~ . Ohio .t:if.:ll.
J:n t('t'f'd a.~ &lt;;f'I:'Ond das.~ rTlilllln~ mall er
,tt Pomf'rn~ · Ohio. F_'rn~ t Offif'e~

( }1\('

Shortbed, red &amp; black, 300 cu. ln. 6 cylinder engine, 4 speed, trans.,

power steering &amp; brakes, am -fm stereo, chrome spoke wheels, new

~;OUND BEEF LB. $} 19.
. ~;~~~D CHUCK LB_$} 59
PRE~SLICED

.WIENERS

LB.

l 'ublf~hf'd (•ach Sunda\' . 1!2~ Third
\wnuf'. b) the Ohio Vallry Publishing
1'nm pan~·.- M ulti rTlf'din . I nc. S('{'onri f'las~

P :tih·

Forfeiting $78 bond on charges of
hunting without a license and
hunting after dark was Jerry
Hughes, 38, Carlisle, Ky.
In .another hunting-related citation, the court ordered · Ralph
Llttleughs, 41 , Kettarlng, to forfeit
$128 bond for a ttamptlng to take a
deer out of seast&gt;n.
.
Clair E . Martin, 38, Eureka Star
Route, forfeited $57.20 bond for
ovetwelght load; John Klrby, l9, Rt.
4, Gallipolis, forfeited $.li bond for
walking on a public highway while
Intoxicated; Josetta s. Jordan, 24,
626 Second Ave ., forfeited $40 bond
for failure to obey a trafilc control
device.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
DoylefWy,48,Dayton , $~; Elrama
W. Smith Jr., 32, WestChestar, $70;
Terry L. Leonard, 25, Oak Hill, $44;
James L. Alexander , 65, Beavercreek, $38; Douglas S. White, 32,
Cincinnati , $12: Robin E. Smith, 30,
Thurman , $38.

Steven Murray, Huber J:ielght.s,
$48; Richard M. Crane, 21, Roseville, J\11ch. , $39; Rlthard A. Wilson,
Detaware, $42; PearlS. Harris,
55, Columbus, $38; Teresa A.
Justice, 18, Lockbourne, $42; RlchardW.Pyle.:t FortWayne,Jnd.,
$39.
.
Terry E. Henline, 36, South Point,
$48; Rosemary Jordan, 31, Columbus, $39; Myrtle Mink. 69, Northup,
$42; Jamrs R. Hojnacki, 47, Grand
Rapids, Mich ., $39; James Palsgrove, 55, Columbus, $40; James E .
J&lt;eesee, 42, Mlddlepcrt, $42.
Sheryl L. Waltars, 29, Rt. l,
Cheshire, $41; Ronald L. Ellis, 45,
GalllpcUs, $40; Paula J . Baisden, ~ .
Rt. 1, Gallipclls, $40; Barbara S.
Monis, 42, 1811 Chestnut St., $38;
Gregory D. Nelson, 25, :100 Glenn
Olive, $38; Barry A. Flllner, Tl,
Millersburg, $43; Staphanle J .
Fillinger, 25, Rt. 1, Gallipclls, $42;
Larry A. LeedY, 33, Chesapeal!e,
$40; Gary D. Sergent, 43, WestarvlllE', $43; Gaylord A. Downing, ~.
Solon, $38.

SPARE RIBS.

4

s~

$43.

HOLLYWOOD

CENTER CUT

LB.

W. Va.

$}39

REG. OR THICK

.iunbap 'limts jtntinel
l

Ohio-Point

Assault ch'lXge brings jail sentence, probation

injur(,:'d in a one-cai'

"ccident on Count;· Road 5 early
Sa nuda~ · morning.
Thr Ca!l ipclis po." of the state .
highwa" pat rot said Roger L.
Saunders Jr .. 18. Rt . 1, Gallipolis,
didn 't require treatment or his
inj ury.
Thr accident orcun·cd a t 12:30
a.m. whilE' Saunders was sout h·
bound. a m ile south of Ohio 588, the
patml sa id . As hr ent ered a right
cutYo, Saunders spotted a deer on
the road a nd applied his brakes. His
car then went left into a small ditch,
overtuming onto its top. It was
severely damaged.

"Specialist Six PaulL. Johnson. a
member of Headquarters and
Headquarters Banery. 2nd Battal ion, !74th Air Defense Artillery.
performed exceptionally outstanding service while assigned as
Chapel Activi(ies Specialist from
March, 1983, to July,l983. Specialist
Six Johnson distinguished himself
by his imaginative foresight , unt ir·
in g efforts, devotion of many hours
of off duty time to the assistance oJ
two-car crash.
the Battalion Chaplain . Specialist
Smith was reportedly eastbound
Six .Johnw n accomplished all ason
County Road 29 a t 8 a .m. Friday
signed and implied taks wit h
she m ade a left rum In front of
when
enthusiasm, perseverance and deda
westbound
auto driven by William
ication to duty and had a great
25. Racine. The
B.
Davidson,
impact on the improvement of the
caused
slight damage to
collision
overa ll morale of his entire battalbotll
autos.
.
ion. His outstanding performance
The patrol sa id a pickup truck
of duty reflects great credit upcn
driven by R ussell W. Goodwin, 28,
himseU, the second baltalion l74th
Amma. W.Va .. and aveh!cledrive n
Air Defense Artillery, the Ohio
by Arden R. Kerns, 55, Belpre,
Army National Guard a nd the
collided
on Ohio 7 in GaU!a County
United States Army ."
Friday afternoon.
The patrol said Goodwin attempEach year we do try to mention
ted
to turn left at 4:55 p.m . as Kerns
the annual Christmas tour of homes
began
to pas's and collided , causing
in marietta held by the Marietta
slight
damage
to both vehicles.
Bra nch of the American Associacar
driven
by Wanda L.Mulllns,
A
tion of University Women.
36,
Rt.
1,
Dexter,
was moderately
This year's tour, the 16th an'rnial,
damaged
when
it
struck
a deer on
includes five homes and the Betsey
County
Road
10,
eight-tenths
Me
igs
Mllls Club. T ickets this vear are
of a mile south of Salem Township
$3.25 and may be purchas'E&gt;d at the
Road 27 at 11: ~p.m. F r iday, the
Betsey Mills Club , 300 Fourth St.,
said.
patrol
Marietta. or you might want to get
in touch with Mrs. Raymond
Guthrie, 1302 Cisler Drive, Marielta, (6141 373-llC~.
The tour will be Sunday , Dec . ll ,
from 1 until 5: 30 p.m.

December 4, 1983

Merrill, Jay and Alan Evans

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

446-6592

~~~

~~~~

�•.

'
Page-A-6-The SUnday Times-Sentinel

December 4, 1983

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

December 4, 1983

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-A-7

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

Meigs area ushers in Christmas season with parade
POMEROY .. Trophles were
awarded the best entries In the
annual Pomeroy -M.Iddleport
Christmas parade held Saturday
morning.
Winners were: most outstanding
band, Meigs High School; best
theme float, VICA Chapter of Meigs
High School; best reUglous float,
Meigs United Methodist Ministries,
and best' marching unit, other than
bands, tbe Stylettes.
There were numerous partlclants
in the annual parade which was led
by the pollee In the respective towns
and a display of lire and emergency
equipment. Bands taking part were
Southern, Wahama and Meigs and
there were many walking and
vehicle riding· participants from
!rom Girl Scout groups across the
county. April Clark was the only
equestlan participating in the pa·
rade although Santa did appear In a
horse drawn sleigh. In both towns,
Santa distributed candy to youngs·
ters follow,lng the parade which

.
•

the downtown section Salunlay, followed by the
J«1l'C class at Rio Grande College 1111d Community

IN 1\IEMORY - Veterans of Foretan Wars Poet
4464 of Gallipolis led the ChrtstJna&lt;; parade through

College.

ON TilE PARADE ROUTE - Fellnes on
minibikes - or those made up for the occa.•lon were participants in Saturday's aDIIW'I Christmas
parade through downtown Gallipolis. Judging in the
parade saw Elwood l..ewis' 1929 Chevrolet selected as
oldest car; a 1955 Chevrolet owned by David 1\lcCoy
set as judge's choice; Temperatures Rising 4-H club

chosen best theme; Gallipolis Recreation Department baton group, best walking unit; Church of Christ
in Christian Union, best reUgious theme; Judge
choice lor parade, Gallla Academy High School
marching band; best band, NorthGalllaHlghSchool;
second place, best ban~: Hannan Trace High School.
•

Gallipolis' ·
Christmas
parade...
•

Brisk shopping
season reported

the best Christmases in years, the
nation's major retailers today
reported strong sales in November
- generally a good indica tor of
brisk holiday season to follow.
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co., the biggest
of them au, said November sales
compared with a year ago were up
11.4 percent, to $2 billion from $1.8
billion.
·
·
Including results of SirnpsonsSears of Canada, acquired In July,
overall sa les last month were $2.4
billion, a 31.5 percent gain compared
with October 1982.
K mart Corp., ranked No. 2 in the
nation by 1982 sales, reported a
November salesgalno!l0.5percent,
to $1.52 billion from $1.38 billion.
Other large national and regional
chains reported slmllar results.

a

.

'

•

CRIF

..~( BL

DLEPORT BOOK STORE·

1 DAY

i

SALE

.~

*AMPLICA RDL-10
RECEIVER
0'

*AMPLICA 100° LNA
CHAPPARRAL POLAR
ROTOR I

EXTRA SPECIAL

~A1nplica,Inc.

*10 FOOT 4 PIECE
FIBERGLASS DISH
11

*RFS ADJ SED" FEED
SYSTEM
*SRS HWB 4 INCH POLAR .

16" ROPE CHAIN
ADD-A-BEAD CATCH
Reg. '40
Sale 119.99
7mm GOlf BALL
Reg. '6.00
Sale '2.99

COCACOLA

. "'\,

i
'\,

NATIVfl'Y -'Ibis fioat deplctbtg the Nativity scene
by the Map United Methodlllt Mlnilllrles won first

S2560 Plus Tax

•RUBY
•JADE

.
OOwAs
89

'149.95

'

A CHRISTMAS DAY
she'll remember

~.. .... .

! '

CINCINNATI(AP)-TheCincln·
nail Gas &amp; Electric Co.is hoping for
state approval of a $106.3 million
r:ate increase for Its electric and
natural gas • customers, effective
next October.
The uillity on Friday notified the
PubUc Uillitles Commission of Ohio
thatltwWaskforpennlsslontoralse
an addtlonal $75 million annually
!rom Its 510,1m electric customers
and $31.2 million a year from Its
:IXI,Im gas customers.
I1 approved in total, the request
would Increase CG&amp;E 's electric
revenues by 10 percent and Its gas
revenues by 7.8 percent, the utility
said.
"U the rates requesled by CG&amp;E
are granted bythePUCO, the cost of
700kllowatthoursoielectrlcltyper
monthforthecompany'sresidentlal
customers will go up !rom $48.14 to
$5Ul," Jackson Randolph, com·
. pany vice president of finance and
corporate affairs, told a news·
conference.
11'fhe price of 25,001 cubic teet of
gas per month, wl)lch Is typical
usagechqingtheheatlngseasonfor
a. residential customer, will raise
lrom$154.72 to$162.98."

CG&amp;Esaiditneedstheaddillonal million, or 4 percent, electric rate
~L
money because its earned rates of increase last April.
return are expected to fall through
Utilities must give the PUCO 30
11 1111
September 1!:1!4.
days' notice before filing a request
~
"During that time period. we for a rate Increase. The commission
Hill
expect our rate of return to
then has nine months to decide
detertorate to 3.3 percent on the gas whether to grant all or par.t of the 1-------~----l
rate base and 10.4 percent on the
request.
electrlcratebase,"Randolphsaid.
Randolph said the added reHUBBARD'S GREE"'HOUSE
Randolph said the ·rate Increase venues are needed to cover costs of
••
request does not Include any costs of new equipment, maintenance, IaSyracuse, OH. 992-5776
lhetroubledZimmernuclearpower bor,depreclatlonandtaxes.
Now Open For The
plant, which Is under construction In
Included in the request Is ,$1
Christmas Season
Moscow Ohio
millionannuallytocoverthecostsof
large selection of potted Pain·
SafetY·rela~ construction at the PUCO's proposed weatherizasettias, hanging Potnsettia basZinuner has been halted by the
lion program Randolph said The
kets. Christmas Cactus, Holly
federal Nuclear Regulatory Com- program woulct require Ohlo.utlllTrees. Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees.
African Violets and Foliage Plants .
mission. The plant, which is being ties to weatherize homes of lowALSO: Candle arrangements , candle
bunt by CG&amp;E, Dayton Power &amp;
income customers and permits
rings, door wreaths, grave blankets,
Light and Columbus &amp; Southern utilities to pass along the costs to all
and cemetery vases and wreaths .
Ohio Electric, is expected to cost customers.
OPEN : 9 to 5 Daily; I to 5 Sun.
about $3.1 bilUon I! completed.
r-:~~;;;;:;;;;:;;;;::;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Last March, the PUCO denied .
1
CG&amp;E $51 milUon tn rate increases
~\'4'
1t~_,.
for Zimmer. The commisSion alsO · ; /
~~·.-·1·
denied ~ Zimmer-related rate
i;!
Increase request by Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio.
··
CG&amp;E was granted a ~19.4
mlllion, or5percent,rateboostfor
gas customers in Januacy 1982. It
also received permission for a Ul.7
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS

IJ.8.IfJtGrt.

N..

...

TDK-VIDEOCASSETTES

T-120...17.95 each-

L-750...18.95 each

SALE DATES THRU DEC. 24, 1983

ORDER "RAIDERS Of THE LOST ARK" FOR CHRISTMAS NOW
139 95
CED DISK 129 95
VHS &amp; BETA... · ·;· '
RAIDERS IN STOCK AT ALL LOCATION
Don't foraet to reserve Movies to help entertain the crowd
&amp;
during the holidays .
.

WOMAN 'S

'7 DIAMOND CLUSTER
CLUSTER

$195
-WATCHES-

PREVIEW OR.· RENT
VIDEO
VHS MOVIES

3 50 '

$·

. ~~\~~

FEATURING:·
e Free Popcorn ·(TY Time) With
Rental or Purchut.

BULOVA • SEI KO

PULSAR
.
CARAVELLE • LQRUS

Every

Preview,

• Purchase Video ·Molies (Beta or VHS) From
A List Of Ower 3480 Titles. '
e Fret Un Of Nic..lodeons Alsop' VHS Head ·

Plus Tax

Cleaner With Any Prewiew or Rental.
1'-'k Video Cassettes.
Mowies Change~ Weekly At All l.ocatiarw.

e Great Prices On

~~S'VSfEMS
J45 N. Columbus Road - Athens, Ohio
Ill A11181S 5M-2524 • . 01110 1·110·592-1957

11
342 SECOND AV£.

113 COURT ST.
POMEROY

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
446-2691

992-2054

•

,,

·WHIRl SANTA, SHOPS

,,

~-4-\'l='~
'

TAWNEY JEWELERS
424 Seconcl Ave., Gallipolis

I•

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THI
ALCOVI

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FRUTH

~~:,";~
&lt;a.ilpollll, Ol'llo

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~\Col/.~~~

T•ntium

THERE'S NOTHING SHE'D
LIKE BETTER

~~1-n•.tt~

FRUTH

FRUTH

,!~~~~~..

The
·Shoe Cafe
:11111 Second Ave.
Lafayette .\ I all
Ga IIi polis. 0 .
S.l&lt;:n:s:o:B:J~Ml&lt;=!l:!:l~f&lt;::&lt;I!&lt;¥1!&lt;¥1!&lt;¥1$::1B:¥Bo&lt;r&lt;::&lt;Bll'$:&gt;r&lt;::&lt;f&lt;::&lt;~r&lt;::&lt;l\&lt;o!~

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Mktdltporl. Ohio ~

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I!!! * Today'r
Trend ...... In Search of Ex ·
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"'IFT BOOKS

N"''"

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•Firnw .. The Body Principal
~ • Special lnr aert s .. .}u)' of Phot o!!, raph ·
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* Com pu!t' r 8 fJo kJ ... Yo~~r F~rrr Basic
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1!1 * Cool ing Delixhtr ..JoJ• of Coohng
U: * Su!e Bo okr ... Wh o'r Wh o Jn The /Jib!f3

Tho Alco .. Bookolo"

L----------11

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\i *PI}'choloRJ
... N ej!arrtmds
W *Nal ure.. Audobon

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So cieiJ'

Rirer'r In MyBin"d

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~ M aries
W •Peo ple... Grr,. ·inR Up bJ' Rul&gt;ell ·
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t!! *Reference... Th e Hnmun Body
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* Cule nd. , ,}65 N ..,, Word.r'A 'Yea r

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FREE GIFT BOOKS CATALOG AVAILABL E
ALL TITLES ARE IN STOCK
Open Daily 9:30-8:00
Sunday 1-6 'Til Chris tma s

11

sUD&amp;

l'olnt ,._,,, w. VII.

FOR CHRISTMAS

W

STATIGI

~allipolis

Baggy below· calf boor
WITh buckled ankle' Si17Jp
and moderare heel

t.A, LU

Rt . I, Pt. Pl•asant

LAST DAY TO OlDER FOR
CHRISTMAS IS DEC. 151h

•ROCKWEL •BRASS
•HUMMEL •WOOD
- I&lt;ERMENTZ -

SANTA,.&amp;Inta agatn proved
hlmseU a' most popular fellow as
residents Uned the business
sections of Ponieroy and Middleport Salunlay to catch a view of
the lradltlonalligure who rode In
a horse-drawn sleigh lor hls

$106.3 million rate increase sought ~:-~_epo_::_c~_~h-e_~:W......:.~ro-/-___.

Chris Taylor

$5000

-GIFTS

'

place honors in the reHglous category in Salunlay's
annual Pomeroy-Middleport Christmas parade.

.

Prices Starting At

$}895And Installation

.,

Winners of· Last Week's
'Diamond Pendant

for Mothe r8 and Grandmothen~. Each brtlllant and
colorful ~:~tone represents a loved one, Set In
gloaming 14K or IOK gold. they Mymbollze a lor tna
f a h\tly, alwayA toge the r ,""

Deposit

GAWPOUS
ICE HOUSE

. •'l

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;wl

BEA U1'JPU L FAMILY BJRTHSTdNE RING!:i

SALE PRICE

and Installation

7 DIAMOND CLUSTER
SAVE 160.00

•OPAL

ALSO INCLUDES 125 FOOT COMPLETE CABLE SET

REGULAR PRICE

M1ddleport

.VERY SPECIAL

•LINDE

16
BTLS.

709 First Ave:

•EMERALD RINGS
•RUBY &amp; DIAMOND
•OPAL &amp; DIAMOND .

•MASONIC

~

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·

OFF

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.

(

GIFTS

oo;0

oz.$ ~~sg

8

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'

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-ENTIRE STOCK-

MOUNT WITH SUBTERRANEAN
MOUNTING CAGE

Christmas tree.

1

HERRYBONE CHAIN
18" Medium With Salty Catch
Reg. $220
Sale '99 ·
4mm GOLD BALL EARRING
Reg. '25
Sale 510.99

STONE RINGS

· •ONYX

Middleport Christmas [llll'llde Satunlay was this

CHAINS o BRACELETS
EARRINGS " CHARMS

•DIAMOND RINGS
•DIAMOND BRACELETS
•DIAMOND EARRINGS

NOW2

entry by thi Meigs IUgh School Chapter of VlCA
depleting a gathering around a fireplace 1111d

BE'lT-The best float carrying out the theme

ONE EVENING ONLY
MONDAY, DEC. 5 ·
5 to 9 P.M.

HOLIDAY

During the Month ofDecember
Receive A

"Home lor the HoUdays" In the annual Pomeroy-

I

vintage lire truck that followed the club's arrangement of other clowns in midget cars.

DECEMB.ER SPECIAL

I

Ohio lottery winner

50o/o.,OFF

Mill St.

,

I

'

Middleport Book S~ore
CW\\'NlNG AROUND - A clown lor Gallipolis
Shrine Club mugs lor spectators at the annual
Christma• parade Saturday. The clown stands atop a

I

I,.I I

14 K GOLD

By The !\ssoclated Press
As they looked fotward to one of

•

moved !rom Pomeroy at 10 a. m. to
Middleport .
.
There were numerous participantsln theparade, led by the pollee
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
in both towns and local fire and
winning
number drawn Friday
emergency units. Girl Scouts across
night
in
the
Ohio Lottery's daily
the county were weD represented
"The
Number,"
was 83t
game,
and among the participants alsO
In the "Pick 4" game, played
were the Wahama, Southern and
Meigs Bands; the Meigs J unior Monday through Friday, the win·
Miss; Cub Scout Pack 235; Carpen· nlng number was 7982.
The lottery reported gross .earnter' s Dance Studio; the Racine
Church of the Nazarene ; Francis ings of $713,6.16.50 from wagering on
Florist, which was given a commer· ·~The Nwnbe.r. "
The earnings came on sales of
clal award; Southern Cadette Girl
$1,303,115,
while holders of winning
Scouts 1115 which won an award as
are
entitled to share
tickets
the best non·walklng unit. There
S589.478.50.
lottery
officials sa id.
was an best car category but, there
were no entries. April C\arkwas the
only equesllan entry .
Alcohol major
Dr. Craig Mathews and Brian
accident cause
Conde were co-chalnnen of the
annual parade sponsored cooperaCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Of the
lively by the Pomeroy and Middle34 traffic deaths on Ohio roads in the
port Chambers· of Commerce.
week ending Dec .1, 62 percent were
Announcing the parade was Keith
due to alcohol, the state Department
Connors of Radio WMPO.
of Highway Safety says.
Twenty-one of the deaths were
alcohol-related and &amp;3 percent of the
\octlms weren't wearing available
seat belts, the department said
Friday.

1

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Time1-Sentinel

Driver cited
after mishap

Ohio-Point PleQsant, W. Va.

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GALLIPOt.IS- A chimney fire
Friday at the J .B. Byrd residence in
Porter Brook subdivision off
Fairfield-Centenery Road was put
out by . the Gallipolis Fire
Department.
Firemen said sparks from a fire
ignited soot in the chimney.
One truck and 12 men responded
to the ca ll and were on the s~;ene lor
:ll minutes. No damage was
reported.

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By LEE ANN WELCH
'
Times-Sentinel S&amp;8fl
., '
GALLIPOLJS -It's beginning to look a lot lfkeChrlstmas, to coin
a phrase.
The snow may not be here yet, but temperatures have really
dropped durthg the last. week, one night to 17 degrees. Could
C!uistrnas be far away?
Not If you look around Gallla County.
The merchants have had the holiday trimming and gift Ideas out
since before Thanksgiving (doesn't It seem to be a llttle earlier each
year?). Santa Claus has made his annual appearance at several
nearby shopping malls, and l1is elves are busy taidngonlers,forlittle
people's gilts.
In downtown Gallipolis, there Is a North Pole express mail box,
fllllng up daily with letters to the jolly man In red. Children pour out
their heart's desire to him annually via the NPM- North Pole Mail.
Yearly Chrlsttnas parades throughout the Gallla-Meigs area were
Saturday, and people Hocked out to see the official start of the holiday
season.
Some of the holiday crazes are the "Cabbage Patch Kids" dolls
and the Glow Worms. Two' department stores in the Gallipolis area
report they've not been able to keep either Item in stock, and another
toy selling as fast as they are put out Is the "Care Bears." The stores
contacted do not expect to get the "Cabbage Pfilch Kids" or the
"Glow Worms" until sometime next year.
On the homefroot, many GaiDa countlans are beginn1ng to put out
their holiday decorations, and live tree sales have begun throughout
the area.
·
.One by one, houses are taking on a yuletide look, with lights and
greenery making their appearances on the outside, brightening up
thecoooty.
.
·
· Children are beglnnlng to look for the hiding places parents have
put their presents, and It doesn't matfer If there Is wrapping on the
packages or not. The discovered gifts are rattled and swirled, and
caretully returned to place, so nobody will know they have been
moved.
·
Yes, It's beg!nning to look a lot lfke Christmas, and Santa's on his
way, he got lots of tays 'and goodies on his sleigh ...

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GALL !POLIS - The following
couples filed for marriage licenses
recently in Gallia County Probate
Court.
Darrell L. Dotson. 25,1057 Fourth
Ave. , e lectronlc technician, and
Brenda• J . Rupe, 25, Langsville,
Fruth Pharmacy clerk.
Charles A. Musser. 44. Gallipolis,
coal miner, and Judith G. Mullins,
44, Rt. 1: Gallipolis, U.S. Postal
Serv ice supervisor.
David E . Kennedy, :r1, Bidwell.
boilermaker, and Judy L. Smith, 32,
Bidwell, meat packer.
Anthony E. Cardillo, 'll, Langsville, heavy equipment operator,
and Connie L. Holley. 21, Rl. 2,
Vinton, student.
Craig Marinskl, 22. Vinton, Chessle System track man, and Robin A.
McCombs, 17, Vinion, student.
Carl R. Oary, 20, Rt. 1, Crown
City, unemployed, and Christine L.
Caldwell, 17, Rt. 1, Crown City,
student.

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Emergency runs
POMEROY--Fourcallswereanswered by local units Friday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
·
Services reports.
At 10:52 the Middleport Unit
treated Keith McCarty at l1is
residence on Sycamore St., and
returned at 12:25 p.m. to the home
and transported McCarty to Hol1er
Medical center. Middleport at ll: 57
p.m . treated Dlcl' Herman at the
sheriff's otflce ruod Racine at 9:57
p.m. tookVickyGiimoretoPieasant
Valley Hospital.

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donates check

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
sheriff' s investlgar.ors are invest!gating a breaking a nd entering at a
residence near Vinton Friday.
The department said Margie
Hoover reponed that the house,
located on Ohio 325, was entered
through the back door. Some file
boxes !)ad been opened, she said.
The department didn 't indicate if
anythingdl'as missing.

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MIDDLEPORT--A check for
$5,225 was presented l;&gt;y Paul
Barnett to the Meigs County
Crippled Children·s Society when
the Middleport-Poll)eroy Rotary
Club met at Heath United Methodist
Church.
The money was the interest from
the Elsa Kimes Trust . The Rotary
Club past president serves each
year as president of the crippled
children ·s group.
The program was presented by
Mrs. Robert Robinson, who was
introduced by her husband, the Rev.
Mr. Robinson. Mrs, Robinson
presented several vocal selections
using the Christmas theme and
.c oncluded with "God Bless
America".
The annual family Christmas
party was a nnounced for Dec. 16 at
the Masonic Temple. The birthday
of Wilbur Theobald was observed.
Roger Luckeydoo, president, was in
charge of the meeting and women of
the church served din net.

Ion theri

1983 .

••

GALLIPOLIS-Citypollcecited :·
Ivy C. Saunders, 58, Rt. 2, Bidwell, • e..
for improper backing following a :: ;{
two-vellicleaccidentonthe&amp;Xlblock :.
of First Avenue Frtday.
•. ;r
Officers sa!d Saunders backed
2
from a driveway into the path of a
;::&gt;
northbound car driven by Regenla
;;
A. Thomas, 31, Point Pleasant, and ,
collided at 10: :ll a.m.
Both cars were slightly damaged.
Also cited by pollee Friday were '
Claudio B. Kruscamp, 35, 414 Third
Ave., aggravated menacing: Donna
F. Johnson, 29, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
shoplifting; .)' .J . Justice, 20,446First
Ave., DWI andfailuretoobeyastop
sign; Eimer L. Bush, 3;l, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, failure to display valid
registration; Herbert P . Smith, 40,
135 Pine St., permitting an unlicensed driver to drive; and Ellen
Luttrell, 3(), Rt. 4, Gallipolis, and
PhyU!s L. Johnson, 47, Rt . 1,
Northup, both for sp€eding:

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HERE COMES CHIUSTMAS - Christmas Is upon Gallla County,
and the sights reDecl the season. Clockwise lrom lop, Babes In
Toyland-like soldiers greet passersby with "Happy Holidays'' at the cHy
park. 'lbe Ohio Valley Bank has decorated their lobby with a huge
a.rl!rlmas lree, above, lor the enjoyment ol the employees and
CWIIGmera. 'lbls Ia onl,y one merchant In the GaiDa Coooty ~ with
their halla bedecked and rooms brlghtmed. At Jell, Gallipolis City
worker Roger Eskew puts tile llnl.shlng touches on decorations In the
park. 'lbere are ali!o "toy soldiers" heralding the sea'lOn greeting at the
. park eatrance. Along the 11treets In downtown GuJUpolls, holiday
deco!'allons lllhl the way lrom every lamp post along several blocks.

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Page-8-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

::--_-----Engagements----Nof thliP -

-

Groves

Kimberly Northup

Carla Smith

Smith -:- Stone
POMEROY - The engagement
and approaching marriage of Carla
Su~ Smith of Valdosta, Ga. to
Christopher Brett Stone. also of
Valdosta. is being a nnounced.
Miss Smith is the daughter of Mr.
. and Mrs. William J. Smith and the
!ale Barbara Smith.
Stone is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Norman E. Stone. Greenville, !II .

·The wedding will take place on
Dec. 17 at noon at the First Church
of the Nazarene in Valdosta.
Miss Smith graduated from
Meigs High School and is employed
at the Bishop Dry Cleaners In
Valdosta.
Stone, a graduate of Greenville
High School. is in the U. S. Air
Force.

GRO'VE CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Nort hup of 4427 Clark Place,
Grove City. Ohio announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Kimberly Sue, to Mark Douglas
Groves , son of the Rev. and Mrs.
Bill Groves of 2558 Stoney Way,
Crown City, Ohio.
An April wedding is being
planned.
Miss Northup is a graduate of
Grove City High School and Is
employed by Bob Evans Farms
Inc. at the Corporate Office in
Columbus.
Groves is a grad uate of Grove
City High School and is employed at
AT&amp;T in Worthington.

M6'igs County
Bookmobile

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Mon·
day, Dec. 5 -Carpenter (Laura's
Store). 3:10-3:40 p.m. ; Dexter
(church) , 4: 10-4:40 p.m. ; Danville
(church), 5:20-5:45 p.m.; Rutland
(Civic Center), 6: ~8 p.m.
·
Tuesday, Dec. 6- Portland (poSt
office), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls
(Effie's Restaurant) , 3: 05-3:50
Gilbert Caldwell of Crown City, and
Dana Caldwell of Crown City. The
p.m.; Racine (bank), 4:35-6:05
groomisthesonofMr.andMrs.Bob · p.m.; Syracuse (pool, 6:20-7:50
Clary of Crown City.
p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 7 - Tuppers
The custom of the open house will
Plains (Arbaugh), 7:25-7: 55 p.m. ;
be observed. Pre-nuptial music will
begin at 7,p.m.
Rlggscrest Addition, 8: 10-8:40 p.m.

Caldwell- Clary
CROWN Cfi'Y - A wedding
ceeremony for Christina Caldwell
and Rodney Clary has ·been set for
7:30p.m. Friday, Dec. 9, at King's
Chapel Church.
The bride is the daughter of

p.m. at tbe home of tht · Rev. and
Mrs. Wlllard Blankenship, Galli·
pols. Blankenship performed the
ceremony.
The bride 1s a graduate of Meigs
High School and Is emplyed with
Fruth Pharmacy, Gallipois.
The groom is a graduate of

'

I

. Brenda
Rupe, Darrell Dotson Wed
.
LANGSVILLE - Mr. a nd Mrs.
Lawrence A- Rupe, Langsville,
announce the marriage of thetr
daughter, Brenda Joan, to Darrell
Lee Dotson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jackie L . Dotson, and grandson of
Mrs. Mary Click, Oak HIU:
The two were married Dec. 2, 7

.

December 4; 1983

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

Southwestern High School. He
served in the U.S. Amly In
Dannstadt, Germany. He is also a
graduate of !be West VIrginia
School of Technology, where he
received his associate degree lit
electronics. He is employed wltll
Cablentertalnment of West
Virglnla.

GIGANTIC

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Store Hoors: 1::10 to 5::10. 1111 closed II 5:00 P.l .
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SUNDRY STORE COUPON
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PER CUSTOMER Exp. Sat .. Dec. 10, i9l3 I LIM I! l PER CUSTOMER
Exp. Sat., Dec. 10, 1983 I LIMIT I PER CUSTOMER
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Exp Sat.. Dec. 10 · 1983 . :
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HOTPOINT WASHER &amp; DRYER ......... 150 Discount on the Pair
HOOVER SWEEPERS, All Kinds, all Sizes .......... .ALL ON SALE
KER-0-SUN HEATERS ..... ;.:.............................. All 1/2 Price
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KING WOODBURNER STOVES ............................. Only 1399.95
WATER HEATERS, 42 Gal., Electric .................... Only 1119.00
WATER HEATERS, 30 Gal. Gas ........................... Only •124.00

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FILM

I LIMIT I PER CUSTOME~

Exp. ·Sat:. Dec. 10. 1983

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(Former Location Of
Dutton Drug)

..

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Exp. Sat., Dec. 10. 1983

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

HOURS: Mon.-~at. 9:00 to 9:00
Sunday 12:00 to 5:00

.

1

�.....____

..

Page-8-4--The

Sundc!y Times-Sentinel

Daatmber 4,

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

1983

DIDttiaber

Sherry Smith _:_ Steven Gherke exchange vows

•

GALLIPOLIS -The marriag~ of
ShciT)' Renee Smith. daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Smith of Rio
Grande, to Steven G. Gherke , son of
.
Mr. . and Mrs . Euaene Gherke,
~
Gallipolis. was solemnized on Satut·dav. Aug. 6. a l'1he First Baptist
Chu~c h . Gallipolis .
· The double-ring ccremm.• was
performed by the Rev. Joseph
Godwin. paslor Music was provtded by Jqe Gulley, organist and
Pianist. and Mark Pyles. soloist:
Preceding the ceremony, Pyles
sang, '·My Tribute." "The Wedding
Song." "One Hand. One Heart,"
and "The Lord's Prayer .. " As the
mothers lit the trinliy candles and
were seated, Pyles also sa ng,
"Sunrise. Sunset ."
The church a lta r was decorated
with a center arch Vota candelabra
wit h spiral Vola candelabras and
ferns on either side. Lighted candle
arrangements decorated the windows. Aqua. pink. and white bows
adorned the fam ily pews.
The bride, given In man·iage by
her father. wore a white gown of
Victorian knit chiffon, trimmed In
Point D'esplrit, Venise and Wedge· wood laces with a myriad of ruffles
that created the semi-cathedral
train. Her veil of illusion, trimmed
of lace and seed pearls, fell from a

·-·

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Gherke

Lorraine Miller, Brent Coburn
wed q,t double-ring ceremony
GALLIPOLIS - In a candlelight
ceremony Aug. 20.. Lorraine Ann
Mp!er. dau ght~r of Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Miller of Water loo. and Brent
Cnarles Coburn, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Denny Coburn of Gallipolis
were united in marriage.
The double-ring cer emony was

performed at the Gallipolis Christian Church by the Rev. Denny
Coburn , father of the groom, before
an altar accented with ca ndelabra
a nd beauty baskets filled with white
gladiolus. white ca rnations and
pink roses. P ew candela bras ligh"
ted the aisle to the altar.
Jeff Nash, organist, and Sandy
Spires, vocalist, provided the music
which included "Just You and 1."
"You Light Up My Life," "The
Wedding Song." and " The Lord's
?rayer."
· The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore a white iorrnal
gown of sheer polyester and
chantilly lace lined in taffeta . The
gown featured a high neckline with
a sheer back and fro nt yoke with
schiffli-embroidery trim. The bedice had pearl trim and lined bishop
sleeves of sheer lace with fitt ed
cuffs. The fu ll skirt featured lace
detail and attached chapel-length
train. Her chapel-length headpiece
was edged in lace with a blusher
veil seeured to a lace and pearl trfm
cap. She carried a fan with white
carnations and pink silk roses.
Following the lig hting of the
wedd ing candle, the bride and
groom each presented their mothers a long •temmed pink rose.
Lisa Forgey was matron of
honor. Linda Carpenter, Julie
Freeman and Lori Hull were
bri desmaids. Each wore a suede
rose lu strous knit gown. The gowns
featured a raised waistline with a
shirred bcdice and sh~Ted cap

circlet w~eath of white rosebuds
and baby s breat h.
She carried a silk bouquet of pink,
aqua and white rosebuds,IUy of the
valley, carnations, and baby's
breath tied with white lace rtbbon.
Mrs. Tanya Smith, sister-In-law
of the brfde, was the matron of
honor. She wore a soft aqua gown of
polyester knit with an off-sbculder
neckline. Lettuce stitching edged
the permanently pleated sleeves
and floor-length skirt. She carried a
sDk bouquet ol ·pink and aqua
colored miniature roses, carnations, and baby's breath.
Attendar•ts were Mrs. Debbie
Sword, Mrs . Jocquita Hendricks
and Mrs. Debbie Moore. The hopor
attendants wore gowns and carried
bouquets identical to those of the'
matron of honor.
Gary Kerr was best man. Ushers
were Steve PyleS, Edwin Smith,
brother of the bride, and Jeff
Hatfield.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Smith wore a ptnkfloor-length
dress. The scooped-necked underdress was of satin withAienconlace
overlay bcdtce, that fiowed Into a
full skirt, draped in pleated chiffon.
She wore a wrist corsage of two
roses, baby's breath and pink

ribbon overlaid with sheer ~hlte
lace.
The groom's mother wore a pink
polyester floor-length dress with a
lace vest. Her corsage was of pink
roses. baby's breath ,and ribbon
with lace overlay.
Following their vows the couple
knelt on the prayer bench as Pyles
sang, "Savior. Like a Shepherd
Lead Us." Then the couple symbol·
!zed the uniting of their lives by the
lighting of the trinity candles.
Immediately following the ce· remony, a reception, prepared and
seiVed by the First Baptis!'Women,
·was held tn the church Fellowship
Room. The four-tiered, cake was
topped with a miniature bouquet

matching the brtde's bouquet. Mrs. ,
Phyllis B.urleson. Mrs. Diana . Bu-,,
rleson and Mrs. Connie Massie
served the cake and punch. Mrs.
Iljik ...,...t red the
ts
Sally,_ . er • ~.. ~ e
gues .
Cunnln h
sed t tile
Brenda
g am pas
ou
programs. Also helping were Miss
Debbie Slade, cousin of the bride,
and Carrie Hatfield, cousin of the .
Bobby Hood
th bell
groom.
was e
.' .
ringer.
...
The bride Is a graduate of •
Marshal! University School of
1 ed by
Education and Is emp oy
Mason County Schools. ·
~
The groom is a graduate l&gt;f Rio ·
Grande College. He is employed ·~ ,
manager of Gherke's Boutique,
.Gallipolis.

~-

"'

sleeves with ribbon ties. The
attendants carried a single pink
rose wi~h baby's breath and pink
stream ers.
Julie Miller was flower girl. She
wore a long pink knit dress with
white lace trim. and carried a white
wicker basket filled with pink rose
petals.
Bryan Cobu rn , brother of the
groom, served as best man. Randy
P atrick. Barry Nelson and Dean

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Monday thru Friday
~AM to~

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Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
l'o/Al K 1rj ()A [ AU I (\A
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446-9510

..;...

Senior aaivities

for coming

•

St'!p In Today

TOP OF THE STAIRS
,. · FJTNESS &amp;
·BEAUTY SALON ·
111 W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy, OH.
PH.992-6720

JO-ANN
FABRICS

Meigs Co.
POMEROY - Meigs County meat and beverage. Thts event Is
Senior. Citizens Center, Mulberry open -to the public so Invite someone
Heights, Pomeroy ,Invites all senior to rome with you.
citizens of the'county to take part In
The Senlor Nutrttlon Progrma
activities at the center. The center serves a hot meal at noon each day .
is open Monday through Friday Call 992-2161 to make a reservation
from 8:30 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m.
for .a meal no later than 9 a .m .. the
Schedule of activities for the day or the reservation.
week of Dec.~ Is as follows :
The following menu Is planned for
Monday - Physical Fitness, the week of Dec. 5-9:
11:30 a.m,; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m .
Monday - Pork steakl 6ven
Tuesday - Ceramics, 10 a.m .- browned potatoes. sauerkraut. apnoon; Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
ple crlsp.
Chorus Practice, 1-2 p .m.
Tuesday - Chill con carne,
Wednesday - Physical Fitness, peanut butter on brown bread,
11:30 a.m,.; Games, 1-2 p.m.;
Waldorf salad, brownle.
·
Bowling, 1-3 p.m .
Wednesday -Baked ham, sweet
Thursday - Physical Fitness, potatoes, green beans, biscuit,
I.1: 30 a.m.; Bazaar, 1-7 p.m.;
butterscotch pudding.
Public Dlnner, .4-6 p.m.
Thursday - Macaron i and
Friday ...;.. Bazaar, 9 a.m.-3 P-1'11·
cheese, stewed tomatoes, lime
Coming Events. Monday, Dec. 5, gelatin with pear, chocolate cookie.
volunteers to Middleport ElemenFrtday _: Salisbury steak with
tary Physical Education Class at
gravy, mashed potatoes, beets, roll,
noon. Regularly scheduled square . mixed fruit.
dance at center at 1 p.m .
Choice of milk, tea, coffee
The annual Christmas Bazaar available daily .
will be held Thursday, Dec. 8, from
1-7 p.m . and Friday, Dec. 9, lrol'!l 9
a.m.-3 . p.m. The craft able will
GALLiPOLIS - Activities lor
Include every ltem !rom baby quilts
the week of Dec. 5-10 at the Senior
to bti-dteeders. In addition to the
Citizens Center located at 220
craft table, there will bedemonstraJackson Pike are as follows:
tl$8 by Lois Pauley from Craft
Monday, Dec. 5 - Ceramics
Ladies on Thursday.
Class, 9: 30 a.m.-noon; Chorus, .1-3
The Personal Advocacy group
Blood Pressure Check, 1:30
wtlJ alsohaveaspeclalcrafttable, a p.m.;
p.m .
.
cetamlcs table, an tee cream table,
Tuesday, Dec. 6 - S.T.O.P.
a &lt;!andy table, and bake sale Items
Class,I0:30a.m.; PhysicalFltness,
wtlJ be Included with the bazaar. 11:15
a.m.
Tbere will be a public dinner on
Wednesday, Dec. 7 .' - VInton
Tliursday. with setvlng from 4 to 6
Bible Study, I p.m .; Crown City
p.m. The menu Is lasagne or
Mobile Unit, 1 p.m .; Card Garnes,
chicken and noodles, salad, bread 1-3 p .m .; American Literature
ani! beverage at a cost of $2 per Class, 1 p.m.
pefSOn. If you have any Items that
Thursday, Dec. 8 - Bible Study,
YD!II want to sell at the bazaar,
11 a.m.-noon.
please bring them to center lJy Dec.
Friday, Dec. 9- Birthday Party,
6 tOr pricing. Please list the prlce
noon; Art Cl ass, 13
· p.m.; Craft
yojl want ~or your item, and the
Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.; Soclal Hour,
ce11ter adds 15 pertent lor handllng.
prawlng for the prizes In the 7
Dec. 10 _Yoga Class,
Christmas giveaway will beeld on
!0:30a.m .
· ·
Friday at 3 p.m.
, The Senior Nutrition Program
'fhe Senior Citizens Chorus' will
will serve the following menus:
present a program of Christmas
Monday~ Macaroni and cheese,
music and readings on Sunday,
Dec. 11, at 2:30 p.m. Following the spinach. carrots, but"rscotchpudpnigrarn, there will be a potluck
Tuesday
Sausage,
peas, apple
bread,- butter,
milk.
dtnller. Bringyourfavorltecovered ding,
rings, · jello with pears, biscuit,
dish and your own table service,
butter, milk.
please. There will be a 50 cents
WedDesdal( - Swiss steadk with
charge to. help with the cost of the
tomato sauce, buttel'j!d rom, green
beans, pumpkin squares, bread,
butter, milk.
Thursday - Wieners, sauerkraut, ' mashed potatoes, peaches,
. -bread, butter.
Frldlly ·- Ham, sweet potatoes,
broccoli, cake, Ice cream; hot roll,
. GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. butter, milk.
Cholce of beverage served with
Herbert Harrington of Route ~.
Gallipolis, were honored on thelr each meal.
59th wedding anniversary with a
Meals subject to change \Yft~out
party gtven by their son-In-law and notice.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bush

Mary Bowling, Donald Bush
unite at October. marriage
JACKSON- Mary F. Bowling
and Donald E. Bush were united In
marriage on Oct. 11 at the Jackson
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints.
Pastors Lawrence Bush and
Evan ElVIn officiated.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs.EmieL. Bosllng, Jackson,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jacob M. Bush,
Racine.
Attendants for the couple were

·The couple were rnanied November 24, 1924, In GaUia County.
She is the former Ethel Dray. He Is
a. retired carpenter.

..L--------+-----------------1

Besides Mrs. Van Meter, they
also have-three daughters and two
sons. A son, Jack, died in 1979. The
cOilple have 25 grandchlldren, 25
great-grandchildren and a great- ·
great-granddaughter .
•

Savings on Will® gifts
Contura-llte•• ocluon
• clipper. Torloise handle 8" shears,lhread
clipperindecorative
giH box. Reg. $2A.70

.

lay "Happy HOikkltyl''
with a Jo-Ann Fabrics'

.

Contura-llle'" bent
trtmm-. Gift boxed
8" scissors wilh tortoise
handles. Reg. $15.75

Gift Cei lllloate

To give or to receive, pula
giH certificate korn Jo.Ann
Fobrlcs on your Chrl~os

$18.59

Wheth"'r You H itYe

424 Second Ave., Gallipolis

&lt;~I

GALLERY

HE:~ US HAIR ARTS
HAS TH E RI GHT

118 E. Main

Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -3233

SHAMPOO FOR YOU !

OPEN MON .-SAT. 9 : 0~ TO 5 :00

CHECK OUR EVERY DAY LOW PRICES
PERMS_:.~l7SO,
·

Specializing In

S2QOO, s2500, S3QOO
s 1 "
" Men's Hair ty es

Delight her,
far Christmas.
Give her Cro;, Ladies'
writin g in .: . t rumc nt s
in 10 or 14 korat
go ld fi lled, ste rl ing

Meigs, Southern, E~stern &amp; Wahama .

SPIRIT HEAD BANDS - $1.50

sil ver, and Classic
Black• Gift packaged. with Pen
Purse® PriceJ

L.!::=======================~

from

ATTENTION!
IN CONCERT
THE HENSONS
And The

UNROE FAMILY
RUTLAND CIVIC·CENTER

a Taste of the
.,.~~\{\

~"'{\\.! \\~~{\

~ 'S'l-~c.

Orienta' .
favorites
CARRY OUT
SUIDAY TltiU
TKUISDAY
II:SO UL
Til t :lO P.M.

THURS., DEC. 15-8:00 P.M.

TICKETS $5.00

CROss·

Exotic and affordable dining
In the Oriental trodltlon.
Sample aUf Cantonese ond
Mondor1n cuisines. prepared
to !,lOUr order b1,1 OlK excellent chef. Reservations.

SIN CE

DAILY
LUNCHEON
SPEOAIS

STORE,

'iuntonuv

Chow Mein

COMPlETE DINNER MENU
ORIENTAL DECOR
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

342 Second, Gallipolis
113 Court, Pomeroy

RESERVATIONS
FIIDAY I
SATU.OAY

11:10 A.M.

446·7227

TIL

10~0

P.ll .

NGER
UNDER THE TREE
AND THE

Buy a select Singer• sewing machine from Nov. 25
24 at holiday savings. and you ge t to choose a quality
appliance-with a s uru:(es led retail value ranging from $26.49
$146.95-absolutely Tree! Be low you'll find one example of th
exciting Christmas gift offer. 1b receive your gift. jus t fill out
.mall the gift claim form you'll get· with your purchase.t ·

CHEER

Or check out our exciting Super Special. While you don't
·Sunbeam
.
get a very merry deal on a terrific Sir1ge r1

Deluxe F,ree-Arm Machine
Mocjel6136
with 14 stitches

15.59

SAVE $50° 0

5

MAGNAVOX 25 " COLOR CONSOLE

Plus get a tree Hot Shot* Hot
Beverage Maker or Total Clean4

NHctlecratt shears.

Electranic Tuning .

Can Opener with Ice Crusher.

Handy 4'1." W!ssperllte". hg.••.95

1

REG . 679.95

••

Silver Bridge Plaza

BuHernut

.

Pomeroy,

Phlint: 112-2039 or 992·5721

We Accept All lajor Credit Cards and Wlrt
Flowtn EVII')'Whtrt.

•

$299 95

Ouistnias. Sunday, Dec."'25.

;: POMEROY
:106FLOWER
SHOP
.
Ave.
OH.

Free-Arm Machine

··ThP Jr'av

I

Open

Model5525

Amf'rinl

)"'ilh built-in buttonholer

Sll"nd'• L111'P. "

Sunbeam's

on these

$3t .95 and $37.95.

cla&amp;m, sales receipt, ~us completed product registratJon card must be
postmart.ed by Jan. 15, 1984. ·

II;:~::::=:::~:~:~:-~=::.~~:;· 1]&gt;&lt; SilliJEir Compimy.

THE FABRIC SHOP

115 W. 2nd

Servin&amp; MtiiS and
Gallla Counties

..J

NOW

SUPER SPECIAL

''•' Send the 9'fstal Caddy Bouquet for

.I

1846

SUNBEAM'S ..~ ..

~HOLIDAY
..

...

to

1

Rutland, Ohio

On Sale Now At Middleport Book
Store and Doxol Bottle Gas in

$33

$75.

Pinking shears. Lightwelghl8' Wlssper-llle'".
hg.$2G.IO

Comuh the hpt&gt;lh

DRY, BRITTLE ,· THIN
or OILY HAIR

11.89

5

TAWNEY JEWELERS

All Shampoos are Not the Same!

r;::=::;~;:;~~~:::;::::=:;1

CLEAR

ALL

Lisa Phlpps, maid of honor, and
James Bush, best man. Ushers were
Kenneth Lee and Anthony,Bowllng.
A reception hqnortng the couple
was held at the church following the
ceremony.
The bride Is 'a student at Rio
Grande College, and· Bush Is
employedattheGavlnPowerPiant.
The couple now reside atl25 River
St., T.lO, Gallipolis.

Couple honored
for 59th

daughter, WWlam and Catherine
Van Meter, at thelr home In
Reynoldsburg.

IN HAIR OfSIGN -·

__

wee~

~O:.rctay,

Sale ends SaiUrdoy,
December 101h.

·n·IE

~·

..._...

10% Discount
On Any .Permanent Wave

Deedra Walker registered guests
and gave out programs. Stephanie
Cash distributed the r ice bags.
The bride's mother wore a
street~length dress of crea m crepe
with embroidery trim. The mother
of the groom wore a formal-length
beige floral print gown with lace
trim.
Following the ceremony a reception was held in the church
fellowship hall. The bride's table
was covered with a lace tablecloth
and accented with sliver candela- '
bra and pink satin bows.
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Coburn
The three-tiered cake was decorated with pink roses and a founlatn
The groom is a graduateo!Gallla
The bride is a graduate of
underneath was circled with green- Symmes Valley High School and
Academy and Is presently emery and baby's breath. Hostesses
ployed · wi_th Foodland at Point
Lawrence County Joint Vocational
were . Lou ise Johnson, Evelyn
Pleasant,
W. Va.
School. and is presentiy employed
Miller , Cheryl Mille r, Barbara
The couple Is residing at Route 2,
with Ohio Valley Foodland ,
Judy and Betty Orr.
Bidwell.

ACROS-S

.

~·

___....,.

The Sunday Time$-Sentinei-Page-B-5 ·

Gallia Co.

..,...

Kuhn were ushers.

1983

Pomeroy

Every
Night
Till
8:00 P.M.
PHONE 446-7886

49800

$

Master
Charge
&amp;
Visa

�,.

December 4, 1983

•

December

cet~!tJrate

50 years

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bs,rrll)ger, 2106
Lincoln Ave., Point Pleasant, w1ll
celebrate their 50th wedding ann!. versary with an open house recep. lion hosted by their children from 2
to 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4.
BalTinger, a retired construction
worker, Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. L. Barringer, deceased.
Mrs. Barringer, the former Hilda

Jacobs, is the daughter of Jessie
Jacobs and Henry Jacobs,
deceased. ·
The couple married in Point
Pleasant. They are parents of MI1!.
Robert (Patty) Allbright, Henderson, and Mrs. Mark (Barr!)
Westfall, Point Pleasant. They also
have five grandchildren and two
great-children.

floor-length gown with a chapel
train in candlelight white lace with
pale pink roses at the shoulders and
a hat with a lace veil. Her bouquet
was a mixture of white and pink tea
roses accented by daisies and
baby's breath.
The groom and best man wore
tuxedos of cranberry with bouton nieres of white and pink tea roses
with baby's breath.
The bride's mother was m a pink
:Kathertne Hendrtcks of Rio . iace gown with a pink lace jacket,
G'rande was maid 'of honor and the and the groom's mother wore a
~st man was David Burgess, New
pink qiana floor-length gown.
Slmltsv!lle. Ushers were John Zinn
T)te maid of honor wore a gown of
'
brother
of the brtde, and Terry'
teal blue with a corsage to match
Piltterson, brother of the groom.
and the corsages worn by the
Pearl Cantrell, Ewington, regis- ·mothers and the maid of honor
tered the guests. ·
matched their gowns .
A program of music was presA reception was held at the home
ented by Mrs. Lee Lee, organist,
of the groom's uncle and aunt, Mr.
agd vocalist was Merlin Ross, Rio
and Mrs. Larry Circle. The fourGrande, who sang several selectiered wedding cake centering the
Mr. and Mfs- James Patterson
tiGns and closed the ceremony by
refreshment table was topped with
sliiging The Lord's Prayer.
the traditional miniature bride and
,Given in marrtage by her
Mrs. Patterson is employed as a
groom.
Patterson teaches at the Chillicothe
parents, the bride was escorted to
The couple now reside In Chilli- .lngh 5!:hool, and 1s th~ coach of the counselor with Gloria Marshall
~ altar by her fa)her. She wore a
Figure Salons.
cothe were both are employed. Forensic debate team.
POMEROY - The Carmel United Methodist church was the
setting for the May 21 w~ding of
Helen Kay Zion, Gallipolis, and
James Brent Patterson, Racine.
The 7:30 p.m. ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Carl.Hicks.
The brtde is the daughter of Ralph
and Velda Zinn, Gallipolis, and the
groom is the son of James and
Linda Patterson, Racine.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

•

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

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mount

Mounts to observe 25th
BIDWELL -Mr. and Mrs. J ack
Norman (Wilma ) Mount of Bidwell
will be celebrating their 25th
anniversary on Dec. 4.
They were married in Spring·
field, Ohio on Dec. 4, 1958 at the
F irst Pilgrim Holiness Church. The
ceremony was pertormed by the
Rev . W. Hannon.
They have two sons, Gail Douglas
and Gary Michael, both of Bidwell.
They ha ve one grandchild, Joshua
Michael. They have one foster son
and three foster daughtecs , Billy,
Caroline, Marty and J uanita.
· Mrs . Mou n! is the daughter of
William and Emma Reynolds of
Vinton and Mount is the son of Clyde
and ·the late Eul ah Moun! of

Mr. 8iidllln.~Baniapr

Bidwell.
Mount is a chief engineer for
American Electric Power Co.

Riverboat Division, Lakin. W. Va.
They are foster parents for
Bu ckeye Co mmunit y Service,
Jackson.

Rebekah Long, Keith Bailey W
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Roger Long are announcing the
marriage of their daughter, Rebekah Jean, to Keith Thomas
Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
L. Bailey, Pomeroy.

The ceremony was performed on
Nov. 7 at the Laurel curt Methodist
Church by the Rev, Robert Miller In
the presence of immediate
famllies.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

•

'.

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

'

Calendar
MONDAY

• ROCK SPRINGS -

The
¥eigs Fair Board meeting "!!ll
be held Monday, 8 p.m. at the
secretary's office at Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.

beCame Ill.

Charlotte has resided in larger
cities and has never had the
.opportunity to live in Meigs County.
She remarked that she has never
found any people anywhere like
those here.
"Never in my life have I seen
people so friendly" Charlotte remarked. She sta ted that the nurses,
aides and doctors at Veterans
Memorial Hospital were wonderful .
She stated that in the larger cities
you just don't find folks like the folks
in a small town.'
·

TIJESDAY

MONTHS FREE
FINANC'ING
DECEMBER 24th
DELIVERY

says.

Say "Merry
Christmas"

Roush Lane I, II, 4:45-5:15 p.m.;
Cheshirei,~:30p.m.; Cheshirell,
6: '35-7 p.m.
Wednesday - . Bane's, 2:15-2:30
p.m .; Sm1th,2:45-3: 15p.m.; M yers,

Friday - i:)liott's (Rt. 35),
2: 15-2:45 p.m.; Kerr, 3-3:40 p.m. ;
Buck Ridge, 4-5:05 p.m.; Jay Dr. I,
II, 5:15-5:45 p.m. ; Bob McCormick
Rd., 6-6:15 p.m.

Church events planned for month
RUTLAND - Bible Prophecy
month w1lJ be observed during
December at the Rutland Church of
God located on SR 124.
During the month three phoplteey
films wlli be shown at the Wednesday night services.
On Dec. 7, "A Thief In The Night"

w111 be presented. This film deals
with what can happen when Jesus
Christ returns .
On Dec. 14 "A Dist,ant Thunder"
wlli be presneted and on Dec. 21,
''ImageofTheBeast''willbeshown.
All services are at 7 p.m . nightly and
is invited to attend.
the

A Holiday Special
From

Bernadine's
Gloria Vanderbilt

Black .Jeans
Reg.
,145.00

'With Gift
Items From
Gherke's
In the Lafayette Mall
300 Second Ave.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Board of Health will
meet 4: :lJ p.m. Wednesday at
412 Second Ave.

1HURSDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The GallipoGarden Club w1lJ meet
Thursday, 6: 30 p.m. for a
potluck dinner at the. home of
Mrs. Gomer Phllllps.
lis

A SOUND GIFT IDEA FROM
TOM'S STEREO CENTER

CORNER
CUPBOARD
Is Filled with Your Christmas Wishes

EVERY BEDROOM SUITE
IN STOCK Al81G
SAVINGS

Antiques
Folk Art
Prints
Quilts
Pottery
Tinware
Much More

'

SONY.
TI-E Q\JE AN) ONLY
336 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.

$849
INCLUDES DOLBY B&amp;C
CASSETTE DECT

Stripping &amp; Refinish
Now Available
Christmas Hours For Your Shopping Conveni,ence
MON.-FRI. 10:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.
, SAT ..10:00 AJI.-6:00 P.M.
CORNER THIRD AVE. &amp; STATE STREET

PIT GROUPS

'·

HUGE SAVINGS AND
DECEMBER 24th DELIVERY

Versadle,
go anywhere looks.
You '11 love th~ versatile, go anywhe~ looks of
our "Skimmer" boot. Fashloned from soft
supple suede on comfortable bottoms. -Pa~per
your feet and sllp into a comfortable pair of
Armadillos@&gt; today!

...-- '··""f

..

All LIVING ROOM SUITES
ON SALE
-·

.
'

·---

,~.

1ar..~~fl~~~~ff!:~~~1e:

~--~·-.
•. :.CJrf!!:ll~: ., . ·~'= ~.-e:l;

•

•

,.

,

'fVGLASSES
What? Wear glasses to
watch TV? Can't I use my
reading glasses? "Yes" to the
first question; but "'No" to the
second. Some • people, often
when they pass the 50-year '
inark, can benefit by wearing
glasses when they watch television. Reading glasses won't
kelp.
, •If you have trouble In seeing
this distance, especially for
long periods -of time, you
i~ould have your eyes exambled. If your eyes tend to wli·
tar or you feel any klod of eye
a~aln when watching televl·
lion; your eyes need help. Why
tet eye discomfort take some
ef the pleasure lrom watching
ypur favorite shOws?

.

,1

STORE HOURS~
MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
9 A.M. 'TIL 8 P.M.
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THU~SDAY
&amp; SATURDAY
9 A.M. 'TIL 5 P.M.

Old Saint Nick arrived here
Saturday to the delight of many a
youngster.
Just think it is only 21 days \Ultil
Chrtstrnas - I hope all of you out
there are better prepared at this
point !han ram.
·
It isfun but, quiteatask.Dohavea

'

3

ON SALE.

LAYAWAYS
WELCOME

Registration for Christmas food
baskets and toys will be held at the
SalvatiOn Army, 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Tuesday and Wednesday, Dec. 6 and 7 !rom 1 p.m. to 4·
p.m. dally.

•I

"Kids come into tune with the
music of the language weU"hefore

Although childfen don't grasp the
plot until the age of 2 or 3, the simple
act of reading aloud can create a
"fantastic associatiOn" that can
star,t a lifelongloveofbooks, Temple

MINIMUM PURCHASE $200

Mary A. Plymale, 20 Lincoln St. ,
Gallipolis, is very much Interested
in forming a Psi Iota Xi sorority
chapter In Gallipolis.
The non-profit philanthropic sorority assist in fields of music and art
but their main theme is helping
children with speech and hearing'
problems.
Their theme is "Together We Are
Something. " Mary is quite anxious
In getting together with ladies of
Gallipolis , Pomeroy and Middleport
in order to get things rolling.
She would be delighted to hear
from anyone who would be inter·
ested. She is willing for persons to
meet at her home to discuss forming
a chapter and enlighten those
interested about the sorority.
At the present time there are over
8,(XX) members and each chapter
does their own "thing" when it
comes to making money.
Mary moved to Gallipolis from
Kokomo, Indiana whereshewasan
active m•mber . She isalsoacharter
member of a chapter In Nappanee,
lndiana making her a 16 year
member.
I! you are Interested give hera call
at 446-2076shewUJ be pleased to hear
.from you.
Candidates who ran 'tor office In
the November election are relflinded that they must flle a
campaign expense statement with
:the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
Thestatementsaredue.bythe45th
day following the Nov . election.

sayS.

GALLIPOLIS - . The Dr. Samuel 3: 30-3: 45 p.m.; Mercerville, 4-4:30
L. Bossard Memortal Ubrary will p.m.; Burd, 4:40-5 p.m.; Crown
be at the following placeS the week City P.O., 5:15-6 p.m. ; Eureka,
of Dec. 5-9:
6:15-6: 45 p.m .
Thursday _ Watts, 2:30-2:45
Monday - Ewington, 1:15-1:45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m .; Apdney p.m.; Brick School Rd., 2: 55-3:10
Rd., 2:45-3:15 p.m.; Vinton
5-6 .0 ., p.m.; Addavllle Elementary ' 3·15.
3:30-4:30 p.m.; Bidwell,
p.m.; 3:45p.m.; St.Rd. 7(Roadslderest),
Harrisburg, 6:15-6:30 ~- ~
3: 55-4:10 p.m.; Georges Cr. Rd. I,
Tuesday - Eno, :
p.m.; II, 4:15-5 p.m.; Bulavllle 'l'r. Ct.,
Rece, 3:(l}-3:20 ·p.m .; Mrlca Rd., 5:30-6 p,m .; Plantz Subdv., 6:153:30-3:45 p.m.; Kyger I, 3: 50-4:20 6 45
~ • 40
: p.m.
p.m.; Kyger II , 4: ......
:
p.m.;
1

they comprehend the plot,'' accordIng to Charles Temple.

WEDNESDAY

.'

SO'ITON TWP - Sutton
Township Trustees w1lJ meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
•

Dl NETTE SETS

GENEVA, N.Y. (AP)- ):'oung
children who beg their parents to
read storieS aloud are attracted
more by the cadence of the voice
than by the story line, a professor at
Hobart and William Smith Colleges

-

RUTLAND - Rutland Elementary students w1ll present a
Chr!sbnas program on Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center. The public 1s invited to
attend.

EVERY DINING
ROOM AND

Reading aloud

EAST MEIGS - A. special
meeting of the Eastern Local
Board of Education w1ll be held
at ·the high school, Tuesday, 6
p.m., to discuss personnel.

LETART- Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at
Letart Falls at 7 p.m.

•

mce week:

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Corrunerce
w111 meet Tuesday, Dec. 6, at
noon at the Meigs Inn,
Guest speaker will be George
Kotallc of Kotallc Landscaping.
All members are urged to
attend.

. GALLIPOLIS - DAR will
meet Monday, '7 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Ruth Gllilngham.

Sorority
forming
tnarea

-

LEBANON TWP - Lebanon
TOwnship Trustees w1ll meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at t)le
township garage.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Junior Women's Club will
il)eet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
Woodland Center.

Katie's korner

By KATiE CROW
Tlmes-Senl\nel Staff
" i have never found any people
lik"" those in
. _,._
Meigs County,
~
they are wonder!~I "
Char lotte
,• . " ·
lmaio fCalifornia
· -, commented.
A
Charlotte's fa- .--~ ·
~
ther . O.E. (Odd) Durham died Monday and she and her sisters and
brot her were called here when he

Gallia County Bookmobile

Late spring ceremony bonds
Helen Zinn, James Patterson

1983

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-~7

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

'

100"4
·American
Made

Reading glasses are tor
reading, for seeing the printed
word close up, comfortably .
Your TV screen Is a lotfarther
away from your race than a
book or magazine would be.
Reading glasses may only Increase the strain. ~
Some people can benefit
from wearing glasses only
when they watch TV. It's
worth checking out 'with your
eye doctor.

by

'U!foii'an
Quin~~;

$3200
"Skfmmers"
•Burgundy
•Block
•Rult

*'******

' In rhe lnteres/of better Ylsloh
.. . from the office of.

OPEN TIL 8 P.M.

NIGHTLY .

•

•

••

'

•

�•

POMEROY
I
LLIPOLI
STORES

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT TO
UMII QUANTITIES
AND CORRECT
~NY

PAINTING

ERRORS

PRICES GOOD MOIIDIY
DEC. 5 THRU
IDIIDAY, DEC. 11 '

Sports

SUPERIOR

U.S.D.l. CHOICE

WHOLE

BONELESS

Augustana College captures
N.CAA small-school grid title

S OKED

,CHUCK
ROAST
$149u

'"v

'

~imeli- Ientine!
Section
·
· .
·
December 4 1983

KINGS Mill.s, Ohio (AP) Senior quarterback Jay Penney
threw a pair of fourth-quarter
touchdown passes to tight end Norm
Slngbush, rallying undefeated Au ·
College to the NCAA
small-college football championship Saturday with a 21-17 victory
over Union College in the Stagg
Bow!' at the College Football Hall of
Fame.
It was theflrstNationaiCollegtate
Athletic Association Division Ill
title for Augustana, 12-0, of Rock
Island, Ill. Auguslana lost to West
Georgia 14-0 in last year's title
game.
Union College, of Schenectady,
N.Y. Union finished the season 10-2,
losing in its , first title-game

69u

gusuvm

GOLDEN
RIPE
BANANAS

touchdown .
appearance.
.
Union College drove to the
Junior quarterback Dan &lt;;tewart
August
ana 17-yard lin(! with 1:27 to
threw two touchdown oasses to give
play. but a fourth-down pass by
Union College a 17·7 iead after the
Stewart fell incomplet~ to clinch the
·
third quarter.
victory for Augustana.
Penney hit Singbush with a
Union raced to a quick 10-0 lead by
10-yard touchdoWn pass·with 9: 30to scoring on its firs t two possessions of
play to bring Augustana to within the game, Including a 45-yard
17-14.
'
Two plays later, wide receiver touchdown pass from Stewart to a
Winston Britton caught a pass from wide-open tight end Frank Kr~
Augustana, runnning out of
Stewart and fumbled, with linewlng·T
formation , finally -got
·
backer Joe Wheeler recovering on
tracked
late
In
the
first
quarter,
·
the Union 46-yard line to set up the
grinding out an 11-play, 65-yard
winning drive.
Augustana used 10 plays to march scoring drtve. Wide receiver Nick
to a fourth-and-goal from the Union Kasap grabbed a 10-yard touch·
2-yard line. Penney rolled tohisrtght down pass from Penney for the
and found Singbush open deep In the touchdown with 11: 55 to play In the
end zone for the go-ahead second·quarter.

Georgetown, Kent State win
, LANDOVER. Md. (AP) -

Patrick Ewing scored 24 points and
grabbed 14 rebounds, leading third·
ranked Georgetown to an 8H1
non-conference victory over St.
Francis (Pa.) Saturday in college
basketball.

4 L8S *1

Georgetown, which raised itS
record to4-0, scored thegame's .f lrst
eight points. St. Francis , 1-2, finally
got on the scoreboard at 15:23 on
Kent Sisler's 15-foot jumper.
Sisler led tthe visitors in-scoring

RED
EMPEROR

with 14 points. Frestunan Reggie
Williams had 17 for Georgetown.
Ewing, dominating play at both
ends of the court, scored ·eight
points, blocked three shots and was
credited with a stealll\ the first nlne
minutes as the Hoyas raced to am
lead.
The7-foot center finished the first
half with 12 points tn just 15 minutes
· as the Hoy as led 40-27 at
lntermis.sion.
Defensively, Ewing forced St.
Francis to eilher rush their shots or

shoot from outside their normal
range.
Meanwhile, junior guard Larry
Robbins scored 22 points Saturday,
leadlnghot-shootingKentStatetoan
89-74 non-conference college basket·
ball victory over Wayne State.
. Kent State, 3-1, hit 14 o! its first 16
floor shotsandrolledlntoa30-10tead
lead In the first 10 minutes, but the
Tartars, 2:1, cut their halftime dell
cit to•42-39. However, the Flashes
went on a 15-2 scoring spree early In
the second half to take a 65-49lead.

'

CAUGIIT FROM BEHIND
Union Collge
fuDback George Capozzi (28) is caught from hehlnd
by two Augustana defenders, Including cornerback
Doug Mc&lt;joy (30), alter a long run during the second

quarter of Saturday's stagg Bowl. Ther National
championship game In Division m, was held at Kings
lsland near the College Football Hall of Fame. (AP
Laserphoto).

LB

GRIP

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79 PORK CHOPS

It
of
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J. FAMILY PACK
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249 FILTER'S
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BY
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CHICKEI
IODDLE SOUP

Cornrnissioner appointment, tr.a des _·on agenda
I

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Baseball executives
The'twornostrecentnamesmentlonedasaposslble
convene their annual Winter Meeting Monday with
Kuhn replacement were those of Frank Dale, former
renewed interest In player deals and an eye on the
newspaper publisher and Cincinnati Reds executive,
and Mlke Trager, former vice president for NBCTV
panel that is looking for a new commissioner.
SevECral club officials said they expect to see a
and now a private consultant working with the U.S.
reversal in the trend of fewer and fewer trades and
Olympic Committee. There apprently' is no clear
sales of plaoters, which had occurred as free-agent
trontrunner for the job, though.
stgnlngs gained-In popularity.
Kulm's 15 years as commissioner come to an
At last year's meetings In Honolulu, there were only
ottlclal end on Dec. 31. If owners .c annot agree on a
eight transactions involving 22 players , compared
stlccessor by that deadline, baseball has the option of
naming an Interim commissioner until a permanent
with 23 deals involving 64 players in 1975- the year
before the first free-ageni draft.
re\&gt;lacement can be found.
The · matter of finding a replacement for
In addition to the commissioner's job, American
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, however, could steal
League owners must also find a replacement for
some gf the limelight, depending on the nature of a
league President Lee MacPhail, who has taken over
report from the search committee headed by
as head of the Player Relations Committee. the
MUwaukee Brewers owner Bud Selig.
. owners' collective-bargaining arm.
Shrouded in secrecy, Selig's committee has been
According to a source MacPhail was Selig's first
hunting for a qew cortunissioner for a year. Selig has , ' choice to replace Kuhn. 'But with labOr negotiations
asked that a report from his committee be placed on
coming up next year, owners felt It was more
the agenda for Thursday, but he would not say If any
important to keep MacPhail In his role as baseball's
labor negotiator.
·
names would he presented to owners.
TI!at feellng may have been U~~derscored last
California Angels Ex_ecutlve Vice President and
General Manager BUZZJe Bavasl, however, said he _ month when the Major League Baseball Players
understood "they will release some names to us. We'll
Assocctatlon unexpectedly fired executive director
have time to con5lder them. Whether we'U vote, I
Kenneth Moffett, a moderate who was the federal
don't know."
mediator in 1981's baseball strike. Repl;~cing Moffett
New candidates
on an at-least Interim basiS Is Marvin Miller, a

hard-line negotiator who headed the union during the
walkout.
Other items on the agenda for the weeklong
meeting include the use of the designated hitter in the
World Series; drug abuse by players, and some minor
rules changes. The meetings open officially on
Monday with a drafl of major league players not on
'any team's roster. The leagues meet separately on
Thursday and jointly on Friday.
Trading deadline Friday
The inter-league trading deadline is 6 p.m. EST
Frtday , several owners feel flurry of trading activity
would precede that hour.
Player agent Dick Moss0 one of the lawyers who
gets Involved In player trades, was more reserved in
his forecast. .
In addition to player trades, the Winter Meeting
traditionally yields several tree-agent slgnings. Some
of the tqp names this year include relief pitchers Rich
Gossage and · Kent Tekulve, and infielder Darrell
.,.
Evans.
Gossage has been with the New York Yankees and
·past siX seasons, while Tekulve has played all nine of
his major league seasons with Pittsburgh. Both clubs
are trying to re-sign their players, but, should they
fall, the clubs showing the most interest In them
reportedly are Atlanta and the Chicago White Sox.
Evans declared his free agency from San Francisco,

and the Los Angeles Dodgers reportedly are leading a
group of bidders that also includes theYankees.
The rules change that would he of greatest interest
to the fan concerns the World Series and designated
hitter. The Official Playing Rules Committee 3nd the
two leagues will consider a proposal that the DH he
used in all World Series games played at the home
park of the American League champion. Currently,
the DH is used in all World Series games in
even-numbered years.
Drug abuse program
Experts on drug abuse will cQnduct several
seminars for player development people, managers,
coaches , physicians and trainers at both the major
and minor league levels. They will he conducted by
staff members of the Betty Ford Center at the
Eisenhower Medical Center.
Some minor rules changes under consideration will
involve the disabled list and waivers.
Currently, only one player per team, a non-pitcher,
may he placed on the 15-day supplemental disabled at
any given time. General managers are recommending this list he expanded to two players.
The Executive Council alSo is proposing an addition
to major league rule 10, which would require new
waivers after Aug. 1 before a player could he assigned
to another major league team.

Neck injury gives
Bengals incentive

::99

.,

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~

ler.

PITI'SBURGH (AP) -When the
·Pittsburgh Steelers last played
Cincinnati, defensive end Keith
Gary grabbed Bengals' qu;~rter­
back Ken Anderson by the face
mask and tossed him to the ground
with j arrtng force.
The Sleelers won 24·14 but Gary
and Anderson lost- Gary was fined
$3,CXXI and Anderson missed several
gameS )Vllh a twisted neck. Bengals
General M;~nager Paul Brown was
so angry he called for a National
Football League lilvestigatlon.
The two American Conference
Central Division teams are rematched Sunday at Three Rivers
Stadium, and this time Gary and the
Steelei:s woold rather latch on to
something else: their first division
title since 1979.
The Steelers, 9-4 despite losses In
their last two games, cando just that
by heating the Bengals and getting
some help from the Denver Bron·
cos, who play the Cleveland Browns
at Mlle High Stadium. The Browns
are 8-5, and could either be tied for
the division lead oreUminated from
the race by late Sunday afternoon.
Healthy BniWIII
The Browns are healthy, the
defmse has been outslanding and
quarterback Brian Slpe has regained his starting job with some
accurate passing displays. The
Broncos have been riddled by
Injuries, especlaDy In the defensive
secOOdary, lj1ld the ~ bas
sputtered behind rookie quarter-.
badt: John.Elway,
ButCieYelandCoachSarnRutlgil·
8JIO doean't lillY the theory that the
Broncos are about to fade from the
~pictUre.

"Denver is In the hunt, and they'll
play like heck to stay in the hunt." he
said. "I've coached on that staff. I
· know (defensive coordinator) Joe
Colller anrt (defensive line coach)
Stan Jones are excellent coaches.
That's a well-coached defensive
team, and I'm sure they feel their
backup players In the secOndary will
get the job done.
"As for Denver's offense, I think
they lost their flow when Steve
DeBergwent out With an Injury . But
Elway is a tremendous Ill lent. He's
like a pitcher - he just needs one
good nine-inning game, and then
look out." .
Denver expects to have only one
regular in its secondary on Sunday.
Louis Wright will man his usual left
cornerback spot, but the other three
starters - right cornerback Mike
Harden and safeties Dennis Smith
and Steve Foley - are listed as
doubtful with Injuries.
The Broncos also will be without
their second-leading receiver, Rick
Upchurch, who reinjured a nerve In
his neck.
The Broncos are battling foroneof
two wlldcard playoff spots In the
American Conference. Two other
teams, Seattle and Buffalo, have the
same 7-6 record as Denver, and it's
likely that only one of the three will
quallty for post-season action.
Cleveland, meanwhile, has the
Inside track on a wildcard berth with
the best record of any second-place
team to date, But the Browns also
have taken alll'l on the central
Division title. Tliey trail Pittsburgh
by just one game, and will meet the
Steelers In the regular-season finale
In two weeks.

'
SQUEEZING TIIROUGH - Ohio University's Paul Baron tr1ei tAJ
squee2e throutlh a P"""' put on by Unlvel'lllly ol PeiiiiS)'Ivanla's James
WoH (42) and Scott Mascioli, rear, durlngllrsthalfactloni!IPblladeJphla
Saturda_v afternoon. OU ji08Ied a 71-67 vlclory. ( AP Luerpholo),
I·

�Page

Seven Meigs players TVC h~norees

1983 All-TVC Dream Team
Player - School
Ron Rlffle, Warren
Jerry Green, Alexander

Al·'n'C Jlbost Teun

P0111 Vr
1:.!

12
12
·12
11
11
12
12
12
12
G,QE 12

Gtta.Jof!es. Nel.·York

France Coleman. W@ll.ston

Glenn Singer, Fed.· Hocking
Terry Radekln, Vin ton Countv
Nick Riggs , MP!gs
·
Jeff Tolbert, Nel.· York

FB-LB

12

RJ&gt; DB
HB
QB·S
QB

12
1:.1
12
12

• Mike Ousley, Vin ton County

DEF

FB 12
Tfl·E 12

'

~·

--

WMml

., .......

~~

Aile(&gt; l.Joyd ~ . Bal~Wallact'

.Unnnl

,

CaS(' Wes!Pm 19, Was hln g~on, Mo. 57
De Paw·, lnd. t!l, Km ytm 43

12
12
11
12 .
12
12
WB,DE 12
TE.C M 11
TB 12
G,E

I&gt;RS
OF'F
T-T
WB·LB
G·NG

PhH Templeton. Warrf'n tc..cal
Bob McDonald, Nel. -York
Troy Davis, Nel. -York
Mike BoJender, VInton Count\·
Steve Crow , VInton County ·
Steve SmJth, Belpre
Andy la nnarell!, Meigs
Darryle Won man, Miller
Brad Kerma rd, Tri'mble
Joe Klng, MUI£&gt;r
Dave Jones. M!Uer
Tom Knox, Belpre
John Fryman , Warren Local
Jay Evans , M (&gt;lgs
Outstanding Spt't.ial Pl~~Jter
Da v(&gt; Barr , Mrtgs
Outstandms Offensive Player
Ron Riffle. Warr~n Li:x"al
OubtandJng Defensive Player
Greg Jones. NI'L · York
TVC Coach of lhe Year
Ralph Holder, Re lprE'

WabtM C....,.,.. (1.-&amp;c
Hektf&gt;lburg _15. Marian El
Wa bash Ill. Wheaton ~
llerea-LIIIIt'l Dlb ~

!&gt;tx'r lin 76. C'ar~M rlkm G1
C~

Us ted on the second team were went to Belpre's Ralph Holder who
seniors Jon Perrin, Andy Janna· · guided Belpre to their first-ever
perfect season (10.0) and a berth In
rell), and Jay Evans.
The. Outstanding Offensive the state playoffs.
Player award went to running back - - - - - - - - - - Ron Rime o! warren LoCal while •
Greg Jones, linebacker. was named
the Outstanding Defensive Player,
Jones is from Nelsonville-York.
The TVC Coach of the year honor

CopPn•SI. 4.9, Mak&gt;lll' 47

('.arnrkii'-MI'l.b! 81~~; HP...t 1\IUJ'!WURII

11

Second Team

Swtt'Cleland, Belpre
Danny L ackey, Trlmbie

Baiiketball

8(w.rlln" .GI"l'Pn Tr. Bo6tCI'I UnJ\'t&gt;rs!t't' 74
Ohio 1\:onhPm 7!!. Conrord!a. M!dl .. 57
W!tten b;·~ T.!. SC . Ambv:w 60

t·NG 12
QB-HB 12

: Jon Perrin, Meigs
BW Meriwether. Belpre

:

COUt·ce
._,.,_

ONo

RB,LB 12

Chuck Elllot1 , AJexandt&gt;r
Brian Benson, Wam.&gt;n Local
StE;Ve Ca mpbell, Trimble

Meigs were seniors Nick _Riggs,
Chris Burdette, Shawn Eads, and
Dave Barr. Barr was also honored
as the outstanding special player ~s
a kicker.

Ohio college scores

FB·E 12
G-T 12

Dave Barr, l'o1elgs

-.

BELPR E - Seven Meigs Ma·
· rauder grldders were honored on
the Ali·Tri-Valley Conference team
named Fliday In votes casted by
the league's coaches.
Named to the firs! team from

· RB·LB
NC
G-LB
QB-S
OF'F
FB·LB
TB-DB
T·T
T·C

• U.. Holde!', Belpro
Paul Jew-ell, Trimble
Ctuis Burdene, M eigs
Shawn Eads, Meigs
Chris lA&gt;wls, Belpre
Charlie Hale, Wellslon
Chris Mayle, Belpre
Jay Lockhart . Belpre

Kevin HyseU, Fed.·HockJng

•

RB·L B

Scott ij:ussell. Trimble

~

December 4, 1983

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

C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

- lAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS -

I

1

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!1&gt;, Urt.ana 64
Spnlr A.rtJor Toumey
Spring Artxr 71. Dyke 7J
~

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0

•

NC 12 ·'

1'0~

12
OF'F 12
OFF 10
OF'F 12
C,T 12
FB,E 1)
C,E 12

E

••

.
,{ 1, .--.

Kicker

~

Running back

Unebar ker

~~I
~L.

ANDY IANNARELIJ
(Second Team)

;.c;,x;;

~

., ;;

DEF

CJII THI MUHTH

"'n
''' "'=

10RCH

,\I~M EIus IN
JAY EvANS
(Second Team)

!

"·

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with a solid brass
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437 Second Ave.
Gallipois.Oh. 45631
1-614-446-3031

(First Team)

.JON PERRIN
(Second Team)

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our new Field Representative .
Trained in our complete service of insurance
and fraternal benefits, our Representative ¥~ill be glad
to rliscun your needs. A telephone coli will bring
complete ir:'formation and no obligation.

U•lt 1 Per

C•ll•••

Carolina Luinber
.a nd
Supply Company
67S-1160

312 SIXTH STREET ·

SATELLITE SYSTEMS
OVER DEALER COST

HAS JUST ARRIVED
AND OUR DEALS ARE FANTASTIC!

12 DIFFERENT SYSTEMS

Redmen to host Circleville College .Monday
· RIO GRANDE Coach John La·
whorn's Rio Grande College Red·
men wUJ battle Circleville Bible
College on Monday, Dec. 5, at the
Paul R. Lyne Physical Education
Center.
Game time is set for 7: 30 p.m .
The Crusaders will enter the ·
contest with a 3-4 r~rd. They have
upended Southeastern College of
Alabama, Great Lakes College of
Michigan, and Ohio UniversityLancaster.
'

Guthlie.each scored 12 Points ,
According to the charts , Easte('ll
hit 20 of 46 from the tloor and two of
two at the foul line. Kyger Creek
sank six of 13 at the charity line and
held a slight rebounding edge.
Eastern capture the reserve
game, 52-39 as Greg Leachman and
Jim Caldwell each canned 14 points
while Royce Bissell added 12.
Kevin Napier Jed, the Bobkittens
with 10 points.
Kyger Creek 1-1 traveled to Mid
Amelican In Huntington Saturday
night
Eastern goes to Hannan Trace
Friday.

Circleville is coming ofl a 19-10
season In which they aJvanced to
the National Christian College
Athletic Association Champion· ships In Sprtngtleld, lll.
They wt11 be led by Mark Barth, a
64 forward, who' averaged 14.3
points and 12.1 rebounds per game
last season. He will be.Jolned on the
front line by 6-3 Rod Hutcherson,
and 6-1 Al Sparks. Starting In the .
backcouPI will be 6-0 Rod James
and 6-0 Brian Walters.

The Crusaders are coached by
Dale Tefft.
Rio Grande w1ll be led by 5-8
junior guard J erry Mowery who Is
averaging 17.2 points and eight
assists per game. He will be joined
in the backcourt by 6{) Rick
Penrod. Starting on the front e
wtll be 6-7 Dan Curry, &amp;.l!Bob Sha .
and 6-3 John Maisch ,
The · Redmen are 6-1 on
e
season. Following Monday's ame
they will host Pikeville College
Wednesda ni ht.

1984 Chevrolet S-1 0 Pickup

Eas&amp;em (t2) - M. Colilns 6-0·12; Guthrie
5-2-12: Matson 142i Newell H)-8: Probert

3-0-6 and Shr!vers 142. Totals

~Z-12.

Kn·er Credf. (44) - Vogel 4.().8; Waugh
2-0-4~ Martin 5-1-l 1: Love 3-2-8, and Bradbury
5-3-13. Totals IN-H.
By quarteni:

Eastern

8 U 16 4-12
· 12 13 13 6-44

K Creek

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December Sale Price·

Drivers Education .
Classes

p.u,. ~

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Beginning Monday, Dec. 12
Call for Pre-Registration
446-0699

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Plus Any Applicable Taxes

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, ·Inc.

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446-3672

Jim Mink

Bill Gene Johnson

over
Southwestern's
Lady High- r~flgu~res~~fo~r~E:as~te~rn~as~c:o~llln~s~and~f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
landers
In theSVACJeagueopener.
While leading 53-52 with just ; 34
seconds remaining on the clock
Southern's Laren Wol!e went to the
'·
foul line and sank both ends of a
one-and·one to secure the Torna,
doette lead to 55-52.
Moments later, after grabbing a
defensive rebound In the Highlander backcourt, senor Amy Lit·
tlefleld drew a foul, then went to the
line where she sank two bonus free
throws as an added Insurance of
victory for the hosts, 57-52.
In a battle of their own aUleaguers Amy Littlefield of Southern and Tanya McNeal of Southw- ·
estern fought It out for top-scaling
honors, both ending the game with
~am , hlgh 22 points. Littlefield, an
all-stater last season, has found a
new home as point guard for the
:J:omadoettes, after playing the low
post for much of her career.
McNeal, only a junior and a
two-year letter winner, works the
pivot for the lady Highlanders.
• Besides Uttlefleld's 22 points and
gpod tloor game, Laren Wol!e
50
CJ!nned 18 pants, Including six of
MO.
'
nine from the foul line. Debbie
Michael added seven points, Jenny
\\ell·
Bentley six, and Julie Houdashelt
60
4b.'aq
leur. For Southwestern McNeal
MO.
notched 22 points and 17 rebounds,
Nlda added 12, S. Patrick and T.
!Juff added slx each. T. Adkins four
and C. Walker two.
,
-~ Southern collected 35 rebounds,
I~ by Littlefield's 12, Wolfe's eight,
and Houdashelt's seven. They
~imned 23 of 65 from the field for 35 1
•
l¥!rcent and hit 11 of 18 from the
10W30
charity stlipe.
~
All SEASON
&lt; Southern hosts Trimble on
(YI:onday.

WINTER
DRIVING
..

SAVE ON
.. BAnERI

3699 ~~q
4299

FORD TEMPOS

Just $200

CHESHIRE- Steve Waugh's 10 SCOred six points In the comeback
foot shot with 11 seconds left in the
bid while J.D. Bradbury scored slx
game provided the margin of points and David Martin canned
Victory here Frldaynlghtas the host
!ourforKC.
KygerCreekBobcatsedgedaggres.
Eastern, using a 1·2-2 zone press,
slve Eastern, 4442 In an exciting
quiCkly tied_ the scored In the
SVACencounter.
' opening minutes of ' the second
With the score knotted at 4242 peliod. The Eagles kept the preswith 1: 11 left, Kyger Creek took
sure on forcing several Bobcat
possession then called a timeout
turnovers. The hal! ended with the
with 33 seconds to go. The Bobcats
Bobcats clinging to a 25-22lead after
worked for the winning shot, but
Eastern's Tim Probert connected
came up short until Waugh grabbed
on a30 footer at the buzzer.
the offensive rebound and canned It
Despite being In foul trouble
Following' an Eastern timeout,
durtng the early portion of the third
the !3obcats pressured the Eagles . canto, Eastern continued Its presuntil a pass was knocked out of
sure tactics, cutting the lead to34-32
bounds. The inbounds pass was put
when Jim Newell connected on a 25
up-- after the buzzer sounded .
footer. The action continued as a
The srpaller, but scrappy Eagles, see-saw affair the ·rest of the period
fell behind 6-0 In the opening stanza
which ended with a tie at 38-38.
before bouncing back to cut the
Troy Guthlie, who got hot
Bobcats' lead to 12-8 at the end of the shooting over the Bobcat ione,.led
period.
Eastern's thirdquarterscolingwith
Mlke Collins, 6-2 Eagle center, eight points while · Newell added
four. Bradbury led KC with six
· points whlle Martin added five.
With the score stlll knotted at 4040
at the5: 47mark,Eastern wentlntoa
slow down offense, kllllngtimewhile
working tor the open shot. It worked
when Collins put his team on top with
a jumper. Waugh connected for his
flrst basket with 1: 55 left 1ylrig the
RACINE - During ·a classic game at4242.
Bradbwywasthegame'sleadlng
nip-and-tuck battle played at Ra·
cine the defending SVAC champion point-maker with 13 while Marlin
Southern Tornadoettes posted a had 11.
57-52 come-from-behind victory
Two players .finished In double

.J

:2999

A NEW SUPPLY OF

NEW LOW PRICES

Waugh's .10-footer with 11
seconds left downs Eastern

SW, -57-52

Clarence E. Shupe·

The Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Page-C.3

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

Tornado
gals whip

-INTRODUCING-

~cKII
(First Team)

:;lacember 4, 1983

CITGO

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(.ittle Pirates win

ODDS &amp; ENDS SHOP

: VINTON - Keith Burnett's 21
Points led the eighth grade North
Oailla basketball team to a 54-48wln
Q\&lt;er Hannan Trace Thursday.
. ·: Other high scorers for the Pirates
Were Shawn Holliday with 12 and
Darrell (VIartln with 11. For HT, ·
~aln scored 23 points and Rankin

MIDDLEPORT

992-6173

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1983 T-BIRD
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11117 T.T. . .. 141.11

$}0,200

11111 ... piJ

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lplr ...... IILll
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hb ...... 141J2
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ftltt llttln .....1
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411b ...... SIZ.ZI
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hb ...... 111.11

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Federal Tax Included

$4,295
1978 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

$5,595
1 INTERNATIONAL
2 TON TRUCK WITH
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at

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11,500

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Open Monday thru

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• OIJruted FalllT.t, Falrvirw Parle !I!
·.. OIM'RO 59. Geloe tJ. ar

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~ 16. Wllhfol.'• ~

~ 11. Anl"'lf'Y wayrae 80
Pel'tiiVWf Ell, HOflale 63, ar
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3999
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311

~116

•
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19

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•

onawa HWI 6l. N. Bllllmlre 46
Ot1ovWt tl, Mtuer CitY 61
"' Par...,_Y at, Ohio '=ity 61
.. Parma \'alkoy Fcqe 75, E . ~and
. • Shlw '10
•
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EJCTRA
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SIMPlE CONTROLS
COMPUTER MONITORED

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N .. Unk:m 4&amp;, New Alt.n)' 42
Norton~ Medlna' }{J&amp;ftl.nd M
Norv.rallt 61, Upper Sancluskl:Y 55

, Norwayne !19, Dalton

•

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37§.

ALTERNATORS

1gsa

PASS-THRU

LOW PRiaD FlloM

::MERCERVD..LE Hapnan
nace girls JX11led away !rom a27-20
lead held by North Gallla In the
(ciurth qualier Thursday to defeat
ttie visiting lady Pirates 46-38.
:; Tabby Sheets led lnscoril\g!orHT
":ith 14 polnts ..Julle Dlllonadded11.
~G 's Campbell took scoring honors
Wlth 14, while Michelle George had

, ..

8-5
.

STAIIERS

'

High school scores

273·3271

'

REAR WINDOWS

I

tJT
. girls triumph
.

BILL'S BODY SHOP
~·

•

COUGAR XR7

WAS '13,107.00

1MI. 111111

hh11.1

1979
OLDS. CUTLASS

: · NG's seventh grade was defeated
~ the visiting WU&lt;jcats, 37·36.
Jarrell was top scorer for HT with
:ij, wlthBrurnfleldsupplytng11.Don ·
Mays had 11 for the Pirates, and
!Steven ~rge chipped In eight.
•: North Gailla plays SouthweStern
home Thllf$day.

liMIT lUIS.

'

Silver Bridge Plaia - Phone 446-9335

Bill Kelley
Manager

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

..

' (

'

.

'•

,••

.'

"'

�•

Ohi~Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

o-niber 4, 1983

Pomeroy-Middl.r;iort-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Southern whips
PATIROT- Utllizlng a full court
provided by Tornado guard Rod
Littlefield.
maMo-man press, visiting Southem jumped off to a 19-6 first pertod
"A team cannot rest agalnst
lead and never looked back here
Southern. Their pressure defense,
Friday night enroute to a 49-36
quickness and hustle wears you
vlctmy over the Southwestern down. You must be prepared to play
Hlghlllllders. The Win was SouthSouthern the entire 32 minutes,"
em's second straight while the · Myers concluded.
Highlanders suffered their second
straight loss.
The Tornadoes led 34-2tl at the half
Veteran Highlander coach Lloyd but Southwestern made a came of it
Myers said his team had a heel&lt; of a in ihe slow moving third period by
time coping with Southern pressure outscoring the visitors, 1().;;. Southdefense and the offensive threat ern added 12 points in the fourth

Marauder girls whip Lancers . 45-37
on 16of43artemptsand four of12at
the foulllnes. Southern held a 31-28
rebounding edge.
The Little Tornadoes captured the
reserve contest, 45-20. Jay Bostick
led the way With nine points whlle
Mari&lt;JarrellandKellyGrueserhad
eight each.
Jim Jeffers paced the Little
Highlanders With six points.
Southwestern traveled to
Symmes Valley Saturday. Southern
·
hosts Kyger Creek Friday.

quarter, making the final margin 13
poirits.
Littlefield led the Tornadoes With
25 points on 10 baskets and five tree
throws. Kevin Curfman was the only
other Southern play getting double
figures with 10 points. Roger Wells
led Southwestern wlth 12 points
whlle Jeff Meeks and Randy Layton
contributed eight points each. ,
Sout hem hit19of 50 floor a!tempts ·
for 38 percent and 11 of 15 at the foul
circles. Southwestern also hit 38
percent fropm the field connecting

Box Sooroo
Soulllorn (4t) - Curfman 4-2·1~ Roush
2-3-7; K. Teaford 1.0.2; Hill 0.0.0; Deem 1.0.2;

Shultz 0.1-1; Littlefield 10.5-25;

ROCK SPRINGS _ Coach Ron
Logan's Meigs Marauderettes
stayed atop the Tri-Valley Conference standings With their second
win Thursday, 45-37, over FederalHocking.
Metgs.traUed 28-22 al the baH, but
allowed the Lady Lancers only nine
points tn the second half Whlle
racking up 23 of their own.
Three Meigs players wound up In
double figures with junior Denise
Stegall leading the way With 14. She
also pulled down a team-leading
nine rebounds.
Jenny Meadows followed With 12
while Rhonda Haddox added 10.
Meadows had eight rebounds and
Trtna Reeves grabbed six for the
Marauderettes.
Meigs made 18 of 42 from the field
for 43 percent and dropped. nine of
18 foul shots for 50 percent.
Federal-Hocking made seven of 15
from the chartty strtpe for 47

LOWrcltes

make state

ConnoUy1~2;

and Cardone 0.0.0. Totals 11-ll....
Soolhwootem (It - Meeko 3-2-8; Wells
5-2-12; Layton 441!; Pellrey 1-0-2; Bailey
2~; Baker 1.0.2. Totals 1....._..
lly quMet'O:
Southern ........ ....... .. .......... 19 15 3 12-49
SouthWestern ....................... 6 14 10 6-JG

Farm
tiOmeOWII8rS

· Insurance
a good buy.

Our service
makes it even better.
Call me

•

Trimble, ·B.e lpre, Nelsonville-York wm
The Trimble Tomcats jumped to
a 38-21 halftime lead and galloped to
a 66-48 win over Federal-Hocking.
Scott Gatchel and Morrison led
the Cats With 14 points apiece while
Nelson Morris added 13. Randy
.·Matlack led the Lancers With 14.
Trim ble (86) - Gatchel 6-2-14; HooJ)E'r
1.0.2: Sayres J.{)-2; Morris 5-3-13: Morrtson
0.2·14: Dupler 4-Q-8: ratres 2.(H: Koons 3-2-8:
, Lent I). H . To~ 28-t!Hlfl.
Federal-Hocking (-18) Koker 2·3·7:
Matlack 7.0.14: Deeter 3 ~-6 : Russell 1.().2;
Sinnet! ).I -ll ; Watson 142: Harrb 2.().4;
Butchl'l" 1.0.2. TQtJds 'Z24-43.
8}' quarient:
• Trimble ......................... .. .17 21 17 11-66
F -H ....................... ......... ... 11 10 13 14-48

Reserves - "Jl'lmble 40 Federal
Hocking 39 (OT).
Alexander came from a threepoint first quaner deficit and then
held off the late Warren Loal
comeback to post a 58-51 win.
AJexander (58) - BoOO 10420; Jeffers
0.3-,l; Gut hrie 5-6.J6; Bennett 2.0.10; Ferris
3-J-9; Tolah 20- t ~.
\Varren (51) - Butcher 1.0.2: Frye 9-2-20:
Ht&gt;$son 1-24; In~am ]-()-:.!; Knight 6-Q-12:
Mitchum 0.1 -1; Phillips 1·24 : Skoglud 3-{1-6.
Totals 2%-7-:n.
Reserv&lt;'S Warrtn 52. AJexa nder 50
Alexander ..... ., ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. 11 1.1 1..1 :D-SR
w1men ... .. .. .. .............. 14 8 8 21 - 51

Belpre jumped out of the gates

quickly and ran away from WellNelsonvtlle-York, Meigs' next
ston 66-43.
opponent, won Its second straight
Belpre (66J - McAfee 0-4-4;
game with a 53-48 squeaker ·over
Simmons 1-0-2: Logue 5-2-12; ' Vinton County.
Holder 3-2-8: Lockhart 1.()-2; Wills·
Nelsonville--York (:13) - Grandy G-7-19;
2-6-10: Bentley 6-2-14; McDonald
man 6-0-12; McDermott 1-2-4; · Bolluck
1-0-2: Kllne 2-2-6; Boyher 1-0-2. Totals 18-17~MUler 6-5-17. Totals 25-16-66.
Vlnton Cowtty (48) - Radeldn 9-0-18; M.
Bollender 2-2.6; Womeldorf 3-0-a; DodrW
Wellston (43)- Newman 2-7-11:
3-7-13; Ha'mroon 2-0-4; L. Bolle-nder 0-1-1.
Lindover 3-2-8; Spriggs 6-2-14;
Totals 19-10-48. '
Jenkins 1-0-2; Henry2-1-5; McCloud
Reserves -VI nton County 31. NelsonvtueYork 21 .
1-1-3. Totals IH343.
Belpre .... .. ........... 20 8 12 26-66
Wellston
................
6 11
14-43
Reserves
- Belpre
60, 12
Wellston
47.

•

Finally, Allen was fouled and Wright getting 10.
ATHENS- A pair of free throws
by Leon Allen with just two seconds converted both free throws for the
Wright's 14 points and 12 by
remaining lifted the Athens Bul- 47-45 lead.
Myers led the Chieftain scorers.
A last second despleratlon shot by
ldogs to a 47-45 SEOAL victory over
The box score:
the Logan Chieftains Friday night. Logan's D . J . Conrad was short as
Logan (45) - J ack Miller 2-3-7; Larry
Conrad 0-0-0: Scott Farrar1~2: D. J . Conrad
the game ended.
It was a weird contest that saw
1-1-3; Troy Wrtght6-2-14; Keith Myers 5-2-13:
Athens, now 2-1, hit 43 percent Larry York 2-3-7: Totals 17-11-45.
Athens win Without scoring a field
Athens (47) - Carl Matheny &lt;1--1 -9; Brian
goal in the entire fourth quarter and from the field on 15 of 35, made 17 of
Blickle 3-1-7; ,Chris Gerig 1.().2: Bill Flnnearty
' Logan going without a single point · 31 free throws, and grabbed 34 4-7.15;
U&gt;on AJien 2-5-9: Sean Harter 1-l-3;
rebounds. eight by Chris Gerig.
for the final four minutes of play.
Chris Leonard 0-1 -1: Jeff Dean 0-l -1. Total8
The Chiefs, with a 2-1 mark, 15-I'M7.
The visiting Chieftains jumped to
&amp;.'Ore bs qwliien:
a 13-11 first period lead and connected on 17 of 49 from the field , Logan . .. .. ...... .. ................. .. 13 11 15 6--45
stretched It to 22-13 midway In the converted 11 of 22 free throws, and Athens .......... .. ............... .. . 11 14 11 5---47
lk'serve score: Logan 36. Athens 28.
netted 28 rebounds With Troy
second quarter.
AHS then ticked off a 10-point run
to grab the lead at 23-22 and led 25-24
at intermission.
The Athens' lead was 42-39 after
WE DON'T HAVE
three quarters before quat1ers
before the Chieftains began whittling away.
A goal by Keith Myers with 4:05
remaining slipped Logan Into a
45-44 lead,- but also became the last
points to be scored by the visitors.
Btu Finnearty, who had !allied 12
of his game high 15 points In the
third quarter, then canned a free
throw with 2:14 reamlnlng to knot
the score at 45-45.
For the next 2: 05 neither team
could get a decent shot away as
turnovers hurt the offense.

ROD LITrLEF1ELD

r:;.;;;;;;···········;;··-~=:::::::::
LUMBER &amp;HOME CENTER

Late free
throws tops

Now Tltru
Sunday, Dec. 11th

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VANITY

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Mlnufacturer"s Llsl Price

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KITCHEN·
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1~h
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R1g. 124.&amp;1 J/4"xt6' Retractable

The Tigers stood back and
permitted Jon Clay an uncontested
layup with four seconds remaining
before Willis hit one free throw a the
two second mark for the final
margin of victory.

11~

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1979 CHEVROLET CAMARO Z-28 - 2 dr. coupe, tilt wheel ,
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11

~~,:.•_•z....,,---16.39
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29'x&amp;l' _ _ 18.39

19.39

31"xM'

32"xB4· - -1B.84

Cost

1------.-------"-~

--21.39
38"x64'
22 39
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84 ,.,. l..iiK,_ERiiiOiiii,_EN;;;E;.;;C;,;;;Aiiii-.;;OiiiR...;,P;UM;P;..,_ _..

1980 PONTIAC FIREBIRD- Cpe., V-6 motor, auto. trans.,
power steering, power brakes. air cond., AM/FM/Stereo,
Extra Clean.

1979 CHRYSLER TOWN &amp; COUNTRY WAGON- 318 motor,
auto. trans., air cond., power windows, power door locks, tilt
wheel, cruise, AM /FM/ Stereo, rear defo~t~~er . Save BIG.

Friday.

.

e

· wearing the Pirates down. Freethrows allowed HT to gain a few
extra points, holding a two-point
lead over NG at period's end.
It was In the flnat" period that
Jenkins' crewfounditssecondwlnd,
racklngup19pointsandkeeplngNG
to seven. Accurate free-throw
shooting helped HT, as they sank 16
of 20 a ttempts for~ percent.
Midway through the quarter, HT
led by only two points, but fouls and
additional baskets supplied by
Swain and Brumfield pushed tile
Wildcat lead farther ahead by 10
points. After that , the Wildcats
never looked back.
Two turnovers were recorded by
HT, compared to 24 suffered by the
Pirates, mainly In the second half.
On floor shooting, HTwas 24 of 52for
46 percent, while the Pirates were47
percent (21 of 44) . NG sank eight of
17 attempts from the free-throw 11ne

'fl!E;;DAY

TIIURSDAY

Nelsonville at Meigs (freshman
boys ), 5:55p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York (girls
varsity), 6 p.m. ·

for 47 percent.
FRIDAY
A tightly-played reserve game
Meigs
at
Vinton County (boys
saw the junior Wildcats hand their
varsity),
6;
30
p.m.
NG counterparts a 40-34defeat. The
little Bucs weJ\t from a strong start
and battled HT point-by-point, With
a 19-18 halftime lead held by the
WUdcats. High scorer for HT was
Terry Cline with 12, with Marl&lt;
Sheets adding 10. Todd Dee! scored
13 for NG and Mike Kemper had 10. HT travels to South Point Tuesday, and returns home Friday for a
league game with Eastern. The
If s so easy to be a member of a
Pirates are Idle untU Friday, when
growing-pr ofession. Start now,
they host Southwestern.
by studying at GBC, 2evenings
Hannan Trace (&amp;4) - J. Barnes 7-8-22; o ,
a week.
• Barnes G-1-13; Swain 5-0-10: Brumfield 3-4-10;
A. Bailey 2-2-6; s un I-0-2: P .. Bailey 0-1-1
We offer the accredited proTotab 24-t&amp;-64.
.
gram
of class work you're re·
North GaiUa (50)- Blackbum3-2-8; Diddle
4-0-8: Lee 5-1-11 : PenJck 3-1-7· Glassburn
qui red to complete before tak4-2·10: Smith 2.o-4; Hawks 2-0-4 . Tot.a~su-uo.
ing the Ohio State Board ExScore by quarters:
Hannan Trace .. .. .......... ....... 16 17 12 19-64
amination .
North Gallia ...... .......... ii'~ .'\13 _21 9 7-~
Complete in only 11 weeks .
Lyne Center Schedule
now! Classes will begin
Enroll
Wt.&gt;ek ol Dec. 4, 1983
Date - G)'TilR!L"'Jum
Pool
Jan. 2. For more information
Dec. 4 1-3 p.m.-Open Rec .............. ....... :..
.. ................................... 1-3 p.m.-Open Swim
contact...
&amp;-8 p.m.-College Rec........................ ...... ..... .......... ... ....... 6-8 p.m.-College Swim

·

ATTENTION!
WANT A
REAL ESTATE
LICENSE

Dec. 5 7:30 p.m. -Redmen vs.
Circleville Bible................................. , ... ... ... .... Noon-1 p. m .-Fitness Swim
Dec. 6 6-8 p.m.-Intramurals.. ..............
...................... Noon -1 p.m.-Fitress Swim

[)('c. 7 7~30 p.m .-Redmen vs. PikPvllle .. ... ... ........... ... ............... Noon-1 p.m.-FIIness Swim

Dec. 8 6-8 p.m .- lntramura ls .... ......... .. ............................ , .............. .................... CJoseo
Det-. 9 7 &amp; 9 p.m.-J:Ie\.·o Francis ......... .......... : ........................... Noon-1 p.m. -Fitness Swim
Classlr Tourname nt ..... ....... ........ ............... .......................... ............ Closed
Dec. 10 2 p.m.-Redwomen vs. Wllmington
7 &amp; 9 p.m.-Bevo Francis ........................... ._..... .
... .... ...... , .. ........... Closed
Classic Tournament
Dec. U 1-3 p.m.-Ope-n Rec ............ ..
................
.. .. .. ... .. 1-J p.m.-Open Swim
6-8 p.m.-Co1lege Rec ......... .
. .. ............ .. .... 6-8 p.m.-College Swim

0

R~sell

signs 1984 contract

CINCINNATI (AP) -r- TheCincinnati Reds have signed pitcher Jeff
Russell to a one-year cont ract
covering the 1984 5eason.
Russell was 4-5 with a 3.03 earned
run average after being called up
from the Reds' former Class AAA

team, the Indianapcillslndlansofthe
American Association, on Aug. 9
last seas~n. He made 10 majorleague starts.
Terms of the contract were not
disclosed.

ScorobJ-. 1&lt;0nt011 ........................... ,. 16 lt 14 12-116
Reeerve .core: Ironton 43, Jackson 32.

f'

r

Conw in !'lOOn and talk with orw of uur
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t' ounl no w. Put )' OUr n·tirt•nwnt plun~ in
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'PHONE

• :a:•
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J'""""" (U) -JoeyWyantSG-16; Jon Clay

Jackson .............................11 16 11 1!&gt;--M

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Reg. 160.

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nt·~ l f'~l!:· II''" lh t• iclt·al inn ~;tmt•nt in ~·uur
own futun , ht• lpin ,:: lo ~uaranlt·t· ~-our

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

. WAREHOUSE/SHOWROOMS

The box score:

Jell O.vlo 1-Q-2. .....
(II) - Doog Gamblll ~; Ryan
AJnswa111 ~18; Dluule 1&gt;0\mey 5-010;
Kevin West3-0-41; Robert WNVf!l' ~J.Jl; Steve
wu11s 2-I-5. ToUII n.z-111.

Tht•n, think r e tin·nwnt -

soon as agt• 59 112: ! Thai's wh.,n ~· ou (' an
!'l l art d ruwi np: on your IR A. You f'an in !' urt·
your retirt•m;;&gt;nl io! N'urily h~· M:n •inll for tlw
fuiurt• no"''· An IR A acl'n unt wilh U!'l is a
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MBER &amp;HOME CENTER
~1!1

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Bank!

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

. 11.

7-1-15;

Thinking n •tirt&gt;nwnt'! You ~ hould
han• ~· ou r lmJi vidual Rt•lirt&gt;rnt:'nt Ac·t·ou nl
in l•la('t• , at thP ri~ht pla('e 1 lwrt• at C&amp; S

MEN'S V-NECK

The Ironmen made 24 of 55 from
the floor, five of nine at the llne, and
netted 29 rebounds, 10 by Wyant.
The Tigers host Russell, Ky.
Tuesday nlght In a non-league
contest whUe Jackson Is open.

place ...
ri~~t time I

NelsonvU!e-York at Meigs (boys
varsity), 6 p.m.

PHONE

4~

Ironton hlt 27 of 53 fielders, two of
nine free throws, and grabbed 29
rebounds With Ainsworth snaring

t~e

. at

REMOTE

PHONE

1$-7-:n.
By quaners:

Meigs

T~e ri~qt

Cordless
Limit
!Per
Customer
MOne -Piece

Meigs played Mlller Friday .and
to Nelsonvllle-York
Thursday.
Melp ( 4~ }- Rhonda Haddox 5-{}-10; Jenny
Me"lows S-2·t2 ; aent.se Stegall &amp;2-14; B . J.
Go'don 2-1-5; Jodl Hanison 0-4~; Tnna
Reeve!'~~;. Cathy Dean ().0.()_T"""' 18-945.
Federai·Hocking (37) - FrasWer 3-5-11:
Bunlette:w&lt;&gt;; Mille.- 3-1-7; Sinnett2~~ ; Amy
Jago3-0-6; Han 1-0-2; Ang1eJago~l-L Tolalo
Will travel

MONDAY
Southern at Meigs (freshman
boys), 5:55 p.m.
Meigs at Albany (7th and 8th
.boys), 5:00p.m.
Albany· at Meigs (Girls junior
high) , 5:00p.m.

Palllkod .....
'"
I pe, Doluxo
"tDA4
Anlt~u• ••••• ~-;.t

Your Final

35"x1Jo1·

Irontoll, playing Its 1983-84 opener, led bY quarter scores of16-ll,
30-27, and 44-38.
Junior Ryan Ainsworth hlt for 18
· points with Weaver adding 11, and
Duane Downey 10 for the Winners.
Jackson was paced by VInce
Wolford's 18 points with Joey
Wyant getting 16, and Clay adding
15 as their record dropped to 0-21n
the new season.

VINTON - Visiting Hannan
Trace played host North Gallla on
equal terms here Friday night until
late In the third quarter when foul
trouble and turnovers helped the
WUdcats post a 64-50 Win.
It was HT's second victory of the
season and Its first within the SVAC.
The Pirates are Winless after two
. games.
Mlke Jenkins. now in his fourth
year of coachlngatHT, watched his
: WUdcats forge ahead ,by the scoring
' efforts of brothers Jeff and Deke
· Barnes. Jeff was the high scorer for
hls ~~:am. compiling 22 points, whlle
. Deke followed with 13.
, Robbie Brumfield's rebounding
· • was also a factor, snatching five of
-: the tota118 erect!ted to the Wildcats.
· : Jeff . Barnes had four, With Billy
:: Swain adding another four.
: . For the Plra~s. Larry Lee had 11
: : points, with Jack Glassburn adding
-: 10. NG recorded 33.rebounds, With
,' ~ Lee given credit fot 14.
•
Action from theopeningtipoffwas
- : brisk, with the Pirates scoring first
:: and HT playing catchup. The
.: · WUacats soon passed the hosts by,
•' building up theirblggestleadofthe
· half (14-9) over NG in the latter part
'· of the first quarter.
• ' But the Pirates soon closed the
• gap. The second quarter. opened
•. wtththeWUdcatsleadlngbythree,a
- deficit NG soon ellmlnated. But the
Pirates were never able to maintain
a wide lead over HT, wltheach team
outdistancing the other byoneortwo
,• points for the remainder of the half.
The Pirates scored 21 points for the
period, going into the third quarier
With
a 34-33 lead.
'
Action continued on the same
level through much of the quarter,
until HT's consistent offense began

..

&amp; DOLLY

JHS, 56-53
IROI\'TON - Free throws by
Robert Weaver and Steve Willis in
the final 20 seconds carried the
Ironton Tigers to a 56-53 SEOAL
victory over the Jackson lronmen
Friday night.
·
Tralllng 44-39 after three pertods
the vtsltlng Ironmen rallied in the
fourth quarter to reduce the Tiger
lead to 52-50 with 2: l7 remaining.
The teams then traded turnovers
until Ironton ran time off the clock
down to 17 seconds. Weaver was
fouled and made the front end of a
one and one, and a 55-51 lead.

Glassburn (12) prepw:es for action. The WUdcats
turned a nip-and-luck affair Into a 64-50 win at NG

-:W ildcats down Pirates, 64-50

BUT WE DO HAVE
ONE OWNER

FOR CHRISTMAS

DRIVING DOWN OOURT- Hannan ~·s Jeff
Barne:l (23) drives the ball down Nolib Ga.llla's court
, and Is Danked by teammates Rob Bnunlleld, Deke
Bames and Sieve Stitt whlle Pirate d~fender Jack

1

"Cabbage Patch Dolls"

USED ·cARS

percent.
Meigs had 32 rebou,nas and 18
turnovers. The Lancers totals were
unavailable
·
·
ln the reserve game, FederalHocldng'"hlpped Mefgs 2.'i-24 In two
overtirnes. J ennifer Couch ' J uJte
Miller, and Maria Musser each had
slx to lead the little Marauderettes
while Lockhart's 10 led the winners.

Meigs sports schedule

Defending champion Athens opens
league play, defeats Logan, 47-45

·'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-C-5

•r

)I

�\

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 4, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gollipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant; W. Va.

Meigs wins second straight

Eu.cESSOR SCORES- Gallla's Chris EDcessor
(21) filps In a short jumper for two of his 18 markers
against visiting Waverly Friday night. G.o\HS won,
56-16. Other Blue Devils in this Tim"""""'tinel phoiAJ

arc Todd Bergdoll (22); Dan Dressel (12) &amp;nd Brett
Bostic (23). Waverly defenders are Brad Breitenbach
(33) and Craig Teete rs (15).

HEMLOCK - Taking heed to
some .. gentle persNaslon .. at the
ha lftlrne Intermission, the Meigs
Marauders posted their second
straight win In as many outings
with a 49·33 win over Miller here
Friday.
Tied 17-all alter two periods,
Meigs scored the flrsl 10 points of
the third quarter and at one point
outscored the Faleons 16-2 to take a
34·21 lead after the third quarter.
With the win, the Marauders
remain in a five-way tie for first
place in the TVC. U Meigs soould
win at home Tuesday against
Nelsonville· York, tt will mark the
best start by a Marauder cage team
in its 17·year history.
All nine Marauders entered the
scoring column as severe foul
trouble forced Coach .Greg
Drummer to go t o his benc h In the
second quarter. The Marauders
had three starters on the pine with
five ~!lnut es left In the first half, all
with three personals.
Leading the scoring was junior
Jay Carpenter with 14 while
sophomore Mike Chancey added 10.
Guards Nick Riggs and Rick Wise
added nine and eight respectively.
It was the play of sophomore
forward Lee Powell who caught the
biggest part of Coach Drummer's

seconds left in the game at 49-29.
The marauders outscored Miller
23-4 from halftime lUI midway In
the fourth quarter, moving lhe
score from 17-17 to 40-21 . .
Reserves In F1rst
The · Meigs reserves kept pace
with the varlsty and the rest of the
TVC pack with their second
straight win, 42-40.
And like the varsity, the little
·Marauders won In the third quarter
with a 14-4 barrage, wiping out a
24·20 Miller lead at the half.
Chris Shank and Shawn Baker
topped Meigs with 10 points apiece
while Brlan Houdashelt added
eight. John Decore lead Miller with

12.
Shank's play In the third period
led to the Meigs' bomeback while
two key free throws each by Baker
and Chris Kennedy In the final
minute kept Coach Mlck Childs'

F rtday before losing a 5646 non·
league cage decision to hos t
Ga llipOlis.
.
· ·· w e may have been too keyed
up. " said Blue Devil Coach Jim
Osborne. ··we we ren 't playing up to
our a bil ity ea rly. Wa verly was
· a lmost piclur e pcrteet t he first
h a If . ··

Alter that 15-point Waverly lead ,
GAHS scored 12 unanswered points
·
2 49
d
h
·
m a : s pa n tore uce t e VISitors·
margin to three, 27·24. The come·
b ack wa s led b y S1eve
' w o Ife, Ch n.s
Ellcessor, Brett Bosl ic, Todd Bergdoll a nd Dan Dressel.
Waver ly led 29·25 duri ng the
ha lftime intPrm iSSiOn.

du ring the final two and one-half
quarters.
GAHS hit 24 of ~ 5 field goal
attempts for 53.3 percent . The
Devils were cold from the foul line
(eight of 19 for 42 percent) .. Gi!llla
had 22 rebounds (none in the first
. period). eight by Bergdoll and six
by Bos tic. GAHS ha d nine turnovers a nd 13 persona l fouls.
F r iday 's victory was dedica ted to
the la te Hoba!1 Wilson Sr. !See
p
1
E
eeps c o umn on ·2 toda .v 1.
Waverly's J im Trimble popped in
21 points , most from " downtown··
hil B d B
w e
ra
reitenbach finished
with 12.
The :r·
· 1gevs were 20 o f 45 f rom t he
field for 44 percent. WHS was six of
13 at the Ioul line for 46 peree nt.
Waverly had 30 rebounds, 10 by

ma r k. Gallia 's E llcessor hit two
layups, to knot the counl a1 35-a ll ;
Dresse l popped in two short
jumpers and GAHS wen f on top
39-35 wi th 2: 36 left in !he period . The
Ga llia ns were never headed.
Ga llia 's biggest lead . was 12
points : 56-44 , wit h 21 seconds left.
GAHS placed three players in
double figures, led by Ellcessol"s 18
ma rkers. Wolfe a nd Bostic added 10
a piece. Dressel. who s uffered a
bloody nose in the t hird pe riod ,
fi nis hed wit h nlnP ma r kers a nd
Bergdoll five.
"Our defense kept us in the ball
ga m e ," Osborne added . The Blue
Devils outscored Wa ve rly 44·19

1984 Ch

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis' re·
serve defea ted 1•isiting Wavclry,
40-22. for their firs t hardwood
victory of 1hP year he re Friday
night.
The Blue Imps, playing without
the services of their coa c h, Jack
Payton. led 10·3. 17-10 a nd 27-18 a t
t he qua rterm a rks. Payton suffered
a kidney sto ne a ttack earlier in the
day, and is hospitalized at Holzer
Medical Center.
John Owens paced the winners
with 10 points. Jeff Atkinson had
e ight, Jon Strait, Rod Saunde rs and
Ga ry Har rison each had six .
Chris .Brow n's 12 points led the
Cubs, now 0-2 overall.
Box !)Core:
Cuhs

t 2'~ J

s

Compe~e

7 10 13-40

in event

GALLIPOLIS - Randy Ams·
bary and Krist! Thom as just
returned from Cleveland, where
they competed In the regional
"Hotshot " basketball competition.
They were competing with athletes
from a four-s tate area, including
Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York and
Michigan.
Amsbary.placed fifth with a total
score of 92, while Krist! Thomas
placed sixth In girls' competition
with a score of 58.
The local "Hotshot" competition
Is an annual Pvent held each
September, and s ponsored by the 0 ,
0 . Mcintyre Park District and
Pepsi.

6

Washington

.l\1

Nl 11 Di[J!O 1119. (;oh• •ri .... l.ilo' ll'e.
D.tlta.;, t:l1. l.o., ,\n h'i"'lo "' 11J~

II

~O~lliiu11

Mllwaukee

By quarten:
Meigs ............ ... .................. 9 8 17 15-49
MOler .. ... , ..... .... ......• .. ....... ..1 10 4 12-ll

12
9

DE'IroU

lndla11a

Melp (-12) - Parkef Long 1·2-4 : Brian
Houdashelt 448; Chris Kennedy 2·2~: Shawn
Baker 34·10: R.odd HarriSon ()..(}.(); Daye
Warth 1.0.2;. Brad Roblnson 14-2. T&lt;Kals
17-M2.
'
Miller (40) - Thompson 1-0-2; Decore ·
G.0--12; Craig -..o.B; Crawford 3-2-8; Stlckdom
244; Toki 1.().2; F rankhailller 2.().4. Tota!Y .
·r&amp;-MO.
•

.~)

•

AUanta

0\k'ago
Qevt:!land

(lleoerveo)

.lili7

6
9
9
5 10
12

.m

..Ill

'i
\U};'IERN CONFERENCE

..l."U
.21'1

Ll

Mlct.n'!ll Dlvbion
Dallas
12 1
Denver
9
Ulah
10 9
Kansas City
8 9
Houston
7 10
San Antonio
7 12
Paclftc DlvWon
l..al A'rlgeles
12 5
Porlland
11 7
seattll"'
9 9
Go!Or-n Sta te
9 10

jl i

~nday ' ~

-

Jl ~

5' '

:\~imml

1

Meigs
........ .. 1.2 8 14 8-42 .
MU!er . ........... .......
14 10 4 12-40 '

:il'J

41,.&lt;,

51~

.412
.lll

·""

61-:

JL ~

.lilt
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31·1

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4

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......,.""'..._

•8 FT. BED
•6 CYL. ENGINE
•3 SPD . TRANS

•REAR STEP BUMPER
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fl

'\'!;)!

f.

II

'lh.') :/91 • :R'J

p.m.

S1 I.OUIS :11 ~· York GlaniS, 1 p.m .
Dallas a l Sl&gt;anle. 4 p.m ,
Tampa Ba.~ at San Frllllclk'O, 4 p.m

!i :t ' 11
:~r:.; JJ:l :!H
.'iu.tkJII.U l 'unkn:nl ' '

11
11

o
n

.~m

;

I

..1:!.1

I

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0

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1
(·,.,cral
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DMroit

n

~1irtnt "1011l
C'h)(' 3~ [)

t&gt; i
li i
'1 \I

Bin

Tnmp(l ll;n

Cll'Veland al Denver. 4 p.m.
ll'rw York JC'ts at Bal timol't', 4 p.m .

m

~~Game
MJ~ t a

.tH!i H2 27':1

i

c ......ll

Lori Angeles Rams at Ptllladeiphli!. 1

200

~

4 \ H.J m ~.
\ ',...,. OrJ0ans
~n Frij nci!&gt;C'O
,\ tt.mm

~

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Waie&amp; Confennce

~

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1\"Y Rangl'rs
Philadelphia

~

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0

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0

..'"l'l8 3.12 u~
.462 ~ m

\Va.s hin,o:TlXl
Pi 11sOOrgh

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PMI.rtdl DtvWoo
\\' L T Pts GF GA
16 9 1 3J 1H 94

9

4

32

lt:B

14 8
12 13

14

3

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103

G 17

2
3

7ii
LS

3 21

1

7

New Jersey

.&gt;t-&lt;'llnrhrd pla}·o lf spot

Sanda}·'s Games
• Buffalo at Kansas Cl~·. I p.m .
C'hlc agn nt Grt.l' n &amp; y. 1 p.m .

Mlam[ at Houston. 1 p.m
~N· Or lea ns at ~ ("W En KJ illl rl .

&amp;dlato

~8333

Boston

15

~""'
Montreat

1 p.m.

Har110rd

101

•
•

I.)

96
El!
9'2 151
81 1(11
tii 124

·2 :l2 U4
~~ 11
3 Jl LJ)
11 1J 1 23 100 .
9 1122078
fi

E~glettes

MEN 'S
BOATERS

~
~"

;wu Seco nd .\ vc.

..,

La Iavette 'lall
Ga l iipolis . 0 .

The
1 Shoe Cafe

93

71
10'2
102
88

;

ADGamfti

sale oils limit t 2 Regular

W L P OP

Team

PREP

INCLUDED

2
1
2
2

155
60
83
U1

187
82
111
129

Pl. Pleasan t .......................... 0 0

0

0

S.tvf' up to

1.66

soc

lhru

.

After mig's $1.50 rebale

Prestone
Super Sealer or
Super Flush

Gasket Compound
T2·03V Reg. 1.89

•7518 12oz .. •7450 13oz.

Logan Ill l'l!aliena 53

2§C

1.59
Titeseal

Gumout Carb/Fuel
System Cleaner
Reg. !.99·2.19

Grt'ent'iekl 42 Washlngton CH 32

Friday's f'8IIUII8:
Ftock Hill 65 Raceland 48
Gallipolis 56 Waverly 46
Southern 49 Southwestern 36
NorthweSt 86 Fairland 64
Boyd Coun ty Rl Wheelersburg m
Portsmouth 71 Colu mbus East 58

...

, ,., ~--

•SPARE TIRE
•VINYL BENCH SEAT

7.38 sale per 2 gal

·2.00 mig's rebate
5.39 Your cost
alter mfg' s rebate

C!Janoel Master·

A'Bk for a live demonstration of Channel Master
Satellite Reception J:quipment, out-of-this-world
reception at a down-to-earth price- today!

49.88

champagne,

Plasticolor Pick-Up
Truck Mats

Plasticolor
Custom
Floor Mats
per pair front , for most popular

Sagaz Acrylamb Genuine Sheepskin
Bucket Seatcovers
·
Seatcovers
Reg. 16.95 Universal Reg . 59 .95 Low and high back buckel,
Champagne 124045, Silver 124047

17.88

doroeslic and import earn black.
brown. and blue

a11d sijver

Fi"'il

Hannan Trace at Sduth Point

~··-'

Athens at Gall!p:JIIs
Ironton at Loi{an
Wheelersburg at Waver ly
Miami Trace at Greenfield
Oak HllloBI Sou!h Polnl

Sd'J( OVPf

6.88

b

.Creepers

ColumbuS South at Portsmouth
Mlntord at Nonhwest
Dec. 10 pmell'
Northwest at Rock HUJ

Reg. t2.95 3t0/t t tW Durable
hardwood consJruclion with padded
headrest &amp;
glide casters

Waverly at Ironton
Wheelersburg at Jackson
Columbus Brtggs at Portsmouth

Save over 5

7.88

36.88

13.88

lnterdynamics
Defogger/Defroster

2 Ton Bottle Jacks
Reg. 9.95
4 Ton .... .. . . 9.88

Reg. 18.95 BD·t Hot air defogs and

Reg 12 95

melts snow and ice last
~-- --- -~-~-·

to in s tall

6 Ton. . .

TVC Standlnp (VIII'Sicy)

Tnm

•

WLPOP

12.88
Reg. 15.95

Trimble ... ... ............ ....... . ...... 2 0 139 87
Nei .·York . . ...................... .. ..... 2 0 133 1~
Bolpre ·· ···· ··········· ········· ' ······· 2 0 ll8 &amp;l
Molgs ........ .. .. ..... .. .. ...... .. ..... ..2 0 1ll 115
Alexander .. . ........................... 2 0 109 101
tl~a~Hocklnlt .. ............ .......0 2 100 128

V!ntoo County ... ...

...•...0 2 98 101

l\llller .................. ......... ..... 0

2 93 129

Warren Local ....... .. ........ .... ... 0 2 91 110
Wollstoo ..... .......... .. .... , ..... ..... 0 2 82 137

.

WLPOP
2 0 106 64
2 0 99 83
2 0 Ill 17
2 o 17 64
1 1 88 89
1 1 53 53
0 29398
0 2 16 83
0 2 12 Ui
026271

Trimble
Be)pre

Net.·York

-

~aJ.IIocldng

"•llnon

-:18

lleo.t-

From

Maintenance Free
Calcium
Batteries
40 Month ballery Reg. 32.88
50 Mu11U1

Reg . 4t.88

70.95

f:

34.88
41.88

New Heater Cores
. F,.m

Welllloa .:J

w........ Local 51

Water Pumps
Wt •ebu•ld e och IOf •II \16 C hen li9 71 w 11h 2t:IBt

Reg .. from 2 29

·eo Month Reg . 47.88
AU batteries with ewchange For most

•'l\1mble 66 ,._,t.Hocklns 411

TOIQue Starter Batleiles
~eg.

25.95

Remanufactured

With exchange

1.99 Theomostats

9.88

d, I ,

L11~\ f'r1c('

New Radiators
From

•! 'I 'v

14.95wm,
Chew y &amp;
18.95

d om e"1C 4 6 c ~ l

1etlu•l&lt;l e• c l"l to ' m os1
sm biOGk 1969 71

Wttn f etlull&lt;l

~•c h

101 !1'1 051

8 c•l domes he

Blower Motors
with exch......... ..... Fr om

Reg 22.95 31.95

New Heater Control Valves
Reg. from 10.50..... From

cars and light trucks

• Melp 49 Miller 33
Belpre 66

26.88

(-)

'l'..n ·

MD!er "

"The Original Drifters"

' 12.88

Greenfield at HUlsboro

Molas

.

0
0
0
1
2

OP
43 32
36 28
0 0
2!! 36
139 1J9

Russell at Ironton
Lancaster at Logan

69.88

9.95

Fan Clutches

17.88 With exchange 72 month

' NellmYllle-York 53 Vinton County .t8

:Dec.t..-.:

'

Wellatoa at Alexander \
Fe&lt;ll!l'ol-IIDCidl!lat !Je~Jll)&gt; ·
N-Yorl&lt; 11M-

MWor o11'r1nlllle

I

~·

~pmeo:

Vtn!on County
WAm.'ll Local

JUST SOUTH OF

P.M.

2 ~·

··--~ ·- :· ·

)..ogan 36 Athens 28

gives you
more!

I

Admission

45

F'riday's rt11ul.8:
lrooton 43 Jackson 32

TV

Satellite TV comes direct from the studio to the
satellite to you, as ~lear as a studio monitor, with
more choices than you ever dreamed possible.
See uncut and commercial-free movies, the hottest .sports, news, and entertainment. You can
even get direct access to the latest financial
information just like a stock broker!

SUNDAY, DEC. 4th
e DOORS OPEN AT ·5:00
e SHOWTIME,7:00 P.M.

Itonton ........ ..... ........ .. ..... .... . !
l
Glilllpolls .................. ............. 0
Alhens .... ..... . :... ..... .. ... .... ... .... o
· Jackson ........ . ...... ............. .... 2

You don't have to go all the way to Larry's home in
Easton, PA to take him up on his offer . We can
show you all the stars he's talking about right in
your own home!

*Four Hours Of
Show And Dance!

47

W L P

Logan ... ........ ... .. ...... .... .... ... ..

Satellite

-

"THE ORIGINAL
DRIFTERS"

*5.

~

Team

•

00

. ... .... . ........ 1 0

Tulalo
Frldas's results:
Ironton 56 Jackson 53
Athens 47 Loga n 45

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Presents

=.

OP

Gallipolis..... .. .......
.......... 0 0 0 0
Logan ........ .. .... .... .......... ...... 0 1 45 47
Jackson ...... .. ....... ........... .. .... 0 1 53 56

Under The Dome

•

WLP

SEOAL Reserves

Point Pleasant

Anti bo1ls run s cooler

. Ironton .. .. .. ... .... .... ... . . ... ... 1 0 56 a1
Athens ..... ..

on 2 gal

Prestone
Anti-Freeze
Sal e pr ice 3.69 ea. Limit 4

SEO.U. Only

~

Chevrolet-Oidsmobi le Inc.

446-3672

2.69ea.

After mig's $2.00 rebate

Sale price 1.75 ASI27 . ASI07

Russell 7S South Point 59

PLUS ANY APPLICABLE TAXES

f1UH

~

·. 3
AUJi\•V•All'] ~

0 56 53
0 65 48

1 211 183
1 167 142
Galltpol~ ................................l 1 103 96
Nont1west ....... .. ............. ....... .! l ll'&gt; 138

Delivered $7427.

AND

~Oj

9::!·.

Greenfield ....... 1'.................. , . ..3 0 176 128
Sou thern .... , .... ..-....... .. ........... 2 0 99 83:

Greenfield 60 Teays Valley 46

FREIGHT

WW\S!JII)

"'
~

Quaker State 10W30
Kendall 10W30, Pennzoii10W30
Valvoline 10W30, 10W40, or
HPO
30
All
89C
99C

Areacag
standings
TWO-HANDED SHOT- Mike Chancey (32) pumps a jump shot
over the anns of MOler's Keith Roberts (41) during Friday's TVC
contest at Mliler. Melp won Its second straight league contest, 4&amp;-33.

~Oj AllJi\·V·AU'l -

.~

win

EAST. MEIGS - The Eas tern
Eaglettes girls' basketball team
posted Its first victory of the year by
defeating Kyger Creek in the SVAC
opener at Eastern High School,
66-24. Easterrr Is now 1·2 on the
season and 1.0 in the SVAC.
The Eagles of Coach Sue Arnold
exploded into the Initial le~d a nd
neve r . were serlously threatened
despite fine hustle by the Kyger
Creek Bobklttens. Three Eaglettes
broke Into double figures with
outstanding offensive nights .
Margaret Horner, a sophomore
center, led the Eaglettes with 20
points, while senior Dee Dalley
notched 16, and Angle Spencer 10.
Amy Roush led the KC offense
with 10 points.
From the field the Eastern squad
shot 44 percent hitting 29 of 60 shots.
while sinking eight of 18 from the
line. Eastern grabbed 57 rebounds
overa ll , le d by Horner's 13.
Spencer, Wilson and Hibbs each
had eight.
Eastern hosts Hannan Trace on
Thursday.

•

.

·c
..c

1\diVT\'&gt; DlvlskiQ

I

.~

I

H~key

\\, ~1

For Chrislmas -

Lay-A-Way For Christmas- Lay·A·

t\! larna a1 M i ami, 4 p.m .

J)"2 2-l7

ll

I)

at Nt'W Yor k Jets, , 12:;,:)

p.m .

~

~~IIi ~1 :n 2
..Jti:i Ul ~
.'16:2 :£) J79
I 'll 191 ."JIO

11
l!

Pltls bu~ h

1% :.lj;:J

269 '!n
~..:111

:!l l

a t Detroit . 9 p.m.
Slltunla.v. Dec. 10

Jwwt8!-JI[)

Ironton ........... .. ...... :: .. ......... . )
Rock HW ........ ... ..... .. ... .. ...... . !
Portsmouth ...... ...... .. ...... .... .. .. 2
logan .............. .. ....... .. ...........2

... '

~

RIO GRANDE - The greatest
tournall],ent.
In the firs t night of the tourna·
point producer In college basketball
ment , Rio Grande will face Frank·.
history w!ll he a part of ceremonies
lin University at 9 p.m . Bloomfield
at the Bevo Francis Basketball
College will face Indiana Universl·
Classic scheduled for Dec. 9·10.
Oarence " Bevo" FrancJs, who ty / Purdue University a t 7 p.m .
Losing teams will meet at 7 p.m .
was the c atalyst of the 1952·53 Rio
Grande College team tpat went . the following night with the cham·
39.0, will be honored at the p!onshl p clas h a t 9 p.m .

Clm:Jnn :ui at P1nsbw"gn. 1 ~. rn .
:ulitn1(J ar Washl ngtoo., t p.m .

'!!'7 ,'Rt

'i.~ 2r.

),o.IU I~

:'\ . \"

f'uottl :UI 1~ ·:\1.,'\11'

.nt6

i 'hi i,HJI•Ipht,l

:0.1

Hwuo..

,\nwrit:an ( o nft· r~~ ~~ ' '
F..a...t
\\' I. T P• ·t. I'F I'A
~
~
o .1lt! :tu !!15
.\ 1Lllnl
Ruffalo
7 li n - ~*' :.:.m 'W.
ti 7 I) ,.)h:J 21!1 .n:l
HaltimJrt·
67
fl
.-lii2UO ~
:\"f'\.1' EnAtand
ij
7 rJ .-'11:1 m2 l!!i
:-.: Y. Jet!&gt;
f t'fltml
!l 4 n er2 ~m
f'1!1 S bi.J 1~h
8 5 I) .'.il5 ~3 lli-1
t'IC'\'l"'land
~
j{
0
.3&amp;') :82 2ti3
C'!ncinn;.~ ti

• ·"""" ,.,
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:
~

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Football

7''

~· J i ll! •

0

6

t':w.t

Phlludl'lphia iii Ho~t on, ~ · :a1 p m
Phoml&gt;: m s.to Antonio. 11::1v p m
~~~~ Dk):o ..u Los An~('lf'~ . 10 p. m .

'
'

;

So n lJk\1&lt;1

Chillicothe 60 Ponsmouth 58

..

Bevo Francis Classic set Dec. 9-10

.rm

fl

""" n
J

11

!)('fl\ 1'1

K.m""" lih

Qi7

6

1 L,\f!alci••'

11•,

MllwOl ukrc it.!. :--;,...,., . .1('1...,•\ HI";"
l : lah llti. PhoPnL\ II I

8

1 t!

Ho.•.,•on
.'

Nov. 28 results:

Downing U.O.fl ;
Hampton 0.()-0; OeW~sc l).l · t Brown 5-2·12:
M a rgoet.~ 0.0.0: Owe n I·J-5: P . Howarrll.Q-2;
D. Howa rd 1.0.2; Conley 0.0{1. Total'! R-fj.'!2,
GAllS BIU(' lm~ (4{lJ - Atklnson .l-241:
Stra l! 3-Q.6; Owens 5-0· 10: Saunders 2·2.fi;
Ha rrison 2·2-6; Slone" 0{1{1: M E'('k.~ G.Q.O;

Ga!llpolls, .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. . .. . .. .. . 10

1

Ne-A· J £'r5(&gt;}'

~~

,2

81 3

New 'iork

i

:!7tl.

Or&gt;trui t LX Ml :t111&lt;.~
Cif'I.P)(md !Cfl. l nc1i.t11:1 'Ill
S.m ,\ moh it'l l tl. ('hie,, ~ •ll
HOUH)OO t!J. Sl;•;:,111•' )If!

l Pl't.

Athens .............. .. :...... ........... .1
Wheelersburg .... .. ..... ... ........ ,. 0
Waverly ........... .. ....... .. .......... 0
Jackson .............. ...... .. ...........0

-

WOOdrUm 0·0·0: Gran t 1-J.J: Ca ll 0·1·1. Total:s
' 1&amp;&amp;-40.
By quart.ers:
4- 22
\Vave rJy ....................... . J 7

lUton II:\, Po t11:mll

"""""'"'""""'w -GB
'·'t:i ' 1'2'2
""''""
" '' ·"" '2
Phltadetph.t a

Fisher ().1-1. Total!i 18-1349.
llllllfor (iL'Il - Todd Plerco 1{1.2; Ray Jenks
(].{}.{!; Paul Westervelt 0-0-0: Keith Roberts
34-10. Total8 9-1.5-33.
•

By quarters:

1-lid a.~ ·.~I lam ....

Na&amp;lonal Bas~ r\.81oolial loft
EASTERN OO!'I.'FERE."it"E

~\ ]h

South Point ....... .. .............. ...... 1 1 123 136

Imps down Cubs
for first victory

Wav crl~·

c
c
evrp1et -1 0 ustom Deluxe

rr•iiiii-:~~~:-ii!l~·-iii·~~~~!ii~~~~~-i!iiiiiiliiiii~!i~~~~iiiiiii;;~~~
!he

~~~rr!:~O::. ~~n~·~~=rt~~5~~~
The Tigers, now 0.2 , held

o.

Basketball

KeMedy 0.2-2; Jackie Welker O.U; Dave

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-7

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

Scoreboard ...

4-0-S: Jay Evans 1}-H: Mike Chancey $-G.lO; '
Jay Carpenter 6-2-14: Lee PoweU 1-1-3; Mike

GAHS, down 15 early, tops
visiting Waverly five, 56-46
GA LLIPOLIS - Wa ve r ly hit
eight of it s firs t nine s hots from the
fie ld, a nd zoomed to a 27·12 lead
.f,·r st ha lf hern
Wl'th 3·. 58 left ,··n lhn
&lt;
&lt;

December 4, 1983

charges In the lead.
The Marauders return home this
Tuesday with a TVC tilt with
Nelsonville-York at 6 p.m. Both ,
squads are 2.0 In TVC play. •
lllelp t41ll - Nick Riggs 2-5-9; Rick Wise •

eyes, however.
.. Powell was ready to play more
than anybody on the team . He
played good defense and rebounded
wei!," said Drummer. Powell had
eight rebounds and three points
coming off the bench.
.. It was good to win, but I was
unhappy with the way we played.
We didn' t execute one part of our
Trimble. The Tigers had 16 turnov- game plan until the third quarter. 1
e rs, four in each period.
was djsappo!nted In the game as a
Gallipolis. 1-1. will host Athens
h 1 .. d
F n"d ay m
. 1ts
. So ut h eastern Ohio w
o e, mentor.
a ded the second·year
Meigs
League opener. GAHS played a
Miller, who was led In scoring by
non-league game a t Rock Hlll o Keith Roberts with 10, made nine of
Saturday night.
60 shots from the field for23 percent
Waver ly will host Wheelers burg while MeigS made lB of 46 for 39
Friday a nd travel to Ironton percent . The Falcons, now
2
Saturday.
overall and 1n TVC play, hit on 5 of
Box score:
26 free throws· (58 percent) and
Waverly t461 - S!rlckland 2&lt;!4 ; TP&lt;'ters Meigs hit on 13 of 24 (54 percent).
0- H : arcilcnbach 5-2-12: Trlmbl(' 10.1 -2t
Meigs grabbed. ~•1 rebounds com·
LewiS 2·2-6: Klinker I-{).2: Ha rris 0-0.(1; M.
Tockcii iJ.&lt;J.il. Totals 21H;.46.
pared to Miller's 3(). Chancey and
GaDIP&lt;Jl• &lt;56! - Ellcessor 74·1R: D"ncan Powell had eight each to lead Meigs
()-{)-{): Carty 1-{}-2: Wolfe 4-2-10: Carter 1-0-2;
Dressel n9: s.rgdoll 2·1·5: Bostic ~10:
while Todd Pierce's seven topped
Garber IJ.&lt;J.D: Fellorc {HHJ: Lilllelohn IJ.().(): Miller. Meigs had 14 turnovers
Pasquall' 0-0-0: Splete Q.{).(}: Tope 1}..{)..{)_Totah
U.l\.M&gt;. .
compared to the Falcons' 16. Each
By'"""'"'"
team was whistled for 22 personal
Waverly
17 12 R 9--&lt;6
fouls.
GllllipOI.l§
8 11 16 15-56
Meigs' biggest lead came with Tl

0

.

' VInton County
Warren Local
. at
'
It

HOURS: Sun.l0-5
M·f 8:311-8:00
Sat. 8:3().6 .

•

209 UPPER RIVER RD.
J

446-3807
•)

•'

•

�'•

•
Page C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

Florida Sl. 67.

College scores

cage scores

Frida)•'• follflt• S..U.ba,ll

Bo:Y• BMil.I:Cball

a, 'DR "-.iated ..,._

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

DJblln 8'2. Marys\'iill? ~
E. Ointan 57. Waynt'S\'Ilk' -U
E. P all'Stii'K' iJ, Prll'I'Sburl). Sj&gt;rin ~ , ij.'l
Easflak(' K ~- Cle. n ru..~n -¥.1 •
l l 11501 6.1. S Cemrdl 10
Elmwood Ill. Wll(dnorl', :\CYI'

AdEna 53, Pal!lt Val. 50

.

AJa"OII Hoban 43, Akron E. 42
Akron St.V-St .M fa, l.JxlisvUk&gt; Aquinas

s.we.

.u: BernP Unkm C

Arcadia 74, VanlUE' 4S
AstltaWLa 66, Ashtabula Harbor 6-t OT
Al.hm.~ '17 , Logan 4."i

"ron

t 'li't'lantt- 7-t, Kf'\'(i!OIK'
t~IJI1

A\loo 52. Columbia 41
Avon l...ake 49. Rock)·

Rlvrr il6
Barbrt1on 87, AkrOn Flft'Stone 5.'i
Blly 89, N . Olmsted 42
Bf.dfurd «1, Maple Hts. 4.'i

R:'lletontal!le 59. LonOOrl 46
BelprE&gt; !ifi, Wcllston :iJ
Berk.shlrl' Ill. Rk:brnQnd Hts J2
&amp;rlin W. ReservE;" 57. Columt. ana
C'reS't\~' 54
~thel 47, 1)1-C'wnty N. 4~
BexJEo:v 73. BuCiu~'l' Val 3fi
Atii: Walool :'a Olmlangy 56
BLaCk RivC'r U, Mupl('lon J6

CrwnsbuJl,! CIU'n TI. !{('\'Crt'

"
"'

\ol

Brookhu\'l'T\ 65. Col

I n{t'pmli&gt;net' ·

Co!. Ea~trruor Hi. Col. Nonhl..md fl'!
Cot F'rank.lln His. 76. Plt&gt;kl'rtn,~t~ o n ~
Cot H :n11('~- -1-1. Col [)(&amp;Jk:.; -l'\
Col Miffi1n Kl. C'ol. Brig_i!S &amp;'J
C'nl S1.Charlf"l 4~ . C.ol \l.'('hrlt'' 11
CQI. SOUth !1'1 , Col. WhetSIOOP 72

C'DI. Walnul Ri~· 70. Col. t~·n lrn ni;iJ Ii-I

Col Walter.'(Jn i~. Col. Rradv 5.1
('ol w.--~t ;,j , Col. UndC'n Ml; Kinlry -l-3
Cotum oos GTO\'r It!.. Pauld1~ 52
('umH&gt;aut ~- A.shlabula Sl-lohn ~'!
Conotton \'al ~-J ewett -Sci()~
l'oplc\ Ill. FlPid -l6
Con -IU\I.'SQI'I R Pano.l:Jra-Giltna i'!
('~two:xl ;£1, Windham 40

Cl.lyahbJ:a Hts i'U. Bnxlitl)"n
l'YC A a. Strct'tsboro 61

~7

Dar Oakwood 5R. Brook\'iJI,-. 41
Da) _ Stflttlin::l 57. Tlpp City 5'!
Day. wavnr 73, Day. Cham.Jul 7fl
l'X'Itancc. 8:2. Sylvania Noi'thvlc-w !'il
D\&gt; lpl'n&lt;i Jclferson !'.6. Upper SC'lOIO Val .

5S

Df'tpm~

St.John 's 00. Celina 56

Or&gt;troil rMieh ..' Counll) ' Day Ill. Cl.- .
UniVet'!&gt;lty

~

Dctrolt
R.1p! Jl

(Mich. J Ti'mplf' .'ll, Emanuel
.

~5

Crow Cif)' hl. Ga hanna .ll
Gtm 'f'POI't -12. UPJFr Arlington -11
Hamilton !15, Das, Falr'oorn 6-1
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11'ainlng program, IS being driven on Ihe roads around
Zanesville, Ohio to train drivers from Cleveland,
Colwnbus and Pittsburgh. (AP Laserphoto ).

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) Stiildng Greyhound bus employees
say they're only trying to exert
pressure with their presence, but
Musldngum County Sherltf Bernie
Gibson Isn't taking any chances.
There was no violence reponed
when about 50 . strikers gathered
Frlday at a Holiday Inn east of here
where substitute drivers are being
trained. The strikers vowed to
return today.
Sherltf's deputies from three
counties marched !our abreast in
lull Mot gear to head off a possible
..iJconfrontatlon.
"We just want them tD know we're
here and we're watching evecy
move they make, " said stliking
drlverRogerWalton . "We're hereto
put the heat on. "
About lJ trainees who reportedly
are from Columbus, Cleveland and .
. Pittsburgh are using the motel on
Interstate 70 a5 a base and are
expected to continue training for two
to lour weeks.
Musldngum County Sherltf Ber·

nie Gibson, saying he wanted to
head off any trouble, contacted
other sheriffs Thursday night.
About60 deputies with riot sticks in
hand · were present when the
trainees left for a training dtive
Fli&lt;jay morning.
The trainees, riding in unmarked
silver-and-white buses, and the
deputies were met at the e nd o! the
motel's driveway by around Amalgamated Transit Union m embers
and supporters fro m Columbus,
Cleveland, Portsmouth, Pittsburgh
and Charleston, W.Va . The ATU
went on strike against the bus line
last month.
The strikers shouted "scab" at the
trainees and hurled insults at the
helmeted deputies. There was no
violence reported.
Gene Clay, who Identified himself
as an ATU executive board member
from Charleston, charged Greyhound with using "Gestapo tactics"
to break the union. Clay said other
training sessions were taking place
in Indianapolis, Macon , Ga., and
Paducah, Ky.

.'

: Shuttle glitch fixed; experiments continue
'

•
••

SPACE CEN'IER, Houston (AP) - Spacelab's
astronauts pressed ahead with dozens ofexperiments
Saturday after fixing a jammed tape recorder that
threatened to curtaU their mission, while scientists on
Earth called the stream of information from the orbit

"excellent."

·

several C&lt;?untlies, Including Angola, Sudan, Iran,
Nigeria, Libya and Turkey.
Commander John Young and pilot Brewster Shaw
alternated at the controls of the space shuttle
Colwnbia, which carries the23-foot Spacelabcyllnder
in Its cargo bay. Both have been relatively quiet
throughout the flight as the focus has been on the
science work.
Much of the science was nearly wiped out Friday
when a transport roller jammed on a high-speed tape
recorder that stores data from the 73 experiments on
board. After several hours of trouble-shooting,
Parker found the problem and corrected It by rotating
the roller back and forth.
Charles Lewis, lead flight director !or the mission,

.

may be unique, Knott reported·. Alurrtinum and zinc,
which do not combine on Earth because of their
different densities, were' melted a nd mixed in one of
Spacelab's three gra,1ty-free furnaces.
"They obta ined ma ter ial that is vecy porous. a
metal with great strength and little weight ," Knott
said. Such material might be useful in making
high-structural strength materials for au·craft In
future orbiting factories. he added.
NASA officials had not yet decided whether to
extend the mission from nine days to 10, saying that
depends on how supplies last and how the weather
shapes up at the landing site at Edwards Air Force
Base In California. An extension would de lay the
Teturn 10 Earth from Wednesday until Thursday.

said the loss of the recorder would have significantly
affected the data return and forced the cutback of
several experiments.
The recorder sends data to Earth at the rate of 32 to
48 megabits per second, equal to 600 10-volume sets of
encyclopedias a minute. By contrasi, the slow-speed
method available without the recorder transmits at
the rate of one megabit per second.
Karl Knott, mission scientist for the European
Space Agency, which . built Spacelab, said the
astronauts are reporting Immediate results on some
o! the materials-processing experiments, with one
significant finding logged Friday.
Merbold, a West German metals expert, used one
of Spacelab's furnaces to create a metal alloy that

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LOCKING THE TRAINING BUSD! - A
Greyhouud bus, .olrlpped ol lis marldDp, Ill loeked
Thursday after being used lo lraiD new bus drivers to
replace workers. The bus, one ollwo being used In the

'

NICE .
CLEAN
-=

"It says 'may.' They're the judges in the
courtroom. They hear the case. And If they say this
man or woman ought to go to jail, they go to jail," he
said.
Department statistics s how that for the first six
months the current drunk dliving law was in effect,
ther,e was a 21 percent reduction In the number of
alcohol-related fatalities and accidents statewide.

. ,./

50

91:

chamber Thursday after an attempt to retain the
mandatocy jaU term failed .
Mallocy said the current law does not provide (or
alternative program sentencing. " It doesn't give any
leeway to suspend any sentences or db anything else.
I've made Illegal to do this," he said.
Mallocy said his btU gives judges the option of
sending an offender tb jail or an a lternative program.

Strikers gather
at. Greyhound Bus
• •
training center

The emphasis was on materials processing and
medical tests Saturday as Red Team astronauts Ulf
Merbold and Bob Parker and the Blue Team of Owen
Garriotl and Byron Lichtenberg continued the
round-the-clock, two-shlit ·operation that began with
'liftoff from Flolida on Monday.
• The flight plan also called for them to study stars
, deep In space, to probe the atmosphere with electron
' ,b eams and to take hlgh·resoiui:lon mapping photos in

Introducing The
The ril,.,.,_
radard
r
atth~ right
pnce.

COLUM)'lUS, Ohio (AP ) - U
state education officials take steps
to Improve Ohio's schools, the
president of the Ohio Education
· Association says teachers lntend .to
have a say in the matter.
' Don ' Wilson, president of the
' !Kl,oo:J.member teachers' union, was
to outline steps planned by the union
In a speech today to the OEA
Representative Assembly here.
Wilson said teachers woUld be
asked their opinions on Issues
including merit pay, certification of
educainrs, teacher training, student
assessment and learning·matertals.
Their reponses are to be presented
to the OEA assembly in May.
"Whatever is wrong with Ohio's
public schools cannot be fixed
without the help of those teachers
already in the ctassroo~," WUson
said. "It is sheer trtckery and deceit
to talk about recruiting better
students into teaching without first
examining the current clrcumslan. ces that discourage teachers."
. WUson said excellence in educa, ' lion cannot be achieved without a
: • ·lookatthecondltlonsthatdtivegood
teachers from tbe classroom.
"Improved working conditions,
, Including substantial salary In·
· creases, Is thecenterofOEA'seffort
• • tolmprovedteachlng,"hesaid.

1982 Olds
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December 4 1983

correct to assswne there Is not a standard statewide.
An~ what we are after here ... Is a standard and to
make sure that the law does give judges that option,"
Ross said.
Ross said Friday the alternative sought by Mallory
had oliglnally been proposed in the current law out
was removed before final passage.
"We luive favored all along an alcohollntetventloii
program for !lrst-tlme offenders so long as it met
state certification and was 72 hours in length," Ross
said.
"We have no problem with this legislation. It Is
what we have wanted from the beginning," be said.
He said It had been recommended by a 38-member
task Ioree on drunk dtivlng created by former Gov.
James Rhodes.
·
Representatives sent the measure to the upper

OEA to suggest
school changes

Taking Charge During.December
We Are Having A Month-Long

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7:30p.m.

0&gt;

.John l.lt'ftn 9L Slll!f'id&lt;m Ill

'

"I expected my greatest difficulty here (in the
House). I never can predict what's going to happen In
the Senate. But we didn't pass II by an oveiWbelrning
margin here," Mallory said.
"I think It's a good approach. I think if It's used
eorrectly we can diminish the number of repea t
offenders who may go out and seliously Injure or kill
someone else," he said.
The state's current DWI Jaw, which took effect
March 16, makes a three-day jail sentencemandatocy
!or first offenders. But prop:ments and opponents '
agreed that sentencing .ls not uniform at present
because some judges at'!! sentencing violators to
alternative programs despite the speelflc lack of
author1zatlon.
"I think there have been different Interpretations of
the drunk dtiving law as It stands now. I think It Is

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\oJumblal1;l 67. LL&lt;;txln 61

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ A House-passed bill
authorizing judges to sentence first-time drunk
drivers to alternative programs Instead of jail Is
heading for the Senate with support from the
Department of Highway Safety.
John Ross, the department's public information
officer, said the agency endorses the bill sponsored by
Rep. Wtlllam Mallory, D-Cinclnnatl.
"The legislation is really just a fine tuning of the
drunk dtivtng law . It In no way weakens the cuiTelll
lawr" Ross satd.
.
Under the bill, which cleared the House 57-31,
judges would be authorized to send !irst·tlrne DWI
offenders to certified dtiver Intervention programs In
lieu of a mandatory three days In jaU.
Mallory said he had no sense of what the Senate
might do with the measure.

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

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JIM
MINK

00 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH.
BIU GENE
JOHNSON

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON

A!II"Mi•ted Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Amin Gemayel of Lebanon
;encts high-level talks .with U.S.
leaders encouraged by strong
·A merican support and "opportuni.Ues !orpiogress,'' but with no quick
solutions In sight, a key aide says_
"President Gernayel wants vecy
quick Ifrogress on all fronts,"
Lebanese Foreign Minister Elie
Salem told reporters Friday afternoon after the latest round of
meetings with Secretary of State
··George P. Shultz.
"He Is notgolngto get this," Salem
said. "There are problems and
; bottlenecks..... You don't set every' thing you want.''
There was nothing In remarks by
either side to Indicate Shull and
Gemayel had agreed on anything
that will help achieve a rapid
• withdrawal of foreign forces from
• Lebanon.
As is common wben diplomats
discuss difficult problems of great
• , complexity, Salem was less than
. specific when asked exactly what
: opportunitie$ he sees to ease
• : Lebanon's civU .war and erect .a
: , govenunent of nat!Qnal reconcilla·
• t1on among wilrring factions. He
• also had no specifics on how to
· achieve the withdrawal of Israeli,
; , Syrian and Palestinian forces !rom
· his country.
' But Salem did say he believes
· : Syt1a Is displaying a new and
-: ")Xllltlve spirit- ... to help lhe
:· Lebllllese govemment COII!lDlldate
:' Its political authority In the

Defense minister
blasts Salvadoran
'death squads'

country."
.
After the latest round of talks with
Gemayel, Shultz told journalists ·~e
and the Lebanese president agree
there is a "genuine sense of
urgency" about the need to make
progress in Lebanon.
And Shultz anliQUnced the forma tion of joint mllltary and economic
committees to speed the search for
solutions.
Last May 17, Israel and Lebanon
signed an agreement calling in
principle for the withdrawal · of
IsraeU forces tram Lebanon. But the
lsraeU govenunent says it will not
be Implemented until •arrangements are made for the withdrawal
of Syrtan anci"Palestlnian forces as
v.ell.
.
Salem said U.S. envoy Donald
Rumsfeld, a former secretary of
Defense, will be back in the Middle
East next week to discuss "au
matters relating to tbe Implementation and envlromnent or the

agreernmt .•,

'

Gemayel's visit to Washington
this week followed a vlslt by IsraeU
Prime Mlnlster Yltzhak Shamlr,
Salem was asked if U.S. of!iclais
had pressed Lebanon tD enter direct
talks with Israel, which occupies the
southern section of the country. He
said such questions !lad been raised
aod labeled them ·'innocent."
"People do forget Lebanon· is an
Arab country in a weak political.
position and could be subjected to
atiAick and blackmail," Salem !lllld.
"Lebanon Is not in position to
break step ~th the reilt of the Arab

world," he sald.

SAN SALVADOR, EI Sii lvador
(AP) - Defense Minister Carlos
Eugenio Vides Casanova urged
Salvadorans " to pursue a nd de·
nounce" Iightlst death squads,
whUe the nation's archbishop said a
Mass honoring four U.S. churchwomen on the third a nniversary of
their murders.
Vides Casanova's condemnation
Fliday was the strongest statement
a goverrunent official has made
here against the squads blamed for
many o! the 40,000 civillan deaths
during the stalemated, four-year
civil war.
His comments came as President
Reagan said he vetoed a bill linking
U.S. milltary aid for El Salvador to
· human rights progress because It
would not help the u.s. effort to
persuade the Salvadoran government to control the death squads.
Vldes Casanova's comments appeared to be in response to stepped
up American pressure that ell ·
maxed with a Nov. 25 speech by U.S.
AmbaSsador Thomas R. Pickering,
who castigated Salvadoran authori·
ties for falling to halt the tenmist
groups.
"The death squads must disappear forever as
token of our
decision to combat them and our
faith in the democratic p~ss,"
said Vldes Casanova, a former
national guard commander. "All
Salvadorans should pursue and
denounce them ... with one voice we
should proclaim that no cause can
justify their existence."
The death squads are widely

a

WREATH LAYING - Lebaneeel're8klent Amln Gemayel walks
anr fr4lm the Marble Corps Memorial in Waahlngton after laying a
wrea&amp;b a&amp; the Memorial on Ft1day. The feet ol the U.S. Marines,
deplded rallllng the fla« on the llland of Iwo Jbna during World War 0,
are vllllble. (AP LMerphoto) .

'

'

believed to he linked to seculity
forces a nd some U.S. and Salvado·
ran officials have said high army
a nd police officials are Involved .
The White House announced
Fliday that Vice President George
Bush will travel to El Salvador on
Dec. 11 to confer with senior
government officials about ''all
pe1tinent aspects G! American
support" for the beleaguered
government.
Meanwhile. aboui 15 priests and
300 Salvadorans carrying white
flowers and palm branches a ttended the Mass at the metropolitan
cathedral Friday honoring ~
churchwomen killed Dec. 2, 1980.
Five national guardsmen have
been chargt&lt;l In the women 's
murders, but little progress has
been made toward conviction.
Archbishop Arturo Rivera y
Damas ·said the Mass was held to
honor the slain Americans and "so
many others fallen in the bloodbat;l1
afflicting the countcy." He spoke of
the "good works" the women had
pertormed on behalf of impoverIshed Salvadoran war refugees.
"We still ask ourselves, surplised
and indignant, why were they killed
in this way? What was subven;ive
about their actions," he said.
In the United States, Robert C.
White, former U.S. ambassador to
El Salvador, said Friday two
national guardsmen who might
have been able to link higher·
ranking officers to the women's
murders were kUled this year by
"mllllary death sguads."

,

�0-2-lhe Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 4, 1983

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

Securities industry reviews
Wall Street.,s bullish· year
the Dow Jones Industrial average
hit a record high up in chilly New
AP Business Writer
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) - U York early In the week.
'The widely recognized avetageof
you had set out to find a financial
optimist among Boca Raton's'pools :Kl blue chips ended the week down
and palm trees, you wouldn't have 12.20 at 1,265.24, after hitting an
had far to look.
all-time closing peak of 1,287.20 on
· Your search could have started 'l'uesday.
The NYSE's composite index fell
and ended with just aboutanyofthe
0.89 to 95.66, while the American
1,001 or so Wall Streeters attending
Stock Exchangemarketvalueindex
the annual convention of the
rose 2.36 to 224.93.
Securities Industry Association.
Big Board volume averaged
There were industry leaders
100.21 mUllon shares a day, against
looking back over a prosperous 1983 95.28 mUllan the WeP.k before.
and talking of the prospects for
To be sure, the brokers had
further gains In their business next
matters to worry abbut - most
year.
notably the mounting Invasion ol
There were New York Stock their traditional business preservt'S
Exchange researchers reporting
by the banks, offering brokerage
that more Americans owned stock
and other investment servlt'es.
than ever before.
They grappled with the Issue last
There were economists and • year, and the year before that. And
financial advisers raising bullish all along, the bailk$ have. been
visions of the outlook for the making steady inroadS.
economy and the markets in 1984.
The prize they are fighting over is .
And between the speeches, the a business that has rarely seen
meetings and the tennis tourna· better times.
ments, you might easily have · The securtties Industry's profits,
happened upon a broker watching a which set records in 1982, are
financial news ticker with relish as estimated to be up 50 percent thiS
By CHEI' CURRIER

,·

CLOSE CAU. - A fireman washes away loam
from around a small pickup truck that uaught lire in
. rural llamllton Cmmty Friday. The truck was

uarrying low-level roadlacttve materials, but the
container wasn't damaged. (~ Laserphoto).

Motorists., group proposes
increased search powers
CLEVELAND, Ohio tAP ) -The
Ohio Motorists Association has
tJegun a new effm1 to make it ea.sier

for police to search for stolen motor
vehicles.
The Association unveiled its plan
last week at the club's headquarters
here. The group says police need
more powers in the fight against
au co thefts, which keep rising and
carrying insurance ra tes along.
The Amencan Civil Liberties
Union of Oh io would oppose any
effor ts to allow warrantless
searches, executive director Ben·
son A. Wolman said.
Proposed state legislation would
give the state Highway Patrol police
· powers on private property, something it now Jacks, said state
Highway Safety Director Kenneth
R. Cox and pa trol Lt. William
Flieger. They denied that the
proposal would turn the patrol into a
state police department.
Also, the OMA is backing a
Cleveland ordinance that would let
Cleveland police make warrantless
searches of such places as body
shops and junkyards to look for
vehicle identification numbers.

''Cleveland is the third largest city
in the number of stolen cars per
100,000," said Lawrence R. Maroon,
OMA president. ''It Is costing
Cleveland motortsts $200 a year
more in insurance rates to Slij)port
aura thefts."
•
The proposed Cleveland ordl·
nance is snagged on the search
warrant issue, police chief William
T. Hanton said. He said slmllar laws
have been passed in Mentor and
Willoughby and are modeled after a
California law that withstood a
Supreme Court challenge.
The California law dealt with
salvage yards and body Shsps, and
Hanlon. along with others, argues
that police already can cheek
taverns for the ages of patrons and
check pawnshops for records.
But Hanlon admitted that 'bills
being backed here would let police ·
on ariy property, including nonregulated or non-licensed businesses. such as service stations, to
check cars and parts.
Hanton urged seven state lawmakers and two legislative aldes
who met last week for a briefing on
the campaign to support state

-.

legislation on car theft. Similar bills
to the one expanding the powers of
the highway patrol have died in
other legislative sessions.
Sgt. George Ishetwood and detective Richard Bennet of the Cleveland police auto theft unit say
another state law is needed to end
. the titles of cars that are totally
FREMONT, Ohio (AP) - An
stripped. Insurance companies now
original investment of $25 in a
sell those titles at auctlon with the
classroom business exercise has
junked cars, and the sale of titles of
resulted in a big profit for a group of
unusable cars helps make it easier
first -graders, who got in early on the
to sell stolen cars, they say.
Care Bear Christmas craze.
William G. Selsam, director of the
"They got a hot Item and hit the
Ohio conference of clubs affiliated
market at the right time," said T.J.
with the American Automobile · Wolfe, one of the first -graders who
Association, said several proposed
cleaned up on the production of
bill attack the problem piecemeal. stuffed Care Bears made by Kenner
He said a catchall bffi is being
Toys.
·
prepared by Rep. Mike Stinziano,
The students, from Lutz ElemenD-Columbus.
tary School, formed the Busy
Wolman of the AO..U said very Beaver Production Co. to learn how
few circumstances should let police businesses ana the economy work.
do without a warrant.
They borrowed the capital from
"Pollee can always secure a the vice president of a Woodville
building to prevent matertal from bank. The original plan was to break
being moved out of it while waiting even and get a learning expertence.
for a warrant to be issued based on
But the children's product has
reasonable grounds," he said.
become one of the rages in
Christmas toys this vear. rtvaled

December 4, 1983

-

iunball

year. Jenrette projected a further 10
percent gain In 1984.
·
Meanwhile, the NYSE reported
that the brokers' "customer base"
- the number of Americans who
own stocks or stock mutual fundshad grown more than JO percent In
the last two years.
A survey taken by the Big Board
at midyear found 42.36 million
shareowners, an Increase of more
than 10 million since mld-1981.
According to the sun~ey results, ·
more than 18 percent of the
population now is partiCipating In
the markets, Including mlllions of
younger adults trying their hand at
the gameforthetirst time.

Public Notice

,....--il

To some, the numbers carried
wtth them an Implicit note of
caution. Adherents of the old
doctrine ol "contrary. opinion"
contend that stock prtces by their
very nature top out when market
enthusiasm ts at Its peak.
But John Phellm, president of the
NYSE, said he believed thf!SUrgeln ·
the ranks of Investors was part of "a
continuing trend, and nota two-year
aberration."

,.
Fremont, Sandusky and Toledb.
Care Bears can be bought in two
fonns, the completed version or in
fabrtc panels, which have to be sewn
together and stuffed.
"I was a ll•tie wonied if we didn't
do good. I was afraid some bears
would rtp and we woul&lt;Jn'! have
enough to sell," Wolfe sa'!a'.
His fears wen!'unwarranted.
Wolfe, who secured the bank loan
with a promise to pay $1 Interest,
repaid It this week and saved 75
cents because he was five months
early.
TheeamlngsfromBusyBeaver's
first venture are being reinvested in
production ot reindeer-like clothespin ornaments, cookies and pins.
When the finn Is liquidated at the · ·
endo theschoolyear,BusyBeaver
ts likely will be used to sponsor
a party for all Lutz first-grade
classes.

Travelling ·c ompanion never
Shipyards offering jobs to
suspected Huffman's past
laid off AmShip employees
he never was suspicious of the man

Huffman, indicted Thursday by a
federal grand jury in Columbus, Is
charged with 26 counts of embeZzlement stemming !rom the raid on the
automatic teller machines last Dec.
18. Huffman was a Bank One
employee at the time and disappeared the day of the thefts.

who is charged with stea ling$409,001
from automatic teller ' machines,
according to a published rep011 .
Bt1lce Lloyd was ordered out of
Australia because he was aboard
Huffman_ is being held in the
Huffman's yacht when police ar-.
rested the 25-year·old Columbus Darwin Jail, awaiting extradition
man Nov. 24 while he was moored in by the FBI, which has until Jan. 6.
Huffman's arrest surprtsed emDarwin, on the count ry's northside.
Lloyd said he met the man he ployees of Darwin's Mlndal Beach
knew as Steven A. Janney at a Casino. who had come to consider
regana in New Zeala nd ,andthatthe him as a courteous young man who
two quickly became friends , the handled himself well at the blackColumbus Citizen-Joumal reponed jack tables.
in a copyrtght story today.
"It was quite a big shock to
In retrespect, Lloyd said the everyone here when he was
amount of cash Huffman canied arrested ," casino manager Howard
Aldridge told The Columbus Discould have been a tip-off.
"He paid for everything in cash, patch. "He was a nice guy to deal to,
and he had a lot of gold coins, fairly quiet on the tables.
"He w~s very friendly, very
KruggerandS and Canadian gold
coins, 25 to 30 ($12,000 worth)," outgoing," Aldridge said. "He
played blackjack, played quite well
Lloyd said.
Lloyd told the Citizen-Journal that actually. He had his ups and downs,
Huffman said he had inherited the but he didn't seem to do anything to
excess.
money from his father.

" . .. everybody took him as a guy
who bought a boat, sailed to DaiWin
and just played blackjack."
LORAIN,Ohlo (AP) -Shipyards
Aldridge would not reveal in Baltimore, Boston and Norfolk,
amounts of money Huffman won or Va., have already begun offering
bet, but did say that he won more jobs to some of those thrown out of
than he lost.
work by Amertcan Shipbuilding
Huffman visited the casino Go.' s decision this week to close its
"about three nights a week" . Lorain yard, unjon officials said.
beginning Oct. 24, Aldridge told the
AmShip, based in Tampa, Fla.,
newspaper.
said Wednesday It was closing the
Aldridge said Huffman said little 85-year-Old shipyard because of a
about himself. "I certainly didn 't sharp decline In ship conslf1!Ctlon
inquire about his background,'' he and the repair business on the Great
said. "We mostly talked about the Lakes.
games. All he said was that he'd
The flrnt also has failed in recent ·
boughtaboatlnNewZealandandhe months to reach new contract
was going to sail back to Amertca agreements with six unions at the
and sell it for more than he bought yard.
it"
.
The Lorain yard once employed
Bruce McCormick, the Austral- about1,300people, but all remaining
ian legal aid solicitor who repres- hourly employees were laid of!
ented Huffman at a magistrate's recently.
Chuck Connors, vice president of
hearing Wednesday, said an Australlan friend of Huffman's, whom . . Boilermakers Local358, the largest
· he would not Identify, offered to post union at the Lorain yard, said
a surety bond.
. shipyards elsewhere have con·
Magistrate Alasdair McGregor tacted AmShip's Lorain unions to
rejected it. considering Huffman a offer jobs.
flight risk.
"A shipyard in , Norfolk has
aiready called the Boilermakers,
·asking for about 50 welders and
pipefltters," Connors said.
Shipyards In Boston and E!altimore also have have asked for
welders, pipefltters and some other
workers, he said. Some of the yards
are even willing to pay relocation
retarded citizen~.
expenses, he said.
Ortent, which still has more than
In addition, union officials repres300 residents, Is scheduled to close enting the Lorain workers say they
Dec. 31 to make room for a state
wiU try tomakeltposslbletorLoraln
prison complex, which wtll house workers to move toAmsbtpyardsln
2,100 inmates.
Tampa and Nashville, Tenn.
The advocacy groups are particuA task force, meanwhile, has been
larly concerned about reports that
set up to find a new company to use
the department plans to move 70 to
the Lorain shipyard.
90 residents into the Dayton
"To detennlne whether there are
Developmental Center.
alternate uses, we have to start
That center, closed earlier this
talking to developers," said task
year, consists of two cottages on the force member Alfred Dietzel, Oliio's
grounds or the Dayton Mental
development director. "It's a unique
. Healtil Center.
site, on the water. It's also a
"MOVIng people from Ortent to
another Institution Is not delnstltutlonallzatlon. That Is worse than
M~hall posts victory
keeping them at Orient temporarIly," Todd said.
HUNTINGTON - Maniball's
A double move, from Orten! to
11nmderkJg Herd dumped rival
another Institution and then Into a
group home, cotild be unsettling, West Vlrpda, 'lMI8 here Sa&amp;urday
Todd said. Many Ortent residents afternoon. In another trHiale
baWe, Kealucky dropped Bobby
still to be transferred have behavior
Knlght'slndlana llooRien, 11&amp;-14.
problems and wtll have dlf!fculty
adjusting, she added.

zABLocKI DIES -

Rep,

Ch!Jnent Zablocld, )).Wis., died
Saturday at Capitol IUD Hospl\"here h&lt;: had been taken
three days ago after suffering a
heart attack In hit congt •IMial
olftce. (AP Laserphoto).

taJi

0

Call 446-.3376 .

•

2 puppiea to good home.

Call 446-B257.

2 recliner chain. Fair shape.

61 4·992-771 3.
Brown

collie.

Nice dog .

614·742·2BB9 or614-7422982.

3 free kittens to good home.
2 twins, 5 mo . old. Slack
tiger striped. F.emale. Better
with grown ups, 1· 12 Week
old gray kitten. All houae
broken. Should be kept in till

opring. 614-985-4248

anytime.

German Shepherd dog, 2
yhrs old, 2 puppies, 304-

675-7322.

Puppies, piu1 collie and
sheep dog, ready for Christ·

moo.

304-882-23~5.

large 2 year old dog , Y2
Doberman, V2 Mixed .

Friendly, 304-675·142B.

2 fluffy kittens, 8 weeks old.

304-675-6726.

6 Lost ancl Found
Lost in the vicinity of Eno,

Rt. 555 on Nov. 26th.

Medium female dog . Brown
with white chest end stocking ftNpt. 6 year old house

Lost-In vicinity of Rocksprings, blond Cock8r Spaniel.
Reward for return: Childs

1

Card of Thanks

The family of O.E.(Oddi
Durham. wish to expreaa
their sincere and dHp appreciation, ·to our friends and
relatives for ell their klnd.nell end aupport during his
long iDneu and subsequent

lott-Walker Coon .dog in
vicinity of Harrisonville. Collar but no name. 614· 742-

2419.

Lo11-between Pageville and
Snowville. Blue Tick dog.
Blue collar but no nama.

Reword. 614-742-2419.

sWEEPER and a.wing machine repair. partt. and
supPlies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, ana half mile up
Georges ·creek Ad.
Call

'.

446-0294.

413 4th Ave .. KMR, Gatlipollo, Oh 45631 . Coli 4464313 .

Balloons for Birthdays. Oat
Well, Annlvarurvs. Sweethearts, parties. Cell Balloons &amp; Co,.. 446 - 43~ 3. ·
Gun shcxrt Racine Gun Club.

Every Sunday otonlng 1

p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
Vacancy: Julia's Personal
C~re Home. Formerly
Mercer Canvalasanca
· Home. 18 years experience.

.

- Pt Pleasant .
.&amp; Vicinity

.: ..:

..

Gerage Sale - New. uted
and antique furniture. small
woodcraft Christmas gift
items and misc. 9 a.m. to 4

·p.m., Sot., Dec. 3. 511 29th

Guided Tours-Europe,
Egypt, Jordon, ltrael. Hawaii. Contact Tour host 1e
ho1tn1 Ira • Irene Wellman,

·,,

--·--- . .·... -···--.........

Clifton, W.V. 304-7731873.

SALE! 20-30·40 percent off
cake decorating suppliet.
· Anna Cake Decoretlng •

Street. Point Pl .. asant.

B · Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Auciion every Tuesday
night. P1 . Plaaunt, wva.
Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth
Canter Bldg ., Camden St.

1114-367·7101.

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, Antique • liquidation sales.
Ucensad S. bonded in Ohio &amp;

WVa . 304-773·5785 or
304-773-9185.

Auction every Fri . night at
HartfOfd Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchandise every week.
Conaigments of new and
used m~rchandise always
welcome. Richard . ~aynoldt
Auctioneer . 304-275-

the

Suppllaa in Tuppero Plalna.

3089.

N'o hunting or treepa11ing
day or n•ht on Charles Yott

Mt.Atto auctiOn every Sat.
night, 8 p .m . Starting
Chritimaa teasOn. No more
conlignmen11 will be takan
until after Christmas. Emma

Farms .

Ripley Sporto Cord Show,
Ripley High School. Ripley, Bell Auctioneer. 304-428W.Vo., Doc . 3,1983, 10-11. 8177. WVe.llo. No. 429·84.

.,

•

21

.
0

'••

i••
l'

~

'.

Golden shimmers, dazzling_ diamonds~ ond oh so
affordable statement~ of beauty. Only from
Pulsar Quartz. Elegance that's perfect for busy
days and exciting evenings. Corne in ond •ee ol the
.
beauty in our Pulsar Quartz coHection.

342 Second, Gallipolis
113 Court, Pomeroy

iI
1

••
••

•

I:
••
••
•
0

j

Used mobile homes and
truck campers. Call 446-

0175 .

Wanted to bu~ . New. used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece · or complete households. Also complete Auctioneering service. Call Osby

A. l\llartin 614-992-6370.

Buying dally gold, sliver
coins. rings. jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop . 2nd . Ave .

Middleport. oh. 614-9923476 .
Raw Fur Buyer . Beef &amp; Deer
Hides -Ginseng . Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley,
Rt. 2. Athena, Oh. Phone

614-664-4761 . 1·9 Daily.

COMMERCIAL

·

EASTERN A'IUUE: One o1 the bujiest str~ in Southeastern Oh~ .

Prime locatioo for small restaurant, novefty shop, or anyth1n ~. Ev.,.y

Ing. Call 614-256-1 19B.

AVON There are 2 ways to
make money with AVON .
Call for information . Call

446-3368.

Attention former Career
Federal Employeea . Possible
future clerical opening at
local government agency. H
interasted call Carol Irwin,
448-7663 for appointment.

ADMINIST!jATfVE
. ASSISTANT TO
THE PRESIDENT
Rio Grande College
Rio Giande, Ohio
Rio Grande College and
Community College in- .
vites letters of nomination
and application for the position of Administrative
Assistant to the President.
Rio Grande College and
Commooity College represents a unique marriage
between public and private
education and between
career and general studies
education. The same stall,
faculty and facilities are
used to service both pn:
vale and community college propns.
QUAUFICATIONS: The successful applicant will possess ltnowledae and experi;ence in the ariiiiS of government relations, research
methods and institutional
bu¥1W- Effective communication and superviSOIY skills required. A

liblt ,. flllllllilll tile president's office: moqitorinc
and cocinlnllilll opporlu·
nlties in 'awtiw lund rais-

WAREHOUSE

tion of
JTPA, OJT
IIIII similar propms.

IN TOWN: We have 16,000 sq. H. warehouse on fir;! A,.. ~oncrete
lloor, 2 overhead doors loochna doc~ 2 exit doon, sprinkler svtem,
~nsulation under rool. Almost new. Only $10,000 down requtred to

assume low 1nterest mortaaae. Mony possibilities.
AIIO in town we have the old Evons Grocery Worehouse buildin~ AI·
moot 32,000 sq. It- 2,432 of rt Is im{l&lt;lvtd office spoce. 5 ederior
lo1dlfll docks, 3 in~do. Ma!IOrtlry butldinc.
,

SUPER MARKET

EXCElLliT IN-'101111\liCAQOI: At! oqulp~~~~~~t &amp;invetlt~. Busi·
nou sold a is. 5 walk.fn coo4ers, 8500 sq. It IAt!s ol por~nt
HARDWARE STOllE

,

·

WEST !5: Everilllilt&amp; b tx!lllldinawost. Owner losl'his store ,me·
napr IIIli is llllllri to self stock, filluNS IIIli 1.... II I reduced
price. Horltwore store hos peel IJO[enlialllith the ocoriomy 011 the
ujllllln&amp;
!lOIIlS THE Til£ 10 II YOUR OWN lOSS. CAUIKE WISE-

IAIIlt tilE WISEIIAIIIIUL EST/IT£ MElt¥ FOR lORE
DUAill- 441-3143.

Between 8 :30 and
p.m. weekdays .

4:30

NOW HIRtNG-OHshore oil
drilling overseas •nd domestic. Will train, $36 .000-

676-6689. T

i~W:

su!MIMsin&amp; the Clll-

ono.

Compensation is necotil·

bit, biMd ~ lltl*i·
-~~~~~ luiOwle ••

,._ sllld IIOIIIIIlltions
IIIII 1e1tws of appliCition
wttli COIIpllll IISUIII, in-

... "' ......
cltdiW -

IIIII .._

- . by Dmmber 23,

1913 to:
.
Office of t~i President
Rio Gllntlt Collep

. lllo Grtltdt, Oh. 45674
AI E~ul ~..lty/AIIlr1181tft Actloti EMploylr

tlo

open ev,eninga.

COORDINATOR
FOR OHIO
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER
ORGANIZATION
(OTTO)
Rio Grande College
Rio Grande, Oh.
Rio Grande College and
Community College invites letters of nomina-·
lion and application for
the position of Coordinator for Ohio Technoloey Transfer Organization. Rio Grande College
and Community College
represents a unique·
marriage between public
and private education
and ·betwee11 career and
general studies educa·
tion. The same staff,
faculty and facilities are
used to service both
private and community
college programs.
QUALIFICATIONS: The
successful applicant
will possess knowledge
and experience of business and industry including: demonstrated
administrative ability,
proven leadership success; ability to work and
communicate effectively with business and
industrial clients. A
Bachelor's degree is
required with an ad·
vanced degree preferred.
· Knowledge of higher
education is desired .
RESPONSIBILITIES: The
Coordinator for Ohio
Technoloey Transfer Or·
ganization (OTTO) reports directly to the
Associate Dean for Continuing, Off-Campus,
and Evening Education
and is tesponsible for
developing and maintaining a strong rapport
between the college and
industry within the four
(4) · county area and
Southeast Ohio, provid·
ing technical assist·
ance, attracting new
industry, and facilitating stall development
programs for the colleee,
faculty.
Compensation is neeotiable, based upon experience and knowledp.
Plase send nominations
and letters of applica·
tion with complete re·
sume, iru:ludin&amp; names
and addresses of three
references; by December
15, 1983, to:
.
Office of Personnel

· Box 969

. ·Rio G'rtndt ColltJe
Rio Grtndt, Ohio 45674
AI ~qAt Ottl&gt;of1onlty/Aifir•. lllllw Action Eltp!OfOr.

Business
Opportunity

31

prises after 6 p.m . Opportunities are unlimited .

Call 446·0276.

~igarette

Beby sitter split- shift in my
home for 7 hr. P1. Pleasant
area. Mon thru Fri. Write Box
P. 2 in care of Pt. Pleasant
Register, P. 0 . Bo~e . 237, Pt.

12

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dependable . Call 4463169 between 9 and 5.

Will cut and deliver fire·

Responsible f-amily man, 38.
seeks employment. Precision metal working background , supervisory capabilities. Call 614~245 - 91 57 .
Tree trimming and removal.
Free estimates. 614-992-

Previous Day Care Director
will do baby sitting in my
home Mon . -Fri. Call 446Experienced mechanic desires any kind of mechanical
work on autos. Has own
tpols and building, work
guaranteed. Call for esti·
mates 446-8252 or 446-

249 .

c

ry-work remodeling,
&amp; roofing . Can
d references, expe-

6040 or 614-949-2129.

ri

Wanted someone to tear
down barn for the lumber.
No responsible 1or acci·

War)J:B to do babysitting in
my home. Day or night ,
experienced . Call 446 -

dents . 614-985·3928 . .

Call 446-2787.

2184.

Business
Opportunity

21

Will cate for elderly person in
our home . LPN care given .
15 years e.ltperience.Call

614-992-7314.

22 Money to Loan
HOI\IIE LOANS FIX EO

675-3908 .

.

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire 'insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century·. Farm.
home and penonal property
coverages are awailable to
meet individual needs. Contact Harry Pitchford. agent.
Phone 446-1 427.

SECRETARY
RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE
RIO GRANDE, OH.
Rio Grande College and
Community College is
seeking · nominations or
letters of application for
the position of secretary. Qualifications required: high school education or equivalent;
knowledge and expe·
rience of word processing; typing skills of 60
w.p.m.; shorthand skills
of 90 w.p.m. Advanced
secretarial training or
com11arable work experience preferred . Responsiblities include
typing, filing, operating
an IBM displaywriter,
answering phone and
other such duties assigned. Entry wage rate
is $4.00 per hour.
Applications will be
accepted through December 15, 1983 at
Office of Personnel,
Allen Hall , Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674.
An Equal Opportunilj/ Afflr·
mstive Action Employer.

4 bdr . bi- level, eat-in, kit chen, LR, dining area, family
room , 2v2 Qath , 2 CST
garage. gas heat . central air .
$68,900 Jay Dr . Cal l 614 -

446· 7923 .

3 bedrooms, one floor plan ,
eat in kitchen and dining
room. 1 car garage, gas
heat, celltral air, fenced in
backyard, storage bulldi ng 1
Located on George Creek
Rd. Call446-0109 after 5

The former Wes ley Chapel
United Methodist Church
building located on County
Athens. 1-B00-341-6q54
Road 10 in Cheshire Town ship, Ga llia County is for
sale . This is a frame buildin g
23 Professional
in sound con dition wit h
Services
approximately one third of
an acre of land: c ontents
included. Please submitt
PIANO TUNING Lowar bids by January 1. 1984 to
pnces - regular 1unings - Athens Distr ict Unite d
discounts to Senior Citizens, Methodist Union . P.O. Bo.1t
Churches &amp; schools. Ward's 67. The Plains, Ohio 45780 .
Keyboard , 304-675 -3824. The Athens Distr ict United
Methodist Union reserwes
the r ig ht to rej ect any and al l
Reallscate
bids.
The late Reuben Al eshire
home bui lt 1864. 15 room s,
5 bedr ., 9 fireplaces , ful l
owner Must Sell Hame l basement, sandstone f ounUnbelie\table price I low util - dation . 228 Third Ave ..
ities! buy it now I Middleport. Gallipolis . Appointmen t
only. Call 446-2481 .
Call 614-992-6941 .

Homes for Sale

•

8

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB-

Public .Sale
&amp; Auction

LISHING
recommend•
that
you CO
do .business
with 1
11r----,.,;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:===-----;
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering.

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

SUNDAY, DEC. 11-1:00 P.M.

Stripping Furniture &amp; Metal .

Instant cash ftowl First time
in th1s area. Our el!lpert statf
has many years of expe rience and has set up resto ·
ration centers throughout

tha u.s . and Europe. We
furnished equipment. cham·

lc~la, S!Jpplias, and anexten -

siva training course at one of

our successful ctmiero neer·
est you . Total cost :
$32,500.00 'Bonded' Coli
Toll Free: 18001 241 -2269

located in the legion Hall in Racine. Ohio
Watch for Signs .
"free Ham Sandwiches for Everyone"

Tools , jewelry, watches, Chmtmas lights , Ztrcon diamond
.
d
b
d
d
k I

nngs, games. olls, attery operate cars an true s, ots

of differerlt items for Christmas .

$1,00 WORTH OF MERCHANDISE
SHOP THE EASY WAY AT AUCTION
Seating up to 150 people.
Come to Eat Dinner - Everyone Welcome
AUCTIONEER-LONNIE NEAL-614-367-7 101

IL----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---L

or write for more info : U.S.
Stripping , 1775 The E.ltchange, Suite 600, Atlanta.

ESTATE AUCTION
THURSDAY, DEC. 8, 1983
10:30 A.M.

GA 30339 .
54 Misc. Merchandise

Winter Craft Sale
1 mile west of Rodney
on Rt . 35

Mon ., Tues. &amp; Wed.
10 Till 6
245-926B

SANTA'S FOREST
CHRISTMAS TREES
Has Moved To
1718 Jefferson Blvd.
In Pt. Pleasant
6 Kinds of Cut Trees-4
Kinds of Balled Trees.
Prices Reduced From
last Year.

FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL .
GRAVE BLANKETS
FOR CHRISTMAS
Different Sizes
and -Prices
For More Information

54 Misc. Merchandise

Completely remodeled 3
bdr .. 6 rooms. Bath . Eat-in
kitc h e n . D 1n i ngr oo m .
Carpet . Large tot _3 porches.
.Large basement, carport.
Must sell. lmm8diate pos·
session . Only S 1 4,900 . Last
house away from River on
Henderson St., Henderso n,
WV. Phone nu_m ber in yard .

RATES 12%% purchase or
ref i nance. 11 v.%adjustable
rate . Leader Mortgaga ,

! NOTICE!

Will do housecleaning .
ReasonBble rates. Call 304-

13

2268 .

31

Will care for the elderly in my
home. Lots of references .
Men or women. Call 667-

3402 .

Distributorship .
Instant cash flow! We are a
Bonded national f irm expanding into the area . If you
are seeking a secure busi ness opportuinty. We provide all retail locations and
all necessary 1raining. Full or
Part time . Investment 1rom
$2,000.00 . Wins ton Salem- Kools , 1-800 - 241 -

wood . Call 614 -256-1528 .

7124

Situations
Wanted

Homes for Sale :

4 bdr. ranch home. large LR~
full basement. w1th garage.
wood burner included, city
schools. 2 miles from town .

G Enter-

Petroleum Services at 312-

920-.9675 ext.-1965 . Aloo

21

local' Company looking for
new distributors, Call 304-

$50,000 plus po01. Call Pl.

The Meigs local School
District is currently seeking
application• from certified
applicants for a Freahman
Basketball Coach at Meigs
45769 or 614-992-7760. High School for the 1983·
84 school year. Applicants
Repairable ·TV'S up to 10 must hold a valid Ohio
yaora old. Call 614-949- teaching certificate and
must meet certification re2994.
quirements of Ohio for
Boy's 1 6 ·inch bicycle with sports medicine and CPR .
training wheels, 304-882..: Persons interested should
contact Dan E. Morris, Su3574.
periritentent of Meigs local
SchOols , at 621 SoUth Third
Avenue in Middleport. in
Ohio.

lady wants ride from Eureka
to end of bridge in Pt .
Pleasant every Friday morn-

LAFF-A·DAY

Help Wanted

manager . 614-687-0065.

Furniture, gold, silver dol lara. wood ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques. etc . Comple1e
households . Write M.D.
Miller, At . 4, Pomeroy, Oh

one witt sie it 600 sq. ft., attractive customer area. ~bath, $37,500

can.get ~ou on your way to independence. Owner wants an offer..

11

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

BEDS·IRON. BRASS old

RESPONSIBILITIES: Reportilll directly to the President, the Adminisli1tive
Asuistant will be respon·

•'
I'

~

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furni ture. 446-3159, 3rd . &amp;
Olive St., Gallipolis, Oh .

leaders desired.

•

-.

Mature individual living in or
near Pomeroy area to repres·
ent established life and
Health Insurance Co. Excellent potential for increased
earnings and advancement .
Applicant must have initiatiwe mature judgement in
sales ability, however no
experience necessary. We
offer complete training program . Guaranteed salary .
Bonus and commiuion ,
fringe benefits ln£1ude group
life end hospitalization and
excellent retirement benefits . We are an &gt;f.O.P. For
more information contact
Darrell Vorheu, District

446-3 672

witli IIIIValad depi preflnld. Knowled&amp;ll of hp
tdlation II1Ciability to !1lwctl~ communicate with
faculty, and · community

0

Help Wanted

Exp erienced Medical secretary. Send resume to box
218 in care of The Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Third
A\Je., Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .

Blchelor's deaTH required

Business .
Opportunity

11

ientinel ·

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

pet. 614-992-3110.

deoth. Moy God bleoa you 7
Yard Sale
otl.
1---------

3 Announcements

~imes-

Wanted To Buy

5 puppies -% Border %Collie .

ap~al

presldenli AmShlp President
George Chandler, and representa ·
lives from the offices of U.S. Sens.
John Glenn and Howard MetzenbaunnandU.S. Rep.DonPease.
Dietzel said state officials are
willing to meet with developers and
owners, develop an informational
brochure and assign a staff person
tull.time to help revive !he yard. But
he said leadership for the program
must come at the local level.

Client release raises
advocacy concerns
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Sev·
era! groups concerned about the
release of Orient Developmental
Center residents Into the communIty have asked for a meeting with
Ohio Department of Mental Retardation Director Minnie Fells
Johnson.
Carolyn Sidwell, executive director of the Ohio Association for
Retarded Citizens, said members
met Thursday with representatives
of other citizen advocacy groups,
county mental retardation programs, Institution advisory boards
and the Ohio Legal Rights Service.
They expressed concern about the
large number of transfers, the
monitor!ngofnewgrouphomes,and
the shifting of some Ortent center
residents to other Institutions Instead of group homes.
"When you move people this
ra(l!dly, you are going to havesmte
things happening. I think It Is
!tightening," said Rosemary Todd, ·
president .of the association for

all applicants. par tiCipa nts r:Jnd
empl oyees m all facets of 1ts
operatrons. and where defrciP.n ·
c1es are noted to take aff~t. ma
11vt'! ac t1on to ~o rrect such
delrcrencres In addruon rt rs
our polrcy to recru1t. h1re and
promote rn al! JOb class1lrca·
t1 ons Without regard to racf!
color relrgron. natrona ! orrgr".
sex (except whe re se,:.; IS a bona
frde occupatronaf qualifJca!IOn)
ance.!try. age. polr trcal affrlratron or beliefs, or hand1cap
(provtded ohvsrcal lim118110n
' does not prevent JOb pArformancel. Persons shal l not be
denred part rc•patiOn m thrs
program srmply because of
th eir CIIIZf!nShl p
It rs our pof1cy to takt:
affrrmatrve act10n to ensur e that
al l tramtn g program s and all
personnAI ac110 ns such as a
rate of compensat10n. benelrts.
transfers, promot1ons. layoff s
and term1nat1ons are admini stered wrthout regard to race.
color. relr gron . nat1onal or1g1 n.
sex ancewv. age. poi111ca1
aff rliat10n cr t1zensh1p. hand1cap
or beliefs
~
David E. Gloeckner, Employment and Training Oirac10r will have the overal l respon Sibll rty ot admm1stenng the
program H a program partiCIpa nl or applrcanl feels he/ sh e
ha s been d1SCr1mrnated aga1nst
tn employmf!nt Sef!krng em ployment and /or tra1mng Wl!h
th1s.. agency. he/s he should
1mmedrately con 1ac1 David E.

II 21'4. ltc

•,

considerable size. '!'he unique aspects make It more salable."
The state would make various
financial assistance plans avallable
to "the right buyer, who can provide
jobs," Dietzel said.
"My department is interested In
jobs and we clearly recognize that
Lorain has been hard-hit," he said.
"This closing offers more evldimce
that the area needs our help."
Other memllers of the task force
include Jamt'S Unger, Loc~ 358

9

Gloedmor, (614i367-7342or
(6141 992-6629 to pursue the pet. Reward . Ce11742-2264
propAr d1scrlmlnal10n comor 992-2810.
plaint procedurA

•.

. By The Associated Press
A Maryland man who was
traveling with Mar)&lt; Huffman says

Giveaway

V . PUBUSH~D

First grade entrepreneurs
reap profits from project
only by the scarce aibbage Patch
KidS doll.
"They took the profits from the
first batch and bought more
materials and kept going," Lutz
prtnclpal WWiam Krurnnow said of
teacher Ellen Kincaid's firstgraders.
After sellingl69 bears and turning
a profit of $145, the children have
stopped taking orders... .
Busy Beaver, which was divided
Into marketing, sales, advertising,
prqduction and accounting dlv·
islons, now Is diversifYing into other
products.
For the Care Bear project, the
marketing department checked out
stores for the best p
materials. Busy Beav
bears tor $2.50 each.
But as the Care Bearer
on, the ·patterns used to rru.,..~...,
dolls disappeared from stores in

4

POLICY STATEMENT
Chickens ' 8t ducks · Call
The Gollla-Meigs Commun· 446-7300 before 4 . 6 14ity Action Agency JTPA pro·
379-2216 alter 5.

gram tS commttted to P.q t.. al
empl oymfm t ODP01\Unll lf'l5 f01

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-3

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

CALL 985-3843

CARPET FOR LESS
- AND LOW OVERHEAD
DIRECT MILL BUYING
COMBINE TO GIVE LOW PRICES
WI ALSO HAVE EXI'I!IT INSTAUAliON AND ONE OF THE
LAROIS1 SELECTIONS Of CARI'IT IN THE AREA

CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATES
IT COULD SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS.

ODDS &amp; ENOS CARPET SHOP
Business Route 7, Middleport, Ohio

992-6173
HOURS: 10 A.M.· 5 P.M.

All antiq ues lroiil the Mary P. Ric hardson estate trust
(Richardson and Hilton lamily he irlooms! wrll be moved
from lh e large !B OO's Hilton family home in Ashland and
sold at auction at the Steel Worker's labor Hall located at
734 Carter Ave. in the west end of Ashla nd. Ky.
ANTIQUES: Inlaid walnut corner cupboa rd, cherry She ra
semi ·hl chest, walnut Shera. gate leg table , ea rly mahog.
sect , wa lnut Viet rose carv ed settee. many frne walnul
Viet arm cha irs, poster and spool beds, n;ghtstands. cup ~
boards, pie safe, chairS, stands, plus all other types ol
country and Victor~ an furniture ;n cherry and waln ut,
over 100 pes. sterling flatware , coin Si lver, man y beaut; .
ful ant;que dtshes, cut glass. lg Wedgewood dinn er set.
oil pa intings, Viet pi ctures, brass items, basketss, pnm1·
tives, clock, many books, plus all other types of anltque
1tems full line ol household chattels
NOTE : Four generations of saving everything from one
of Ashland's early fam ;lies. Pian to attend .
TERMS: Cash or good check w/ 10
lunch
Sale by order of Thi rd National Bank of Ashland . Ky. (executor

under Will i.

Auct io neer: MIKE CLUM, INC .
Thornville . Oh 1 614-24G-6871
Mike Cium &amp; John Clum

ESTATE AUCTION

SATURDAY, DEC. 10:10:00 A.M.
421 1st AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OH.
LISTING: Picn1c table , Whirlpool ref nge rato r, Ke nmore
do uble oven electric range, toaste r oven, dinette set, Tup.
perware, plants. lawn cha irs, table lamps, 2 &lt;ron beds
complete, wardrobe , 2 metal chests 1ce crea m lteezer.
suitcases, wee d eater, elec. fa ns, rocker: set twm s11e
beds, lamp tab les, daybed , Hoov er sweepe r. bra&lt;ded
rugs , lots of bl ankets and sheets.
ANTIQUES: 4 011 la mps, cast iron bean pol, cast &lt;ron
dut ch oven, gran;te coffee pot s, sa lt 1ar. croc ks, turkey
platters. stone coffee pol, Lesto;l bottles, Coca-Cola tray s.
Jim Beam bottles, graniteware, bu ffet. 6 oak d;nette
chai rs, wood scoops, cheese bo•. m;rro rs, 2 llat wall cup boards, 4 ga llon stone jar with wnt;n g, bluepnnt des k
very old, smal l wood chest, Jenn ;e lynn bed. hall tree .
wa shsta nd, stone jars, 3 ni ce camel backtrunks , h1gh boy
dresser, lots ol jewelry, large Roy al N;ppon va se, sma ll
Nippon va se, small milk glass oi l lamp. hallway dresser ,
wicker llower sta nd, school d~s k . treadl e sewing
mac hi ne, cane bottom rocker. oil lantern, oakstand, table
with ball feet, sew ing rocker, large Rosev&lt;lle vase, oak
kitchen tab le with b&lt;g fancy legs, 2 large stemwaree
bowls, Hetsey pattern pitcher, several other ofd p;tchers
pickle dish, butter dish, heavy pressed glass dessert
dishes, vin egar cruet, tall etched crystal pitcher w;th
matching glasses, old drugstore ca ndy jars. There are 4
bushel baskets lull of old glassware.
THE ESrATE OF EDNA MAY MENSHOUSE

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Kenneth Swain and Associates
Gallipolis, Ohio
•

•

�1

Pa~D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

41

INVEST IN YOURSELF IN·
STEAD OF YOU LAND·
LORD . You may be able to
buy a home for monthly
payments lower than your
rent plus enjoy a siuble tax
benefit. Your ERA Real
Estete professional can :
•Show you what's for sale
•Teach you the buying pro cess•Halp you make a amart

buy . Call today . ERA ·Real
Estate, Wiseman Real Estate, 446 -3643. Each office
independently owned and
c perated.
LeGrande blvd . 3 bdr., carpeted. insulated steel sidi ng.
. TV or dining room . AC, 2
bath . Call 446 -7834 .
Located in Syracuse-"ear
school S. swi mming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one·
third acre lot. Price reduced
$23,600 . or will rent for

·s240 mo. 304·866 -3934.

Lincoln A\lenue, 7 years ald.

$55,000, 304-678-5047.

Two bedroom house. basement , clean condition, park·
ing off street, big yard,

304 · 675 -1301 . good

neighborhood .. ·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

304-875-73B6 . .

3 or 4 room unfumithed apt.
utilities paid, aduhs only, no

pots. Call 441· 3437.

Call 992-2606 aftqr 5PM . ·

Completely furnish
newly decorated. 3 rooma
and bath. 468 Second Ave ..
adults, 8190 mo. plus deposit. Call 614-446-2238 or

3 bdr. 1 Y2 bath s, close to
hospital &amp;. shopping plaza .
No pets, dep: &amp; ref. re -

quired. Call614-245 -51 36.

6 room house on fa r m near
Crown City, At. 7 . Call

61 4-256-64B4.
5 rooms. bath , full basement, garage, glassed in
breezeway, gas forced air
heat, central air condition-

ing. Call614-949-2734.

3 bedroom house- large
yard . Double car garage .
Alternative heat source .
s ·m all deposit and referen ces. Pomeroy ·area . 61 4 -

843 2nd . Ave., Oallipolia. 5 .
rooms, yard, off strMt parking, no pets, dep. a. ref . Call

4 room house with bath.
Located 1 mile off 87 .
Everett Keefer , 304-895-

3865 .

992-2937.

New 411n1 end two bedroo'!'
•partments. furnished or
unfurnished In Middleport.

Cell 992-&amp;304.
Apartments, houM and office apace . Call Cleland

Nicly furnished niodern mobile home, in city . 1 or 2
adults only. Call 446-0338 .
2 bdr

mobile home. Call

446-050B .

Henderson. WV. 304-675·

446 -1052.

2 bdr. mobile home at
Evergreen . Call446 -7032 .

$15,000. Call 992-6034
after 4 :30 .

1 2x60 ft . 2 bedroom mobile
home. Approx . 5 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport. Call

992-6858.

homea. hou•••· pt, Pleeaent

min. fromGIIIpoliaon Rt. 7, '

ond light houoo keeping
P•rk Centre! Hotel.
Coli 448-07&amp;11.
·

room1.

and Golllpollo. 814-U8· l·_c_•_ll_ll_14_·_2_11_11_
-1_1_9-'8·-8221 .
I ' Equipped kitchen, nowly ,
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . reftll'dolod,contrololr,f2&amp;0
elderly • · diNblod with on
Income . of

leu

th•n

112,300. Renting for 30
percent of adjutted income-

.Phone 304-875-8679.
Duplex. 8 rooms. bath. basement. water fumiahed , Lock

26 Road, Point Ple8aant.

1-81'4-4411-0239.

Furnidl8d ept. for rent in

Two bedroom apt , tn Mason,
edutl:s only, no pat1. 304-

Syracu11. 614-992-7889
alter 6PM. ·

675-1452 alter 6pm.

Apartments . "304-876 -

Furnithed Apanmentl, 304-

875-20110 or 304 -875·
3491 .

per mo. Call 448-2118.

46 Space for Rent
Fu~ni1hed

office for rent.
CIOH to city building and
court houae . Call 448 ~

1 Big furnished room. eff,
apt. whh bath In Rio Orand•.

All utllltleo paid. U8-0157.

Real Estate General

Furn . effieienct apt. Private'
entrance and bath . Suitable
for one person. Call 448·

1232.

JUST UST£0 - NEAR!.Y AN
ACRE Hl.s SHELTER HOUSE
BEAUTIFUL RIVER VIEW. BOAT
OOCII. LOWER RT. 7. PRICED TO
SElU'
BUIAVILLE RD. .- FRAME 2
STORY HOM[ fUU.Y CARPETED. 3
BR PLUS BATH. $38.000.

NEED A HOME YOO'Ll BE PROUD Of - AT .APRICE
YOU CAN AFFIJR01 3 BEDROOM BRICK f«lME. I ~
BATHS, FAMILY ROOM WITH. AREPlACE, PLUS
WODreURNER IN LIVING ROOM, EQUIPPED KITCHEN 2
CAA GARAGE. POSSIBlE LOAN ASSUMPTION. $48.00o

446-3636
~ Cooa®~ 446·969b
~..!tot

Ill lil

~:loous!StiOOI
f:/oQfipciQtl.lJ~IO

142. &amp; dr. cheota, 8'114. Bod
"•moo, t20.ond 126 .. 10
gun • Gun coblneto, 1350.
Gaa or electric rangea 1376.
Blby mattresses, 826 S.
t36, bod "•mea t20. t2&amp;,

&amp; UO: king fromo 160.

doy.·Coll814-448·0176.

Good •election of bedroom
suites, cedar chests,
rockers. metal cabinatt,
swivel rockers.
Und Furniture -- bookcase,
renge1, chairs, dryers, re frigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulevllle Rd. Open 9am
to lpm, Mon . thru Fri .• 9am
to &amp;pm. Sat.

Household Goods

record

A REAllY NICE OlDER HOllE
OONVENIENTLY LOCATED NEAR
. CITY ~HOOLS AND DOWNTO\\N
SHOPPING. 2 STORY FRAME, 3
B£DROOMS. FORMAL DININ(O
EAT-IN KITCHEN. VERY AffOR!)A.
Bi.E AT $45,000.

Spin washers, gas &amp; electric
dryert, auto washers, 911 &amp;.
electric ranges. refrigera tors. TV seta.
W••hert, dryer•. refrlgerators. ranges. Skaggs ·Ap·
pllancea. Upper River Rd .
be1ide Stone Crest Motel.
446·739B. '
11 -· ..

e

wHh bunk'" 1199. 2 ploco
antron UvlngrOom tuite•
*199. entron iecllnera t99,
other reclinen 180. maple
dinette aett e179, box
aprlnp • mattrea twin or
full 1100 let regultr-flrm
•120. meple dinfltte chairs
'315. waah ltlnda
mople rocbro t69, 7
chromo din- ntt1 ••.• .D.ol

BRICK RANCH - 3 BR 11\
BATHS, FUU. BASEMENT i CAR
GARAG£ NEAR CITY WITitCOONTRY SETTittl $58,000. .

$30.000 STill. BUYS A NICE
PlACE TO U'll!- 2 BR RANCH,
LG U~t«ilM., EAT IN KITCHEN,
NE.V GAS'FURNANCE. CITY.

g••

2 tmell refrigerators, 2
range•. 1 Maytag wringer
weaher, automatic washers
A dryer. All gu•ranteed.
Gl111were S. what nota for
Chri1tmu. Hupp's Appile nee &amp; Glassware, Comer

Rt. 7 • Rt. 141, 446-B033.

-t;

Ctllliiii'NfA.Inl:.. TMII-u LJ S. Pal a TM art

51 Household Goods
Sale. 25% to

50% off

waahen, dryers. ref.,
ranges, deaka and chest of
drawers. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd. Call

814-448-7398. Open 9-6.

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"-22" atocked
In yard. HEAP vender,

54 Misc. Merchandise
Limestone delivered. $10

ton. Call614-266-1427.

MICROWAVE
OVENS

APPROX. 22 ACIIfS- BEAUTIFULCOUfi!RY HOME. 3
BEDROOMS, FORMALIJININI\ GIGANTIC FAMIL'Y ROOM
'

STARTING AT

Mobile Home Moving, Licensed and Insured, Free
Es1imate' 6100 . per hookup minimum . Phcne 304-

576 -271 t ·or 576 -2B66.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-676·2711 .
Tri - level, excellent condi·
tion, $66,000 . 8% assume·
ble loan. $11,000 down .
Phone 304-676-1629 after
5 p.m .

1973 Holly Park, 12x65,
304-675·6663 or 304·67657B3.
33

Farms for Sale

68 acres on Bulaville-Poner
Co . Ad. 3. Old farm house
for sale by owner, asking

t55,000. lntOfootod party

pleaae call

448-7247

or

513-293-7270.
100 plus acres, 4 bedroom
modern ranch, full basement, Min. rights. Nur
Cheater, Ohio, Palmer
Realty, Inc. Bud Spirea,

Auoc ., 614-374-2819.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 acres at Rodne., on W.T.
W•teon Ad. Owner financ-

Ing available' Coll448-8221
after 6 weekdayt.

'

before 2:30PM, 614-448·
9472 .

1 6 cubic ft. Saara ColdSpot,
frostiest upright freezer .

Franklin fireplace s1ovo.. 24

814-247-3B95.

inch, call 304-675-4673.

1

general electric stove$76. 1 Norge deep freeze$76. 1 table &amp; chaira to giva

6 ft . Scotch Pine, artifi cial

after 6 p.m .

Used 4 poster w ooden twin
bed comp let e with new box
springs &amp; mattress. $200 or

Dried

304-675-1438.

firewood delivered .

Call304-675·7771 .

SYRACUSE - Nice modern
insulated lxlme in Rustic Hilo.
3 bedrooms, one floor. garage,
and n1ce I~ lot A~o an older 7
rm. home ·on 124 wilh all
utilities and 245 by 115 lol

Fireplace insen-nill in factory carton·automatie
controls-2 blowera-glass
door-ash pan-fits 30 in. to
48 in. fireplace-burns wood

, 5 bedroom Geor&amp;i•n Colonial Brick- entry hall w/beaull·
: 'lui open stlirway, den, 2'1t baths, Chandler kitchan
• ir/oodles of aoraoous cherry e~binets &amp; new appliances.
:·-t:xtrl larp liYinl roo11 w/wood burnina fireplace, formal
: ;J,injql w/IMI!II·in china hutcll, full base11ont w/lireplaco,
f1n11hecl aH1c1, 2 car prop, beautiful finished natulal
· )!rood Hoors &amp; woodwork throuahout.
: tONUS: Attached 7 room offlcew/'lt bath- seller financ·
· lna could be ccinsldtrod.
.

MIDDLEPORT - We have 5
homes here for you lo see.
Brick or frame Starting at
$16,000.
.

wv.

NICE COUNTRY HOME
AND 2 ACRES
1728 sq. It living space plus 2
bathrooms. Full basemen! unfins·ihed. front porch 15 fl
car garage 32 fl. by
under one rool. 2acres
more or less. 400 fl. frontage by
216 fl deep, all useable. New
home not completely finished.
Has a garden bath tub - its
own water system (drilled well).
Buck stove heater. plus electric
heating system. Has about
evel)'thing you would want
Priced at $59,900. Phone now!

POMEROY - Nice 3 bedroom
central heated home. Above all
floods. Carpetmg, balh. basemen~ and garage. May assume. One o1her 3 bedroomer
wrth 'A acres. I'JI utilities.'

REAL ESTATE
•'

:It

•

IN CITY

windows. 6 room rnnch style
w~h no upkeep vmyl siding
Nat gas furnace. Nice modem
krtchen. Price only $29,900.
#590

#587
IN GALLIPOLIS- WALK TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
reduced lor quick sale. $29,900. 6 rooms, 3 BR, full
ba~imen~ nice large rronl porch. No upkeep. Nice large shade
taxes.. Home.you
should check on.
.
#530

Heildquilrft'rs

446-4206
Bonnie Stutes. Realtor

•NEW U5nNG - Modeni 3 bedroom home, 2 baths. nice kitchen,
bmallivine room. dinilll lamily room. TolaiiMng space 1,920 sq.
~carport vorl. awelld patio with carlfitand sliding
'llfl patio. lDis of mirrors. S11ifaee building, 1.~ acres more or less.
city school dislrict
.

m

'pond. Conlemporary lllme. 2:;12 sq. It plus basement City
IChtds. [xcetent location.

;!

'ni-LML- 3 BR. basement, landscaped lot all bric, city schools.

,tf:: needs
room witl1 woodbumer, low hell bilb a lamily.
'

cONTRACI - ROUND HOIIt - I Acre
:)loodlnd. Ba9erMnt Po11111JlJ1. $65.000.Lolsol ~ass and dec~ng,
:~~ malte a deal.

~

-EY -

HOllE MD BUSINESS OR IIENTAL - Com,plfinished otJer 2 stury, I.JIJI buiding, Illy schools. Make us an

..,
j:

••

••
•

,lrAIIA mATO - Bi-iMI 4 BR. II lamily and rec. loom, Kyaer

p.ll SchoDII.
j•

'

,,11111118Sl£Y atll HOlE with 7124 IXIJindo:.~-~
: oWb tJIPa. ilrmll dininr. pllio doon, klchen. all
•3Jodri111111, llundry I1IGfJI. f"' bllll$, prden tub, 2

:.4Ndric.
ll111 \'OVII8d IJIIiO.
. cen1n11 air. Mt~lderpitu!l.
.
- WMII -

Family room with woadbumer. 3 BR. city

llldlad. t38,000.

NEW BRICK APPROX. I YEAR OLD
While brick front 6 rooms. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, nice modern step
saver kitchen. Elec. heat pump wrth ac. Two car garage. Nice
landscaped shady back yard. Beautiful home. You must see th~
#581

FRESH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
right in this lully furnished mobile home with ap\]'DX. 7 acres
beautiful woodland. Pertect for retirement Call lor inlormation.
#583

POINT WITH PRIDE - looking
and more attractive than most? Inspect lh~ lovely
ranch, 2
years old, family room, dining room, fully carpeted, large bedroom,
2 car garage, over 2,000 sq. fl. living space, beautiful selling on I

acre.

#1799

PRICE REDUCED FOR I'IIEDIATE SALE - Nice lllme wrth
aluminum ~ding 4 bedrooms carpeted, 3 level acres, good
location. $43,900. Owner will finance.
OUTSTANDING BUY - Large ranch hom~ 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
lamily rm., cenlral ar. 2 car garage. Beautiful carpet. You'll love lh~
lxlme.
.

#1252
JUST USTED - Remodeled home wnh aluminum siding 3
bedrooms. balh. 2 outbuildilg;, plus 2 acres.
#0022
NEW USTlNG- Cozy homewilh 3 bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, nice
lot city 11:hools. Thi'l lllme may be the one for yoo.
#1295
IAIIGE FARM - This farm has one ol the :o-ea's best laying land
wltl1195 acres. has older home, lll!l'eral buildings, pond, tobacCo
base. pel kJcation, possible GWner financine Call lor delai~.

.

~rn

~~:~~~~u L RESTORED Colonial home srtuated in downt~rn ~~
•
bedrms.. library. family room, formal dining rm ..
·~!::;:;,;,;~~ Orleans type courtyard, 3 w.b. fireplaces. Call lor more.

3

7,000 sq. ft. building located along:
:1=!lf::~dE:,~~.~G~ aBUILDINGlliPOliS. Plenty ol parking space. Owner will lease

(I(.

.N.EW LISTING -: 4 bedrm. home silualed along old RL 7, Lower • .
.R1ver Rd. Gallipolis C1ty School OISL, City water, good klc'lion lor.
Children and adults. lireplace Pnce $37.500.00 Call lor
• app~ ntmenl
..
•

THE PERFECT SffiiNG
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2211 acres more or less, lormal dining room.
family room, plenty of garden space. Lots ol dwart lru1t trees,
woodburner stove, luel oil FA lurnace, thermopane windows and
storm window. Beautiful setting on Stale Highway 160 at junction
of old Rl 160. See it now.
.
#591

gas heal Thil

.

HssliU ·WD

#437

one.

llfALIOI

'•
.
$' ACRES Of VACANT IMD - More or less. Appro.. 18061b.
\1blcco base ilr '84. Wafer avaiable. Give us a call today.
'
.
··HL-IIOIITOII RD. - 16.340 acres. Ten nil court 54x 120, pool,

SMALL FARMS - 2 · 2\\ · 4 ·
9. · 12 acres. In Southern,
Langsville, RuUand and Eastern
area.

HUIISIII!J

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. garage·
workshop, Immediate possession.

[H

:In

MODERN - 5.25 acres and a
3 yr. old 7 rm. 2 baths, Ox32
great room home. Cook and
bake unils. dishwasher. relrig·
erator, swim pool and tenno
court.

FARMS - 76 acres. Farm
house, woodburner, mineia~.
near Langsville. - 96 acres
near Rutland, free gas and
minera~ - 58 acres Neas4l
Setllement with I~ 3 bedroom
home, bank barn - and over
300 acres near Racine wrth
rree gas an d 2 bath home.
IOWl'o INTEREST NOW

.

614 -367-7220.

3 bedrooms, storm doors and

WHAT A DEAL! $27.000
Come see lor your.;el~ Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washed. dryer,
dishwsher, refrigerator, woodburner. and all like new. Storage
building and 2 car carport. Kyger Creek schools.
#552

.STU E
,•t

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

or cool. $690. Cell 614268-1216.

513-793-2783 or

•

Barding all breeds. Selling ·
Happy Jack Dog · Food .,
Doberman puppies: Stud
Sentice . Call 446-7796 .

256-6689.

for 1711. Coli 44B-3389.

PRIME LOCATION

''•
:•'

besi'Otfer. 304·BB2·2642.

HILLCREST KENNELS

Firewood. • Pickup or delivered dump truck. Call614 -

Boby bod 1 yr. old, with

:; ONE OF THE ANEST HOMES IN GALLIA COUNTY

.·'

615. 304-675 -2637.

_s_s___P_e_t_s_f_o_r_s_a_le_

1·

Coll814·245·52,67 efter 6.

rnanreu. Pold 1140 wllloell

FOR SALE BY OWNER

TRAILER LOTS - 4 in
Middleport. Some with fur·
nished trailers in town. in the
country, Pomeroy, and on the
river. We have one for you.

Xmas tree w ith metal stand

1

walher, lawn moWer. stero.
refrigerator &amp; train lay-Out.

Be•utHul mtple water fall
bedroom auita 837ts. Alto
mlac. items. Call 448-2481.

r . 7nd st.

POMEROY - large mod.
veneer 3 BR home. L~ master
bedroom wilh bath. beautiful
fam1~ rm wrth fireplace and 2
car garage. 2~ baths, central
a~r and heat

LUMBER - Flough cut. oak. ·
poplar, 2)1:4 , 2x6. 2x8, 1x4,
1x6. 1 x8 , le,gth available, 8
foot thr ough 14 foot . Hogg
&amp; Zuspan . 304-773-6654
daYtime.

2 . anytime radio record
player combina1ion. haat-olater, marble top table. Call

e.

1/II&gt;GIL B. SA

NEW LISTING - 6 rm.
Syracuse home on 2 level lois.
BAih, naL gas hea~ insulated
and near scools. $25,000.

0 . Cell 614-245-5121 .

Real Estate General

For Sa By Owner
Phone 446-8221
'• .
••

Building materi~tls
block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows. lintels . etc .
Claude Winters , Rio Grande,

6460 or675 -3334.

One met al desk and chair .
one ~it chen cabinet. Call

ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses? See this fenced in pasture wrth 4 acres more or less
including a three bedroom home. just a few miles from Gallip~is.
Excellent land lor farming as well as a new home construction.
large barn plus two storage buildings, pond stocked wilh' catfis~
bass and ~ue gi lls. large concrete drive. Call lor a showing and be .

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

Surplus Deni m 10.000 garrrients stock .Armv cloth ing.
Boots-Leather· lnsulatad. Insulated coveralls $27.60. all
sizes . Sam Somervill e's.
East Rave M wood. o pen
1: 00-7 :00pm, Fri.. Sat. ,
Sun ., other days after
6:00pm , FREE delivery
orders after 8pm . 304-675-

992-2802.

away. Coli 814-992-5616
lnte!Uvision video game with
vcice modual, storage system and 13 cartridges. Call

55 Building Supplies

614-446-4 782.

Waaher gas dryer. Mathcing Kenmore. •125 pair.

446 -0063.

1981 14x70, Shultz limi1ed
mobile home. microwave .
dishwasher. centi-al air, underpenn i ng , three bed rooms. 1 V2 baths, excellent
condition . $16.600 . Call
304-676-6049 after 6 p.m .

446-0212 .

Crahsman 10 in. radial-arm
taw with 11and. dado blade,
shOp vaccum. $300. 614·

446-4630 .

446 -2B57.
Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
OeUv•ed in Mason. Meigs,
Galli a or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call 446· 7785.

Central Ave .• Vienna.

1972 mobile home with 1%
acres and outbuilding . Call

$1 0,000. 304· 773-5023.

balanced,

30'4-676-2519 ..

Christmas Special New 4
ft.x8tt . electric arrow flash ing signa. 2 colors, rent
$100 mo . for 4 mo. Then
buy sign for S45. Call

Raal Estata Oanaral ,

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

Call 304-882-3592.

scale.

AM-FM Stereo with 8 track
player and turntable, 2
speakera and cabinet. $86 .

304 -675 -157B or 875 ·
7896.

Call614-256·1427.

Coli U&amp;-1232.

POMEROY .
LANDMARK
614-992-2181

a

Firewood delivered . $36
pickup load, 10 loads $300 .

HOT POINT

In Middleport-trailer with
expando livingroom . Very
clean, corner lot. 12K60.

Produce

Grainfed freezer beef. Cho ice of black Angus or Hereford . Weight approx . 800
lbs . 58 cents a pound . Call

31119.

Call 992-7479.

&amp;14-949-3037.
- - - - - - --lc -

Ooll Collection! 2 very old
dolls, Blaque and Porcelain ,
beautiful pair. Golden Phea- .
san1 2 ring neck hans .

Wood World. 2506 Grand

bedroom suites. refrigerators, ranges, cheat. drea1er1,
wrlngw w•thera. TV's, drv·

•

116

54 Misc. Merchandise

Oak tablet &amp;. chaira. corner
cupboards, buffets 8. etc.

ploce dlnme oet t99,

,.

Firewood $.36 PU load, 6
loads $160. 10 loads 8260.
Hardwood, delivered•. Call

388-9767.

prompt delivery. 814-258·
GOOOUSED APPLIANCES 6245 . .

• uaed wood A coelatovee,
wood living room
tuhe with
inch ftet arma
$399. bunk beds complete

e piece

~.
.-

7034 or 614-992-6284.

Hand made do ll houses with
furniture, 365 . Phone 614-

Beauitful wood baby bed
with canopy and mattre11
also youth bed. Call 614-

Ave., Gollipolia. 446-1699.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
&amp;2 Ollvo .S t., Galllpollo. Now

$289 95

ATTENTION! Is ther.e such a
thing as a Classici In mobile
home7 When you view this
Holly Park we think you will
agree there is. A 1969
12x65 Holly Park with with
2 bdr., 5x10 tip out in livind
room. completely set up in
nice park . 1t includes 40 ft .
patio cover, 2 sets of steps
with railings, central air. nice
furnishings. even a washer
and dryer . completely
skirted and ready to occupy .
There isn ' t a cleaner or well
kept home in the area . Just
like brand new. You must
see to appreciate all of this
$12 .900 . Financing available, low down payment. and
low monthly payments. For
information call 614-992-

For ule grave blankets. Call

51000. Coll814·387·0314
614-367-0137.

TV • Applloncea, 627 Third 54 Misc. Merchandise

telav!olon, 304·676-11481.

$166 per month plus utilities and deposit. No pe1s.
Country Mcbile Home Park.

REAR OECK. $39.000.

New \*tOD d burning stove
with fir.ebrick $325 . each.

85 STU fuel furnace with
tank. Coal wood burning
PA system. Yamaha EM 160 . atove . 1969 International
mixer. 2 -EV 1 2'11peakert . 3 - truck for part1 or will tell
llure professional mies . outright . Call 742-241 6 .

en, &amp; ohoeo. Coli 448·

FIREPlACE. ATTACHED GARAGE

Antiquet. oak furniture re·
production. mise. items. Use
our Christmas layaway plan.
Conkela, Tuppers Plaint.

S75. Call614-367·0314 or
61 4-367·0137.

448·0322

changer,

coli 304-1176·

1. ameli black and white

2 bedrooms , furnished .

WORTH ASECOND I.OC*I-LOW PRIC£ $43.000 3BR
BRICK AND fRAME RANCH, HUGE FAMILY RM.' Willi

Uoed hid-a-bed, 30 !n. gel

614-258-8636 alter &amp;PM .

firm. 168. and e78. Queen
Mte, $196. 4 dr. .chests,

20 ft. flat bed trailer. Can
pull with own pick or car.
Haul anything on it. 126 per

ISR

IHAf HouseFc:e'&gt;
· Wof&gt;l'f louCI-1.

Boby bod•
1110. MattrttHe or bo~
oprlngo, full or twin, 168.,

Equipment
far Rant

1200.00,
58&amp;8.

AN~fi'I;N~::t

up to t395.

\IYolnut cob~' otylo Sylvo·
nil otoroo
AM ond FM
raalo, 8track apeployorond

Realty

54 Misc. Merchandise 54 Misc. Merchandise

Call446-1171 .

•&amp;&amp;0. and up, m•pla or pine
flnlah. Bunk bed complete
with mettretMI, 1260. and

leave meetage.

48

o;=

t110 up to t2211. Hu1choo,

992-7479.

!51

ONE ACIIE PLUS - J.JST
0\JTSIDE IllY, BEAUTIFULLAAO
3 BR. fi\IME FRANCH HAR0:
WOOD FLOORS, GAS HEAT, FUU. •
BASEMENT, HOOKUP FOR MQ.
BILE HOME $53,000.

54 M isc. Merchandise
range. cedar wardroba , RCA
color TV. Corbin S. 'Snyder
Furniture , 956 2nd. Ave.

T~UMJ3 WHet~ il C&lt;Yo\"'7 To
~tfl'oVeRS i'J : NeVel'!. eAT

beda. 1440. and up to.
16215 .• Recliner•. 1176. to

Pomeroy. Urge Iota. C1ll

Pion. Coli 446 -'2745 or

A £'icd) Rul!'

U8&amp;. to t89S. Tobloo, 146
and up to t1211 . Hldo-a-

end up.· Wood table with six
cheire 1426 to 1745. Desk

COU.NTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33, North of

$200 deposit located nur
Foodlend end Spring Veney.

cheir and loveM•t. •276.
Sofae and chelrs Pf'icedfrom

Urge tr•ll•r tpace on. on

two bedroom, rent llhlrting

at 1193 per month with

Solo, chair, rocker, otto·
3 tables. {extra heavy
by Frontier!, tiiBII. Sofa,

. .. .. .. ...
..
·--·
...........

SURROUNil(D BY BEAUTIFUL COUNTRYSIDE
EXCELLENT N~GHBORIIOOD., THR!'E &amp;DROOM
RANCH HOME Hl.s 2 BATHS. LARGE LIVING ROOM WITH
STONE AREI'lACE. SCHEIRICH WOOD CABINETS IN
EAT·IN KITCHEN. KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. COOLD
EASILY BE THE BEST BUY ON THE MARKET.

by Larry Wrlghl

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

m•n.

8376., Lompa from US. to
•75.1 pc. dinenea from
t99., to 436. 7 pc. t189

Bul.lvlle-Addloon Rd. Cell
44&amp;-4211&amp; or 4411-473&amp;.

------------~~--~~----------Raal Estate General

1 4K70 mobile home. Large
lot . Call 985-4367.
.

Adults only. 614 -992-2101
or 614·992 -2319 .

Household Goods

0081111 doyo. 1125. mo.

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS IEquol
Houolng Opportunityl . hoo

5434 or 304-882 ·2566.

.. ..

1 mobile home for rent . 2
mobile homes for sale. Call

446,0390.

Nice 2 bdr. opt. forront. 1&amp;

Apartment• now available to

F'umiilhad Rooms

The Sunday

W. Va.

Ohio-Point

For rent SIMplng Roome l-"iLAliviNNEE=i'siFiiiRN'rruiiE-1

'
APARTMENTS
, mobile

Raalty at 814-992·2269.

6548.

4&amp;

Apartment
for Rent

Unfurnished ona bedroom
trailar for rent. Suitable for
office space or lingiBS. '-::-61_4_·_9_9_2_
·7_7_B_7_.____
Water and sewage paid. 1
Inquire G &amp; G Sunoco. Efficieny apt. Call 9927450 .

2 bdr. mobile home . Call

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 bed room Apt. $196. mo.
including utllitiea. Equal
housing opportunity, Con tact Village Manor Apts.

for Rent

14x70 Penthouse high rise.
for rent in Pomeroy -Athens
For sale or rent 3 bdr. ranch, · area . Full furnished ,
!ull basement . 1 car garage,
equipped kitchen, washer 1n ground pool 16x32, sale dryer, woOdburner. S225
price 845 ,000. rent $300 . plus utilities . Or will sell for

259B.

Furnished apt. 6 roomt ~~~
bath, no pets, dep. required .

44

814-256-U29.

42 Mobile Homes

992·6539.

Small furnished 3 rocm
house with bath in Middleport . Adults only . 614-992-

Apartment .
for Rant

614-448-25B1 .

Modern 3 bdr. home sec.
dep. req . Reference s. no
pets, prefer m iddleaged .

304-424-6108 ofte• 6:00 .

• Call 614-JBB-9360.

paid. 3 room apia. utlltlet
paid. Call 304-1Jj1'16-5!1 04 or

3 bedroom house for rent.
Middleport with kitchen ap pliances. Deposit required .

1232 . .

44

Furnlohod epto., 1 -2 rm. &amp;
both down &amp; 1 up. Aloo 1·4 adult&amp;, 110 pets, month rant
rm . &amp; bath up. Cleen. no piUI 1100 IOC:Urit\' 992·
.
pets, adults only. Ref. req. 3874.
Coll448-1519.
2 bdr. apt .. utilltieo p'onially

1983

W.Va.

Furniohld opt. Middleport,

2457 or 446 ·0332 .

House .for rent or lease
located in New ._.a\len. with
NEW AND USED MOBILE . option to buy, large lot, 3
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· bedrooms, built-In kitchen ,
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES, family room, 2 car garage.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS. References and deposit reRT 35. PHONE 446· 7274. quired . 304-882· 2688 or

Trailer on 2 acre lot $1 9 ,000
and trailer on 1 acre lot
$11 ,000 on Kerr -Bethel Rd.

448-033B.

$275 plus utilities . Avail.
now, 2 bdr .• LA , new kit .. &amp;
bath. Large (enced yard..
new carpet, 556 or 658 3rd .
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 446-

Call 992-5B5B.

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446 -7572.

Apartment
for Rent

Smell furn. hou• 1 or 2
adult• only, no pett. Call

Equipped kitchen. newly
remodeJad, celftralair. &amp;300
per mo . Call 446-2168 .

845.000 . 614-992-5B5B .

3 bedroom. large lot, 2606

44

roq . Call 446-4222, 9:306:00.

2 bdr. farm house Located 1
mi. north of Crown City on
Big Creek Rd . Call 446 -

9B5 -43B7.

Every Time

Two story house, 4 bdr ..
•260 par mo. 8250 dep.

Call 614·379-2196.

Baum addition, 3 bedrooms.
· 2 % baths, A .C., family room
with fireplace . 2 acres.
$67.500 . No down pay ment, owner will carry at no
interest for 5 years . Loan
assumption possible. 614 -

They'll Do

Houses for Rent

3

bedroo m ranch style
home, carpeted, full size
basement, 1 car garaga, in
ground pool 1 6x32 .

Ohio-Point

VAcatiON CAMP BY BlUE LAKE
financing. Sundeck, rural water. septic sy.stem, electric. Buy
camping trailer or wrthoul, concrete pad. Greal Fishing BUy
and move right in.
#584
LOW DOWN PAYMENT. OWNER FINANCING
Are you looking for a 2 bedroom home overtooking lhe Ohio River
with little maintenanca Beginner home or retirement ho111a We
have~

#260

MULTI PURPOSE PROPERTY
Locatoo on Oh~ Rl 7 near GaU1polis. Walk·in cooler. d1splay
cabinets, three rental mobile homes - income now $660 per
month. Could be 6 room brick home plus 2 room bu~ness whatever you have in mind. flower shop, small grocery store.
carry-out, etc. lots d uses. Phone lor appolnlmenl to """ Live in
part - . business in other part. Renl mobile homes. Great
opportunity.
·

#580

•

6.95 ACRES VACANT WD OFF RT. 35
Rolling land - Beside old U. S. Higliway 35. In an area lhal ~
develop~ng last Rl 35, short distance west ol Gallipci~. Get ~ now.

• NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm. ra nch hom~. siluated near NorthGalli a•
• Sc hool. nice lot faces Rl. 160. Pnce $37,500.00.
•
• 2 BEDRM . COTTAG ESituated along Vinton Ave. Nal gas heat •
• 117 baths, SIX rooms, tamily room. 2 car garage. Price •
$32,000.00.
.
COLONIAL DUTCH. 2 or 3 bedrm . 2 full baths:conveniently •
•
located across from new court house. Lg. living ·rm. w/ w.b. •
f~replace. I&amp; krtchen and formal dimng rm. Ca ll for •
•
appo~n lment $82,000.00.

e

•

•

•
•

2 ACRES. more or less, with 3 Bedrms, fam1ly rm.. altachoo •
garage. Privacy witl1 in -ground pool. Near City l1mrts
$59,000 00
. •

•
•
•

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm. horne 1n Eureka. near Gall1pol~ •
dam. Be read)' for construct10rr boom. L1ve in or rent •
$22.000.00.
•

•
•
•

QUALIT'I BRICK HOME situated on approx 2 acres, w1thmc~ •
ol Gallipolffi. Solid che 1ry woodwork and pa nel. 3 W.B. •
l~r~pl aces, lull basemen! (llmshedl. conslrucled dunng late •
40 s. Amenrt1es too numerous lo list Call Ken Morgan.

•
•

•
•
•
•

••

APPROX. 5 ACRES w1th 2·3.bed rm. home all modern, electric •
heat w1lh woodor coal aux11iary, I.a. heatmg system. hard road a
on three •des of property. Room tor additional building loiS:"
Uwner may help finance qualified purch ase~ . Call for more W
~nlorma \ion.
• .

•
•

4 BEDRMS .. 8 RM ..HOME situaled alo ng Gartield Ave. A •
convement place to live. Overlooks I he beautrrul Oh1o River •
Price $30,000.00
•

•
•

10 UNIT MOTEL w1th house and approx. ~ 'Cfes. f1sh1ng pond •
socked With l~ h. Relax and. enjoy life wh11e "'"l&lt;~ng a I IVIn ~ l • •

•
•

151 ACRE FARM near Vinton. Has '3 bedrm. house, lg •
eqUipment shed. bottom land, pastureand \Orne wooded area •
·
Pnce reduced lo $86.000.00.

•

3 BEDRM. HOME. fa m i ~ rm , adapted for wb heater •
In-ground pool, lg carport. fenced ·ln yard . Madison Ave. Price
$46,900.00.
•

•e
•

•

••

INVESTMENT PROPERT'I!' 2 apartment home wrth 2 bedrms •
each. Located wrthin 2 bloc ks from schools. Plenty parkmi • ..
good locatiDn.$65,000.00.
COMMERCIAL PRO,PERT'I - Approx 4,000 sq ft .located'"
downlown Gallipolis Can be leased or purchased Across ~om
city parking lot

#544

PREP~RE FOR WINTER and move 1nto I his 2 bedrm. cottage
$2'~1 m Foodland Grocery. Nat gas heat: Buy now

8 ACRES
· 10 minutes drive to downtown Gallipolis. City school system.
hookup lor moble home. Gallia Rural Water, electric and septic
NiRht light on pole, 200 ft. lrontage on Graham School Rd.
Building snes. Call now.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Active res1aurant business
!oca1ed on ;,orner lot in Kanauga. Purchase and get immooiate
'Cash Flow owner may fmance some to qualified purchaser
Call for more ~nlormation.
·

#4n

00

.

�December
Ohict-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

56

Pets for Sale

Brlarpatoh Kennels Professional All-breed grooming .

Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities. English Cocker SPaniel 'pupples. Call 614 -388 -

. 9790 .

57

Musical
Instruments

•

Peavy bass uitar, hard case.
Peavy bass amp, 16 "
speaker. Both 8 600. Call

Brass trumpet with ease.
Good condition. 8..260. Call

Oragonwynd Catt ery Kennels . AKC Chow puppies. CFA Himalayan , Per-

992-5844.

sian and Siamese kinens.
Coli 446-3844 after 6.

Fonda~ super reverb amp.

AKC Registered Poodle pup pies. Dep. will hold for

Christmas. Call 446-0857 .

Beagle puppies. 12 weeks
old. $36 . Call 614-3889354.
1 Y2

yr . old male Cocker

Spaniel . Call 446-7300 before 4 . or 614-379-.2 216
after 6 .
AKC

Chow puppies. Call

614-367-0581.
Toy Fox Terrier puP.pies for
sale. Call 61 4-446 -2 1 1 1 .

and Gtbson flat top guitar.

61 4-992-3342.

Brand N"ew Armslrong flute,
$200. 00 or best offer, 304 -

937-2390.

Dixon Acoustic guitar. sao
or best offer . Phone 304 -

675-7711.

59 For Sale or Tr.ade
1971 Volkswagen wagon.
runs good, good t ires , auto.
trans . new banery, good
interior. Call 614 - 266 ·

6836.

Registered English Saner ·1952 Ford F1 Pickup . Call
pups, 2 males. 10 wks. old , 742-3166.

S150 ea . Call 446-9634.

AKC Miniat ure Daschund.
Black and Rust, ready for
Christmas . Born November

1992 Buddy two bedroom
14x16 furnished.wa ·
sher&amp;dryer.like new . Fi nancing av11ilable , 614· 992

9. 863-8378. $160.

7479.

Registered AKC Doberman
puppies. Fawn and rust -

1978 Harley Davidson
Sportster, lots extras.
$3,000. or trade for car of
equal walue. 304-882 -

$1 50

each.

Blues-$175.

Black and red-$75. Wormed
and shots. 863-8378 .

Will pay top pric:: e for to ~
bacco poundage. Call 614-

3220.

.

3 bdr. all brick rariCn . Full
basement attached 2 car
garage, ._
8 acres. close ~o
hospital. C.ll 446-7838 lifter~PM.
'

j
NORTH

11·1-1.1

63

livestock

EAST

+J9.

.1086 3Z

'PQH

EXLINE SADDLE SHOP 2
mi. Nortt'l of Jackson on St.
Rt 93 beside 93 Auto Sales.
Christmas Sale . Youth show
saddle save SS
headstalls save $$
leather show halter with
silver S47.60
all grooming item save SS

61 4·286-6622.

For sale Reg . Chestnut
Quarter horse mare. Big
Sorrel gelding 4 whi1e stock ings, white blue face ,
Slmca show saddle w ith
breut strap. 614-2 86 ·

.QJ109 2
• •2

t83
·~·

.QJ9 4

SOUTH
.U8 32

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Large round bales of hay.
$15 each . Call 446-1 062 .

1980 Dotoun·310 GX. AMooklng f3.195. Coli 4416626.

mond to his ace and ruffed a
third diamond with dummy•s
trump seven. East wasn't
going to waste bis ace of

1918 Chevello 307, 4 bor·
·~

quickly. South cu~ bll AQ of spades, ted a club to
dummy's ace, dilearded bil

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

last diamond on tbe spade

We1t

North

Eu1

South

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+
39'
Pass

PaS!!

! 'P
2 NT
4'f

Pass

Opening lead: tQ

king, led a trump, . - wltll
his king, led a second trump
so that Eut'o trump ace
captured West'o jock and
claimed an overtrick.
That overtrick wouldo'l
mean mucb ' iD a rubber
bridge game, but it wu the
difference between bottom

retl, perf•!:l· Interior. new
point, good body. Coli 8l4~79·24114

or 448-3787.

1980 Ford LTD, auto .. AC.
PS. PB, cruiM. 1 owner,
n•w tirea. low mil... exc.

Wreckod 19711 Chevy Novo.
Will ooll oil or pono of. Good
tirel, 6 cylinder engine.
Runo good. Coli 304·882·
31192.
1978

H•rley

D•vldaon

By OSwald Jacoby

and a near average for East
and West.

Spontter. f1900. Excellent

and James Jacoby

It seems tbat all other

Coli 304-882-2904 or 304·
882-3481.

One of the most valuable

Easl players ruffed with tile
trump ace rtlbt
to

features in the American
Contract Bridge bulletin is

give the defense three trump
tricks instead or two.

the column by Forrest Smith

•••J

(NEWIIPAPII:IIIIN1'It\I'IIIIEAIBif.l

te

condition. Prlc1 negotlllble.

Forem•na--for lell ex pen·
alv• cara •nd truckl. Lana•·

ville. Coli 614·742·2734.

ore

1977 Malibu stationwagon.
gooJf mechanically, new

paint. $1500. 614-985·
4174.

·

197~ Cornaro.
spe-.d,

$6(\0.

Bobcat kittens. Grandfather
wild bobcat. In time for
Christmas. $100. firm. 304·-

937 -2686 .

--~ ~" ~~$1. ~-,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

82,800. negotioblo. 304896 -3967 or 304-895 3472 alter 6'00 .

1652.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1978

Chevrolet

Scotdala

'81 Mercury Lynx, 4 speed.
goo'd gas mileage, &amp;kc.

Call 446·2836. ·

1979 Chevrolet 4x4 black
with short bed, V-8, 4 1pd .•
With lock out hubbs &amp;. roll
bar. Call Ron Sheets. 6141-9 72 Ford van automatic for

2282.

Coli 446· 7739.

SOUTHER,. HlLLS R.E.r INC.

AFFORDABY
M.ADE US
.

1978 4•4 Blazer, 65,000
mi18s, good cond .• $4,296.

Coli 614-245-9498.

$1360. Cell 949-2605.

1,CENTURY 21;

.

.

N390

POMEROY- Mobile home lot all utilities. $2.500. DEXTER - 1\! s1ory frame home, island krtchen,
HARRISONVILLE - Mobile home lot, septic ian!, carpet in all 7 rooms- $29,100.
·
w::~tF•r ::~nrl PIPrlrir fvlnk un ~ nnn
NAYLORS RUN - 7 room house. 6.05 acres.
3 BEDROOM l2x65 mobile home, Com~elely outbuildings - $29,500.
furnishert ~~.~QQ,
RUTlAND - 3 bedroom remodeled home, 2
MIDDLEPORT - liberty St - Two family u n~ balhs, garage, large lot - $29,900.
large lot. $8,000.
POMEROY - Main St.- Front porch, great river
POMEROY - laurel St. - Speoial pnce on v~ew. 2 story, 4 bedrooms, part basement remodeled home. range and dishwasher $29,900.
slays-$8,000.
.
SALEM TWP. - Nice mobile hom~ huge ~cnic
POMEROY ~ chea~e m town, 3-4 bedrooms, she~er, garage and extra trailer lot - $30,000. ·
needs wor&lt; - $9.800.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, I \l bath' rec. room,
MIDDLEPORT - General Hartinger Pkwy. - 4 nice k~chen - $31,200.
room hous~ good renlal investment $10,000.
POMEROY - Mulberry Al/fJ. - Excellent
SYRACUSE- 30x30 block garage, could be body oondit~n and localion, bui~·in krtchen- $31,500.
shop, camper/boat ~orage - $10.800.
POMEROY - Rose Hill - Home in good repair,
SYRACUSE -Church St - 2 nice level lots and full basement 1.1 acre, come see- $31.500.
an older h()(Jse that needs some repair- $11,000. RUTlAND - Home fur sale at a right price,
RUTlAND - 2 bedrooms, double lot $11.900. assume loan - $32,000.
NEAR MINES- free gas and water with 1971- MIDDLEPORT - 4th Ave. - 1\7 story,
12x60 mobile home, 1 acre - $12,000.
dishwasher, disposal, air cond., 21ots- $32,000..
NEAR LEADING CREEK RD. - 1 acre lot with 2 POMEROY - Beech St. - ~ve acres and mce
bedroom mobile home. - $12,000.
home in town - $32.000.
lANGSVILLE - Partly finished attic bedroom. SYRACUSE - Rustic Hills - 3 bedroom ranch,
patio. cellar room. storage building &amp; $14,625.
hardwood floors. carport immediate possession MIDDLEPORT - Good location, house needs $32,900.
wor~ - $14.900.
BASHAN - Alarge family home, 4to 5pedroonis,
DANVILLE - Country Ch urch - approx. 1 acre full basa menl on 2 acres - $35,000..
Ia~ completely furnished for services- $15,000. POMEROY- locust St. Two story.lru of closels,
POMEROY - Anne St.- High on ahill and plenty wishmg well and balcony - $35,000.
of space. Could use some work. - $15.000.
RACINE - 7 rooms, 3 bedroom home w~h 1\\
RT. 33 NEAR POMEROY - Nice siding rear and baths. lots of nice features - $35,000.
front porches, needs some work - $15,345.
MIDDLEPORT - Brownell Ave. -Cool central
POMEROY - lincoln Hill - good starter home. air. n~e decorating, 3 ·acres, low heating one floor plan - $16,000.
$35,000. '
POMEROY - Brick St. - Live in ~or renl rt RUTlAND - New carpeting throughout ranch
$16.000.
home, attached garage - $36,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Second St. - lovable live-in lANGSVILLE - Beautiful woodwork, corner
krtchen, older home charm - $16,000.
hutch, enclosed rear porch. ,pt and business
RUTlAND - St. Rt. 124 - Two bedroom, building - $36,000.
carpetmg forced a11 heat sheds- $17,100.
SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom modular, nice level lol
MIDDLEPORT - Pearl St. - Cute 3 bedroom - $36,500.
home, ideal fur older oouple- $19,000.
ROCK SPRINGS ROAD- lll acres, 3bedrooms,
MIDDLEPORT - High St. - Cute 3 bedroom one fiw. new carpet- $36,900.
home, ideal fur older oouple - $19,000.
BEECH GROVE ROAD - Modular w~h 5-6 acres,
SYRACUSE - Carol St - Starter home. air central air, 2 baths - $39,225.
conditioned, 3 bedrooms, 1 yr. rnd furnace TUPPERS PlAINS- A gorgeous 2 acre lot .with
$19,500
one floor ~a n home - $38,500.
POMEROY - Peoples Terrace - Two un~ renlal RUTtAN 0 - Beech Grove Rd. - Almost new 3
- $19,500.
bedroom home, deck and privacy - $38,900.
CHESHIRE- 1 ~ lois of ievel ground w~h nice POMEROY - Rock St. - 2 story older home in
house, owner wanls Ia finance - $20,000.
good condition, full basement - $39,000.
POMEROY- Vale ~t.- Cute one floor plan with MIDDLEPOI!l - PLUM ST. - New modular,
basemen! - $20.~.
·
woodburning fireplace, ll'lcd locat~n - $39.500.
- BASHAN - New rool and sld~ng. full basement FARM lAND in the coontry, approx. 64 acres, &lt;if
and gas righls. 2 old houses - $39,900.
like new inside - $21,500.
POMERI!Y - Mulberry Ave. - 3 bedroom home LETART - Five bedroom oom~ enclosed
s •nporch, 3 car garage, a~ a renlat- $39,900.
and 1 bedroom renlal unit - $22,500.
liNCOLN HEIGHTS- Neat &amp; n~e. 2-3 bedrooms, FREE GAS, own water sys1em, alniost an acre,
garage, nice oome in country - $41,900.
garage - $22,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Third St. - Shaded lawn. 3 HARRISONVILLE AREA -Grand old farm house,
several building;, 5 acres - $42,500.
bedrooms, 2 balhs, fireplace - $23,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom ranch, insulated, MIDDLEPORT - Business building, 4 apartment
and 2 commercial renla~ - $45,000.
utility room. nice lol - $24,000.
POMEROY - Wetlgall St. - 3 bedrooms, full RUTLAND - Approx. 20 acres witfl 3 bedroom
ranch, family room, garage - $45,000.
basement lruillrees - $24,000.
I FLOOR PIAN IN RUTlAND - Reduced to REEDSVILLE- 681- family comlortwilh plenty
at room, garage and workshop - $46,000.
$24,900.
POMEROY - Heats w~h coal and wood. MIDDlEPORT - Pearl St. - WICker balhroom.
corner ~garage, 4 bedrooms- $45,000.
.remoo~ed and added on to - $25.000.
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms, family room, cute NEAR FIVE POINTS- 33 acres, 7 yr. ~d ranch
wrth basement big ~rage - $47,500.
krtchen, 3 lois - $25,000.
MI ODLEPORT - Second St. - Rustic log home, SYRACUSE - Rustic Hills - 3 bedroom ranch,
family room, fireplace - $48,000.
open kitchen, loft area - $25,900.
MIDDLEPORT - Pearl St. - Front and rear MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful large home, wb
porches. nice back yard, 2 s1ory home--:- $26,500. fireplace, garage, etc. - $49,000.
DANVILLE - 2 ~lli'J home, big barn, in a quaint POMEROY - Mulberry Ave. - Extensive
little town, I 1'1 baths, 1 acre, ooal shed, fruit trees remooelin~ equipped' kitchen - $49,900.
-$26,500.
.
C"ESTER AREA - 3bedroom brick veneer ranch,
DEXT£R- Three bedroom block arid frame home rec. room, woodburner, equipped kitchen on 6~ acres in country - $26,900.
$53,000.
HARISONVILLE AREA - Six acres of fenced POMEROY - Five Pcints Area - Ranch home
cleared ground, ond, 2 bedrooms, equipped wrth 1,800 sq. ft, family room, garage, fireplace, 4
bedrooms, 2 baiiJS - $53,500.
kitchen - $26,900.
MIDDLEPOI!I- Rutland St. -IOacreswitllll! RUTLAND- lltw lillll ROid - 47 acre farm
s1ory, house, 2 car garage, buildinr; - $26,900. with a dream fi a house - $57,900.
POMEROY - Mulberry Ave. .- 11'1 story, foor SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom bi-level, 2baths, family
room, fireplace, sprral stucase - . $64,000•.
bedrooms- $27,500.
RUTIMD -l.li ICIIIS fi good la~ng_ land, 6,000
POMEROY - Un1on Al/fJ. sq. ft barn, free gas Ill house - $l!5,000.
two baths, sewing room POMEROY - Lillcol~
features. POI!llAND - 182 acre farm, barn size of Noah's
Ar~ river wiew, gipntlc oouse - $290,000. ·
ful basement storage
COUIII'RY-

•

#461
NEW LISTING - 1979 DUKE MOBILE HOME -In
excellent condition. Very nice kitchen with refrigerator,
range, buin in microwave oven. 2 bed roo~ large bath,
livinl room, family room Electric heat. central air '
con itionin&amp;
,
ff486
4 ACRES OF NICE lAND to build on. Nice homes inthe
area. VEry good location. Wrthin 3 miklS of Gallipol~.
Buy all arid use for building lots or build your own
spedal homa

.

#481

.

#392

PRiceD FOR QUICK SALE - 134 acre farm. Stale
Route 681, Tuppers Plains. Approx. 20 acres crop land,
most all level. The rest~ wooded. Has Slreams on land.
Gas well, past royalties approx. $750 per year. County
waler available. $38,800 all youro.
•
11367
VACANT lAND :-OhioTownship-20ecres, v.oods,
pasture. Apfl!OXImalefy 2 level acres, lnbacco ground.
Home site:

MlM

-

·~:
r

.~

..-·

soliD OWER. FRAil 2 s1Dry home with 4 bedrooms,
liVIng room. kichen. family room, dining room, bath,
cellar house, garage with attached carport. Could be
used for business. Priced in lhe 30'~
113Ti
LOOK AT ALL YOU GET FOR $28,000 - 3 bedroom
home, main bath, large kitchen, very nice living room,
good ~pet, natural' gas heat, all new windows, froot
porh, recently buin garage. 40x 150 lol Located in city
school district

."

OWNER SAYS SRL - Th~ nice home in Mddlelillll
has been drastical~ reduced from
$32,000. Living room, formal diriing room,
bedrooms, full basement I tar prage, aluminum
siding

••

·'

,·

11476

••

11318

COME TO THE COUIII'RY and get away from ~ all. 3
bedroom ianch. I II acres. Woodbumer. Storage
building Only $21,500.

.
IMT1
7 ACRES - Close to R~ Grande. Sevl!flll feet fi
frontage on Stale Rt: .325. Rural wal!!l availalle. No
restrictions. City schools.
ROOM TO GROW with this older 2 story home, 3
bedrooms, family room, living room, llrl!ll kitchen, bath.
Nice large .lol In wafllin&amp; dlslance lo downlllwn and
schools. Priced 11 $23,500
·

. M5l

I ACRE LOT- Mostly ftat and located II Route,141.
Green Township. Rurat water available.
·

u

2 studded snow tires. 1
wheel and 1 jack for Volks wagen Beetle, 304-675·

6461 .
Billy Lee's Tires and Battery
Seles. New and used tires,
also, tire repairs. 1603 Jef·
farson Ave. Point Pleasant.

304·675-5406.

lee lpaa
Home
Improvements

I

•

81

Now arrange the drclad letters to
10"" the surprise anawer. u aug·
gested by the above cartoon.

I X X,)HIS( 111)
, _ _y)

'
Jumbles: SWOON GRIMY ENTIRE
MANAGE
Answer: Could be Instrumental In a marriage

Home
Improvements

F S. K Tree Trimming, stump

removal. Call 676-1331.

Home
Improvements

Call 614-388-9857.

304-895-3802.

Appliance Service All makes
8t models raft igerators,
washers, dryers. ranges.
compactors. dishwashers,
microwaves. Heating &amp;.
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work .
Gallia Rafrigeration Co. Call

SEAMLESS GUTIERS, Ono
tor. (Dey 614-692-4066,1
(night 614·698-8205.)
GET

your

carpet

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Quazar , and
house c::alls. Call 576-2398

fumiture cleaning, free eati-

304 -675-2088 or 6764660.
Real Estate General

matos. 304-675-2295 .

Houses moved or raised,
basements dug beneth
houses, free estimates.
House Movers, Inc . 304-

576-2711.
Framing. remodeling, roof ·
ing , siding. concrete work .,

---..
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170 ACRE GRASS AND BEEF FARM - 57 acres
permanent lime and treated pasture. 60 acres
rediimed, treated · and seided in aHalf' clover,

...

.

...~j·.

' 'I

orchaill 1J1SS. Woods, lobaccQ base, 2200 Christmas
trees, 2 yea~ old. Modern 7 rm house, good bam. Buy
while farm prices are low.
11360

"·000 DOWN - ASSUME 10% MOIITGAGE - Owner says
'!"I i now. Very allractive 3 BR 4 yr. old home. ~mrnled to
Slit anyone's - - The fire~ace. 2 1~1 balh~ nice orge
IICcflen. heal pum~ 2 c.v garage, Wllfksilol&gt; and I acre~ee
slulded yard. $59,000.
'
.
AfP HAS MOVED OWNED 8111 NOT HIS HOUSll - hal
'f"'"$ savini!S lo yllll, because he's ready lo deal Hell hawi a
liartl ome replacing this atlraclil'e 3 bedroom brick ~anch
rxlmplele with fiji llasemsl\ family room. lvirlg room. em
nice kitthen, II! bath. Efficienllumacewithc:enlnland lot. of
insubililn lo keep the ~lo down. Utllily room, 2 car garage
add possiiJe 9% loan OSSIJmption. PLUS CJIE YEJJ! BUYERS
PROTECTION. City schod~ dose lo shop~fiS Reduced lo

,·'.

·'

·'.
~

..,'.

remodeled home. 2 large barns, machinery shed, 3
other outbuildinllf aft in excellent condition. 2670 lb.
tobacco base, pond, 30 acres bollom land.

..,

.,

11474

IAIID COIII'IACT - l\lth 1/try reasonable down.
PIYmenl 7 year old horne with 2 bedroo~ balll.
Bit-in llilcllen irot:ludlng range and refrigerltnr tivinR

rmm. 1.9 IICn!S, more or less. $25.600.

'

..

~$49,000.

~

-·•
~

..

M65

135 ACRE FARII - loclled just soutll of Thurman on S.R.
279, lllis IO'm corOins 40-50 acres of ii)Od croplan&lt;\ lhe
remailm!J. ~ is_- wllh some timber. Also fealures
3500 t ~-~~~ 1f01111180. 30x40-llm achine sllod, and e70ft
• deep
whidl cooflrls aii)Od water wpply. Oldef 2 ~ory
1x1me is siluoll!d in a beautifiA setlin&amp; MinefJI righls inciOOed.
l1ti'NERS MO'III«l OOT OF TifltiN - CllY s:HOOLS - This
is 1 nice 3 bedroom brick and fnme home ju~2 miesweslof
tuwn. lnclllles a worm and mry iejUce, 1~1 basemen! w/
fomiy room. c:enlnl air. llfllll and more. Gal to see tflis one
IDday.

..

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I

85

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane.
leaden, dump truck. Call

Generi!]_Hal!ling

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Laniur, 304·6 75 -

614-446-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.

7397.

87

Upholstery

J .A.R. Construction Co .
Wa.ter Lines. Footers,
Oi-eins. All kinds of Ditching .

TRISTATE
UPHOlSTERY SHOP
Rutland, Oh . 614-742 - 1163
Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis .
2903.
446 -7833 or 446-1833.

84

We do quality reupholstering, make new custom made
reupholstered furniture. R &amp;
M Manufacturing. Crown

· Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

SHEET METAL WORK
We make custom duct
work. We Repair Furances
&amp; Heat Punips.
GALLI A
REF~fGERATION CO.
614-446 -4066
~~IMPROVEMENT-S

f:'

Bill's

T

Nu·Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility
buildings

City, 614-256-1470.

Plsquale Electric Co . all
pha~as of electric work. all
work guaranteed . Aerial
truck rantal. Call 614-446·

691 Miller Drive
446-'2642

Free Estimates

SOLUTION

2716.
SEWING Machine repairs,
sarvice . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sci1lors. Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Cell 614·367-7471
or 614-367 -0591 .
Need something hauled
ewav or something moved?

We'll do rt. Call 446 -3159

between 9 and 6.
Water hauling, Fast ~ervice ,
low rates. Call 614 -256 -

1743.

·sUNDAY PUZZlER

RlDUCED TO $29,000 -l.ocallld 11112 Teus Rood. This 2
,.- 3 bedroom oome I'OS a nlllrol """" firislllhfOUII'out ·
In dudes all kitcflen alliUlces arid lois of llfK'J nice lunilure.
Has lull basement nal' gas hell and pra110 Owner miEl sell

CALL US TODAY
PHONE
446-3643

ACROSS
1 Sllalter

6 Country ol
Europe
11 Inclination

16 Heavy
21
22
23
24

volumes
Rent
Put In line
Medley of '
dances
Standard ol
parfectlon

25 likely

Famed
Penned
Aegulauo'n
Proceed
Parent :
colloq ..
34 A Gershwin
· 35 Beverage
36 Distance
meaaure
37 Fondle
38 Organ ol

I

ocean

I'

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I

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I
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between
lwo

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NEW LISTING -128 4th AVE. - ThiS is aremedeled 2story
3 bedroom rome with avery lice 18x36 in-grourld pool.The
oome indudes ~rge rooms, equipped kitcflen, dining room,
Buc~ ~ove, nat gas heal. cenlral air, alum. Sld~ng lenced
back yard and m.-e. Pnced ID sal al $49,900.

26
28
30
32
33

sight

40 Lono. deep
cui
42 Wire
measure
43 Rise and
rail of
44 Vehicles
45 Large tub
47 Looked
lntentty
o49 Reveal
50 Torrid
51 Earthquake
54 Act
55 Contest
56 Imprisonment
59 Hurried
80 Armed
· conflict
62 Recreation
64Mud
SS Pianissimo:
abbr.
ee Chaldean
City

67 Hindu

cymbals

69 Flghls

70 Dispatched
n Senora:
abbr.
72 SerJes of
games
74 Son of Zeus
and Europa

76 Chart
17 let It stand
78 Part of
fireplace
79 Inherited
customs
82 Depended

on

84 Light brown
85 Repetition
86 Cravats
88 Extremely
terrible
89 Loved one
90 Musical
Instrument
92 Amend
~4 Weighing
down
98 Arrow
poison
99 Planet
1Da Parcel of
land

102 Slrlkos
103 Golf mound
104 Insect egg
105 Young girl

106 Journeys
108 The self
109 A state:
abbr.

110 Latin
conjunction
111 Musical
Instrument
112 Nuclei of
the atom
114 Pigpen
116 Pronoun
117 Staid
119 Principal
120 BuCket

122 Relishes
124 Devoured
125 Kind of oak

....

126 COndiment
128 Brim

129 Unadulterated

131 Tumbled
132 Dance step
133 Look flxedlv
135 Place out
138 Hostelry
139 Blood
140 Sunburn
141 Prell~e : three
142 Compass
point
143 Paid notice
144Unltof
Italian
currency
145 Bay window
147 Imagine
149 Rocky hill
150 More recent
152 Sufferer
from

Hansen's
. disease
154 Separate
t5611al!an viol in
maker
156 Mountain
nymph
159 Tropical
fruit: pl .
160 Garden
I lower
161 Baianc::e
DOWN
1 Censure
2 Recomperise
3 Dine
4 Conjunc tion
s Ranoa or
knowledge
6 Petty ruler
1 Gratllled
8 Succor
9 Preposition
10 Recent
11 Fish from
moving boat
12 Nerve
network
13 Day before
hell day
14 Greek lettar
15 Mock
.te Baked clay

17 Poem
18 Pronoun

19 Ardent
20 Narrow

open ing s
27 Lubricate
29 Foray
31 Rubo'er tree
36 Mud
37 Top of head
39 Smooth
40 Pack away
41 Part of foot
42 Between
small and
large
43 Domesticate
44 Center
46 Part of
" to be "
48 MLJSical
instrument
49 Prohibits
50 Damage
51 ConfldEince
52 More
unusual
53 HavlnQ a flat
breastbone
55 SwalloWed
eagerly
56 Force
57 Small shoot
58 Freshet
61 Hindu
queen
63 Scorch
64 Reward
68 Plunderers
70 Spire
71 Enthusiasm
73 Goal
• 74 Small ·
amount
75 Cuts
77 Fathers
78 Oceans
80 Apportion
81 BishOpric
83 Cover
84 Mrs .
Truman
87 Tavern
89 Railroad
stations
90 Climbing
plants
91 Join
92 Grate
93 Bumpkin

95 Tauered

cloths
96 At no time
97 Wheel teeth
99 Femal e
horse
101 Figures of
speech
105 Tardy
106 Decorate
107 Break
suddenly
t 11 Detest
112 Becom~
cloyed
113 Drinks
slowly
115 Ivy League
university
116 Reliance
118 Mend socks
119 Burrowing
anlma1
121 Missives·
123 Roman
number: six
125 Harbinger
126 Sheet of
glass
127 Scarcity
129 Musical
instrument
1JO Beneath
131 Preposllion
132 Couples
134 Equip
136 Dllficuitles
t37 Weird
139 Encircle
140 Woody
p1an1
144 Meadnw
145 Chnose
146 Once
around
track
147 Cooling
device
146 Short sleep
149 Siamese
flatlve
151 Pronoun
153 Babylnn lan .
deity
155 Parent :
colloq ,
157 A state;
abbr.

•

~

-·
~

1449

complete with central air. I e2r garage, carport and our
Buyers ProtecOOn Plan which insures against loss from
breakdown of lhe ma~r syslems cf lhis hom•

NOW lfS $52.101- PRICE DIIOI'PED $7,000- This was
just anothOI' ii)Od boy, now ~s an unbel~able bargain.
Owners must sac~ce Ihis attractive 4BR ranch off Rl35. The
decorating is just klvely with newer carpet, paint el~ There
are 21ul baths, alarr.llr""l ~ning room, pr~ ~!chen wilh
breallfast roo~· firep ace, cenlral .air !heal pump) and gara(IO.
Owners leaving area. Gall us anytime lo "" lhis ooe.

MEl IICMfiG TO I:Oiu.tJS - died&lt; lhe features of
lhis . . - , . 2 !lory Has boon complelely
fO'IIodoled, New mQI silln&amp; now roof, new roodem
. _ COI14AIW1 new IW:hen wilh neorfy 30 fl. of
cobilels, 2 ..........., plls fon:ed lir llmace, 3 lig
bodnloms, 2 .. bllhs, monee. - dinin polio
OOIJ - . " 1 hlllt neo wndtlric locobid near it., and
BuciiM His on 2~ oc. Rot kit OwnO'- i S&lt;lld. Priced al
$72.000.

~

Msl

W8£YAI:Mf .UIT - Perry Township_ Coo1ty W111Jr
and lllectric llllilable. level lot Hard road.

. •

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..-·

ATTIACTM 3 N:.. smTfiG - This 3BR vinyl roncll is just
IIi"""' from 1M:. Has 2bolhs, eat-il k.then. 2cor pr~~~~,
- p and I nice 3 ICr! lot Whit I nice view. Privole

BRING THE WHOLl FAMILY lo oo~ at lhis complell!ly
finohed 5'bedroom oome localedc 2 bloc~s lrom lhe hospital.

Olll OFTHl BEST NEW Urn fiGS Wl HAVE-6rooms~us
&lt;lillY and balh. 2car garage. 20'x40' pool3 y~. od.Nice 1...;
lawn. Also 2A. m~ of high~ productivland, tobacco base w~h
.... 1000 lh base. Also lllOII kll value for ooilding localed in
Crown Cily. l'liced 81 $7~000

In city schools. 3 B~
1111~ 12'1124' ~&gt;&amp;senm\ new ptlch Onglh of house, 14'x16'
p•ilio, slorlie bldi Over 1.5 A land.l'liced In sai.Lelus show
10u llis d0111 well kept 4 yr. old oome. l'liced ot $36,000

-'_,

11om the city limits in Green Township just

This one hass extras like: sewing room, utility room, music

~IU VIEW HOllE JUST Off 211 -

'

m~e

room. lamily room, li~ng room. 2 fireplaces. 2 balh• and

Q01£1 COUNTRY LIFE - Gan be yoors with eneriiY efllcient
nxxlern loll home. Own wood sUilflly for heal and land for
gOrden..,l0.81 acres. J bedrooms. I~ balhs oitl1 ~~ stme
flrel;ace. On Brumfield Rood, 2rriles off Rt 218. RlliiOOo!IJe
jJriced at $35.000. .

PIICED RIGHT- You """1 find vef'/ manJ _II&gt;Od buys ~
lllis one too often. Prlt:ed at $44,000, lhis 3 BR bHMI offers
l200 sq. ll of lving ...., living room. fllmly room. bolh with
lieploce, 2 lull balhs 1nd gar111• localed M mmer lof, llis
ll!me is cbie In shoWng and i1 c:ily schools. fen&lt;ed In yllll
&gt;!lh fruit lrees.

REALTOR

will trade for business property or anything else of value.

$¥.800. '

ITS CUlSl TO THl IIINES - This LO yeor old 3bedl!llm
l)&gt;me offers 1800 "' ft ot livhg space for $38,000. 2 yr. old
m ,.- lXIII fon:ed ir furnace. 20 fruit lrees silualldon 7oc.
in' a nice WiiXIed. area.

. I

kitchen, tlh·balhs, 2 wooclbuming fireplaces, family room, 2
car garage, storage buildin&amp; and beautiful lawn. Must sell and

IARGl fMIILY - FREQUlNT GUESTS - GRANDCHilDREI! - We hove li;led ~~ lhe oome. 5bedrooms, 2 balh~
remodeled older section bot mostly new s.tructure finohed in
i,lXId tzlie. Has kootly pine wal flflish in one room with sta1r
rsiNng to - h modem ~rge ~!chen. wood deck 8'x54', tronl
porch :JJ'x50', garage arid shop. ~us 2 acres for lawn and
garden. On S R. 325, 5 miles S. ol Rio. Asl&lt;ing $67,000.

Henna. panda, di~chBI ,
basements, etc . Call 446·
4907 . Carter &amp;. Evans
Transportation .

I

off Rl. 141. This ,.ry pleasant l'&lt;lme fealures awie apprOVEd

'

Excavating

THE STAN -S HOR CO.
Excavating, Swimming Pool
Sales &amp; Service, WinterCovOI's,
Winterizing Kits. Domes. Spas.
Pool Winterizing Available.
Dozer. Backhoe, Dump Trutk.
388-8869

otc. Call Bud, 304-458·
1566.

OWNER WIU TRADE FOR ANYTHING OF VALUE -lovcly 3
tfdroom brick ranch setting on a 2.3 ac. knoll with masterful
view j.Jst 1 ~

83

SHIP

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal,

rienced roofing, including
hot tar application. carpen ter. electrician, mason. Call

J&amp;G CONSTRUCTION
New Construction . Remodeling, Roofing, Siding,
Room Additions. Free Esti mates. Reasonable Rates.
Ph. Meigs 992 ·7697
Gallia 446-3302

piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut-

614-446·4066 .

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

Dewitt's

Plumbing. Cell 614-367·
0576.

owner.

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test. holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

1----------

lennox Heating &amp; Air Condition!"' All types Insulation,
Eleetrical Wiri"'
Call 446-8515 or 446-0445

Good -1 Excavating. base- Will haul coal. gravel, sand,
anything. Call Bud 304 ments, footer•. driveways.
septic tanks, landscaping . 458' 1666 .
Call anytime 446·4637 ,.
James L. 0 avison, Jr . -;;-:;--;-:--;--;-:----

Marcum Roofing &amp; SpoutinQ. 30 year$ experience.
specializing In built up roof.

STUCCO PLASTERING - or 446-2454.
textured ceilings commer cial and residential, free

81

Fomerly

All types of consiru ction and

DOZER WORK By Tad

THE ORGANIST

KlLLY DRIVl TRI-LEYEL - Your ~mHy will love lhis
allractive 3 bedroom 2 bath oome localed 10 Kyger Creek
SchOO dislrict Includes anice ~mly room. large ~!then, fuly
egupped, central air cood:•nd adedt Thisbri:Home is just
wflat yau need for Christma&gt; Pnced at $57,900

WATCH THE SUN GO DOWN - From llis roomy 3BR rancll
1220 sq. ft. of "'~ya~e INing space, with 21.-11" bedrooms,
partial basement large eat&lt;n kilchen with all appliances arid o
suac~us bath make lhis home Ye!) at1ractive a1 $57,900.
Owner is anxious to sell, so don't hestitBte.

112.95 ACRE FARM - This older couple would
consider tradina for a nice ranch style horne. Partially

ctkhlluse.

4 white spoke wheels, 15x8,
6 lug, fit Jeep, Ford or
Scout. $80 . 304 - 458 ~

.

00.

home, 3 bad!-. bllh. liltl:hen willl bul-in r&amp;flllll
and CMn, dishwaher, livlne room. Buns, ctlllllnd

.

mcb.tding taxes and insurance). Immediate J)lSSeSSion.

WEEKEND RETREAT - Aeetwood 2 bedroom molile
home on a wooded lot Utiity bldg on concrelf.
Screenhouse 16ft by 20ft, cement floor. Su~ '
condition, stronf drilled well. Counly water aVIilable.
Tycoon Lak~ $ 2,900.

USE YOUR IMAGINATIOII - Builllng sa, 2\! acres
ckl!e to Rto Grande. 28x~ basernenl shell iust Wlitine
. Ill ba finShed. Call tor mora dellils.
11401
POMEROY - 2 story lrame house on I acre lot 2
bedrooms, bath, livina room, 2car prqe. Priced In the
l8lns.
11441
JACIISOII coum - 105 - n. 2 s1ory alder

Answor horo .· HE(

FOR RENT OR SALE -Owner woo~ prefertosel Mwillrenl
1$225/mo.) lhis 3 BR home with balh, carport ond fenced
yard. Localed off Rl 35 near shoJII)ing &lt;:erOOr. To IUthase
ITI'Y assume a 12% foed rale VA mortgage ($325/inonlh

11456

1973 RANCH mLE HOME - Hhas l ell. One story
three bedroom, lllrge eat·in kitchen, formal dining
room, ~ving room, fami~ room with fireplace, utiity
room. large concrete patio. Approx. B miles from
Gallipot~ $36.000.
.

Auto Parts
&amp; . Accessories

t

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
AGENCY

.~

;.
,.

11412

11425

76

CISEXE

HAPF'ENEr:::&gt;
TO THE MAN
WHO suec:&gt;
THe P'OR1'!111:?

~

•

YOUR FAMILY into lhfl neal and llltraclive
home before winter. 3 bedroom rancll, 2 balhs, eat·in
kitchen, living room, fami~ room with woodburner in

basement 2 car pn~ge, vinyl siding. Alllhi&gt; on a !acre
111
·
11362
COMMERCIAL ACREAGE - 7 acres. Coi'ner of old
Route 35 and·new Rt: 35 at Rodney. Springfield arid
Green Townsh1~ Counly Wiler, 11 inch line, natural
gas arid electric are availabl~ Allemalive financing
possibla

go, $2,300. Call 446-9408

IJ

I K]

W~AT

ELEORONIC REAL
I
ASSOCIATES
I
~....E.ac•h. .o•ff•ic•e•i•n•d•epe
. .n•d•e•n•ll•y•o•w~ne•d--a•n•d•o•p•e•ra•l•ed
. ......~~~--~........1~

' ··""""

98 ACRE FARM - READ CAREFUUY - Older lui
story brick home. 5 bedroo~. 2 staircases, a~ one to
attic. Partial basement good condition. Counly water,
fair barn. 10 acres crop land, 63 acres pasture, 25
acres wood~ Good farm, exciting location. $78,100.
11368
136 ACRE DAIRY FARM -In~ production unti
th~ spnn&amp; Step down mll~ng parlor, barns, sheds, 2
sitos, 5 ponds. Tobacco base. 1680 sq. ft modular
home with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, kitchen with
eye-level double ovens and di&gt;hwasher, fireplace. For
more information give us a ~.

.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Real EstateT:

.·-

11463

HURRY TODAY and lake a took at this family home. 3
bedroom ranch With family room, li~ing room, eat-in
k~chen, bath, utility. ln·ground sw1mming pool, 2
st,.-age bu1ldmgs, 2 level lots. Call for an appointment
today. $39,900.

75

toknowin ·

..'...

#468
ONE TO SEE- Five room ranch style horne. House has
been extensively remodeled. 2 bedroom~ modem
kitchen, counly water. C'Aluriy school system, I\! acres
of ground. looli at price! $24,900.

ING.

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO.

remodelinc. roofina. plumbing
and heating.
NO JOB TOO SMAll
446-4002

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

304-675 -

CONT~~~TING
Gallipolis Oh.

Phone 4411'3888 or 446·
4477

All you _need

. ..

··.

new.

Business Senrices

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

Cor . Fo4rth and Pine

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

.......,
.'·'-·

JUST LISTtD - BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Produce
· market Ready fur a new owner. Located State Route
160. lndudes equipment inventory, large walk·ln
cooler, plus more. Call tor- more de!Ji~.

I

rJ
............ ___
[JI
_
·--;-

Real Estate General

3 BEDROOM MODERN HOME - Bui~ in k~chen with
refrigerator, stove, range hood, deep freezer, large
living room and family room with woodbumer. Drilled
well wrth pump. Gan1ge and other outbuilding;, Old
Route 35, Thurman area: $;34,000.
PRICE REDUCE - Brand new home - 3 bedrooms,
I\! baths. large living room, kitchen with dining area in
one end, formal en1ry, extra wide halfway. Utility room,
Anderson Windows. Lot ~ze approx LOO ft by 120 ft
Priced in the 40'~

as

ostlmatoo. Call 61 4·256·
1182.

1973 Chevrolet pickup, V-8, 1973 Joop CJ 6. 304
standard. runs good. $660 . engine. no top. mu1t sail.

Clthy l'apl. •• c lafll. 379-2741

same

82

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Poge-D-7

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1983 Hondo XR80. S575 .

81

salu or will trade for boat or
1981 Toyota long bod, 5 VW Beetla. Call 446-2429.
spd., factory air, AM -FM

solll Call 446-0844.

KESTO

Motorcycles

1817.

73

by HeM Amoldond Bob leo

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
lour Ofd1nary words.

veslerday·s
1979 Toyota 4 wheel drive.
long bed truck. 304-458·

266-1484. I

.JudJ DIWitl. lltlltor. Jlt.ll55
J. lllrrlll Cllllr, ...... 379-21.84
W, ln. AIM It 44U458

74

aher 5 :00 .

1965 Chvrolat 491 engine.
30 passenger bus. 4 speed,
new brakea, good body &amp;
tires. Runs good, 11,600.

tape, sliding rear window,
dalux• mirror, step bumper,
&amp;Kcellent condition. Murt

1jjj~~Je)1l ~THATBCRAIIBLEOWORDCWIE

~ ~ ~~..

$2250. 614·992 -6056.

1978 Ford F-150 4•4

4•4. Call446-8132.

72 · Trucks for Sale

1969 J.eepiter, mechani callv excellent. sound body .

93.000 miles. one owner:

301•675 -4550.

6874.

,

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars.
Smith
Buick -Pontiac, 1911 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, 446·

w·.o.

·A luminum Bass boat. 40HP
Mere. outboard , thruster,
depth flnder.trailer. ready to

.

1989 fiord Torino, good
work car. new tires. good
motor and transmission.
8260 . Phone 304-676-

You load . Nearly new wood
stove . $180. Severe! loads
of firewood· S25 . par pickup
load. No Sunday sales. Call

AD 1974 Ford tractor 3000

9106.

614~ 949-2332 .

coni! .. 304-576-2623 ..

Farm Equipment

power steering, looks like
new, priced $5,600. With
disk plows &amp; bush hog in
working condition . For more
information call 614· 246-

350. 3

good condition.

1978 Mercury Cougar, good
conC:Iition, loaded with extrill-. $3,600. call after6PM,

after 5 p .m .

896-3958.

Vans &amp; .4

'75 Jeep excellent condition . '76 Luv truck, VB conversion, blazer wheels. roll
bar, auto . transmission .
304 _676 _3388.

1--- - - - - -- -

2581.

Haven-304-882 -3262 . Call
AKC Registered Daschund
pu ppies and ad ults, 304-

61 4-986 -4174.

1 97~ Olds Delta 88 Royale,
ucellent cond., new tires,
A-C:O plush interior. all extra•: $2800 . 614-742-

BMR 389- OWNER Sl\,.iSELLTODAYf Yourfamiy Will enjoy the
r®n~iness of 'hi&gt; house. lndudes 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR, DR. buiR&lt;n
kitchen. Situated on large COffl!!l' lot Close'to lown in city school
district. IGreen Elem.l. Call to' 5e!!
one!
•
..th~
,
BMR ~-:- 2 STORY FRAME horhe for only $10,500. Rent~ or ,
lrve 1n it Either way the vakle b there. Call now for appointment
1. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1!""•--•••••111~

Registered J)it Bull Pups .
$50. Bob Roach of New

61

73

3031 .

1961 Ford f700flatbedtwo
ton truck. Will sell or trade
for pickup of equal value.

742·21 68 .

BMR 436 - EXC£LLEIII' STARTER HOME with 2BRs, LR. DR. nice ;
k£hen, utility and new bathroom. Carpeted thr()(Jghout Screened
~Ill. carpol1. Large lot Call for appointment

614 -698-3862.

$7000. Cell 992 -2219.

1968 Olds Delta 88. Good
condition, new plugs, new
battery. new &amp;Kaust system
&amp; brikes. Reasonable. 614·

BMR 435- IDEAL STARTER HOME- 3 BR, ~rge kitchen, LR,
carport nalural gas heat. new roof, located within Gallipol~ city
lmils. POO!d at $31,900. Be the first see.tfl~

cond .. fll.100. Coli 814·
2641·1333.

1981 Tan &amp; Burgundy Ford
F- 150. Air-conditioning,
AM-FM Radio, and camper
top. Excellent condition.

Call 61 4-388 -9905 or 3889323.

BMR 443 -'-NEW LISTING- FIRST TIME ON MARKETl-Bi-levet
locted just minutes from town oo Debby Or. lndudes lR, eat-in
k£hen wrth d~hwasher &amp; disposal, dining room pins krtchen, 3
aRs, 1 bath plus 2 half batlls. Famiy room in basement 1 car
garag~ Heat pump. $99 mo. budget City school dist Call fur an
appointment!
BMR 426 - OWNER SAYS SELL- tt has an asstlnable loon wrth
on~ 91'1% interest We are llll~ng abo.ut a ~ery clean, ,3 BR home
srt1.11ted on nice flat lot 1n a fam1ly onented neighborhood.
REDUCED $3,000 down and assume loan!
·
.

cloth interior, ruttprooflng,

Cell 614-388· 9905 or 388·
9323.

1976 Chevette new paint.
O\l&amp;rhauled engine, good
cond., $1,200 or best offer.

'

FM redio, tlu::h, quartz dock,

The rest of the play went

tA 765.
+K 3

6622.

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

•

SOuth won the diamond
lead in dummy, led a dia·

trumps oo a mere eeven-t:pot
and discarded a spade.

+AQ

P~

loodod. Call 114-317-7224.

the high trump.

+Ai076 5

Trucks for Sale

1979 Ford Currier new paint
&amp; tires, low milage. ELT
group, $2,996 or best offer.

446-4782 .

BMR «2 - OWNER SAYS REDUCE! 974 ShultZ moble home
112&gt;65) Tip Out in~udes 3 BRs. new carpet, a.wning &amp; patio,
situated on 1-ICre m-1. Washer &amp;dryer induded. City school&amp; Was
$20,000, now $17,900. Call for detai~!

1978 Ford Ellte exc. cond .•

He gives thi.J band u aa
example of the reluctance of
many defenders to ruff with

.K 7S
.10 7 5
• K4 .

WEST

to be elementary, but Is Jood
bridge for anyone.

72

nice, $2,495 . John 's Auto
Salet, Bulaville Rd . Call

Call 4.46-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245-9507

1982 Dotoun 200 SX, u .
cond., 10,000 mi.. f7,000.
Call 4411-1 01111 after IPM.

"Building a Sound
Foundation." It is supposed

Autos for Sale

1978 2 dr., Chevy Nova,
autO J AM-FM radio. real

Broker-AuctionHr

AT, PS, PB, AC, 82,000 mi.
Call 446-11911 after &amp;PM.

titled

71 ·

Autos for Sale

1979 Pontlec flrebird V-8 ,

When to ruff high

379-2165.

614 -367-0314 614-3 670137.

71

BRIDGE

62 Wanted to' Buy

1983

December

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~int Pleasant, W . Va .

4, 1983

..•

. ..••

~

'.'..

•.'

'

~

•

•

�•

Page-0..8- The Sunday Time5-Sentinel

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

December

4, 1983

•

Ethical questions hound Celeste administration
.

Area deaths
Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home from
6-9 p.m . Monda y.
Eastern Star serv ices by Lucy
Ann Chapter 79will be held at8 p.m .
Monday.

Nicholas G. Beard ·

PT. PLEASANT - Funeral
services for Nicholas G. Beard, 20.
SQuthslqe, who died Friday mornIng from injuries suffered In a
vehicle accident In Southside, will
be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. Point
Helen Richards
P leasant. with the Rev. Fred
McCallister offi ciating. Burial will
GALLIPOLIS - Unintenlionally
omitted fl'om an obituary on Helen
· follow In Concord Cemetery.
Born Oct. 29. 1957 a t Charleston, , Richards. 91, North Canton, appear·
ing in Thursday's Gallipolis Daily
he was the son of Jabez T. and
Tribune, was a sister thar also
Agnes Beaver Beard of Southside.
He was an employee of the preceded her in death, Mrs. Murl
Darling of St. Petersburg. Fla.
Lannes Williamson Pallet Com·
pany, Southside, a member of the
Harmony Baptist Church and a Roberts' pallbearers.
GALL !POLIS - Pallbearers for
graduate of Point Pleasant High
. the funera l of Corbett J. Rober1s. 81.
School , Class of 1975.
Other survivors arf' hi s wifr, Rt. 4. Gallipolis , whodiedThursday.
Donna Likens Beard; one son , are Randall Roberts, Michael
Adam Jabez, at !tome; a nd mater· Roberts. Grorge Roberts, Jon
nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sommers. Bart Repass and Lewis
Bowman.
Mace Beaver of Ironton, Ohio.
The funeral will be held at 2 p.m.
Friends may call at the funeral
today
in Willis Funeral Home.
home after 3 p.m. today.

Irene 0. LaRue

William R. Mullins

Pr. PLEASANT - Word has
been receive&lt;l of the death of Irene
Ohlinger LaRue, 74, of Nitro,
formerly of Hartford. who died
Friday night in a Miamisburg. Ohio
hospital.
Funem l ar·rangements will be
announced

by

Gatens

FUneral

Home of Poca. burial will be at

Hometown.

Helen W. Lewis
GALLIPOLIS -Helen W. Lewis,
81, formerly of 76 Pine St .. died at
11: 45 p.m. Friday at the MontereyYorkshire Nursing Inn a t Columbus . She had been in failing health

for several years. Mrs. Lewis was a
re tired beautician .
She was born Aug. 5, 1902 in
Jac kson County to the late James
B. Wil son and E llabclle Runfield
Wilson . She married Charles Pearl
Lewis August 19,1933 at Circleville.
H·e preceded her in death on May 7,
1971.
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Frank !Charlene) Diggs of
Columbus, and a son. Charles Pearl
Lewis, Jr. of Gallipolis. six grand·
children. a brother. Claude Wilson
of Jeffersonville, Ohio.
1Wo brothers and two sister~
preceded her. She was a member of
t~e Paint Creek BaPllst Church a nd
a charter member of Lury Ann
Chapter No .. 79 OES .
Funera l services will be held all
p.m . Tuesday at the Pa int Creck
Baptist ChUrch with RPv. Gr·ovPr
Turner and Rev. Elbert McGhee
Buria I will be in Pine

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va .- William Ray Mullins, 73. Rt. 2.
Ravenswood, died Saturd ay at his
home near Medina. He was 1he son
of the late Joseph and Mary
Jefferies Mullins. He was a member
of the Warden Chapel, United
Methodist ChUI'Ch, and a former
emploYee of the Winifred Colliers
Coal Company. Winifred , W.Va ..
and the United Mine Workers of
America.
· Survivors include five sons, Carl
of Diamond1 Ohio; Kenny of
Wadsworth, Ohio; Gene of Brunswick. Ohio; David of Ravenswood,
a nd Gene White , a foster son; five
daughters, Mrs. Jimmy (Faye)
Smith of MurTaysvllle. W.Va .. Mrs.
Helen Meadows of Ravenswood;
Mrs. Ftichard (Gina) Kosmo of
Clearwater, Fla., Mrs. Edwin
(Violet) Fliim of Ra venswood and
Mrs. Greg (Barbara) Gatrell of
Middleport. Also surviving are two ·
brothers, Carl and Harley of
Winfred. W.Va., four sislers . Esta
Lowther of Winfred, Mrs. Virgie
Carroll of Clendenin, W.Va ., Laura
Sayre of Reedsville. and Edna
Ca nterbury of E uclid. Ohio; 25
grandchildren and four great·
grandchildren .
Funera l services will be held at 2
p.m. Monda)' at the Vail Funeral
Home in Ripley, W.Va. , with Rev.
Ernest Marty officiating. Buria l will
be in lndcpendence Cemetery at
Sandyville. W.Va . Fr iends may call
at the funera l home after 2 p.m.
today .

a wJi.tten agreement under which

Celeste in December 1982 said he
would pay Lt. Gc'·· Myr!Shocmaker
$00,1XXl in campaign funds ovet· fo ur
years lor his ser.•ices on pas t a nd
future campaigns.
Shoemaker earns $35.1XXl as
lieurenanr go\'crnor. He also serves,
without

pa~·,

as natural resources

director. a cabinet-level post that
normally canies a sa lruy of about
$50,1XXl.
.
Both Celeste and Shoemaker

Charities receive
$3,850 from -Diles
go-£ tournament
RACINE - Area cha r ities wlll
benefit in the a mount of $3,850 from
the 1983 Dave Diles-Appa lachia golf
lournament and hillbilly supper.
This Is a marked dropoff fro m
previous years, but brings to nearly
$34.000 the amount contributed to
charity durtng the five years.
"We 've been a little disappointed
in not reaching our goal," said
finance cha ir man Tom Wolfe of the
Racine Home Nation a l Ba nk .
" We've sort of set a sta ndard of
$7,500 a year. but we've been In
som e tough economic times. When
we reflect on the total picture, we're
glad we are still in the black and
that we a re a ble to do as much as we
can for those who need our help ."
The local organization maintains
an e mergency fund for despera te
sltuatons in order to give a nonym ous help in c rises. The rnain thrust
of the charitable work, said Wolfe,
is to provide help lor young people
and for the needy. He said checks
will go out now to the v a rlous .

organizations inlime for Clu"istmas
U!?f'.
Tournament spokesman Bill Nel·
son noted contributions to most
organizations had to be trimmed
because of the inc reased cost of
operating the tournament , a nd its
expenses. plus the fact tha t local
support for the tournament was
slight ly down.
He said the steering committee
briefly considered abandoning the

Our Year-En d Clearance is
St ar tin E arly This Year!!
~~~~~~={ ~~·

insist that the agreement In which consultant fees last year from his
that Chambers of Commerce
around the state pick up the
the lieutenant governor will be paid own campaign when he was running
$15,1XXl a year in four Installments · for office and had no other major
unusually high salruy he proposed
!rom the governor's campaign source of income to support his
at the time lor Development
committee Is forconsultant servlces family.
Director Alfred Dietzel.
Tha t would have taken action by
and does not constitute a suppleCandidates have for years diment to his salruy as a public verted campaign contrlbutlons to a
the General Assembly to Impleofficial.
variety of persona l uses- relmbur·
ment, andlegislatorsquickly letit be
If 11 was a supplement It would sements for travel, meals and . known tbey weren't Interested .
appear to viola te a section of state related out -of-pocket campaign
Dietzel eventually agreed to take the
ethics Jaw barring elected officials expenses.
job at the lower state-paid sairuy.
from compensation for publicdutles
Bu t It Is rare for a candidate- as
sustaining a substantia l cut from his
other than by sta te wages.
with Celeste and now Shoemakerprivate-sector salary In the process.
. Disclosure of the agreement in a . t6 be paid. essentially, for being a
Sol'ne State house Democrats,
· campaign finance report filed by the
candidate.
whow UI talk about thesltuationonly
Governor's Conunittee probably
Celeste became involved in a
on the condition their names not be
should not have com e as a surprise.
separate but similar financial
used, predict the lates\ flap over the
Celeste set the precedent for It
controversy soon after he took office
Shoemaker payments may hurt .
himself.
when the administration s uggested
future fund r aising for the party.
The governor picked up $45,1XXl ln

COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP) - Ethical questions over the use of private
and public funds have plagued Gov.
Richard !Celeste since he took office
almost a year ago and continue to
hound the administration.
The latest controversy centers on

1

tourna m en"t - " but jus! briefly,
because we know the hard-core
support we have, the way the
various celebrjtles look forwa r d to
com ing to the Meigs-Mason area
and the good that we can do through
our charity work." F or · those
reasons, Nelson said, plans already
a re underway for the 1984 event .
Following Is a ltst of the 1983
donations:
Feeney-Bennett Post , American
Legion. for the Ed Bennett -Jim my
Stewart commem ora tive marker ,
$100.
Salvation Army. $150.
J aycees' Christmas Fund , $100.
Meigs Boxing Club, $200.
Wahama golf team , $200.
Meigs golf tea m , $200.
Fire departments (Middleport,
Syracuse, Racine, Tuppers P la ins,
Bashan. Salem Center. Mason.
New Ha ven, Rutland , Cheste r (10) ,
($75 each). $750.
E mer gency squad s (Pt. Pleasant . Mason, Ru tland , Mlddlepori,
Syracuse, New Haven, Tuppers
Pla ins, R acine. Pome roy) (nine).
($100 each ). $900. ·
Big Brothers. $100 .
Racine Salvation Ar my, $50.
Boy Scouts of America (local
camp) . $100.
DUes Scholarship F und , Ohio
University, tha i goes annually to a
deserving student from Meigs or
Mason county. $1.000.
Total disbursements
1983,
$3,850.

•

.[JJP

j;;'"''UrePacked
Upright
With
•Exclusive

Vi braGroomer

II Beater.
Bar Pulsates
20.000
times a

1977 CH EV. BEAUVILLE SPORTS VAN
One of a few bui lt. Equipped with water and electric hookup, captain's
chairs, sink, ice box, ti lt wheel , AM -FM cassette. CB, and much, much
more.

1982 Pontiac J2000 Tudor
Ai r,· local owner. We sol d it new.
WAS
NICE
$6495

$5495

1983 Chev. Conversion Van
by Road Craft
Loaded with power windows, door
locks, captain's chairs, TV, dealer
driven.
WAS

$15 900

,t;•

. WAS
$4295

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
See: Greg Smith, Harland
Wood, Bob Brickles or
Jim Cochran

$3740

•'' . r.' /.
( ./
t

_,

/.

./

J'

~SALADSU~RE,~E $279

Cautain D's.
..,.. a.,.TUttle Hlfoo:d place,

•

IC

CHOICE FOR A CHANGE
• Fresll !ossed sotod wMI your choice of !hree dressings
. • Country white beons
• Piping hot ~ed polato (served 11 AM ·.8 PM)

Cleaner For

'

Farms often provides an answer.
How else would the nationwide
network of 550 stores have sold 12.5
mDilon pounds of beef stick · - a
summer sausage - last year?
• "It' s an extremely safe ~itt." sald
Stuart Rosenthal, vlce president of
marketing for the finn , which Is
owned by General Host Corp. of
Stamford, Ct. "I don't think anybody
is offended by receiving a beef
stick ."
At this time of year. lfwould be
hard to pass through a shopping
mall and not see a beef stick outlet.
During the holidays, Hickory
Farms rents additional space In
malls and shopping centers for up to
1,lXI kiosks, orsatellle shops, where
certain Items are featured.

Hlckocy Farms was the entrepreneurial Idea of Toledoan Richard
Ransom, who Sold out fu General
Host in 191ll. The new parent has
lavished attention on Its acquisition.
The number of company-owned
stores has grown from 65 IQ 250 In
three years. Thereare:nlfranchlse
outlets.
'"lbere has been a cautious
broadening of the product Une, but
we have not gotten any way Into
changing the basics of the business,
which Is to provide aqualilyfoodgtft
product, •• Rosenthal said. "General
Host has served as protector of that
concept. ''
A vigorous direct man program Is
being steered by the parent linn.
General Host spokesman Adam

Bob Evans Farms sales increase
COLUMBUS Bob Evans
Farms Inc. reported net sales of
$98,885,000 lor the first six months
ending Oct. 28, representing a 6
percent increase over net sales of
$93,00,000 during thesanie period in

•Includes
8 pc . tool
set
•Roto-Matic
powerhead
•Headlight 1
•Dual-Edge

1982.

Net lncome forth~flrstslxmonths
reached $8,292,1XXl, or 50 cents per
share, compared with $6.687,1XXl, or
42 cents per share In 1982.
Dan E vans. chairman of the
board and chief executive officer,
attributes the 6 percent Increase In

SAVE
$60

List '219.95

deep cleanL.-..:..--.....:
•4-Wav Dial-A-Nap
•Dual Edge Kle'!_ner

~IQ;'"'"'--.:;...------~_~~~

50

•Powerful 6.5 AMP
•Vibra-Groomer II
•4 -WIIV Dial-A-Nap . ll!llllflll'

Ul438

U2061

-

-

•
•
arms: zerotng tn on season trade

ory

MAUMEE,Ohlo (AP ) -U every
month of the year could bring sales
like the period between ThankSgiv·
ing and Christmas a t Hlcko!Y
Farms, Bill Ready would probably
•be-mnsldered a business genius.
Thepresldentoftbespeclallyfood
gift stores Is trying to spread the
business out over the year without
sacrificing holiday tra de, which last .
year made up for 60 percent of
armual sales.
"One of the missions we have Is to
change the way we're looked at by
thecustomer," Readysald. "But we
-certainly don't want to be forgotten
at Christmas."
_
For the thousands of shoppers
thrOWll Into a quandry over gift
buying during the holidays, Hickory

I

Kleener

~1~

..

•••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .............. ..

6.

,•

.

$6995

Orie local owner, topper, 36,000
miles. Expect the best.
·

.

'

Air, V-6 engine, sport beige. One of
our daily rental cars.

1980 Chev. Luv Pickup

r

'

.;;..,..

1982 Buick Regal Coupe
WAS
$7995

J

I

~imes- i'entiactl Section
December 4, 1 83

lllltltulltutullll DELICIOUS tttlutllllltulltul

minute to

SAVE

Work draws
nearer to
completion on the
new building under
construction off
Third Avenue in
Gallipolis at the
city parking lot.
The bui~ding will
seroe as the new
homes of TriCounty Medical
Supply and
Headquarters by
Juanita. Two
apartments will
be made out of
the second floor.

·

The Coptotn Is lo~ng you to !he country with !he new Captain 's Cot.ntry Dinner.
Agentlfous port&lt;&gt;n ol out special ccuntry·style llih ftlleb.lrled okra. country
while beor)S, hsh creamy cole stow, lwo soufhern style husll puppies,
tarter sauce end lemon wedge. Now !hat's o dovln home country dinner
you're going lo love!

Christmas ...

. '

Business

'

ONLY

$10~.~

net sales to additional Bob Evans
Fanns restaurants In operation.
Evans said the company's net
income rose prlmarlly beca use of
Improved sausage margins caused
by more favorable live hog prices,
and more restaurants In operation.
A 65 cents per share dividend,
payable Nov. 28, will be pald to
shareholders of record Nov. 11.
Bob Evans Farms Brown and
Serve Sausage was introduced into
'Philadelphia, Pa.. on Oct. 31,
because of Increased production
capacityprovkledbythecompany's
new plai!t In Gallipolis.
Brown and Serve SIJ,usage, the
newest addition to the Bob Evans
Farms product line o!17 varieties of
sal!sage, Is a precooked, high
quality convenience Item without
additives. The company plans
further expansion of the new
product during the coming year.
with Nov. 28 set as the Introduction
date for Knoxville and Nashville,
Tenn., and LoulsvJIIe, Ky.
Five restaurants were opened
durlrig tbe second quarter, bringing
to 101 tbenwnber In ~ation at the
end of the first six months. That
compares to 86 that were doing
business a yell" ago. Plans call tor
the opening of three restaurants
dw1ng both the third and fourth
quarters, brlng!ngto107thenumber
&lt;if Bob Evans Farms restauranls In
operat19n at the end of fiscal year

1984.

vetue

$14 .95

WITH PURCHASE OF
EUREKA VACI t""'~

OWNERs - Mr.

IIDd Mn. Genld Roulht, IJncl*t HID,
ol Dudll and 8uiiiJ, a colD-operated
Jauachmat. 'l1le RoiJ&amp;hla purdlaled the h &amp; em til pMI week from
- Joe OlapmaD. A""-, who apented the 1aunc1roma1 ~ 111111Q' ,_...
Under -IJIIlllllllelll,the JJ.e em w11 be lllllllld Jerry IIDd
CIJin.o.mallc. b wiJ be opl!lll 7 Llll.·ll pm., wllhhounlobe ...... !WM .
II' '
nprovea.Analil!lldantwlllbe.a...,uaBIImslllldtll''•
NEW

PUiiWIO)', 8l'e

new

OWbel8

The lOOth Bob Evans restaurant
opened Nov: 211n Schaumburg, Ill.
Cun;ettly there are 103 cmnpanyopened Bob Evans restaurants In
Ohio,- Dllnols. Indiana, Michigan,
Kentucky, Pennsylvanllf and West

Vlrglnla.
Bob Evans sausage Is · now
dlstrlbuted In all or part of 16 states
and the District of Columbia,
lncludlllg Ohio, Dllno!s, Indiana,
Mlclllgan, Kentucky, PennsylvaWIIMac
II beiDJ oftered. Redeoondloa II pl•u etl,
. Ida, West VIrginia, 'l'ennessee,
MMIV1I&amp;IonL An Clpalllou.e .. pi• • fur ........,..,....... .. .
Georgia, New York, Maryland,
nAediSV!ceniBDIIDdpari-tllneP-o) pollceofllcer.Mn. ....... ll
IX 'tlst at DrN Welr1hr American
AID, '7 Ill. 'l'beJ luM! · New Jeney, Delaware, Virginia,
Mla!wrl and Iowa.
line dtlldral, Gerrtllamlltoil.lll zt'
'lameli IIDd Kellle Knl&amp;ftt.

a..·.

....,wllb

••toe

Jeam
+

Friedman said $50 million in annua l
direct man sales of Hickory Farms
products Is anticipated within three
to live years.
" All of our businesses are
Important to us, but if we had to
focus In, I would say the specialty
food area Is our concentratlon," he
said. General Host has Hot Sam
pretzel outlets, Little General convenience stores and Van de }(amp's
frozeq foods among Its eight
holdings .
"The potential growth of Hlckory
Farms Is, we think, explosive. It's
taken us untn this year really to get
them asslmUated Into the business, ••
Friedman said.
Hickory Farms accounted for
about $7.5 million of Genera l Host's
$11 million earnings in 1!&amp;!, helping
It win its way onto the cover of the

parent' s annual report .
"Hicko!Y Farms will do substan·
tlally better this year than last
year," Friedman said. "The estimates on Wall Street are currently
around $8. 5 million In earnings."
Beef stick sales are expected to
rise to 13 million pounds this year ,
Rosenthal said.
At Hickory Fanns headquarters
in Maumee, about 10 m iles south of
Toledo, a furtou s pace of activity
begins in late September a nd ends in
early December. Tha t' s when the

bulk of Hickory F anns gift boxes.
ra nging In price from $4.99 to $1l9,
are hand-packed.
The assembly linecons lsts only of
a conveyor belt. Workers c rowded
together stuff boxes with plastic
green grass and load in cheeses,
beef stick, crackers a nd candles.
This year. Hickory Farms Is
offer ing cheese spreaders, coffee
mugs. decorative tins, wood boxes
and othe r gifts In the packages that
outlast the food they accompany.

r---Business Briefs:-....,
Holiday sale indicators encouraging
By The Associated Press
As they looiled forward to one of the best Christmases in years, the
nation's major retallers today reported strong sales In Novem ber generally a good indicator of a brisk holiday season to follow.
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co. , the biggest of them all, said Nove mber sales
compared with a year a go we re up 1H percent, to $2 billion from $1.8
billion. ·
·
Including results of Slmpsons-Sears of Canada, acquired In July,
overall sales last month wer e $2.4 billion, a 31.5 percent gain
compared with October 1!&amp;!.
·
K mart Corp .. ra nked No. 2 in the nation by 1002 sales , reported a
November sales gain of10.5 percent, to$1.52 billion from$1.38 billion.
Other large national and regional chains reported s imilar results.

Tax conference reviewed

State board
exam passed
GALLIPOLIS - Mattbew R.
Willis. son of Mr. and Mrs. Cleetand
R. Willis, 3 Portsmouth Road. has
passed his funeral directors state
board examination.
Willis passed his embil!mbers
state board earlier and Is a
second-generation licensed embalmer and funeral director workIng in the family's business, Willis
Funeral Home.
A cum laude graduate of the
Cinclnnatl College of Morturuy ·
Science, where he received an
ilssoclatedegreeln applied science,
Willis was also recipient of the Ohio
Embalmers Assoclatlon Award,
glvenforexcellencelnthecomblned
theory and practice or embalming.
Willis graduated from Gallla
Academy High School in 19111 and
attmded Rio Grande College and
Community College prior to going to
mortuary school. He is man1ed to
fomier Letty Jo Walker, daughter of
Harold and BetlyWalkerofJackson
Pike, Gallipolis. WUJis and his Wire
reside atlO Garfield Ave.

RIO GRANDE - Syd Hyder, associate professor of accounting a t
Rio Grande College and Community College, recently a ttended a
farm tax CQnference in Chillicothe.
Sponsored by the lnteral Revenue Service, Ohio Deparlment of
Taxation and the Ohio Cooperatlve Extension Service at Ohio State
Universlly, the confe rence drew approximately lXI participants to
discuss areas of farm Income taxa Uon and new changes In the tax
law.
A certified public accountant, Hyder Is In his !feCOnd year on the
faculty of the Emerson E . Evans School of Business Management.

Goodyear distribution underway
WASHINGTON, Pa. - Fairmont Supply Co. Is oHeringGoodyear
industrial rubber products .
The firm, opened in 1921, represents more than 400 manufacturers
in eight states with its tine of mining and Industrial supplies.
Fairmont Supply will .sell Goodyear's industria l hose, hydraulic
hose and fittings and power transmission belting products and
underground conveyor belting.

Columbia Gas gift certificates sold .
GALLIPOLIS - Columbia Gas of Ohio Is offering gift certificates
to help pay gas bJIIs.
Gallipolis manager . Jake Koebel said the tax-deductible
certificates can be bought In amounts of $10 or more at the local gas
company o!!ice or can be ordered by phone.
The gift amount wW be credited to the CUI'I'tint bill of the person or
family designated by the buyer.
Certificates may be purchased for anyone who has Columbia Gas
service in their name by other customers or non-customers.
Colwnbla wW maD the certificate with a card to the recipient or the.
buyel' can deliver it personally.
·
Information on the plan Is available at the local Colwnbla Gas
office.

\

�December 4, 1983 · ·

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

Peeps: A

~4,1983

Agl-iculture praises ~IK's perforntance

Gallipolis Diary

Gallipolis native elected to city council
l

By J_ SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Marian R.
Spen&lt;'er , twin da ughterofGa!Upolls
nat ives. has been elected to the
Cincinna ti city counciL
Mrs. Spencer · finished seventh
am ong the nine council rriember s

THE OIDO VALLEY UVESTOCKCompanywasorganlzedln I~
and had II!! first a uction on Saturday, July 26, lim, with Col. Howard
Titus as the auctioneer. Tlwt li!'it year more than 1,000 animals a week
we re sold here. A fire on•May 24, 195.'1, did 5100,000 worth of damage to
lhis place with the eatire wooden part destroyed. The Gills fa mily owned
75 percent of the company at that time.

Stockyard advantage
for Gallia fanners
By JAMES SANDS
Specla,l Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS Before the
building of the Ohio Valley Livestock Co. in 1930, Gallia farmers
generally sold their stock to traders .
·
who ci rculated
t h rough t h e
county. A few

0 .

farmers too k

, ...

~heEd!~k /~-'

1)

-·

' The advantage of
stockyard in Ga Uipolis was that a
farmer could expect a better price.
For one thing the stock was graded
a nd grouped a t the stockyard; a
fi xed schedule of - prices was
established: and farm ers who did
not wish to sell at the price o!!e red
could. bid in a nd keep his animal.
Another advantage of the stock
yard was that the Iarmer did not
have to SC'll any certain number at a
partic ul ar time. He could then split
his market shipments.

The first auction sale at Ohio
Valley Livestock Co. was o~ J uly 26,
1930 and every corner was Crowded
with animals and pecple. The
Chesapea ke and Ohio Ra il road had
even

r un

a spur

li ne to the

stockyards and 20 livestock cars
were parked beside the grounds.
CaldweU organized it
The organizer of Ohio Valley
Livestock Co. \vas Ja mes Ca ldwell,
who served as director of sa les.
Also involved in the venture were:
W. A. Lee as president; John W.
Gills as vice president; C. T.
Robinson was secretary-treasurer;
Will Todd Hask ins as general
manager; and CoL Howard Tit us as
auctioneer.

The stock prices brought each
week were pri nted on the fro nt page
of the Gallipolis Da ily Tribune and
farmers studied them e&lt;~relull y.
On August 2. there wcre·900 head
sold; on August 9, there were 1,691;
October 4, 1.100; October 18,637 and
on October 25, 1.032. Calves in 1930
were sell ing for from $5.90 per cw(.
Lambs were brin g seven and

one- half cents per pout\d and hogs
nine and one-half cents a pound.

The ma r ket in 19.10 was depressed
because of the widespread drought
in the county that sum mer.
Markel Dooded
Farmers did not have the grai n to
feed our their stock; therefore, the
market had beco me flooded. Incidentally, even in the ea rly years the
sa le a t the stock yard was held on
Saturday.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co. too k on
a n added dimension after the
demise of the Ga llia County la ir in
1935. Beginning in 1927 Ga llipolis
had organized a fa ll fPst lval which
ra n for eight years some weeks

after following the county fair. But
from 19.16to the World War !1 period
there was no coun ty fair, and 4-H

a nimals were sold a t the Fall
Festival and the Ohio Valley
Livestock Co. played a signifi cant
role in helping tha t sale come to
pass.
An odd I hing happened in conjunction wit h the stockyards In 1939
w hen it was annou nced that John

J_.ane would bring to GaHipols by
fe r ry boat 111 head · of He reford
cattle and drive the m through town
to the stockyards. The G~l llpolis
Tr ibune reported:
" Yippee VI Yippee VI Yay;

Gallipolis to t,., a cown town on
Friday." It took fiv e trips hy Jerry
lor Lane to bring the animals

across and men on ho"ieback drove
the" animals through the town,
much to the delight of young and old
alike.

According to Lane his Herefords
had put on 5.001 pounds in two
weeks w1 th a die t of crushed corn,
· cottonseed meal. wheat. a nd alfalfa. Lane, who owned the Gal!J polis fe rry boat for over a quarter of a
.century, also operated a la rge farm
In West Virginia.
Firemen save cattle
On Sunday, May 24, 1953, fire of
a n undetermined origin broke out in
the stockyards a nd destryed the
pa11 which held the anima ls.
Ga llipolis firemen saved 20 cattle ·
a nd 45 hogs as well as the
restaurant . offices lof the stockyards ! a nd the houses across the
street. When the tar paper on top of
the wooden roof ca ught lire, bl ack
sm oke cou ld be seen all over town.
One observer likened it "to an oil

publisher. On the side, he eove red
local sports for the Daily Tribune.

756 T hird Avenue, Gallipolis. These
twins are 1938 graduates of Gallla
Academ y High School as valedictorian a nd salutatorian.
In 1942 both tw1ns were gradua ted
from the Unlver slty of Cincinnati.
Years laie r, Marian became Mrs.
Donald Spencer a nd Mlldr€&lt;1 Mrs.
Richa rd Malcolm, tile latter a
teac her In WashJ!gton , D. C.
Marian kept up her'pell-meU pace
in clvil a nd humanitarian e ndeavors 1ri the Queen City. -

,,,••'
'
•

.., .

GALLIPOLIS had an amateur
basebaU team In !he 6hlo Vade&gt;:
Associa tion called the · " Gauls.! 1
Holle played and managed that
team. After a five-year break
during World War II, Wilson then
managed Dale c;_ Gilkey's Queen
Bees baseball team in the OVA two
and a half years (1946-48) . Leter,
Holle umpirE&lt;! OVA and local high
sc hool games until the early 1900s,

elected.
She Is a DPmocrat-Charterit e
Liberal replacing equally liberal
Cha rterite Mayor Thom as B.
Brus h. She got 39.026 votPs.
Edjtorial comment was that
Cinciluia,ti, dPspit e a reputa tion as a
conservati ve municipality. would
WILLIAM HOBART !Colt) Wilelect m inmit ies, perceiving the m
son, Sr., 87, who--passed a way l ~st
as good ('andidates. A fund-ra!ser a t Tuesday afternoon, was one of the
the Spectr um Night Club fin anced
·
Oi'
first ha il-dozen
the successful cam pa ign: Too. for
Sam P eeps ber.
.\·ears she was preside nt of the local
ca me acqua inted
chapter of the National Association :j with 43 year s ago.
for the Ad-va ncement of Colored
People. a nd through th at office
I T WAS ln
managed to unite l aOOr. wom e n.
June, 194\J, that
and consumer groups with the
Pee ps cl imbe d HOBE nut."&gt;u'"
oflice of the Ohio Public Interest
off the Greyhound bus at the Libby
Hotel and went to the First Ave.
Campaign iOPICJ.
home of his a unt, J essie He nke.
This is a rainOOw coalition of
constitue ncies whic h Include la bor,
Within a week, Peeps talked with
women, teachers, clergymen. and
Coli Wilson.
over- th e-R hine ne ig hborh ood
leaders.
P EEPS, who had just com e up
Maria n Regelia Alexander a nd
from Kent\!Cky , wsa assigned to
he r sister. Mildred Lu\onia AJexhelp produce the · city's 150th
annive rsary sesqui-centennial ediander, a re the twin da ughters of
Ha rry a nd Rosanna Alexander of
tion by the late Harold Wetherhoit,

·,

'

'·'

A BOON to athletics around here,
Holle's oldest son, Bill, won tile
second athletic key at · Gallla
Academy in 1937. Hobe bow!M,
liked to hunt and fish, and was
active In the Downtown Coaches·
MARIAN A.. SPENCER
Club more than 10 years (1943·
1953) . He managed Gallipois' first
little !~ague c ha mpionship baseball
Bob Harrison. Howard Hardway, ·
team, the Yankees, in 1956.
Dale Gllkey and many others In the
AFTER his tetirement from the 1920s and 1930s, still followed the.
Ga111polls Post Office on Nov. 30, Cincinnati Reds on radio and TV
1963, Wilson. a "southpaw" sw1n - today, and was always tuned In on
ger, took up go!! for the first time at WYPC·FM when the Blue Devil
age 67. He was shooting i/1 the hlgh footballers .and basketballers were.
30s when he finally had to give up in action.
tha t sport three years ago.
WILSON lived a long, happy and
successful
life. He wUIIJe missed by
HOBE, who played amateur
his
family',
friends, and associates . .
baseball witn such-greats as the ta te

.
. NAMED BANK OFFICER -

of Point Pleasant High School, be also p-aduated from Gallipolis
Business College In December 1968. He served lour years In the U.S. Air
Foree as a budget analyst. Newberry and his wUe, Karen, reside with
their chlldrel, Janet, David and Chris, at Rt. 2,
where they own
aad operate a lann raising beeltmd tobacro. Newberry is also a deacon
at Fnloch City BaptW Church.

VInton,

Agriculture &amp; our community

Cattle raising, feeding _innovations ·noted

Extras set
for movie

live In a country blessed with a good
agricultural climate and a vast
acreage of good farmland . But that
land isn't expanding. Population Is.
Will there be enough land to be sure
pecple will have plenty to eat?
There are slightly more than one
billion acres of latmland in the
United States. It sounds like a lot,
but it's a n a verage of only 4.5 acres
per person of which only two acres
a re suitable lor the production of
food a nd fiber. So,fighr--n
you
depend on less than five acre....-__"
year lor your food and atural
fibers lor clothing a nd
number
sup~U;,es:;,;··,e~-::::::F!f! ears a go thPre was an
average of about 10 acres of
far mla nd per person in the United
Sta tes. Twenty years later than
number had slipped to eight acres;
35 years later, the number was six
and one-half aces.
How much is 4.5 acres? The
boundaries of a foot ball field total
slightly more than an acre. So, 4.5
acres is a tittle more than four·
football fields.
F a rmers who take care of these
4.5-acre pa rcels have a n investme nt of $4,274 in physical assets.
F or this the average consumer
pays the farmers $725 out of money
spent on food and other farm

products. The farmer gets about 28
supplies wUi cost us more. So the
cents out of each dollar spent for
export market lor the one-hall acr.e
farm-produced food. He uses the
helps hold down food costs.
· $725 to pay $616 in production
How well Americans eat ln the
fxpenses such as seed, fertilizer,
years ahe~d w1ll depend on the
fuel and other expenses. This leaves
farmer who lends the 4.5 acres that
$109 lor the frmer, or aboul two and
grow their food anp fiber - ari
one-hail percent cash return on his· a mount of cropland that will get
investment, and he throws In his
smaller each year.
labor free. That $4,274 In a savings
Calendar- of Events - Winter
account would return $214 a t five
Vegetable School, Tuesday, Dec. 6,_
percent Interest at the end of the
at Martella. No Tillage Conference, ·
year.
Wednesday, Dec. 21, at Canter's ·
· Fortunately , farmers are so
Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson County.
eff1cien t that they can make those
4. acres produce about twice as , - - - - - - - - - - - much wheat and rice ·a s pecple can'
eat ; about 40 percent r ..ore soybean s than people can use; and a
fourth more feed grain&gt; than It
takes to feed the livestock and
poultry producing meat, mUk and
eggs.
Beca use people can't use ail the
food the farmer raises on their 4_.5
ac res. he looks for a market
overseas. If he can't !lnd a good
market there, he must cut back
production. That's not good news
because the more the farmer cuts
back production, the higher his
costs·will be. and our food and !lber

YOU GET
WHAT YOU
PAY FOR .

SALT LAKE CITY tAP)- The
Great Sail Lake has reached Its
highest level in nearly a century and
threatens to cause $480 million in
damage to lakeshore property by
spring, officials say.
On Wednesday, tile lake was
measured at 4,:;m.3 feet above sea
level; the U.S. Geological Survey
said, noting it last reached that
height in !888. The rise is attrtbuted
to above-normal precipitation and
low evaporation.
Long-range sriiutions include
pumping excess water Into the
desert and building storage reservoirs. A shorter-term solution breaching a railroad 'causeway
across the lake that keeps the north
arm about 1 ~ feet lower than the
south arm - ls expected to
before the Legislature next month.

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.
(formerly Fulton-Thompson)
110 Spring ·Ave., Pomeroy)
PH. 992-5101

Used Class 6

POLES-an sizes

Good ........ $1.75 ft.
Fair......... $1.50 ft.
Poor ....... $1.25 ft.
Need a Firewood Hauler?
1974 Chevy Y2 Ton Pickup
for $695.00.

The Stihl' 028 Wood Boss •plenty ol muscle lor any cutttng
cltore large or small. Easy to
handle. Wood Boss•d,gs its Ieeth
in and won'llet up until yO\l do.
There are tols ol chain saws on lhe
market so wily buy Stihl? Simply
because you get what you pay tor!

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
CIIESIQ, Ott.

tiS.'III

ST/Ht.
.....
...... -~

BLDG. SALE

come

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

ATTENTION

IS FIRST
A MEDICAL PROBLEM ...
And should be examined by a qualified physician .
Medical or surgical intervention may be i-ndicated.
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I

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••

At!(horlties say they have few leads
In · the execution-style killing of
VIi-gil L. Cates, who recently
pi~ guUty to being part of a
multi-state aulD theft ring.
Cates' wife, Sophia, found his
boily Wednesday morning near a
car In his private aulll work.sbop.
Cates, 45, had beal slmt twkle In
tlli head, and Investigators said his
bo(ly also had beell burned.
ttJchland County Prosecutor Jotm
Allen declined to speculate whether
Cales' killing might be related to his
ln~lvEment In the aulD theft ring

ICS¥· -

'

•

j,

'1 ..

So far, counting tbe latest sales,
the Soviets have bought about 4.63
mllllon metric tons of wheat and
com under tl'rms · of the new
agreement, Including 2.58 mllllon
tons of corn and 2.05 mllllon tons of
wheat. Also, 400,001 tonsofSJJYbeans
have beell sold.
The Soviets are eon:unltted to buy
at least nine million metric tons of
wheat and corn annually over a
period of five years. II they choose,
the Soviets can substitute up to
500,001 tons of soybeans for one
mUllan tons of grain In meeting the
mlnlmum.
An additional three mllllon tons of
wheat and rom can be bought at the
Soviet Union's option - maldng a
total of 12 million tons - without
lurther·talks with the United Slates.
If more than 12 mllllon tons are
wanted, eonsuilatlons must be held.

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. WASHINGJ'ON (AP) - After a
two-month absen~-e. the Soviet
Union has returned to the U.S. grain
market, with purchases of 100,001
metric tons -3.94 mllllon bushelsfor dellvl1cyr uncter a new long-term
agreement that took effect on Oct. I.
The Agrlculture Department announced the latest sales on Thurs.
day, the first announced since Sept.
28. Historically, the Soviets have
often skipped buying for weeks or
months at a time before going on
limited buying sprees.
The sales were reported to the
department by prtvatl'exporters, as
f.qulred by law. No prices or other
terms were disclosed.
However, the department says
the current estimated lann price 6f
corn is $3.21 per bushel.
A metrl~ ton is about 2,205 pounds
and is equal to39.4 bushels of corn or
36.7 bushels of wheat or.s oybeans.
Thus, the latest sates would have

an estimated U.S. farm value d.
about $12.6 mllllon.
The SoVIets bought Sl)me SJJY·
beans on Aug. 5 under tenns of the
new agreement accepted In July,
and in September bought grain
regularly, along with some addl·
tlonal SJJYbeans. The five-year grain
agreement .was formally signed In
Moscow 011 Aug. 25.
On Sept. 1, the Soviet Unton shot
down a South Korean jetliner with
269 people aboard. AJthough there
were bitter exhanges over the plane ·
downing, no serious moves were
made to. cancel the pact .

Most Stores Open Late
'Til Christmas

GALLIPOLIS -Openingweekof
the 1983-84 Burley Tobacco Auctlon
was marked by slightly improved
grade prices but lower quality. says
the USDA Agrtcultural Marketing
Service - Tobacco Division.
Gross sales for the three days
through Nov. 23 averaged $179.98
per hundred . This average is down
$1.83 from the first three days last
year, which was $181.81.
'The Burley Cooperatlves received 27.9 percent of gross sples for
this first week eompared with 21.2
percent the first three days last
year.
Averages as of Nov. 23 lor
markets Used by GaUia County
were as follows: Maysville $Jll(l.38; Morehead - $181.58; Huntington - $176.79; and Ripley $181.74.
Remember, lf you lll!ed plans and
ln~rmation about packaging and
handtlng burley tobacco In bales at
the !ann, contact us at the
Extension Office for copies of these
·
publications.

..
I

Although the precise costs of the
program will have to walt until final
accounting, department economlstsestlmated thatPIKC&lt;llllll1od!ties given to farmers may be worth
$10 bUHoo ID $12 bUllon, based on
recent market prices.
The J'ellOrl sald auditors are sWI
revtewtng PIK operations in key
areas to see If tarmers 'are
complying with program
requlretnents.

GalllaCounty

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Agriculture &amp; CNRD

Kingsbury Homes

HEARl NG LOSS

In aU, tanners signed up to take
more than Ill mllllon acres from
production this year, about onethird of the nation's nonnal
cropland.
The department has announced a
scaled-down version of PIK for
wheat In 1984 but none for feed
grains or eotton, although there will
be "regular" acreage curbs and
benefits for those crops. A decision
for rice has not beell announced.
Ray Waggoner. a spokesman for
the farm program agency, ASCS,
said that "we're going to be a little
tougher, I guess you'd say" In the
1984 acreage programs.
The report said that ASCS had
been slow In recovering advance
"deficiency" payments to farmers
who got !he money at tlmeofs[gnlng
up in the PIK program but wound up
taking their entire farms from
production.
U they bad opted ID Idle only part
of their land fllld used the remainder
for crops, those fanners would have
been. eUgtble for cash deficiency
payments ID l)'lal\e up for sagging
market prices.But since they Idled their entire
farms, no crops were grown - and
no deficiency payments due them.
Thus, tlley were supposed to repay
the advances. The report said about
17 percent of the farmers who ·
collected $6:¥1 mllllon in advance
paymen(S were not eligible.
Waggoner said those farmers are
still required to give back the

By DON.KENDALL
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Despitl'
some procedural problems, the
government' s payment·in·kind
acreageprogramhasworkedpretty
well this year, according to Agriculture Department'invest!gators.
But officials added that the
program eontinues to be watched
for serious infractions, Including
any attempts b,; Ianners to reap
undeserved benefits.
"We concluded that the PIK
program was adequatl'iy presented
to producers and that PIK contracts
generally were properly corn·
pleted," the department's Office of
Inspector General said Thursday In
a rwort to Congress.
However, tile report said the
department's Agricultural Stablllzation and Conservation Servicethe nationwide agency that handles
PIK and other farm programs needed to tighten its methods used to
handle appeals from farmers and to
set crop }ields for determining
benefits.
TherevlewofPIKwas includedin
a semiannual J'ellOrt on activities of
the inspector general's office, as
required by law.
Under PIK, participating
farmers get free surplus quantities
of wheat, corn, sorghum, rice and
cotton In return for reducing 1983
acreages. In many cases, fanners
opted to Idle their entire crop base
acreage in return for benefits.

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent _

Start your spring plans now by
fertilizing this fall and winter. The
reasons are agronomically and
economically sound. Fall-winter
fertilization helps both farmers and
industry. Spring weather Is uncertain, so why not use good spreading
days In the fall, and winter and free
the spring schedule at the same
tlme. ·
Fall-winter fertilization helps the
farmer by giving him greatl'r
nexiblllty. It helps to reduce soil
compactlon and provides the best
opportunity for early spring planting. AJso, it allows the farmer a
sense of insurance that necessary
plant nutrients are in place, ready
to go.
In some years there is a
substantial tax benefit by shifting a •
· part of next year's productlon costs
Into the current tax year_
· Fall-winter fertilization also
helps industry. It allows more
effective use of plant storage and
spreading equipment and lt helps
spread the workload. The dealer
avoids the spring rush for fertilizer
sales and custom spreading, and
that means better service to the
faimer.
}';very move counts. Top profit
gtbwers make every move ln
getting the most complete plant
food diet for their crops. Fail-winter
lerttllzatlon is a big part of their
1un-feed soli fertility program. It's
a~nomlcally sound and economically· right.

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;,-j

Lake reaches
high level ·

IS OFFERING
DURING THE MONTH OF DECEMBER

(•

Steve Newberry ha8 been named

coasumer lotin ollloor at Ohio Valley Bank, Gallipolis. A i967 graduate

Tobacco's first week

Meigs extension agent's corner

By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POME ROY - Wonders of lnno,-a tions ... Would you believe?
Instead of castrat ion in cattle they
have developed a shot or shots tha t
does the sa me thing. The injecta ble
chemical has been approved by the
FDA. The material Is Injected into
the testicles and within 90 days
nearly a U of the testicular tissue Is
fire."
destroyed . I t has proven to be
The heat was so intense that
almost 100 percent effective.
rubber tires on fa r m equipme nt
Comput ers nad Da iry Feeding ...
owned by the Ohio Va lley Imple-Yes, feedin g dairy cows by compument Compa ny across the Street
burned to a crisp. A hay baler ter is here. Don Pritc hard , da iry ·
science E xtension specialist a t The
owned by the implement dealer
also ignited. Several neighboring Ohio State Universit y, makes the
houses had to be evacuated for fear fo llowing comments a bout computers in the dairy business.
the lire would spread.
Compu ter controlled concent rate
Gillses rebuild
feeders
a r e ta king the guesswork ·
The total d amage to the s tockout
of
feeding
dairy cows. They're
yards was over S100,tm and the
replacing
the
feeding of concetiinsurance was not adequatE' to
r
rate
while
cows
are m ilked.
cover the loss. In 1953 J . E vere tte
A
necklace
aro
und each cow's
and Fred Gills owned about 75
neck
has
he
r
specific
Identifying
percent of the stock in the com pany
nu
mber
on
it
.
whic
h
tells the
and through their e!!orts the
computer
hos
much
grain
that cow
stockyards were re built . Incide nbe
fed
on
a
da
iry
basis.
It will
should
tally, Gerald Gills, the company
then
allocate
he
r
so
much
feed
at a
accounta nt , was able to save all the
period
eac
h
time
she
given
freding
records from those first 23 year~ of
he
r
head
into
the
concentrate
sticks
operation when t h~ fire hit.
fodder . The cow can't overconH lo'OU want to write to James
sume.
The CO!T!pu ter remerrlbers
Sands, his address is Box 92,
how
muc
h she was led, and then as
Clarksburg. Ohio 43115.
each cow comes back to eat a
different meal anothe r time of the
day the computer shut s her off or
gives her more fee d.
This computer controlled feedin g .
allows the dairyman to keep track
of individu al cows a nd what they've
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) individually consumed. It gives him
Hundreds of the city's high school a list of which cows are not eating
student s wlll get a chance to a ppear a lithe grain they are programmed
as extras in the new movie to eat.
" Teachers," which is scheduled to
Ma ny different types of system s
beginlilming at Centra! High School are ava ila ble, with a new one
early next year.
ocming out about once a month.
Ohlo Film Burea u officials anWith these compute r controlled
nouncedThursday tha tproducerso! feeders pay lor themselves? Prit the $10 million film have agreed to chard says yes. based on surveys
give Columbus studPnt s first prior- that show fa rmer responses from
ity in hiring of as many as 4,00J looking at their own records. He
extras.
thinks the pay- back period could be
Thirty-five0hioans,20 teen-agers a bout one and one- half years or
and 15 adults, also will get speaking less. The price of these feede rs
part sin the ltlm. But theywUI IJecast • range from about $150 to $300 per
through talent agencies, said Nikki cow. Th a t looks like a tot of money
Spretnak of the Ohio Film Bureau.
to recove r in just a year to a year
Officials of the Columbus Public and a ha lf. but dairymen are
Schools a nd the Ohio Bureau of reporting such !lgures In terms of
Employment Services will visit all more milk ;&gt;roduc tion pe~ cow or
the crty's high schools next week to less feed consumed .
take applications for the parts.
How Ma ny Acres Are Between.
Student a pplica nts must have a C You and Starvation• ___ Americans
or betier grade a verage and a
record of good classroom attendan.,., offici als said.
"Teachers" will star Nick Nolte
as a disillusioned teache r a t a
fic tional high school. Filming is
scheduled to IJegin in January.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag• E-3

Pome10y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea~e~nt, W. Va.

By Micronta

695
Keep the hotidav fun running! Tests 9V

transistor, uC'\ 'D" and "AA" sizes.
122.o!l8

•

Check Your Phone Book for the
L!A~~~~~OF~~~OY~OOR~~~~~~~------------------------------------------------~~~~~E~S~AP~P~~~A~J!A~~R~TI~~~IA:~~~~N~G~S~~~E~S~A~N~O~~~
•• •

,,

'

.

�Paga

E-4-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sewer
survey
planned
POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners were awarded a
grant by the U.S. Environmental
P.rotection Agency in September of
this year to design and construct
sewage diSI)OSal lmprovements tn
Tuppers Plains.
An earlier grant by U.S. EPA,
awarded In September. 1981. fl.
nanced a study to determine the
most economical solution to long·
standing sewage disposal problems
In the community.
Find,lngs of this study Iden tifiei:l
upgrading and replacement of
existing home sewage disposal
systems as the most cast-effective
solutlon and qualified the county to
receive U.S. EPA grant funds to
design and construct the recom·
mended Improvements.
These grant funds wili pay
approximately 25 percent of the
costs of . design and nearly 85
percent of the construction costs of
the project.
The onsulting engineering llrm of
John David Jones and Associates
staff ~ll be conducting house-to·

Meigs ·adopts
weather policy
POMEROY - The Meigs Local
School District has established the
following policy in case of lncie·
ment weather:
Cancellation
If a decision is made necessltat·
ing the cancelling or ca lling off of a
day of school, the local radio
stations wlU be called to inform the
public. Generally this decision is
passed to the radio stations the
morning of the day to be cancelled
and usually the call is made by 6: 15
a.m.
Delay in Opening
II a decision is made to delay the
start of a school day, the local radio
statlons will be called to inform the
public. Generally this decision is
passed to the radio stations the
morning of the day to be delayed
and usually the call is made by 6: 15
a.m. Bus drivers "111 contact
WMPO Radio of any route changes
or of any areas that they will be
unable to pick up students. All
students wlll be delivered home at
the normal Urnes. Any student
whose bus does not run the route in
the morning and who comes to
school must be prepared to provide
his/ her own transporta tlon home In
the afternoon.
Early Dlsml'lSlll
In the event bad weather arrives
after school is in session, it .may be
necessary to dismiss school early.
II the decision to dismiss school
eiirly is made, the radio stations
will be called to notify the public of
the early dismiSsal and to communIcate how many hours early the
dismissal wUI be. II a child must go
. to a place other than his/her normal
delivery point during an early
dismissal. please advise the school
by Jetter or phone. The school will
make every effort to allow children
to call parents/ others to make
special arrangements if time
permits.'
The nonnal dismissal times are
as follows: ·
Bradbury Elementary, 2:20p.m.
(regular) ; 2:40p.m. (EMR);. Har·
rison ville Elementary. 4 p.m.;
Middleport Elementary, 2:30p.m.;
Pomeroy Elementary, 4 p.m.;
Rutland Elementary,. 2:50 p.m.;
Salem Center Elementary, 3:55
p.m.; Salisbury Elementary, 3:00
p.m.; Meigs Junior High, 3:02
p.m.; Meigs High, 3: 25 p.m.

We Re5erve, The Right To
· Limit auantities.

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

·BALLARD S

Hospital layoffs

percent1Ulderttsl~a~of86.8

percent. Less than !Opercent of !be
beds were occupied, he said ..

v

.

LB.2 ROLL or $}2 9
Sausage...~ .~!~~!~~~ ...

1/4 Pork Loin.~~·-~.1
FRESH PORK BUTT·
U.S.D.A. CHOIC

99
Steak... ~~.Jl

SUP~RIOR FRANKIE

.

19
¢

. .

Steak!Roast.. ... ~P; 99
.

¢

Wleners....... E.~~-P.~c.. 89.
LB

KAHN'S CRISPY SERVE

99
Bacon.................. ~

¢

COLUMBUS Obi (AP)

$

U.S. No. 1 WHITE

Potatoes....~~~~}.~~ .. I

Aft

49

2% Milk.~~~~T!~.~~~L.O.~~J59

•

.

Ora.nge Drmk?~.~~·.89

¢

KRAFT

·

9
9
Velveeta ..... .2.~~;!?~.~ 2

FLAVORITE

SUGAR

$I 49

SLB. BAG

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 10, 1983
I

I

e

I I I I

•
•

••

PUREX BLEACH
GAL.

69¢

Lirnit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 10, 1983

CHEER DETERGENT
171

oz. ·$599

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At . Powell's
Offer hpires Det. 10, 1983 .

BETTY CROCKER

CAKE MIXES
11:5 OZ:

3f$ 2

Limit ThrH Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer ExpirH Dec. 10, 1913

Life
Insurance
For

you love

.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-j

'exemptions once they have been
granted. "In this state once exempt,
always exempt. No questions asked
as long as that deed doesn't go
through that courthouse," he said.
Roberto said clatms of a lack of
exl$ting authority to deal with such
matters might be . challenged by
some.
"He claims not to have adrninis·
tratlve authority to prevent some of
those kinds of examples. That may
be questioned by some.

,..rulrrn.tl LiJr lnwra11u
Hom ~

C ff ic • -

~o c k

hland , lllonoh

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..

SPEECH &amp; HEARING DIVISION
GALLIPOLIS

JACKSON

POMEROY

412 v:nlon Pike
446·5500

200 Main Street
286·5075

Mulbarry H eights
992·2192

r-----------------------~------------~-----1~~~P~ho~n~e~4~46~-0~6~9~9~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

:?~:~o~~fi:~: ·~----c-;;;i;;,;As·;;;;;·--1 r
partmitsthlldfloor,whlchonce

BROUGHTON'S

R'S

The latest photographic tech·
niques "are anything but advanced.
The good things got left behind. They
went to something cheap and
junky," CoffPr said.'
"A lot of color photographs look
real cute now- but give them 20 or
30 years and they're going to be
gone," Coffer said, explaining that
the pictures fade. He said some
photographs dating back to 1840 are
still sharp.
Coffer, who gets some of his
supplies by special order from
Kodak, can make an okJ.Iashioned
photograph In 45 minutes.
Coffer's fa!ber is dead and his Ul
mother, who lives in California, is
unaware of his lifestyle. He said his
sister "thinks my life is real neat"
Mrs. Coffer said her parents, who
live in New Jersey, were shocked
when she sold her car and many of
her clothes to live in a wagon as a
photographer's assistant.
"I had to learn how to use a scrub
board and cook over a campfire,"
shesald.
·
But recently, when Mrs. Coffer
told her parents that she and her
husband planned to settle next
spring In Lancaster County, Pa., her
father warned her not to become too
materialistic.
.
THE OLD WAY - Disdaining modem methods, traveling
They in.tend to live among the
photographer John Coffer prefers to work with a large view camera and
Amish in Pennsylvania, but said
techniques of photographers of the !BOOs. Coffer has traveled five years
·they have no plans to become
- three with Ids wHe, Sue - in ox and horse drawn wagons practicing
members of that religious group.
his craft. (AP Laserphoto).
This winter, tbe two will live In a
small, heated house at Hale Farm
and VIllage. They arrived at the
historlc site In Bath just before
Thanksgiving.
·
exemptions on · Income-producing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- There . property.
.
Besides the photographs they sell
is a need to close the door to "the
Roberto said the two measures
as !bey travel, the Coffers also have
sold books of their work. They may candy store" of laws that allow would probably be sent to a
write a book on tbeir lifestyle and . ownersolcertainrealestateinOhio, subcommittee early next year and
to. avoid paying property taxes, combined into a single measures.
travels.
lawmakers
have been told.
"We earn enough to live," Mrs.
"I'm not going to prejudge the
Columbus mayor-elect Dana problem. Some people perceive it to
Coffer said. "We probably put as
Rinehart, who currently II' Franklin
much in the bank as anybody County
treasurer,' said there cur- be a problem and some people
because we don'~ have many
don't," he said.
rently is $10.9 btlilon worth of
Rinehart has raised the subject
expenses.''
tax·free property in the state. He
When they were traveling around said the value of tax-exempt land previously during his campaigns lor
the country at 2'h miles an hour,
statewide office and offered exam·
went up $921 million last year.
seven or eight hours a day, many
"It's a candy store. It's that pies of exemptions for the
people would Qffer them food or
committee.
simple. And somebody has got to
"How about an Investment prop·
pasture for their antmais to graze.
begin to close the doors or we're
''Only a few were real suspi· going to have . to completely, erly where you've got a pizza shOp,
claus," Coffer said. "They thought eventually, eliminate the tax base an ice cream parlor , four apartwe were gypsies going around
ments and somestorerooms?There
that we Currently operate under at are no taxes paid on that location at
IJIVaglng the country."
the local government level," Rine- all. That's owned by a tax-free
hart recently told the $enate Ways institution and Is sublet," he said.
He said there is no mechanism to
and Means Committee.
Two bills dealing with the matter retest applications for properly tax
are pending before the panel.
offices but they left In l!J'/4- tor new
One, sponsored by Sen. David I
Hobson, R·Springlield, would requarters lri the State Office Tower.
quire counties and cities to hold
A forme~&gt; state architect said in
hearings before granting property
1968 that the annex should be
tax exemptions under certain urban
demollshed when the new tower was
development and rehabllltatlon probullt. But as the debate over its fate
h
grams. It also would require the
continued, legislators w o were
state tax commissioner to deter·
running out of office space in the
mine at least once every three years
Statehouse began moving into the
whether each parcel of tax-exempt
first two floors of the aging Annex.
property continues to qualify for
Needed roof repairs followed.
that status.
Then Senate RepublicanS in the
The second bill, Introduced by
1981-82 legislative session remoWaysandMeansChalrmanMarcus ·
deled the former Supreme Court Roberto, D·Ravenna, redefines
llbraryonthesecondfloorforuseas whencertaintaxexemptlonsshould
360 Second Ave.
office space.
be granted in an attempt to prohibit
Gallipolis, Oh.

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Advo- try to amend Title 10 to include
parental involvement In the legisla·
cates of teen-age birth control are
tion/~ he saki.
gl&lt;ld !be Reagan administration has
The regulation, which was proquit trying to require that parents be
posed
Feb. 22,1982, never took effect
told if their minor daughters are
because
of federal court injunctions
receiving contraceptives, but they
it.
against
fearsomemembersofCongresswill
It would have affected about 4,!XX&gt;
now push for such a rule.
.
family
planning clinics.
The Planned Parenthood Federa·
It had been challenged by a
tton and !be National FamUy and
Reproductive Health Association variety of family planning and civil
declared victory On Wednesday llber11es groups as an Invasion of
when Solicitor General Rex Lee privacy and exceeding congre5·
decided against appealing a dispute slonailntent.
Backers of the regul~ lions argued
over the administration's parental
that parents have a right to know
notification requirement.
. "What r.ntered into my decision I when tbeir children are being given
medications which might have
cannot tell you," Lee said.
The administration had proposed Some affect on their health.
Opponents predicted more adoparents be told within lOdays if girls
17 or youu~ger received btJih control lescent pregnancies would occur If
pUis, intra.uterine devices or dlaph· the regulation went Into effect as
girls, fearful that their parents
ragms .from clinics receiving fed·
would find out about their se&gt;rual
eralmoney.
activity,
stopped going to clinics for
But two appeila~ courts, in
contraceptives.
Washington and New York, as well
The depar1rnent of health and
as lower courts. say the regulation
human
services received more than
went beyond Congress' intent when
120,000
comments from Individuals
It said parents should beencouraged
and
groups
when it published the
to participate in adolescents' contra·
regulation.
ceptive decisions. Lee decided not to
lake the matter before the Supreme . . - - - - - - - - - - - • Court. .
Scott Swirling, legislative dlrec·
tor lor !be reproductive health
association said, ''The battle is not
over yet by a long shot.'' He noted
that Title 10, the legislation which
authorizes federal spending for
family planning services, will
expire on Sept. 30 unless it is
Everyo~e
extended by Congress.
"We are fully expecting them to

Property loop holes need patching

er
uears of debate• overo Its architectu
'
-

raJ and pracilcal value, the 84-year·
old Statehouse Annex on Capitol
Square is being given a new lease on
ll1e
·
The three-story structure which
hasfallenintodlsrepalrasaresultof
Water damage and neglect Cur·
space much
rently Provides Off! ~
c~
of it in closequarters-for60House
andSenatemembersonitsfirsttwo
floors.
Butlt Is about toundergo!belatest
.in a series of llmlted repair and
renovation projects which will allow

W 0

Planned Parenthood
wins Reagan battl~

Annex given new lease on life

•

CINCINNATI (AP) -Southern
Ohio and northern Kentucky hospl·
ta1s have reported' a continuing
decline In patients and two hospitals
have begun layoffs because of lt.
On Thursday, Jewish Hospital
announced that 31 workers have
bee!! laid of! and another 118 were .
asked to work reduced hours.
Jim Scott. vice president of
human resources, said !be hospl·
tal's census has been about 7.4

\'

·

drummed gently on canvas
stretched over their ox-drawn
wagon, John and Sue Colfer pointed
to !be century-{)ld camera that has
sustained them for three years and
thousands of miles.
~ff&lt;;r. 31, and his 28-year-{)ld wife
have traveled about 5,000 miles
together In the past three years with
their two oxen, twohorses ,adogand
photography relics that still work.
Coffer, whO was born In West
Virginia, raised in Nevada and
attended college in F1orlda, had
covered about 6,000 miles alone in
two years as a 19th·century·style
photographer . before he met the
woman who now shares his love of a
quiet existence.
· "I always leaned toward the
slmple life," Coffer said softly,
holding one knee and rocking
forward on a narrow, blanketCoVered bed by the only window in
bls 10-year-{)ld wagon. "But I had a
~ndominium, a sports car, a
··telephone and a van."
He sold it all and bought a wagon
from the Amish in Pennsylvania,
Coffer . had earned a college
degree In oceanograp)!y, then
became interested in underwater
photography. He was further sidetracked from ocean work after
wandering into a buy·seU·trade
store In Florida and finding an old
camera.
"I &lt;jecided I'd Uke to pursue old
photography and make a living at
It," said Coffer.
He said old·styte photographers
he had seen would dress people up In
silly outfits ·in what amounted to
"Hollywood photography."
"I didn't want to get into that,"
Coffer said. "It dawned on me that
there are enough eountry roads to
get on that I could live and travel as
an itlnerant p)lotographer did 100
years ago."
Coffer said he then IJied to find
someone else who still uses !be
long-lasting photographic processes
of a century ago, such as llntypes
and wet glass plates.
He contacted the Smithsonian
lpstituilon In Washington, but
someone there told Coffer to notify
the museum if he found such a
photographer. Coffer tben was
inspired to save what seemed to be a
lost art.

The Sunda)'"Times..S.ntinei-Poge--E-5'

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

I

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., DEC. 10, 1983

....... _.

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

BATII, Ohio lAP) - As rain

2.98 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Round

Dmmber 4, 19$3

19th century-style
photographer has
simple existence

house interviews du ring midDecember. The purpose of the
Interviews will be to determine the
type ·and ,location of each ho·
meowner's sewage disposal system
and to identify which systems
should be upgraded. During the
interviews, Jones' staff will answer
any questions local residents may
have concerning the project.
Sewage disposal systems to be
improved will qualify for EPA
grant funds . According to the Board
of Commissioners , Improving sew·
age disposal systems in .the area
also will result in EPA lUting the
long-standing building ban In
Tuppers Plains.

' December 4, 1983.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

released $190,22fl in previously·
authorized capital lmprovement

CUT YOUR OWN AT

-~==~~=~~:= ~ B~~~~R~E~:~v?.L~~;v'E
GIFT SHOP ITEMS
during the last five years, with the
single most costly Item a new roof
needed to stop chronic water
damage.
Debaiesoverwhethertodemollsh
or renovate !be' structure have
spanned almost three decades but
apparently will soon be settled.

~

l
I(

can

I, I

i

TWO LOCATIONS

783 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. OH.
364 Jackson Pike, Gallipois. OH.

post 13, turn south on vavel road I'll miles to grove .
WATCH FOR SIGNS
.
Hours: 10 Til Dark

1,

EXTENDED CHRISTMAS HOURS
FRUTH PHARMACY OF OHIO
MIDDLEPORT &amp; GALLIPOLIS
DEC. 5 TIL DEC. 24
Monday thru at. 9 A.M. til 10 P.M.
Sun. 11 A.M. til 8 P.M.
Sat., Dec. 24, 9 A.M. til 7 P.M.

••••ll';tl•••~~~~~~~~•••-••--•

YES

saved."

am

FRUTH PHARMACY

I! Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin onto Rt. 68J,go 4 fltiles to Mile·

. State Architect Lee Martin said
an Ohio Building Authority study of
state government space needs due
later this month Is expected to
"indlcatethat !be Annex ought to be
That prompted officials to proceed with plans for the latest repairs
althOUgh no date has been set. "No
timetable has been establlshed for
when thatworltwouldstart·orend,"
Martin said.
Of tbe $190,22fl total, the largest
single proj~t calls for spending
$75,CXXI to repair !be thHd floor
bearing room. Another $42,2al will
be used for.repair and renovation In
Jjallwaya and office space to include
plastering, painting and misCellaneous repairs as needed.
: Other proJects include $25,CXXI to
repair existing leaks In exterior
walls; $:Ml,CXXI for ret110dellng to
Include an addlttonal fire exit on !be
floor. · and SS.IXXI to repair
f10111!Work and stair ba1ustrBde
&amp;etween tbe llrst and second (lOOI'S.
In addition, $2fl,CXXI will rover !be
a1 repaving the House of
Repr! smtatlves parking lOt.
; CooltrUCIIDD of tbe Annex began
11118119 and was complel£d In 1901.1t
ued to boUle !be Ohio Supreme
CQ!rt and tbe AttorneY deneral's .

1

Closed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas

There is still time to

ENROLL IN THE WIN-TER CLASSES
Prepare now for YOl)R future!

TRAIN IN FIELDS THAT PAY

WELL..~ ·

ASSOCIATE DEGREES AND DIPLOMAS IN
•Busines Administration
•Executive Secretary
•Compute.r Science
•Accounting

ELIGIBLE FOR TH.E TRAINING OF VETERANS
FINANCIAL AID IS STILL AVAILABLE

Gallipolis BU8iness CoUege
429 Jack10n Pike, Galllpoli1, 446-4367
St. hi· I 75·02·04721

•Dependable, Low Cost Prescription Service
•3 Registered Pharmacists
•Most complete Prescription Stock
•Itemized Receipts for Insurance end Income Tax Purposes
.•We Compound Preseriptions
•We Fill All Third Party Prescriptions
•We Maintain A. Complete Record of all Prescriptions Filled
•Free Perking

10% SENIOR CTIZENS DISOOUNT
(60 and Over)

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

PHONE
446-6620- 992-6491
,.

�SALE PRICES GOOD THIU DECEMBER 24th, 1983.

(Unless Otherwise Noted)

WE'RE HAVING A

GR' TE CHRISTMAS KICK ·oFF
T MASON FURNITURE CO.

Solid Oak

By CECIL Y BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
MORNING REFRESHER
Orange Bread &amp; Iced Coffee
ORANGE BREAD
Delicioust keeps well and
makes wonderful toast.
I package dry yeast
~. cup warm water [110 to
115 degrees J
2-3rds cup orange juice, at
room temperature
3 tablespoons sugar
I teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons butter, soft
· 2 tablespoons finely grated
orange rind
21h cups (about) unbleached
flour
In a large bowl, sprinkle yeast
over water and let stand until
dissolved- about 5 minutes. Stir
in orange juice, sugar, salt, butter and orange rind; gradually
stir in enough flour to make a soft
dough. Turn out on a prepared
board or pastry cloth ; knead until smooth and elastic- about 10
minutes. Place in a buttered
bowl; turn to butter top. Cover
bowl; let rise in a warm place
(about 80 degrees J until doubled
- I to 2 hours. Punch down ;
knead for 5 minutes. Shape into
a loaf; place in a.buttered 9 by 5
by 3-inch loaf pan. Cover; let rise
in warm place about 1 hour.
Bake in a preheated 375-degree
oven until a cake tester inserted
in center comes out clean- 35 to
45 minutes.
COOL NIGHT DINNER
Prune Roast &amp; Noodles
Salad &amp; French Bread
Cheese Tray &amp; Coffee
PRUNE ROAST
Interspersed with the wondrous prose of M.F.K. Fisher are
· some fine recipes - here is one
of them ..
4 to 5 pound beef rump
roast
2 teaspoons salt
Pepper
2 cups washed , dried prunes
2 cups boiling water .
'' cup cider vinegar
'' cup water
l cup light brown sugar
&gt;• teaspoon ground cloves
l teaspoon ground cinnamon
Heat a he avy, deep pan on top
of range. Add roast, turning so It
will brown on all sides . Sprinkle
with salt and pepper. Add prunes
and water, cover, and simmer
until tender - about 3 hours.
Remove meat from liquid to hot
platter. Stir in vinegar, water,
sugar, cloves &lt;!nd cinnamon;
cook rapidly until a thick sauce
is formed. Pour sauce over and
around meat; serve immediately . Makes 8 to 10 servings.
From "The Art of Eating" by
M.F.K. Fisher (Vintage) . .

ROOM SETS

DINING

TERRACE SUPPER
Salmon Salad &amp; Rolls
Tomato &amp; Broccoli Molds
Fresh Fruit Cobbler
TOMATO AND
BROCCOLI MOLDS
A new and refreshing recipe.
I envelope unflavored
gelati n
6-ounce can regular
cocktail vegetable juice
6-ounce can spicy cocktail
vegetable juice
8 ounces II cup) plain
yogurt
I cup !lightly packed )
cooked tiny broccoli
flowerets
In a medium bowl ~ prinkle
gelatin over regular cocktail
vegetable juice and let softe11about 5 minutes. In a small
saucepan heat spicy cocktail
ve9etable juice to boiling; pour
over gelatin mixture and stir until gelatin is dissolved . Add
yogurt and beat Wltil blended there should be no flecks. Add
broccoli. Chill until mixture
begins to thicken. Stir gently to
distribute broccoli. Turn into 112
~up molds or 6-ounce custard
cups. Chill to set. Unmold at ser·
ving time. Color will be a rosy
beige rather than a rosy red.
Makes 4 servings.

By CECIL Y BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
BUFFET SUPPER
. Sliced Turkey Platter
Green Pea Salad &amp; Rolls
Cherry Pie &amp; Iced Coffee
GREEN PEA SALAD
A new version of an old
American favorite .
I 0-ounce package frozen
tiny green peas
·
2 or 3 large ribs celery,
thinly sliced 1about I',
cups)
I or 2 medium scallions ,
thinly sliced 13
tablespoons)
l Ia rge (7 ounces) red
Delicious apple, unpeeled
.and diced ( '• inch) to . ·make about p, cup&gt;
I cup diced !'•·inch) cheddar
cheese
· 4 tablespoons salad oil •
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
Lettu ce
2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
Mayonnaise and yogurt
Cook pea s according to
package directions; drain and
cool. Toss with celery. scallion, ,
.apple, cheese, oil and vinegar;
cove r tightly and chill. Serve on
. lettuce and garnish with egg.
. Whisk together equal parts of
mayonnaise and yogurt lllltil
· blended and serve with the salad.
· Makes 6 servi ngs.

'

GRATE CHRISTMAS KICK-OFF SALE.
50% On
Selected Su.l tes,
Every suite In stock "'duced ~om SIOO.OO to $600.00011 our already !ow price for
this sale. Prices will never be lower. Decorate your home today with a new livill(!
room suite for Christmas.
Available Tn light or dark oak, set Includes
leaves and six bow back solid oak chairs.

42"

American Madel

Reg. $799. ' 5 Limited Time Only

5

599

I

12"

table with two
.
'

95

~ ....,~~.a.m.

To 9 p.m. Monday, December 5th.

MANY OTHER SAVINCiS:TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION, PIICES ON MOST OF THE ITEMS
LISTED HERE AND
OTHER ITEMS THROUGHOUT THf STQRE ARi GOOD THROUGH
DEC. 24th, 1983.

On

Other Seven Piece .Sets Priced From .'298°0
-Five Piece Sets As Low As '19900 Available
In Oak, Maple and Pin~.

Items Through

. . . ..... ! . SUPER!

Number 1 m long
li fe • fewest repa1rs
•mlowest serv1ce costs
• m nat!onw1de prete·r-

.n~~;f!!t:

12 HOURS ONLY! .ONE DAY SPECIALS!
Items Would Make Great Chri1tmas Gifts!

COMPANY DINNER
Lime Glacee
Grilled Chicken &amp; Vegetables
Peach Upsidedown Cak€ "
LIME GLACEE
My friend Jonathan Dudley
often serves this to hot-weati)IQ'
dmner guests.
6 cups chicken stock
1 medium onion, sliced
2 ribs celery I leaves .
included) , chopped
5 cloves garlic, crushed
3 sprigs parsley
3 teaspoons unflavored
gelatin
8 tablespoons fresh lime
juice, strained .
3 drops Tabasco
I cup heavy cream. whipped 1.
2 tablespoons candied
ginger, chopped
Pour chicken stock into a larg~
pot. add onions, celery, and
garlic, bring to a boil, reduce
heat, and simmer I hour. Drop
parsley to wilt in stock; remove
and transfer to blender with I
cup of the stock, blend well, and
return to pot. Stir mixture well,
then pour through a fine sieve into a large bowl, pressing with
back of spoon to get all liquid . ·
Dissolve gelatin in I' cup water'
add to hot liquid, and stir till
dissolved completely . Cool to
room temperature, stir in lime
juice and Tabasco, and chill till
thickened. Serve in icy-eold glass ·
cups or bowls topped with
generous dollops of cream. Garnish each portion with I teaspoon
candied gmger. Serves 4 to 6.
From "American Taste" by ·,
· James Villas !Arbor House) .

ence I Based on a nat1onat
survey askmg consumers
whtch brand of wasner

'

SUPERI SUPERII Sfi!CIALS

'F=~ they 'd like to own )

BIG LOAO ORYERS
• Commercially· proven
m self serv1ce taunones
• Gentle energy elf lc1ent
Orymo • Electron1c Auto-

Dry oi T1me Controls

BUY THIS 1984
19" COLOR T.V.

Good Monday, December 5th Only
12 Hours Onlytll
ONE DAY SPECIALS

• Nobody gets
you r IJIShes cleaner!
• Low Energy cycle
lor everyday loa ds •
Energy Saver Orvmg
• 3 level Jetwash

FOR ONLY

These Items Would Make Great Cllristmas Gifts!

System

WOOD ROCKER RIOTU
Desk's At Sale Prices!
NEE[) A DESK?
· ~-J ',

'

Special factory purchase! Choose from one of these two beautiful
solid wood rockers and save $50.00. Over 20 styles of rockers in
stock to choose from in oak, maple, pine a n " l

!

h'fs

Reg. $169.'~
Come in and see our newly
expanded deskline, roll top
and student desks in stock .
They Are ~oin~ fast; get yours:
today'

Sale Priced '"'"~

BUY ONE TAILE LAMP AT
REGULAR PRICI AND GET
THI SECOND MATCHING
LAMP FlEE.
•
December 5,1983 Onlyl

I

I .

';I

LIMITED SUPPLY!! WHEN THESE ARE GONE
THERE WILL BE NO MORE.
$
95
Other Rockers Priced

Gratt' Selections
At

A LANE ®

Fr~m

59

~

Reg. 55911 Sale
Price

LOVE CHEST

When Merry Christmas lsn 't All You
Want To Say.
THE

Reg. $239.'

Plant Stand
. . .turned Queen Anne

ELECTRONIC
PHONE

Lane®

'18995

'2995

FREE! FREEl FREE!

by

5

December 5th, 1983 Onlyl

Newer Be Priced This low Again!

Chests

GUN CABINET
8 GUN

Regularly Priced At $44995

. ~~ ALSO HAVE A LARGE
SELECTION OF FLOOR LAMPS! .

•

SPORTSMAN

DEU PICNIC
Cold Meats &amp; Potato Salad
Cole Slaw &amp; Pickled Beets
Carry-along Cake
PICKLED BEETS
My sister Phyllis has a n~
version of her standard recipe.
Two !-pound cans sliced
beets
' ' cup cider vi negar
'' cup suga r
10 whole cloves
2-inch piece stick cinnamon
I teaspoon ground allspice
Drain beets; save liqwd. In a
medium saucepan bring beet liquid, vinegar, sugar, cloves, cinnamon and allspice to a boil; boil
2 minutes. Pack beets into a
!-quart jar; pour boiling liquid
·and spices over top. If there 1s
not enough liquid to cover beets
make up the rest with boiling
water:· Chill for several days to
allow flavor s to blend before
serv1ng.

TO HELP YOU, OUR CU
AND ALL OF US. AT MASON FURNITURE KICJ{ OFF THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON W HAVE REDUCEDOUR ENTIRE STOCK OF MERCHANDISE TO SUPER
WILL PRICES BE THIS LOW THIS TIME OF .YEAR, COME IN AND
. LOW PRICES. NEVER

•LAY-AWAYS
ACCEPTED

Kick-Off
Sale Priced

by

leg with Geniune
morbi.. fop.

SPECIALLY DEVELOPED!
SENSATIONALLY PRICED!

ITNTI'IEIIR@UJ.&amp;ffi'IT:£ ®

...

.....L~

·'

•.)

On sale now until Christmas.
Other gun cabinets available. In
6, 8 and 10 gun size by Pulaski.
Priced from $189 .93 to 5649.93.

A GENUINE

LA·Z·DOr·
/

Reel ina-Rocker"
Reclina.Way® Wall Recliner

Stop By Mason Furniture On

Your
Choice

Monday, Dec. 5 During Our
Christmas ~~ Sale And
Purchase $15()1» or More In
Merchandise And You'll Reeeive This
Electronic Phone Freel

-~ 15~)
Zenith

!11~nt•l'\)American Versatility ...
ROOM OIVIOER I

COLORlV

OHer Good Monday,
December 5, 1983 Onlyl

Zenith CUSTOM SERIES Color fV· • -Model
Yl3IOA · Personal-size 13" diagonal portable
w ith Almond color finish . Features Tri-F.ocus Pic-

ture Tube for outstanding picture sharpness:
100% modular Z- 1 Chassis; Super Video Range
Tuning; Automatic Color Control System and
energy efficient Electronic Power Serrtry. Zenith
Quali~ means great-V2

Super

69

Savings On
AIf Chairs

,_._

--....-·-. ..

_-·

lllo_,.,_l",.,""'"""'
.......,v - ............... ...
_,..
,...., ..
_,,...,. .
"'.....
....... .""'...........
I'.Ool,.. " "

--~

~. ,.,.,.. ,..,

,._c•• .,.

h •lw" ...,...,.lean

KNOTTY PINE

95

Win A Free Santalll

OUR
SELECTION OF
STYLES AND FINISHES IS
COMPLETE . BUY NOW FOR
CHRISTMAs,
00

Now

188
·

CHRISTMAS GinS AND
OUR SELEtnON IS GREAT,
ALL mLES AND FINISHES
Pricld From
Only

'6995. Ea.
\'

Stuffed Santa To Be Given
Away During This Christmas
Sale. Drawing will be held
December 24th at 12 noon. No
purchase necessary, ·nod not be
present to win.

I

· 12" Merbk! Top

Mqdel S2554NK
Classic
styling. WOOd and
simulated wood products in
richlyiJrained Nutmeg Oak
finish. · ·

•s 8 9

8

Reg.

.,

$34" NOW

12

BS

Limited Supply!

I
J

2.§:'DELUXE CONSOLE

I

~ldllblllty. •

'
• Dependable 100% Modular Z·1 Chllal1
for long-life
Reliable E!Cronlc llmlna -

er Sentry l)rCiecll cl'

II, controls

Monday, Dec. 5th Onlyl

•

MORNING COFFEE
Oatmeal Muffins &amp; Coffee
OATMEAL MUFFINS
My sister Phyllis favors thi s
reci pe from a new book wntten
by two professors of nutrition .·
I cup plain low-fat yogurt
"• cup oil
1 egg
I'• cups flour
% cup quick-eook ing rolled
··
oats
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
'• teaspoon baking soda
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Grease muffin tins lightly or line
with cupcake papers. In a 2-cup
measuring cup, measure yogurt
and oil ; and egg ; st1r to combme.
In a bowl combine remaUllllg dry
ingredients. Add yog urt mixture
to flour mixture, stirring approx·
imately 25 strokes. Fill muffin
tins to the rim. Bake for 20 .
minutes. Yield : 8large muffins.
From " Nutrition for the Prinne
of Your Life'' bv Annette Natow
· &amp; J()-Ann Hesliii 1McGraw-Hill! .

one-

knob VHF IIIII UHF chlnnel leiii(II!Or'. • l'enllll's
Pern118el A•·lllnlngConlnll. • Chollftl8lhlrp100
Plclura 1llbe-- ZMIIII'a100" H~BI Electron Guns
for ...-nc~~:=nlllerpo 11111111 highlight delelt.

Exceptional Value!
Limited Quantity

·Speclol ·, ..,•l·
'•'

This beautiful plant stand with
lovely turned Queen Anne leg and
the big
round 'genuine marble
top adds a very useful and
decorative look to any room In
your home. Has a wide variety of
uses . . Avallable in beautiful
frullwood flnlsh12

12"

'

e Elecboulc

OPEN MONDAY~ DK. 5th
9 A.M~· .To;9:~.M.
Be Sure and Check..th• Monday Only

1

i
J

,~,
G.nlullll!!

energy- • Auto-Conlrol Color'"*"·

HOUR ~·. SALE

"

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

Be Sure And Register For A 3 Foot

and Finishes.

fAll ES MAKE LOVELY ·

I

I
I

au,11itv goes in before the name.goes on•

E.rqulslre y•srtraay, ann more so toctey!

R

J

j;rt!P" ., Dec. 5th, 1983 Only!

In Stock! ·

.........

J •.

' .

Oak veneered magazine rack
has ·carrying handle end lots of
room for magazines and
rewspa$39:·15

14''I'iJils.

SNACKTIME DELIGHT
Lime Bars &amp; Iced Tea
LIME BARS
Always a favorite .
J' cup all-purpose flour
v, cup sugat
'l•·poWld stick I 1h cup 1
butter, melted
Topping, see recipe
In a small bowl stir together
flour and sugar; stir in butter un- · ·
til blended. Pa~ over the bottom ·
of a buttered 9 by 9 by 2-inch bak·
ing pan. Bake in a preheated
35(klegree oven until light browri
-18 to 20 minutes; set aside but
leave oven control at 350 degrees.
Prepare Topping; pour over 1
crust; bak~ m the 350-degree
oven Wltil finn - about 40 ·'
minures. Cool on a wire rack; cut··:
into bars.

'

�•
December 4, 1983

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

Sec. Block employing hoopla for conservation program
By DON KENDALL
APFann Writer

administration.
However, Block Is expected to
WIO.SHINGTON (AP) - Agricul- provide impetus for· on-going proture Secretary John R. Block will be grams and restate his views that soil
using a masslvetelephonehookup,a - and water resources deserve a
hlgh-prtority treatment. perhaps
fly-casting demonstration and fried
catfish toattractattentlon forhissoll looking ahead to next year when
and water conservation policies.
Congress gets down to work on new
The event is scheduled for Dec. 8, farm legislation.
the same ·· day the Agriculture
Department's 1983 yearbOok will be
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
unveiled. It's about Conservation, Agriculture Department says
wheat farmers are collecting an
too.
..
Block, whose aides have shown a estimated$735m!l1Jon to$765mllllon
taste for dreaming up stunts aimed in "deficiency payments" for their
remember
the Block
family
ea tlng- a
at
attrnctlng
the news
media
food stamp diet for a week? -will
hold a half-hour news conference at
which he plans to Introduce the
yearbOok and "a special national
resource conservation campaign,"
the department said Friday.
"Following the briefing, the
media can accompany Block on a
tour of the demonstrations and
exhibits In the patio of the administration building" where the department'sseniorofficesare located, the
announcement said.
But what was not publicized by the
brief announcement, is a luncheon
at which ' the Catfish .Farmers of
America will provide and cook
farm-grown catfish for dozens of
invited guests, Including any reporters who accept the invitation.
Catfish farming, by the way. is
featured In one of the yearbook's
chapters.
Larry Marton ofUSDA ·s Office of
Governmental and Public Affairs
said · the festivities after Block's
news conference will Include a
demonstration by an expe11 turkey
caller and another on fly casting.
Various exhibits set up In the
department's first -floor indoor patio
area will Include tents, backpacks
a nd other recreational items.
Proceedings ,of the news cynference will be available to anyone In
the country who calls a "900"
number and listens ln. The charge,
according to officials, wUI be 50
cents for the first minute and 35
cents for each additional minute.
Thus, if the entire 30 minutes is
sought, the charge will t&gt;e about
$10.65. Officials hope. however. that
groups of people might li~ten In roan
amplifier hooked to single lines.
The National Association of Scil
Conservation Distrtcts and other
groups have been publicizing the
event, and certain USDA agencies
have been Informed that telephone
calls by their.field offices would be
welcome. In those cases, taxpayers
will foot the bilL
But Marton, who is helping
coordinate the festivities. denied
that any coercion, gentle or otherwise, has been used to encourage
federal workers to listen In by phone.
"They have been advised that the
faclllty is available," he said.
"Nobody has been told to call in."
Although getting some big billing
from Block's people, he is not
expected to announce any new ,
massive programs to _save the
nation's soil and water resources.
For one thing. the USDA budget Is
tight. the same as the rest of the

1983 harvest.
The payments are due under the
government's target prtce system
for certain crops. Ifthecashmar~et
prtce falls below the target over a
specified period, the suhsldles are
paid to make up the difference
t&gt;etween the target and the market
prtce - or the loan rate. whichever
Is higher.
Everett Rank. administrator of
USDA's Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Service, said
Frtday that farmers already received part of their payments, about

ihrough October. But the loan rate . !ng share of tbe natlol)'s milk and
dairy products, according to an
signed up In the l9l3 program. The - the amount tanners can borrow
Agriculture Depar!nle1t report.
balance will be avaQable soon !rom USDA by using tli~!J' crop as
. Prellmlnary figures showed Frtthrough local offices of the agency, collateral- was $3.65 ~r busheL
day that in 1911! - the most recent
he said.
· Thus the deficiency p.jyment is 65
year examined - C!HJ!1S handled Tl
Farmers who participated In this cents per bushel.
year's program and abided by the ·
Rank said barley farmers are, percent of the milk sold toplantsand
dealers, compared to 76 percent in
rules ca!llng tor an acreage reduc- getting $35 m1lllon to $40 million In
1973 and 64 percent In 1964.
tion were eliglble fortbe target price deficiency payments this year, and
. RandaU E. Torgerson, adminisbenefits on the remainder of their oats producers about $7 million to
crop.
$10 m1lllon. Advance payments also trator of USDA's Agricultural
Cooperatlve Marketing Service,
. The wheat target price this year were made on those crops.
said
that gains also occurred in
was $4.30 per bushel. The market
marketings
of cheese and dry milk, ·
price nationally averaged $3.51 per
WASHINGTON (AP) - Dairy
while
butter
sales held about steady.
bushel .In a five-month period, June- cooperatives are handling a grow-

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

est~

or ess . -• .

The. "
is
available in vinyl or cloth .

recliners by

' -

®

__ ane
They're the most rewarding gifts you can
give! Roomy and comfortable, they have a
special device that allows you to fully recline w~ile only inches from a wall! All are
tailored in beautiful decorator fabrics, too!
And for this week only, the prices are more
comfortable than you'd believe possible!

Hospital No~es

Traditional rocker-recliner
witn tufted back.

$2 95

Pillow-back recliner with
extra thick seat

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV. 30
Brandy Bing, · Patricia Brady,
Lois Creel. Arthur Darnbrough,
Myrtle Davis, Anne Fischer, Donald Folmer. Vernon French , Lid a
Frost, Woodrow Funderfol, Tana
George, Timothy Hall, Karen
.Hively, Wanda Imboden, Chr1stopher Jeffers, Cecil Johnson, Luke
Kessinger, John King, Dennis
Lantz, Herbert Loomis, Bonnie
Martin. Mrs. Danny McNeal and
son, Trenla Minton, James Monis
Sr., Verona Moffman, Bessie Parsons, Joshua Richards, Garney
Riddle, Ray Riggs, Derek Rose,
Jason Sharp, James Smith, Sharon
Smith, , fhristie Strow, Ruby
Thompson, Mrs. Hugh Walker and
daughter, Erma Waugh, Joann
Weyersmlller. Betty Whaley, Cynthia Wilson , Jennifer Young and
Mildred Ziegler.
BIRTIIS
Mr. 311d Mrs. William Huffman,
daughter, Letart; Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Leach, daughter, Point Plea'
sant; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Lloyd,
son, Jackson; Floyd Rhea, daughter, Jackson; and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Young, daughter, Mason.

•

,·

Priced from ..

350·

$

Skirted traditional recliner
with T-cushion.

$295

Come settle back into generous proportions of
plush pillow softness and enjoy mounds of rock-·
ing, reclining or lounging luxury! bold mo_dern
beauty covered in soft, supple velvet

====~
•

pamtmg
restored ·
ONCINNATI (AP) -Specialists
at the Cincinnati Art Museum who
just completed an eight-month
restoration of an 18th-Century
painting hope their efforts w!Uspare
the painting from the ravages of
time for at least 75 years.
Museum conservators Elisabeth
Batchelor and Stephen Bonadles,
who presided over· the painstaking
repairs of the historic Benjamin
West painting, "Ophelia and
Laertes, " said the artwork should
fare well within the museum's
cllmate-controlled interior. The
Interior temperature and humidity
are regulated to keep old canvasses
from deteriorating by drying out
and cracking.
'. The painting, which West created
in 1792 and retouched in lll06, has
been retouched since then. But it
badly needed repairs, Including
llrttng of the old varnish from the
painting, reinforcing of the old
&lt;ianvas and retouching In spots
\!ohere the paint had worn away.
· The work was beguh In March-and
(iompleted two weeks ago: Asked
tiow long he expects the repairs to
iast, Bonadiessald, "Ifwe'retalldng
about 75 to 100 years, we'd be
reasonably pleased."
The restoration was no small task.
The painting measured 9feet byl2~
feet, making It too large to fit Into the
museum's conservation workshop.
So conservators erected a temporary workshop around the painting's
resting place In a gallery, lnsta!llng
windows in the walls so museum
visitors could watch the repair
work's progress.
American Express Co. took an.
interest n the project and raised
$32,(0) to pay for the restoration.
The company donated' sums ranging from 5 cents to $5 whenever
anyone used an Amertcan Express
product or service In the Cincinnati
area.
,
"We always have projects sitting
around waiting to be.. done, but they
have to wait until the funds show up·
first "museum spokeswoman Jane
'
'
Durrell said.
West, an Annerlcan painter from
Philadelphia who studied his craft In
Europe, set up his studios In London,
England, and remained .there. He
bl,canne known as a master teacher
under whom prominent American
artists studied, Including Samuel
Morse and Gilbert Stuart, the
painter famous fordoing portraits of
?.resident George Washington.
West helped found the Royal
Academy of Arts In Lond~n.J{e was
also commissioned to produce a
series of paintings of scenes from
William Shakespeare's plays, from
which the "Opbella and Laertes"
painting resulted.
The painting was given to the
Cincinnati Art Museum before the
turn of the century. The museum
.w as founded In 1881.
Because of the painting's size,
conservators had to use a system of
ce111nf!-mounted pulleys to turn It
over during repairs. They"erected a
temporary brtdge over the painting
as It lay on the floor, so they could lie
on the brtdge while performing
restoration work.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)majorlty tifHouse members believe
jail prisoners should pay thecos.t s of
their confinement, although some
Say that, like many lofty plans, the
,·
idea may not be practical.
,. Rep. David J. Leland, DColumbus, is sponsoring a bill under
\fhich departing prisoners would
have to .eimburse local authorities
fur room, board and other costs,
i!ither In lull or to the extent of their
ability to pay.
His bill, already approved by the
J{ouse and now pending In the
Senate, authorizes vOluntary state
lind local programs which could be
set up bY the d!rector of rehabUitatlons and corrections, judges, and
authorities In charge of jails,
workhouses, and correctional
The bill does not requtrecollection

446-0322

3 Miles Out Bulaville

~d.

Gallipolis

Big button-tufted recliner
with pillow beck.

2g5

$

, SpeclticaUy, the measure authorizes the ·.attorney general, along·
Wtth county and municipal prosECUIors, to bring ctvil actions to recover
(rom a collvlcted person when
authorized todosobythedlrectorof
i-ehabllttation and correction or by
lhe Iegislatlve authority - county
parnmtssioners, city council which controls thP jail.
·
; Lelalld says his proposal could
lead to considerable savings for
&amp;ocal governments while adding
pnolher deterrent to potential

Crtmlnals.

COUPONS
bOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP ,
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S .

THURSDAY, DEC. 8

Budget
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Special

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SUPERIOR

SLICED
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PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY

•REDELM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY:
SAVING COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AN.D RECEIVE
DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PURCHASE THE
SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER ITEM. NO
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MERCHANDISf', COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER
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ARE EXCLUDED BY LAW. TO INSURE PRODUCTTO
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BOILED HAM
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~nters.

Step lively, Santa! SALE ENDS this week!

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-E-9'

Pameroy-Middleport-Gallipolis;· Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Payment
proposal
examined

DISCHARGES DEC. I
Lucille Burnell, Adam Bishop Jr.,
Carl Blake, Mrs. William Blanton
and son, Dora Canter, Laura
Carmichael, Roberta Durham, Carolyn Elklns, Etta E!lls, Tina
Foster, Marable Haffelt, , Gwendolyn Hobson, Grace Johnson,
Dorothy Kitchen, AlvaMariln, Vera
Mason, Floyd ·Matthews, Alvin
Mooney, Mrs. Michael Moore and
son, Matthew Peckham, Jerry
Ramsey, Autumn Saunders, April
Snyder, Brenetta Snyder, James
Stratton, David White II,
BIRTII!!
Mr. and Mrs. PhlWp Miller,
daUghter, Northup; Mr. and Mrs.
Sammy Smith, son, Radclltf.

Dacember 4, 1983

West

$344 ml!llon, as advances when they

r1

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~ save $3 mllilon a year," the
il'rank!in County lawmaker said.

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�Page

Pomeroy

E-1 0-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport

December 4, 1983

Gallipolis, Ohi~Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Unemployment dip linked.to manufacturing jobs increase
By STEVEN P.ROSEN-FELD
AI' Business Wrller
·
NEW YORK (AP) _:_ M111ions of
Americans have gone back to work
in the last year, with
manufacturers leading the hiring
boom.
But some analysts say it may be
three more years before manufacturing employment surpasses the
levels of ,July 1981, at Ule stan of a
steep recession.
Nevertheless, theshrinklngofthe
ranks of Ule nation's unemployed
has far outperfonned forecasts for

the ~ecession began, a figure that
plummeted to 18.2 million a year ago
before rising to 19.2 million last

as an indicatorolincreaseddemand
for goods. something that could lead
to increased production and more
month, Duprey said.
· jobs.
Data Resources predicts the
"We've probably seen the strong·
. manufacturing job total will not get est period," Parry said. But even If
past the 1981 peak until early 1986. the economic expansion slows In
By the end or 1986. ·manufacturing 19&amp;1. he said. "there is no reason to
employment may exceed July 1981 see any re\'ersals" in reducing
levels by only 200,00J jobs. the film unemployment.
forecast. ·
In other business and eeonomlc
Otller ~ect ors of the e&lt;'onomy developments this past week:
leading t~e hiring mclude servtce
-The Commerce Depanment
companies. accounting for nearly 35 said its Index of Leading Economic
percent of the additional jobs since Indicators, the government's ba-

vember after two months of
ctecllnes. Food prtces, which are
expected to rise 2.2 percent this year
for the smallest Increase since 1967,
are forecast to cllrnb 4 percent to 7
percent In 1984.
-President Reagan signed a blil
tljat removed government·imposed
Interest rate ceilings on Federal
Housing Admlnlstratlon·lnsured
mortgages. The new law also
eliminated a previous requirement
that a homebuyerobtalnlnganFHA
mortgage could pay a loan ortglna·
tlon fee to tbe lender of no more than

on track and the leading indlcaiors
show substant!al eeonomlc improvement Is still ahead. Full steam
ahead," said Larry Speakes, the
White House spokesman.
-President Reagan signed into
law a bill that for Ule first time will
provide' government payments to
dairy farmers for not producing
mW&lt;. The measure, slmllar to
provisions for commodities such as
grain, Is designed to slow overproductlon that has led to large
stockpiles · of government-owned
cheese. butter anddrted mille

' December
-The
Agriculture Department
retail trade. 1982:
with 12wholesale
percent; and
and rometerofeconomictrends,rose0.8
percent in0ctober,the14thconsecu· said
pricesfarmersrecelveforraw
construction, wit h nearly 8 percent. live monthly gain. "The recovery is
products rose 0.7 percent in NoThere have been losers as well as r iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
winners. ,,
Falling oil prices and the impact
Model 213
M. F. 35 1964
of energy conservation efforts
N. I MANURE
DIESEL
combined to reduce the number or
jobs in petroleum processing by 4
SPREADER
percent in the past 11 months.
Duprey said. Employment in minlng is down 9.6 percent in the same
FARMALL H
period, and there are 10 percent
Model 245
Very Good
fewer jobs manufacturing tobacco
MANURE SPREADER
Condition
products.
Raben Parry, chief economist at
Security Pacific 1\ational Bank in
Los Angeles, said the dramatic
MANY MORE NEW AND USED EQUIPMENT
gains in employment can be
explained by the brisk recovery of
IN STOCK
consumer spending.
WI~NERS OF BIG EAR OF CORN CONTEST
The nation 's leading retailers
S100-1st-Ron Cowdery, Long Bottom
reported this past week that
November sales increased at a
$ 50- 2nd-Betty Dean, Pomeroy
robust pace, and analysts predicted
"=====
the best Christmas shopping season
In five years.
. Parry said that with inflation
251 West ·Main St.
reduced substantially in recent
years, the double-digit sales gains
Pomeroy, Ohio
said It would recall1.200employees analysts expect for the holiday
992-2668
to Its Atlanta assembly plant 1n !::e~a~so::n~w~W~ev~e~n'!:pe~m~o~re:_:s~ign~fi_::ca~n~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*~~~
HapevWe, Ga., nextyeartostaM up r
a second shift it had discontinued in
August 1979.
The Commerce Department said
friday that while factory orders
rose 0.7 percent in October compared with a 1.5 percent rise in
September, orders for durable
goods jumped3.1 percent in October
against a 1.1 percent increase the
previous month .
"It's hcanening to see the
durables growing," said Peter
Duprey, an economist at Data
Resources. "But there's still a long
row to hoe."
Many of the industries leading the
hiring parade have yet to return to
their pre-recession employment
peaks, he said.
There were 20.4 million manufac·
turing jobs In the UnitedStates when

1983.
The Labor Department said
Frtday that the civilian unemploy· ·
men! rate fell to a two-year low of8.~
percent In November, compared
wlth.B.B percent the previous month
and a post-Depression high of 10.8 .
percent in December 1982.
)
More Ulan 12 million people were
unemployed a year ago, but ·!JI the
last 11 months, about 3.6 million
people have found jobs, Ule depanment said.
Nearly 37 percent of the jobs that
opened up since December 1982
have been in manufacturing indus·
tries, a sector Ulat typically ac·
counts for 10 percent of tllenew jobs
In periods of new economic growth,
according to Data Resources Inc., a
privateeconomicconsultingservice
in Lexingion, Mass.
The star pertonners include
manufacturers of durable goods,
such as automobiles and applian·
ces, Industries that were clobbered
in · the recssion but which have
. accounted for28.2percent ofthenew
hiring.
This past week. Ford Motor Co.

$3950

$8150

one percentage point of the total
mortgage. Thechangesdonotapply
to mortgage ceilings set by the
Veterans Administration.
-The ·aomrnerce Department
and Departn)ent of Housing and
Urban Development said ·sales of
new single-famUy homes rose 8.2
percent In Octoher after rising 10.7
percent the previous month. In a
separate report, the eonunerce
Department said spending for new
construction feU 2.5 percent In
October after a slowdown In growtll'
over the prevlous three months.

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;~====~i!!!!~==~;~~;;-,

NEW YORK (AP) - The highly
acclaimed "NBC News Overnight,"
plagued by low ratings and heavy
financial losses, went out not with a
bangor a whimper but a "meow"as
It broadcast its 367th and final
edition Saturday.
The last broadcast of the stylish
news program was shan on current
events and long on nostalgia including two retrospectives, one of
highlights of "Overnight" and
another on great final programs in
TV history.
Co -a nchor Bill Sc hechner
summed up his feelings about the
show first broadcast July 5, 1982, by
say ing, "We here and you there
broke the barrierofthemedlum that
connects us. It wasone hellofarun."
The other anchor, Linda £ llerbee
said the last live words on the dying
show: "And so it goes," her
characteristic sign-off.
But the last sound heard on the
program was Ule "meow" signoff of
MTM Productions, taken from Ule
final episode of the old "Mary Tyler
Moore Show."
It was an ironic ending because
Grant Tirtker, NBC's chairman who
made the decision to end "Over·
night." was the head ofthecompany
that produced "The Mary Tyler
Moore Show."
Slncc the network· announced the
show's cance ll ~tion several weeks
ago, NBC has received more than
10.600 letters and phone calls
protesting Ule show's demise, Ms.
Ellerbee said. Fans even held a
ca ndlelight vigil outside NBC's
corporate headquarters here.
Ms. Ellerbee said earlier she and
other "Overnight" staffers met with
Tinker In a last-ditch effon to save
the news program.
She .said she made three propos·
als: Give the show an extension
whUe more research Is done on the
audience size and make-up; move It
back to Sunday night at 11: 30; or
have It replace NBC's first canceled
show or b,ring It back this summer.
The only suggestion not rejected
was the summer scheduling, M~.
Ellerbee said.
Ms. Ellerbee said before the
program she wasn't sure what she
would say to ni.lr~ the last show.
"I don't want !t to be overly
sentimental. We're going out wltll
some style. Sappy Is not our way."

'

e~erv ad•e•
h~l!{l olem on ~OC~ ()tl Gl.l' ~helves II ~"

·

Ou• lorm "\lllf'llQ&lt;\ •llo hav!

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the long years of warmth and affection typical of the Ameri~an family.

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POMEROY, OHIO.
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�Page

December 4, 1983

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

E-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

Inner city neighborhood ·groups provide own protection
TOLEDO. Ohio (AP l - Tired of
complaining about too little pollee
protection. neighbor hood group!&gt; in
the Inner city and a chic area near
downtown are providing their own
security.
Patrol organ izers bristle at any
suggestion of vigilantism, saying
their services - for which residents
pay monthly fees - are just the
opposite.
"Iri the two and a half years that
we've been paying for outside
protection, our on-&lt;luty officer ~ as
never drawn a gun." said Michael
Murray, a realtor a nd organizer of
Old West E nd Security Inc.
"The police cannot do enoug h.
The city of Toledo does not have
anywhere near the number of police
needed. We've found that by
fetching for ourselves, crime has
dropped significantly. I can't give
you a figure, but it has dropped."
Ther e were 30,327 crimes re·
ported in Toledo in 1982, one for each
11.7 of t he city's 355,115 resident s. In
Cincinnati, the Ohio city closest to
Toledo in population, there 33,684
· crimes reported, one for every 11.3
of the city's 383,975 residents,
according to the FBI's unilo1111
crime report.
Across town from the Old Wes!
End are some of Toledo's decli ning
neighborhoods. where residents
also watch out for tllemse!ves ..
The .New Union of Blacks to ·
improve Amer ica launched motorized pa trols of the inner city in
Septem ber . Residents pay $10 a
month for the patrols and other
community improvem e nt functions
·
of NUBIA .
Although outfitted in black unifo!Tl1s with private patrol-style
insignias , radio-&lt;lisptached NUBIA
officers carry no weapons and stay
in their cars in nearly a Ucases.
"The ultimate solution to criine
rests w ithin the community," said
Delman Smith. fo1111er Toledo

Board of Education o(ficial who quit
that job to head thP all-volunt eer
NUBIA.
" What real!y needs ro happen is
that the community needs to rise up
and say, 'Wr't'E' going to get crime
u nder control."·
Smith said J\UBIA has the
support of the Toledo ?o!icc
Patrolman's Association. " We do
not e ngage in their business. Law
e nfdrceme nt per se is the province of
the police department," he said .
William A. Du nn. president of the
patrolman 's associa tion, said he is
not concerned that NUBIA's program will conflict with police work.
He said, however, he would prefer
that the city hire more police officers
so citizens do not feel the need to
organize.
Toledo has 750 officers a nd 55
c ivilians in the department. To bring
this up to the na tional a verage for
cities of more than 250,00! the city
should hire 150 more officers and 200
more civilians, Dunn sa id.
Police Chief John Mason said the
city's potential liability preve nts
official endorsement of citizen
c rimefighting groups , including a
fledg ling chapte r of the Guardian
Angels.
"Tbe city has had to divorce itself
from any idea that these a re
s ponsored organizations, " Mason
said. " If we would train tllesepeople
a nd they screw up out there, here
com es a lawsuit against thecitythat
could just wipe it out finandl!lly."
Are private patrols .needed?
"It .d oesn't really matterwhat.my
perceptions of the need are," Masonsaid. "It's what the people perceive.
To one extent or another, all these
programs are benefiCia! in te1111s of
tlle people's perception of their
safety."
The graduation of a new police
class early next year should give his
department more flexibility in
assigning officers to a directed

patml unit, Mason sa id. Tha t unit , a
discretionary force, Is assigned on a
tem porary bas is to ir)crease pollee
\isibllily in areas where 'c rime is
rising.
"Ewry once in a while, a problem
crops up on a block or two," Murray
said. "We\·e hac! &gt;orne help from
the directed pall"' un :tona coupleof

occasions."
So why then ilv many of the 5,00&gt;
t"Pside nts of the Old Wes! End pay
$15 a month for private police

service?
" People are tired oftheway police
have treated the m ." Murray said.
"We tried for two years to get more
police protection out here. How
pay $10 a JnOIKh lor services provided by the New
NUBIA ON PATROL- Radio dlspatclleci units such
much are you supposedtobang your
Union
ol Blacks to Improve America, which includes
as this are on patrol around-the-i:lock in Toledo's
head against the wa ll?"
boarding
up vacant houses and gmeralllx-ups. (AP
black neighborhoods, where unanned cltlzms hope
Murray said PinkertOO'Secutity is
I..aserphotAI).
the vlsllttllty ol the wt1ts w1 D deter crbne. Residents ·
paid "a very high fi ve-figure"
a nnual fee by Old West End , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - residents.
In addition to patrols by a
telephone-equipped squad car, Pin·
ke rton provldes a late-night escort
service for Old West End residents
upon request and makes security
checks on homes of vacationiing
residents.
The neighborhood group has filed
a $750,00&gt; damage suit in U.S.
District Court again~! ciry officials,
c laiming in a dequate pollee
protection.
NUBIA patrols are designed to
reduce crime through v!sibllity, but
they are part of a much larger
ne ighborhood consciousness·
raising program that ~an in 1977
with an after-school tutoring prog'ram.for black school children, .
Smith said the pa trois are the final
phase of NUBIA's plan to'improve
!lie in the inner city, a plan that
Includes boarding up vacant houses
and general upkeep of the
neighborhood.
NUBIA patrol director Mansour
Bey said officers who cruise the
streets are well-received by
residents .

SAVE

25°/o

AND· MORE
TIL

CHRISTMAS

Today.,s family farm unaffordahle
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's fatherdiedtwo yeMsago. He saidhe
next farming generation - young probably would not be a farmer had
people who a tte nded the Ohio Fa1111 his father not died.
Burea u federation 's convention
last week - said they want to
" There !sn '!e nough (land) to keep
becom e pari ofthe fam!ly farm , but both of us going after I'm out of high
just can't afiord it.
school, so we need to find more land
" It 's (farming) not the opportun- or something," Barrett said. Yet,
ity for them ... they've got a lot of the cost of land and potential
opportunities outside of farming financial catastrophies worry him.
with the large r isk there and usually
" It's hard to find good land to rent
not the possibility of going back to a
at a decent prtce," he said. "There' s
family farm because there's not the some land next to ours I would l't
room for expansion," said JaniceJ. give more than $90 an acre for."
Dresbach, 19, state chaifl"oman of
He said one farmer, however ,
the farm bureau youth program.
rents it for more than $100 an acre
Miss Dresbach, an agricultural and is losing money. Barrett said he
economic$ major at Ohio State knowsanotherfarmerwhosewlfe!s
University, sa id her family, includ· sick, and "he's going to ·have to
ing two brothers. farms 1.600 acres spend a lot of money on her medical
in P ickaway County.
bills, and he'sgoingtoloseoneof his
"Someday I'd like to return to the fa rms."
farm , but there's not really room for
Seeing tha !, Barrett said he plans
me tllere," she said .
to go to college or technical school.
Instead, she and others who said and he and his brother, who Is a
they don't want to leave farming will diesel mechanic, "plan on starting
pursue agribusiness careers, often som e kind of agrtbusiness" so they
looking toward marketing agriculwill have money in lean years.
tural products or in agronomy or ·
Barrett's friend , Bruce A. Oberanimal sciences.
,1
l!tner, 18, a freshman atOhloState,
One of Miss Dresbach 's brothers, said neither be nor h.ls two older
E rie, 23, who also advises a fa1111
brothers or older sister want to stay
bureau youth council, said only four
with the 400-acre family fa1111.
of 20 teen-agers in the council plan to
" Not enough money, " he said.
continue plowing the family farm.
"We'e like to keep it in the famlly ,
" If their dad 's not in It, noway, "he
but no one wants to farm it."
sa id. adding that even he must run a
Yet for some, the Jure of the farm
custo m grain hauling opera tion .
is overpowering, even !! they didn't
"Tha t keeps me in cash. The far m
grow up on a farm, like Paul L.
doesn't," he said. " An&gt;1hing I get
Gault, 17, of Butler County. His
from the farm I put back into it. "
father works at Amoco Steel. but
Som e of the teen-agers talked
Gault said he always wanted to be a
about rents., profit margins and
farmer .
volumes - and what they need to
" I love the animals and being
make it in farl"ing - as easily as
around people ... I Iovethe~utdoors,
older farmers at the convention.
in other words," he sald.
Richard D. Barrett. 16. had to help
Gault , however, sees h!sdreamof
his brother farm the family's 200
owning a farm discouragingly far In
acres in Hardin County when his
his financial future.

"I don't think I canjustgoout and
finance it. I don't see how you can
make a million dollars in your life to
go out and pay (for it)," he said .
So Gault said he Is confining his
dream to managing someone else's
farm .
"The only way anymore is to
marry in or inherit it," said
Charlotte A. Brill, 17, whose famlly
has a 900-acre daily opera tion In
Lorain County.
She and others said their paretits
may want them to stay on the farm,
but are realistic.
,
"They understand you might.
want to do something else than
farming, that you don't wantto take
the risk," Miss Brill said, noting that
"it will cost you forever to buy a
farm from your parents."
Even having a credit history,
these teen-agers know, isn't always
enough to get the money needed to
buy or run an operation. Barret! said
he and his brother, who Is 10 years
older, both borrowed money from
the local Production Credit Association when tlley were young.
'
"They said It will help build your
credit," he said. "My brother (who
is 10 years · older) has been
borrowing since he was 10, yet my
mom still has to co-sign tlle loan. "

..
Includes complete

listings

Filmeter

-

955 SECOND
AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS

COJ{fliN ~ SNY()fl{
fU RN ITU J{f CO.

Station listings
wsA:.
HBQ

MAX

Playtex®

CBN
ESPN
WTBS
WTVN
WTAP
.WCHS
WPBY
WBNS
WOUB
WOWK
WVAH

•

E

RELAXING ON 8Ef - ActAin Rock Budtloa, left, and BoiJei.t Mllehum relax durllq: a break
· in the sh•"*c ctlllle mavle ''Tile Ambutlador'' tb8&amp; lt!t helqftlmed in theJotlean deleri, fltllrlt rent
o( Jenlllllem. BudiiOII eu~e~pd from a year of aelf·impoled etdle to make the movie tbriDer wllb

.M11ebum. (API •

tjlbo&amp;o).

Huntington, WV
Home Box Office

Including
Lovely Look·bras by 18HOUR

CENTER

Plus

.

Evening Appo!ntments for Eye
Exams Available by Robert Terry, 0.0.

A $3 Bonus Refund

when you purchase any bra and girdle set •
"Slap In lor .., the det..lo.
Sele lll1d offer oncl December 31, 1983.

PHONE 446-1760
See what an Ultrasonic Cleaning of your current eyewear can do to·restore its apJ!earance.
'

&lt;flO'

IJ(lJ
(lJ
(lJ
t]}
(J)
(I)
(I)

Clnemex
Chriotlan Netwrk
Sporta Network
Atlanta, GA
Columbuo, OH
Ptlt'kersburg, WV

ID
0(1)

C-ton.WV
Huntington, WV

(I)

&lt;l!l

Columbuo, OH
Alheno, OH
Huntington, WV
Hurricane~

®

.Ill

•

WV

Showbeat

Page6

/

Seroing Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

'

'

..Channel23 listings included
in this week's guide." .

PHONE
446-1171

GALLIA OPTICAL

'

Page5

You can afford to be choosy
when you save 25% on Broyhill's
Custom Upholstered Furniture
Sale!

Fdr Family Vision Care Needs

548 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

·. A gUide to local
Television programming
December 4 thru December 10

.,

..

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