<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14767" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14767?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T12:46:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="46796">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0dda88dccf340e803718c56b9a3ec2de.pdf</src>
      <authentication>12354d162dc4f9a7c137310c3f95e7bd</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="46795">
                  <text>'to--o-~----

---

-

---

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--J4-The Daily Sentinel

gan,. finds hope -in narrow defeat
(AP) - Preaident
Reagan,
hope In a narrow
a less-reluctant
defeat,_
ofAWAa!
planes Saudi Arabia by offering
Israel 'additional radar-jamming
equipment.
The Senate Fo.-eign Relations
Cormnlttee voted 9-1 Thursday to
reject the $8.5 billion anns deal as
two Republicans switched to support
Reagan, who swayed one of them
with a long-distance telephone call
during the panel's debate.
urm gratified it was that close."
the president said. "01 COIIrSll. I
wish it wenttheotherway."
It was close enough, though, that
an enthusiastic Senate -Republican
leader Howard H. Baker Jr. told

Pressler, who only two days
reporters: "It's now winnable.
before bad rejected Reagan'• plea
Several weeb ago it wasn't.''
Balter's optlmlam was baaed par- for support at the White Hoaae, said
tly on the shift by Sen. Larry he wu penuaded by the president'•
Pressler, a -South Dakota call from Philadelphia, where he
Republican who had been among 50 was ape•klnc to a foreign policy
co-sponsors of a Senate resolution to group.
"The president felt we would Imveto the sale of five Airborne Warning and Control System planes; pede him In foreign policy If we
Sidewinder mlasllea and new equip- vetoed the 8I'Jil8 sale," Pressler
said.
men! for jet flghters.
More Important, Pressler said,
Also swinging behind Reagan
were Sens. S.I. Hayakawa, R-Calif., Reagan promiled to Incorporate In a
who had been leaning against the letter to the Senate an 888urance
sale, wid Charles Mathias, R-Md., that be would offer Iarael new radarwho had been undecided. That cut jamming equipment to prevent the
the Senate lineup, according to an AWAa! planes from being uaed to
Associated Press count, to 53-37 spy on Israeli air operations.
Earlier, Maj. Gen. Richard V.
agail)SI the sale, with 10 senators 1111.
Secord,
a deputy 88Sistant aecretary
cormnlt!ed and the vote slill a week
and a haH away.

Property transfers
Easement, Salem.
Vivian Pierce to Carol Pierce,
Easement, Salem.
Vivian Pierce to .Carol Pierce,
Easement, Salem.
Vivian Pierce to Carol Pierce,
George H. Schneider, Genevieve
Salem.
Easement,
V. Schneider to Harold M. SMith,
Georgia
E.
Wiseman, aka Georgia
Lot 13 Crooks Add .. Syracuse.
E.
Thompson,
Kenneth Wiseman to
Guy D. Hysell, Ruby Hysell to
Leading Creek Cons. Disl., Right of Glenn Eugene Thompson, Lois W.
Thompson, 1Acre, Salisbury.
Way, Rutland.
Burl L. Putnam, Bonnie S. PutRodney K. Bailey, Cheryl D. Barnhart to Leading Creek Cons. Dist.;- nam to John D. Causey, Tarmnie D.
· Cal:lSey, Parcels, Olive.
RighlofWay, Rutland.
Katherine M. Jacobs to Donald E.
Richard B. Bailey, Doris Bailey,
Kelly,
Phillis Kelly, Lot, Pomeroy.
Charles R. Karr, Jr., Mildred Karr
Phillis
Kelly, Lois Kelly, Pamela
to George W. Jackel!. Jr., Lot 383,
Kelly
to Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
M.
Middleport.
Kathleen
M. Cleland, Lots,
Glispie Howard, Edith C. Howard
Pomeroy.
lo Magnwn Petrolcwn, Inc., Right
Milo B. Hutchison, _ Betty Hutof Way, Rutland.
chison
to Joyce E. Seelig, Martin E.
Dorothy !.. Gibnore, Affidavi~
Seelig,
I Acre, Rutland.
. Salisbury.
Bernard
V. Fultz, Exec. of the will
Margaret E. Eskew , Affidavit,
of
Emma
D.
Johnson to Bernard P.
Pomeroy.
Lavalley,
Jr.,l.43
A, Sutton.
Jesse Gainer, Deed., by Geraldine
Jerry
F.
Powell,
Margaret Powell
Smith, Exec, Affidavit. Pomeroy.
to
James
E.
Diddle,
Right of Way,
James W. Clifford, Faye F. ClifSutton.
ford to Royal Petrolewn P•·operties,
. Gary L. Gibbs, Donna L. Gibbs to
Inc., Easement, Bedford.
James
E. Diddle, Right of Way, Sut-·
Frances I. Foster to Gary Gibbs,
ton.
Mine1·als, Sutton.
Warren Aumiller, Lillian
Ronald C. Grady, Affidavil, SutAwniller, Earl C. Awniller to James
ton.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Pauline E. Diddle, Right of Way, Lebanon.
Stevens to Roger W. Davis, Iris J .
Harold M. Bolen, Juanita Bolen to
Davis, 65 Acres, Bedford.
James E. Diddie, Right of Way,
VIvian Pierce to Carol Pierce, Rutland.
Ruth Ann Yeauger to Kenneth L.
Yeauger, Four Parcels, Salisbury.
Freda Middleswart Proffitt, Gordon Proffitt lo Gordon Proffitt, II%
acres, Lebanon.

•

tr=========~=College

"the '-Hila blvo not"'* ehay
•inleresf in radar jaJIDIW!tl. If Ia my
]udj!nlent that hl!cauae the AWAa!
threat.bi 10 8iD8Il, the la'aells will

Asa Edward Jordan
Asa Edward Jordan, 75,

of 637
Grant St., Middleport, died thia morning at Scenic Hills Nursing Home,
Bidwell.

Mr. Jordan w88 preceded in death
by parents, William and Flora
Pickett Jordan, one brother and one
infant sl.ster.
Mr. Jordan was a member of the
Middleport First Baptist Church and
DAV Post ii3. He was a retired employe of the Penn Central Railway
with '1:1 and one-half years of service .
He was also an employe of the State
Highway Department and was a Iarmer. He wasa veteran of World War
II.
He is survived by his wife, Nor~
Jordan; one sister, Laura Jane

Four emergency calls were answered Thursday by local units.
Middleport at 7:59 p.m. look Michael
Reynolds from North Fourth Ave,
to Veterans Memorial and at 9:23
_p.m. took Amanda Murray, North
Third Ave. tD Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Racine at 5:27 p.m. took
Sharon Johnson from Bashan Road
to Holzer Medical Center and at 3:25
a.m. the Rutland Unit took Roger
Riggs from Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer

Vol. IS No. 36

Today's T-S

sky•

1

Championship

BIG AS IIASKE'I'IIALUI- Tbese paffhiUs ""re fOIUid by Tom Dliiit
in the woods near Ills bome 111 State Route IG. Paffbaiia are Nlklled
luugl charaetertsed by spore cues dull pve off a cloud of day 1pires
when suddenly brullen.

. series, c.:.section

.Judge ends 20 cases

· Carrie Stack

Funeral services for Mrs. Carrie
Stack, 87, of Elba, mother of Mrs. Jo
Thirteen defendants were fined
Stalnaker, . Pomeroy, · were con- and seven others fotieited bonds in
ducted Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at the Meigs County Court Wednesday.
McClure-Shafer Funeral Home in
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Briim
Marietla. Burial was in the Lower were Janette Roach, Middleport,
Salem Cemetery at Lower Salem. and David Parr, Tipp Clty, S22 and
Mrs. Stack died on Wednesday, Oct. costs each, speed; Roger Riebel, II,
7,
Long Bottom, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Richard Thomas, Tuppers
Plains, and Robert Grim, Middleport, $20 and costs each, speed;
Medical Center.
Carl Parker, Reedsville, $10 and
costs, failure to display valid license
Minor ac;cident
plates; James Quillen, Middleport,
$10
and costs, failure to display valid
Pomeroy police reported light
registration;
Mark Simp$on,
damages to two vehicles in an ac$21
and
costs,
speed; Marc
·Racine,
cident on Sycamore St. Thursday
French,
Middleport,
$24
and· costs,
morning.
Mike
McDOnald,
Middleport,
speed;
A pickup truck driven by Elmer
YoWig, MinerSville, turning from
Main onto Syracuse, struck a parked
vehicle owned by Dan Carter.
.Damages were light, police said.
Those who are to pick up November and December WIC coupons at Veterans Memorial the Meigs County Deparb:nent of
Health are to do so as follows:
Admltted-Estll Collins, Pomeroy;
A thru C, Friday 11-11 a.m. only,
Mary Taylor, Middleport.
October 23; D thro H, Monday 11-11
Discharged-Luella King, Retia a.m, only, October 26;. I thru M,
Day, Michael Reynolds.
Tuesday 11-11 a.m. only, October 27;

.

.

'

Dayan. dies,
.

$150 and costs, 10 days coofinemenl,
eight days suspended, six mohths
probation, fleeing an offlcer; Carl E.
Moore, Syracuse, $27 and costs,
speed; Carl Buckley, Middleport,
$30 and costs, left of center; Charles
Whittington, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, 10 days confinement, confinement suspended, one year .
probation, reotitution, hit-skip,
Forfeiting bonds were ~ard
Shingleton, Parkersburg; Anna M.
Powers, Huntington, Darrell
Leeper, Lenisville, Ohio and James
R. Swank, Stockport, $4(1.50 each,
speed; Durojaiy~ Baruwa, Huntington, $35.50, failed to display valid
registration; John Ullman, Athens,
$31 speed; Matthew Weaver,
rutland, $62.55, reckless operation.

A-6

N thru R, Wednesday9-ll a.m. only,
October 211; S thru T, Thursday 11-11
a.m. only, October 29; W thru Y,
Friday !1-11 only, October 30.
Those who cannot make the appointed day are to pick up their
coupons on November 10 from 11-11
a.m. only.

_Riverby,_B-1

.•. ;

t

t1~;.H

.Y orktown

·SALE INQ.UDES All SPORT SHIRTS •
DRESS SHIRTS • FASHION JEANS ..
SPORT COATS • DRESS SlACKS

.

EVERY MONDAY NIGHT AT

Save all over the main store and at our Mechanic Sl

SERVED WllH:
Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Beverage

Ch~

'

-

· celebrates,~ D-1

I

Warehouse during this big once a year sal.,. event

Take-One

-

TliuiSday's paper for sale items. VISit every
.

DINING 100M ONLY

.

.

'

department Shop ' EIIIIJ Fbir - You'll real~. save.
ABB&amp;&amp;BB&amp;BB&amp;&amp;•s•&amp;&amp;BBBBBBB BBBBBBBBB

~CHOW'S
228

MAIN

OPEN FRIDAY nLL IIGG P.M.

FAMILY RESTAURANT.

.

'

PH. 992--5432

white inale who robbed GiWngham's Drugs, 762 Second Ave., of about

build other parts of the plane.
'l'he ferteral government is insisting that the project he completed
"on time and on cost," he Said. Getting the workers trained in advance
wiU speed productivity and
therefore production, he said.

-

guide, Uuert .

•

I

,

,

.......,.,., .....,.,._111
rt ...

.....

.

*

Of lbll ,.n ..............
. . In lbllr flnt -~ Ut

us - lllllien

lild

.......

.

Olflcers spent the rest of the afternoon searching the area for the
subject, described as 8-1 In height, with brown hair and wearing a
brown shirt wiih white sleeves and blue jeans, "cleancut in appearance and weU..s,haven."
·
Thia was the third drog robbery in the city in . two moolhs;
Gillingham's was robbed Aug. 17 by a single white male, while Price
and Sons Pharmacy, Second Avenue and State Street, was hit by three
white males Sept.l4.

RIO DE JANEIRO,- Bnizil - Most nations In the Western
Hemisphere do not have a free press, the Inter-American PreM
Asaociation concluded In Its annual report on freedom of expression.
The IAPA Issued the report here Friday at the end of ita 37th annual '
meeting.
·
The IAPA found that many govenunents directly or Indirectly muz·
zle the press, and that attacks on journalists are frequent In some Central and South American naUons.
But even the United States and canada are not totally free from coJ
cerns about restriclions on tbeir ptea8 •.the IAPA report says.

'

'

Tbe _campus Ia llao ICIIIVIIr
ll8lklng
enrollment ot tnti1ri11tM111
fcrtlltcr"sl'lli"pt,Brwnez·
pl•lned. Wbt1e 11111!11\r!Yale achooll · ltndents, the dlreetor aplaliMIL
•Onllalllll . . . . fldonWIIItdnt

Avenue.

Three injured iri one-car wreck

are averaging close to $100 per
credit hour, Rio Grande's average
undergraduate, In hill or her lint
two years, pays '15 per credit hour
plus a $4 general fee. ·
· "Tight money makes people look
to home," Brown said. !'We have
nice enrollmentll here because the
curt atructure Is reaaonable."
More than halt of the college's
· students hall from the Immediate
: fOili'COUilly area. Gallia baa 382
liiDdents enrolled, Jackson 231,
Melgslhnd Vlnton27.
.
·
In lddldon to the coet, area hi8h
llchOolllndentl ~ Rio Gl'lllde
beca1111 it's wltbln driving distance.
But Brown said hllllllllce "1(1111111 a
good deal or time" recruldn&amp; bl 1111
hl&amp;b IChooll and abaat lilt oilier
ier:llndary schooll tbrqhOal . .

ltate. .

$500 in narcoUcs Saturday afternoon.
1 The male entered the store shortly after 1 p.m. and held a gun on
store personnel, demanding drugs. He then fled on foot toward Third

Western _world restricts free press

-

there are llli seniors.
Duo to economic reasons and
other factors, private collegea have
become t-Giilj1811tive for student&amp; In
the IIIII. To cOmbet the problem, .
CoJie&amp;e Is modest, collece !lffldall they haft offenld new cou.- or
ire~.
apecl•llMd lnt.elll ...... Brown
In what'• ae.n as a compeUUve 118id the colleae malntalnlnC Ita
market, the collet• ·Ia , apparently , n11u11r JII'Ofli'lliill - partlcalarly
holdini Ill oW1i, aCCCII'dlna.to Dean l!!wtp 11 JNimlnlllra&amp;ion, educllUOn
Brown, admllllanl cllnldor.
8111 n!lniDI - bave been Jarce
''To be vel')' boneet, ft're right 111 c1raw1nc ~for lludentll.
the iDCIIIIf with aur projell-." he
~ tid educllUoo have the
lAid, illlllillltha 1111111 but steadY lD- Jqbeat lllllllber IIII'O!led, Brown
o.- - _. 1111 last five years ,ll8id. 1111 llllrlflll dlpulmenlla In
1111 bllll"n=tt aldJI what's been Ill aecood year atlha coUeae alter
beq moved from Holler Medical
• t snt•t.ahtlha'COII'81 OIQtlr.
,
- ...... atl,Sill, • I I I PI Ill
Ill Ill ftral Y• at the colltit 11
R01'C (Ruuve em. '1'n1D1111
Ull. Rto a•MW• ibcl1
(larpl), wblah brllllbt 1a mare 1111n
.

_..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, iOpllllllGie8
J

press

On other subject•, the governor said he's not gelling involved in the current legislative battle over the stale budget
and P"'posed tax hikes. "I discharged my respon•ibility," he
said, referring to the Sept. 8 •peech before a joint sessit1n in
which lie laid t~ut hi• own tax and spending plan . "They
ch•lllfed it in the Home, a.n d there are four or five plans to
ch•nge it in the Senate. •• Rhodes ;,..;,red, in respotule to
que•tion., that he ha•n 't firmed up any future political plans.
"I h.re neoer seen so ~ny people looking out after my
political future," h-e said. "A lot of people would like to see me
our completely. I don't blame tltrm."

By ltEVIN KELLY
Tbn 8elllbiel8tafl
RIO GRANDE - Although the Increaae In lili'Ollment thta year at Rio
Grande College and Conununity

,...,

entertainment

ELBEIFELDS IN
'

•

..

&gt; '

s car

GOP governor said, in which
another 3,000 to 5,000 jobs will he
created In central Ohio supply and
service industries.
But Duerk said several other Ohio
cities also will get an economic shot
In the arm as plants in their areas

POINT PLEASANT- Three people were Injured in a oo.,_.,ar wreck
in Mason County early Saturday.
The accident is still under Investigation by the sheriff's department,
but the car apparently crashed Into a tree oo Steenbergen Hill on West
Virginia Rt. 2.
Injured were Keith Bowles and Jlnuny Rogers, both of Point
Pleasant, and Chris Maham of Gallipolis.
Bowles was reported in satialactory condition in Pleasant Valley
Hospital with fractured rlba, Rogers was transferred to Holzer
Medical Center, where he was Usted In stable condition with a cheat InjUry. Maham was treated and released from Pleasanl Valley with
minor injuries.
The Point Plelisknt Fire Department reportedly used Ita "Jaws of
Life" extraction devi"' on the wieck when one of the Injured ...,j
discovered Inside the car.
Untol. Suncloy

Hull'"'

p, ••_.,
I non

fM\\1

--Cold

Slnlonn••r

...--raiD

aula a a.u n.t
II "I lid._. wn a
Apprl I hi npa u well ea parll of -It 11tt1 ..... II .I ll
..U.. El who!re llldel will be 1118Y· CAP l.aaerJih IV).

'• .

,,
•
-~

• •

Drul!
store robbed second time
GAWPOUS- City pollee were still searching at
time for a

Rio enrollment·encouraging
-

'

News b,riefs.

Crease that will likely accompany it
- clear the upper chamber, It would
lace a~ uncertain future In a joint
conference cormnittee to work out
differences with the House bill.
· Inability to reaolv~ such problems
last June led to the current temporary budget measure.
"The chances are better than even
that we will have to have an interim
budget," Glllmor said.

.

117th ANNIVERSARY SALEI

SPAGHETTI DINNER

ready for a floor vote Thursday as
originally anticipated.
"I doo't think we're going to malre
it," Senate President Paul E.
Gillrnor, R-Port Clinton, said. "I'm
not saying we woo't make it. We
may have a floor·vote next week but
I '1\!0uld pot want to say the odds are
in favor of it. n
Even if the Senate version of the
budget - and a proposed lax in-

Rhodes called the prtll conference to aMounce a $534,800 state
,contract with a central Ohio
vocational education consortium to
train workers to help fill 7,500
Columbus jobs that the project will
create.
There will be a spillover effect, the

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

::~

Bomber project boost for Ohio_
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
economy is getUng the biggest boost
from a single Industrial Widertaking
in 25 years, the Rhodes' administration says.
Gov. James A. Rhodes and James
A. Duerk, his development director,
said at &amp;-news conference Friday
that supply companies around the
state will benefit from the B-1 bomber project at Rockwell InternaUonal Corp. in Columbus.

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
.

..

COWMBUS, Ohio (AP)- AdopUorf ol a aecond temporary state
speillllnc plan appe&amp;nl likely as the
legislative lllruggle over a permanent budget heads into a crucial
stage In the Senate.
· With two weeks remaining before
a four-month Interim budget ex·
plrea, the HOUIIe-paaaed version of a
$13.6 billion document is stlll before
Senate cormnitlees and may not he

F.RIDAY AND SATURDAY

--

Mootgomery recognized and signed'
a contract with the American
Federation of State, County and
MWllclpal Employ- (AFSCME)
88 the legitimate bargaining agent
for his department's personnel and
referring to a previously stated
posltioo of "sympathy" for the employees, one strlklng deputy .said,
"We don't know where he standa
now ...hls sympathies seem to
ehangedaily."
.
/
"As sheriff of Galli11 County, an
,, '
,' )
elected official, I am responsible to
J •
fulfill the obligations and duties of
"~I
'(
the office of sheriff," Montgomery
said Friday, "IIeell have tried to he
fair .. .! hope they will work with
me... Idounderstand thelrneeda."
Those ln.volved In the work llloppage consider at least haU of the
back to work orders as moot since
four of those 01-deroo to return to
work are currently working.
Included In the order were the
chief deputy IDd two captains. They
were ucluded from union mombership by the agreement signed
last week between the sheriff and
the union. A fourth order was iaaued
to the department's matron, Sheriff
Montgomery's wife. A fifth was
delivered to the chief depuUes' wife,
who proct!SIII!II papers for the department
· Only u.- road deputies are affected by the back to work order.
"Wedon'tknowlftheywillretum
DAYWATCH.-a.leiDepatyBellllannbeeh- . 2tth dlly at DOOii today. ShorUI Jameo Montgomery
to ivork or not," me strjker said the radio at tho,Gallla COUDty SberUf's Departmelll as
lasuod a back·to-work order Friday
Saturday morning, "of course, we lbe Jltrill:e by ""'-"rtment employees eidered li1to tta
(Continued on Ml
, ' .. '
. \·
~;;;;;~;;.;;;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"""'i

~

-· SALE

Drilling begins soon

By LARRY EWING
TlmeHleiitiDel StaH
GAWPOUS - Although Sheriff
James M. Montgomery baa lasued a
back to work order - containing a
threut of diamissal for failure to
obey- to eight of his employ-, the
striking depuUes vow the work stoppage against his department -will
cootinue.
'
In a letter delivered Friday afternoon to eight sherlfl's office em'
ployees not effected by previously
announced layoffs, Sheriff Mo11tgomery directed they would he expeeled to appear for work beginning
with the !2:01a.m. shift Monday.
"Any failure to report lor your
duties at the time apeclfled will be
considered a breach of your employment with my department,"
those letters state. "You will be·subject 1o dismissal for failure to appear
In a press release iaaued following
the delivery of the back to work order, Sheriff Montgomery stated, "At
this time I am recalling the eight
employees In this department that
have not been layed off. The remain. der of the employees will be called
back as soon as funds are provided
. to do so."
As word of the back to work order
spread through the picket lines
established at the county courthouse, some striking employees apressed confusion and anger at the
sheriff's action.
PolnUng to the fact thatlast week,
o~ ~16th day of the strike, Sberill

spending plan
ll.ke-ly J.t.or Oh 1•0 budget

DON'T MISS OUR

t Sections, 72 P•ges 35 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper .

Gallia sheriff issues
'back-to-work' order

Stop~gttp

I

the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers In
Huntington, W.Va., said company
officijl]s at the site told him the accident occurred about :1:30 p.m.
The accident occurred on the Ohio
side of the river wllere the community of Vanceburg, Ky., is installing a hydroelectric power piant.
The corps of engineers IBn 'I
associated with the power plant, but .
operates the locks and dam at the
site.
The project is being developed by
the city of Vanceburg's Power and
Ught Co. The plant, which recenUy
was set In place, was built in France
and shipped to the United States.
tbe consulting contractor on the
job Is Lewis and Associates of Portsmouth. The prime contractor is
Jolin G. Ruhlin Co. of Akron.

Sunday, Oct. 18, 1981

Strike continues

t

List WIC coupon pick-up dates

(Continued from page 1)

't·J!1~

.'

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallip_o lis-Poinl Pleasant ·

Copyrighted 1911

.

and several
nieces, nephews and coualns.
Fl!lleral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at E\VIng Chapel with
the Rev. Mark McCIWig and the
Rev. Kirby Oiler officiating. BVurial
will be In Wells Cemetery. Frienda
may call at the funeral home alter 1
.p.m. Saturday and all day on SWIday.

. Iowa ...•....•.•. 9
Michigan : . . . . . . . . 7

tmts

• tbe admlnl.stratloo also enltated
Maxwell Raab, U.S. ambassador to
Italy and a prominent Jewish
leader, to win Pressler's vote. Rsab,
described by Pressler 88 an old
·friend, bad luncb with the senator to
urge IU support ol the sale. ·
Reagan's atrategy did not work,
however,
on another senator
Nebraska Democrat Edward Zorin-

~. Colum~.

Ohio State ..... , : 34
Illinois . . . . . . . . • 27

•

Accident ·

I

Wisconsin ....... 14

replied: "Well, that would end the

"

I.

MSQ ..•..••.•.. 33

matter."

Meigs CC?unty happenings •••
Emergency runs

Penn State .• :. . • • 41
Syracuse •.• ; . . • . 16 ·

not want addltlonll jammers.''
,
Asked about that later, J're8iler

Area deaths

·. I '

Ohio University . .. 29
Eastern Michigan . . 7

ot defense, told the comm111ee that

football scores===========::::;;]

J

�..

Commentary anll perspective

Times-Sentinel

Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

Oct. II, 1981
Pag-A-2

.

Forum

Pre s ide :t tial

of presidential nominees was a

Nominations.
The report deser\oes a better fate.
· Under the general chainnanship of
Duke's president, Terry Sanford, a
bipartisan panel of 19 political
figures heard testiinony from
score of knowledgeable observers of
presidential elections. Their recommendations ought tO" be widely
discussed, but out of the void comes
no reaction at all.
'
This is a pity. The present system
- if so disorderly a process could
properly be called a system - has a
thousand detractors and few defenders. The process takes too long; it
costs too much; it reduces delegates
to rubber stamps; it converts the
national · cOnventions into duml&gt;shows, and it tends to destroy what

foregone conclusion. In New York,
delegates backing Edward M. Kennedy attempted emancipation, but
thionp-thump-thump went the rul&gt;ber stamps, and slave.-y.prevailed.
The first recommendation of the
Duke panel is that this stultifying
practice be abandoned. Delegates
should be free agents at convention
time, with power to vote for any candidate they choose to vote lor.

on

a

iunha:JJ

A second reconunendation would

restore the salutary· practice by
which major party officers and
public officials automatically
become convention delegates. On~
of the worst of the lamentable
"McGovern Reforms " in the
Democratic Party resulted in ·the
virtual exile of the party's most ex-

~imts -

..,~

~m:s~

ientin.el

ADivisioa of

~15

825 Third Ave., GaUipolis, Ohio
(614) 441&gt;-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

I614) 992-%156

perienced leaders. The .active p81'
ticipation of these experienced pols,
says the report; "would help to link
their fortuns to the nominee, laying
the foundation for a govenunent that
can in fact govern after the election."
Athird proposal would put an end
to the distorted emphasis now given
to the early caucuses1n Iowa and the
first presidential primary In New
Hampshire. The Duke panel
proposes that..,tbe .. pref'ereritial
primary season be concentrated in a
period of no more than four months,
with one day a month set lor holding
primaries'
Regrettably, the Duke panel did
not address other procedures that
contribute to the disarray. In limes
past such states as Wisconsin, Montana, Michigan and Idaho have held
uopen primaries" that make 8
mockery of the party system. The
panel had nothing to say aboilt the
pernicious· rule of winner-uke-all
that prevails in Republican
primaries in at least eight stales.
Neither do we find any proposal for a
uniform rule by which the names &lt;1
candidates are placed upon .state
ballots.
But never mind; The Duke report
represents a serious effort to ad·

gets to be anticlimactic; it gets to be

·dress'a serious problem ln our public
affairs_ There is nothing good to be
said of the preoent nominating
process. It elhausts the candidates;
it gives far more power to the press
than we have any business having ; it

ii--

a bore.
'l'he two parties have it within

their power to achieve senoible
refonna by their own action. They
need not wail upon legislative

,..

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Although elimination or
modification of unjustifiable federal
regulations .has become a popular
cause ln recent years, one liroup of ·
harassed citizens remains entangled
in unwarranted goverrunent restrictions.
The hapless victima are the
politicians who must run for federal
office, especially the presidency; under a set of laws and regulations that
range from abeurd and GUtlandlsh to
inappropriate and irrelevant.
A series of sensible reforms has
been proposed, however, by the
Citizens' Research Foundation, a
highly regarded, non-partisan Los
Angeles-baaed organization that has
specialized in campaign;finance
issues for more than two decades.
·The recommendations come from
a meeting that CRF cCHivened .late
last year of approximately 30 finance officers who worked for virtually
all of the presidential contenders in
the !976 and 1980 campaigns.
Those participating included the
finance chairmen, finance directors
or treasurers of campaigns
organized on bel,lalf of winners and
losers; liberals and conservatives;

changes within the stalel. Bill
nothing is likely to happen unless the
national committees come to life;
and for all OIIC hears of the national
conunlttees. they too may be out
there in the black hole

•

,•

~

•

___ ..__

..,..
~

.. .... • •
•,....._,,_ • -'. I - ..
•

•

•

-

•

....._

.J •
.,.,,.

•

Talk about cheap! President
Reagan is getting ready to squeeze
the welfare peMy like it ·has never
been squeezed before.
Remember the sa!ety net? The
While House now wants to reduce it
to tissue-paper strength, thus
guaranteeing that it will dissolve under the lightest weigh~.
The administration has proposed
to reclaim billions of dollars for the
national tre&amp;sUO' by cutting support
for the school-lunch program, en·
forcing new tegulatlons governing
welfare recipients' personal assets
and Increasing investigations into
food-stamp fraud. '

Secret memo says MX alone ·can't
counteract Soviet .Ep;; ; ;:;:o:=:w·: =~e~r'=====Ja=c==k=An=d=e~=so=n

ROBERT L. WINGETT
·Publisher

WASillNGTON - Top-secret Pentagon documents explain why
PATWJflTEHEAD
HOBART WIU:ON JR.
President Reagan 'feels an MX
Assistant Publisher.Controller
Executive Editor
missile system is necessary - but
also why the administration's
AMEMBER of Th«- Assll('lated Prt!sll, lnlnnd Dally Pres~; A m~e lallon and the American
scaled-&lt;lown version borders on the
Nt'III'Sp!lpt"r PubliHIJer ~&lt; A&gt;01mdalion .
ridiculous . .
LETTERS OF' OPINION are well'orJH.&gt;d. They !ihould be It'll!! than 300 WllrdJIIong. .4.U
What it boils down to is that,
lt!tief'll arr ~ ubjed tu editing itnd must bt sl!(nt"d wlt.h 1111me, uddrt'!ilj 1nd telepbolll'
without an enforced SALT II treaty,
number. Nuull'ilgned leHen will~ publl.. hL'il. f..t.Ut&gt;rs shoold tw Ia good &amp;aKk , addresshtg
lsNu es~not pennmalllie!l.
the United States would need
something like 10,000 silos in which
to hide our retaliatory intercontinental baltlst)c missiles to
forestall a Soviet firsU strike. That's
more than twice tile number of
shelters proposed in the Carter administration's "shell game" for 200
mobile MXmissiles. It's many limes
the number of silos proposed by the
Reagan administration for 100 of the .
MX missiles.
Simple arithmetic applied to
figures
in a top-secret report from
By LOWELL WrNC.F1I'T
the
Joint
Chiefs of Staff sliowa that
What do Senators Jesse Helms, Jeremiah Denton, Orin Hatch,
even
'Jimmy
Carter's MX proposal
Congressman Henry Hyde, Rev. Jerry Falwell and this writer have in connwas
inadequate
- and that Ronald
mon? We are all male and we are all sticking our noses in something that is
Reagan's
more
modest proposal is
none of our damn business.
ludicrous.
In
fact,
it may be iJn.
The issue of abortion is the direct business of only the 50 or 60 million
possible
to
build
an
impregnable
women in the United Stales who are of child-bearing age. They, with the help
missile
system.
and advice of their mates and their doctors, must act as their own conThe simple arithmetic would
science may dictate. Efforts to restrict the right of free choice they were
ma~e
dull .. reading but for the fact
given by the Supreme Court in 1973 by any person.or groups for political ad'
that
it
involves the securitY of the
vantage is vile and inexcusable.
United
States - and quite possibly
Senator Heims and Congressman Hyde started the anti-abortioo ball
the
future
of the entire world. ~
rolling last spring when they attempted an end run around the Supreme
The cold, hard figures suggest that
Court decision with the Right to Life bill. This after it was evident all antiabortion amendment would never make it through Congress. Now all the the Russians have already achieved
numerical superiority over the
Congressional prognosticators have pronounced the Helms-Hyde bill as
dead as a dodo bird, Senator Orin Hatch, R-Utah, is trying to reap a litue United States in intercontinental'
missiles. It was this assessment by
political capital by transferring the issue to the states.
the Joint Chiefs that persuaded
If you were watching TV coverage of the events in Egypt last week
following the Sadat assassination, you will have noted that Senator Hatch
was not above garnering national publicity from even this sad event. He
publicly changed his mind on the AWACS deal with Saudi Arabia. His announcement was of little importance and could. have been made in the
privacy of his own bedroom but that is not the way politics works. The
AWACS deal is $8.5 billion worth of business to Reagan's war industry buddies and Hatch will not doubt be rewarded for his public disclaimer with a
I know It doesn't sound important
War Department boondoggle for Utah.
·
when you measure it ag&amp;inat other
Under the Hatch proposal, either federal or state government can
budget cuts, but NASA is now conrestrict or prohibit abortions. If the state law is tougher, it would take
sidering abandoning the Voyager 2
precedence over any federal regulations. Tougher oo whom? You can bet
spacecraft which, at this ve.-y
your bottom dollar it won't be Helms, Hatch and Co. II will be tougher on any
moment, is CHI its way to Uranus and
female, who no matter what the reason, seek.s an abortion, Patricia Gavan,
Neptune.
·
head of the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights, has termed the Hatch .
The estimated arrival time to
proposal as a "farce that could tum into a tragecy." Is it any wonder the
Uranus was 19811, but if all went well
public's respect lor Congress is growing less eve.-y day?
. it waa supposed to make a pass at
There has always been a sticky sentirhent about motherhood which often
Neptune in 19119.
blinds people to the realities of life. Ahundred or so years ago, a poet write,
Ihappentobea bigfanofV!)Yager ·
"The hand that rock.s the cradle is the hand that rules the world." He was so
2 and I know it would break the
blinded by his own sentiment that he failed to see that the hand that rocks the
spacecraft's heart If they cut off all
cradle is also the hand that changes the diaper, keeps the house, cooks the
ils controls after Ita magnificent per- ·
meala, f~ the chickens and slops the hogs. Women have made some
formance Iodate. Tome, It would be.
progress since that day but not much. Sixty years ago they were allowed the
a hmnan tragedy. How do you break
vote but that was all. They still follow meekly behind the men and much of the news to this magJiiflcent
the fault for that status is the women's. Inatead of demanding an equal part- satellite, which is now billions of ·
nership with their mate, they have been content with male domination.
miles frllm home?
One of the greatest weaknesses of the present adnlinistration and of the
· "HeDo, Voyager, this is NASA confar right groupe who think they have finally epme into their own is their
trol. We are aborting your mlallon.
refuslll to accept the hard facts of tile. Ses, thank goodness, will always be
Do you read 111? We are aborting
wiih us. -No.JIIIllt!l: how much the Moral Majority; the Helma and the Denyour-miatlion:"
tons rant and rave, they cannot charge that bulc law ol nature. What does
chango is the economic circumatances. Couples can "'? longer afford Jarse
families. When America was largely a rural economy, the couple with a
large f1J11i)y considered themaelves especlalJy blwed. The klda helped with
the fannworit or got their fannies tanned. Education waa cheap and good.
Now it COlla a smaD fortlme to send a child tbrough high achool. College is
far beyond the reach oiiJIQit average famWee.
·
So, whelher -ornot JDIIIand Co. accept It, abortion is here to stay, jUit aa
!he Supreme Court deddecL In the most recent poD conducted by the
AB80dltld ~- NNC News 78 per cent ol the 1,801 adulla In a111u-tde
JCieotltlc umpiiDg uw !lied any anti-abortion amendment or leslllaUon: I ·
would a- tllat a poll am~ women ol chilcl-bearini age would .00. a
inuch _,.. pei'CIIII-ae In favor ol free choice.
ft8v, Jeny P'~..U. whole 1811Ctiman1ouallllile is on TV over tbe
entire Cliilb), II ICIIId ol aaying "Jesus llkt1 Winnenl." I don't aee bow
F8iwell'a Marllllajarltr or the other rigbt wing bigots can ezpect to win

Sense, cents and nonsense

Abortion is
women's issue

President Reagan we needed to
build up our retaliato.-y strength.
Here are the figures from the !op- ·
secret documents : At present, the
Russians are known to have 1,398 ICBMs &lt;lf all varieties. These include
SS-!7s witn four nuclear warheads,
SS-IS. with eight to 10 warheads and
SS-19s with six warbeads.
To eowtler this strategic missile
strength, the United States has a
grand total of 1,053 ICBMs; 52 older,
single-warhead Titan lis, 450 singlewarhead Minuteman lis and 550
triple-warhead Minuteman Ills.
- Any schoolboy with a pocket
calculator can figure out why the
Joint Chiefs of Staff are worried:
The U.S. ICBM force totals 2,152
nuclear warbeads versus more than
5,000 ln the Soviet' arsenal. Each
warhead is good for one target,
whether an enemy missile silo or a
military, industrial or population
target. What this means, as our
schoolboy's calculator will show, is
that the Kremlin has enough
warheads to knock out all 1,052 of
our missiles ii\ a first strike, and still
have roughly 4,000 nuclear
warheads left to take· out sub- .
marines, bombers and other u. S.
targets.
What's even ·more depressing is
thal.these figures don't even take into account the Soviets' own suDmarines and bombers; the missile
count refers only to land-based ICBMs.
The hopelessness of the situation
should be obvious. But to make it

even more clear, let me cite just one imother 1,200 nuclear warheada to
particular segment of the Soviet· justtheirSS-I8arsenal.
missile force as outlined in the Joint
But thefll'S worse yet: · MOll! inChiefs' secret posture statement, telligence experts agree that the SSreviewed by my associate Dale Van · 18 monster missile could , easily
Alta_
car.-y 20 warheads - possibly as
The missile .in question is the SS- many as 40. That's where the missile
18, known as the ''monster missile." arithmetic goes right off the board.
The SALT II treaty - now dead The Russians' missile technology
would have limited ·the Russians to has made Jimmy Carter's 4,600-silo
3118 of these blockbusl~rs.
"shell game" for the MX missiles
According to the lop-secret Joint hopelessly obsolete. There is evidenChiefs report, slightly more than ce that his SALT II negotiators
one-third of the Russians' SS-!Rs are realized this. Confronted with lhe
"the highly accurate Mod-4, each potential of the Soviets' SS-18, the
with 10 (warheads)." The rest con- best they could come up with was
sisl of Mod-2 missiles with eight testimony from the 'Pentagon's top
warheads apiece and some single- research official, Dr. William Perry.
warl\ead Mod-Is and Mod-3s, which It was pretty lame.
will probably be fitted out with the . "We estimate that (the Sovids)
sophisticated Mod-4 mulliple will have in the early 1980s apwarheads within the next two or proximately 5,000 warheads
three years. "When this retrofit is deployed," he said. "Our strategic
completed, assuming the Mod-4 is response to that was to detennine to
deployed in the 10 (warhead) ver- deploy a mobile ICBM which has sion, there will be a total of 3,080 in- 5,000 shelters protecting the missiles
dependently targetable (warheads) in it."
in the 85-18 force alone," the Joint
In ' other words, Perry was saying
Chiefs predicted.
that the incredibly expensive MX
All thiS is staggering enough. system - which would lake years to
What makes it positively over- complete - would only neutralize
whebning is that the Russians are the Soviets' current missile
apparently limiting their "monster capacity. Then, conceding that U.S.
missiles" to 10 warheads only estimates of the Russians' missile
because they agreed to under the strength might be way off, "we
unratified SALT II treaty.
would . need to make some ap1be Joint Chiefs' report says the propriale change," he said. He adSoviet 85-18 has been "assessed to ded: "The most obvious change we
be capable of carrying as many as 14 would make mllitarily would be to
warbeads" ln a relatively short deploy 10,000 shellers instead of
period of time. This would add 5,000."

The president and his team hope
that these actions will reassure conservative hard-liners that they have
not forgotten · their campaign
promises to crack down on the
welfare cheats and poverty
professionals who Reagan claimed
were stealing the treasury blind.
In recent weeks they have sought

to pare even more dollars from
programs that are already
languishing under the Draconian
budget cuts made in the first half of
the yea when Congress waa pliant
and the ., president's popularity
supreme.

Today is Sunday, Oct. 18, the 291st day Of 198!. There are 74 days leflln
the year.
Today's highlight in histo.-y:
On Oct. 18, 1867, the United States took formal possession of Alaska
from Russia.
On this date :
In !!167, an unmanned Soviet spacecraft dropped instruments onto the
surlace of Venus, reporting that the planet's temperature is hot enough to
melt metal.
In 1974, the Soviet Union and Egypt agreed to support the estsblishment
of a Palestinian stale.
In 1977, three West German terrorist leaders conunitled suicide in Slultg~rt prison.
'
And in 19711, the Church of England said homosexual relationships may
be. justified, and recommended that homosexuals not be barred from the
priesthood.
.
.
Ten years ago: Soviet Premier Kosygin was attacked- but not injured
- during a visit to Ottawa liy a ·man who shouted, "Long ·live free
Hungary!"
•.
Five years ago: Six Arab leaders signed a peace plan for Lebanoa.
calling lor a cease-fire and supervised troop ~ilhdrawal of warring fac- tions .
.
One year ago: Iran's Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai said a
decision on the fate of the American hostages was "not far away."
Today's b[fthdays: Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., is 60. Greek actress .
Melina Mercuri is 56.
Thought f~r toda~: "Concealed talent brings no reputation." Erasmus, Dutch scholar (about 1466-1536).

It is llliely that this.. country's ditional burden on state unemnearly four million welfare families ployment and social-services rolls.
will soon face stale inquisitors who
But doo't worry. Those greedy
will tally up the value of their per- schoolchildren will just bave to
sonal property and household ef- make do with even less, and their
fects. if the television set and grand- spendthrift parents will have to
rna's brooch add up to more than scrap most of the furniture at home
$1,000, they will have to be discarded or be cut off the dole.
or sold under penalty of losing
We black Americans must develop
federal assistance.
a response to thele economic hard
State welfare caseworkers will times that is both reactive and
have to become experts at personal aggressive.
properly appraisal, and welfare
The old home-grown social- .
recipients will be reduced to the welfare infrastructure &lt;1 black
barest essentials of daily life.
America - churches and lodges, ·
Children who eat federally sub- savings cluba and burial societies sidized school lunches will find less Must be revived and revitalized to
on their plates under a proposal meet the challenges of the austere
from the Agriculture Department. · '80s_
The portions will be not ooly smaller
This requires tapping the volunbutless nouriahing aa well.
leerism that has kept the black churThe familiar six-ounce milk coo- ch afloat and directing it toward
tainer will be replaced with a four- . helping lechers educate · our
ounce carton. Students in the fourth, children, insuring that our neighfifth and sixth grades will see their borhoods are clean and safe,
two-ounce meat patty shrink by half providing a restful life for our senior
an ounce.
· citizens.
The limit on personal assets and
This donnant manpower ijod
the cutbaCk ln school lunches will · womanpower can become a positive
require additional sacrifices by the force in replacing government
portion &lt;1 the population that assistance and enabling black
Reagan has called "the truly , America to bridge the gap created
by tbe evisceration of the New Deal
needy."
Moreover, these and other new andtheGreatSocieb'.
budget cuts come in the waks of in- ·
creased unemployment among all
'
American workers and a staggering
jobless rate of 50 percent among
teenage blaclt male,o. This rise in
unemployment will pisce an adFRI. thru THUR.

..
'

"I've ALWAYS loved the fr1111 ent9Tprlse
system. But I find It harder and harder to tolerate competition any more."
·

.

'

'Unrealistic stand?'
Mr. Commisaioners,
After learning the "unrealistic"
stand you have taken against the
Gallia County deputies' efforts to
return the desperately, needed law
enforcement to the people of Gallia
County, we are shocked at your attitude!
We are presently students at the
Gallia County Police Academy, and
one of the first things we are taught
was to protect the basic human
rights of the people. One of' these
rights is guaranteed, under the First
Amendment, the right to present
grievances to the govenunent.

ment" to the people of this county
and, now, by a single stroke of the
pen, you are denying protection of
the law to the people of Gallia County!
Why do you hesitate, "Mr. Commissioners?" What is more i m~
portant to you,' a political game, or
the lives of the people of Gallia County?
One final question, What price are
you willing to put on the lives of the
people that elected you?
- Janet Pendleton and
Sandra Carr

Students, Gallia County
Police Academy

· May '\\'0 remind you, "Mr. Com- rr,~:=:=:=:=:=:=::;:=::;=::;=::;~
missioners,'' you are the elected
iunbae Cf!imr1· jinrtinr\
heads of govemment in this county!
By denying the Gallia County
USPSr.?UOO
AMulthnecti a N~w s pa ~r
deputies recognition of their chosen
Publlshl't.l cad1 Sunda y, 8~ Third
means &amp;r representation, we feel you
Avenue , by the Ohi o Vall ey PU bll~ hln l!
Company- Multimt'tli3,lnl·. Sm:onJ d ~:o~
are violating their basic rights!
po!:!tB~I' paitlllt C. al lipoHs, Ohio, 400:11 .
When you gentlemen were elected
E.nlcrt:d liS st:t·Ond \' his~ Jllaililll-( m&lt;JIIc r
at Pomeroy, Ohi o, PO!lt OHicc . ·
as conunissiooers, you publicly
promised to provide "gOod governMember: Tile As.wciallltl Pr·css, Jnluml
Da ily

Pr·c.~ ~

Amcrit·an

Associati on a nti tht•
Ne w s paper P ubli sht!rs

Associatio n,

cOLO\)

By Cw rric r or Mutor Ruuk
Ollt' week
. $1.00
One Month .
. . , . $HO
One yea r . .. . ................. S!.i2.8fl
SING LE COPV

FRI.-SAT.-SUN.

PRICE
35 Cents,

29

brooke shields

endlessloVe

--

'A'U~i~~iR~~~ ..

•Wholesale •Retail
JACK-O-LANTERNS
PUMPKINS
TURNIPS
INDIAN CORN

Plus, Plus, Plus
Open

Dally 121118

Located on
Jackson Pike

Gallipolis

1\d vcr lls in ~

SUBSCRTPTION RAT ES

,_ '"Ill.' •

GREEN THUMB
ROADSIDE MARKET-

NHLiu nal

RcplcsenliltivJ, lJ•·anharn, 17117 Wc:;t
Nine Mile Road . Suite 204 , Detroit,
MichJgan, 480Th .

OOOOI U.."""' r"l " -

'"'

~

No s ubsnrplio rls by mul l Jlt'n ni tlt:d in
wl11:rc hom e ~a rri c r .scrvkt: i~
a\'Uililbl r. ·
tow!\~

Tile SuatlHy Tirn ~s·Scn tinel wt ll not be
rcspunsible fil r a d v an ~:e pa y r ru:nt.~; rnatl c
to carr iers .
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday On ly .
. ...... . .... $20.00
Dlllly and Sunday
Uhhumd West VlrginJa
Oncyet~ r

JOHN BELUSHI

... ... .. ........ , .... , $33.00

Six rnonth . . . . . . .
. . . . $17.50
TlrrL't! rnonths ........ , ... , ..... $10.50

BLAIR BROWN

Rllll.!s Outs ide Ohiu
~tud W est Vir~ ini a

(QtiJ iNE NTA~

[)lYJJl E

Oneyellr ..
Six monlh!i . , ..... .

\111\.• .·~1111\11/

Thrct&gt; months

. :. ,·~ ~.:·... "'.:··""...~·. ' ·.•.
.....

. $311.00

12&lt;l.OO
$11.00

• I''

"Are you crazy, NASA Control'
Everything is going smoothiy?"
"You are being riffed for budgetaryreasona.Over."
"Butmyunderstandingwas,when
I took this mlssiCHI, I WOuld get to
photograph all the planets. U I don't
get to Uranus or Neptune we'D never
know what makes tbem licit."
"Wt're sorry, Voyqw, it's out of
our hands. We've deCided you're expendable."
'
"Now you tell me. I'm up ~re In
nowhere barreling away from
Saturn lllld you're going to leave me
in the dark."
-"Believe' us. Voyager, it hurts us
more tbln it hurta..you. But David
lltodaDaa is' acllmlnt You go out
witb lbe IChool hmchel. ''
"J bow what the p.-oblem is. You
~'t like my pieturel of Saturn.
But l t - · t my fault. I developed a
IDJdl ln one of . the movable in-

struJI\ent panels. It could have haP- . ."That's chicken feed compared to ·
pened to anybody."
what you people can gel out .of it.
:·The pictures you sent back were Playboy spends more than that to
just great, Voyager. Believe us, photograph a centerfold."
we're all very proud of you. But the
"PLease, Voyager, don't make it
money ISn't there to let you continue harder on us than it is already. If we
on your way."
could have saved the miasion we
"111 go to Uranus and Neptune aa would. A lot of us on Earth are being
a free-lance photographer and it riffed too."
won't ct:ill you a dinie."
"Is isn't just you that's being rif·
"Yeh, but you have famwe8 to go
fed. The whole .program has to be home to, and you can probably find
aborted. We can't afford the ground job! in mill~ space probes. I'm up
support to get you to Uranus."
.
here all alone with no one to talk to.
"But where am I going to go? ·If you would just let me get to
What am I going to do("
Uranus, maybe I could 111!1 the
"I guess· you're going to have to money from Traveler's Aid to getkeep tumbling along. But you can me baclt."
not longer count oo any help from
"Sorry, Voyager, orders are orus."
ders. In 10 seconda we're cutting off
~'What are we talking about,
all power. You're on your own. ls
moneywtse?''
· there anything you want before 1 ·
"Stockman figures we can save press the abort button?"
_$231 millioo by canceling JOUI' bip."
"Yeh. I want to \!Ilk .to 1 priest."
.

Monday &amp; Tuesday Only

Chipper Dinner

SAVE
20%

21or

$2.99

OFF
•DIAMONDS

With Chipper Dinner you
• 2 fish ftlell
• hot, criiP lrench ITiea
• frelh, c~my cole slaw
• huah puppieS

•COLORED
. .
GEMSTONES
•14 KT. GOLD

Offer good at
Gallipolis store only. ·
217 Upper River Road

MOUNTING

D~

=::.·

•••llke,.U

,,

i

'

"

••

'
•

'

It!

Paul oa~ies Jewelers is celebrating its
.35th Anniversary with a 20% loose
diamonds, colored gemstones. and 14
•
KT jewelry mountings. This is a lan, '· tutlc opportunity to select that special
' Chrl$tmas gift early this year and save
20'1(,, Layaways are welcome.

au/.
Jewelers

I
f

•

•

r==-=======---t

lbllone.

.I

'•

•

Republicans, Democrats and in- tween the presldenllal race and Con- typical household 'budge! measured
by the CPl. Other items in that
tests for House and Senate seats dependents.
categOO'
include television adbut
political
campaigning
isn't
· One propoeal woold Increase (to
.
vertising
and
direct mail COlis. '
neceasari1y
beming
exorbitantly
exan unapeclfled figure) the current
·
The
price
of
all those items has inpensive.
limits CHI the amount an Individual
creased
far
more
rapidly in recent
CRF
Director
Uerbert
E.
Alexancan giVe to a single presidential or
than
has
the
CPI, but the
years
der
notel,
tor
example,
that
this
congressional candiclate per eiecton
present
system
is
incapable of
country's
annual
expenditures
for
{$1,000) ' and to all contenders for
reflecting
t.hose
inflationary
chewing
gum
now
approaching
federal office during any year
pressures.
A
new
index
can ·- and
$1.5
billioo
far
exceed
the
amount
($25,000).
shouldbe
developed.
of
money
invested
in
campaigns,
unThose numbers undoubtedly apIn addition, those assembled by
pear to be quite generous to moot doubtedly .the most essential comthe
CRF proposed abandonment of
ponent
ol
the
democratic
process.
people- who donate little iJr nothing
the
current
system under which canThose participating in the CRF
to support the poUtictana of their
didate
spending
Ceilings are fixed
choice - but they're actually ve.-y conference suggested maintaining
·
for
each
of
the
slate
primaries.
the
overall
spending
·
limits
for
modest in the context of con- ·
Those
limitations
already are
tempora.-y campaigns.
. presidential candidates during the
being
consistently
evaded.
During
In an era when races for House primary election season but .
the
intense
New
Hampshire
prima.-y
seats frequently cost $500,000 or proposed important modllicatlons in
UJJ!re and campaigns for Senate · the method of establishing that campaign, for instance, candidates
.
. and their staffs regularly are housed
seats ill many stales require ~x­ ceiling.
The spending limitations are in- overnight in neighboring
penditures of at least several million
dollars, nobody is about to buy (or dexed to account for inflation, but Massachusetts or Vermont so tbe
·even rent) the soul of a politician for the current method relies upon the lodging costs can be ascribed to
. Consumer Price Index, · which is slates where there is less pressure
a mere$1,000.
Moreover, those limits were wholly inappropriate for measuring on campaign budKets.
Those and other suggestions for
estsbtisbed in 1974 and have not bee the ' specialized COlla of political
reform
have been lorwar&lt;led to the
campaigning.
increased during the ensuing seven
White
House,
Congress and the
The
costs
of
air
fares
and
aircraft
years to adjust for inflation.
Federal
Election
Commission,
charters,
for
example,
are
major
All campaigns for federal office
where
they
deserve
to receive
components
of
any
presidential
laat year cOli! more than $liOO
seriolis
attention.
campaign
budget
but
not
of
the
million, divided about equally be-

Today
in history

Aborting .V oyager .2=======;=Art=
..
·=B=uc=hw=al=a

v

Berry's World

Robert
Walters

Time for black volunteerism'-,-·___;J_"'_ian_Bo_
· n_d Letters to the editor

•

r-

....
•

A-----------~·

Primaries, parties, ~~~~~====~~===============
presidents
remains of our two-party system.
The presidential election of !980
saw 36 Republican primaries and 34
Democratic primaries. .Roughly
three-quarters of all the convention
delegates were elected in these
primaries, and in most instances the
delegates were bound to the candidate who d hand-picked them.
Long before the Republicans went to
Detroit and the Democrats toe
Madison Square Garden, the choice

-

Page-A·3

Deregulate the politicians
---------------------

]ames }. Kilpatrick

WASIDNGTON - The. scienttStir
told us a few week.s ago of the
discove.-y of a black hole in space,
unimaginably vast, in which they
could find absolutely nothing at all.
With deference, ld me suggest
another possibility: Their black hole
actually is filled with the reports of
study commlssions, spinning invisibly forever, and among these
disappearing documents is this month's report of the Duke University

Op-E~

Oct. 18, 1981

.'

446·1647

�---------

.. .

Page-A-6-The S~tnday Times-Sentinel

oct. 18, 1981

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

1.,-~-·· ·

,.

•'

.......... .............. -· ,...... -·'
'

.

~

....

-

....

·~

~

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)- Moshe

Dayan, who wielded the sword of
Israel In three wars and countless
sklnnishes before helping to hammer out the plowshare of peace with
Egypt, is dead at age 66.
Dayan, whose black eyepatch was
a familiar symhol of the Jewish
state In war and peace, died of a ·
heart attack shortly alter the start of
the Jewish Sabbath Friday evening.
"He. was an extraordinary Jew, a
brave fighter and an original.
statesman who had the soul of poet,"
said opposition Labor Party leader
Shimon Peres, Dayan's longtime
friend and lonner political comrade.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin
ordered a state funeral Sunday lor
his former foreign minister and
lsraei's · most famous soldierstatesman. Associates said Dayan
would be buried at N'ahalal, the
collective fann that was his boyhood
home, . in accordance with his
request.
Dayan, a powerful force In the
negotiations that led to peace with
Egypt, died 10 days alter his fellow
peacemaker, Egyptian President
Ariwar Sadat, was cut down by the
bullets of Moslem zealots.
He was eulogized by President
Reagan as "the symbol of Israeli
resolve - the resolve of a great'
people to be free and Independent,
and the resolve shared by the people
· of the United States."
One of Dayan's last public
statements criticized Reagan's efforts to sell sophisticated Airborne
Warning and Control System
(AWACS) radar surveillance planes

to Saudi Arabia.
Bom of jlussian lnunlgrant parenls oo May 20, 191ii, Dayan was the
first child of the first Jewish kibbutz,
or rollective !ann, In Palestine.
And he was always a soldier.
As a young man ·anned with a
spear, be guarded his parent's !ann
agalnsi Arab raiders In the early
days of British mandate rule In
Palestine, and later guided British
forces behind enemy ·lines In Vichyheld Syria, where he l&lt;llll his left eye
to a sniper's bullet. He was a bold
hatallion commander In Israel's 1948
war lor independence, chief of staff
in the 11)56 Sinai campaign and
defense minister In the 1967 and 1973
Arab-Israeli wars.
The unorthodox lone wolf of Israeli
politics, Dayan In later life won
more praise in foreign capitals than
he did at home. He was drummed
out of govenunent In 1974 - blamed ·
for Israel's failure to detect and
prevent the Egypt-Syrian surprise
attack that 5wept the northern and

·ALOSS FOR ISRAEL - lsrneli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayao aod
Rachel, visit the pyrnmids aod the Sphinx in Giza, Egypt in
June, 1979. Dayan died Friday of a heart attack at a Tel Avtv hospital. He
was66. (APLaserphoto).

....•......•...

Gallia

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

(Continued from page AI)
hope not. .. but, either way, the strike
will continue."
The sheriff's employees voted
Sept. 8 to organize under AFSCME.
That vote preceded the layoff of approximately 7ii percent of the department's force. The sheriff issued
those layoff notiC&lt;!s alter the tloard
of commissioners refused to grant a
$611,000 supplemental appropriation
to the department lor operations
through to the end of the current
year . .
On Sept. 22, following a refusal by
the county conunission to recognize
the union, the employees, including
deputies, dispatchers and jailers,
walked off the job and established
picket lines at all entrances to the
Gallia County courthouse.
Wi!h the sheriff's acceptance of
AFSCMEJ last week, the employees
indicated they might accept the
layoffs and pull the picket lines if the
commissioners recog nized the

WHOLESALE • RETAIL

SWIMMING
POOLS

.••

PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM

••
••

COKE
TAB :

The satellite uses a series of repeaters (transponders) which
"downconvert" the signals from the 6 tO the 4 GHz range.
This allows a two-way ~duplex) communications, where the
incomi'ng and outgoing sig.nals don't interfere with each
other. This way, an ettec~ive relay i,s established.
If a satellite is ~quipped .with a broadbeam transmitting
antenna, called a "global beam," slightly m~re than one·

li&lt;:enst:d by

from the satellite . If three such satellites are placed in orbit •
equally spaced (120° apart) around the equator, the entire
earth's surface will be covered, except for the polar caps.
Thi s would establish 'instant two-way communications be·
tween practically any two places on earth~

•
••
•

:
Plus tax •

&amp; dep.

·
•

•

•

••

'1 09

•
:
•
.•
e
•·
•~
•

union.

OPEN
MONDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

••
•••

•

NOT
Yes. CRC. one of
the wholly owned
subsidiaries of
Anheuser-Busch. will
Pay You Cash On
The Spot For Empty
Aluminum Cans of
Any Kind.

MON.-FRI.
TILL 8 P.M.

.

\

24th Delivery

I
•

'

Earn .250 toreve,.,.,Ound(about

· ~)of aluminum

cans you recycle.

It's an easy way to earn extra money for your
club, favorite charily or yourself.
'·

on

''Ch,anglns Times.''

Tickets at~ each are now on sale
In the district office or from any
district supervisor or olfice per-

sonnel.
Deadline for · purchasing your
tickets is Nov. ii.

Place load limits
on three bridges
CHARLESTON - The West .
Virginia Department of Highways
has announced that restrictions on
the below state maintained bridges
have been removed :
Mason County 6 spanning Broad
Run 2.00 miles south of Uie Junction
withUS33.
· Mason County 6 spanning Broad
Run .811 mile south of the Junction
with us 33, and Mason County Z1
spanning Five Mlle Creek -12 tons.
These bridges have been repaired,
replaced or reevaluated and now
conlonn to the laod limlls of the
roadway.

BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13
(Wage Earner Plan)

No fee for Information:

1-221-5379
Lee

c. Mittman

Pamela N. Maggied
Attorneys-At-Law
88 E. Broad St.
·Columbus, OH . 43215

Rich.tnl Lee Fraley, 37, Route ·4,
Pomer4f, died Thursday e~enlng at
the M~own-Hamblln Hospit.l at .
·Morristown, Tenn., as the result ot'
Injuries received in a motorcycle accident in Morristown .
Mr. Fraley was hum at Wevaco,
W.Va., a son of Clifton Fraley, Sr.,
and Margarette Hutton Fraley of
Route 4, J&gt;omeror.
Other survivors are his wife, Della
Mae Payenter Fraley, and two
daughters, Kai'DD and Debbie, all of
Missouri; three sisters, Mrs. Ernest
(Ann) Ly0118, Franklin, La.; Mrs.
Timothy (Kay • llawchurst, Thornville; Mrs. Roger (Bonnie) Jordan,
· .&lt;&gt;rlando, Fla. ; live brothers, Clifton,
Jr., Curtis and Ricky, all of Route 4
Pomeroy; LaiT)', Versailles, and
Robert of Wapakooeta; his grandmother, Mrs. Ella Fraley, Albany.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Monday at the Blgony-J ordan
in· Albany With the
Funeral
. Rev. Pat Hensen officiating. ·Burial
will be in Temple Cemetery. Friends
may call at tl)e funernl home from 6
to9p.m.Sunday. ·,

.

-

SJORE HOURS:

Mon.-Thuffi. g am til g:JO

r,ri.-Sat. g am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

.. .
..

.,,.
•U

.......

'

.. " .

l yl

-·

"'
·'
.,

,.

(304~75-1244

.. n

,,

..

.

...

...
,,
.'"

lOth ANNIVERSARY
SALE I
•

ONE WEEK ONLY, OCT. 19th-OCT 24th

The Rev. Charles Roth officiated.
Burial wu In the Odd Fellows
Cemetery.
Born in·Mercerville, son of the late
Roll lnd Me1llsit PldWpa Halley' he

Turn what could be trash Into oath and clean
up while you're cleaning upl

Point D~lbutlna Company
Route 62 North

I

'

..

wu a Rio Grande College graduate
and busfna man. He W88 alJo a

,•

•

D*Dber of the Mount OUvet Lodge
· No.'3, A.F. and A.M., and wu a Scottiab Rite Muon.
llunlvinl are hl.s wl(e, 'the fonner
Gamet 'l'borDIClll; • daiJ8blel', Mrs.
&amp;:ugeat (Liada) lflabla of Parke~­
. IIJuril; I - . 1fi1Uam of Tuclon,
'
~
lllld ' a
IUIIII.WIIbrothen;
IIIIWtarlaD of

r:.::=:==~~b)
/l •

•

•'•

'

,,

.

OFF

·.

ON All PURCHASES
INQ.UDES M1. MERatANDISE AT LOCKER -219, ALSO

sburg.

.....
II

Services will be held Monday,
Oct. 19 at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant with Rev.
O'dell Bush and · Rev. Charles
"Tommy" Kinnaird officiating .
Burial wiD follow at llambrick
Cemetery. Frienda may call the
funeral home after 4 p.m. Sunday,
Oct. 18.

son of the late CharUe and Ann Lit-

GEORGE HAll

PARKERSBURG, . W.Va .
Funeral services were held Oct. 4 In
the Ogdln Funeral Home for W!Wam
D. . Halley, 92, of 1831 19th St.,
Parkersburg,.W.Va., who died Oct. I
In st. J011eph's Hospital, Parker-

8:00AM ·11:00 AM · 4:00PM· 6:00PM

.,.,
..' •

•'

WrlgbL (Photo byJodyOWeD.)

Feb. 18, 1912, Southside, and is the

Patty Montgomery

Wllliam D. Halley

(Acrou from City Ice l Fuel)
Point Pleatcmt 675-4519
BEGINNING MONDAY, OCTOBER 19:
Monday l Thullday . ·

'

~mber

HOMECOMING QUEEN.:.. MIA Robia Nelaoa,· ~ter of Mr. and
Mn. Nidi NeiHe, wu erowaed 1881 Pollll Pieai&amp;Dt Hlgb SchoOl
HOIIIftomlllg Qu- darfDI ba1ftlme ceremoales at the I'PHS-Ripley
foothall game Friday evealq. Sbe II piclllred above with escort Tony

speak

Home

O~EN

·

Ever!llte W . Lancaster, botb of
Gallipolis.
Servlcea wiD be held Tuesday,
Oct. 20 at 11 a.m. at the Fairhaven
Baptl81' Churcb, Cempbells Creek,
Charleston, with Rev. David
Kilburn officiating. Burial wiD
follow at Cunninllham Memorial
Patk, st. Albans. Friends may call
WUcOJten Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant after 5:00 p.m. Monday,
. Oct. )9.

He will

Richard
. . Lee Fraley

'

STARTING AT

..

Ohio.

' Surviving are one slater, Mill
VIrgil Lancuter, and one brother,

CALL
or

SEE IT TODAY AT

THIN·K OF 'E.M AS ••••

ROCKER
RECLINERS
WALL
HUGGERS
REGULAR
RECLINERS

:: LayaWJJay For Christmas
.

retired from B.F. GiJcltlrlch, Akron.

speaker.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Stratolounger XP •
'Close-up·

.."

Chalham Ave., GaJUpolls, died
Saturday mondng at the Rivenlda
Nllrlinc Home, st.Albans. . .
He 1\'U the IOD of !be late 'lbomaa
Jelferaon and Jenny Pod1ette ·
LIDcuter and was bom Sept. 19,
1887 In Farmers, Ky. He was allo

POMEROY - The 3Ith annual
dinner meeting of the Meigs SoU and
Water Conservation District
(SWCD) will be held November 10 at
the multipurpose building ' in
Pomeroy at 7:30p.m.
Supervisor elections will be held
daring the meeting. Two supervisors
are to be elected from the four candidates, Tom Theiss, Res
Shenefield, Pat Holter, and Edison
Hollon.
Tbe winners will serve a three
year tenn on the Meigs SWCD Boenl
of Supervisors.
Certificates will be aw'IJ'ded to our
alflllate members In appreciation of
the contribution to our district.
The Good Year Fanner of the
Year Certificate wiD be awarded to
Joe Bailey.
Awards will be given to the winners of the annual iloil judging contest. There will be a slide presentation showing the progreSs ·of the
district for the past year. Door
prizes will be awarded during tbe
evening:
Robert 0. Grieser, a Iarmer from
Clark County and fonner Chainnan
of the Ohio Soil and Water Conservation Conunission will be the

, JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

.,. BOB'S ELECTRONICS

DRIVE THRU
cARRYOUT
709 First Ave.

Last Tuesday, for the third time ·• ·
since the strike began, the com- •
mission refused to recognize AFSCME.

Claude M. Lancaster
Claude M. LIDeuler, M, tm

fRENCH QUARTER

Typically , howe~Jer, satellite transmitting antennas are
highly directional, high-gain, narrow-beam antennas which
are focused. on a narrow area. like the lower half of the
United States, for example. This avoids the problem of
wasting the satellites' valuable solar power by radiating
unnecessary si~nals into space. Another benefit of the narrow
·beam antenna is that it provides enough gain to reduce the
satellite transmitting power requirements to jyst a few

...." oer channel.

Election highlights
annual SWCD banquet

chfield Woyan.
GAIJJPOIJS - Patty MonWoyan worked 20 yean lor the
tgomery, 50, of Rt. 2, Crown City, West Virginia Department of llliJhdied at 7 p.m. Friday at her residenways and retired from the Conce, having been In falling health for
structlon !Ughwaya u a grader
the put several yean.
ope111tor.
. Bom May 17, 11131, In Gallis CoonHe Is survived by two daucbters,
ty, daughter of the late Ernest and Mrs. Wilma Jean Martin. Gallloolls
Clara Chandler Lamlbert, she was
Ferry, lllrs. Geneva · McCarty, r.;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;~~
man'ied to Paul T. Montgomery Sr., . Apple Grove; three stepdaughtera,
THE LEGENDARY
whosurvlves.
Mrs. Georgianna Pennington,
Also surviving is a son, Paul Jr. of Gulaevllle, Ohio, Ro:unna Lawson,
ENTERTAINER
Tt!l&lt;ll$; live ·daughters, Frances
Florida and Macella . Dial,
Cavin of Crown City, Patty of Parkersbllrg; folU' sons, Clifford,
Gallipolis, and Linda, Phyllis and Dallas and J.C. Woyan, Southside
Cathy, all at home; a sister, Mary and Glen Woyan, Seminole, Fla.;
NIGHTLY
Leonard C. Calvin .
Belle Shropshire of Crown City; one stepson, George Dial,
ruEso•y THRU SATURD·Y
VINTON - ·Leonard c. calvin, 76, three grandchildren and six Southside; one aliter, Mn. GraCi!
"
"
of Rt. l, Ewington, died at 9 a.m. stepgi'Dfldchildren.
Kearns, Apple Grove; two brothers,
OPEN TILL.
Two sons, a sister and a brother VIrgil, Marysville, Obio and
Saturday iii St. Mary's Hospital,
Huntington, W.Va.
·
Claude, East IJverpool; 27 irand2:30 A.M.
alsoprecededlndeath.
Funeral services wilt be held at 1 children
and
21
greatBorn Jan. I. 1905, in Radcliff,
Ohio, be was the son of the late John p.m. Monday In the Willls Funeral ~randehildren.
Hoine, with the Rev. Monty Sheets
Wo~ was_preceded In death by
and FBMy Arbaugh Calvin.
officiating.
Burial
will
be
1n
Ohio
three
brothers, two sisters and one
Lou nne &amp; Carryout
He married the (onner Georgia
For Ar1 ·. Over 21 Only
da
ht
Dlmpl
Doll
White ob June 20, 11125, In Gallipolis, Valley Memory Gardens. Friends
ug er,
Y
e Myers,
and she survives.
may call at the funeral home from 2- r-Po_lnt_P...;l_easan
__t _in_l_97_a_.----.l......-----------1
Surviving are two sons, Eugene of 4and 7-9 p.m. today.
Ottawa and John of Newcomerstown; ~vj:o daughters, Mrs. Stanley John W. Woyan
(Barbara) McKlnniss of Athens and
John W. Woyan, 69, Southside,.
Mrs. Lorene Blackson of Coshocton;
died
at Pleaaant Valley Hoepltal
16 grandchildren and seven greatSaturday
morning. He W88 bom
grandchlldren; two brothers, Frank
of · Colurnbu.s and Glendon of
~aahington state; three sisters,
1\fn!. George (Birdie) Knox of McArt¥. Mrs. Raymond (Ruth) Burns
of Rt. I, Ewington and Mrs. Cary
(Marjorie• Hawk of Cleveland.
He was a member of the
Wilkesville United Methodist Chur· OHice Hours by Appointment Only
ch and the Oprhans Frjends .s&amp;AM
Lodge No. 275 at Wilkesville.
Funeral arrangements will be an-(614)-992·2104
nounced at a later date by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.

introducing

rhe New York Yachr Club

••

:a16oz.
•
Bottles

·' ·1~j};,:·~··" •
DAYAN DIES at !be lime a Major Glmenl 111111
Cblel of Staff of tbe Isnell Army, digJI a ditch aloq wllb other ldgllraDklns Israeli olflclall ~ part of tmeJ'IIeDCY prepanU0111 a1aa&amp; tile
Gua Strip Ill 1151, Ill u effort 1o forUfy fnmller vfllages, Dayan later
became forelp aDd defeue mlnlater of Is111el. Dayan died of a heart attackiDTeiAvlvFrkillyattbeqeof88.(API.alerpHte).

third of the earth's surface will be covered by the signal

SPRITE:
•

-~":

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

•

•

·;. '&gt;

GAWPQIJS- Brady Angel, 83,
formerly of Rt. 2, Crown City, died
at 5:115 a.m. Saturday at the residence of hla daughter, Mrs. Dorothy
Perkillll, Eureka Star Route.
Born June 18, 1898, In Ohio Twp.,
. Gallla County, son of the late
Sheridan and Amanda Shaw Angel,
he ~ a reUred fanner and CODstruction worker.
He married the fanner ~va Martin on July 7, 1920,1n Pomeroy, and
sbe preeeded him lD death on Aug. 5,
1970. Also preceding him in death
were two SOI)5 and two grand.chlldren.
Surviving are siJ: 80118, Jzmes,
Ralph, B111dy Jr., Charles, Shirley
and Haymond, a11 or Rt. 2, Crown
City; eight dall8hters, Mrs. Betty
Crouse, Mrs. 1311811 (Irene • Holley,
Mrs. Donald (Dorothy) Perltlns and
Mrs. Barbara Clary, all of
GallipoUs, Mrs. Irwin (Josephine)
Gibson of Coshocton, Mrs. Kenneth
(Lucy. Brny of Spring, Texas, Mrs.
Cline (Audrey• Sallllders of Rt. 2,
Crown City and Mrs. James
(Pauline) Jeffers of Westerville; 50
grandchildren, 37 greatgrandchildren and two great-greatgrandclill~n; .a sister, Mrs. Mae
Porter oiSandu.sky.
. Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday In King's Chapel Church, with the Rev. Ernest Saker of.
ficiaitlng. Burial will be in Bethel
Cemetery, Friends may call at the
Waugb-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
from :Hand 7·9 p.m. Monday.

Television

For Your Winter Need
Call304-429·4788

Shoe

'

-·~ 1~~·

· Brady Angel

Satellite

AMERICA'S
CUP®

~

after

His second wife, Racbel, 116, and
daughter, Yael, were at hl.s bedaide.
Dayan Is also SW'Vived by his first
wife, Ruth, whom he divorced In
111'11, and two~ Assaf, a movie
actor, andEhud, a:fanner . .

southern borders on the Jewish Dayfliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
· iiiiiiiiiiii~ipiiiiiiiiiii

The

bis :wile,

of Atonement In It'll
Dayan was hospitalized 'l1lllnlday
at the Sbeba. ilolpital at Tel
Hashomer, a Tel Aviv suburb,
suffering chest pains,' his step.
daughter, NurltHennon, said.

'

..

Israeli leader dies Friday.

..,.
-

. ..

' .

REGISTER .FOR '50.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE
'

•

i.

'

h-eritage. ~ouse ·

•

' .

•
•
'•

CRISP·
HEAD
LEITUCE

'·

OF SHOES
21N?5
N. SECOreD A~' liliU FPORJ
.

'1'

(

49'HE~D
•

I ,

HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
1001 •

Jar

$349With

::t:

.........
•

--·~

�•

•

tleep• ... a

~allipolis

lliar~ - -

Oct. 18, 1.981

The sunda Times·

:Man from Kansas,
•

0

Oct. 18, 1981

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

Page-A·B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Open Oaily 10·9

0.,. I.... ,_..,.. t1o 111 lqo. . . ...., ac!WI!'
1&gt;Md lltm on llaU on o.r iht'¥t!o M ~
.,..,._ iJ 1101 ••ao!4DIItor lloo'

Sundays H

c

·~

Cflne lkle lo 1ft, ~ntoo- '11101'

KlftiiiW •-I~C!IIDO)'Ir""'Uftl
~~~~--~~O!IIII!IIIIDrreason

.~seeks grave of ancestor

lllllf....., .......]"O.ll'll'diNa .. .,.
•• .
......

he house ·by the

, . '"" ....................... r.r "'"' JG!jl~-.,.....,..,...

~

lllwdo:ln.t~ ~01

QALLIPOUS - Yesterday was call from the "little girl" now grown .
the'l9lst anniversary of the landing into Mrs. Robert D.. (Margaret
of llle French 500 at what is now the Booton) Osborn of Indianapolis
. Pulillc Square. And tomorrow is the
__
·
mil armiv~rsary of the surrender (f MARGARET OSBORN said that
ol Comwallis at Yorktown.
she would be in Gallipolis Oct 19
T~y's regular 1_11eeting. of the Oct. 20, and part of Oct. 21, witb he;
Gallia County Histoncal S~&lt;:~ety Will sister, Helen Bisenz, from Califorf~ Lawrence M~1d, ~ Pine nia. Their brother, Orland Booton of
St. j Gallipolis, ~airing oo, Foun- Logan, W. Va., will join them, and
~·: ol GaiDa County.
The come over to the PeepshoWJe to visit '
meo:.tmg will start at2:30 p.m. in St. their cousin, ole J . ·Samuel. Their
Peter's Episcopal Church banquet father a native Gallipolitan _
rooifl, with Mike Brown the program Orland Booton, Sr., spent a lifetime
chairman there to mtroduce in journalism·and was the head man
La)orellce..
.
at the newspaper at Williamson, W.
· ~rd will meet at I p.m. today •n va. When ·he retired, be went to
a '!&amp;ek room of the new addition of Macon, Ga., where he died.
St.. Peter's. Peeps hopes that
solhebndy brings up the subject of
l.OUIS GREEN, 849 Third Ave.,
our society's making some eflort to Gallipolis, thinks nothing of walling
get eopies of the Gallipolis documen· downtown and back, roughly two
ts which the Cincinnati Historical miles round trip. About half the
So&lt;;iety has on file.
people know him as Louis, and the
other half as Buster. His aunt, Mary
WRY WlGNER, 305 South Fif· Price, gave him the Buster nick·
th,!Atwood, Kansas 67730, came to name about a week· after he was
the: Gallipolis newspaper office last born. When he was a mailman, his
MOI}day afternoon, still looking for route covered 12· miles a day.
the gi-ave of his Revolutionary War Walking. No wonder it's no problem
ance3tot, First Sgt. Daniel Wigner. for him to walk downtown and back.
ThiS ancestor was born in the edge of He's a World War II veteran, South
Philadelphia in 1755 and died in 1840 Pacific Theater ;. he was on Tinian
011 :hiil farm in Green Tw)l., Gallia
when the Allies hit Europe on DCo(lnty - between Koontz bridge Day, June 6, 1944, · and was
and •. Hulbert Cemetery. That's discharged in December, 1945.
Darllel Wigner. If you find the gravestone, please write to his descen·
REBA CRAMER, Montpelier,
da(lt, Harry Wigner, in Kansas.
Ohio, wrote that she got a belated
birthday card from Harley and Iva
tHERE WAS A Daniel Wigner in DeMey, her former Gallia County
every generation, and the fourth neighbors. "The DeMeys have the
Daniel lived on the Green Twp. farm distinction," Reba said, "of attill 1943. A half·mile from the farm tending the Little Brown Jug races
there was even a Wigner post office at Delaware, making it their 32nd
from 1885 to 1!106 in the same year of not J!lissing a single race."
building as the Smeltzer flour mill. They have a similar record at
1'hC first Daniel Wigner, the one who Lexington, Ky., where Peeps was
was in the Revolutionary War, in brought up and saw only a couple of
1798 moved to Virginia (that part of races. Reba's letter continues: ' The
Virginia which is now West DeMeys owned and raced the 'cir·
Virginia), and he moved to Gallia cuit' in their younger years, and hor·
County in 1816.
ses have been a part of their lives
throughout the years."
BACK JUST BEFORE World War
1

I $1arted inphotographer
Europe, there
Ga,llipolis
whowas
.ha,da
among his stage scenery an art1sl s
coRceptio~ of a well for drinking
water. A little girl stood beside it,
and with her was a little boy; they
were holding hands when the
pij&gt;tographer took the studio pi ~
ture. About 68 years later the "little
ro,y" now grown into 73-year-old J.
Samuel Peeps received a telephone

ByDEBFO~

Our Reg. 32.87

29.97 '

3001

Single quartz tube
mate hes output of
dual-tube unjts. Auto·
malic heat-control
and Tip-over safety
switch. l' cord . Save.

$6ourReQ.
7.96
irl
, coz'/ sweatsh
MISSel
. n toP ot
The oll·f'm~~~y~ic 1cotton
Cres ton~ __...,, ...1M
• "rnerk:OI'\r..'fV'""''-

WhHeAnd
Colors

$1
3

Out For

.

Skeins ·

(301)
Our Reg.

see Eo.

Heavy Rug Yam of Dacron·

Colorfast Dacron• polyester with 'durable
wash 'n dry quality. 1.6 oz • Save now.
'Du Por.l Reg IM
'Net WI .

•·_

_;_t';P--

Our Reg. 17.88 .

12.88

(302)

48" UHIIty Shopllte
Chain. hooks, plug included
40·W Fluorescent lube, fa. 99J
(303)

~

·-___----

IISTERIN
·-- --·:.~
... .
~- ........
-··---

6-pr. Pkg.
Our 5.97
Men's Crew Socks
Cotton/stretch nylon
with cushioned tooL

~~:!;;!;:.:t...

':",:;;.:;.="__;

Emergency runs

'Middleport at 10:50 a.m. took Bet·
• tY:Armentroul, Coal St., to Veterans
M)!morial Hospital and alii :25 a.m.
took MarliiJ Snyder from Route 7 to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pomeroy at 5 p.m. took Tara
Morris from an East Main St. auto
accident to Veterans Memorial. At
6:lil a.m. Saturday, the Racine Unit
took Fritz Buck, having difficulty
b~athlng, from his home in Antiquity to Veterans Memorlal and
the Racine Unit at 8:30a.m. Satur·
day took Mrs. Lut)ler Bartow from
Long Bottom to Veterans Memorial.

.
$8
2

{305)

for

Std.Pillow
Our 4.97 Ea.
Polvesler I cotton cover.

20x30" Queen,21S9 (306)
20x36"
2/ SlO (301

4.44

(308

ProtecHve Runner
Polypropylene. with
non-skid rubber back.

1.87

(309)

RuHies Potato Chips
Ruffles · 1 pound ·bag .
Buy now&amp; save!

Above la Rlverby u Ills now. Mally addill0111 were made to the original two-story, six·room brick structure, lDcludlng the'!ronl poreb.

•

Llmll2

·•

reports.

wife Florence and daughter
Carrie occupied the house. It was
.GALLIPOLIS-'l'llere Is much
during this time that a bathroom
history in any Ohio River town,
was ~uill on the side of the house.
and GalllJ)Olill is no exception.
The only non-physician
• At 191 years of age, as of
resident of Rlverby was WUI
yesterday, Galllpolls has quite a
Carlton, who operated a music
few bulldlngs which hold an instore in the· city. He lived there
lere!lting put. One of these iB the
for a while in 1916.
Rlverby house.
In 1918 Dr. Cliarles E. Holzer
Located at 530 First Avenue, · •. bought the house from the
· · the house's structure, incl!J(!ing a
Needhams for $5,700 and the flats ·
. spiral walnut stairway and an
next door for $5,200. The flats
18111 century dlandeUer, has been
were eventually converted into
the subject Of many photograph-!
classrooms for the nursing S&lt;:hool
and the bouse's history the suband a structure was added behind
ject of much research.
,
them for the students' quarters.
l\mOIIg the researchers are.two
· II was during Holzer's family's
local realdents, Ruth Tap and Jan
stay that the house became
Thaler. David Brook, fonner
known as Riverby, named by his
Gallipolis resident and director of
wife and taken from the John
South Central Ohio Preservation
Burroughs' book "A Journey
Society, also has done research
Down the River. ''
011 the structure. Such research
· Architect Frank Packard, who
ted to Riverby's Installation into
designed the hosptial, designed
the ~ational Register of Historic
the house's current front porch in
Places in Janliary,1980.
1919 or 1920.11 was add~!'~ by Mrs.
Research shows that the
Holzer's father, Frederick.). Vor·
property on which R\verby stannholt, who also added the house's
ds was originally owned by two
present oak floors.
trustees of the Ohio Company.
The recently built bathroom
They were R.J . Meigs and Paul
was removed as were the stables
Fearing. The property was
and tennis court, additions by the
owned by five more owners
Needhams.
before it was sold to the house's
The Holzers constructed a
probable builder. Owners before
swimming pool at the western
that transaction were Peter
side of the house, but It was fUiect
Marrel Sr., Peter Marret Jr.,
in after about 15 years.
Peter Maquel, and P.R. Bureau ·
Other Holzer additions include
and his heir, Sarah M. Goddard
a bathroom off the front hall,
who owned it unti11855 ..
walnut paneling in the dining
It was that year that Dr.
room, pine panelb · in the
George Uvesay bought the land
remodled kitchen, Ill, • . , r porch,
and It iB asswned he built the
the copper roof, eaves and downhouse. He purchased the property
spouts, and the wrought-Iron fenfor$500.
ce surrounding the yard which
The original Riverby was a
was added to discourage hospital
two«ory, six-room brick house
. visitors from picnicking on the
with a winding stairway and high
Holzer lawn.
ceilings.
•
Dr. Holzer died in 1956 and his
Sometime later, a room was
wife in 1970.
added on·the eastern side aa was
The current owner of the house
a dining room, a fourth bedroom . is the French AJ:t Colony, which
and hall over it on the bilek of the
boughi it In September 1971 for .
house, a kitchen, dinette, rear
~.000.
bedroom and upatairi' bilth.
'
Individual tours are available
Dr. WIIUamC.H. Needham, the
from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each
hoine'a second owner, probably
.
Tuesday
and Thuraday and from
made the8e additions, accordillg
I
to
5
p.m.
on Saturday and Sunto reserch. The hoWJe was sold to
day.
Group
tours should be
him for $7,000 in May of 1870. AI·
arranged
in
advance.
ter Needham's deatli ln 1882. his
Tlmet&amp;atfael Staff

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

r&lt;JMEROY-Five calls were answered ~y local emergency units
Friday and Saturday morning, the
M"eigs Emergency Medical Service

•

Pollrokl't 880 Sun Cemer1.
• Built-In flash Hres automaticalty,
Indoors or out.

• Focuses automatically by sound
waves.
• Blends natural light and flash for
more reliable, pleasing exposures.
• Economical; never needs flashbars
or batteries.
• Uses new 600 High Speed Land film.
·Shoots Indoors 2'-14 ' (with no
special lens); outdoors 2' to infinity.

174

(310)

save!
• Moaloll• Antacid
12•01.
fast relief: plea;ant tostej

1

32 •01 ; ustarina · · · · · 1.9

'" "

(311)
21·01. ' Ajax• Cleanser

f ast cleaning oct:on'
'Nelwt

Tawney
Studios
Second Ave.

LlmH2

424

Our Reg. 4.97

Gallipolis, Oh.

From Your
Favorite Negatives

OUR OWN
PERSONAL
NEWSWIRE!

5x7"
For8.44

2.97

1 ~1 ·

Sale Price

Our Reg 1.

"

2. 77(31~) 1.1

~ '---~' (313)
14·oz~ Aja~ D•tergent 12"x75' Aluminum Foil
1·pc. FlooHno Lantern
For
Sale Price
Hausenold aluminum
Weatherproof switch. · 32•oz.' Ajax• Dish L1q11id I For clearer Whites and
brighter coior1. Save!
•with metal · cutter
Our 1.27, F~tlghl, 970 For grease-tree di~res.
'Net WI
edge . Save now .. ,

2 3
.......

·' '

. ,·

8x10"
For 9.88
hka Chargt H.
Made From lllde

or"'"'
I lrUIOillront diSC brQII.e pod~
and broke ~mng5 on •eot
wneets
2. Aes..,rroce,dtUfl'IS and true

TRS·81! VIDEOTEX

IOIOIS

Tums a TV or Personal
Computer Into an
Information System

3. Inspect troniFOlC&gt;ef$
4 RebUild re01 wn&amp;et eylti\CJ&amp;". 11

posMble: replace, f necessary.
at odattiOOCi ports cost per
wtleel cvtnder

•'

inner and Ql.ller

I

• AP News Wire
• Major Newspapers
• "Electronic Mall"
• Dow Jones&lt;~ Stock ·
Market Information

u .as sua ua

Our Reg. 48.88

7J.88 57.88 2.74

39.88
lattery

lUI

•TR5-80 VIDEOTEX brings a world of news, information, enter·
:tainmenl-lrom giant nationwide computer networks, right into
;your home or office. Come in lor~ "on-line" demonstration!
:Priced as low as $29.95 with your computer, or as low as $399
;with Radio Shack's VIDEOTEX Terminal. Free - one hour Dow
•Jonas and CompuServe• network usage.

"- A DIVISION Of' TANDY CORPORATION

•.

many cars. l ighllruc~s.

ill n!1l.c olde. .

8.88E~

OUrR-e.
41.11 '

P'III}IORII

•

.

'

•

H.l». llloOir tnllall•d •
Fits manv U.S. cars· All •
weathll fluid. SOve! :

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATINB DEALER

•

•

•

,•

•

..

PRICES MAY VARY AT INOMDUAI. STOA£I AHO DEALERs

•'

'·'
•'·

ported oaly from the wall, reeetvtag no nppart from

SOle Price Thlu SOl.

CornpuSeiW 1e • ndlmarX of CompuSewe. Inc.
eow.~on~e'•• Dadlililll'k or Dow Jones &amp;""to., Inc.

ftad1e lhaek

'

--~

i•\

.1,
11

..

.

.,

•

·\

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Ple~sant, W.Va.

Page-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

Oct. 18, 1911

Oc:t. 11, 1fl1

~edmng~---.--------~----------~------~
piece and veU which was double ·. The gram ·wore a sliver IIJ'IY ·
tiered of flngertip Wusioo attached tuxedo with a plealed front. IYWY
to a bridal cap of alencon lace ac- shirt and lll'IY striped UCGt llld •
cented with aeed pearll. She carried boutonniere of sweetheart l'Oiell.
an heirloom lace handkerchief and a The groomarneu and the rinlbearer
silk cascade of l'lllll8, mlnlature car- were alao In IIJ'IY lwledOI and bad
nations, forget-me-nots and baby's camatioo boiJ!onpieres. The ringbreath with Ivory satin ribbons. Her bearer carried an Ivory taffiia
jewelry·was her mother's. string of pillow edged with -lace and tOjlPed
pearls and an aunt's matching ear- with a silk roae made by the bride'•

..
(

t

•

Vining and Smith . wed Keesee marries Hall

••

..-

.

.
POMEROY - Miss Irene LoIS
Barnes and Lloyd WUUam MWer,
Jr. exchanged wedding vows at the
Helen Mauck Galbreath Chapel on
the
University campus at 3:30
p.m.Ohio
Qfl Saturday! Sept, 26,

Wedding Prayer." As a part of the
wed•••• Wllt;
ce emo
light=t-:
can:~. the coup1e

The bride Is the daughter of Mrs.
Dorothy Barnes Woodard, Langilville, and the late Paul M. Barnes.
Mr. Miller Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd W. Miller, Oceanside, Long
Island, N.Y.
The Rev. Robert McGee of
Pomeroy performed the double ring
ceremony before the altar cent&lt;:red
with a silver cross and :Wo lighted
-silver candles. A vase of burgundy
and rose colored mums with baby's
breath and fern flanked the candles.
Used at the entrance was a silk
arrangement of the same colors and
two candelabra with white candles
and bows. White bows with greenery
were used on the pews.
A half-hour of nuptial music was
presented by Dr. Eugene
Wickstrom, organist, and Miss Jo

The bride was escorted to the altar
by her brother, Morton Barnes, Irving, Texas, and given in marriage
by him and her mother. She wore a
gown of candleUght chiffoo with reembroidered alencon lace designed'
by Mori Lee Bridals. The bodice was
fashioned with a Queen Anne
neckline of lace encrusted with
pe.aris and the long full sheer sleeves
were cuffed with alencon lace. The
softly gathered skirt extended Into a
graceful court length train.
The bride desigoed her own head-

4
A

'.'

•,.

'

i!
''J

r.
'
••
••
~ ·''

,.

t

•••

dressed in gray tuxedos. His best
man was David Durham of Houston,
Texas. Ushers were Jack Mathews
and Mike Allen of Gallipolis and
Richard Morse of Toledo.
Immediately following the wedding, a reception with buffet dinner
·and dance was held in the banquet
rooms of Stouffer's University Inn,
Colwnbus.
The bride is a graduate of North
Union High School and is a
marketing major at Ohio State .
University. She is a reservations
manager at Stouffer's Inc.
The groom attended Gallipolis
schools, Portsmouth, OHio High
School, Bowling Green State University and graduated from Ohio State
University as a mechanical
engineer. He Is a certified public accountant and works for Ernst .and
Whirrmey in its Columbus office.
Following a honeymoon trip to
Hilton Head Island, South Carolina,
the couple resides at 2989 Talbrock
Circle, Dublin, Ohio.

..,, ..,,

RUTLAND - Hits Dlane Vining,
daugbll!r of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Vining of Rutland, and Homer B.
Smith, Jr., soo of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer B.. Smith, Sr., Pomeroy,
were united In marriage on Sept. ~The double-ring ceremony was
performed at the Ratland Church o1
the Nazarene with the Rev. Lloyd D.
Grinun, Jr., officiating. The church
was decorated with a white archway
featuring yellow and blue mwns. In
the center were two doves with a
white bow. White bows marked the
family pews.
A half-hour of pre-nuptial music
was presented by · Billy HaD,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Beverly Baylor,
Gallipolis, singing "Endless Love,"
"I Pledge My Love," and. "I Can't
Help Falling In Love With You."
·The bride was given In marriage
by her parents and escorted to the
altar by her father. She was attired
in a white gown of satin with an
overlay of sheer organza fashioned
with a sculptured necldiDe with
cluster pearl lrim 1M 'an-lace
bishop sleevas. Her veil fell from a
headpiece of lace and pearls and she
&lt;JU'rled a boaqalt Ill yellow i'oses
· sutriiW1ded bY blue and yellow ··
mums and baby's ~th. The
boiM!uet was trlrmned with yellow
and blue silk rlbbolW tied in lovers'

HEALTH INSURANCE

I

A remembrance bouque~ of garden-fresh
flowers and mother would love and cherish.
And, . whether our Mother-in-Law's Day
flowers ·are going near or far, our 30,000 fellow
wire florists make delivery nearly .anywhere
as simple as a phone call. Please order early.
Stop by scron or call us today.

Like o good neighbor,

Stote Form i• there.

QUALITY PlTIEIT
DIRE PRODUCTS

knots.

•Disposable underpads-2 sizes
•Disposable Adult Diapers
•Wheelchair and Geri Chair Pads-several styles
•Heel and Elbow Protectors
•Comfort Rings
•Portable Whirlpools
•Aq ua K Heating Units
•Air Mattresses-2 styles
•Foam Mattress Covers
•Contour Cushions for Back
•Cervical Pillows
•Kodel "Sheepskin" Pads, 2 sizes
•Hand Massagers-2 styles
•Oster Body Toners
•Gillette Heat Wraps

•

'S TATE FARM MUfUA.L
MJTOJIOBILE IN8UIIAJICE COIIII'NW\'

llo•• Offk:•• .....,...... wa.•

~

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

Sor.int Volloy Plaza

1&amp;1•1 -·2206

.

..,

Oollipallo, Ohio

I1----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!___j

----COUPON-----

ILSTEAD'S PIZZA
With Purchase of Ar.y Large Size
Pizza. Get A

·FREE

2 LITER 8011 LE

OF PEPSI
WIIIIC•pooo
4 P.M. TIL 11 P.M.

Good October 19th thru Qctober 22nd

LSTEAD'S
BAKE
Ave.

244 Third

Pll.446•t122

SLEEP .SOFAS

' .
.

\),!

I~ Flexsteel®
l!llftcl

STARTING_
'
AT
.

,,' '

lrOOki!IIOOd

Mike, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Desi
Jeffers, The Plains; Eugene Smith,
Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
ShuttandJ~ica,Baltimore,Md.

Office

Friday, October 23, ·1981
9·00
AM
5·00
p•M•
•
• • •
•

f fee 1982 broch Ure5

$29995
.

· He's shopping around for a real" Bargain", but shopping
for "price" alone ·isn't the wise way to find one. The retail
merchants in Gallipolis offer you price, quality and friendly
service. You see, tl)e answer Is in the store Where the owner
Is there to serve you better ... Stop in soon and see . what
Gallipolis has ....

'' FridaY - Flab on bunl1artar
. . . . llarvard beets, cotlqe

1WIN • FULL • QUEEN SIZE

.....«

'

I,

Olilllle .,

bennp ..-ved with

"

SO OON'T MISS IT!

Where ffse

.
....

...

. .•
. ..
·-·'.

Peddler's Pantry

., l

llOWNfOWN GALLI POLIS

PH. 446-2755
~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::~ ..•
"

"YOU" PANTIES
bj Formflt Rogel$ ®
There's never been a 'panty 1\ke
YOU® belore. YOUI!I panties
•r• made with
LITA. a

revolutJonarv nRW fabric that

br..thn like your skin. Since

nyiDn traps moisture and coHon
retains it, nylon panties with a
cotton lining actually double tap
moisture LIT A carries moisture
away from the body and out
through lhe fabric. Keeps you

cooler, drier, more comfortable.

'•

.,

.. •'
Ch~ From:
A. #2500 Tailored Brief, sizes 5-8
B. 12501 Tailored Bikini, sizes 4·7
Both in White, Cafe A:u La it
C. #2512 Matching Daywear Bra, size 32-36
D. 12507 Lace Trim Bikini, sizes 4-7
E.12514 Lace Trim Hipster, sizes 4-7
F. #250,.Lace Trim Brief, sizes 4-7
Colors
White and white lace, cafe au Lalt with ecru lace

WEE~DAY 10:01).9:00

SUNDAY l:ON:OO
SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

.

,'

j)

\'

We'll a ISO be
Baking Bread-

~

1n'P''*itel+, orana:e, milk.

,.... ~ nndlnd on a nona tt'· ..,..._,.

(

'

Picture of a inan about
to make a mistake. • •

blana, * - ! tomatoes,
butter, applesauce and cin-

•.

.i • '

.'

E""MIIUI
·•"''I'""' Invited .

namill, milk.

aP.M. ·

...-

" '

.

.

Jackson Pike are as follows:
Mooday, Oct. 19 - Chorus, 1~
p.m.
Tuesday,Oct. 20-S.T.O.P. Class,
10:30 a.m.; 'PilyBical FitnesS, 11:15
p.m.; Bible Study, 1-2 p.m.; Craft
Class, 1-3 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 21 - Vinton
Bible Study, . 12:30 p.m.; Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.; Garden Club, 1-3
p.m.
.
.
.
Friday' Oct. 23 - Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Blood Pressure Check, l:lii1:~ p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3
p.rh.; Soc181Hour, 7p,m.
The Senior NutriUon Program wU
serve the following nlenus:
Mooday - Dry Uma beans and
ham, '· vegetabl~ !!'latin salad,
pictied beets, cornllread, butter,
fruit, C!Obbler. milk.
~ · -, . Macottage beef
caa•erole, broccoli, tossed
saladl~. b!od, butter, biked
CllllaJd, oillk.
• Wecm.day - Chicken, . mashed
pate..,., lral&amp;lvlnepr, bread, butter, red fruited gelltln, milk.
Thunday- Meatballs and gravy.
griiiQ
~

·OPEN MON..FRI.

.. "

GAWPOLIS ~ Activities for the

CERTIFIED FITTER

MANAGER

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

HOU.SE

q

week of Oct. 19-23 at the Senior
Citizens Cente.r located at 220

•

~

an OPEN
at the Galli. ...,.._.

11 A.M. TIL ??

You are invited in to smell,
taste '!nd hear all aboul our
fresh ground coffee beans from the line folks a
Coffee .

Calendar

NEED EXTRA BEDS FOR
YOUR HOLIDAY.VISITORS ·
I.

You are cordially ·nvited
to attend

FRIDAY, OCT. 23

Citizerts.

Wire Flowers Everywhere

,, -----~· '

jacket. Mrs. Darst wore an i~entiCal
MIDDLEPORT - Spiral can- satin fashiooed with a Queen Anne's
gown in blue. They carried single delabra trinuned In white bows was neckline, and long sheer sleeves
yellow long-stemmed roses and , featured in the altar decorations of tririuned with alencon lace. The
baby's breath with blue and yellow the Middleport Church of the skirt with an overlay of lace flowing
ribboos tied in lovei'S' knots.
Nazarene for the wedding of Angela into a l;hapel train featured a
plealed front insert.
The groom wore a brown suit with Keesee and Charles Hall.
The bride's veil of illusion was
a yellow shirt and a yeUow mum
The bride is the daughter of the
boutonniere.
Rev. and Mrs. James Keesee of Mid- chapel-length trinuned with lace
Best man was George Nesselroad, dleport and the groom Is the son of anil she wore a blusher, also lac~
Pomeroy, and the usher was Dave Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam Hall, Route •· edged.
Burt, Pomeroy. They wore tan suits Pomeroy.
Her bouquet of silk flowers were in
with yellow mum boutonnieres.
The ~·s father, assisted by shldes of peach and beige with
"The bride's mother wore a tan Dwight Aahley, performed :the baby's breath and beige lace ribfloor-length gown with a corsage of double-ring ceremooy at 6:30 p.m. bons.
Deena Kerchner, Massillon, was
yeUow and blue mums. The groom's 011 Aug. 22. Music was presented by
mother wore an orange floor-length Bill Hall, brother of the groom, and the maid of honor, and the bridesmaids were Dawn Keesee, sister of
.gown with a matching ~rssge.
. Beverly Baylor, organ and vocal.
Mrs. Susie Smith, sister of the
Given In marriage by her parents the bride, Jenell Kelly and Lori
groom, registered the guests and and escorted to the altar by her Kloes, Middleport. Miss Kerchner
distributed .the rice bags. A recep- father,thebridewasattiredinafor- was in a peach gown with white lace
tion wsa held In the Rutland mal gown of sheer organza over trim, and the other attendants ..Ore
Methodist Church basement. The r;~:;;;;;;:;;;;;~;;;;~~;:;;;;:;;;;;~~:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;l
table featured two yellow candles
I
and the three-tiered weddln,g cake
~
f1
trirmned in yellow and blue flowers
~ A1
had a stairway of yellow tapers. Tlie
, a~
cake ·WBI topped with the lrsdltional
'
miniature bride and groom.
Mints, nuts, and punch were ..rved. , Mrs. Lena Nesselroad,
Pomeroy, . and 1\lrs. Linda Jett,
A(D\
Pllnleror. served at the reception.
.,...,. ~
Following a weddinll trip to Kin8B
360 2nd Ave.
I.aland, Cincinnati, the couple returned to their home at VillsgeGreen
Galipolis, Ohio

Senior

·'

We Accept AI.I Major credit Cards and

L

IMr. and Jv1rs. Hall

Gallia County

"The Way America Sends.Love"
Phone 992-2039
104 Butternut Ave.
992-5721 ·
Pomeroy, Oh.

....
......................
D. Dillon, R.N.

,

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

INIUIANCI

·•

Altendanla were the bride's two
sillters, Mrs. Terri SOUth, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Sharon Darst, Pomeroy. ·
Mrs. Smith wore a yellow qlana
flool'-length gown with spaghetti
straps and long· sheet matching

STATI PAlM

A·

Thanks to · you - ·our customer - we're doing neat
things at the Pantry and we want you to be a part of it!

Mr. and Mrs. Smith

The best person
to see about

Send the BUNCH-OF-LOVE

/

YOU SHOULD SEE US N&lt;M!

~

.._.._..,.
_ _ _ _ _ ,_ _ _

MAKE YOURS HAPPY! -

•

..

.,

mav be your
c:ar; home and
life agent!
See or c:all:

The couple took a trtp to GaWnnow reside at Twa
Apartments, Addison. .
The bride is a 11180 graduate Ill
Meigs High School and is emploJed
at McClure's Dairy Iale. Mr. Hall,
abo a graduate of Meigs, is employed at the Gavin Power Planl
Both are members of the VIctory
Baptist Church.
.
Out-of-town guests attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Flyte, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Kerchner, Masalllon; Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff Statoo and family,
Galion; Claude Woodard, Portsmouth; John Woodard, Portsmouth;
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hall and family,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Cecil, Colinnbus.
burg, Tenn. and

\

!

Phone 446·4396

meets
POMEROY-Plans for the annual
fun\I!Jrive were disussed at the recnt
m~? of the Meigs County Chapter qc the Central Ohio Heart Chapter !held at Vererans Memorial
H""pital. Dr. James WithereD
presided at the meeting.
It lvas noted that the search for a
COIIQ\y campaign fund chainnan
cootinues. Pamela Simmons, field
consJIItant, discussed special event
for the year. A urock-n-roll" for
heart at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center wiD kick off the heart fund
campaign the first week ·in
February. Feb. 7 has been
designated as Heart FiJnd Sundsy. In
Meigjl County. The Beta Sigma Phi
Soronty and Middleport Bus!,......
and P,rofeeslonal Women will be partici..Ung in the residential campaJgJi. Others interesb!d in volunteerlDg to uslst with the residential
camJ!8Ign shoud contact Rhonda
Dalley, R.N. at ~211M, En 35.
'I'ht board also agreed to cooduct a
golf t1Jur1181D8111 and a ••run for your
heart" In May. Further detslla 111
the~&amp; two events and reglatntion
wiD lie aMounced later.

.,__.._..

'

~·

with weddlnc party fl&amp;urlnea ·u- •
tended to llllaller round calles.
•
Melinda Keesee, slater of the • ·,
bride, llld Lori Cecil, Columbus,
registered the guests.

All were faablooed with elbow length
puffed sleeves, rounded neddlnes,
and tiered aldrts. They carried car-

'·

.

'i

I
I

Spring Valley Plaza

association
/·

I

'

1•

'

On Mother-In-Law's Day
Sunday, October 25, 1981

Heart

•

-~

''·~"'"

....

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

---h-r-----.--·--·
-·

...
·/.-.

r:T:exas~,:w:as:the=ring~~bea=r~et:.

r-;:===::;:=====::;-i I

r---:;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;:---:t

••

'

Mr. and .Mrs. Miller

Mr. and Mrs. Blowers

•
GA!lLIPOLIS - The Old Stone
PresbYterian Church, Ostrander,
was chosen for the wedding
cererriony ·uniting in marriage
Tama;a Ann Searles, daughter of
Mr. a.id Mrs. James Mitchell of 1733
Warr$1_Road, Delaware, Ohio, and
Stephen C. Blowers, son of Mr. and
Mrs. ,Raymond H. Blowers, Jr., 545
Hilda 'brive, Gallipolis.
Rev. David Baumgarden officiatiid the vows at 4:30p.m. August
' 15 befOre the altar which was centered:.lviih a nower arrangement of
long $)emmed red roses, stephanotis
J)nd j!ucalyptus leaves flanked by
candelabra.
Given in marriage by her parents.
the liride was escorted to the altar
by her father.
Sh~ .chose a gown of silk organza
enhanced with silk venise lace and
seed ~pearl accents. The gown was
fashlpned with a stand-away coilar
and hodice yoke of silk venice lace.
A rulfled flounce circled the hemline, :detailing the attached chapel
train; a traditional hat of silk venice
lace with accents of white silk roses
centered with seed pearls and a
pouff veil al the back completed her .
attire.
She carried a cascading bridal
bouquet of red roses, stephanotis,
baby:s breath and spirals of English
Ivy. Her bouquet also held three antique lace handkerchiefs belonging
to each of her maternal grand- ,
mothers and one from her paternal '
great-grandmother.
Terri Searles of Delaware served
as her sister's matron of honor.
Brid"1Jmaids were Sononi Baker of
Mari~n. Ohio; Margaret Busher of
Cleveland, and Toni McLarnen of
Columbus. Attendants wore white
fuil-length gowns of Lustriglio knit
styled with softly draped empire
bodices and matching chiffon capes
with ruffled collars and each carried ·
a single long stemmed red rose.
Blowers and his attendants were

·•

miniature bride and ~ Brid&amp;eS

peach, beige and white floral gowns.

natloo IIJT8ll8ements.
Shannon FaUoo, Gallipolis, wu
the flower girl and wore a peach
fioor-length gown with white lace
trim and a picture hat. Jonathan
Keeoee served as ringbearer at hts
sister's wedding.
Jimmer Soulsby of Pomeroy wu
the best man and Ryan Hall, Route
•. Pomeroy; Dave Williamson and
Dan Edwards, Rutland, were the
Ushers.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Keesee was attired in a white and
marooo ensemble and wore a carnatloo col'lllge. Mrs. Hall was attired In navy blue and white and a1ao
had a carnatioo corsage.
A receptioo hooorlnfl the couple
was held In the Riverboat Room of
the Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
The three-tiered traditional

rlnfls.

mother.
The bride's attendants were Miss
For her daughter's wedding, Mra.
Milisa Hizer, Cincinnati, maid of Woodard wore a light blue lloorhooor; Miss Lul8a Mlller, Geneva; length gown of polyester trimmed
N. Y., sister of the groom; Mra. Judy · with lace and had a conage ol
Heide brink, Millbury, and Mrs. Lisa sweetheart roses, mlnlature carnatioos as did Mrs. Miller who wore
Elluon, Covin8tonThe maid of honor was in burgun- a champagne colored floor-length
dy with the bridesmaids In rose. The gown of chiffon overtaffeta.
floor-length gowns of suede sllesta
The bride's table 'Was centered
were designed with high necklines, with the bridal bouquets and used
schlffil embroidered illUsion yoke, with white candles In double glass
and loog full bishop sleeves of em- holders. The four-tiered pink founbroidered lace.
tain wedding cake was lOPped with a
The maid of honor carried a silk white satin beD ornament and
nosegay bouquet of rose colored decorated with white bells and pllik
HUes, burgtl!ldy forget-me-nots and flowers and encircled with greenery,
baby's breath, and wore matching centered a round table draped in a
flowers in her hair. The bridesmaids white gathered skirt.
carried silk nosegay bouquets of
Other tables for the buffet dinner
burgundy lilles, rose forget-me-nots were centered with silk flower
and baby's breath, and also wore arrangements of the bride's colors
· sprigs of matching flowers In their and had lighted white tapers. Backhair.
·
ground band music was provided.
Michael O'Malley, NorcrOss, Ga. Mrs. Vicki Barnes, sister-in-law of
was the best man and the ushers the bride, registered ti!e gueSt,, and
were George Buccigrossl, North also gave out handmade roses fWed
Richland Hills, Texas; l!lchard with bird seed for the reception lin~
Heidebrink, Mlllbury; and 'Fred at the lodge.
Ellen Diehl, Charleston, W. Va. Schnid
w hln
They will reside at 328 Hoke Ave.,
h
lecti
·
ded
din
·
er,
N. J. Ryan
1
w ose se
ons 1nc u
"Wed g Ba
has ·ofgton,
the bride
Oceanside, Longislsnd, N.Y.
Song," "Evergreen," and "The
rnes, ne11 ew
'Irving,

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3 . ·: ' . ·
~

Barnes and Miller ·exchange wedding vows

Searles weds Blowers

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

- ~•

\

"''.,
$3.75
$3.25
$7.50
$4.75
$5.00
$5.50

'
o')
-

''!

"'
.,•
.,

"I

..

..
• t

-...,•
,..•

�.,,

-

.,

•

4

-

..

....

...

.. . ..

..

Ohio-Point

. ..
"

1-5

··.:·Halfhill
.-.
.
,. :'.. :marrtes

Thomas-Depoy

'

:~ Cox

·'

-

GAWPOIJS- Rhonda Halfhill,
daughter of Mr: 11nd Mrs. Dana
Halfhill of Cheshire, Ohio WBI' .
.• married to Don Cox, son of Mr: and
• Mrs. Lester Cox of Gallipolis.
The weddtug took place iJ
Gallipolis Sept. 22 by the Rev.
Adolph Swick of Vinton at their
home.
·
Those attendtflll were the bride's
mother, Mrs. Etta Halfhill, and
brother, Rapkin, Eddie Halfhill and
sister, Margie Wheaton, all of
Cheshire. Also atlendtflll were the
groom's puents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Cox of Gallipolis.
Other relatives attending were
· Carole Fitch ·and daughter, Cheryl
Gall Fitch and son, Jimmie, of
. Cheshire; Pete, Linda, Larry and
· Kenny Cox, AHred, Louise;Xathryn
• Joann and Jo &amp;arbery, CUrt Lee
, , Cox, Marjorie, Joy, Jimmy and Earl
Eugene Shaver, Rickie, Connie,
Loretta and Bub Lambert and the
groom's grandmother, Mrs. Flora
Scarberry of Gallipolis, and the Rev:
and Mrs. Adolph Swick of Vinton ;
. Barbara Dennison and James
Holley of Gallipolis.
' ··

Thomas

Precision
Camouflage .
Bow

Engage,ments

79.99

· .Clark-Allen

Reg. 99.99

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Donald K. Thomas, Pomeroy,' are.
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Rebecca Dawn, to James
Nicholas Depoy, soo of Mr. and Mrs.
James Depoy, Bainbridge.
The wedding will· take place on
Nov. 14 at Trinity Church, Pomeroy,
at 7:30 p.m. Music will begin at 7
p.m. The gracious custom of opoln
church will be observed and a reception will follow in the church sllcial

•

149.99
Performance features and prac·
ti cal price. Slide action 12 gauge
with C·LECT choke and vent ribs.

Princely Camouflage Vest or Brown :
Duck Vest with Pile Lining.
Sherpa pne lined vest with 2 large pockets, ziP- :
per front, kidnev flap. Available in choice of ,
cam9uflage or brown duck. Sizes S, M, L, XL. r

AMIFMIMPX wltl'l built-In 1 tratk pla~e.-.rec o raer or cnwtt
player-recorder . Full alze r.cord changer. 8uilt·ln 2/4 speaker
matrix 1 y 1tem, roterv volume tHIItVIce. base , and treble ~;ontrola.
Digital covnter on us..He, twin mlct, pause, fast foi"Ward on B
track. twin speakers. A11nl1 o per stOre.

Your kitchen won't be complete
without a 16 piece Melamine set. Per·
feet for the ·whole family, won't break
or chip. Durable and long lasting.
Assorted decorative patterns to choose
from .

.7.99 .

DEPT. Two

Mount Union :

Reg. 10.99
Men's 100% Brushed
Nylon Corduroy Knit
SPORT SHIRT

Rille

25.99

I~ . BrU511ed
Nylon Corduro~ look
kn11 sport slllrt ln N~tvv .
Camel. Med . Slue and
Brown. Slle&amp; S, M, L.,

Men ' !

Reg. 19.99
W~ter Heater Insulation Kit

···.·

HARDWARE DEPT.

GALUPOUS - Mr. ·and Mrs.
Bobby J. Clark of Gallipolis announce the engagement and forthcorning marriage of their daughter,
KeUy Ann, to Mark E. Allen, son of
Mrs. Thomas Leslie, GallipoliS, and
Ronald Allen, Lexington, Ky.
The bride-elect is a 19!11 graduate
of Gallia Academy High &amp;hooL Her
fiance is a.19'16 graduate of Henry
Clay High &amp;hool, Lexiugton, Ky. He
is employed by Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative.
The c105ed-church wedding wiU be
November 20 ai Grace United
Methodist Church,

DOMESTICS DEPT.

CE~~~W-~~~~

1.88

SYLVANIA PKG. OF 2

Inside· Frost Ught Bulbs

.69

Reg. 12.99
Men'5 Sateen .
WESTERN SHIRT

60·75-100 WATT
2 PKGS . (4 Bulbs)

Reg. to ·18.99
Kolpin Gun Cue or Scope Gun Case.

1.00

Choose from either of· these Western style VUr\
cases. Two-tone featuring palomino brown sup.'
ported vinyl embossed with buffalo hide grain.
accented with a camel tan western saddle parlel.

Western

style shirt is
perfect with leans and
casual wear. Sizes s, M, L,

BA
Hand Towel Reg. 2.49 .. 1.89
EF211

99e

~inipkins

/~

XL
LARGE.R SIZE •.. . 10.99
CLOTHING DEPT.

Reg. 98c Pkg.
Stoc k up now on
Sylv an ia's bi\Je dot,
Insi de frost bulbs, 60,
75, an·d lOOwatts.

:Loomis-·

revival

Reg. 34.99
St. Mary'5 Full
Sintle Co,-.lrol
ELECTRIC
BLANKET

XL

s

from Hocking Technical College in
she received her
associate degree in medical
assistant. She is employed by the
Meigs Medical Clinic in Pomeroy.
Her fiailce is a 1977 graduate of the
Paint Valley High School in Ross
County. He received his &amp;SSQ~:iate
degree in electronics from . the
ijockiug Technical College in '!979
and is presently a senior at Ohio
University where he is worklug on
his degree in e\eclrical engineering.

1979 where

' 16 PC. MELAMINE SET

3805 22 Cal. L. R. Seml ·autoriHttic 15-shot capac I·
t y thru buttstock f eed. Clean r ifleman style'stock .
with non-slip butt plate. Available with or
without 4X scope with across hair reticle .

13.88

The bride-elect is a 1977 gradaate
of Meigs High &amp;hool and graduated_

Reg. 8.99

ARCO GRAPHITE 10W40
MOTOR OIL

Reg. 229.96
ELECTROBRAND4MODESTERE
COMPONENT SYTEM with AM-FM
CASSETTE PLAYER/STRACK
PLAYER AND TURNTABLE.

-.68.88

Mossberg 22. Semi-automatic
with Scope.
·

6590/518

159.99

Mossberg Pump Shotgun
With Vent Rib

:6.22

.·1.14

Reg. 179.99

room.

1.44

Reg. 1.49

Plastic Storm Window Kit
The Allied Plasti c storm window kit
will help to provide extra insulation
during cOld weathef. Helps fight high
heat b ills. Easy to use. Package of 4.

l:::W::M:.,...,•

Reg. 2.29
4 OZ. HOPPE
NO.9 SOLVENT

J~19~

39'

Reg. 59c
PRESTONE GAS
LINE ANTI-FREEZE

BAI,..TON THEitMAL
WITH RED
TOP
SOct~S

1.66
Reg. 2.99
STRAP-ON
EMERGENCY
CHAINS
AUTO
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

1!111••1111111~~~:;;~~~
AUTOLITE
PLU(OS

REG. SPARK

1.59 • • • 1.19.
~

i~g~ 14~36

. .... .... .... 2.78
CDol6
Reg. 6.54 ............. 4.17
COolS
Reg. 8.72 ............. 5.56

;_
.~-.

RESISTOR SPARK PLUGS
CDof4 .... ........... 3.29
CDof6
Reg. 7.74 . ... •... • •·· · · · · · ·

•

HARDWARE DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPEOALIZlD

CLEANSING AND

99'

3100
Reg. 44.96

6.88

Reg. 1.77 ea.

KRAC06x9RE·ARDE
SPEAKERS

. PRE STONE
DE-ICER

Reg. 12.99
HART LQG ROLL,J:R

Automotive Dept.

Loomis

' .. '.
'

2.88

. ..

Anna Mae ill
' a 1978 araduate of
, · · ·poJnt Pleuant High &amp;boo! and Ia
' · •employed It Point Pleaaant Dairy
· ' Queen. Kenny ill a 19'18 graduate of .
Kyger Creek High Sclhool and Ia
employed at Valley BeU Dairy Co.

I,.,,.....
""•

COUGLAN CHIMNEY
CREOSOTE REMOVER

7.99

.Reg. 11.96
NORELCO CURLY "0"
MIST HAIR CURLER
JEWELRY o•PT.

FOR

CGast or Zest

'

.

1.87

STIMUPLANT
SOIL,20Qt• .

Reg.2.7'
POTTING

l_.88ro 2.88. 4.99

Reg.4.59
5X7 PHOTO FRAMES / ·
oval or Rectangular Mitt .

' Reg. 2.77 to 3.48
SEALED BEAM
HEADLIGHT BULB
Automotive Dept.

:.

(.')ur service stops light , dirt, ,• ~ - . .
rn~otl\s 'tllnd mildew from aging or
d.amoging delicate fa~rics.

Reg. 8.99
lATH SCALE

1.99
comtortMih' slled and
onty If/ +" hiQn. Tlpl...
pi•HMm is cOV&lt;tred with
tougll vlnyt tllat can be
wlpedcle•n. A.lt«t.d.

preM&lt;•acl
lor all tho yoart
to
.
.

come.

•16 oz. Milky Way &amp;

Aolt about thla ldool Mrvlco - 1

Three Musketeers
•13 oz. Mars Bars
•12 oz. M&amp;M Plain or
Peanut
•lox TWix or Summit

OHIO VALLEY LAUNDRY
.AND DRY CLEANERS

In Gallipolis

121 State Street·
Phone 446-1842
Also In Pomeroy

ROBINSON'S
DRYDEINERS

.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·5428

'lbl p1ldaul Cllltom ol open
~ - - cburcb will be alllenrld. · .

•

\t

•

Molded 17" handle .::toub\1
raw 36 count polv tuBing for
ru.t and ..,tlclent Y'IOW
rtmovel. Sfurd~ bre•k.•r
tltfh tor Chipping Ice. L.ong
w..r polv ttrlsHn.

2.19

SERVI~CE,..-"'!1~/....,

Your gown is scientifically proc.
eued , triple -w rappe" in blue
tluue, Haled in a special can.
tointr, which is again pla1tic
sealed, and returned with beauty

Tbe nclcllng will be held Ocl :H,
7:llO p.m. at Zion Baptllt lllurch,
GaDipolll F.rry. A reetpllan will
tmmed!etelJ follow at Stauffer C1ab

,

Reg. 1.99
snow Brush and
scraper

HB 1600

,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Loomis,
:··." ' Gallipolis Ferry wtah to announce
' · · the engagement and forthcoming
' ' ' marriage of tbelr daughter, Anna
:
Mae, to Kenny Simpldna, son of Mr.
·' .
and Mrs. Olley Simpkins, Kanauga,
Ohio.

a-..

PAWGING

.,

.,

�Oct. 18, 1981

•

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

The Sunday Times-Seritinei...-Page-B-7

The
..,.....

Gilliam weds Sorrell

Community
Corner

-

Revivals planned for this week .
Young and Harris wed Paint
- .•
Creek
GALUPOUS - The Paint Creek
Baptist Church wUI be in revlvlll this
week. The services wUI begin al 7
p.m. each evening j)ct. 18 through
Oct. 23.
.
These services are a prelude lo the
observance of the !48th anniversary
on Oct .25 at2:30 p.m.
Paint Creek is one year older than
the oldest chartered organization in
the United Statea, being founded iri
11133.
Rev. Calvin Minnis, pastor of Mt.
Moriah Church, Middleport, and the

STURE HOURS:
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

Tlm~tlnel Staff
·. '' The longer I'm there, the better I
lik( lt." That was Roger Walker's
com me nt on
Saudia Arabia
where he has
worked for the
pastl9 months.
Roger is home
for a several
weeks' visit and
then will return'to
Saudia Arabia for
Charlene
another si:J: months or so b&lt;!fore
coming back for another visit with
his family. He works as a supervisor
with an electrical contractor ihere.
As for the heal, he says he's.seen it
"!er 130 degrees. Now that's hot!

Sunday 10 .~m·lO pm

·298 SECOND ST.

· POMEROY, 0.
•

•

...

Corinth Baptist Church, Oak Hill,

~wUI be the speaker on Sunday, Oct.

18
Monday through Friday Rev.
W. King, pastor of Union Blacll:forll:
Baptist Church, will be the
evangelist.
On Oct. 25 at2 :30 p.m. Rev. Lavin
WWlams, pastor of the 18th Street
Baptist Church of Huntington, W:
V• •• wUI deliver the anniversary ser·

W
.!

mon.

..

All are welcome to attend.
•

First Church

'

GALUPOUS - A narvest time
revival will be held al First Church
of God, 109 Garfield Ave. Oct. 19
, through 24. The Book of Hebrews
wUI be the theme. The evangelist
·wUI be Stanley Wlullroad from

PRICES GOOD lHRU 0CJ0BER 24, 1981

Roanoke, Va.
.
Services will be held each evening'
at 7:30p.m. Worship will be at 9:.30:
a.m. and 7p.m. Sunday.
'
All are welcome to attend.

.

.

;And speakirig of "hot" ... Middlepori Chief of Police J. J.
crerr.eans turns out a great pot of
.. chili ... hot, hot chili. And this persilnal not to him. We loved the chili!
Sl.lre it was hot (the hottest ever),
but we liked that, and you thonghl
Vie wouldn't(

•

I

.

$ 49
Ground Chuck. .... ~~.
USDA DIOICE
.
. .$
99
Round Steak.......~·•.

•

•Our belated congratulations to two
RBcine couples on their wedding an'l!versaries, Oct. 11. ·
·
,.. For Floyd and Mona Farra, it was
thefr 65th, and f~r Herbert L. and
qpris E. Sayre, It was their 60th.
Both had family gatherings in
celebration.
.

Jack Kane, married to the former
$errie Blackston of Pomeroy, is
now with ChannelS, Charleston, W.
'Ia. as weekend anchorman and
dl&gt;ing special reporting through the
~k.

-Jack,.for' lhe past six months has
been with WTAP at Parkersburg,
and before thst was with radio
sialions in Steubenville, Marietta,
aJld Parkersburg after spending
seme time at WMPQ here.
: Currently his family is still in
Marietta but have sold their home
now and will he making the move to
Charleston. Sherrie works at the
S!Jelby General Hospital, accounting
department, but will be leaving her
ejnploymenl once the move is made.
•The couple have two children,
!feather and Emily.
·

.~

.

: harvey and June Van Vranken
h!lve returned from Memphis where
tfley got their finrt peek at their new
grandson born in !ale July. they
,jpent ~everal days with Scott and
Sandy VanVranken and the children
and while there got to see the "Blue
, Angels" in action. Enroute home
; they stopped at Nashville to see Phil
i VJIII Vranken, a dentist.

•• By the way, June, who directs the
Voices of Liberty, advises that the
rehearsal scheduled for Tuesday
night has been changed lo Monday
nlght at 7:30 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Plans are underway for a fall concert.

BUCKET

.

Mrs. Young, mother of the bride,
POMEROY- Lori Lee Young and
WISE, Virginia - The First Chur- Gallipolis, served 88 best man. She
was
attired in a gown of mirit green
carried a single long stemmed red Michael Ray Harris, were united in
ch of God, Wise, Virginia, was the rose. The bridegroom and his best marriage June 14 at 2:30p.m. at the with spaghetti straps and a matsetting for the July ·18 double-ring
ching jacket with a corsage of tinted
ceremony of Sherry Ann Gilliam and . man were attired in tuxedos 'of sliver St. Paul's United Methodist Church
gray with gray and white ascots and iri Tuppers Plairis: The Rev. Richard green carnations. The groom's
Dehnis Mark Sorrell.
red rose boutonnieres.
Thomas performed the double-ring mother, Mrs. Harris, chose a sleeveShe is the niece of Mr. and Mrs.
Following the ceremony, a recep- ceremony· The bride was escorted to less blue gown with a matchirig
Curtis Gilliam, GallipoUs. He is the
lion was held at The Wise Inn. The the altar by her father, Lan-y mini-shawl and wore a tinted blue
son of Mr. and Mrs. Denny Sorrell,
carnation corsage.
Jr., Columbus, and family of bride's table was covered with a Young.
white tablecloth decorated with a
The bride was attired in a lonna!
Following the ceremony, a recepWellston.
centerpiece of silk yellow and while gown of while qiana with a v-neck tion was held in the social room of
The ceremony was performed by roses, daisies and baby's breath. yoke of sheer EngliBh net and had a
the church. A blue and while theme
Rev. Leon E. Hartwig, pastor of the
Four candelabra, wedding bells and high necklirie, empire waist, full was carried out in the decor~lirig
First Church of God at 5:30p.m.
yellow silk roses completed the table bishop sleeves, an accordion pleated with the table being centered with a
Sally Baird, organist, provided a arrangement.
skirt and chapel trairi. The trairi, besutlful blue and white · fountain
program of pre-nuptial music.
r.lnda Wright, aunt of the bride, yoke, cuffs, waistline and skirt were cake which had been decorated by
As the bride approached the altar,
served the wedding .cake, with Sue accepted iri heayy Venice lace trim.
she presented her grandmother and Justice presiding at the punch bowl. · She carried a bouquet of silk blue Ann Fausnaugh. Refreshments of
cake, ice cream, punch, coffee 'aod
aunt with a long stemmed red rose.
The
bride
and
groom
were
~uests and white carnations with greenery mints · were served by Ann
Mter the ceremony she presented
her mother-in-law with a long stem- of the Inn at Wise, leaving for their · and baby's breath and blue Fausnaugh, Janice Young and
honeymoon to Myrtle Beach, South stramers. Pror to the ceremony, Phyllis Duduit.
. med red rose.
Carolins the following day. Mrs. music was presented by Susan HanAfter a trip to Sea World and PittsGiven iri marriage by her aunt and
Son-ell is a student at Buckeye Hills num and selections included, "If" burgh, Pennsylvania, the couple are
uncle, the bride was attired iri a Vic- Career Center, Rio Grande. The and "Throu~h the Eyes of Love."
at home iri Reedsville. The bride is a
1 Lila Young, sister of the bride,
torian style gown featuring high
groom is a 1971 graduate of Wellston was the maid of honor. She was at- graduate Of Eastern High School and
neck, long sleeves trimmed of net
High School. He is presently em- tired iO a fonnal gown of light blue of Holzer School of Nursing and is
and lace, wide lace ruffle falling
ployed as a foreman al So11thern with spaghetti straps and a mat- currently employed at Sl. Joseph's
from shoulders to a deep vee at
Ohio Coal Co., Albany, Ohio.
hln 1a
h rt s1
1 k t She Hospital, Parkersburg, West
waist, three tiered skirt accented
Out of town guests were Gladys c g ce s o eeves ac e .
with lace and ribbon. Her headpiece
wore a white bat and carried a Virginia. The groom is also a
was created of a wreath of white sllk Gilliam, Jenkins, Kentucky ; Linda bouquet of sllk blue and white car- graduate Of Eastern High School and
Wright, Dorton, Kentucky; Lori
th bab •
th nd is employed at Shell Chemical Plant,
s~l!an!'tis and baby's breath. For
Robinson, Melvind!lle, ·• 'Michigan; nations wir .
Y s brea
a
Belpre, Ohio.
accessories she wore a pearl necklace, and she carried a single long · Lundy Brown, Gallipolis; Mr. and ~:~ds were Rhonda Dudult
stemmed red rose with greenery aod Mrs. Denny Sorrell, Columbus; Mr. aod Ciridy Harris, sister Of the
and Mrs. Porter Emmert and Nicki, groom. They were attired in goWII!
baby's brea!h.
The groom's sister, Lynn Em- ' Hamden; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis and bats identical to the maid of
•
GiJlli!m, GallipoliB ; Melalne Wright, honor and carried matching
mert, of Hamden, Ohio, served as
bouquets. Amy Well was the flower
matron ofhonor and Lundy Brown . Dortori, Kentucky.
girl. She wore a light blue gown and
white hat. Eric Larkins was the ring·
besrer and had a light blue suit with
alight blue ruffled shirl.
The groom was attired iri a white
tuxedo with tails and wore a boutonniere of tinted' blue carnations. The
•
best man was Craig Reed who wore
a white tuxedo and also a boutonLawrence McQuaid 'Will speak said thai the public is welcome to at- niere of tinted blue carnations. The
ushers were Randy Orr and ' Kevin
Sunday afternoon in the banquet hall tend. ,
The meeting will startal2:30 p.m. Dill, each wearing blue tuxedos and
of St. Peter's Episcopal Church for
the monthly meeting &lt;&gt;I the Gallia Gen. George E. Bush, president, blue tinted carnations for boutonpresiding. The board will meet in a nieres. Klla Young, cousin of the
County Historical Society.
Mike Brown, program chairman, hack room at I p.m. same day.
bride, registered the·guests.

$
249

.

Cube Steak.........~.. .·.

GRADE A WHOLE

Fryers ..~ ...............~.4

·w. ·1eners.............
· . !~~.
SUPERIOR FRANKIES

Mr. and Mrs. Harris

Mr. and Mrs. Sorrell

·I

12'oz.

'

CRISPY SERVE .

Bacon...........·...... .'!.

•

·McQuaid will speak
at historical meet

Riverby
'
1 Calendar
1

/ 7 )u

(J[~b
Exhibit for the month of October
- Functional Porcelain by Tlm
Mather of Athens, Ohio. 60 original
items in both Galleries.
Gallery Hours - Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m. unlll 3 p.m.;
, Sa.turdsy and Sunday, I p.m. until 5

: p.m.
.
October 19, 7-10 p.m. - Opening
. • session of the Creative Writing
: .. Classes to be held each Monday
~ evening for seven weeks; instructor,
! Marc Harshman frofll Moundsville,
: vr. Va. Preregister now with Janel
: Byers at 446-1903. Members, $25 for
, the seven weeks, non·members, $30•
•• October 20, 9:31Hl a.m. : :Workshop on Block Printing, laugh!
! \)y .'Janet Byers; no charge, open to
I all. Participants requested to Share
I part if not all of their work with the
French Arl Colony to be iricluded in
• the.Christmas Gift Bazaar to he held
• in early December at Rlverby as a
Fund raiaing event. Preregistration
, !:I"JUested, call 446-1!103 or 448-3134.
1 ~:30 ,p.m.- Mixed Media Class for
I children, agea seven through nirie;
'1 taught by Barbara Braden Ca$.
This Is the second of the series set up
1 for a total of elghl Conlecutive
Tuesdays. Fee for the total nwnber
of classes, $21). Call 446-1803 or 336: 3834. 8 p.m. F .t\.C. ln1 tenlepartmental Meeting, JUverby.
()clober 21, 4-t p.m. - Children's
Theatre classes, age 10 and up, fee
p;. 7-9 ·p.m. - Adult Theatre
ClallseS;·fee f30 for members. P5 for
IJ(JIHilelllbera. Bcrtb ,:!• 11 to ~
Unue for eight weelal; lnltrudllr,
• Joe BalloU frml Albenl. Ohio. Cll1
: Janet Byera at 4*111113 for
~-reg~straUon; iiDPhule Cll

!
•

i

_SNYDER'S RIPPLE •

. Re, '2.09 ~

Potato
Ch1ps.!!~~.... _, .
.
.

1
!

69

•

95
.• $399
-

.· MON. &amp; FRI.
TIU 8 P.M.

'

REG. '548

4/$1

Fillntinl A -

445-711&amp;

20%0FF
lnllolllllckWOOieiii.AHmelesslrwestrri811tinelegonee:·
wOOl blend solids and fancies. fiom 54' wide.
Reg . from $8.99 yd.

Intire llock corduroy. Plnwole, widewole and
nbless, including Cromplon, Poly/cotton; machine
wash. dry; 45' wide . Reg. from $4.99 yd.
• '
'
Intire stock deco~ fabrlca.Choose rrom our · ~
entire, In-store stock or special order fiom swatch
books. Famous names, fabulous prices!
Entire atoc1c buckles. Make It yourseKI We have
many styles and widths of buckles for belts.
including bfass and nickel flnlsh .

*"A'

l'ab!t«amma velour. Acetate/nylon solids are just
plain fun for robes. Machine wash, dry, 54' wide .
Reg . $3.99 yd.

30-AtOFF
t

.

_, '-' •ngham c:IMokl and llllrllngs. Our entire stock of
bath plVfly poly/collans. Machine wash. dry, 45"
·wide. Reg. $2.19 to ....... yd.
.

FLAVORITE

.

l'lanMI solicit and ptlnll. Nice lor nippy weather!
Brushed calion/polyester. Machine wash. dry, 45"
wide. ~eg. •ut and •ut y~~.

$}lg

lnll,. ttook auadea. A mustlor fashion this Iaiii
1~

polyeller solids. Machine wash. dry, 48' wtdt! .

hg. from $1.49 yd.

'

CAN

01110

1111RD IIVEIIUE

•

6. PACK CANS

SP.AGHElTI O's ·.
145 oz.

GlllliPOUS:

....,. lloCill AonM 101-. Excellent cutters lor
leN. Dnlnmokers. pinkers. munl-purpose trimmers
andmore. lleg.$1.79to$a.89pr.

";.c,a-Co··la................
. $149
.
Ice .Cream........~.~...
~

:E

$J 4goo

lnllre lfaCk quills. Single or double-laced of
cotton or poly/colton wtth poly flll . Machine wash,
yd •
dry, 46' wtde . lleg. 11om

$}:49 .

!

' .

'

2% Milk ...........~..~l

SELECTIONS START AT

CGIICol and fa~lon prints. Cotton and blend ,
.mini's lor folkloric fashions . Moc,hine wash, dry, 45"
wtde. Reg. $U9 to $4.49 yd.
.

AUAT

DAR I.fRESH

"As a long time
video tape fan,
I'm pleased that
Magnavox is helping people
better understand VCR."

25%0FF

Bananas ....:......;..~. 2

••

k~:a~~

Classic traditional roii-arin styling with
thick button-tufted attached pillow back
and seat cushion .

·lnll,.lloallllppen. Ch0019 fiom our regulai1y- ·'
priced colleclton, Including aeulon'", Unlquee ~.
Invisible, Coati a Clatk and many more.

Traditional elegance with button-tultad
lltacilad pillow back, roil arms and smart

lingle .nit -

cushion_..

RADI1E

: .· LAYAWAY FO~ :·:·' ·:

SUGAR ..

,. ' CHRISTMAS .
DECEMBER 24th DELIVERY

SJ39.

+

~

NBRICS

-

•.~
STORE HOURS

SHOP lHE AREA'S
IMGEST FURNinJRE

SILVER. BRIDGE PLAZA

Mon ..sat. 10.9

Sun. 1·5

and perfortnaiiCtl•

(

'

'

.,

•

.

'

�•

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

Pag,._B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Oct. 18, 1981

Oct. 18, 1981

Tuberculosis is still a problem___________~-----'&lt;.-.
By JOAN TEWKSBARY, R.N.
Meigs County
Tuberculosis Nurse
Tuberculosis has not been stamped out in the United States, contrary to the expectations in the early
1960s. While most of the Magic
Mountain Sanatoriums have closed,
tuberculosis still thrives. In the
United States, nearly ' 3,000
Americans died of the disease in
1'1/7. Eacb year about 30,00o new
cases are reported nationwide. Last ·
year 21 states noted a rise in cases.
Ahnost three million more cases occur in the rest of the world. Says one
concerned pulmonary specialist, Dr.
Lee Reichman of the New Jersey
Medical School in Newark: It's a
classic case of what happens when
we eradicate a disease but we don't
eradicate it. ,We know everything

r

about it, yet it's still there.
Tuberculosis strikes all segments
of society. It occurs in people of all
socioeconoplic levels.
At an international conference on
tuberculosis, in Orlando, Florida,
doctors noted that many earners d
the disease have no outward symp)
toms. Others suffer from fatigue,
coqgh, weight loss, night sweats orsutennnittent low-grade lever. For
instance; some older people who
became infected but not diseased
many years ago, may manifest the
&lt;\isease now. Until the 1900s preven- ·
live drug treatment lor tuberculosis
was not available. Our Meigs County
Tuberculosis Clinic cannot be lax
aboui tuberculosis control.
The American Lung Association
had a homecoming of sorts to its
original mission in the Jate 1970s

medical conditioos In addition to
It may be only a ,persistent cougll'thelr tuberculosis. Some of llll* that brings a person to the tuberolder people overlook the tuber- culoals office. Laboratory tests of a
culosis medication In favor of thelr sputum smear under the mi~•
pills for heart disease or another - which is a standard diagnostic:
condition that concerns them. So procedure may ahow that the tuber'what started as an attempt to cut cule bacllle are probably present. II
cost in developing countries In dlf- this is so, treatment for tuberculosis
lerent parts of the world ended up in is started right away while waiting
this country as a means of smving lor culture confirmation. But even if
the compliance problems.
a smear is negative, a sputum samChemotherapy calls for intense pie is sent to the laboratory for
monitoring of the patient by the culturing lor four to six weeks. II
county tuberculosis nurse and Dr. tuberculosis is conflnned, tuberRoy L. Donnerborg wbo is our chest culosis treatment is started or con·
clinician !run University Hospital, tinued. Once tuberculosis is
Columbus, Ohio. When drugs are diagnose&lt;!, there can be no let up in
self-administered, adherence to the ' attention to the patient until the
regbnen is monitored by such in- treatment has been completed. Your
dicators as clinic attendance, home county TUberculosis Nurse monitors
visits, pill counts, laboratory tests, the patient and supervises therap~
chest x-rays and bacteriologic so that our end result will be a higher~
examinatiolisofthesputwn.
rateofpermanentcure.
'

licult to lick. Patients don't always
stick to the treatment for the whole
period. As a reault, recurrence of
disease often occurs in theae people.
Even if the patient is acutely ill in
the beginning - and most now are
not - the patient gels to feel well
very quietly with the tuberculosis
cbemotherapy. It is ulomatic that
people take ~edlcaUon wben they
are feeling sick to get bettar. PatienIs are told from the beginning or
soon thereilf\et' that they don't need
to . stop going to school, that they
don't need to make changes in their
lives- but they are also told to take
thelr pills every day. People who
feel well and go about their lives
have a tendency to forget to take
their pills.
Tuberculosis patients who are up
in years lace another problem.
Many are under tretment lor

when it realiud tuberculosis abel
· refused to disappear from the
American ocene. The recommendations or short course
chemotherapy now issued jointly by
A. L.A.'s American Thoracic Society
and the ceriters for Disease COIItrol
,wage anew the baWe against tuberculosis here by tackling the dilemma
of -patient noncomplial)ce with the
entire tuberculosis regimen that has
come to be a "terrific problem," in
the , worda of Dr. Farer. (Disease
Control Center, Atlanta, Ga.)
Although the turnaround iD tuber·
culosos prognosis started with the
development of effective antituberculosis drugs, physicians and
nurses who manage TB patients
have continually encountered a
problem with cherhotherapy dif.

man. ·
Guests will be registered by Kelly

Evangelist William B. Kughn of.
ficiating. A half-bur of pre-nuptial
music by the Ohio Valley College
Ch9rus will piecede the ceremony. ..
The maid of honor will be Brenda
Bush, sister of the bride. The best
man will be Alfred Meier, lather of
the groom.
A reception will follow at Buckeye
Hills Vocational School Caleteria. It
will be an opeJH:hurch wedding.
The bride has been honored with
bridal showers given by Mrs. Roger ·
Brandeberry and Mrs. Keith Brandeberry, one given by l,frs. Neal
Clark, Mrs. Joe Clark, and Mrs.
Tommy Vaughn, one given by Mrs.
· Don Robinson, and an afternoon tea
was held in honor of the bride by the
ladies of the Chapel Hill Cburch of

.
The open-church wedding of Julie Pullins.
A
reception
will
be held in the
Ann Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
church
hall
inunedlately
following
John K. Clark, Gallipolis, GaUipolis,
the
c~remony
with
April
Curry,
and Joseph Franklin Calvert, son of
Houck
and
Linda
Oats
as
Cherne
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Calvert,
hostesses.
,GallipoHs, will be lleld Oct .24 at 1
p.m. at Sacred Heart Church, Pl.
Pleasant, W.Va.
Mw;ic at 1 p.m. will be presented
by Barbara White and Brian Griffin.
GALilPOLIS - Final plans have
Father William Myers will · of·
•
been
completed lor the marriage of
flciate at the double-ring ceremony.
Tami L. Bush, daughter of Mr. and
Cathy Levy will be matron of Mrs. Herbert L. Bush, to Arthur
honor for her sister and the brides- Lilly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
maids will be Beth Gooderham and
Sally Baker, cousins of the bride- Meier.
The wedding will take place on ocelect.
tober
24 at 6;30 p.m. at the Chapel
Best man will be Steve Calvert,
Hill Cburch of Christ with
brother of the groom-elect, with
Christ.
'
ushers, Dave Knotts, brother-in-law
.of the groom-elect, and Brent East· ,-----------,...--------------1

Bush-Lilly

.

YELLOW ·.
cOOKING
ONIONS

This inclqdes items already discounted as
much as 50%

: and filing lor financial aid. In;.ronn.ation sessions will be from 1-3
; p.m. with a tour of the campus and
: nursing skills lab provided from 1-3

20% Off STOREWIDE

•

"

22)

19)

CHOCOLATE DRINK

'1 3.9

GALLON

8-16

REPEAT OF A WINNER!

· DUNCJUtl' HINES

4 LB.

BDNIE MIX
23

BAG

'129

oz.

BOX

~\

•would be marvelous if we cou ld take
:oters at face value , Unfortunately , .
~ this is sometimes unwise. Don't let
~~:~d ~:;.ssions catch vou off·

'

f

-~

2% .MILK

~-

GALLON
'
PlASTIC

iARIES tMarch 21,April19l Be tact·

20)

You .

may not take direction too well
today. or your instructions to subor·
dlnates could be confusing . In either
case, be careful .

I

GEMINI

(Mey

l·June

20)

sometimes good things come to us _
withoUt expending too much effort.
However, If you're looking for
50methino for nothing today you
may be sBdly dl5appolnted .

I

CANCER (June 21·July 22) You

, may have. to dea I with some restric·
., tive • conditions tOdav which .could
. • prevent you fr.om acting as in, ·

·~ dependently as you·~ like. Resisting .
' willmakemattersworse . .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Normally

~you ar"e rather optimistic, but today .

t.. negative
you might dwell more on the ·
aspect of a situation than ·
IIi on its positives ones.

!

VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Avoid
11Cquelntences todey who tend to lm·
pose upon your generous nature. If
you must deal wllh them, have an

ONLY

$179

~L.,

...

6.5 Ol
CAN

•

. FESTIVAL
ICE CREAM

BETTER SOUP 'N SAlAD BAR!

321 Vi1nd Strttl
F'oi1t F't..t

HAi.F

,,

IJ

,.

1

How Is saving filth received? "So then faith cometh by hearing,

heart of the believer and confidence in regard to things hoped for and
conviction In respect to things not seen, bUt revealed In God's word, It
cin only be Imparted bY hearing 'the word. Belief in and the knowledge
we have of God •.Christ and the Hoi'( Spirit ,-come·to us toda¥ by '!'fBY of
the word When the word Is taughF,f:Qe tes_t1mony of faith ls man1fested
and rece.lved In faith. The word is &lt;the demonstr•tlon of P!'oof to the
believer giving confidence to what is promised and convlct1on to what
ts ·t aughf The word testifies that ttlere are two eternal destinations of
the soul: heaven or hell "And these shall go away Into everlasting
nlshnient (hell); but the righteous into life en~erna~ fheaven" (Mtt.
~·46• The Christian hears the testimony, rece1ves •f by believing It
and cOnducts his life in harmonv to the word in ~egard to the two
-tlnatjons Ills once and for all settled I No doctnne nor philosophy
(an go bey~ it. Why? Because the Lord said sol The same things
should be true In respect to the testimony of lhe word In every realm of
fit hing WhY? Because all God's word l!i. truth. His power to save is In
~c ord' the gospel "For 1 om not ashamed of the - 1 of Christ:
for 1'f1s
power of 'God unto selvatl~ to every one that believeth; to
the Jew first, and also to the Greek" (Rm. 1;161 , He reveals His

rt httousness by the gospel, "For therein (the gospel! Is the
rl:..llousllln of God revealed from faith to faith; as Ills written the
;u llhllt live by faith" ( Rm. 1; 17!. Saving lallh coming from the faith
r.:..alod end received In faith (believing!_ leads us to complete
-IIIIICoto God's word In the whol• of ChristianitY.

·

of

'"tltti41

Bula.,.lle Road • P.O. Box :101
~LIPOLIS, OHI04!563t

-.

DETERGENT
22 Oz.

NO WITHDRAWAL

enci heerlng by the word of God" (Rm. 10 ;17!. Since faith Is to the

' '~'~{ .7GII rtt.uMia

.

f'

A consumer repurchase·agreement that does
not require you to get locked into a long-term
investment. You chooSe the term-from one to
89days; you choOSe the amount-from as little
as $3,000 to as much as $99,9991

_.__·THE RESULT!-You earn high 11 tterest oorriputad dally. The rate of
interest wll be de1811' dned e8ch morning and wll
be effective the same day. The rate wll float dally.
There's ab!!olutelv no penalty for premature
wtthcjrawal. You haw aoceea ao your money and
, 119 earned kt1et est wheneYer you chocse. And, of
courae, you can reinvest at the prevailing rate at
!hi end of your term.
·L.eavellklthe Ohio '1/aJei Bank to provide a
new 1nvesb11111'11 uppor1unlty thai does al this and
mora. 'Ybu 8f10Y the major advel1taQ9 of a dally ,
floltlng b• est ral8 raflecti tg today's market
conditionS. 'i'ou haw a short-term inoesb 119nt with

.

---THIS IS I T ! - Ohio vallsy Bank's Dally Investment Account as
. an alternative to Money Market funds is
particularly attractive for the smalinvestor who
cannot or does not want to tie his money up in a
' filled rate for six months, two and one-half years,
lour years or longer.
For .,,re Information, 081 or visit 1ny Ohio

Ylley Bank office.

.--FOR DAILY RATE
PHONE

446·2631
A. AepurcMse Agreement ~~ not.=~ dopOSI1 tnsured by the Fodural Dcpos•t
1ns~Kancc Cotrx&gt;ratiOn tnslefld . titS an .nvewoont secured by UndP.l'l
States GoOI('rnmenl obligatoos. a vety sate torm Ol tnwtslmonl

~cash lkJIIdlty.

__
·-...
.--·
.,. .,... "
lhiiAM

I
(

By William B. Kughn

- ' u l unchenvlng Inspired and complete word of GOd, the trUth or
tht oo..,lt There wlil be no otner revelation from GOd, •• Ht hll
lldtd In me gotpel everything we need to k,_ to bo 10voct and to
=.,t tile galnNYtr. Ills once and for all settled I Men hll no choice
to make when 11 comes to Ieith, for there is only_, When 0111 teaches
you tllet mere 1.1 more than one and to accept the faith of your choice,
biWareJ

what.

·..

•

SAVING FAITH

thlna we are to believe and obey. we are to do all that we can to
~the truth, keeping II unmixed from me teachings end doctrines
o1 men The one ralth has been dtllverec:l for all lime In tile perfect,

GALLOfl

understandlllV as to who pavs for

(Sharon) Darst. Attending were Lonnie and Lisa Darst,
Eloise Morris and Jason, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Smith and sons, James
and Roger, · Jr. Ul)able to attend
were James Morris and son,
Jeremy.

Lawrence

INTEREST RATE

• u

JOY LIQUID

$}39

Mr:

POMEROY and Mrs.
Calvin Smith, Route 3, Pomeroy,
celebrated their 50th wedding annlversary on Monday, Oct. 5. A dinner was given in thelr honor at the
home of thelr granddaughter, Mrs.

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE•. -.

18"..! IGr the faith" and it has been "once delivered unto lhe 10ln11
IJ do 3) The faith 11 the contents ot ·belfef, the whole or total of

'

VALLEY BELL

Mr. and Mrs. Smith

1T089DAYS

How manv saving faiths are there? "One Lord, one faith, one bap·
. tl m" cJEph. 4:5). There Is but "one faith;" we are to "earnestly co~:

STARKIST
TUNA IN OIL

. POTA10 CHIPS

'
•

POMEROY - COAD senior gelatin, bread, butter, milk.
dtlzens center luncheon menu lor Thursday - .Meatballs and gravy,
this week;
' '
stewed tomatoes, green beans, apMonday - Lima beans and ham, plesauce, bread, butter milk.
pickled beets, vegetable gelatin ' Friday - Fish on bun, Harvard
salad, .peach cobbler, cornbread, beets, cottage cheese/pineapple,
milk.
butter, milk.
Tuesday - Macottage-beel, Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
tossed salad, battered broccoli, milk or buttermilk served daUy.
baked custard, bread, butter, milk. Please register in advance for your
Wednesday - Fried chicken, lunch. Pomeroy 992-2161.
mashed ,potatoes, kale, .red fruited

·
A reception honoring the couples
was held following the mock wedding. The refreshment table
leatund a ~tiered wedding r---------------------~~~=---------------L---~------------~---------------------l
cake decorated in fall colors which
was. served with punch, mints and
coffee. Arrangements of white
mums used m the table were
Grange•
Mrs. Ethel Grueser bad charge of presented to the honored coupleS.
Special recognition was given to
the program and introduced the
couples. On behalf of the Grange, Fred Goegleln with Lucille Leifheit
they were presented corsages and giving a tribute to him. Goegleln has
boutonnieres by Fred and Barbara served as master of the Grange lor
the past 21 years. He was then
GOegleln and Francis and Mary
Sllaeffer.
·
· presented with a past master's pin_
Highlighting the program was· a by the new master, Bill Radford.
During the regular business
mod&lt; wedding with BW Radford as
·meeting
Mrs. Leifheit, past master,
the preacher, Pat Holter and Rollin
by Harold Blackston, marassisted
Radford, carrying shotguns, as the
shall,
and
Frances Goeglein, emUlhers, Lucille Lellhelt in pink chifblem
bearer,
conducted a joint In!Gn, beige knee socks, and a fur cape
stallation
of
offleers lor Rock
81 the bride's mother; Nancy RadSprings
and
Hemlock
Granges. Inford in a dark print dress and picture
.
stalled
were
Bill
Radford,
Rock
hit as the groom's mother, and
Springs,
and
Rollin
Eastman,
LouiBe Radford as the pianist.
Helen Bblckston was In the role of Hemlock, masters; Margaret Hanning, Hemlock, lecturer; Robert
the flower g!rl and came down the
Reed, Hemlock, steward: Barbara
aillle tossing leaves from her very
Fry, Rock Springs, and Muriel Bradlarge basket, wh!le Nancy Morris in
ford, Hemlock, Ceres; Jessie White,
11 Ught blue gdwn with a pink picture
Hemlock, Flora; Roy Grueser, Rock
hat was the matron of honor. In the
Springs, assistant steward; and
role of the bride was Harold
Blackston, in a blue floor-length Opal Grueser, Rock Springs, lady
assistant steward. ·
gown and picture hat with long veU
A new flag was presented to the
CIII'I')'Ing a bou~!"' out
grsnge by Mrs. Fry and Blackston.
!Iowen. Opal Grueaer was the
Yvonne Young gave a report on the'
lfOOI1I and wore a dark suit. Best
man was Roy Grueser with Roy tubercUlosis levy renewal to be
Holter as the bride's father, and voted on in tbe November general
Ethel Grueser and Sally R!ldford as election. Corrine Hager was repor·
guest with humorous remarks 'ted ill&gt;
throughout the ceremonv.

the

RUFFLES·

INCLUDES:
• Tender fish fillets fried to
~With Shoney's
own !ipecial seasoning.
• Golden brown French fries,
(or baked potato 5·1 0 pm)
• Toasted Grecian bread
• Tartar sauce and lemon wedge. ·
'
• SHONEY'S JW..-YOU-CAN-00 BIGGER AND

joiiY.~ _

$159

BROUGHTON'S

: PISCES (Feb. 2D·March 20! II

C TAURUS (April 20.May

$1~

PEAK
PINTO BEANS

,.you hope to accomplish today,
~rather than to do it. It would be bet·
•ter to perform first, boast la'ter.

1o

oz.

BOffiES

"may find it easier to talk about what

r

49~.

BARRELHEAD ROOT BEER
&amp; . ORANGE CRUSH

You

ful with vour mate today about ·
familY issues. There's a possibility
:that something quite trivial could be
,. blown out of proportions.

tober 25 at the First Presbyterian
Church in Gallipolis from 2 to 4 p.m.
An open house invitation is extended
to all friends and relatives.

7·UP, DIET 7-UP,

···=- ··--=-:.:--,-·-..-'"':';":--.

Middlt"porl, Ohio

You

¥

SLAB BACON

The Sewing Center
''T" in

PKG. .

6 9"'"

SUPERIOR

SCAVENGER HUNT
BIDS TAKEN ON ALL FIXTl' RES &amp;
CAlliNETS
oDf.he

WIENERS

MIXED FRYER PARTS

November 12 - 19

=

. POUND

.

GOLD KIST

50% OFF

: are blessed with a very keen
• imagination. Unfortunately, you
:may use if in ways that are coun·
•terproducfive today. Instead of
"seei ng clouds, look for,sunsh ine.
: SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec;, 21)
"'Try no.t to let yourself become in·
:valved in commercial situations
~ today in which you lac k expertise
:and know-how . Costly errors are
•possible .
• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A
:tllilure to show the proper spirit of
• cooperation today could alienate you
; from associates whose help you
., might need. Be a team player.

t AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb.

Sl RLOI N STEAK

SUPERIOR

BIDWELL
Mr. and Mrs.
Vaughn Glaasburn will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary Oc-

Ohio Valey _Bank, where'you can and
should expect more, introduces t(Je

USDA CHOICE

ROYAL CREST

November 5 - 12

·: Aim high in the year ahead and
.. you'll have a better chance ·to sue·
: ceed . It'!&gt; better to shoot tor the
-.. moon and miss than to sight on a
~ streetlight and hit it .
~ LIBRA (Sept. 2J·Oct. 23) Your
" potentia ~ for success is very good
~ today , but there is a chance you may
.. make things more difficult for your·
;self than they need be. Look for eady
-toutes .

• ·SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov-

GAUON

30% OFF

October 18. 1981

LB.

39

I

HALF

October 29- Nov. 5

~ Astrograph -

$299

RHOUSE
STEAK

ORANGE JUICE

'·

'

· Interested persons should meet at
: the Fine and Perfonning Arts Cen: ter on the Rio Grande campus
: November 12.
: For further information, contact
: the Rio Grande Nursing Department
: or Office of Admissions at (614) 24:&gt;: 5353.

Racine; and D. Bryce and Sally
Sayre and children, Brian, Bethany
and Julie of Jackson. Also attending ·
wasa nepbew, George M. Sayre, Jr.,
Denver, Colo. and other relatives including Edwal'll and Hilda Beegle,
daughter, Patty, aru! her two
children d South Zanesville; Paul
Sayre, nephew of Fairview; N~
and Wilma Styer, Waterford, and
their granddaughter and a nephew,
Roger K. Wolfe, Ashtabula,.

Herbert L. l!lld Doris E. Sayre observed their 60th wedding anniversary Sunday with a picnic lunch attended by all the family members.
At the obserVance were W. Dean
and Eari1ise Sayre, Middletown,
Pa.: David B. and Dorothy Sayre,
Anticjulty: the sons ot the late
Derrell B. Sayre, a pilot killed at the
otitbreak of the Korean conflict, and
their families, Daniel B. and Donna
Sayre and aon, Daniel B. Sayre, Jr..

COAD senior's menu

A surpriSe celebration in ol&gt;servance of the wedding an·
niversaries of Mr. and Mrs. William
Grueller, married 60 years, and Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Goeglein, 29 years,
was held at the Thursday night
meeting of the Rock Springs

USDA CHOICE

VALLEY BELL

· October 22 -·29

: p.m.

T-BONE
STEAK

~, 5

October 15 - 22

: The presentation will include in: formation regarding the nursing
• program, application procedures to

Sayres' 60th honored

Smiths celebrate 50th

'

Gruesers' 60th observed

USDA CHOICE

WE SAVE
YOU MONEY
WHEN YOU .;

S _A L E

~ the college and 'school of nursing,

85 Vine Street
Gallipolis, Oh~
Phone 446-9593
"We R•M the Ri ~ to·Urn~ Quantity"
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 19~

BUY GENERICS
A j JOHNSON'S.

10% off all Fabric &amp; Notions

lassburns reach 50th

·Mr. and Mrs. .Glassburn

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.

2"::99¢

Final Going Out of Business ·

: nursing program.

H

HEAD
LETTUCE

This Is Our.·.

: RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande
: CoUege and Corrununity College
: Nursing Department and Office of
• Admissions will hold an information
: session Thursday, November 13, lor
: those persons interested in the
: school's two-year associate degree

nntversane~--~~--~-----~~
- --~--------· --------

-

ICEBERG

~Information

lsession pl~~ne

•

·""."'

Wedding plans are finali~ed
Clark-Calvert

•

r'

'(,
r

•

j
I

'

'

�Page-B-ID-The

Sunday
VANDERHOOF - The Glory
Read Singers of Colwnbus will be
presenting the Christmas
musical "The Highest Praise" at
the Vanderhoof Baptist Church
Supday, at9 :45 a.m. The public is
invited to attend.
HYSELL RUN The
" Revelators" of McArthur will
be featured at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church oo Sunday at
7:30 p.m. · during the regular
evening services. The public is invited to attend.
·
POMEROY - HomeComing at
the Morning Star United
Methodist Church will be held
Sunday with the worshlp service
at 9:45a.m. and Sunday school at
10:45 a.m. There will be a carryin dinner at noon, and the aftemoon program to begin at 1:30
will be presented by the Rev. and
Mrs. Robert Robinson.
POMEROY- Hymn Sing Sun. day at 2 p.m. at the Nease Settlement Church featuring the ·
Hannony Singers. Public invited.
MORGAN CENTER - There
will be a revival starting Sunday,
at the Morgan Center Gospel
Mission with the Rev. Joe Gwinn
as evangelist. Special singing by
the Joint Heirs and other groups.
Services start each evening at 7
p.m. Everyone welcome.
GALUPOLIS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Church Women (ECW)
will hold their regular monthly
bilsiness meeting Mo!'riay, Oct.
19, at noon . Guest speaker will be
Dr. James D?Ubleday.

CHESTER - Howard Frank,
county auditor, sill speak at the
regular meeting of the Chester
PTO on Monday, Oct. 19, at 7:30
p.m. Frank will speak oo the upcoming school levy to be voted on
in the Novl!liJ,ber election. Final .
plans for the jitney supper and
carnival to be held on Saturday,
Oct. U , will be made. All parents
of T-ball, pee wee and little
league teams are urged to attend.
A discussion will be held on the
use of the ball field by the high
school girls' softball team. Child
care will be provided and refreshmenta served. All interested
parents are urged to attend. ·
THE LONG BOTTOM Community Association will ·hold a
bake and yard sale on Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday, 10 a.m.
each day, at the community
building. There will be baked
goods and Iota of clothing.
THE MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's Club
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the Middleport Public Library.
Public relations chairman, Mrs.
AIwilda Wemer, will have charge
of the program and special guests
will be Lillie Misa and Mister of
Meigs County, Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit, Mrs. Janet Kom, and
Mrs. Addalou Lewis. The Club
will also observe National BWP
Week with the naming of a
1
' Woman of the Year.''

Tuesday
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Chamber of Commerce
will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
Ingels Fumiture Store. The agenda will consist primarily of plans
for the Christmas promotion. AJI
nrerchanis are urged to attend
the mee,ting.

THE GALUPOLIS Golf Club
Ladies' Association will sponsor

the final "scotch-foursome" tw&lt;&gt;ball event Sunday at I: 30 p.m.
REV. A. E. Blake, ChUrch of
God minister, will be the speaker
at the Stella Fuller Chapel Sunday, October 18, at 7 p.m.
Preceding this service at I :15
p.m. band concert, 2 p.m. Sunday
Schoo~ classes for all ages.
Tuesday, Oct. 20, the Rev.
Charles Mullins of Ranger, W.
Va. will speak and beginning

SENIOR Citizens Center, 7:30
p.m., Movie, Death by Someone's
Choice. Free. Open to public.
Sponsored by Right to Life
Society of Gallia County .

BAKER'S LANDING - There
will be a baptizing at Baker's
Landing Sunday at 1 p.m. by Rev.
Kenneth Saunders of Northup
Baptist Church.
NORTHUP - Rev. Kenneth
Saunders will preach at Northup
Baptist. C))urch Sunday at 7:30
p.m.

COUNTY·WIDE
Prayer
Meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Middleport Church of Christ in
Christian Union. Glenn Bissell
will be the leader.

Comiflg
Events

HANNAN TRACE Athletic
Boosters will meet at the high
school Monday at 1:30 p.m.

GALUA. COUNTY Historical
Society 2:30 p.m. St. Peter's
Episc!&gt;pal Church: Lawrence
McQuaid on "Foundries of Gallia
County." Board, 1 p.m.

MASON REScuE Squad wil
observe loth anniversary with
open house at the squad building
Sunday from 2 p.m. to~ p.m.

Oct.l

W.Va.

RIO GRANDE PTO meeting
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Guest
speaker Dr. Richard Simpson.
VINTON FRIENDSIDP Garden Club meet at home of Mrs.
Max Barnes at 12:30 P·l"·
Tuesday. Program is on flower
arrangement.

CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America, meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Inspection
V{ill be held. Members are to
wear white uniforms.

.•

MEIGS COUNTY Genealogical
Society, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the
musewn. There wiU be a review
of the FFO applications.

POMEROY - Meeting ol all
persons involved in the Pomeroy
Elementary School fall festival
6:30p.m. Tuesday at the school.

&lt;;AWPOLIS- Lafayette Unit
'll, American Legloo Auziliary,
will meet Tuesdlly at 7:30p.m. in

the Legloo Hall. there wiU be an
initiatiCII ol""" members.
POMEROY - A meeting of all
persons inVolved in the lall
festival ol the Pomeroy Elementary School baa been set for 6:30
p.m. Tuesday at the school. The
f.-tival is PrA sponsored~

f

MIDDLEPORT -Plana for the
1\lUlual Christmas promOtiiJII!il
program will be made at a
meeting of the Middleport Chamber of Conunerce to be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the Ingels Furniture Store in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT - The annual
banquet of the Homebuilders
Class of the Middleport 9burch of
Christ will be·. held Tuesday at
6:30p.m. Reservations are lobe
lll8de with Coleen Van Meter,
Pomeroy. Anyone who has ever
been a member of the class may
attend the banquet.
POMEROy-:: "'filidCileport
Chamber of Commerce, 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Ingels Furniture
Store. Agenda will consist
primarily of planning for the annual Christmas promotion. AU
merchants are urged to attend.
GALUPOLJS - Lafayette
White Shrine will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple. A worthy chaplain will be
elected and installed.

are

and·:~.

children _begin Wednesday
at the French Art Colony

''.
'~'

1,;
'"
two quarters. He haa continued -.;,

GALLIPOLJS - A unique op- classes, by calling Byers at 446-1903.
portunity for both children and The fee for the eight-week course for service in the Ohio NaUOIIII G~
adults to participate in theater- children is $25. The fee for the eight presently serving as the operatlcllllf
classes at {liverby, sonsored by 'the sessiOI!S for adults is $30 for mem- and training officer In Athena Pia!~"
French Art Colony and taught by bem of the French Art Colony and nJilg and Implementing the trllnl.nf.
Joseph F. B8Jlou of Athens, will . ~for non-members. •
begin on Wednesday afternoon, OcBallou's name is recognized
tober21.
locally for his recent direction of
Aa an Instructor of theater, ~
Accnrding to Janet Byers who is . plays produced by Theatre 36. He !line, in the theater ~=
chairing the arrangements and pre- holda his master ol fine arts degree College of Fine Arts, at Ohio UniWI'"
registration for these cla.sses .that In playwriting from Ohio University, slty, he Is responsible for teachlni
will continue on Wednesdays for along with his bachelor's in general
playwriting for OU at the ChiWCtJil!i!
eight weeks, an aftemoon ciaaa for studies, creative writing, sununa Correctional institute at Chillicothe.:
_..
.
children, ages 10 and uj,, will meet cum laude, from Ohio Universll)',
A number of Ballou's works ~If
each Wednesday from 4 p.m. until 6 also. He received the President's been JRiblished· He and, his wife
p.m. Then at 7 p.m., a two-hour class · Honor Scholarship in 1976.
two children live in Athena. ~
for adults will meet until 9 p.m. EJn.
He served in the U. S. Army from · French Art Colony feels fortunate td.
phasis in both the children's and the 1964 until 1973, and. then captain in have Ballou available to teach thei
adult classes for this eight-week the Ohio Anny National Guard form theater to both children and adultS'
series will be on ,w riting and per- 19'15 untll1978. He joined the staff of at Riverby, as an educati01181 apd,
formance. In both cla.sses, .the Ohio University . as a graduate cultural asset 'to the cominunlty, Ill(
registration will be limited to 15 par- assistant in the theater department well as the area 'surroundlDc
ticipants.
in 1977, assisting In teching history Gallipolis. Anyone interested 'in'
Pre-registration is required for of Greek drama and all un- either of the classes should · iJDo
both the children's and the adult
dergraduate playwriting courses for mediately contact Byers at 446-1110#. ·•

October 19, 1981 ·
You will be luck ier this com ing

year in ventures or enterprises
which you are able to control,
rather than with those which in·
elude partners. Don ' t be afraicl to
strik e out on vour own .
Ll BRA (Sept. :ZJ·Oct. 23) Your

goals will not be realized today
unless vou take active steps to ac·

compl ish them . Overcome your

tendenc ies

to

procrastinate.

Make yourself move .
SCORPIO COct. 14· Nov . 22) Be

careful

today .

There

is . a

likelihood you may repeat
m istakes similar to ones you
made In the pa st. Try to learn
from experience.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23~ Dec ,
21) You have an Inquisitive
nature. Normally , friends don't
find your curiosity offensiVe .
However , if you ask too many
probing ·questions today it could
J)i!rturb pals .

CAPRICORP( (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
You ' re capable of m a jor ac ·
complishments tOday, but those
w ith whOm you deal may find too
.much to admire in your methocls.
Protect your image .
.
AQUARIUS . (Jan . 20· Feb. 19)
Your way of doing things today
and the way your boss wants
things done could be poles apart.
It's best to !:Omply with his
wishes . He signs the pay check .
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Be
sure that all of your affairs are in
order before you attempt to tell
another how he or she should han·
die
th i ngs
today .
Your
suggestions may not be
welcomed.
ARIES (Maret~ 21 -April 19)
Others could butt in tOday in
areas normally your bailiw ick,
and disrupt your established
routines. Try to avoid con·
frontations.

says- _
H the Farmers
Ahnanac is·
right you 'II ·

The Buckeyes, snapping a twoditch touchdown at the Ohio State 33
gmae losing streak, took the lead lor
yard line.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
llllnols, dropping to :1-2 in the con- good on tailback Tim Spencer's
State survived another big passing ference and 3-3 for aU games, over- second touchdown, an eight-yard
perfonnance by·Illinois quarterback turned an early21-IOOhioState lead run with 3: 09 left in the third quarTooy Eason Saturday to defeat the and went on top 27-24 early in the ter. That gave the Buckeyes a 31-'ll
fllinl 34-27 and remain in Big Ten third quarter on a four-yard run by lead.
Bob Alba's seconcj field goal, a 2&amp;Conference football t!Ue contention.
Eason.
yard
effort, gave Ohio State Its final
The Buekeyes, now :1-1 in the . The Illinois quarterback,
margin
with more than 10 minutes
.league and 4-2' overall, thwarted hoWever, was more ~ressive
remaining.
.
Eason's line passing performance through the air, hitting 27 of 47
An
Ohio
Stacilwn
crowd
of
67,158
with three interceptions, the last by passes for 368 yarda. He has passed
outside linebacker Anthony Griggs. for more than 300 yarda in all of his watched the game, marking the 81st
straight home sellout for Ohio State.
With 2:05 left, griggs' interception Big Ten starts this season.
stopped the IUini's bid for a last·

~.

Wisconsin upset., 33:.14

....~

TAURUS (April 20· May 20)
Work in harmony with coworkers
today, not in competition. If each
serves his or her own interests,
nothing will be accomplished.
GEMINI (May 21· June 20)
Rather than going on a spending
spree today , it would be more
prudent to seek ways to trim your
budget. Funds c:an be managed
better.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) Be
concerned for those in your
charge, but don' t try to dictate
their every move today . Be too
demanding and th ey'll do the opposite of what you request.
LEO (July 23-Aug. ·22) Try to
give others "the benefit of the
doubt today . If you expect them
to respond in an unfriendly man·
ner, you may unconsc iously
create · conditions to bring this
about .
·
·
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your
tinancial prospects are encouraging today, but vou may
either take things· for granted or
fa"il to recognize opportur'lities
when they occur. Be alert .

CAUGm IN 'qiE BACKFIELD -llllooiiii'IIIIIIIDI
back Darrell Smllb, (%2) Is tackled In the backfield

City Sandals

llurblg Saturday's octioa by Ohio Slate defeaalve

lacldeJerome F01ter,(50). (APLaserpboto).

Garvey's homer keys
.LA victory., title .ti~t today

with genuine polished
calfskin uppers and
·
leather-covered
sculptured heels.
Flattery and fit!

.

.

Grey or Rust

:IIHI Second ,\ve.

Lafayette Mall

She's dre~~ ··.·. . .,~
.,
ofa Lane®
Christmas...

f

MONTREAL (AP) - Steve Gar·
vey's tw&lt;&gt;-run home run in the eighth .
.inning led the Los Angeles Dodgen .
to a 7-1 victory over the Montreal
Expos Saturday and evened their
National League championship
series at :1-2, forcing a deciding
game Sunday.
Dusty Baker also provided a big
offensive punch for the Dodgen,
drivll!g in the first run; then batting.
jn two insurance runs in the Los
~eles' four-run nintiJ ~' The Dodgers, who have never lost
in a lelll!ue championship sertea, will
'send rookie )eft-bander Femando
Valenzuela against Montreal's
veteran rlght.hander Ray Burris
Sunday.
Montreal, which needed to go five
games against the Philadelphia
Phillies to win the NL East Division
tiUe, Is seeking its first pennant in
the 13-year history of the frartc~.

.

The Dodgers won the West by in front 3-1 and send the series intO
beating Houston in three straight the showdown game. ·
Hooton, who won 11 and lost six
games alter· losing the fin1t two al
with a 2.28 earned run average
the Astrodome.
Saturday's game had been a pit- during the regular season, won the
chers' duel beween bard-luck Bill · first game in this series, H, also
Gullickson of Montreal and Los working 71-3 innings. He appeared to
·Angeles' Burl Hooton, who got win be In control of his secol'ld win, using
with relief help from right-hander his key pitch, a knuckle curve, to
Bob Welch with one out In the eighth work out of tough spots. Th~n in th!l
inning, and left-bander Steve Howe, eighth, the Expoo knocked him oot.
Rodney Scott started with a single
who worked the ninth. Hooton
to center, but was forced as Andre
allowed aU five Montreal fiV"e hlta.
Gulllckaon alruek oot BID Rassell Dawson hit liiCo a :&amp;elder's cbol~.
to open the Dodger' eighth, then 1ben Gary Carter olngled to center,
Baker, who had doubled in lhj! lir!Jt Dawson stopping at second.
That brought out Los Angeles
Dodger run in the third, singled to
mailager
Tom Lasorda, who swnleft.
.
That brought up Garvey, the moned Welch.
Welch did the job. He struck out
Dodgers' veteran first baseman and
one of baseball's top clutch hitters. Larry Parrish swinging and got
He hit Gullickson's first pitch· over Jerry White, whose three-run home
the left field fence for his first home woo Friday night's game, to fly out
run of the series to put the Dodgers tO center, ending the inning.

Yanks take breather Saturday
NEW YORK (AP) -Saturday was a day ofpeaceforthe New York Yankees.

·

Tbe Yankees, who returned from Oakland Friday night with the American League pennant, were

Only you can make her most cherished dreams of togetherness come
true. This Christmas, tell her how much you love her and symbolize it
with a Lane love chest... the beautiful, centuries-old gift of love.
There's not a more meaniniJful expression of your future hopes.
Come, discover our impress1ve collection of exquisite designs, each
crafted of fine cabinet woods and lined with fragrant cedar to
protect her treasured keepsakes for a lifetime. Selecther favorite
to win her heart and to seal your promise.

given the day off by Manager Boll Lemon, who scheduled workouts for Sunday and Monday.
New York opena the World Series here Tuesday night against the winner of the National League
Championship Series between Montreal and Los Angeles.
:
Left.hander Ron 'Guldry tentatively is set to pitch the opener and southpaw Tommy John goes m
the second game.
·

,,

STARTING
AT

'

. ••

BACKING AWAY - Los Angeles Dodgen batter
Ron Cey falls away from an inside pltcb by Mootreal

Expoo plteber Bill Gullicksoo In the second lnnlag of
Saturday's Natl01181 League playoff game In Mootreal.
LA remained aUve with a 7-1 win. (AP Laserpboto).

Nichol's three field goals top Michigan, 9-7
.
.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -Iowa
lreslunan Tom Nichol booted three
field goals and the No. 12
Hawkeyes's powerful defense made
. them stand up for a ~7 victory over
fifth..ranked Michigan in a Big Ten
football showdown Satlirday.

first punt and the Hawkeyes moved marching 68 yarda in 10 plays with
Steve Smith passing 17 yarda to All~n for 8 2().yard Nichol field goal
American wide receiver Anthony
seven plays later.
Carter,
who beat Iowa defender Lou
The next time the Hawkeyes got
King
for
the touchdown in the right
the bali Nichol concluded a 56-yard,
comer
of
the end zone and Michigan
seven-piay drive with a 36-yard field·
held
oit
to
the 7~ lead at the ball.
goal to give Iowa a 6-0 lead after one
In the third quarter, Iowa defen·
quarter.
sive
back Mel Cole intercepted a
Michigan
put
together
its
only
Iowa's Dave Strobel recovered
Smith
pass intended for tight end
drive
early
in
the
second
quarter,
Evan Cooper's fumble on the game's

..

need
LAYAWAY FOR
· CHRISTMAS
. .

.

DECEMBER 24th DELIVERY

CINCINNATI (AP) ~ The Pit- AFCCentral.
BrownsHostSalnts
tsburgh Steelen are III a stmgy
"The Pittsburgh steelers are
CLEVELAND (AP) - II the
mood as they prepare to play the among the best in the business,"
Cleveland Browns are at aU skepsaid Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg.
tical about the ability of New
Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.
The last two times theSteelers ''They have won four straight
Orleans rookieGeorgeRogen, they
traveled to Riverfront Stadirediumb~~ games, and this one is certainly very
heed only ask archrival Pittsburgh
turned1the baD-over an inc · e I lmpol'l!lntto both of us."
· about him.
times and lost both times. Unclerstandably, baD control was emphaslzed at \he Steelers' workouts
thisweek.
"Looking at the !lima, it looks Uke
CiJtclnnatltriestolackletheballand
ATiiENS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio University quarterback Sam Shon
JMiliCh the ball out," said Steeler runscored two touchdowns to lead the Bobcats to a 29-7 college football
nln&amp; back Coach Dick Hoek.
victory over Eastem Michigan in the Mld-American Conference on
The Steelers fumbled nine time$
Saturday.
and lost IeVen in a 34-10 drubbing In
Shoo br9ke the aU-time Ohio University record lor total yarda in a
1979. Last year, they loot four of
college career, with5,167 yarda, when he completed a pass to receiver
seven l'umblel in a »-211 setback.
· Mark Green in the first quarter. Sbon passed and rushed for 238 yards
They also suffered four inin the game.
ten:eptlallllri the two~·
The former record, 4,11116 yards, was set by Cleve Bryant In 1989.
The IWtpll have been • forAfter ROn Harter kicked an Ill-yam field goal In the first quarter for
the Bobcats, Eastern Mlchipn came back oo a IIJ.yard IOuchdown run
mldable fOe lor the Steelera even
thoiJCb they baVIII't been In conby halfback Richard Calhoun.
tention in the AFC Cen&amp;rall&gt;lvlllon
Ohio took the lead for good in the second quarter, when Shj)n took the

Cozy Sleepwear

This Winter.

Shon paces ou vi.c tory

·She'll love you

lor·a lifetime ,wllon lho llnds thla hoonwarmtng
Colontat love ohlll 'undtr hlr lrae. A.._ In
five wood ond three palnteclllntan•. ·

----etc. 0

OPEN
MON•.fRI.

..,._.,.,__.._

nu.,a,.M.

•

•

"

Craig Dunaway in the end zone, and
the Hawkeyes went 67 yarda in 12
plays. Nichol then hooted a 30-yarJI
field goalJ,hat put them ahead for
good.
The victory left Iowa with·a per- .
feet 3-0 conference record and 5-1 oo
the season. Michigan fell to 2-2 in the
Big Ten and 4-2 overall.

Bengals host Ste~lers in key NFL encounter

No.3"! Co lonial c:htl rry.

POMEROY - Voices of Uber.ty reheal'l81, 7:30p.m. Monday at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
ChW'Ch.

"

EAST LANSING, Mi~h. (AP)- Bryan Clark passed for three touchdowns, two to Darryl Tumer,
as Mlchigan State upset 14U.:ranked Wisconsin ~14 in Big Ten college football Saturday.. ·
Clark completed 18 of30 passes for 291 yards and set up a touchdown with.a 41'yard
as the Spartans won their first conference game in four tries.
Wisconsin, playing on the road for the first time this year, suffered its first Big Ten loss and feU
from first place with a 3-1 conference mark. Overall the SpartanS are 2-4, the Badgers 4-2. Mlchigan
State's 33 points was the most scored against Wisconsin this season.
Clark also threw a touchdown pass to Otis Grant and Aaron Roberts scored on a 1-yard plunge for
the Spartsna.

run

RACINE - The Racine PTO
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at
the school. The sixth grade room
mothers will serve.

THE MEIGS COUNTY C)lUr. cheB oi Chriat Men's Fellowship
will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at the
Zion Church ol Christ. Members
will load tnlcks to take !lema to
the Grundy Chriltlan home. After
loedlni the vehicles, memben
willat!lnd the reVIval being held
at the Zion Church.

-1

By GEORGE !n'RODE
AP Sporll Writer

· ~====-'~

'

C·

OSU outlasts
Illini, 34-27

.

.

.I

The sunday Times-sentinei-PaJ!.e- ·

••

.

\

oct. 11, 1981

'!~..

a Lane love chest,.the gift. that starts the.home

OAK lULL - Cardiff Club
regular meeting at Parish Grove
·near Oak Hill, 6:30p.m.

GALUPOUS - American
Legion Lafayette Post 27 will hold
a regular bueines meeting Mon!day, Oct. 19, at 7:30 p.m. at the
post home Dn Bob McConnick
Road. Special speaker Will be
Don Dunaway, Field Representatiye for Portsmouth Social
SeCurity District. All members
urged to attend.

Theater classes for adults

.'

Astrograph

Monday

GALLIPOUS - The monthly
meeting of the Gallipolis
Welcome W~gon Club will be held
at the Community room at the
Jackson Pike Branch of the Ohio
Valley Bank on Monday, Oct. 19,
at 7:30 p.m. There will be a
" speaker from the French City
Florist Shop. All members and
guests are welf ome.

•

•;
•

..

I·--',,,-.
, . --------~----------T---~----------~--------~·~--~-

-·-·'

Rogers, who. le~da the Saints
against the Browns on Sunday,
carried the ball25 times and picked
up 77 tough yarda in a 20-6 New
OrleanslosstoPittsburghtwoweeks
ago.
He added 134 yarda oo 17 rushes in
a 31-14 loss to the unbeaten
Philadelphia Eagles last Sunday
giving him 624 yards oo the Y""")'bat's third in the NFL behind
Houston's Earl Campbell and
Detroit's Billy Sims.
The Browns, 2-t, have been hampered by injuries.
Quarterback Brian Slpe, tlie
NFL's m!)8! valuable player laSt
year, sa tout the final quarter of S~
day's 13-7loss to Pittsburgh after abo
sorbing a violent hit by linebaekir
Jack Lambert. He will start IIlia
Sunday, Rutlgtiannaid.
Others hurl ·but expected to play
for the Browns include wide receiver
Dave ~an, bothered by inj~Jl1d ·

.

�•

•

Page-C-2-The sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

•

w. Va.

Oct. 18, 1981

Eagles stay unbeaten with 32~0 win over High~anders
EAST MEIGS-Friday evening
before a large h&lt;mecomlng crowd,
Eastern's Ellgles nested victory
number seven Wider Ill wings with a
stunnin8 3U victory over the Southwestern Highlanders to remain un" beaten in all games.
In the early portions of the contest,

•

::;:.~'!:~=:::tr~

EaStern 13 In jut eight plays. The
"drive was thwarted, however, by the
tough 'Green wave' defenae, wlllch
has been a domlnanl force on the
local grid scene this season.
Later on.ln the period, after b'oth
teams seemed to be eternally staUed
offensively, P.G. Riffe broke the ice
on a spectacular 76 yard punt retum
with I :29 on the clock in the first
period. The PAT run failed but the
big play swayed the momentwn
towards the hometown club.
With iust 51 seconds left in til!'
half, "Mike Bissell jaunted into the "
end zone from ten yards out. AJohn
John Reibel

Back

Florida
State is
• •
VICtim

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)"- Fourthranked North Carolina overcame a
HHl halftime deficit and rallied
behind the running of tailback
Tyrone Anthony to whip North
Carolina State 21-tO Saturday in an
Atlantic Coast Conference football
game.
A record crowd of 56,200 watched
Anthony rush 32 limes for 183 yards,
109 in the second half, to lead the Tar
Heels' comeback.
Anthony churned out the yardage,
but tactical errors by North Carolina
Slate and lhe Tar Heel defense made
the difference.
• · &lt;;:~ Leading J().{l at intennission, the
Wolfpack tried an onslde kick to
open the second half. The Tar Heels
recovered on their own 49.
North Carolina drove lo its first
score in 10 plays, the touehdown
coming on a 1-yard run by fullback
Alan Burrus with 10:38 left in the
third quarter.

j

c

,

delermlned effort.
toolt over. By the Ume the. ball waa .
Tbe lllcldnc game added to the •· snapped only three "seconds
dternont of the evening as both remalnect:
teamB produeed better "tban
Time ran out with the ball in the
avergagepuntaalangwltbexcellent · air," Vogel and bls . defender
coverage that kept both Ieima in the almultaneously going for the ball,
hole.
•. and eventually CClllllng down with
Juat as the ICOI'eboard indicated tbe winning catdl.
llllW the laat fCCW seemdl of the
Ed Moore led the Bobcats "with 78
game,both teams played nearly yards nllblng on 18 carries.
even. Both oo the ataeboard aod
Following Moore In yards l1llhlng
~=~~~ SVAC, while statlllically
the lwo SVAC f - bet- waa Tim Barr with 42 yards ooseven
carries, while Waugb had eleven
The entire conteat kept fans on tied evenly In every cakgory.
In
the
1aat
minute
of
the
game
yards on lour attempts. The t.e KC
both sides of the Held standbig, thus
Southern
had
the
ball
deep
In
ltl
own
recepiiDD waa the biggest play of the
setting the stage for the grand
territory
and
faced
a
fourth
down
game,
a 41. yard game-winning pass
flllale.
Coach Bill Porter of the Southern situation aa time ticked away. reception.
Southern elected to go for the bomb
Dave Talbott led SHS with 71 yarTorna~ said, "This waa a
tremendou's ballgame. We played a and the win, putting 'Its dependable da on 13 attempts, Ra Thornton was
LOOKS FOR RUNNING ROOM - Soatbem's
puling game to the test.
9 for 58, Allen Tuc!ler 6-29, Greg
Wade CemMI!Iy (22l Ioob for numiDg room in this
tremendousl&amp;:!tatandlng ballgame
Wltll j,.l seconds left on the clock Nease 6-29, Wade Connolly 4-28, and "
and Kyger
played equally as
Sbawo '111oma1 pboto taken Friday duriDg the ttcRob Waugb hauled down an in- JohnPorter3-14.
··
well. Neither team should show any
shame."
\
tercepUon on the Southern 41 yard
Passing-wise Porter was three of
line, aettlng up a dramtlc ending.
nine for 47 y~.
The hard hitting affair becalne
Wltll no time outl remaining aod
Kyger Creek hosta Southwestern
more inlel!ae as the night grew one
13aeconds on the clock, KygetCreek Friday while Southern g- to North r - - - - - - - - - - - ;
with both clubs exhlbl~ an eqwilly
Gallla.

By SCO'lTWOin:
RACINE-For ·nearly four full
quarters the Kyger Creek Bobcatl
and Southern's Tomaa locked
. horns In a scoreleu deldloct before
Chuck Vogel hauled down an Ed
Moore pass as tune ran out to give
the Bobcats a hard-fought ~ win.
The dramatic sloryboc* win boosted
the Bobcats of Coach Deryl Well to a

Statlstlci

Department
First downs
Yards rushing
Yards pass'lng

Total yardage
!=lasses att.
Fumble completions
Fumbles lost

SW
E
3
11
31 51 35-228
67
so
118
!78
12
14
12
14
c

2

Interceptions
l'unts· total yds.

2·1
5-182

l'un'tlng avg.
l'enaltles

36"
2 10

By quarters :
SWHS

3

4-2
3· 114
38
c

4·20

oooo-o

Eaatern

6 8 12 .....32

Early In the final round, freshman 1
~.
quarterback Jay Carpenter took"~--~;;;;~~------~~~--~ ,.~
c

. .

. . . . .

over as quarterback with his varstiy

counterparts. The signal caller led

BASEL, Switzerland (AP)- Ivan
!..end! of Czechoslovakia defeated
Eddie Dibbs, 6-1, 6-&lt;I to advance to
the semifinals ofthe $75,000 Swiss in·
door tournament
In other action, Argentina 's JoseLuis Clerc eliminated Stan
Kruzevitz 6-2, 6-3 ; Trey Wallke
defeated Sammy Giammalva 6- 1, 62; and Heinz Gunthardt outsted

,. . •~·i•• the -styles may change

MEMBERS

over the years, the quality

EMERGENCY ROAP SERVICE

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How the top
teaflUI In The Auociated Preu
Ohio high school foo\ball ratings fared:

The Best.
;;;- A, """
,. .Men's frye

Dark

v...,,

The
:Yik Q)Pu (UJ .
Sh:;-"'lfoe Ca£e
1.'
c

THE
AU'fOMOBILE CWB Of SOUTHEASTERN "OHIO

land

Salonlayc

jE~c=ua=d=o~r=·s~An=dr=e=s
=G=om=ez~S-4~,~~~.6-J~~~~~3~6~0~S~e~c~o~n~d~S~t.~,~G~a~i~li~po~t~is~,~O~H~.,~44~6~·~06~·9~9~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3.

1

»-7.

7, Steubenvlllt,

a,

ctncinlllti

Shawnee lS-9.

6-4).0,

BASKETBALL

Ntdtul BadleiMU Auodatioll

DETROIT flSTONS-Waived Donnie
Koonce, gWird, and KeiU\ Herron, for·

ward.

·

FOOTIIALL

Natloul F.....U l.eqat

PITTSBURGH

STEEU:RS- Walved

Jolwlle Dtr&lt;len wide receiver.
SAN FRANCJsOO 4iERS-Si&lt;ned Jim
[AOney Uneblcker. Pllced Lenvil Elliott.
,.,.,.,.; bodE, on lhe Jnl...., _,.. 1111.
WASlllNGTON
IU::DSKINS-Sicned
Dallll8 Aictman, Uneba,;Rr. WaivM Cri1
Cr111y defeuh'e bid.
'
HOCUY
Ntu-1 Hdey Lelpe

'

TORONTO
MAPlE
IEAF8-Troded
Pit Hickey, lett .,Lng, to the Ntw York
Hangen for future Consfdentlonl.

"
Lima

9, ctneinnaU Princeton, 8-1_., beat Fait-field ~7 .
10, ColumbWJ Eutmoor, 7.0.0, beat 0&gt;

3
2
0
0
6-56

By quarters :

To fulfill future drilling programs wi'ite or call and be

7

219
41

sure to include property location and acreage that is
available lor lease. Also those that have oil and gas
leases that are due to expire within one vear.

260
9
1
1
0

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM
CO.
.

0

.

3-35

P.O. Box 74

" 0006-6

Southern

Ironton, Ohio

Ph. 614· 532·0101

45638

0 0 0 ()-{)

....

10, l".anMvtlle

Weot

beat Pbllo 12-7.

MuKingum,

.

We're

744,

ClASS A
1, Newark Catholk, 140, pllyld Utica

.

~,.

2, cadiz, &amp;HI, lOll to Toronto 17-0.
.3, Struburg, 6-J-G, lost to Midvale ~

4, WaynHVWe, 740, beat Lees Creek

"ENERGY SAVERS
Carter
&amp;
Evans
87 Olive St. ·
Gallipolis, OH.
• s
POlJ Ian Ch a1n
aWS
14 IN. SAW WITH
4 PK ENGINE OIL

16 IN. SAW WITH
4 PK ENGINE OIL

'169 95

'23995

*28995

After Sale Price $194 . 90

SALEM

Woodchoppers
Maul

$}399

'

•••

HEART~GLASS

After Sale
Price '18.29

~~

WOOD
Satin black wood rack
keeps wood stacked and
ready for use. •

'

VALULINE GLASS SCREENS
With antiQue hand rubbed look, energy saving glass screen

rildlates fire's heat Into ttle' room whlle eliminating I.OS$ of
heat up the flue. Simple to assemble ... onlv a screwdnver Is

• Fload-huggtng lreaa
• Smooth·r•dmg POI~esler cord

body
• Gooayears best·sell tng tltas
ply ltre

No tra,da needed.

Wh ttewalls slightly htgher

• The strength of 4 full plies of polyester

SALE PRICE

Size

• Hard-pulling deep·
· seated tread cleats
• Effective in slush,
snow, and hard pack
• Built tough to resist
the hazards of winter

~~~~~i;~i~![~Size P155f80R 1
2

[

lib•

ITAtl ••••

A
..........

good •lfr!W.

Sfl• Fl,.
(
/Hhlll. P 7305.1
Stale Farm Insurance Companies
Home Oll1ces : Bloomington, Illinois

&lt; ---

Plus $1 .40 FET .

Blackw
• All season tread des1gn
lor all
traction in mud and snow: plus
Qu1et highwa y nde
• Gas-saving radial construchon
~;~:-~:- -1· Over 10.000 gr1ppmg edges

· ;·~~=

MAINTAIN STOPPING DISTANCE

BRAKE
SERVICE·

ANTIQUE BRASS

fireset complete
with poker, shoven and
broom.

7

$ 988

·'45 79

FITS OPENING

U.S. STOV_E

COAL/WOOD ' HEATER
.
"
~nort1l'r $10 oact. 1~.;sv Ull ~ ~ me
~n . uslest way rver

to'"·.

StJI a I lie trlllf'llil.l
Now. vet ilgrelt·IOO•Ina
to install it . iJR(I 520 fliCk Ill ·
rectlv from Armurong lut

L.•r~ upecity

illr·tlghl

f lr.box.
heavr" duty

'

construction. automatk
non-electric

rnmv. IWUuW! m it Sll«1ill ofrt!r
" on for a Hmltto wnt onl'l

th«moatal.

one lo•d of coal
provfdn ltudY ne.t for
10 hour:l or longer. Al10

SPECIAL PllCING 11 EFfECT

burnswtiOd .

Coventry

tWitch. 617·3U'·

.

~

PLASTER.

American ~tovellolrd

:

'12

WOOD·

$999

Bleck wood basket
can also be used as
" 1 meoaz111e ra~k,
Or
fiOW41T '
arrangements.

.•

c

.

(

,I .•1

1

"
"
··.-....I:.. ,.,,JJ
~I
. 1

Com pact Cars

•

"426 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

""ec~ge o11r1111 Ieaklno

1--Iolf.

road test car · Most U"S.

~

312 111111 Sitltt
671·1160
,..
Store Hours: Mondlr·fridll 8 l"m" to ~p.m., Sltu1d11 8 l"m. 10 12 loon

aulallno value. A raiUCI
baldlllll on lllrlace _ ,

&amp;

Group 3-24
3 Year
Wananty

"""T~ ·~,~

of ncep!IOIIIIIV lllglllnc

The nner 11 back lloard

lining , all A wheels . New front grease
seals . Resurface drums · Repack front
bearlr;vs - Inspect hydraUl ic system ·

•Bnt In Startini Power
•Lon1 Life
~ Mainten·anc:e-Free

Helpl protect metal from sa It . Helps
prevent rust on new cars. Helps rust
from 1preadlna on older cars . All
vulnerable 1ru1 spray coated.

' ..II •,,:1 ··''
L.:: Roy1i Oak .

CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY COMPANY

Made of IIHI IIIMII.

OR
.
4·WHEEL DRUM: Install new brake

cars, some Imports.

'

•
Jl
')

~

•.,

BOARD
29

After Sale Price '27 .19

handle and tip over

"•\

"~

;...u.K •N:-:·; r
.,

$29

c

wheel bearings " Inspect calipers and
hydraulic system · Add fluid &amp; road test
car. (Does not Include rear wheels) .

Add fluid

o• "MANY rAmus sm rwo WAYS.

...,.

~- -

99

~·

RUST·
PROOFING
Applied By Qualified
Personnel

Addlllonol porls
and
services
extrl If neldtd.

front brake pads and grease seals ·
Reaurface front rotors • Repacks front

SALE PRICE

After Si!te
Price $395.95

Heater

BATTERY

2-WHEEL FRONT DISC: Install ntw

IWW Ctlltng , I r@all~ llmplt Wil"f

Instant "fen forCed 1320
watts. Wide angle knob
selector with positive off
position. COOl fold down

·.

c

022-616/3407 29" to 37'h'' 24'' to 27'h''
022-62&lt;1/3408 29" lo 37V7'' 28 to Jl'h''
022·632.l3-409 35'' to 42112" 29 to 31112"

EX IDE

Your Choice

Bla~;k .

.

Single ·Bit

stained wood
handle. '

biiDkwll

Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446·4290

required. Available In three sizes.

SALE PRICE

ARVIN

3'h lb. single .
bit axe with

• plusS150F~T

2·olv
lood "'""" e.
ptut 11.53 FET

PRICE

FIRESET

RACK

After Sale
Price 118.40

•2700
A71" 13, .lloliWIII

Pcii/IODII

CAROL SNOWO~
· 417 Second Ave.{i./;{

ooOZ$

Axe$1299

78

for tractton

Sledge eye with 36 in.
straight handle.

VERONA-SALEM

P.ra-Saason Val

lllfdl.

PARIS (AP) ~ David Graham
shot a 72 for a 143 totsl and took a
one-stroke stroke at the haHway
point"of the Lancome Invitational.
Four players were tied for second
with 144; !sao Aoki of Japan, Hugh
Baiocchi of South ..All'ica; . and
Americans Clll1i!i Strange and Bobby Clampett
-

Goes with any decor, handsome tough antique brass l~ok painted finish

C.OOD]fYEAR

for •II
yourlamlly
lnturiiiCI

Graham fires 72

HART

ANTIQUE BRASS

was Idle.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Beulah P':."%'.J:"sleJn Ma&lt;lon, 7.(&gt;0, boat Rock·
has received tentative approval fonl Parkway 15-0.
from the Ohio Racing Commission to ..:0,M=ldi..,~2-11, loot to North Lima
conduct l" controversial quarter
1o, a.edMlle Eutom, 744, beol Pal·
'
roit SouUnre!Mm 3U.
horse meeting next year, says r--------------l
Beulah Genersl Manager Bob
Hou.ser.
Neighboring Scioto Downs; a harness track, fought the Beulah quarter horse dates on grounda they
weren't being raced on consecutive
dates. But Houser said the Friday,
Saturday and Sunday programs did
constitute consecutive dates.
The Beulah quarter horse meeting
next year would run from June 11
through Oct. 8, Hol151!1' said Friday.
The
The commission is expected to approve the quarter horse dates at its
f0111
next meeting Nov. 19, he said.

After Sale Price 5319.00

After Sale Price $264.00

s.o.e,

8, New Phlladelp!U Tuscarwas Catlll&gt;
lie, 7-G-0, beat Wat Wayette Rkigewood
,..7," Tiffin Calvert, 6-1-CI, beat Sanduaky

.
on h orse meetmg

All With Solid
State Ignition

18 IN. SAW WITH
4 PK. ENGINE OIL

5, Btai..Wville,

8"eU lab get S OK

BAISEBAU.

contract.

s

Kyger Creek

URGENTLY NEEDEDI

-.o.

East Cllnton 56-G.

Frldl.y'a Spor11 TnllladiOilll
By'fMAModa\etiPrHI

PITTSBURGH PlRAtts-Slaned Bill
Madlock, third bUeman, to a als:-yea.r

8c

42
201

Interceptions
Fumbles
Fumbles lost
Penalties

s

KC
159

Passes attpt.
Passes compt.

..

diaf!. Valley Nofth lf.J:t.

Transactions

......,..._

Seathenl game. Moving iD for tbo stop is an unldenUfledBobca~ Rob Waug~ (20) and Tim Barr (3tl.

OIL AND GAS LEASES

Shl'lt'llee
I, lloyUn R4lh, OM, played lloylon P&amp;
lmGnS.tunlay,
II, Net.m-Ufe-Yort, 7-4-0, beat Belpre

lumbus Marion-Franklin 28-13.

. ·Automatic
·Portable ·

Ameriua Leap
TORONTO
BLUE
JAY8-011trighted
Charlie Belman and Greg Wells, first
· basemen, to Syracu.!e ol the International
LtagllC!. Added Ron Shepherd and Ray
Schroeder, outnelders, and Man Eichhorn, pitcher, to their tl).rmn roster.

Cleveland.

8, WuhlnJtM Coort H-. " 7~ beat
Ashville l'ely1 Valley ...7.
7, Urbona,
7. .,
beol S!xinlfleld

played Wintersville

Elder, &amp;.i-o, belt

5+0. played

Carroll 2f.7.
4, lrmton, 7..o.G, beat AthtnJ G-31.
S, Akron St. Vinc«lt-St. Mary, &amp;-1-0, Iori
to Mullllon IH.

6, Gahanna, 7.6-0, tat GaDony West·

300 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

~urday.

Yards rushing
Yards passing
Total yardage

Benedictine, f.O.O, .plafl!d
Cleveland Holy Namo Saturday.
3, Hamilton Badin, 7+0, beat Dayton
2,

1, Clnclnnatl MoeUer, 7....0, beat ClncJn.
1'18tl St. Xavier 37-3, .
.
2,
A&lt;llnglon, 7.(&gt;0, belt Rey·
noldsburg 56-fi.
3, Canton McKinley, 7.0.0, ~t North
canton Hoover ~.
~ Lakewood St Edward. 000. played
Cleveland St. llfl8llus Satun:lay.
5, Cleveland St Joeeph, 6+0, played at
Menlo&lt; Lake ColhoUc so-y.

... .· ' . ·. ' Bools at:

ClASS A.\
Y'ounaltown Mooney,

Boanhan

llASSAAA '

'
1

Phone: Di!y- 245·911t
Night- 245·5820

1,

ranked

~

LARRY MILHONE'S SOHIO

...._..._
Stallltlcs
......,...-ent
Flrsld.Wns

How they fared ... .

always remains the same.

RIO GRANDE • NEW LISTING

Lendl tops Dihhs

"Tar Heels
in comeback
victory

14 yard run. A Mike Hauber kick attempt was blocked,but the Eagles
.led :111-0.
With jut six seconds left ill the
same period Greg Cole hit paydirt
· for another score to make the score

Potter had one ~ for 17
yards and Gilbert one for liO yards
for SWHS. Riffe caugbt two ap1ra1s
for 38 yards 81111 Greg Col~ one for
12.
Eastern travels to Hannan Trace
Friday to stay in the hunt for the
SVACcrown.

Buy classifieds

ENJOY GOOD NIGHT - Two Eastern players continue to paee
tbelr team In Friday's J%.8 SVAC victory over Southwestern. P. G. RHfe
(80) had a 76 punt return and an iDtercepUon on defease. JobaRelbel (21)
rushed for 138 yards in 17 carries iDcludlog a touchdowo and convenioa
run.

PIITSBURGH (AP) - Quarterba ck Dan M arl·no • wear1·ng
special pads
to protect
a bruised
shOulder,
tossed
three touchdown
passes and set three school records
to lead third-ranked Pittsburgh to a
42-14 victory over 11th-ranked
!?lorida State Saturday.
Safety Tom Flynn also returned a
punt 83 yards for a touchdown and
linebacker Sal. Sunseri returned a
pass interception 22 yards for
another score as Pitt, 5-0, avenged a
19110 loss to Florida Stale, 4-2, that
cost the Panthers a possible national
title.
Pill tailback Bryan Thomas
finished the scoring with a six-yard
iouchdown run with 2:14 left in the
game, capping an afternoon in
which he rushed for 217 yards on 23
carries.
·Marino, sidelined the previous
game with a bruised throwing
shoulder, returned to action wearing
a flak jacket and special shoulder
pads. But he became Pitt's all-time
career leader in passing yards and
total completions, and his " three
touchdown passes boosted his
season total to 16, another school
record.

Casale Sbeeis.
In the third period, the winners
shot out of the gate as Mike Bissell
again trotted In to the endzone on a

the Eagles into the endzone for the
fifth time of the night,capped by a
seven yard run bY Riebel. \)le ~I
yard drive waa highlighled bY a rl
yard PasS from Carpenter to Riffe.
Statistically, Riffe and Cliff Griffith pulled down Interceptions for the
Eagles, while N(J:k Leonard sec;ured
a fwnble recovery. Todd Norton had
9 tackles and Leonafd eight. "
For Southwestern Jerome Potter
had eight tackles and Ron Carr
seven. Scott Lewis had an interception, while Rainey and Gilbert
each had a fiUDble recovery "
John Riebel rushed for I~ yards
on 17 carries, while Bissell !'las eight
lor 32 yards, Cole three for 21, and
Joho Beaver five-21. Ron Carr led
Southwestern led with 54 yards on
" nine carries.

P.G. RHfe
170 lb. Sr.

•

15a lb. Sr.

Riebel run followed to glve the
Eagles a IH halftime lead.
At halftime, Eaatilrn's fans were'
treated to an exceUent halftime
show by the Southwestern band, an(!
a nice homecoming ceremony which
featured the outltandlng tslents of
the Eaatern lllgh School band. The
ceremony featured !ormer queens of
the past" decade, followed by the
CI'Olt'llinll of the 1981 queen, Miss

Game ending·· play gives KC
6-0 Victory over ·Southern

,._t

675-3930

�Pag-C-4- The Sunday Times:sentinel

Oct. 11, 1981

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

oct. 11, 1911

Meigs -game has everything; Marauders defeat Wellston
By LANCE OLIVER
POMEROY- It was freewheeling

football at Its ~O&lt;rt exciUng - faked
long passes, spectacular
touchdowns.
And when the game clock struck
0:00, the Meigs Marauders owned
the hefty end of a 3+21 score, handing the Wellston Golden Rockets
their fifth loss of the season.
·
Fpmbles killed the Golden
Rockets, as the first three Meigs
touchdowns came aa a result of
Wellston bobbles.
The most outstanding Meigs
recovery came with 17 seconds
remaining In the first quarter when
defensive end Randy Murray picked
up a loose ball In WeUaton's back·
field and trotted 36 yards for a toul'bdown.
Wellston was the first on the
scoreboard with a charge toward the
goal Une after the opening kickoff.
The Golden Rockets saved their
drive with a fake punt that netted a
first down and two passes by quar·
terback Scott Massie.
With a fourth down and seven to go
on the nine yard Une, the Golden
Rockets lined up for a field goal at·
tempt, but Massie took tile snap and
passed to Brad Benson who made a
shoestring catch In the end zone.
Meigs' first score foUowed Dennis
Thornton's second fumble recovery
of the game with I :37leftln the first ·
·quarter. On the next play, Roger
Kovalchik slid tllrough the grasp of
the WHSdefense to travel the 17 yar·
ds to the goal Une.
kicks,

On the kickoff after the Murny
touchdown, Wellston fumbled again
and the Marauders began a.drive as
time ran out in the actiCJO-Rilcked flrstquarier.
'·
In eight plays, an of then;l on the
ground, Meigs completed its firsl
sustained drive of the game to take a
22 to 71ead as Dave Barr's kick split
the uprights.

Lambert rolled for 173 yards in the
game on jusl17 carries. The slippery
halfback shouldered almost the entire load of the -Golden Rockets'
sro1111d game.
The Maraudel'll exhibited a balan·

0
280
5
0
1
3
1
4-40

Fumbles loSt
Penalties

By Quarters :
Meigs
Wellston

113
317
16
6
1
9
4
5·45

15 7 6 6-34
7 0 7 7-21

·w arren Local tops Wahama, 41-8
ByGaryCiarll
Floyd Griffith scored three touchdowns and rushed for 128 yarda
Friday night In leading the Warren
LGcal Warriors to a convincing 4HI
triumph over an Injury plagued
Wahama White Falcon team.
warren Local lived up to Its 64
·record in its · first ever meeting
with the White Falcons by rolling up
384 total yards enroute to the lopsided victory. Griffith scored on
runa of two, five and 23 yards as the
Warrion scored 20 first half points
before Icing the game with 21 more
tallles In the third period.
Wahama entered the contest with
three starten on the sldeUnea due
to Injuries and unfortunately losl
their roilrtli' on the lint series of
playa when Travla Gray suHered a
broken wrist.
The defeal was the third In a row
for tile local grldden and for the
first time this season the White
Falcons own a .500 record at 44.
Only two games remain In the 1981
season for Wahama wtth st. Mary's
' visiting Mason next week before the
bend area team journeys to Buffalo
In the season finale.
Warren LoCal wasted little time
In gaining the upper hand when
tbey scored on their first
poaaeoaion. The drive began on
their own 43 yard Une and covered
fl1 yarda In ten plays. Griffith, the
workhone In the drive capped the
series with a twO'yard run on fourth
down. The extra point pass at·
tempt feU Incomplete leaving the
v1alto1'8 with an early ~ lead.
On the ensuing kickoff Warren
Local recovered a Falcon fumble at
the Wahama 21. The White Falcons,
aided by a 15-yard penalty were
able to stop the Warriors at their
own nine when a Held goal attempt
was blocked doe to a low snap from
center.
Wahama moved the pigskin from
their own ll·yard Une to the Warren
Local 16 before the drive bogged
down. This was to he the deepest
penetration of the game by the
White Falcons except for their lone
scoring drive late In the fourth
quarter.
The Warriors Increased their
lead near the end of the half with

two quick touchdowns. The first
came at the 3:16 mark of the
quarter when fullback Ron RH!Ie
went 18 yards for sb: polnta. The
PAT attempt faDed. Just over two
minutes later the vlslton struck
again on an 18 yard aerial from '
quarterback Randy Swick to Tom
Gessel Swick ran the extra politts
to give Warren Local a ~ hslf. ·
time advantage.
Things weren't any better for tile
White Falcons in the third period as
the Warriors scored all three Urnes
they bad the ball In the quarter.
They took the second half kickoff
and marched 72 yards In 12 plays ·
with Griffith covering the final five
yards for the touchdown.Swlck hit
Gease1 for the PAT to Rive Warren
Local a 2lll edge.
A oass ..lnterceutlon set 1l1l the
visitors neil score at the Wahama
23 yard Une. or;ce again Griffith
scored the touchdown on a 23 yard
scamper. 'Mike Pahl booted the
extra point to make It ~The Warrion final score was alao
set up by an Interception with Andy
Short p888ing to Mark Magers for
the m to cap a nine play 53 yard
drive. The extra point pass fen
Incomplete.
·
Wahama -managed to get on tile
board midway through the final
quarter when they drove 73 yards In
just seven plays. Kevin James
sparked the drive by completing
three aerials for 51 of the 73 yards.
Donnie VanMeter s&lt;:ored the lone
Falcon touchdown of the night on an
eight yard run. James ran the elrtra
· point to make It 41-11,
·
Like the score· Warren Local
dominated the statistics In cart
turing the victory. The Warriors
totaled 15 first downs, had 282 yards
rushing. And 102 more passing.
Wahama had 10 first downs, 98
yards rushing and 104 yards
tllrough the airways.
Individually Griffith gained 128
yards whUe Riffle had 79 yards In
seven carries. Wahama was led by
Kevin James with 114 yardi In 18
tries whUe Donhle VanMeter had 30
yards In eight attempt&amp; Swick
completed seven of 12 passes for 73
yards whUe James connected on sb:
of 15 aerials for 84 yards.
Wahama returns to action ~It

Friday' In their final home game of
1981. St. Mary's viStts as senior
night wUJ be observed. The Blue
Devils were U going Into 1aat
nig\rt's meeting with Doddridge
CPllllty.
st8tistics

Department

First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passing
Total yards
Passing
1nter ceptions tf:'lrown
Fumbles-Lost
Penaltles-yds
Punts-avg .
Offensi ve play s

Score by quarters:
Warren Loa I
Wahama

Curt

Warner rushed for a school record
·256 yarda on 26 carries Saturday,
scoring on a 611-yard gaUop and set·
Ung up four other touchdowns with
his running and receiving as secondranked PeM State romped to a 41-16
college football victory over

$yracuse.

t·

~
'

Warner, a f&gt;.foot-11, l!lf&gt;.pound
junior from Wyoming, W.Va.,
carried 13 tim!!! for 189 yards in the
first half and went on to smash the
~year-old PeM State mark of 250
set by Shorty MiUer In 1912 against
•eamegte Tech.

Campbell hurled three touchdown
re· n' and Jimmy Smith ran for two
11C0r"1!1 Saturday to lead Purdue to a
'arM~ Big Ten victory over Nor'thwukrn, atencllll« the WUdcats'
loalnl atreat to :1111 games.

Campbell find IDuchdown paaes
,Q/. J2 )'lrdl to Joe Linville, II yards
to Efti'IU Plcbal and II yanll to
Steft Bryant, ~Smith poanded

vlclorY.

Coach Tml Korab's crew scored
on the first play of the game when
QB Scott Korab bit King with a IJ3..
yard strike. Tbe scoreboard clock
read 11:36. Klng'i kick from
placemeal made It 7-1) before fans
had settled in their seats.
Second time GAHS bad
.possf!!!i'lll, the Blue Devils marched
81 yards In 14 plays (with the aid of a
penalty against Logan on fourth
down) to take a 10.0 lead. King
kicked at 24-yard field goal, his
secondlntwoweeks, with2:.7left in
lhe quarter.
From that point on, it was a fairly
even baU game although GalllpoUs
scored three more times - twice as
a result cii'Logan turnovers.
Bberbanl Scores
In the second period, James Grif·
fin Intercepted a Jim Angle pass and
returned It 15 yarda to tile GAHS
eight.
Four plays later, Brian Eberhard
smashed over from the one (9:28).
Kbig•s kick made it17oll.
Jerry Eulsler, ITh-pound seolor
end, playing perhaps the best game
of his career, blocked a lenny Woltz
punt midway ·m the third period,
scooped up the l0011e pigskin and
raced 18 yards to give the Galllans a
23oll advantage at the 6:46 mark.
Aaron-Saunders, 17Q.pound junior
halfback, scampered 41 yarda with .
3:28 left to play to complete tile

MOVING IN FOR STOP- 'l'bree Golden Rockets, a pin lD Friday's SEOAL contest at WeUslon.. Meigs
Ted Slmpooo (88): Dale Lambert (32) and Scott Massie woo the free scoring affair, 34-Zl.
'
1101 move In to stop Meigs' Roger Kovalchik following

Expos move closer to Series
MONTREAL (API - They have Steve Rogel'll on a chilly night more and·so close~ln 1979," said Fanning.
flirted with this fantasy before, but sUited to loothaU than basebaU.
"BasicaUy,n's the same team. They
never has tile affair gotten quite so
" Remember, we neede4 one more have developed the ability to bounee
serious.
in Philadelphia and we couldn't get back iii tough situations. That
The young, enthusiastic Montreal it the first day and we couldn't get in quality makes for a championship
Expos stood on the lllreshold of their the second day," said Fanning, team."
firsl-&lt;!ver pennant today and sent recalling the National League East
The Dodgers had nicked Rogel'll
right-hander Bill Gullickson out to Division playoffs against the
for
a run In the fourth on singles by
nail down the flag against the Los · Phillies. "We had to do It the third
Dusty
Baker and Steve Garvey and
Angeles Dodgel'll' Burt Hooton. ·
day."
an
RBI-grounder
by Ron Cey.
Montreal moved into position to
Fanning also knows that the
Reuss,
unscored
upon
jn post-season
pop the champagne corks with a 4-1 Dodgers came off the deck against
play,
was
cruising
along
and retired
victory over the Dodgers Friday Houston, sweepiug lllree straight to
the·
first
two
Expos
in
the
sixth when
night, taking a 2-Jiead In the best-of· win the National league West againAndre
Dawson
singled.
Then
Gary
live series.
st the Astros after they had lost the
Carter
walked
and
Larry
Parrish
But Manager Jim Fanning was first two games of that series. But he
drilled a single to left, scoring
playing it cool, following the axiom believes in his team.
Dawson
with the tying run.
of that noted baseball philosopher,
"TI!is team was so close In 1980
Yogi Berra, who once observed, "It . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ain't over till it's over."
1'l"lere's still a long way to go,"
said Fannlug after Jerry White's
three-run homer had backed the
courageous seven-hit pitching of

IRONTON - Three different
Athens playel'll passed for touchdowns Friday night, but the Ironton
Tigers still clawed the Bulldogs 411-20
in an SEOAL contest.
For the undeftated Tigers, the
script is familiar, Mark Snyder
throwing touchdown passes, Dennis
Bacon and Mike Smith running for
scores, and Jimmy Morris kicking
seven extra pointa.
Smith taWed the first of his two
touchdowns when he scrambled 32
yarda with a blocked Athens plint
with6: 19left iii the first quarter. ·
Jinuny Morris then booted the fir·
st of his seven extn points.
With 20 secunda showing In the fir·
st quarter Smith nui 20 yards to
paydirt.
FoUowing an Athens turnover,
Ironton scored on the first play of the
second quarter when Snyder connected wilh Kraig Koerper on a 40
yard pass.
Down by 21-ll and looking bad the
Bulldogs tllen exploded for 15 points
in a four minute span to bring the
crowd to the seat edges.
Wlth8:02left Dave Torres, back to
punt, surprised Ironton with a fourth
down pass to Steve Rohe that
covered 73 ·yaros to the end zone. A
conversion kick failed.
At the 4:24 mark halfback Matt
Stenson rifled a 57 yard TO psss to
Dave Torres and Kevin Schwarzel's
convenion run made il21·14 .
However, the Tigers took the
kickoff and moved 64 yarda to score
with Dennis Bacon going' the flnsl
siz yards to paydirl with jast 37
iteconds remaining In the half.
The lone Ironton score In the third
period came iii the final 'll seconds

11

Simmons Olds.-Cad.-Chevy, Inc.

• ELECTRONIC WHEEL ALIGNMENT
• HIGH SPEED SPIN BALANCE
•AIR CONDITIONER and HEATER SERVICE
•BRAKE, TUNE-UP, SPECIALS•
•BODY SHOP
•WRECKER SERVICE
•COMPLETE MAINTENANCE by FACTORY
TRAINED TECHNICIANS
CONTACT US FOR AN APPOINTMENT
GEORGE BUCHANAN, SERVICE MANAGER

. SIMMONS
...

IN PURSUIT- WeUstoo's Ted Slmpooo (88) Is jlist a few slepo
behind Meigs quarterback Bob Asbley In Ibis action shot,from Friday's
SEOAL contest at WeUstoo. Meigs won the encounter, 14-Zl to remain In
cooteotioo Ia the loop title.

OLDS.-CAD.-CHEV., INC.
308 E. Main
. Ph. 992·6614
Pometoy, Oh.
Mon.· Fri. 8 a.m.·&amp; p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.·S p.m.

I

Thafs.right! _And as a gift ·from us to you, when you
pay 49 payments, we'll pay the 50th payment for you.
Assure yourseH of a "Grand Opening" when
Chrimnas 1982 rolls around. Open a Christmas
Dub Account with the C. &amp; S. Bank of Gallipolis.
··' A.bank u..fs "Aiw....on your side''
I
. .
'

~

•

TEAM
Ironton
Gallipolis

Mtlgs

Jackoon
~ogen

2 2

Jacksoo Rebounds
JACKSON - QUarterback Matt
Bonzo tllrew for three touchdowns
Fiiday night in leading the Jackson
Iromnen to a 26-13 victory over the

o

..
.

tonal~

...

.. .

' . I "' ' •

carries paced Gallla's ground attack. GAHS rushed for 164 yarda In
39attempta.
Kotab completed four of 10 passes
for 10'1 yards. King had three receplions for 91 yarda.
Doug Kitchen had 54 yards in 15
trips for the Chieftains. Howeyer,
. Logan finished witll ooly 29 yarda
net rushing aa the Chiefs IO&lt;rt 60 yar·.
dsfromscrlmmage.
·
Angle connected on four of 20
passes (three lntercep~) for 31
yarda, giving lJ!S 60 total yarda.
GAHS bad . 'Ill yarda rushing and
passing.
Waverly Ned
Galllpolis playa at Waverly
Friday. Logan will hO&lt;rt WeUslon.
Statistics:
DEPARTMENT
First downs
Yards rushing
L.ost rushing
Net rushing
Pass attempts
Completions
I nterC:epted by
Yards passing
Total yards
Plays
Return yards
Fumbles
Lost fumbles
Penalties
Punts

Score by quarters :

G
10
179
15
164
11
4
3
107
271
51
58
2
2
1·55
5· 167

...
'.
l.j • • •
~.

~

·.J

,,

~

... .&lt;..
:~ .

.

GAMEBREAKER - ·Gallipolis' Phil King (18,
with bsU) eaugllt three passes for 91 yards, rushed for
:13 m:ore, alld a JJ.yard kickoff return, Intercepted one
pass ood fielded one puolla Gallla Academy's Z9o11 vic-

tory over Logan Friday. KJai scored lbe game's first
10 points and wound up with 11 markers. TraiiiDg play
Is Jerry Eutsler 180). Logan defender on lefl Is Erie
Griggsi«J. -Brenda wuaon photo.

'

..

.' •·. ..-..
..
· ·~

r-.:__ _ _ _ _.:__ _ _ _ _.....;,_ _ _ ___::_:__ _ _ _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - - •, , . •

. • ·•

L
5
89
60
29
20

•

0
31
60

56

1••
1
1

·--40

6·169

10 7 6 6-29
0 0 0 o- 0 .·

Gallipolis

Logan

Waverly Tigers. The win snapped a
two-game losing streak for Jackson.
·The Irorunen broke open a tight
contesl by scoring 20 points In the
third quarter and then hanging on
for their second league victory.
Bonzo threw the first of his three
scoring passes midway In the first
perjod when he hit Allen Collins witll
a 53 yard strike. An extra point kick
flli)ed.
Waverly knotted the score In lht! ·
second quarter wllen quarterback
Tommy Thompson capped a 56 yard
drive by ramming in from the two,
and a conversion kick failed.
With the score tied at ~Hi Jackson
opened the second half by kicking off
to the Tigers.
The Mark Fenik kick squibbled
aloug the ground, and a wall of
Waverly blockers fonned for the
return, but none of the Waverly
receivers touched the baU.
An alert Jackson player leU on the
ContiJ1ued on ~ .

Drive Home This Bargain Today!
"Instant" Mobile CB System sy Realistic"'

#274-331

.~ ~. :

' .•

#21·540

::: .

.

.. ,-·.

#21-1504

Cut 21°

10

'

Complete System

•
•
•
•

Realistic TRC·410 2-Way Radio
Base-Loaded Magnet-Mount Antenna &amp; Cabla
Portable Quick-On/Off CB Floor Mount
12VDC Cigarette Lighter Plug &amp; Cord

••

. ,..•

Attach mount to transmission " hump:', fasten CB to
mount, pul antenna on root or trunk lid and connect
cable to CB, plug into lighter socket, and you're
on-the-air!

TRC·209 by Realistic

LCD Calculator Fits in
The Palm of Your Hand
EC-202 by Radio Shack

Save

sso

119!~

.

80 102

otWGOd at Pt. Ploasanl
flock Hill It Olk Hill
lymmll Valley It Cool Grovo

'

Aaron Saunders' 49 yards In two
trips and Eberhard's .39 yards In 16

· GOOD NIGHT - GaiUsl'a Jerry Ealller (•) leads biterfereaee for
Brilll Eberbard CM) Ia Ibis Brellda WllloDpllotoclarlD&amp;Frlday'oSEOAL
p1d tilt •IIApa. Eullller blocllad a Lopa put aDd tamed It lato a loucbdowD. He aiHaacked Logan'a quarterbadt •ti-l three tlmel from his
defeaoive end poaiUoo.

40 Channels!
5 Wattsl

Our best! Ready to use on
illl channels -no crystals
required. Hino power
switch, LED channel display. Wilh carry case ._

#21·1660

7!!
Slanted case ~a­
sign tor desktop
use. Percent.
plus/minus, all tour
math functions ,
clear key. #6!Hi02

HUNTIRS SPICIAL
'·

All MEN'S LACE BOOTS
INSULATED ANDNON-INSULATED.

20%

Save

19%

888

OFF

outcloorsman

Utica

CHAPMAN
,...,v. ~'"

SHOES -

e tberfetds In Pomeroy"

Personal
Protection Alann

By Mlcronta®

Chlppewa
Sheboygan

Ironton It Meigs
ltAtlllnl

E

..

ference.

Gallipolis al Waverly

''I(LWAYS 0"1 YOUR SIDE'' ,' Mllllber FDIC
'•r ~ '•
'
~
25 Court Street
Siver Brldte l'lue . · Spring Valley

#

··~ ~

Gallipolis, now 3-4 on the year, Ia
ttejl for sec«!&lt;~ place In the
Southeastern League (with Meigs)
with a 3-l mark. Logan dropped to ~
IH ovenU and »1 Inside the con·

Oct.Upm••

'

· ~;

..'

the series.

... .

. ..,
The ComnwJclal • SQvi~· J.ank
~

-- - :..

.

CB Walkie-Talkie

1 2 1 67 93
o 3 1 20 76
o 4 o 68 .1«!

wellston
TOTALS'
l5 1S .2 6n 677
"rldly'srooults:
tranton 49 Atliirns 20
, .Golllpolls29 Logano
Melgs34Wellaton 21
.
Jockson:NWa-ly 13

.c·ars Bank
.

on a 33 yard pass !rem Snyder to
Rick Ferguson.
·
The Tigers put 14 more on the
board In the final quarter on a siz
yard run by Bacon at the 10: 25 mark
and a five yard dssh by Jinuny
Morris with ~:42left .
With a 411-14 lead coach Bob Lutz
inserted his subs, who gave a 5&amp; yard
scoring strike from KeVin Schwarze!
to Matt Stenson. A conversion run
failed and It was 4&amp;-20 with 4:36left..
N'o statiatlcs on the game were
avaUable, bot the Tigel'8 roUed up
more than 400 yarda In offense whUe
the Bulldogs accounted for 200 yards
in passing and 31 on the ground.
Score by quarters:
Athens
0 14 0 6-20
Ironton
14 14 7 14-49

SEOALONLY
WLTPOP
4 0 o 202 61
3- I o 74 55
3 1 0 79 52
2 2 o 87 98

· WaverlY
A!hens

'

,.

you

ALL GAMES
TEAM
WLT POP
Ironton
7 0 · 0 286 97
. Coal Grove
5 2 0 152 83
Meigs
4 3 0 124 95
Jackson
4 3 0 143 130
Pt. Pleasant
4 3 0 71 79
Rock Hill
4 3 0 115 70
Gallipolis
J 4 0 99 113
Waverly
3 4 0 93 154
Wellston
2 5 0 .171 196
Athens
1 5 1 88 193
Logan
0 6 1 20 183
Non·SEOAL results :
Ripley 16 Pt. PleasantO
Coal Grovo «J Chesapeake 0
Fairland 14 Rock Hllll3

1982 Christmas Club Accounts

""'

The Sundav Times·Sentinei- Pag-C·S

1!

game's scorlnl!.
" Any time
can star! off the
game with a big play, It gives you a
definite advantage," remarked
Coach Korab.
" Our blocking is improving, and
we had 1 chance to get several of our
younger boys In there," Korab added. "We didn't exactly foUow our
game plan, but the kids played
another outatanding defensive
game. I believe that's nine straight
quarlel'8 we have shut out the op-.
position," he concluded.
CCJ4Ch Dave Snipes was "very
disappointed" by his team's per·
lormance helore a good sized paren··
ts night crowd. "You can't. make
, mistakes Uke we did tonight and ex·
pect _to win In this league," Snipes
commented. "We knew King and
Eberhard were fast, and we knew
what they could do. We simply let
then;l do it," he concluded.
The.Chieftains lllreatened only once an evening as the Galllans recur·
dad .their second shutout win in a
row. ·
Just before interinlssion, ~
GAHS had picked up a first down on
·a 16-yard pass play from Korab to
King, the latter fwnbled on Logan's
40, with Mitch Trucco recovering.
Eutsler Shines
In eight plays, behind fOur paSs
completions by Angle, Logan advanced to Gallia's 18, but a 1!;-yard
penalty, and a 14-yard quarterback
sack by Eutsler ended that threat.
It was Gallln's fi1'81 triumph at
Logan since 1!113, and fi1'81 time
GAHS had blanked the Chieftains
since a 12oll victory up there in 1!169.
The win gave GAHS a :IJS.2H lead in

Area grid
_standings

NOW OPEN!

' .

.

Ironton slaps_49-20 loss on
Athens; Jackson whips Waverly

"THE SIGN OF MR. GOODWRENCH"

Todd Blackledge, who completed
10 of II passes for 120 yards, scored
on a !;-yard k~per and lllrew touch- ·
downs passes of 1 yards to Mike McCloskey and 12 to Vyto Kab, giving
the Nlttany Uons a 21-11 lead and of·
fsetUng field goals of 51, 50 and ~
yards ,by Gary Anderson ~
Syracuse.
Warner carried five times lor 53
yards Including runs of 16 and 26
yards as Penn State took the opening
- kickoff - Warner returned It for 21
yarda - and stornied 78 yiU'ds In
nine plays for a 7-ll lead.

across from the 1·yard ~twice for '
his two touchdowns.
1
Purdue turned two ~ lnterceptiOlll and a fwnble l'llCOYery
Into H1'81·haU touchdowns 11 tile
Bollermaken lifted their PeeCJrll to •
21n the Big Tea and t-2 OfWIIL kar.
thwestern suffered Ita IIIGIIou tiQ
111!8100 and -1.1 two •-titonllf
matchlnc the aiJ.tima majclr c:a11ep
lOlling ~ Of 28 ..,_ ..... by
KallllU State and Virginia.

6 14 21 G-41
oooa-8

29-0, for lheir third consecutive grid

AUTO SERVICE CENTER

.: rurdue blanks Northwestern, 35-0
• EVANSTON, IU. (1\Pl - Scott

WHS WL
10
!5
32·98 49·282
104
102
202
384
8·19
9-17
3
0
3·2
1· 0
7·65
2·30
3·26.6 3-25.3
54
70

LOGAN .- Phil King, Galllpolls'
!56-pound senior halfback, acored 10
polnta during the first nine minutes
of play here Friday olght aa the
visiting Blue Devils blanked Logan,

POMEROfS COMPl£TE -

Warner sets school mark
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -

'

cad running attack In a gatne that

Yards passi ng
Total yardage
Passes altpt.
Passes com pt.
Interceptions
Fumbles

w. Va.

Gallipolis "Captures ·third ·
• •
wm m row, blanks Logan

saw only five Meigs passes, the
lowest number of aerlala In any
~for Melgsthlsseason.
Despite sitting out the entire
second half due Wslomach crampa
and dizzlnesa, 'Roger Kovalchik lad
MHS rushers with 74 yards on eliht
carries. Also contributing were Bob
Ashley, 61 yat$; Chris Burdette, 48
·
yarda; Jon Perrin, 38 yarda; Greg .
The Maraudel'll took the opening Bush, 33 yards : Shawn Eads, 20 yarkickoff of the second half and . ds.
executed a nine-play, 11&amp;-yard drive
Greg Bush's return to the MHS
that · culminated with Chris Bur·
backfield
provided an added punch
delle's second TD of the evening.
·of
hard
running,
tsklng some of the
Meigs kept the ball on the ground the
- pressure off of the smaller backa,
entire drive.
WeUston retaUsled • after the Kovalchik, Burdette and Perrlh.
kickoff with an eight-play, 57-)'ill'd
The Meigs defense played without
scoring effort that was sparked by a the services of middle guard Bill
:JO.yard pass completion. The score Powell who was sideUned with a
hand injury sustained In practice
brought the score to28-14.
Wednesday.
The Marauders' final score was
Despite several minor injuries sufthe result of an ftO.yard drive bssed fered by Meigs, all hands are ex'
on the running of Greg Bush and Jon peeled to be healtlly for next weel\'s
Perrin. Meigs scored with 5:43 confrontation with undefeated iron·
remalnlng In the game.
,ton.
WeUston's Dale Lambert, the ·
Statistics
game's leading rusher, racked up
Department
M
w
the final score with a 7~yard touch- F lr.st downs
12
12
down run with 1:05 left In the COD· Yards rush ing
280
204

test.

Pomeroy-;-Middleport- Gallipotls, Ohio-Point Ple~sant,

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

788
Clalrol's1180

Prtce Waa
$18.89

Bltt•ry extra

Reg.14.95
Remote " calls" master,
even when system is "off"
With 66' cable. 143-221
.

Check Your Phone Book for the lbiiMIIe

a.:=::.:.:.::.=.:=:;_ _ _ _ _,;,___ _ _ ___, "·•..,
A DMIION Of TAND'f CORPORATION

PRICfd MA'f' YNf't AT JNOMOUAL STORES AND DEALERS

~

.

~

•
'

.

'

'

I'

'

••

�I

•

1911

Oct. 18, 1911

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

Page-C -6-The· Sunday Times-Sentinel

North Gallia records fifih
straight shutout win, 24-0

Friday's high
school scores

PE

OUoHJPkl&gt;ooiP-.
Byn.-10! .....

.

FrtdiJ'•a.alll
Akron Cent-Hoftr t , Akron N. I

c-. IG, " -

Akron Coveolry I, Hudooll t "·
Akron Fl...... 21, Akron E. I
Akron G&lt;rllt kl Sl, Akron. Ellet 0
Akron Hoban 17, T1llmldge 0
lllo&amp;andor :lll, F-.J Hockina I!
ADen E. rz, Pauldtna 14
AmeUa 23, w.aem ltrown 0
ArChbold II, Polrict Henry 0
Aahlobulo II, Alhlobula Edo"'ood 12

een.v.

Aahlobula l!.trbor :Ill,

0'

14

lAnJn
,
. , _Kll1o!
a, ..
Canton

7, 201'
I!

r-.1 VALUABLE COUPON
I

POMEROY
LANDM.ARK'S
DOLLAR
STRETCHING

SAVE '20.00
MODELGR-9
9300 BTU

COMFO_RT GUM
KEROSENE HEATER

Hillsboro

'237

cops golf

title Friday
CIDLUCOTHE - Hillsboro caJ&gt;tured the !981. Class AA District golf
championship here Friday. '
The Indians finished th.e !$-hole,
par 72 Country Club Course with a
355, and advanced to the state tournament, to be held this weekend in
Colwnbus.
Portsmouth's Trojans finished
second with 358, New Lexington
third, 360, Gallipolis fourth, 361 and
Warren Local last with 384.
Minford's·Mike Sowards captured
medalist honors with a 78. Matt
Chabot, Portsmouth, was second
with an 83. Gallia's Tim Madison
tied Hillsboro's Matt Chaisk for
third place honors with an 84.
Mike Allen had an 87, Tom Moore
!10, Steve RWJyon 100 and Kev Carty
a 114 for Gallipolis.
The Blue Devils finished the
season with a 44-10 record.

I

SAVE '4.00

TITAN EL£CTRIC

HEATER
1

Wayne 8

...I

Continuep from C-5
ball at the Tiger 35 imd fiv e plays
later Fenik scored from the six with
Bonzo passing to CollinS for the conversion.

Bonzo foWld John Hale with a 15
yard scoring strike, and five
minutes later teamed with Collins on
a 19 yard TD pass.
Both conversions were thwarted
as a run and a pass failed to keep the
·score at 21Hi.
Waverly drew closer in the fourth
period when Don Welch scored from
the 10 and then kicked the extra
point.
A late Tiger drive to the end zone
was killed on a pass interception by
Jackson.
•
Jackson accounted for 13 first
downs, 146 rushing yards, and completed five of 12 passes for 122 yards.
The Tigers rolled up 17 first
downs, 105 yards rushing, and hit on
12 of 23 passes for 165 yards with
three intercepted.
Don Welch was the game's top
rusher with 105 yards on 15 carries
while Fenik paced Jackson with 74
yards on 18 tripa.
Score by quarters:
Waverly
0 6 0 7- 13
.Jackson
6 0 20 0-26

Work's on putting
PINEHURST, N.C. (AP ) - After
Neil Croonquist defeated Billy
Napier in 21 holes Friday to gain a
berth in tbe finals of the North and
South Senior Amateur goil tournamen~ he headed for a vacant
green to work on his putting.
Croonquist, plagued by a balky
putter aU day, missed short putts on
the !9th and 20th holes which would
have given him the match.
Meanwhile, Richard Remsen of
LocuSt Valley, N.Y. advanced to the
finals by defuting Roger McManus
of Hartville, Ohio, 3 and 2.

Mayer advances

~-- VALUABLE

1

$350,000 City fJI Napiel CUp Tournament
Top 1 eetied Bjorn Borg of Sweden
easily belli American 8lndy Mayer
6-2, &amp;-2 In • bite Jlllltcb,

•'

COUPON

$146

1

I

'1 0 00

WITH COUPON
OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 26, 1l"l1

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

I I

HOMELITE OIL I,I I

ltl

6-% PT. cans
$431

11

:I

WITH COUPON .

7500Sq.Ft.coverage

I1

.

It

$368 'I•

•1249

WITH COUPON

?

49

I
I

!
I.
!! •

(Fish-Chicken-Liver)

35~
26C

61!20Z. Can
WITH COUPON

OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 26, 1981

•

COUPON

WITH COUPON

'5

21

~

CAT FOOD

I

---------------------OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 26,1981 .

.-------------------- .
1

rI

'700

I·!~--~~,!'!,_~~~~~~l~L-J!

•

Stebbinl 30,
Part M, Indian

= "·

~--~!~~~~~~~£~~2~-~~J---~!~!!~~!~~~~~

--

I

RUBBER MAID

'609
WITH COUPON

1409

1
1I I

!!

r-

1 I

:!
I

~--2!!!~~.!:, 1,!~_2~,;!!:,!!'!,~- ..J

---

1
I

STAIN
Green..: ·Gray

'1015

I

WITH COUPON

f'735

l,....,.oFFER EXPIR&amp;50CT.if.1911

_., •-

:

TIRES

I1

t,
This Coupon good tor 55.00 Off
on any pair of tires at Pomeroy
· landmark Service Station.

I1

HOTPOINT

!
I

.!
I

'38~5
WITH COUPON
9595

Bridle Bits Plus Grain
This · coupcm Worth Sl.OO with
the purchase of 100 Lb. Bridle
Bits Plus Grain.
·

I
I

r

I1

It

WITH COUPON •

I

16991

I

I

l

'·

II
, '542
WITH COUPON '49"00 I

CaooploeUC""'"'"
NorrlllMvlliH
301'887
3 1 '0 111 15 I
Z1118l3$
2 I 1 II ~~ $
12121223
I 2 ·-0"· •13 14 2
llmyfloo DIYioloo
"
12026221

J

w.-.-

Bdmori011 I, CIIPrY

San0ie11o

0 183 113

llfJ

0 Ill 131

.117

IIOIIUIJI?
':we
Eoo-lllvloho

NI~C

Phllodelphla

4 2
I I
2 ....

WuhiJI&amp;Ion

0 . 140 131
0 till t7
0 1111 161

1 I
0 101 1M
Ceatral Dtvte1ee.

...._
T~Biy

lJe&lt;riJft
Green Bly
OUcqo

LooAnplea
SuF't'alae

At1onto

•

Ill Its
111 10
·11· Ill
u• 140

I

I

G tt 131

t

2 0 lDI· Ill 11117111JGI)
I
I 14 Ul .111

.331

.m
.111

SAVER

.117

_,.1_

New 0rien1

I

Buffalo at New York Jt&amp;l
Huuslon It New EnPDd
New Orlelnl ., ~
Phil..,.,... ., N!nMIDta

-u
otFrandleo ••· OrteD

Sin
..-

Bly It Mit-

W~oiMIIml

Loo 'Anploo ol llolloo, Ia)

Delloll .

~

•• .._
'*'
.......,.._

.....
-:a,·

OlloiCio

-.odoll--

,.......n: · r·

. ~-~
'*' .

.._._c
,
_..,...

W L T PPPAM ·
4 1 1141 U4 .Ill ·
••

lltlllliiAll
1 • • IJII l. lll
l • • !GI " lll Jll

Rate Effective thru Oct 31, 1981
Minimum Deposit: $500

12.14%

II Dolnil, CO)

-,

v...o.- ..~Qome.

\'

.117
.117

Pllllt&gt;urlh o:

11 Pbilldtlplllt

.

J67

f

...,..~1M Ill
I

JGO

0
0
0
.o

-

II.'I. loll

OHIO VALLEY BANK

.3SS

I
2
4

s.:...,a;,otf.:""'vodl a:.,..~..tile

=
=~

•

.117

4
4
I
2

Sl.~

t

411111

'

100140171.000

N.Y. Giantl
'St. l.Qals

•a.IAolo 11 NY Ranpro
M:• dm at CIIICII'

.

•

llollaa .

2

4 2

4 I

t4oa•.sa

Ook1and

Red Wings

0

w-.."""""
IIOLIS11JII

Kanlal City
Saute

0

Laudermllt (No . .42), JeH Roush (NO. 501 and Raymond
Friend (No. 7%) . Wabama suffered a U-8 loos at the
bands of Warren Lacal. (Photo by Tim Davis.) .

ee.tnl Dtvlllel
4 2 0 153 131 1111
4 2 0 141 111 liD
420lllttM1
240M12'1J&amp;1

o.n... .

0

I

UP IN :ruE AIR - Wllllama oparterback Kevln
Jamea (No. 121 lalbown apIa tbo alr ao lie attempls a
paa on lbla play•. Olber J'akoaa pictured are Norm

o

t, Grovtport

South 31, Y-. Wlllon I

........,.1otQ'•G,...

. 1!1-h

324 SECOND
GAUIPOLIS, ·~

Zanea. Rolecrlu fl , Miller I

Fridoy'•-

---------:...__.,

alot-F-~dtlivtry

'

y-

Wotllllltlton

Bolton 1,, Colorado I

I

00

Northwestern 3!, Delton 24

N. 12. Pld&lt;erlngton a
Westerville S. 11, Gro\ie City 0
Wheelersbw'a: 38, M~ NW 2S
Whitehill 21, Col. Franldin Ht!. 17
Willard . a,' Tiffin ColwnbWI o
WiUougbby S. 6, Maple Htl. 2
Wllmlnglon ?, H1111bor&lt;, 0
WOCII&amp;er 31, Coehocton 0

1M .An,;eiH 10, ·Colorldo

Drivea littleand 1ave
wltlll1175.miles.
Y11, we urvlct at your local Hotpotnt Dlllltr.
. . Store Hourt:l:.to.SIII. Mill Clasellats:OO .P.M.
Serving Melgl, Galla and Mason Countlaa.'

.

w. Salem
w....rvtue

_&lt;,_'•'.""""'" I
_C.,,.......,.
2

OFFER EXPIR!!.~!:~:_!'!-~-J~---O!~·:!!_P_!!I!!.~~!2!!--.!l __ _!»!~!!.~!!!~o:'~~!~--l
.Mck w. Caruy-Mgr.

POMEROY LAN DMARK

Z13192

DAN THOMAS
&amp; SON

W. Holmes 31, Tuscarawas VIJ. 0 .
W. JeRerson Zl, Col. Aeedemy 14
W. Mustlng1DD 12. Philo 7

2!011:114
~

Get Rc:d Wings."

oian •

CincinnoU
Piltlburgh
P1trid. Olvllioll
W L TGFGAPIII . HO\ISIOn
Cleveland
3011)]0 7

O

selling pull-vn, Get the best.

Wayne.gville 56, E. Cl1nton 0
Wellington U. Lorain Brooblde D
W. Chestor Lilkota II, Cln. PurceU·Ma-

N1ti1UI HOfkCJ l.elpe
Wales Coal~

lt'~

der they' re Americ a's lOp·

Waynedak 39, . Norwi)TIC 22

For the recor,d;

-.1

I

Waterloo 20, Windham 20, ,tie
Watkinl Memorial 4&amp;, Hea.th 0

2221$1311
2 2 0 1 1 ·· ·
14tliZ3
' 0 4 1 11 21 l
..........,.'IGIUDCI .
Detroit ' II ~ SL IAuil 3 .
lllootnal '' lllrUonl 2

l
·&gt;

Warren Local 41, Wahlmlll, W. Va . 8
Washington C.H. 40, Teays 'Val. 7

:!(1

3 0114&amp;7
· 13112M3
14011:112
1 307212
1-daiDI Dlvtlloa
31 1 . 1 7 7
2 0 1 21 7 $
?:111118 -1

'

"My nc:w Pt'cos Red Wings
give me a heel·hugging fil and
on·rhe-job comfort. N&lt;• won·

warren LaBI'I!Ie 40, Newton Falla I

Lalicaster 30, Wheelll'@ (W. Va . l Park 6
taanoo 47, Franklin 15
leetonia Zll, Bel'Jholz Spring. 1

Bufti)O

Hardworkina
RedWinas

Warren Chlmplon 12, Yawts. Ubei1y 8
Warren Hardin&amp; 23, ~rd 14

t.tewood 33, VaUey Forp 7

Montreal ·

Good-looldna,

Vandalla-Butlel" 7, Day. Northmont I
Vmnili011 to, Amherst . D
.
Walsh Jeallit 7, Canton Glen&lt;Mk 7

Kenrt.on 14, Cleve. Oranl(e 7
Kent Roosevelt 21, Akron Spring. 7
K - 11. s. ·Amhem o
Klngo 21, Roa I
Kyger Creek I, Racine Southern o

NY

HUMIPifiER
'199"

Tuslaw 21, Sandy VII. 8

JonaUJan Alder 3t, N. Union 0

Booton

Wings!

'IWinsburg 11, W. Geaup I ~
United Local 31, Sebt'inl McKinley 8
Ul\ionlown Lake Jl, Claymonl 0
Upper .Arllni!IM 51, Reynoldoburg 6
Urbani 38, Sprinc. Shawnee 0
VaUeyview 35, Dly. Northridl(e 0

John Glenn 14, River View 8

Wahlngton

You've ·earned ··
your

Twsc1rawas Cath. 7, Rld&amp;ewood 0

'

Hillbllftl :m, Delaware 1
Holland SprlnJ. 6, Matirnft D·
Indian Valley N. 14, strasburg 13
Indian Valley S. 14, Malvern 14

NY Rangers

Porter (IZ) provtdlag the defeoae getB ready for u IDterceptlon. KC won the bard-Ioogb! SVAC game, 6-8 on
the final play of the game.

Trimble 10, · VInton Co. 0
Trotwood M1d!.on 27, Tecutn~eh I

33, Cln. Flnneytown .3
Hebron Lakewood !1, Granville 14 ·

PIUa!Nroth

(11) who liter taupt tile wiDDIDI' toucbclon 1aa bJa
armi oalltretebed fCll' W. paa u Soalben'a Jolm

Triad 31, Waynesfteid-Golhen 7 .

•

H~~rrison

Pllllodolphia
NY lslandtl'!!

GOING FOR BALL- KJ&amp;erCreek's Cbadt Voce!

Sprtnjj. G......, 36, Kenton Rldoe 1
Spring: Nortllwestem 10, Bellfonlllne a
SteubenviUe Cath. 21, Jefferson Union

Gallipo~ 29, Logan 0
Grand Val. 21, Pymatunin'g Val. 0
Grandview 21, New Albany 17
Greensburg Green 26, Norton 14
HamilWO Zl, Cin. Aiken 12
Hamilton BlfJin 2t, Day. carroll 7

Ironton 49, Athena

'

Solon 38, Aurora 0
Sparta Highland '11,. Clrdtngton •
~boro 3 1 , - 1
Spring. C.th. 19, Indian Lite 0

Col. Westland 7

PNlodelplllo 1,

li

Smithville 80, JtillJdale 0

r•Uon :1.0, Norwalk 14

:11
1

Sand"*" 22, Elyrio 0

Tol. Rodgers 3, Strttch 0
Tul. Whi&amp;ner 12, To&amp;. start 7
TorontQ 17, Cadiz 0
Tz;ehton Ede~tnod Zl, · Middletown Fen- .
wlcl&lt; II ·

rww

zn,

GahaMI

WITH COUPON

OflfiiRIK .. IIIIoa'.M,'tll

IJUIIIMARK ®

-·

RAT·KAKES
'142

MIC!q;~AVE

J o-·--0!~.!.!~!!'!-~.:,_:!! __

VALUABLE COUPO

w.

Evergreen 3, W1uHon 0 ·
Fairbank!' 14, W. Uberty Salem 6
Fairborn Baker 3$, Sidney 21
Fairborn Part Hilla II, Miamisburg 12

-· ·r

HORSE FEm

I

., _________________ J
•

I

BIRD FEEDER

:
II

-·

.L-~~.!!!.!.X!~!_S_!)~T~~!!~--.J

Seneca E. 22, Plymouth 9
Sharpovtlle, Po., 13,
Branch 12
Shelby 10, Bellevue 7
·
Shefwood Fairview 14, Hicklville 13
Ravelllll SE 211; WoodrldiJe 12

To). Macomber 30, Tot Woodward 6

Edon 28, Wayne lAndon
Traee 018
Elmwood 11, Eutwood 0
Elyria Cath. :11, Cear Foci&lt; 6
Erie (Mich.) Muon 7, Tecumleh 0

LB. BAG

I
.-J

. North I

ertoo33,'l'lolora8

!

!

•

ChamJul 0

Dublin m, Bla Walnut 0

•I

I. LANDMARK DOG NUGGETS I PERMANENT
: D-CON RAT BAIT I
I.
DISHWASHER lI
•
-1
ANTI-FREEZE
'2'.s
II
I
I I
.
I
I Hoss2o '5412,
I
25
•sso II II
'439 Per Gal .
I
I
I I
WITH COUPON . , . .
I
II WITH COUPON '47500 I
I II WITH COUPON· '3"· II 1I OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 26,1981 II
1
WITH COUPON '500
HOTPOINT

Jefferson I ,

E. 11. X~ 1S
W. 18, Beavercreek U
Park IS, Westlake 3 1
14, Avon 0
Fostoria tf. Uma cath. 7
Frankfort Adena M, Piketoo .0
Fredericitowr~ 3$, Centerburg 0
f'l'emOnt. Rosa 28, Lorain 14

II nilS COUPON WORTH
OFF I
II
~~ · ·TELEVISION l
l~
II 2SEM1824 '87328 l
I ANY WASHER AND DRYER IN STOCK.
WITH COUPON ?6500

!1

!?iu

Belmoot 21, O.y. Wright 8

Fairmont
Fainnonl
Fairview
Firelands

I

$sooo

Revere 3$, Field 0
Rocky River t , Medina 6
Root1town 13, canal Fulton NW IZ
Sand""'Y 22, Elyria 0

14
.
Streetsboro U, GarrettaviUe a
struthers 20, Broakflekl I
·
Swanton S3, Bryan 0
Sylvania Nor;thview 2.1 , Oregon Clay 14
Sylvanil SoUthview 7, Perrysburg 0
Tecumaeh . :r. Trotwood Madilon I
Tiffin calvert 20, Perkins 0
Tol. llowDher Sl, Tot. Devllbloo 8
Tol. Ubbe)' 18., Tol. Waite 7

ll U:
Defiance 41, ottawa-Glandorf 7
Dwer a, Mana. Madison 1
Doy
. la
Jestown 11, Rittman 8

WITH COUPON
IL--0-FF_E_R _ex.,.P.,.IR.,.Es_o_cr_. u_,.,.19-11- - ' .

-., I

35, Artldla 0
CreatUne 18, LoudonviUe 7
Crooksville 26, .Maysville 21
Dly. Bellbrook 21, Brookville 15

25 LB. BAG ?SO

I
I

••Cory-RawJOn

Day.
Oly.
!loy.
Deer

VALUABLE COUPON

Porta:. Notte llame 21, Porta. Eaal 0
Portl. West 32, Minfonl 7
Preble Shawnee 11, F..llon lf
RavefUll 14, Nordonil 7
Reedavill• Eutml 32, Polriol SW 0

Mlthew~

CUyaholl:a Falla U, Stow 12

I

JUST ARRIVED

Copi•Y 01, Modtna Hll!hland 1
Cortland LMkeview 38, Vienna

ATLANTA (APl- Rory Sparrow
bad a game-high 28 poinls as the
Atlanta Hawks defeated the
Cleveland Cavaliers 91-83 In a
National Basketball Association
game Friday night
Atlants led 53-39 at the half and
maintained a lead of at leaat five
points during ti)e remaining two
peri&lt;Jds. The Cavaliers got off to a
cold start, scoring only 14 points In
the second period, and never
managed to ignite their offense.
Second leading scorer for Atlanta,
1·2 in exhibition play, w.aa Rudy
Macklin with 15 points, KeMy Carr
led the Cavaliers, 0-2, with 15 points; ·
Richard Washington and Roger
Pbagely each added 12.
Washington and Scott Wedman
fouled out for Cleveland in the last
period.

PaineSVille Haney a, WllftflSVille 0
Paint Val. 11. lluntin&amp;lon D

""
Col.6 Ready 12, Qll. Wehrle 8
Col. St. Chlrles 7, Col. Hartlty 7, tie
Col. Walnut Rid(le If, Cot Briggs 13
Col.. Watterson 2111, Col. DeSales 0
Col. West 7, COl. Sow.th 0
Col. Whetstone 18, Col. Northland IZ
Colwnbwl Grove 21,· Upper Scioto Val. 7
conneaut 38, Madison 0
Conotton Val, 34, Jewett-Sclo 8

I
J

Hawks defeat
Cavs, 91·83 ·

Obego 20, Gibeonburg 0

Cloverluf 7, N. ROyalton 7, ti e
Colonel Crawford J1, Wynford 1f
Columbia 17, Cuyaqa Ht!l. 0
Columbiana Crestview 34, Stanton 18
COl. ~hcroft 22, Col. Mifflin It
l:ol. Cenlnd 8, Col. lndependoce l
COl. Ea!Jt 6, Col. Centennnial 6, tle
Col. Eastmoor 20, Col. Marion-Franklin
I!
Col. Linden-McKlnley 14, Col. Brookha-

L. . -~:,E.,!!~.!.R.!!.~!:~~'~--l

Il

II

LI'L RED CAT DINNER

Cleve. Hay 26, Cleve. Glenville D

't:a~b~ '611

I

-------------------i r-

~------:--------------J

I

Cleve. Central Cath. 21. Owmcl 7
Cleve. Hlwken 2Z, Newbury 0

1
WILD BIRD SEED
1
I
BulkorBag

LAWN PEP FERTIUZER

WITH

I

Cleve. BI'UIJh 13, E:utlake N. 12

I
I
I
I
I
I
.I
I

Brtoni'IDI&lt;ertoa (Ill, MlkeMedas (581, Paal DuDeaD (80) IIIICITtmLaaler
(71). GARS blanked tile Chieltalns, !t-0, for ttB third otral&amp;bt vtc~. ­
Brenda .Wllson pboto.

N. Bend TaylOr 12, ctn. Greenhills 1
·N. Gallia 24, illlwln Trace 0
, N. Olmsted 35, Bay 12'
N. Rlclgeville 7, Midvtew 8
Norwalk St. Paul 7, Mlpldon 0
08k Hlrbor 32, Kansu Lakota n
Oakwood 20, Greenville 0
Orrvill~ 23, Akron Mlnchuter 8

Cleve. Adams 6, Cleve. Rhodes 0

'1121

I

,--

Cin. wyOOllng 21. Radlnw 8
Circleville 41 , McClain 0
Clermont - NE 1, WllllamsburH 0

INSULATED
VESTS

l WATER SOAENER II TRAILER LOAD OF HOTPOINT III!.
l co:~~~;sooo !II WASHERS and DRYERS ll
OFFEREXPIRESOCT. 26,1981

Cin . Woodward 43, Cin. Withrow 0

cieveland Hts. 7, Garfield Hts. D

rVALUABLE
I

30,000 Unit

I

Cin . Walnut Hills 18, Cin. Western Hills

6

Cleve. Kennedy 12, Cleve. Marshall 3

-TT

rI

Cin. Moeller 37, Cin. St. xavier 3
Cin. Northwett 39, Norwood ?0
a n. O&amp;k Hill! 26, an. Turpin 1
Cln. Princtt.On 63, Fairfield 1
an . Sycamore 10, Milford lZ

'

'\"'fOI'd

· IIUBROUNDED BY BLUE DEVILS - Jim Aqle, Locan qliCII'
terlledt (151 Ia iWINl""'' by a boil ol O.lllpolla Blue Devtbl 011 tbla play
at HBIIep Btadhn FrldaJ J11CbL Cllu~DJ tile LIIS aee, loft to rtgbt are

Mogadore 14, cre.twood 0
MI. GUeod 21, Oalarto (
Mt. Healthy M, Cln. Andoroon 8
Mt, Vernon· It, Oillllcotbe I
Napole«a 22, Bedford, Mich. 14
NefaonvWe.Yort S, Belpre I
New Cutle, Pa., ll, Panna PaN I
New t.ufDiton ~ 'l\1-VIIIey 15
New Pbl1lde1phia 33, AINarxl •
New Richmond 7, GGihen 0
Newart D, Portamouth 0
Newcomerstown 38, G&amp;riWI)' 8
Nonnandy 14, E. Cleveland Shlw I

Mariemont 1, Glen Eate 6

Cleve: Soutb 29, Cleve. E.dTech 0

l---~~e~_:':,"~~~o~~!!'2'!!.,. __ j L-~~!~':!'!.'.!~~~~~~~-J l_ __ ~!!~'~..!'!~!e!~c!·!';.!!!~--

I

·an.

l_ __ ~:,"!!~x!~:.s...?~~~2_H~..;.-J

Get Cutting And
Get The Savings!

I I

$122

WITH COUPON

South a

Cl1anlon 37, .Belchwood 20
Cin. Elder 36, lJma Shlwnee 9
Cln., lluilheo 311, Cin. Taft 0
an . LaSalle If, Cln. Bacon 9

. PERFECTION
I
I .KEROSENE HEATER
I
I
'23'5
I
I WITH COUPON '18"

·DA 51

:I
No. 428
:I II
l LANDMARK GLOVES l l

I

NJU'U'.S. Italy (AP) - Gene
Mayer beat. Tomas Smld of .
o.ecllollonlda &amp;-2, 6-4 ; while
Corrado Baruzuttl downed Vljay
AmrltriiJ of Ida 11-4, U, 6-3 to advance to tbe llllliflnaiB of the

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

'25'5
II
_.________ .....

__

M15

Chagritl Fall 13, Wickliffe 6

SAVE '5.00

.'

Molgs Sl, Wl!llstl!n 21
Milml TriCt zs. Madllon Plains 0
II, Slronpvllle I
Mill
L1ke 14~ .
I
.
Milton- niGn II, uwe t
.
MlneraJ JUdee 211, Berlin W. Reserve 11
. Minerva 28, carrollton Z2

Clintm-Massie 20, S. Charlest.on SE 7

WITH COUPON
OFFER
E·XPIRES
OCT. 26, 1981
·....;._.....,
.....

:

Ironton . ..

14

-

,

11, · Sprlnw.

• '

J-

•

. e&amp;nton McKinley I, N. Canton 0
Cartwe at, npp City 6

Centerville

8. :Ill

LoooliVIlle 32, ........ g , •
Loftl&amp;nd 21, MAdlira 11
LowelMll• 32, c.lumblano r7
Bvtler 21, UUie llloml 0
Mlnlfield 15, LeldnltGn II
Marion Calli, :111, N"ortlu1* 0 Mitton LOcal 11, Partway o
MuotJion t , Akron Sl. V-al. M 1
Muslllon
11,_~ II
Muslllon Perry II, l
Mayfield It, Mentor lli, tie
Medina Buckeye 17, Brooklyn 0

14

-y

VALUABLE COUPON -

Senior 32, M'Mrt?:m I
U.boo D, Soutbtm LOell 14
Utile It, Mlddlolown -

London D , SDrtnl;. Nutt 5 n 7
lAnln Cath. II. 1:. 1tno1 1
·
lAnJn Cleorllew • • Oborlb&gt; •

Budleye w. 18, woodolleld ~
Bucynu 19, Upper
14
Campboli,Memorial 21, Canlleld 11
canton G..ll()at 7, Wai!Jh Jesul.t 7, lie

--

J-., -

i..UM

Lod&lt;lond 11, ctn. l'orfamiDI AN It 0
Looan Elm t , Berne u- o

Aven Lake D, Obnlted F11b 10

Ayemille li Holpte 0
S.ver ~ Zl, WeUaville
Bedford ' · EoacHd 3
Bellaire 10, Brooke, W. Va.
B&lt;llalr&lt; Sl.j_oll)__~ Mingo
aer- Jl, ~e1 11
Sl, Canllnal 1
Buley 14 MaryiY!IIe II
. Bowllnc Gnen 1, Anlhoay
Bnwwld&lt; 1, Wodlworth 0

Lolpoic
Sl, Yon lklno
' ~·-~~~(ft'Oe I
Old'ard
,...,_ I
Ubor\r
1
Lltklne· VII. 32,

-=·.·=-.

.,..,
W ' 'fbi'

y-""''

Ill

a

0

....

..

Lll ~

,,

~.
at Ia

••

'

'·

'

�Sunday Times-Sentinel
Page-0·1 ·

Ripley surprises PPHS ·
16-0 in homecoming tilt

classified
COLONIAL

Blacks were unable to pick up a first ·
yard line and with :32 seconds down in three plays. With time now
remaining on the ·clQCk Ripley at- playing an lmp!Jrtant factor the Bit!
tempted a field goal. The kick was
Blacks went for It on fourth down
no gone! as there was a bsd snap and came up empty handed.
from center on the play, thus leaving . Ripley took over on Point's 41 yard
line ll'hich set up Ita final tally of the
the score at 6-G at the baH.
In the secOnd baH both defenses contest. It came on Scott Wallace's
stiffened as neither Point or Ripley one yard plunge in the final minutes.
could move the ball or sustain any
The loss dropped the Bit! Blacks'
record
to ~ on the year. Ripley is ~
substantial drives. There was a com3.
bined total of only 34 yards between
Leading Point's offensive troops.
the two teams during the third stanwere Kip Atkinson with 'l1 yards.
za.
With less than seven minutes left Mike Porter and &amp;ott Rutherford
in the game the wear and tear were , combined for a total of 78 yards
starting to show nn Steve Safford's passing, the most In any one contest
defensive squad as the Vikings· this year by the locals. .
Local defensive standouts were
moved to the Big Blacks' nine yard
line- From there Ripley's Mike Bald- Jim Wamsley, John Daugherty,
win split the uprights giving the Kevin Smith, Randy McDolllild, ·
Perry Hicl&lt;num,and John Oshel.
Vikings a 9-0 lead.
On the ensuing kickoff the Big
li'riday, the Big Blacks wi!l entertain another Jackson County for
in the Ravenswood Red Devlls.
Game time is set lor 8 p.m.

Both teams had trouble putting
together sustained
d·rives
throughout the second stanza. The

Reutemann captures ·p ole
position for Grand Prix

Statistics
Department

PPHS
4
·3

. First downs

Yardsrushing
Yards passing '
Total yards
Passing
1nterceptions thrown
Fumbles-Lost
Penalties· Ycls
Punts-avg.
Offensiveplays

78

75

R
13

223
10
233

6·16
1-3
0
o
1·0
1·1
4·26
6·60
5·30.0 4--40.5
40
56

Blcentenlal

6-8 p.m.-College Recreation

Oct. 19 8-10 p.m.-Intramural Volleyball
Oct. 208 -10 p.m.-Intramural Volleyball
OCt. 21 Closed
,
Oct. 22 8-10 p.m .· Intramural Volleyball
Oct. 23 7·9 p.m. -Open Recreation
0ct. 242:30p.m.-Volleyball vs. Defiance

TAKING THE SNAP-,. Mike Po11er (No.5) of 111181bomecomlaggamebydefeaUDgtbeBigBiackalf.
Point PleaBBDI II plclllred above beblnd biB olfeulve 0 before a ca..clty crowd at Sau..ten Memon.l
Une as be takea the SDapl~ center on tb,ls play again- Stacjlum Friday night. (Photo byCharUe Lee.)
st tbe Ripley Vikings_. Tbe Vlklnp spoUed Polut's 1111•

You always think you
. can do better--Garcia
.

Cl.EVELAND (AP) - Dave Gar·
cia, manager of the Cleveland In·
dians, Is the eternal optimist. There
would be no other way to survive as
manager of the Cleveland Indians.
"If we'd. played the whole ·year,
we'd only he seven games oul with 59
to play," Garcia 1!3id. ,"We played
very well at times."
Yet the lnilians came very close to
becoming the first baseball team in

through May 17.
"You always think you can do better," Garcia said.

Injuries, as has been the case consistently for Cleveland in recent
1
years, took their toll.
"I would like to llave seen what
would have happened If . Bert
Blyleven and John Denny hadn't ,
missed any turns," Garcia said.

IN POMEROY

Yorktown celebrates
Revolution's end

'·

YORKTOWN, Va. (AP) - Men Yorktown will be re-cemented
dressed in the uniforms of two cen- tonight when Vice President George
turies were showing thelr prowess Bush greets French Presldent Franon Y11111town Battlefield today cois Mltterrand,
Mitterrand and Bush will have
. dUring the nation's celebration of the
end of the RevoluUonary War bere dinner together in Williamsblirg,
also the site 'of a surnrnlt meeting
2110 years ago.
Costwned colonial mock troopil and state dinner when President
moved from their muslin-tent en- Reagan arrives Sunday.
Reagan and Mitlerrand wiU adcampments to display off 18th century seige warfare, complete with dress th• Bicentennial gathering
Monday, befor.e the re-enactJhent of
ancient cannon and black powder.
Their 20th-century counterparts, Cornwallis' actual surrender.
Virginia Gov. John Dalton ofwhose supersonic jets, high-powered
tanks and battle-gray ships have in· , ficially opened the four-day fete
vaded Yorktown, displayed more Friday morning, and the costumed
modem tactics on the Yorktown troops put on their first display as
the allies assa~lted a British earthen
Bicentennial's Military Day.
The Revolutionary troopS set the fort captured in the 18th century.
. Dalton also issued the welcome to
stage first with a re-enactment of
the
175,000 visitors expected here
the call for parley, when Lord
and
said Yorktown :offers sober
Charles Cornwallis called for a truce
lessons
for our own times.
Oct. 17, 1781, ln order to negotiate
''Before
us is a celebration of vic~
the terms . of surrender to Gen.
tory, but I su~gest it is more a
George Washington.
The Franc&lt;&gt;-American alliance monument to freedom and to
that ensured the victory at generations of friendship between

POOL
2-_. p.m. -Open Swim .
6·8 p.m. -College Swim

Closed
1-9 p.m . -Open Swim
Closed

2--1 p.m .-Open Swim
6·8 p.m .-College Swim

3-,SYJeed 71n&gt;rmos(atic Blower - The Buck Stove's

Prwure

FRONT END ALIGNMENT

Blower

Vessel Plate
·steel
tlrebox

Glass

We' ll ser casler, camber and toe-in to
mo111ufactur'er's specifications. Check
suspension parts for wear and damage,
;\l &lt;,o tires lOr wear and safety. Parts exft ,, , •f needed. No extra charge tor airconditioned cars, or torsion bars.
Call for.an appointment now .

*1495

SAVE $8.00

Door
Inserts

powerful rear-mounted blower can completely recirculate
!he air in-an IHOO square foot house once every half
hour, insuring even heat distribution. And since the
thermostat is regulated hy the firebox temperature,
very little heat is lost up your chimney when the fire is
hot And your house isn't Hooded with chilly air when
the fire cools down.
·

MOCI[ BATn.E -

lire u two

Smoke blllowl from

C8IIIIOII

..W.C lhlpo eome

bnadalde a mocll sea
battle 011 the Yart River. The battle was ..rl of tbe
YOiticnnl, ,va. BleeilleltiUI telebratlon. On the left Ia
ProYkleaH IIIII 011 the right flriDg liB C8DHll Is M.eka
n. (AP Laoerphoto).

:"''

2

O.ambe"'

We install new tront brakP pads, resur·
tnce rotors, repack front wheel bear·
ings. inspect master cylinder, brake
cJI•per, and brake hoses, bleed system
t~nd add new fluid, then road test the

Englishmen ,
Frenchmen, :
Americans and many other people

who have sacrificed for it," Dalton
said .

"So let us rememper Yorktown ...
a new birth of freedom for which
men of many nations risked life ltseH, a ·rorch they pasoed to us in ·
trust that we too would keep illit and
held alofl for many generations to
a~

come,''hesaid.

Francois de Lahoulaye, Fre~ch
ambassador to the United States,
also said Yorktown should be
remembered for its contribution to ·
freedom and friendship between the
two nations. '
"In our minds the . memory of
Yorktown and your war of in- .
dependence is linked with the :
memory of those battles on our soil :
when twice in this century your armies helped my country to restore
that liberty which we had helped
establish

on

these

shores,"

l..ahoulaye said.

•

Air

BRAKE SPECIAL

••

Costumed Continentals and the boom of cannon• brought the .•ight• and sounds of
revolution back to Yorktown on Friday to open the nation's lost Bicentennial
celebration. About 170,000 people are expected 10 allend before the pageantry end.
Monday with a recreation of the British surrender that ended the American Revolutio·n
200 yeart1 ago. Around the trenches where Lord Cornwallis made his last stand,
"soldiertl" in 18th century altire paraded and drilled with blar·k powder weapon.• and
to 8ncient tune&amp;. The Yorktown Bicentennial Bril{ade march1!d onto the battlefield,
the French in sparkling white, the Brilish·in scarlet red.

Closed

Oct. 25 2· 4 p.m.-Open Recreation
6-8 p.m. -College Recreation

Most American Cars

history to finish sixth five times in
four years. They edged the World
Series-bound New York Yankees by
percentage points to finish fifth in
the American League East in the
post-strike season.

Cl95ed
Closed

and Central State

their

Yorktown, VirRIDia Friday. Tbe
Yorktown
Blceateunlal
celebratillg commemoraliDC tbe
laal battle of tbe' RevolaUoury
War IOIIUider way Frtday. (AP
Laaerpboto ),

E~BERFELDS

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
week ot October 18, 1981
DATE- GYMNASIUM
Oct. 18 2·4p.m. -Open Recreation

Cel~bratloa,

unll01'1111 IIIII
equipment for a ..node Ia the
colonial army enc~~~~~p~~~e~~t Ia
prepare

Jones. But he does not expect Jones,
the defending world driving chamThe Indians finished their
pion, to offer any help on the course.
traditional sixth during th~ first haH
Jones, who is out of this year's
score b.y quarters:
of 1981, despite a strong start that
.
oooo-o
point race and has previously an- PPI-!S
kept
them in first place from AJ?ril22
0 6 0 IQ-10
nounced his retirement after today's Ripley
race, "Is going for the nine points r---------------------------~~-----------------and I'm going for the nine points,"
Reutema'!'l said, referring to the
points awarded fora victory.
"I think I need to go for the win.
Alan can't win the championship,
but he is going to try to win this
race," ReutemaM said. .
Jones, of Australia, qualified
Friday at 104.683 mph, just behind
Canadian Gilles Villeneuve at
104.591! and Brazilian Nelson Piquet
at 104.461.
Along with Reutemann, only
Piquet and Frenchman Jacques Laf·
lite had a chance for the world
driving championship going into the
season finale. Reutemann had 49
points to 48 for Piqueland 43 for Laf.
file, who qualified a disappointing
12th at 103.133 mph.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - One
race away from what he hoped
would he his first Fonnula One
driving championship and leading
the three finalists for racing's top
piize by one point, Argentine Carlos
Reutemann had a deceptively sim·
pie strategy for victory.
"I'm going to drive ... the limit of
the tires, the limit of the car and
myseH," he said Friday after taking &gt;
the poll position for Saturday's Las
IIegas Grand Prix. His fastest
qualifying lap of 104.918 mph on the
first day of qualifying withstond
c"halienge Friday. It gave him the
edge into the first turn on the tight
course built specially for the
inaugural Grand Prix on the hastilyconverted parking lot and sandlot
adjoining Caesar's Palace.
· " For me, the best solution is to
win," he said after taking hiS' sixth
pole position in 14 Grand Prix races.
Reutemann wiU start the rae•
next to the green and white
Williams-Ford of teanunate Alan

ENCAMPMENT

- Partlcipanll Ia the Y'onton

V~ &lt;lfove to the Big Black 17

POINT PLEASANT - Visiting
·Ripley spoiled Pt. Pleasant's 1981
homecoming festivities on Saunders
Memorial Field Friday night by surptlslng Coach Steve Safford's Big
, Blacks, IS-G.
With the victory, the Vikings
claimed the Old Oaken Bucket for
another year.
On the third play of the second
quarter Ripley fullback &amp;ott
Walters hit paydirt for the Vikings'
initial score. On the PAT the Blg
Blacks were penallied for offsides,
placing the ball on the one yard line.
Ripley elected to go for two and was
denied with a total defensive effort
by the Blacks, leaving the score at SOinfavoroftheViklngs. •

D

Oct. 18, 1981

\
,

Cool Air
ln121&lt;e
Vents

I!

·-·----..:....

t
j

CiH .

2Wheel
Front Disc

MOST AMERICAN CARS

WINTERIZE
NOTE: Recommended every 24
months or 30,000 miles for protection against rust and freezing.
*Flush cooling system
'*Pressure Test System
*Check hoses and belts
*Add two gallons coolant

TUNE UP

We install new factory recommended spark
plugs, new fuel filter, adjust timing, set idle
speed, check air filter, p.c. v., and road tesl.
WE USE-SUN ENGINE PERFORMANCE
ANALYZER
SAVE511
SAVEGAS

SAVE

*2295

.There is only one Budl Stove
heating~. '

Buck Stove invented the forced air woi&gt;d heating system
and has continued perfecting it ever since. Its exclusive ·
and patented design - for·both fireplace insert and
freestanding models - cannot be duplicated.
Since many Buck Stove imitations have appeared on ·
the market, we think you should know why Buck Stove
is sliU the leader.
Quality Construction - The Buck Stove is made with
three steel walls. The firebox is pr.essure vessel plate
steel - the highest quality steel available. The doors
are cast grey iron, and the glass door inserts resist
breaking at temperature as high as 1200 °F.
Airtight Design - The Buck Stove heating system is
engineered to bum \IDOd or coal slowly_and completely,
allowing a controlled, .even Dow of air across the fire.
This precise draft control niakes it easy to build a fire
and eliminates constant fire tending.
.

V)

I

YORK RIVER BATIU:.:... The
salllq vessels, Pride !left),
Provldeace (center) allfl the
Yfllllll America (right) ..,..
Uel..le Ia mock sea ballles In the
York River near Yortlowa,
Vlqlnla · Friday. The demaoltlllllallis ..rt ol the Yortiowa •
Blee~teulal ·telebntlou. ( AP :
Laaerpboto).

MECHANIC STRin W~IIHOUSI

ELB
~-.------,1'-----:;----:------'-:--------v:----~

---- -·.,.---:---:---x-·- - - - - -- - - - - ,-";---+-

I 'tl.

,

·'

�'
'

t

I

.

Oct. 18, 1981

Pameroy- Middlepart-Gillipolls, Ohio-Paint PleiSant,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
Fedlnl Grain lnlpectlon Service Ia
flrlniiiiU'ly. percent of lla atalf In
4411eld afficea u put of an ecGIIOriiY
move . and OI'JIInilaUOM! face..
llftina, the Agrlcillture Department
88ya.
Oftldala Aid Friday tbat f/1 employea wDilole lbelr joba u ol Nov.
I. None of the 44 field office~ will be
clJlll8d, oo...evar, said Kenneth A.
Gilles, adminlltralor of the agency.
· Tbe agency's field office wort force CUITelltly tolalll,218 employea.
· Tbe firings wDI reduce it to 946 by
the flnt ol the mooth.
Tbe agency Ia l'tlpOIIIIIble for a
natioowide ayalem ~quality control
for grain, including the Welshinl!
and offlclal lnspeclion of commodltles as they move through the
.markellne cbain and Into export
channels.
Gilles announced several weeks
11110 that 77 joba in the agency's
beadquarters staff would be'
abolished and ~ more downgraded
as of Oct. 3. Prior to thoae firings,
there were 261. people oo the agency's headquarten atalf, most ol

AAA .names new manager
Since her employment wlth AAA,
Rathburn has attended an air traffic
conference seminar held in
Washington, D.C. during September. She has also completed a
course spOnsored by the Cruise
Lines International Association as a ·
cruise counselor.
A get-acquainted time is being set
for Friday, Oct. 23, from 9 a.m.~
p.m. at the AAA office on Second
Avenue, to allow the public to see the
new office, its manager and be
briefed on the vBriety of services
AAA has to offer.
Among the services are the sale of
luggage to Its members at a special
discount price. Additionally, the of·

lice has discount admission tickets
. to lour of Ohio's major amusement
parks, ilicluding Cedar Point,
Geauga Lake, King's Island and Sea
World, during the summer months.
AAA· can arrange charter buses,
hotel rooms and sight-seeing junkets
for group outings: The office is
working on arrangements for trips
to the World's Fair in Knoxville,
Tenn., next year.
Currently, AAA's 10 southeastern
Ohio offices are offering a special
membership discount pal'tage in observance of President John lrwlo 's
30th year in the organization.
For !lOW master members, first·
year dues run $20, and for associate
members, the charge is p to join for
one year. The dues renect • 20 per·
cent savings.
AAA also provides credit card
registration, a convenience to members if their cards are lost or stolen.
AAA will notify the credit companies
about missing cards.
Other services avall8ble Include
no-fee travelers checks, a 25 percent
discount at the Colombus Sheraton
Airport Inn, a 30 percent discount on
Hertz and Avis car rentals, and a 20
percent discount on Port Columbus
Airport parking.

''
''

..
.f

By STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
AP BUJiness Writer

NEW YORK (AP)- Reportslhls
past week have added to the mounting evldence of a listless economy
and raised the prospects . of the
nation falllng into its eighth
recession since the end of World War

recesaion for the past three years.
"The overall perfonnance of the
economy has been consiatently weak
since the early part of 1979," say
Morgan Stanley &amp; · Co. Inc . .
economi.sts H. Erich Helnemam and
Charles Ueberman.
"Put simply, the economy is
currently going through the ~ond '
major downward step in its 1979-1982
recession," they say.

DETROIT (API - American
Motors. Corp: says it lost $16.8
million during the third quarter of
1981, the automaker's sixth consecutive unprofitable three-month . II .
pjlriod.
Government agencies reported
The last time the firm was in the the biggest drop in industrial
black was the first quarter of 1980 production in more than a year,
when it reported profits of $1.3 rising inventories of unsold goods,
But Heinemam and Ubennan say
million.
sluggish growth in retail' sales that they expect Inflation to continue to
AMC said Friday the July· fallC!I to keep pace wlth inflstion, unwind and interest rates to fall subSeptember loss, which amounted to and the weakest early-October auto stantially in 1982.
. NEW MANAGER - Karen Rathburn of Ga!Upolls rejoined the
32 cents per share of stock, was sales in 23 years.
Influential Wall street economiSt
G~lllpoUs AAA office as manager on Aug. 1, replacing Cathy Dreier, who
down sharply from a loss of $84.9
On Wednesday, the government Henry Ka6fman, managing director
relocated with her husband. Rathburn has receiveli tralnillg In air traffic
million, or $2.66 .per share, in the reports on the growth of the and memher of the executive comand cruise couoseling.
July-&amp;!ptember quarter of 1980.
economy during the third qiu.rter. rt mittee of Salomon Brothers Inc.,
the "re~l" gross national product- says that while interest rates may
the inflation-adjusted total of goods deCline in the next few weeks, they
and services produced by the will turn higher again, ~tting new
economy - declines, It would be the records.
•
·
second
consecutive
quarterly
drop.
Meanwhile,
the
Federal
Reserve
'DAYTON - Robbins and Myers, persistent weakness in the industrial be used to offset more expensive
A recession is commonly
reported that indWIIrial production
bank borrowings.
In~ . set net sales and earnings recor- and capital goods markets they seras
two
straight
quarters
of
described
fell
0~ percent In September,
Wall said that the bscklog of un~~ in fiscal1981 with sales increases . ved in fiscal 1981. The fluids han·
declining
GNP,
although
teclmical
following
a 0.3 percent decline in
of f9 percent and earnings per :share dling division attained a substantial filled orders for the company at the
analysts
insist
on
cumulative,
per~reases of 24 percent over the sales increase and profit gain, but end of fiscal 1981 was $01,555,000
pWvious year, said Fred G. Wall, saw backlogs deteriorate toward compared to $54,539,000 the previous vasive ' !Yeakness in economic acyear. He cautioned that the con' tivity ,before dec)aring a recession.
p~sident and chief executive of· year end, he said, while the
WhUe an increasing nwnber of
tinued
low order rate· from the
materials handling division had flat .
fi&lt;)lr.
economists
are predicting a
goods
markets
combined
capital
sales and incurred a loss.
COOLVILLE ~ An open bouse is
~les rose to $250,315,000 from
recession
this
year,
some maintain scheduled at the Coolville Medical
The electric motor division, he with greatly increased seasonality
$lf4,152,000; and net income advanced to $13,429,000 or ».66 per said, had a modest sales increase, of ceiling fan sales in the comfort the economy has been gripPeli by Clinic on Sunday, Oct. 25, from noon3p.m.
shjlre, compared to $10,732,000 or but also incurred a loss for the year. conditioning division will low the
According· to Wall, AC motor earnings of the company during the
The cl!nic, located on Wilson ·
$4~ per share the previous year.
Street in Coolville, is owned by the
In the fourth quarter, sales were products saw a sharp sales decline early months of fiscal 1982. Fiscal
village of Coolville and was built
$61,280,000 compared to »2, 780,000 and also incurred significant new 1982 is expected to be a good year for
with funds provided by the Apin: fiscal 1980 and earnings were plant start-up expenses, while DC the company, JNith an upturn in the
motor products (Electro-Craft economy in the second half. Finanpalachian ~gional Commission and
$3~,000 or $1.51 per share, comthe Ohio University College of
P"fed to $2,691,000 or $1.15 per share Corp.) achieved a good sales in- cial highlights for the fourth quarter
crease with nat earnings. '
ended Aug. 31, 198llollow: ·
Osteopathic Medicine.
t ~ previous year.
·
High interest rates cost the comOHio Valley Health Services
'wall noted that in fiscal 1981 the
coffifort' condltfOri!ng division l&lt;id·all . pany $7.5 million in fiscal!981 , an in· . Net Sales, $250,315,000; Income
Foundation, Inc., of Athens superpelfonnance in sales and profit, and crease of $3.5 million or $. 78 per . Before ' Income Taxes, $25,589;000;
vlaed the construction of the facility
II$ occurred in spite of the shar~, over the previous year, Wall Federal and Local Income Taxes,
. and is managing .the clinic for the
di!estiture of ventilating fan lines said. He also noted that on Oct. 5 the $12,160,000; Net Income, $13,429,000;
during the year.
company signed a Ia year $20 million Earnings Per Share, » .66; Conunon
He said the other three divisions loan agreement with three in- Shares Outstanding, $2,376,000; Un·
suffered in varying degrees from a surance companies. The.&lt;e funds will filled Orders, $51,5SS,OOO.

~irm
..

.'

continues to show profit

August and a 0.6 percent gain in 1
July. It was the largest decUne since
a 0.8 percent drop In July 1980, al the
end of a short but steep recession.
.The Conunerce Department said
· inventories held by U.S. bullnesses
roee 0. 7 percent in August u aales
fell I percent. It also reported that
sales by the nation's retailers roee
0.4 percent In September, and have
increased at a seasonally adjusted
rate of gain of 1.4 percent In March,
much less than the increa.Je Ukely
attributable to inflation since then.
U.S. automakers Aid salea plummeted 34.1 percent . In the first 10
days of October from the same
period iaBI year, falling to the lowest
rate since 1958, a recession year.
American Motors Corp. reported a
loss of $16.8 million in the third quarter of lhls year, its sixth consecutive
quarterly )IJ9Il. But It waa an fm..
· provement from the $8U million
deficit In the third qlllrler ol1980.
The prbne lending rate at major
banks fell to 18 psrcent, Its lowest
level since early May.

COBA/SELECT Sl RES

Alfalfa production forecast

.. '
'

RIO GRANDE - Hennan L. Koby initial list of about 20 such schools,
of Rio Grande College and Com- fi ve were selected. In addition to Rio
munity College recently traveled to Grande, Cornell University, Temple
the University of Bridgeport (Conn.) . UniverSity, University of Delaware,
to, participate in a workshop and New College took psrt In the
de~igned
to study institutional study. There are approximately 80
privat.,.public relatedness in a schools that have a private-public
select group of five college and relatedness throughout the United
universities from throughout the States.
eastern United States.
Koby.is a native of Gallipolis.
Each of the five schools selected
l.'he study was made possible were analyzed in six broad
thfough a $15,000 one-year grant to cate gories as follows: (1)
the university by the Ford Foun- background (why the state relationdation and a grant from the Exxon ship became necessary and
Corp., made two conferences desirable) ; (2) how the state
possible to evaluate the studies. The relationship was achieved (per·
purpose of the recently completed sonalities, cl!mate of opinion,
prj)ject was to explore parinerships enabling legislation ); (3) descripbe,fween state governments and tion of the'Telationship (how It works
private institutions Qf. higher in theory and 'in .practice, the kind
;.ducation.
~
and amount of financial aid, the kind
l'he project took the form ~f a and amount of sl8te control) ; (4)
cOmpa.(ative case study. From an
educational consequences (per-

Village.
Physician services are being .
provided by the 0. U. College ·of '
Osteopathic Medicine wlth Dr.
ThOIIlllll A. Thesing in attendance
three days a week. Support staff include Joan Ann Lockhart, LPN, and
Barbara Chapman, receptionlst.
As patient uWlzation Increases
the physician time will be expanded:
Junior and senior medical 81udents
from the college will receive clinical
experience at the facility under
Thesing's direction.

more

Apreliminary meeting was held in
mid-July at the University of
Bridgeport to discuss the project
and at the final meeting of the panel
In &lt;:arty October, the reporta were
pulled together, edited and a cmparative sWJU118ry and conclusion
were giVen.
The results were published In a
book entitled " Patterns of PrivatePublic Relatedness - ' Five In·
stitutional Histories and an
Analysis."

r

VERMEER ROUND BALERS

SAVE '998.00 to •1 ,270.00

Contact Joann Newsom 992-3382
or Cathie Wood 949-2358
·

DALE HIU. FORD
, TRACTOR INC.

•

We Are Now Selling School Jackets. Come In and See
Our New T·Shlrt &amp; Jersey Lines.
,
·
. ,
'
" ·

, ,

•

. SPECIAL. SALE ON
THE FOLLOWING

;.

CUSTOM PRINT SHOP
:·
'/ ' '
~s~~:la:ll:d~I.~·--------~----~~2~3~4~N\~a~i~n~~~~~9~92~-2~4~6~7~~~~· ~~P~o~m~e~r~ay~,~O~h~.~ ;·

•

.
By CHET CURRIER
AP BUJ!neu Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A new item
...s been added to Wall Street's loog
li~ of economic worries - leas-thanInspiring earnings reports from
.Gme of the nation 's leading com~ea .

·AU the returns aren't yet in for the
J~y-Septemller 9uarter, and no ooe
Is'writing off the period as a uniform
~for~teproflts.

But _.a! concerns wilh large
cl.W. In the invealment world
hllve lllued "down" eaminga repor-

faD

ta~ dayJ, addblc to concern
the ~t _state and future

1

.
p1 oopecls of business activity.
The most prominent of these was
International Business Machines,
which on Tuesday reported a·22 percent drop In net incllrne - Its first
quarterly decline since the end of
l!rnl .

Arilong others recording lower
results were Polaroid, Honeywel l.
Scherlng-PIOUBh, Dow Chemic
Merck and NCR, not to mention s·
Wall Straet llalwarta u Merrill
cb and E.F. Hutton.
In many ollbeae 1n1tances
eamlnga aOOwlngJ hid beeh
peeled, given the troubled economic
'environment in ll'hlch ~has

c•·

(

•

'

'

614·446·167 5

Gallipolis, Ohio
plus many mare BIG savings!

•

OCTOIII 31, 1911

1-Ford Tractor 7700 Cab, A/C, am-fm stereo,
. rear tires filled, load monitor .. . . . ' .. Retail $29,976 .
Sale Price, no·trade thru Od. 31 •. •.. •• Only $20,435
1-Fard 503 Rake ...... . .. . ... .. ...... ........ SI,045
'
.
f '
1-Fard 101 Plow, 2-14 . ..... . .... ... . . .. . . . .. , . $780
; 1-Ford 1066 ·Ton Wagon Gear .... . .......... .. . 5421
I~Ford201 Flex Disc, 7'12 ft .• . •• ... , . . . ..... . . $1,015
1-Faril131 Chisel Plow, 7ft... . . .. ..•. ... , ..•• , $1,003
1:-Ford 208 Field Cultlvator • . .... .. •. ; .... . •• • $1,325
· 1-Waacls 84NC·2 Pull Type Rotary Cutter .••.•.• $1,735
1.,;.New Idea R402 Rake ......... . ....... ..... $1,575
1-Roul Wheel Rake . ·.... . . . ... . ... . .. . , .. ... . $535

NOTICI
We will 118 demonsrratllig (weather permlfflngl the new
I • C:LIUi~ Combine October 2oth and 21st In the Racine .
area. ·If interested c•ll this dealership for details.
I.

'•

OPEN HOUSE

DAI.EHIU.

251 W. Main St.

\:-

..

PqflltrOY, Ohio 45769 ·
Phontitt2-6441 or 9t2-2668

..
.:J

•

,,

'

.

BIG 1-DAY SALE

OF.

TRACTORS&amp;
IMPLEMENTS
The Long Una of affordable farm equipment Is now even
more affordable during our "Big One-Day Sale. You can save
.up to 25% or more over our normally low prices.
FREE DOOR PRIZES
$7,441
48.5 H.P.
$91449
4X4
$8.904
64. H.P.
4X4 $10,799

CHECK THESE SPECIALS:
24 H.P. . $5,124
24 H.P. $5,551
4X4
$6,969
35 H.P. $6,743
41.94 H.P. $7,036
4X4
19,194

PLU,S FREIGHT

""" ....., lfoleiiG ..""'''

,FORD lRM:lOR, INC. ,..

'.'It fa liCit the ..... of I balfNlly
healthy lllll'kel ..... ltocb wbldl
are lllread1 down lha!ply fram lhalr
higlw are 111111'-ainl Ill~ earnlnp," uld NIW!Gn Zlllder, an
analylt at E.F. HDttm.
.

1981

JIVIDEN FARM EQUIPMENT

INVENTORY ITEMS ONLY

been operating lor montha. But the
stocks of some of the compin1es fD.
volved were buffeted by lleJllDg
anyway.
IBM fell more tlian 4 polnta to the
low IMla, for eumple, hiUlng Ita
lowest price In a r- and 1 half.
ffiM lbaru, the No. I bolclinc of fD.
vesting 1nat1tuU0111, bave dropped
about II point.s since early January.

•f

9ne Day Sale Oct. 31,

'

Activity
reports
worry
investors
.
'

FEEDER CALF SALES
ATHENS UVESTOCK SALES

•

And Receive a FREE T-Shirt and up
to 50%.in·MerchandiSe on Sales.
I

ception of ctumges In quality of
RETIRES - Carrie Slllloa, Rt. ' 1,
education and in accessibility of
education to the public) ; (5) Cbesbire, a 13-year employee of the
economic
consequences Guiding Hand Sebool In Cheshire,
(enrollment, accoontability, and retired recently. Sbe atarled witll
cost or savings to the state), and (6) Guiding Hand as a veblele operator
current attitudes (perceptions of · and later became a ceramlel Iathose involved as to the success structorandbuadrlverrortlleadult
and/or failure of the sl8te reiation- program. Sbe was later promoted to
ship 1.

~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

up 15 percent, officials say

HAVE A T-SHIRT PARTY

"

Buy.classified ads

GAiliA COUNTY CAm.EMEN

New clinic sets open house ·

RGC participates in conference

.

Homemakers'
Circle

Listless ·economic move in view

AMC big loser
'

Soatbeutern Oblo afflce In AlbeDII, l8ld W1!18111 Cooalnlelloa of Pomeroy sboalcl complete the reD''*""&amp;
began last oprblg, by mid-November. An apealnc date
bas not been set.

_,....•'

GAIJ.JPOUS - Income tax ter-study approach let you read and
management before the end of the review at your own pace, in your
year may be even more critical than own office or ll'rinl rocm.
The course wu deVeloped by two
usual for Gallla Cowtty fanners in
•I
. Ullll. The wet spring and related ef· Area Agents and a State Specialist in
.
fects - . planting delays; added Farm Management in the OSU
.•
chemical, feriWzer and fuel costs; Cooperative Eztenaioo Service. II
and potential reduced yields; Blonc was uaed in 19'18-79 by a pilot grcq~
with some IIIIII'ked changes in pricea of about 500 lamllles and farm tax
..
- all will affect your tax situatioo advisors. They helped evaluate the
thia y!lllr ... as well as your p.cket- course and auggested reviiiOI)II. Tbe
'.••
families aald the course belPOII them
book.
,.
In addition, the 111111 Economic better understand what records to
Recovery Act, enacted in late sum- k~p, hw to choooe deprodatioo
mer, ••re-wrote the rules' ·~ for strategies and claim investments
depreciation and made the new rules credit correctly, and bow to correcretroactive to January I, 1981. It also tly report gain on sale of capital
substantially changed the in- itema, among other things. Of thoae
responding, 46 percent said they felt
vestment tax credit.
the
course had helped them aave in. The 1981-«Z Oblo State University
BARRElS OF BERRIES - A wet harvested from a bog that has
Ellensloo "Farm Income Tu Let· come taxes, with an avenll!e saving Jthem~~ln~W~~~~~
· =========~====='!! worker
reportedofover$250perfamlly.
.
II
__
..
__
..
spreads cranberries as they been flooded are uaed in proceuing,
ter-Study eou.,oe" coold help you
are
loaded
by conveyor onto a truck for Items such as juice .and sauce.
Over 3,500 Ohio fann families
better understand the Federal inin
carve,r
Mass. recently. Berries (AP Laserphoto ).
come tax regulations and as a result enrolled in the courae in 1f79.10 and
increue your after-tax net income. 19110-il years. ·Iowa State UniverSity
The course will be avall8ble in modified the course lillgbtly and of·
lt•aturlng
Galiia County for a lee of $6 to cover .lered it in 1~. At leui three.
Annie Anyhndy
other states are planning to use the
[1081age and printing of ll)Bterials.
Ry BF.TIIt: CLARK
In order to enroll, send ·Or bring COurSe.
All lessons have been reviewed
F.xtenslnn Agent.
your $6 to the Extension Service Of.
A TTIENTIONI
Home Er·nnomic's
fice by October 23, so materials can since last year and revised and upGAUJPOUS - Hot water. It's a · fnm 156 degrees Fahrenheit to 120
be aaaembled and mailing can begin dated to clarify certain areas and to
confonn to recent tax reptions significant energy uaer in your degrees Fahrenheit can save about
on time. ,
.
· The course' consists of weekly let- and interpretations. The three home. Aside fnm heating and $100 per year on the utility bill.
ler-lessons mailed from the County lessons on depreciation and in- cooling your home, water heating That's assuming a family of four is
Office, the first week of November vestment credit have been almost takes the biggest bite out of the using the water, wlth each person
home energy budget.
using 18 gaUons per day. And the
through late J~nuary. There are totally rewritten, to try to provide
OFFER PROVEN SIRES IN ALL22 BEEF BREEDS
nine le&amp;Sons plus a comprebens.lve the best lnfonnation currently
According to the Ohio Department cost of the electricity is six cents per
problem and an "Update" letter on available oo the new law.
YOU CAN SELECT BULLS TO IMPROVE THE
of Energy, about II percent o! your kilowatt-bour. Lowering the therDon't forget the October 23
the new ·tax leglslatioo passed in
utility bill goes for heating water. Of mostat on a gu water heater yielcls
FOLLOW! NG TRAITS:
de8dllne,
so
you
don't
miss
out
on
1981. Each lesson includes several
course, it's not feasible to do without about a 40 dollar yearly savings.
e FASTER GROWTH
review questions. A self-check key this opportunity to increase 1981 af· ,· any hot water In the home, but there
Families wbo have lowered the
e BETTER MILKING BROOD COWS
are WIIYS to ahave some dollars off water heater thenn011tat and find
. comes wlth the next lesson. The let· ter-tax net income!
eCLUB CALliES
the utulty bill.
· that the water is too cool, may have
eCALVING EASE
The largest energy and dollar . another energy-eating problem saver is to lower the temperature uninsulated water pipes.
FOR INFORMATION OR SERVICE CONTACT
setting on your water heater. Most
'l1lis may be especially true if the
EUGENE HUFFfi"'AN, COBA( TECHNICIAN, PHONE
thennostats 8{1! pre-set al the lac- water heater tank is located aome·
446·2290.
tory somewhere between 150 and 180 distance from the hot water point of
degrees Fahrenheit. Howeyer, a set-· use, Uke in an unheated basement or
ling of 120 degrees Fahrenheit (or unheated garage. Another rule of
140 de8rees Fahrenheit if you have thwnb will give you some Indication
an automatic dishwasher) is of the degrees of temperature you're
losing from tank to point Of use. For
probably sufficient for most homes.
.
.
'
To
lind
out
bow
high
your
elected
every
loot
of
water
pipe,
water
ternyear's
Mount
St.
Helens
fallout
area.
WASHINGTON (AP) - This
8:00 P.M. OCTOBER 13 and 27th
year's· production of allalla seed is Utah and Idaho fanners had gc¢ water healer Ia set requires ooly a perature dropa one degree
forecast at 117 million pounda, up 15 grqwing and harvest weather unill few simple steps. Fint remove the Fahrenheit. if you have an unheated
percent from 1980 and the largest rains on late fields ctirtailed har· metal plate on the front o!,the water crawl space beneath your borne, inheater \ank. There may be about staWng insulation for the water
PH . 592·2322
ALBANY, OHIO
crop in a decade, ·~· says the vest."
Agricnltve Department. .· .. .·
1be Great·Plalns atates from Nor· . four smalllcrews boldlng !lin place. . pipes wDI be a good Investment.
Under the plate, you wDJ find 110111e . Another way to cut from _.., to
1be department:• Crop Reporting th Dakota to Oklahoma "continued
lnsul8tion.
Dig this out to find ather· , twenty.flve dollars off your yearly
to
suffer
the
effects
li
iaBI
yeM's
Board said Friday that the acreage
All Beef breeds, calves, yearlings, mixed
mometer
dial
and a hand pointing to utility blll is to insulate the hot water
drought"
and
many
field
were
cut
rl allalla for seed harvest- 3110,000
breed. Calves may be delivered after 3:00p.m.
aGfeB · - slipped 12 percent from · for hay instead of being left to the temperature. YOu'll probably heater tank. U you have an electric
need
a
smaU
screwdriver
to
reset
water
heter,
this
Ia
an
easy
job
for
the
day before the sale or by 11:00 a. m. sale
produce seed, the report Ald.
4211,000 acres last year.
to
the
deaired
the
do-it-yourselfer.
You
can
cover
the
thermometer
dial
By states, lhls year's estimated
day and must be healthy, castrated and heal·
But the yield of seed is ezpected to
temperature.
·
the outside of the tank wlth strips of
he a record of 308 pounds per acre, allalla seed output and their 1980
eel. Rejects will be sold at the end of the sale or
How much money can you expect blanket insulatioo attached with
on the average, compared to 238 production included:
owner may lake home.
Calllornta, 56,930,000 pounds and to save by lowering the thermostat? duct tape. Or watch for.specials on
pounds in 19110, the report~·
"California, the natioo's leading 40,580,000 last year; Idaho, 14,240,000 That depends on a lot of thlnp, in- kits at your locat home im·
Send Consignmenl To:
allalia seed producer, reported a and 14,220,000; Kansas, 5,225,000 and eluding bow much water you use, j!rovementcenter.
·
RODNEY HOWERY
bow
many
degrees
you
lower
the
'Instilatiilg
a
gas
water
heater
is
a
jwnp of 38 percent over last year's 6,400,000; Montana, 4,320,000 and
Atheos
Livestock Sales
where
your
tank
is
bit
tricky.
The
De~ent
of
thennostat,
production," It said. "Both acreage 4,:ioo,ooo; Nebraska, 1,750,000 and
Albany, Ohio45710
located,
etc.
Energy
recommends
using
only
·2,475,000; Nevada, 10,200,000 and
and y\eld were up sharply.''
PH. 592·2322
As a rule of thumb, lowering an retro-fit kits. Be sure to foUow the
"Nevada seed fanners enjoyed 7,650,000; Oklahoma 4,900,000 1111d
manufacturer's directions to the letNo. Head ____ oct. I3 _ _ _ _ Qct. 27 _ __ __
nearly perfect harvest conditions 6,875,000;' Oregon, 4,9110,000 and eleCtric water heater thennostat ter.
4,550,000;
South
Dakota,
2,750,000
and record high yields to push their
·'
and 4,200,000; Utah, 3,706,000 and fli~-~~--iiiii-iiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;jil
productioo up one-third.
"In Washington, yields averaged 3,185,000; and Washington, 9•000•000
Chtlck These Specials&amp;
Southeastern Ohio Beef C;~ttle 1mprovement Assn.
600 pounds per acre, with bumper and 1,665,000.
PAUL H. BAER, Secretary-Treasurer
crops coming from ares outside last

,,

NEARS COMPLETION - The old Burger Chef fulfood reotaurant ,.. Eastern Avenue In GaWpolla wDJ
soon be redoae II I Ru Roaat Beef. Rebert B-elen
development 1118118ter Jor the Pizza Hut

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Pav-D·3

FGIS will lose 271 workers Nov. 1

Oct. II, 1981

A managerial change· t.is taken
place at the Gallipolis office of the
Automobile Aasociation of America
(AAA ) of Southeasetem Ohio.
Karen Rathburn, who worked for
the local ann of the travel service in
19'1&amp;-79, has returned to work with
the finn after worJ&lt;ing with Rjo
Grande College and Community
College and another finn.
Her appointment to the position
brings the personnel strength of the
office up to four. The other AAA employees are Polly Darnbroug~ and
Barllara Melvin, who serve as
·domestic travel counselors, and Bill
Eshena ur1 a domestic and inlerna tiona! travel counselor.

w. Va.

"'

It has the ·
.one thing a pro looks
for in a saw. Everything.
KEEPS YOU CUTTING FOR AS LONG AS YOU
WANTTOWORK
• Six-point vibration isolation system effectively reduces
vibration levels for more comfortable operation and lfis
fatigue.
• Th'"1)iece, centrifugal lined clutch transfers more power to
the bar 8nd chain for optimum culling action.
• AutomatiC oiief with manual override lela you customize the
oil flow to match cutting demands.
• Capacitor disCharge ign~ion for dependable all-weather
~art&amp;

.

.

' • D~al Chamber Softone'" mutner with front-mountad , bottom
dileharge lor quiet operation.
·.
• SAFE·T·Tif&gt;8 antH&lt;ickback device protects you and your saw.·
• 4.1 cu. ln. dltplacement ll)Bkes the 410 strong anough for
heavy f811lng, lightweight and versatile anough for limblng.

JIVIDIN fARM IOUIPMINT

SEETHEHOMBJTE"410CHAINSAWATVOURLOCALDEALER.

lnllllll RNd, Galllpolll, Ohio 4SUI
(614) 446-1675
Rt.7 *outh of Oalllpolll, Tum rllftf till Rt. 211. 10 2\ls mll11

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
CHESTER, 'OHIO

.tiiCIIIIII Rtllll.

•

'

&gt;

�Page-D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport..:...Gallipolli, Ohio-Pain\ Pleasant,

w. va.

~~SA~n~MU~M~om~en~tfi•====~
~V~a~.~~~~~~~~T~h~e~~~~T~i~~~~~~~~~~
9====~~~~~===i======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Oiih~io-~iP~o~init~~~~~VV~.
=
Do It

Oct. 18, 1981

3

Elderly man held on five
murder counts in Kentucky
An

f,LLEN, Ky. (AP) elderly
m8n entered an automotive parts
store, threatened to kllJ everyone if a
young lll8ll didn't get off the
telephone, and then shot eight people
with a .30-callber rifle, killing five, 8
survivor says.
Anderson Newsome, 42, one of the
wounded, · said be noticed an
argwnent Friday between a .young
man and an elderly man as he and a
friend entered the Mountain Truck .·
Parts store in Allen. Moments later;
the younger man entered the store to
use the telephone.
. The elderly came in and said,
"I'm goi)D8 kill everybody 1n here if

be don't set that lelePhonO out of his

band," Newsome recalled: tbe-man
then opened fire.

·

William 0 . Bevins, a 71l-year-old
retired coal miner from nearby
Printer, was charged with five counts ,of nwrder, authorlUes said. He
• ..~
_ _.___.
"..........
, ... to another county
lor his 118fekeeplng and to protect
· the jallen and pollee," said Floyd
Diatrlcl Judge Harold Stumbo. He
did not Specify why the jaUers and

NO

Wright worked at the auto parts store where c&amp;
workers were aUegedlf slain by gunman William 0.
Bevins, 70, who was shooting at aoylblng thai moved.
Wrighlsald be was protected by.lbe bodies of two 8laiD

SHOOTING VICI'JM - Oue of the survivors of lhe
bllarre shooloul tballefl five people dead Friday In
ADen, Ky., lalked to reporlen Friday afternoon from
bls bed In Hlgblnnds Regional Medical Center. Bill

c~workers.

NEW YORK (AP) -A California
man convicted of criminal .trespass
and .eggravated harassment of
Caroline KeMedy says he still wants
to marry the late president's
daughter.
Kevin King, 35, of Palo Alto, Calif.,
a self-described law school graduate
who acted as his own attorney at the
non-jury trial, pleaded with

see

how you can harass someone
when you want to get manied."
. Bradley set Oct. 23 for sentencing,
at which time King could get up to a
year In prison on each count.
Mlss Kelinedy, 23, who .Uves with
two other young people in a .Manhattan apartment and works at the

Plllll1p TucJrer said the shooting
followed an argument in front of the
store between Bevins and on. ol the
vicllms, Roger Click, age unknown,
of Allen. Tucker said the subject of
the dispute had no1 been determined.
Stwnbo said he would announce

G.111ia Co . Area Cod e

M •~ •g s

614

c o. Area Cod e

"'

.J.u, - G.llllpotis

YY ~ -M•ddtcporl

:1 61- Ch cshir c

Pomeroy
'lil S - C hester
J4J-- Portland

:1118- Vinton

.24S-

~

io Vr.lnde

~ S6 ~ Guy a n

Dist .

l

SWEEPER: and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
Pick up and
supplies.
del ivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call

949 - Rac .ne
742- Rutl.lnd
MilSOn Co ., W. Va .

Oct. 20, · 1981 . 7:12 p. m.
Chester Grade school.
Steakdlnner. Price ; Adults

$2.50, Child $1.00. Make

446-0294 ..

reservations at Pomeroy
office or with any board
members. 992·2181.
En·
tertainmcnt
is
the
Tunetimers.

TER:S.
Come in and
register now for our Big
Buck
Contest. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·8025.

P lt'aSilnt

Jelly Maid for sale . 1
package makes three 8 oz
glasses .
Strawberry,
grape~ blackberry, black
raspberry. Contact Wilma
McMill ion. Reedsville. 614-

TRAPPER We have a com·
plete line of trapping sup·
plies. Traps, dye, wax , and
lures .
Spr ing
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza , 446-8025.

~~ 11 - L e on

516-- Appl e Grove
'1'/:J-- Mason
IUI1-New HclVen
1195- Letart
Yl7- Buff.llo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

EARLY

In Meigs County

44~2342

992-2156
In M.1Son

675-1333

.... .. ... .
_.,........................
~

_.

~ ··

2

Card of Thanks
We woul_d like to thank
everyone who helped in
anyway during the illness
and death of our mother.
Grace E . Stobart. The
Floyd Stobart Family ,
The fam ily of Edna
Roush wishes to thank the
many friends and relatives
who sent food, cards, and
flowers , also Rev . James
Clark ,
the
Racine
Emergency Squad, and Dr.
Ridgway and staff of
V eterans
Memorial
Hospital. also Ewings. May
God bless all of you.

In Memoriam

in memory of Leland E.
Nelson who passed way 3
years ago October 17,
1978. Three tong years
has gone by, but you are
still on our minds. Sadly
missed by wife, Flossie,
sons, John and Eddie,
daught,. · in ·t aw, Dottie .
Friends and relatives.

You'

II

tract it down
with a

WANT AD
WANTED
Pari Time
Exp. Medical
Transcriptionist

Apples, Honey and Sweet ·
Cider. Grimes, R:omes,
Gal., and Red Delicious,
Staymen Winesap. $5.25
per bushel and up. Cheaper
in volume. Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR689 . Phone 614·

SEASON

SPECIAL Deer slugs, rem .
12 gauge, 25 per bOx, $9 .97 .
Spring Valley Trading Co .,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·

669·3785.

MARTIN
GEN ERAI.. SIORE

Horses, pon ies, horse
trailer, r iding lessons. Hoof
Hollow 614·698·3290.

Ph. 992-6370

!::=========:...

Gun Shoot Racine Gun S
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p .m . Factory choke
guns only ,

Happy Ads

Happy Birthday

TRAPS and TRAPPING

to the

supplies . Gene Hines,
Amesville, · Ohio. 614·.u&amp;·
6747 . Daily after l p.m.
Racine Vol. Fire Dept.
sponsors a shotgun &amp; rifle
match every Sat. night at ·
6;30 p .m . at their building
at Bashan. Factory choke
12 guage shotgun &amp; open
sight 22 rifles.

8
·,

best Bunny

ever!
He Loves Her.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
lARGE GUN SALE

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1981
10:00 A.M.

PENNSVILLE, OHIO
ON st. RT. 377 IN MORGAN CO .
SATURDAY, OCT. 24
ATlO:OOO'CLOCK A.M. SHARP

u.s.

8N Ford tractor w / 6' Side mower, 1949 Ford truck,
HO n1owing Machine, wagon frame Con rubber),
iron kettle &amp; stand, HD plow, scraper &amp; disc, wagon

bed, wire, shutters, lawn mower, air compressor,
log chains, pile of bricks, platform scales. elec. fen·
ce charger, porch furniture, breakfast set. 2 metal
top tables, 2 living room 'uites, coffee table, writing
desk, bookcase, floor lamp, night stand, rocking
c~lr, stands, B&amp;W TV wltl'l stancl, bedroom suite.
library table, Iron bed, Harvest table, new set Of
harness for draft horses (never used), horse collars.
western &amp; English saddle . Many hand toots .and
miscellaneous Items.

TERMS: CASH
LOUISE PARSONS, OWNER

Lee Johnson·
AUCTIONEER
·crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-674o

Not RHponllble for Accldtnts or Loss of Property

PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL ·
Professional
Electrolysis
Center .. A.M.A . approved,
Doctor referals, by appointment only . 304·675·
6234. Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday &amp; Saturday.
A

clean

furnace

saves

· Announcements

Buick· Pontlac, GAllipolis,
Ohoo. Call4-46-2212.

NO hunting &amp; trespassing

Junl&lt; cars with or With out
motors, scrap. metal, and
baneries. Call388·9303 .

October Special. Furniture
upholstering·25 percent off
on labor. 1 month only.
Mowrey's
Upholstery.

Phone 1·30H7S·4154.
No Hunting or Trespassing
on former
Ferguson·

Walkup form. back of We$1

later when a hearing would be held

Columbia,

for Bevins, who was being held
without bond.

will

WV. Violaters

prosecuted

be

by

owner .
Mountaineer S~op, Hen·
derson. WV . Hound sup·
plies and cold beer to go.

Specials. Open dally,
NO hunting or trespassing
R~ymond

on

Smith Farm .

:{iien~:~ky ~~~~Uct~;:

Baton cort:~5 &amp; Private
·piano. Now scheduling
students, con't act her·116
Mayo Drive, Box 785 New

ot

Metropolitan Muaeum
Art,
testified King fli'st accosted her on
Aug. 18 as she was eating lunch on
the patio outside the musewn and
told her that "strange forces" had
been telllng him about her.

Haven, WV 25265 .
No Hunting or Trespassing
on Howard Hickle farm at
Hartford, wv.

" It was very confusing," she said,
"because he kept talking about the

Giveaway

4

ANY PERSON . who has

forces manipulating us."

anything to give away and
does not Offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for'
_ sal'e may place an ad in this
coiumn. There will be no
charge to the-advertiser .

TRAPS AND TRAPPING SUPPLIES

pistols in both as-issued and sporterlted condition.
Commemoratlves in this collection Include many

hand guns, rifles a. shotguns In unfired condition In
original boxes. Rarely will the opportunity over
arise to purchase guns of this quality ala ule of this
size. Don't miss .this Iorge all day ule held Inside
Iorge bluldlng regardless of weather. One of the
largest sales we liver had. Guns will bt mov,d ot
this location on day of sale and bt on display at 8:00
O'clock A.M. All guns must bt revlsterod day of
sale.
If you are 1 dNior you must hovo copy of gun 11-

.. and vendors number day of ulfl. Out of Stale
buyers mu•t be Hconsld liNter. AH 111n IIIUIIf lie
roglstered and !Mid IGr w/peld r-lpl before
INVIng building.
•
No guns con be ·'"" before doy of sate. Lunch on
premiHS. Terms - Cllh or Chtck W/fiOIItlvo I D
uy of sale. Not responsllllllor o«l4tlflll.
1111 Jo-tn c1111rwe ofhlfl
Auctl-~ 1111 Jl-.llltllly Newsom
ond AIIOCII'"- ,.....61_,•1411

Call614·667·3762.

'

&amp;

•

Puppies available for adop·
tion . Call 992-6505 .

FREE to good home·half
AmeriCan Eskimo Spitz,
half registered Beagle pup·
py, 8 months old, loves

kids, caii30H76·2297 .
MOVING·have to give
away 8 year old neutered

send lllo you by U.P.S. Send nc
for completl nt•l~~g .
Directions: Follow Rt. SSD E .
ol AUten• to Amesville, Otl. Turn
N. M St. Rl. 32t, gO 'llf~ miles
and 1urn W. on Cl1 "Kasler
CrHtt" .lltiiOUSeon lttf.
HOURS: 1 P.M. tof P.M. D1iiy.

OIL &amp; GAS
LEASES
WANTED

Siamese cai30H75·5774.

You 've heard about it. You 've seen pictures. But now it's
happening all around you. with more life and color than
in a thousand magazines.
The island sunsets, the tropical palms, the deserted
beaches.
The Navy is more thanjuat a job; it's the South Pacific.
Hong Kong , and all the foreign ports where Navy ships
stop. It's training in one of sixty skiltfielda. It's working
on the most advanced technical equipment.
' For the complete story, speak to your local Nav'y ·

Rt. I
Amesville, Oh . UJ11
Ph.ne 614-.-l-6747

DIXIE ENERGY CO.
P.O. Box 683

SEALED BIDS

TOWHOM .ITMAY CONCERN :
we wish to mAIIe it llnown thai
the R:oberl A'hley recently 1111 · ·
mined to Vtlerans Memorial
Hospital is NOT Robert Drew
Ashley of Rl . 2, R:1dne, Oh.
ILet•rt Filii). He IIU fttYtr
been 111 patient or said hospital.

Also we don' t have 1 son.
Robert . We 011ly h•ve two sons,
who are : Clifford Dennis Ashley
oiS&lt;~~Iter Re .. Racine, ancllleiltl
Drew Ash~y (whose wife is Em·
ma) of Crew Ra .. Pomaroy, and
one d•ughter, He~i Jill Smith of
Clition, W. va . Furtllermore,
there is no relationship betwten
Robert C. Ashley Of RICIIII IIMI
the Robert G. Ashley, Meigs
High coach of MiclcU•I)OI't,
Rober1 Drew Ashley
lnd JUReAIIIIey

I

For sale by sealed
blt;fs. 1975 Ford 4 door.
Formerly
Rutland
cruiser. 40,000 actual
miles. Sealed bids will
be received until Nov.

recruiter.

time bids will be opened
and sold to highest bid~
der upon receipt of cash.
Sealed bids should be
mailed or handed to
Vernon Weber, clert&lt;,
Rutland
Village,
Rutland, Ohio and
marked on outside of
envelope {Cruiser Bidl.
Ford cruiser may be in~

at

,

ber ShOp, Middleport . 992·
3476.
.
NEED MONEY? I need
furniture. New, used or an·
tique. Also buyin'g glaSs,
chlna 1 gold, silver, coins,
watches, chains, etc. Mar·
t in's General Store, Mid·

dleport. Ohio . 992·6370.
Scrap metals, batteries,
radiators. ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Yarper·Hatste·
ad SC~Ivage Company, 300
Slr~el .

675·5868.

Also Flea Market open
daily,
Open
Monday ·
Friday 1·5 pm.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, STARTING 11 A.M.

ANTIQUES: Ornately carved marble top sideboard
w/carved gargoyles and urns, beveled mirrors, un· ·
"er 7', a museum pieCeortoinally made for. the foun·
der of the Clhcinnatl Conservatory of' Music; lar~
Cherry gate legg~d drop· leaf table; Walnut game
table;. Oak drop· leat table; four flank bottom
chairs; fancy art deco style chest o drawers and
matching dresser with mlrron 2 fancy wicker
rockers; Oak pressed back rocker; Oak refectory
table w/4 chairs; 3 hill trees; Mllhogany claW foot
serpentine front desk; Duncan Phyfe drop-leaf

LoSi .aiid FOU~-­

Cliff area . Call614·992·5876.

..

Found: small reddish
brown male dog with pug
face. Found on RT143 . Call

•

•

6]4-992-7892.
· year old. Morning Star
area. Call614·949·2780.
Black, white and tim collie,
Letart erea ·off Sandhill
·- Road, on medication .

Phone 89~· 3433 .

Help Wanted

Wanted EdUcational Sales
Representative for Gall ia
Co. &amp; surrounding area.
Sales experience helpful,
salary &amp; commission.
Phone 446-4367 &amp; ask for
Mr. Tylfr. Equal Op·
portunity Employer.
Need extra money for
Xmas? Sell Avon . Call 446·
3358. •

LOST· male blue tick ,
vicinity
McDaniels
SlaUghter House, reward,

304-882'3328.
Walker dog. Call 458·1657
l and, identify.

•

'

.'

• Lost female walker dog, 10
~ mo·; old, mostly white,
:- Cl~rk Temple Rd . area .
! Tat SlJys Bill Parson, Gay,

.

• WVA. If foond call245·5007.

'

-

• r.l .,.

~l!trd

ARMY. •AU.lOU CAN . .

-...

stand; Duncan Phyla pie crust.sland: 100 pes. MZ

-·

occasional chairs; Danish modern sofa and chair;

bars; 2 and 4 drawer file c:ablnets; round metal

mesh patio table WJl&gt; chairs and 3 stands; Rain Jet .
portable water fountain w/colored lights; Electro
r Lux floor sc:rubber; Eureka portable IW-r; 19"
Zenith portable TV; Zenith AM·FM llble radio;
wurllfzer model 4100 electric organ and bench;
.aectrlc roaster and cart; 3-20'' electric fans; lam·
ps; small kitchen appllances1 poll, pens and
dishes; Corning Ware1 large teck box; water
trou~h: lawn oncl gonlen lools1 1971 GMC "Jim·
mey ' High Sierra, 4 - 1 drlvo, 18,1100 miles.
original owner wtewery option avallablt Including
·chrome running boards and mlacella..Oua Items
too numerous to mention.
TIIUoiS: .CASH 011 CHRCK WITH POSITIVE I.D.
ICOllt or trlvolln Checks •ty te aut of town
buyers) I
.
.
OWNIII-MRS. I. I.IIAVIS
SaleMIMIMflloy
GARTit'l AUCTIONS, INC.
AuctlonHn: ld
Maurice CAhill

·

e..-

·

I

•

Help Wanted

II

•
•

ply. Write box 729- BIn care
of
Dally
Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio .t5769.

From 11 A.M. tv I P.M. Monday thru
FrldiY In Division of Business Affairs.
Mt!llf 1111ve hllh Kllool or tfluivattnl, hlgll-lovel typlfll skills, tllte _..11111 IIIICktraulld with 1 y"r
oporotloltl of cemputtrs. Background
1ft ecetunllfll Mlplul. 14.7t I*" llr. with 11111pl1y0r
_,.... belttlltl. l'ar AIIPIIU- procodlltll,
~I 0111 Olfke or 11111 Ca-ardlae!Gr of Per. ~lillll'ilillfiCOIIeiiOI, llleGrancle, ,Ohto4M74,

..,.,_...Ill

..
'

'

CommHIII'-Jf"IINIIIed.
.
OIHttnYnlarYI-. DICD, P.O. lu tMI,
a, 01110 Qtl6.
All -~~~~~~~~ Will be kettt tit
IIIII ... 11o
IVOIIMie lor 111*11&lt; NYIOW AI tltt •llovt lllbllll 01-

==fecllve 111 or elloUt Novombor :L Appllca·
liM Ocll• sr 21.

- ltce.

J

Bodyman ~needed to work
in Rutland. Apply in person
across from old Rutland
high school .

RIO GRANDE
'
and COMMUNITY COllEGE
ASSISTANT TO COMPUTER
OPERAlOR

·

C:eo P.M., Mlftllly IIIIIU"" .., . , ,

GET VALUABLE training

and dependable need ap·

Gillie County Office, C17 ,.Cottt1 A - • (Old
~lllller Ford lldt.l. lhiHpolll,' Oitlo, - t.2. lxt.

..........

Blue Tartan,

Position open for front end
mechanic. Only qualifie~

MilliS C-ty 0111.., Meigs County Courtllouse.

Goi...MIItl CAA. NOrth StCinll' I, Main St.
c-,..
01111, M7·7141-ftWftt
·
TIM Plan may .. re\1ftllll fntlt f1M A,M to

to Box 206. Gallipolis, Oh
45631 .

•

Copies of the state Plan may be rovlewllltocally a1
1ny ol tht IeU-ng GAIIII·Molgs Community AcIIOft ... IIOIICYDffkell

Pomerov. Oltlo, fft·MOJ

Duties include telephone.

typing &amp; filing . Respon ·
Sible party send letter of
qualifications &amp; experience

RN or. LPN. 11 ·7 shift, full
9
Wanted to Buy
or part time . Competitive
WANT TO BUY Old fur · salaries, excellent fringe
nitufe and Antiques of all benefits. Call Nancy Van ·
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, Meter Mon. · Fri. 9·-4 :30. 992 ·
6606 .
256-1967 in the evenings.

In compliance wttn t'UDI1c Law 11 97-35,
Subtitle l!·Community Services Block
Grant Program, Section 671-683, 1742
1743 and 1745, the State of Ohio Submit~ ·
its plan for the use of CSBG .funds to
pubnc·revlew and comment.
Copies of the State Plan have been distributed to all
Community Action Agencies In Ohio and are
available for review In lhelr offices. The Depart··
ment of Economic and Community Development Is
the appointed Stole Aflt!ICY and the plan Is 1110
available at the Depertmenl's Office of Human Ser·
vices, :Uth Fl-. Slate Office Tower, 30 East Broad
StrMI, Columbus, Ohio.

oval Mahogany marble fop coffee table and ~ mot·
ching end tables; oriental nesting tables, lingerie
cheJI1 Walnut office desk; office chairs: 4 banquet
tablet: 36 metal folding chairs; 2 portable ..,.,lng

sale.

·.------------------::--G ARAGE sale Friday and

..

PROGRAM FOR FISCAL YEAR 1982

Henredon Ivory brocade side choirs; other quality

Small office needs help.

YardSale

-sa?urday, 9· ? tots 10 cent
items. 9 miles north on Rt.
2 near Flatrock .

.PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT

s

services, P .O. box 936.
resume
to Oh
Ohio
Residential
Gallipolis.
45631
.

some great gifts as a Sen ·
--:yard sale . Tues, Oct. 20. 9 tlnel route carrier . Phone
• ...,to ·5. 176 Grant st., Mid· us right away and get on
-=:dteport. Chlldrens clothing, the eligibility list at 992 ·
2156 or 992··:1157.
:-leans, misc. Items.
-

'·

oval dining table w/2 leafs, cane beck Side chairs
· and 1 captains chair, matching hutch and serven
custom . made 72" sofa; barrel back sculpturede
velour iota; pair white provincial side chairs; pair

Day activity/workshop in·
structors and coordinator
needed to provide training
and activities for MR/DD
clients in Gallipolis area.
Teaching or related eXperienced
personel
preferred. To develop and
organize a structured day
· program with emphasis on
productive and creative activities. Excellent support
and benefits provided in·
structors 510,000 per year,
coordinator $15.000. Send

::"MJddleporl. Mon., Tues., as a young business person
and earn good money plus
- wad.,Oct.19, 20,21 .

~10 STATE PLAN
COMfi'UNITY SERVICES BLOCK GRANT

CltYMiiiOA'"""• ... I!WN
Da~Sfn' ...,...,""'
u 1111 •• ?'

"

'

'

31 ·

HamuforSale

32

.MoblleHames

32

for Salt

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Year

~:J,o~~~an ~~~2 x C~~w~

19691railer12x65 wlth1973
2 room addition, diSh·

9

end sale, prile reduced,
used mobile hOmes . CALL

BY OWNER: 4 bdr., spill·

UIOPI• 12 x 65, 2 beerooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70. 3
1977 70x14, Govenor mao lie bedrooms. 1972 Nashau. 14
home. 3 bdr .• 1 112 beth•. )( 60. 2 bedrooms. e' v. s

446·7572.

H
e:pv:'Jo: 43\:~r~~s~

~9 jg

has moved to Sales, Inc: 2nd and Viand
kitchen. lg . family rm .• 2 owner
Florida priced to 5ell quick . St•. Pl. Pleasant, WV.
Johnson Mobile Home Phone 675-4424.

1/2 baths, located In Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District: Shown by appt .
only call 446·9403. ·

HELl) WANTED
BRANCH SALES
MANAGER

Ofllhe Road
Tire Sales
Southeastern Ohio Area
Excellent opportuni1y
tor an aggressive,
qualifled salesperson ·Ia
maintain and expand
market area, 4 to 6
years of OTR or heavy
duty truck tire sales experience required. In
new or retread lines.
Excellent salary and
benefit package in·
eluding bonus, program.
Our employees . are
aware of this opening.
Send reply to Box 307,
c·o Gallipolis Tribune,
Gallipolis, Ohio45631.
Situations Wanted

Elim Resthome. Care tOr
handicapped, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary oilimlted care. Or continuous
home w ith us . Equipped for
wheel chair. 742 ·2266.

Will babysit in my home in
Racine area . Daytime
preferred . 949·2079.
Will do house cleaning on
weeklY basis. can get
references. 669·3381.
HaVe board and room for
elderly or disabled. 992 ·

6022 .
Will bitbysit in my home .
Rutland area. 2 or 3
children. 992·6124.
13

WILL do house cleaning

304-675·4264 .
Re9istered · nurse will do
babysitting in my home for
1 child ·2 days a week . 446·

3375.

21

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
cover.:,ge in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in·
dividual needs. Contact
Harry Pitchford, agent.
Phone 446·1427.

payment-Bargain priced!
owner wants quick sale!!
55 acre farm -House, bank
barn ,. nice land-Building
lots, 1 acre and up . .,._N D investor's dream of 50 acres
already platted for building
lots . All adjacent Pomeroy ·
near intersection 7 &amp; 33.
For more information or
appointment call collect
Thalma at Thelma Mon·
tgomery Realty, Inc. 1·614·

Small house in Harrison·

1976 New Moon 6SxU. gas.
2 bdr., 2 window arr cbn·
dltioners. skirting and
steps, extra clean, $7,995.
Johnson Mobile Home
Brokers, .446·3547 .
•

Pi"ofitable l'"etail ·hardware
store for sale. For in;
formation call614·373·4283.
22

Money to Loan

Columbus First Mortgage
Corllpany FHA-VA Finan·
cing LQan Rep. Cookie

72 12X60 mobile home, 2
bdr., 3 acres .of land,
garage &amp; front por~h. Must
sell ifnmediately. 388·8747,

$10,000.

.

New 81 mOdel selling at in·
V9iCe. Used 14x64, 2 &amp; 3
bdr., · S7,ooo . Kanauga
Mobile Home, Kanauga,

Oh ., 446·9662.

'

-------1969 Kirkwood 12x65, •2bdr .•

stove, carpeting, air cond ..
very nice condition. Call

Krautter (304)675·3473.

Road,

Did yov k;now that you can
51 ill own your own home for
tess than StSO. a month?
We're not talking abOut a
mobile home buT an O"hio
Building Code approved
house . See our All
American Model at AmPak
Plaza or Rt.
West of
Athens or call 992·7034 or
698·8111 for Information,

so

~~~-----

For those hard to f ind
Mobile Home &amp; camper
parts and accessories see
our large inventory. (We
carry Coleman Furnace
Filters). At Rt. 124 Miner·
sville, Kingsbury Home
Sales Inc. or call 992·5587.

- - ---- -

1975 Holly Park trailer.
14x 70, 2 bedroom, partly
furnished. Intercom, metal
building, awning , un ·
derpinning , central ·'air,
dryer , total electric, on
rented tot. Excellent Con·

NOTICE

Professional
Services

Piano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bi tl Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446·4372,

Gallipolis .
HARPER Adult Care Cen·

tn fast growing community cin u.s. 3$,
near bank. Shopping center and hospital.
Good hoist in two bay lube room.
Privately owned and operated for 35
years. Good income for aggressive person willing to work, If interested write t11_ .•
.Box 306· in care of Gallipolis Daily
Tribune.

START COLLEGE
IN THREE YEARS WITH
MORE THAN $20,000.
1f&lt;!w IIWI1 employers today ..., para~~lee
YOII work f• lllne yeen, let alone offer you a
for coli•? TodoT• Army wiD do both.
Ill feet. If you jolll the Arm:y for three yeuo,
you oould - a t a more lbaa ,20,000 for ocllool.
Here'• bar. If.yop putlclpale In the velerans'
Un •• ·'.! drtree= Propam (VBAP). the
wiD t~~~~tob the eutlln&amp;1s you •ntwof......,. for a mubnum tJI 18.100. Tltoll, If you
flllollfJ, tbe Army wiD llfld on 1 812,000 edueatloul
........ Tbat'IIIIIO.OOO Ia Jut three ,...,..
For lDCII'I1 oltout bow to -.ve your oounlry
..tallelt llelpe you~ oobool, vlllt your loeol
Arrlq ........... Or..n

10•• •

992-7113 or collect 594-4238

AIUft .ALLlOU CAN a

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

NEW I:.ISTlNG 63x12 Vin·
dale with 7xl2 e&gt;:pando
living room . Like new in·
side and out, carpeted
throughtout, like new wood
burner , silver top awning, 2
bdr. Priced to sell fast . Call
Johnson Mobile Home
Brokers, 446· 3547.

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70 , un·
derplnned. 615-4064.
14 x 70 mobile home, 2 .
bedroom, family room ,
central air, underpinned,
awnings. 67S· 1121 or 675·

3987.

..

1973 PEERLESS 12x6D
$4500. unfurn i~ hed . phone
67H615afler 4;30 p.m .
1973 Victorian 14 x 65, extra
nice ,
woodburnino
fireplace, ready to move in .
Phone 675·4544 for appointment.

1972 Schultz lh 65.' &gt;D4'67S·
2907.
• •
33

Farms for Sale

Farm House, 34 A. Farm,
tob . base, 2 barns. 15 mi.
So. of towrt Caii4A6~ 2426 .
Lots Acreage
"'LOTS
----=-=====· Rea I nice campsite

35

&amp;

on Raccoon Creek, ali
utilities available, SJOO.
down , owner w itl finance.
call after 3 p . m ~. 256·6413.

did Caii513·59H175.

1981 14' Wide

29 wooded Acs .. partially .. ¥&lt;.
developed , Rt. 141 fran ·
f, _,
tage, all mineral r ights,
::.._:
rural water avail. S1S.OOO.
..,
379-2540.
.. •""

sgggs
Call At
Leisure

BY owne r!IJ 3 apartment
house on approx. 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment . Can
be converted single honie.
City water, Wil l consider
land contract . 675- 1;883 9·5
p.m .
...

Financing
Available
Syear
Protection Plan
Large Inventory

Rentals

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOMES
INC.
- -- ·-- _.... --"-Real
----Estale
--· .. ---------

Houses for Rent

41

Call 1-614·448·3821 . 9 to 5

Mon. ·Fri.

Genera l

-~---- -

-- -- ---- - ---LIFE

~al1446·0552

Calllmmedialely

Mobile Homes
for Sale

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.

CLEAN USEO MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SIILES, 4 MI.
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE ~46-3868 .

(Jim Elliott)
Rt. 93 North
Jackson, Ohio

286-3752

Anytime

Mobile Home Brokers
Ph. 286-1144
Jackson, Ohio

Ph. 446-3547
Gallipolis, Ohio

Looking to buy a new or used
mobile home or sell your· pre·
sent one?
CALL 446·3547 NOW!

LIST WITH US.
Check tonight's class ifieds

for

I

MOBILE HOMES
MODULAR TRADE-INS
l9J.2 BARON 12x60 .................. '7450
2 bedroom, balcony front living room,
central air condition .

1971 SHULU 12x60........ ~ ........ '6450
2 bedroom

1974 CASRE 12x60............... ;•• '6450
3 bedroom

1971 BELMONT 12x65............... '7450
2 bedroom, balcony front kitchen.

1976 OAKWOOD 12x52 .............. ~395
Furnished with central air.

1976 ELCONA .10x50 ................. '3450
with lipout.
PRICES ON MOBILE HOMES
INCLUDE DELIVERY AND SET UP

KINGSBURY HOME SAUl
1100 Main

~-

tiMR 3118 -· l-oan assumption with 8 1'., 0 o inter est . 3
bedroom home, includes faml y room w1th fireplace.
Don'T pas5 thi s one .

,;

11M~ 171 Restri cted buil ding lot in ci ty sc hool
di snic1. O.M ol an il&lt;i_re . Ca ll now

.. ..

. 992-7034

. ..

'

,.

,.

~

'' l

~

- ..'

J\ MR JVJ
Th1 s house has r ecently been r emode led
insi de and out. has basement , heat pump for year
around comfor t , five mabi le home pads, l ots of fron tage on Route 7 pl us an eQual amount on the Ohio
River . Th is one could be a money maker . Call now.

JOHNSON'S

3

I

BMR . 386 - Quiet country home on 112 acre lot in·
eludes 20)(20 barn with loft and partial basement .
You will enjoy this one. Reduced to $25,900.

18~9

Pomeroy

.'·
...

BMR 391 - Pr ic e reduced. Owner wants it sold
now ! 10x50 mobile home situated on a r iver front
lot. Excellent buy for newlyweds or for retired persons. Call now.

l i MR J92 - - Now Is your c hance to live in tow n lor
less · thiln S&lt;IO.UOO Three bedroom hOme ncar
G.A H.S.

our

.'

Cheshire river front house,
4 bdr., 2 baths, large kit·
chen with dishwasher, full
basement, fireplace, :;275
mo . Deposit, ref. required.

5 rm . house redecorated,
river·view, near Gallipolis.
Call-4-46·0571 after 3PM.

210 Eastern Ave .
Phone 446-3547

Pl .

SINCE

.. ,,.

Would you like to own a 1
home of your own . We ·• ,.
didn't have $10,000 for a· ' "
down payment nor SS.OOO
nor even $1 ,000. Do what We

INSURANCE
. 428 Second A 'tf:e.

caii30H75·1293 .

SERVICE STATION
and GENERAL STORE

3967.

2416.

.

ter·provlding the personal
care your elderly need in a
home like atmosphere .
Vacancies now availible .

o·R RENT

MOBILE home located in
Camp Conleyt extra nice
and clean , phone 304·895·

washer, bar stools, underpinning, 2 porches. 882-.

Broker· Aucnoneer

Pleasant, 3 bedrooms, 1 112
baths, double garage .
Owner will ·finance . lm ·
rpediat,e occupancv . 675·

32

K &amp; 1&lt; Mobile Homes
Pt . Pleasant, wv

.. . ...

New 198114' Wide

5817.
23

big$$$$$. MUSlSOII ~uickly ,

675·2427 .

2 bedroom' house on 1 acre,
2 miles back of New Haven
on paved road, fully car·
peted, self contained water
and sep'tic system. 882·32d7.

Sandhill

TWO reJSQssessed mobile
nomes, brand new 1 81
rriodels, cprevioUs dealer
lost floorplan money) . Save

~75 · 3000

1-716·1142-6000. Ext. 6423 .

21

FOR SALE'

. ..

Brokers, 446·3547 .

profitable Jean &amp; Fashion pet. interest. Remodeled
Shop offering top labels ·inside. 614-928 ·4417 .
like
Klein,
Jordace,
dition . $8500. Call 614·992·
Levi..plus, training, fix · Milton Road, Camp c·o nley . 5338.
tures, inventory and more. 2 year old, 3 bedroom
Call
Mr .
Summers, house, fully carpeted, with 1964 Troy Mohile Home.
Presti age Fashion toll free 1 full and two and a half 'Furn i shed, QDOd concL new
l :IJ!)0·527-6443 '
baths, yard landscaped carpet, 1112 baths, washer.
with large utility building . $4.000 . Call alterS p.m. 614·
$180 Per Week Part' Time Assume 8 112 percen t loan . 667 ·3065.
al
Home .
Webster , 675-6275 .
America ' s foremost die ·
tionary company needs Or rent-3 bedroom fur ·
workers 1o update local ni shed home on Bud Chatmailing lists. All ages, ex· tin R.oad on big level lot.
perience unnecessary. Call 576·2711.

~;~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~
.,

down

, OWN, ville. $8,000. Owner will
highly finance. $1,000 down, 12

------

Insurance

no

385-6740 or 385-7419.

Business
Opportunity

BE
YOUR
BOSS ... own
a

POSSIBLE

MoblltHomts

ler S.le

New 3 bdr. house with
garage and full buement

ki.OOO. Call446·0390.

-

-blttHomH
for Sale

level , living r&lt;&gt;Om &amp; dining
room combination, eat·ln

12

6

Found: Pit bull in Laurel

How IIIOa;Y omployen today.,..,: ........,lee
you work for three y....,Jet oloae offer you • bon•
for collep? Today'• Anuy wiD do both.
Ill f~ If you join lhe ~y for three yean,
you eou1d ..,......ulate more lbaa f2(),000 for ll!bool.
llere'o bow: If you putidpate In tbe Veteruo'
F..duc.tloaoJ ,lnd¢ence l'rn8nm (VBAJ&gt;), tbe
fiOvenuD8Dt wiD DIOidl tbe f!UIIInp you .... twofONHte for a mnJm..., ol M,IOO. Tbea, If you
qualJCy,lhe Army wiD llfld OD 0$12,000 ed1M2tioDoJ
bonuo. Tbot'o f2(),000 In Jut three yean.
For more oltout bow to -.ve your ·couatry
wblle II belpe you flnonee eebool, vi11t your 1oea1
Army Recrulk!r. Or coli 446-3343

The undersigned Is moving to a retirement cttnter
and will sell the following antiques, nne household
furnishings •net 4 wheel drive truck at Public Auction located u.s. Route 93 North at the north edge of
Oak Hill, Ohio, dilgDnally across from truck stop,
signs will be posted.
·

Nott: Tht DeVIl llllfllllr II t _., ..,.,,_, w.tllt
fomiiY ln.lite O.k Hill-. lhWY Item 111 lilts Nle
Is topqltiiiiV and lltlllr- - ·
L-h HrYed by ladill of 11111 Ptrllh Of Tltllflle
Hilts.

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency , Ed Burkett Bar·

Experiehced heating and
air conditioning mechanic .
Contact Carter's Plumbing
and Heating, Inc. ~·3888 .

Reward. Call446·8182 .

START COLLEGE
IN THREE YEARS WITH
MORE THAN $20,000.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

I CNI'r_.'INI...,.

c.:.....,.........:.="-"=='--

Lost : Dalmatlon dog , 1

Rutland,

-AL'tlCM'I"-

~ ~ ....

3 ~bdr. home lotated at 123
Wanted to buy 3 woo1J
, Garfield Ave. 2 acres lot
beams. 10 in. by 10 in. by 35
runs from SR 7 to Oh'to
ft . or anything close to this
River. Full basement,
size. Call256·1579.
finished rec . room, 2
fireplaces, 2 1/2 baths, con·
crete pool, new carpet al'ld
Wa'nt to buy Reese hitch tor
paint . Will consider your
pickup truck. ·Phone 446·
property in tradel OWner
1542.
will consider financing
with $10,000 down and $500
Buy ing
Gold,
Silver,
permonrh.Call446·1546for
rlat inum, old coins, scrap 1~=~==~~~=~=::::::::::::===:::::::~ an appOintment.
rings &amp; silverware. Daily f""
quotes available. Also
3 ·bedroom house, 2 acres. 2
13
Insurance
coins &amp; coin .supplies for 11
Help Wanted
baths. family room . ·FUll
sale. 446·8025c 446·8026 .
basement, garage. 949·
AUTOMOBILE
IN
·
RN or LPN-· Nat. Co.
2079. been
can·.
SURANCE
~EDS· IRDN, ~RASS, old requires oUtgoing person
Lost
your
furniture, · gold, silver with medical background celled?
5 rm. house witt) bath . On
operator's
License?
Phone
dollars, wood ice boxes, to- complete examinations
La~d contract with small
stone jars, antiques, etc'., for insurance co,mpanies in . 992·21.0
down payment with 12 pet.
Complete
households. '{Our area. Part-time,
interest on balance. 36'x4.2'
Write·: M.D . Miller, Rt . .4, flexible hours. .R-eply lngarage. On Rt . 7, Tuppers
Pof)'leroy, Oh. Or 9'/'H761J. writing·Lifedata • ~ical 11
Wanted to Do
Plains. 992·2201.
Services. Inc., PO Box 276,
Would
like
to
do
babysit·
CHIP WOOD . Po4es max. Hampton, VA 2~9.
ling ROdney· Cora area . LE/IDING Creek Park·
diameter 10" on largest
Call379·2706 anytime.
Near Rutland features 4
end . $12.50 per ton. Bundled
cabins· lSdev. campsites, 3
slab. $10.50 per ton .
shelter houses. 211:1 acre
TV
service
calls.
Call
992·
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co .•
2034 . Also used color TV for stocked lake. ALL on 12
Rock
Springs
Rd . ,
acres! Gorgeous lan&lt;:l on
sale .
Pomer:ov. 992·2689 .
paved
road.
$39 ,900 .

11

'

Ohio. Rutland council
ree.r ves the right to reject any at; all bids.

_,..~~,MtfZJlt•hS.---

dental gold . Class ringS,
Weclding rings, sliver c:olns
or
anything stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Stor~ . Gallipolis -"6·2691 or
992-205-4 in Pomeroy .

25515.

Whlte Himlayan cat lost in
vincintv of 31 Portsmouth
Rd . ~nd Burkhart Lane.

Joe Hollren 446-7829
Or call collect in A.t ltens 593-3566

IV, 1911, 7 p.m. at which

spected

_

3-2 -

stamped 10K, 14K , 18K and

tfwo refrigerators . You
haul them iJWay . Write
Audrey Sibly, Box 14,
Gallipol'is Ferry, WV,

POJitTOF CALL, PA&lt;~IFJC

H &amp;· H HOCKING
VALLEY LURES
GENE HINES

Call or Write Today

Every Time

paying cash for anything

Eleventh

If you live too far lo artve we' ll

FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Drexel

u.s. end foreign military rifles and service

4 female hound puppies,
half Mountain Blue. Tic.

IF YOU NEED IT
WE HAllE IT!
IF YOU WANT IT
WE'LL GET IT!

money . Have your furnace

51. Rt. 377 Ia Pennsville at the IILL JANES FAR-

many

Announcements

We urry • comptete line of H &amp;
H Hocking Valley Lures ana
luppli•s. We urry traps,
stakes, blsktll, ctye, wax, lure ,
urine, boots, Nile Lites, belh,
cauene tapes, (arbide litftll
and c•rbklt.

Take St. Rt. 60 north out of M1rletta to McConnelsville or take St. Rt. 60 south out of Zanesville
to McConnelsville, cross river through Malta an St.
Rt. 78 west for 2 miles- stay left at top of hill onto

Selling extra large gun collection of 430 guns which
have collected over many veers consisting of an·
tlques, collectors Items, fine foreign &amp; domestic
firearms of every type and description. Handguns
include :..uger, Walther, Mauser, Browning, Colt.
Smi1h &amp; Wesson, Ruger, HI ·Standerd and Beretta .
Shotguns
include
Browning,
Winchester,
Remington, Beretta, 1theca, Weathertly &amp; Lefever. ·
The s.. le has an outstanding collection Of tine hi·
powered rifles as well as dozens of small bores •net

3
.,, :. ·.·.•i , •.

Czechoslovakian dinnerware (peacock motif); New
Haven 30 hour weight clock; wood coffee mill;
steins; milk crocks; asst. sherbets and pattern
glass; · old picture frames; beveled mirror In gilt
frame; service for fOur Meisen type dinnerware;
large linen table cloths; boOks; crocks and jugS; 6
Bavarian bird plates; old wool parlor carpet from
original Davis home.

MS. 30 miles northeast of Athens 'or 80 miles
sOutheast of ColUmbus. Ohio.

Located J miles north of Point Pleasant on
62
betWeen Lakin and West Columbia. To settle the
estate of Carl W. Par$ons. the following will be sold:

3

Wooster, Oh . 44691
216·264-5612

Will have inside booths
available by the 1st of
November. Reserva ~
tions must ·be made in
October.
·-

For bulk delivery of
gasoline. heating oil and
diesel fuel. call Landmark ,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Announcements

FLEA MARKET

Reduce safe &amp; fast with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E · Vap
'Water pills' . Gillingham
Drug.

Send
resume
to
Veterans
Memoria·!
Hospita 1, P . o. Box 149,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
Equal
Opportunify
Employer.

8

378·6306 .

8025 .

C:ounty

3

cleaned . Call675·2158.

A rei! Cod e 304
t.~/S- Pt .

Announcements

Meigs Co. Farm Bureau
annnual meeting, Tuesday

ATTENTION DEER HUN ·

:147- lelili"f Filii S

64:1- .Ar.l bia o.st .

Announcements

CASH PAID for clean, late
mOCiei used cars. Smlftl

permission on Woolhon
Farm• at Apple Grove ,

Clothing, ·winter &amp; summer . Box springs &amp;
matress. Call-446· 4807~

3

They'll

BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER

Ciassifieds
l:lu,, ,,jfit•d Put:e• t•over the
ji&gt;lloll'ill{: ."•lr'phoflr• exchiiii(.(('S .. .

no

· on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Woolhan
Farms.

. Bevins was arrested without a
pollee mlght.be threatened.
Allen, a toim ol700 in eastern Ken- struggle at his home about 9o
lucky, ia allot!t 120 miles southeast of minutes after the alxWlnp, ~
Tucker. The weapon, ldeoUfl~ as. a
Lexington. '
Kentucky State Pollee Trooper .:llkallber rifle, was not recovered. ,

Criminal Court Judge John Bradley
in his cloeieg argwnent that ''I don't

a.

hunting

trespassing Wlth9Uf wriNen

Man would still minTy Caroline

••

wantedto8u,r

COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
WE SELL IT ALL
,REAL ESTATE &amp; CHATTELS

' ,..

.
.,."'...·
.-

,. I

•

~

'

J"' ')
•• J

'

~.

I • l

,•'

,~

'

1,MR 17 5 ~ Price greatl y reduced on t his 3 BR br1ck
r Anch . Si tu ated on large flat lot Call for detail s !

"

e

I f ' !"

BMR 398 .:lose to town 3 · BR: · ranch
on lg. flat lot includes detached 26x26 garage plus
18x36 i n·ground pool. Owner transferred and anx·
ious to sell.
BM R 399
Two story home present·
IY being used as duplex, could easi ly be converted to
single family . Choice locati on in Ga llipolis. Owner
will help linance.

•
......,. ''

..

•~. ·~·•
.t•••
d

-

uMA' 401 -- Sec- th is one now
Owner tin;m c.i nq to
buyer. Modul ... ~ \...o ~ w1 1h 3 B R's, 1 lul l
0
bat hs, large li 'iling rex S, u 1ninq Mea, buil t in kit
chen. Priced to sell qUiCk at only $21, 500 .

qu r~ liticd

BMR 139 - REDUCED - Two story home on
Second A11e .• Gallipolis. A luminum sidmg, 3 or tl
bedroom s. Reduced to S22,500. Call f or deti:l.i IS .
BMR 402 - 37 Acres bare land , 1401 lb.
base, 30xJO t'obac co barn . Check on this one!

toba ~..co
.. ,I

BMR 403'- New Listlng-1981 Mobile home on rer'l ·
ted lot. S10! ~Q9 . ~early ~ew .
BMR 400 - Check ttl is one. For only $8,500 you can
buy a two BR home w / rural water and bath.
BMR 397 .-.:. Owner says sell, and he will do the
financing at 12%. If is an income,producing duplex.
Priced at$17,500.
BMR l89- This fine 4 bedroom home is located in
the city school system. You will enjoy a Large lot
w i th a tot•l country atmosphere, and the same time
have all. of the city conveniences . Call now , owner
has been transferred ~nd needs to sell soon .

•,

.~ ~

.

' •'

. •'••

.'. ' .
''
• '

I
I

I

'

BMR 41M - New Listing - Clly schools, newly car·
peted and painted. This three BR home Is priced in
the low $30's, a great buy on today's market.

BMil 405 ...:.. Great location! A verv nice ranch sty le
hOme with a ,uti basement with fam il" room . Main
floor has three BR's, i8rge living roor'1 with" cory
brick fireplace . All situated· on .43 of an acre and
only two miles from Gallipolis.
. 8M:-, 406 1.25 acres mil. locateo clo~~ to
Gallipotis. Frontage on Rqute 160 aM Bulaville Rd
OWner will help finance .
·
·

IMII417- TWo s!Gry hOme In village of Vinton. In·
clutlfls 3 bedrooms. dining room with fireplace. w.
baths. Situated on large flat lot lnclutlfls mObile
~ pod. Coli for details. ·

.

\
\

''

•
•'

-'

�1
7
4
9
'~~~~A~~~~;~,:;,~~~m~t~=T~~~::1F~or~L~o~a~;=:=::="~sl~=H~ou~sello~~~d~G=OOCI~•~~~KIT~~.N~'~CARL~~~Yl.E~~~~~~;g~~by~Larry~n~t~:~rl~~ a~;~afn~:~w~ ~ sc~a~- ~M~o~rc~h~a~nct~l~c•;=T~w~ M~:~:~ ~M~I I'~cl l ~ nct~t~ .~im~efs~ ~S~en~:~lin~ ~~M-~o~:~~~~~:~IC~~~~ ~
r-------------------,
9

The
41

Ohio-Point

...

Houses for Rent

41

42

HouseslorRiftt

4 bdr. 2 1/ 2 bath b l level

Furnished, adults only, no
pets. You pey utilities.
PhOne 675·2535

with pool off Rt. 35. Call
W1seman Real Estate
Age ncy. «6·3643. ·

Small 4 rm. &amp; bath, fur -

\

nished, located 735 rear Jrd
Ave , Ga llipolis. $110 per
mo , S60 deposit Call .u63870 or 4.06 1340.

2

BEDROOM

Small 3 bdr . house located
ref.
in Gallipolis Dep.
r eq , Call446·0254 alter 5.

a.

5 rm house in Gallipolis.
Call446 3945alter 5PM.

2 bedroom furnished, $150
per month plus utfltfes,
Call576·9073 or 576·2&lt;141.

homes ,

Mason and New Hllven ,
adults only, no pels, 304·

43
ba~ment

in Henderson $165 month
$100 deposit and referen·
ces. 675· 1118
42

I·Ni,;bii;tho;;r;m~e~i~n~c;lt~y~c~en;;;;tr;:;all

air and heat, adults only,
dep, 4A6 0338.
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Par·
!Iaiiy furnished. S170 you
pay utilities. Call 992·22811
alter6 p.m.

APARTMENTS
One
bedroom starts at S152 .00
per month . Two bedroom
starts at 1118.110 per month .
Depo$11 1200. Call446·27&lt;15.

for Rent

44

FurnlsMd apartment. 3
rooms and bath. Deposit
required . No pets. Call614·

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Galflpolfs,
614·446·8221 or 614·2&lt;15·9484.

12x60 2-Bdr. mobile hOme, 5
miles from town. No pets.
$165 mo Oep required.
Call446·0822

12 x 60 mobile home. 2
bedroom. bath and half.

Two or three bedroom,
n verview Phone 446·3329

dleport on Rt 143 Call614·
992 5858

bedroom trailer in
Syracuse Sl50 per month
You pay utilitieS . Deposit
requ1red Cal/614·992·3625

2

1965 10 x 55 2 bedroom
mobile home Furn1shed .
614·742·2400

2

3 bdr , double wide, convenient location In qty
l1mits, furnished, new carpet &amp; drapery throughout,
all utilities paid except
electnc, no pets, no more
than 4. Ref. &amp; dep reg. SlSO
per mo. 446·3547.

---

2 bedroom apartment ' '"

Henderson . $150 per month
675· 1972.

1 bedroom apartment .n
Henderson, $150 per month
675·1972

ltlt WltemU, lrDittr, U4 UN Ellt
Jim cocnran. Assllcl•t•.•.. ·1111 he.

'

B J . Hairston, AUDC., 44J.U41 Eve
(lrdeWalktr, .ls~GC 2U-U11

Partially furnished apart·
ment, Clifton, WV. 675·1044.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Available. 1 bedroom apt.
for rent. Contact Vjllage
For sale or rent 1979 Ux70 Manor Apts ., Middleport.
3bdr., located In Mid· 992-7787.
dleport on large lot, AC,
range, refrigerator~ $250
per mo. plus utilities, S250 Centrally located, dOW!"·
dep. reQ. or owner will help stairs, all utilities Pd,
lini!lnce with suitable down sream heat. $190. mo. 260
payment. Call 992-6173 or 4th Ave:, Gall ipolfs Calf
446·0544.
4.06·0963.

45

Furnished Rooms ·

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt,
Park Central Hotel

PHONE 446-3643
''

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
m -7479.
Trailer lots Call675 1076

2 bedroom mobrle home~ in
bend area, adults only, no
pets. 675· 14!i2 or 675·2996.

2 bdr. $100 month &amp; $100.
dep. Call after 5, 446-4002 .

2 bedroom on
Road 675 3834.

Furn1shed trailer also nice
tra11er space Ca/1379·2469.

Sandhill

4'2

4 room unfurnished cot
tage Phone 675·1453.

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

992-7721
MDblle Homes
lor Rent

2 bedroom 1W1n ' smgle in
Pt Pleasant ar 205 Poplar
Stree:t $200 month plus
deposit. 1 614·263 8322 or
614·263·2669

WISEMA~

1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts . Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call

42

3 yr . old house located In
c1ty school district, 1 mite
from c 1ty. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. much more. Must
see to appreciate. Call 245·
5040.

RNt Estale- Gener•l

Furnished apts. 2 bdr.,
$230. , utilities paid, near
HMC, adults. Call 446-&lt;1416
after 7PM.

Approximately S m 11es
from Pomeroy and M1d

3 bedroom
furn 1shed
Mobile Home witH wesher
&amp; dryer. No pets. Deposit
requ 1red. 9494851.

Api!lrtmeml
for Rent

Furnished efflency apt.
Down town Pt. Pleasant.
All utilities paid, dep. req.
Caii304·895·345C.

2 BEDROOM apertmenl,
HUD accepted. 675·5104.
Apartments. 675-.5548 .

992·2937.

••

3 room furnished co'ttage.
utilities furnished, ··adui~&lt;.
675·2812 or 675 1580.
'7

2nd floor turn. efllcency
apt., tdults only, no pels.
Calf4A6·0f57.

Mobile Homes

'"cheShire. Close to power
plants, S250 mo . Call 4461527.

bedroom unfurnished
$190. 1 bedr oom furnished
apartemnt. $125 . Naylors
Run. Security deposit. Call
614-992 2288,

Farms lor Rent

1800 LB Tobacco Base for
Rent. Call 256·11549 and
oblige me, kenneth Jef·
fers.

2 bdr. house on Roush Lane

7 rm and bath, 6 acres w1th
barn Call 250-9344

2 ~r. apartment unfurn.,
In Crown City, Olllo. Call
256·6520.

675· 1&lt;152, or 30H75·2996.

2 bedroom with
2 BR house, State Rt 7 2S6
6520, 446· 4292

Mebllo HOIIIOI
tor Rlftl

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446·:1066

T0101N - Very
nice, •mmaculate 5 bedroom ranch
near golf coorse Has equipped ki1chen,
2 baths, family room, full finished
basement, nat. gas, i::ent air, 2 car
detached garage, nice yard Malnrenence tree steel siding. Only S58,500.
Call abourthisonel

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, .Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose C.nt~rbury, Associate 446-3408

EAFORD
216 E. second Streer
Phone

RESTAURAN'r lor lease,
Pt. Pleasant area . Write :
Box C-15 in care of Pt.
Pleasant Reoister.
51

Househotd GOOds

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. at·
loman, 3 tables, $500 , Sola.
chair and loveseat. $275.
Sofas and chairs prlce&lt;:l
from $285. to S79S. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·• ·
beds,$340 , queen stze, S38Cl.
Recliners, S175 to $295.,
Lamps from $18 to $65 5
pc. dltettes from $79., to
S385 . 7 pc , $189. and up.
Wood table wl1h 4 chairs.
$219 up lo $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300 . and S37S.,
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Oak, $675 .• Bassett Cherry,
$795 . Bunk bed complete
with matttesses. $250. and
up to SJSO. Captain's beds.
S275 complete. Baby bed5.
$99
Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
f:rm , S68 and $78. Queen
sets, $195 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr
chests, $42. Bed
frames, S20.and $25.,10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
te chairs S20"· and $25 Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
fhopedic super firm, S95,
baby matresses. S25 &amp; S35.
bed frames $20, S2S. &amp; $30
Used,
Ranges.
refr1gerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulav111e "Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, MQn.
thru Frl ,9am to5pm,Sat
446·0322

...

=~~e~~k!:~itNux:i=

GOOD
USED
A P·
PLIANCES . wasners.
dryers,
refrigerators.
ranges ,
Skaggs
Ap·
pllances, 1918 Eastern
A.ve., 4.46·7398 .

~o!.r.r ~=~~ r;; ~~

How
eM&amp;Awrfi~.
,.,,._,...,.
A
"'~

"{A~

cord or S40 per half cord.
Call for quoles on large
quanlties Phone 2.tS·S..78.

11
I_

eALL. ·

New WOOdbumlng •~ on
furnance, still In factcry
carton, heats Iaroe home,
54.50. Call256-1216.

7 piece living room suite,
SI7S. 304·675·6838 .

0
54

Misc. Merchandlce

0

Fuel oil stove &amp; 200 gal.
tank1 Cafl256 6413

0

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service .
Complete sales, service.
pool covers, and win·
teriZation kits . Call446·1324

Mi~ted

firewOOd . Single
load $35 oo, 4 loads Stoo,
and 10 load $200 Call 256·
1471.

Restaurant
equipment
reconditioned by RAOCO.
Call 30~· 523· 1378. Hgtn ..
WVA.

Real Est•le

Gener•l ·
For sale 1977 Pontiac
Firebird, 6 cyl., exc . cond .,
undercounter dishwasher
and stove. Cal/256· 1401 .

44 ACRES
Good retirement home
In quiet area near
Ewlngton. some woods,
small pond, 5 acres
tiUable. Vinyl sided 4
bedroom house. A good
buy at S4MOo.'Coll Gary
or Marilyn Ramtier at
(216) 435-6351, agents
tor
DALE
WIRTH
REALTY, Creston (216)
435-6365.

Housing
Headquarters
R;eal Es1ate- General

'

E. Mai1nlnlilll

POMEROY, 0.
992· 2259
NEW LISTING
Bulldtng or trailer lots
near Rutland . Appx. w. .
acres Asking $3,500 .
REDUCED - ThiS out
s1and 1ng quality home
has 3 bedrooms, llh
baths, din1ng room,
fin1shed basement with
family room, office, and
util ity Now$49,900
THIRTY·SEVEN ACR,
ES -OVERLOOKING
THE OH 10 RIVER Most are wooded with
good stand of Whtte Oak
trees . A
hunter ' s
paradJse. Also has two
houses, and many other
outbutdings. The main
house has
rooms &amp; 2
bedrooms $26,900

s

SYRACUSE - Are YOU
energy conscious? If so
1h•s could be the hOme
for you. It is a s room
one story frame home
t wtth new storms, new
tnsulatlon, and new carpet. All on 2 corner lots.
$29,900
ALMOST NEW RANCH
- Just 4 ys. old, with an
equipped
kitchen,
garage, 3 bedrooms,
dining room. large bath
c::~nd full basement. N 1ce
large level lot. Now
reduced to $39,900.
COMPLETELY REMO·
OJ;LED
and Is
gergeous
with
2
bedrooms. largt living
room, enclosed porch,
carport, Iaroe lot with
an additional trailer lot.
S21 ,000
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
"H191 ·
Jean Trussei/949-UH
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
"2-5692
Olflce H2·225f

A

*Willis T Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446·9539
• Norma Lfe K tnnert. Phone 446 7111
• Phyllis Loveday, Phone 446-2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446·3294

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

RTABL
2
OM
home
s1tualed on Garfteld
Ave . w1th1n walktng
distance trom down
town Gall1poi1S t...arge
garden area. one car
qarag e. Comfortable
ltv•ng room, d1n1ng
room and k1tchen Ideal
for one or two persons
Pr1 ce $25,000 00

NG 2
acres of land with th1s
beaulifully
finished
bnck home. 2 3 or 4
bedrooms, 2 full baths
w1th showers. full base·
ment, nat gas fired, hot
water heat. asbestosroof.
copper
Sic'lte
ttash1ng, 2 car attached
qar~g e
wtth
open
NS Th1S is a QUAL I TV
BUILT home and you
Wtll be proud to own it!
Pnce tn $80s '·

-~'""'"~

COUNTRY
MOSPHERE
Looktng for that perfect
home? Look no more.
Four bedrooms, 3'1~ ·
baths, 23'x18' livmg
room, 2Q'xl4' family
room, ex'tra nice country kitchen w1th all the
latest conveniences
GracioUs I lvlng with Ap·
prox. 3450 sq ft . Hving
space plus a beautiful
pool on 3.2 acres of
woodecl land . Much
more, call for your ap
po1ntment 11
S04

Like New-Bi-Level
We have that special
dream home with
modern kitchen, w1th
lots of bu1lt·in cabinets •.
dtshwasher ana stain·
less steel sink, 1 full
bath, 2 half baths, liv1ng
room, fam•IY room, din·
lng room has patio doors
reaaing to sun deck,
fireplace, air condition·
1ng, fhermopane win·
dows ana in mint cond• tion
1424

KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT
Modern 3 BR ranch home approx. 4112 vrs. old. Ther mopane wmdows, storm doors, FA furnace, w1th
central air, k1tchen has built In cabinets, stainless
steel dbl sink and dining area . Full basement with
patm doors. Rural water system, garage Call now.#
3
7
9
f•!IRAC f iV~

ALLSRICKH0Mt..!
E 11 1oythc be aut 1ful Oh1o R1ver from th1s spac1ous.
cheerful house. 3 bcdrotJms, 11:&gt; baths, large ltvtng
room f'il t 1n k1tchen, 2 f1replaces, full basement. :.!
porchf's, plus mnny extri'ls Phone today for details
p
•
50s
IN CROWN CITY
N1ce 4 room frame house w1th a bath . Eat· 1n kitchen
w1th metal cab1nets and double sink . Fuel 011
heat1ng stove Located on ntce c1ty lor near church
and grocery Pn ced to sell! I
11511

- SECLUDED BI·LEVEL N_.,stle!d 1M over 1 acre of trees th1s dutch
style home has 3 bedrooms. 21h baths,
famtly room, 2 large unfinished rooms
m lower level, large wrap around deck
and 2 car garage outstanding location
$67,500

NEW LISTING
Natural wood siding
decorates
thts
3bedroom ranch style
home Si'tUated in a
wooded
ar'ea
overlooking the valley
adracent to Kerr Bethel
Rd. Spacious living rm
area
County wafer,
electnc heat, 10o/o, 30
year , assumable mor
tgage .

HOME &amp; 11 ACRES - 2 yr. old 3
be1iroom double wide home situated on
wooded acres In city school disl.
Has 2 baths, family room, ~ltchen &amp; for·
mal dining, large road frontage, ex
cetlenr garden area &amp; workshop
$32,500.
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Attractive
3 bec;trqom brick home on Mjtchell Rd
Has large bath w/varden tub, nice sized
living room, garage, large oorch plus 1h ·
acre landscaped yard. 8lf... %.

NEW LISTING - All
the comforts for modern
f1vi.ng but with the
solitude of the country.
3·bedrooms, ' living rm,
dmmg room, utility rm ,
modern k1tchen w(oak
cabtnets, 2 baths, 14'K18'
master bed room . Ap·
proxtmatelv 50 fruit
trees ana 6acres Of land
near Raccoon Creek. All
for $78,500.00.
'''

,

1

'

NEW LISTING 2·
bedroom
cottage
located on. 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Convenient
location to schools,
grocery , churches and
downtown area. Nat.
gas heat. central air.
Off streep parking in
carport
Pr1ce
$30,000.00.

'b&lt;'d'&lt;&gt;O"'" · modern home
Or'l l

c1 crC IOJ

the
t) nlo R1ver
Located along Ohio
River $45,000.
o , r· rl o ok~ng

ht •l UltiU I

DRIVE A LITTE, SAVE A LOT
3 BR, full basemen1, white alummum siding, fuel oil
F A furnace, 30'X40' barns, t11ngled roof, lots of
young peach and apple trees. Alllh1s reduced to on·
ly $14,900
1452
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME
Located in c•ty of Gat l lpoiiS, close to supeQTiarkets
and business secr1on 10 rooms. 3 or 4 bedrooms
modern kitchen with lots of cabinets. dishWaSher:
garbage dtsposal, electric table top range. Formal
dining room. family, recrearton room. Just lots of
room. Central atr, natural gas F .A. furnace, central
P.A. system, fireplace, planter In home Young ap·
pie and peach trees, flowers and shrubs and a lot
more. MUST SEE THIS CITY HOME .
1391
, l9ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tillable pasture/and, some f1mber, plenty of spring
water. 112 mile frontage on ProspecT Chur.ch Road
Phone for full details
N497
2 ACRES - 4 ROOM HOME
12'x6S' MOBILE HOME
L1ve In one, rent the other Rent now coming is
S175.00 a month. 2 acres of wood, own water system.
F A gas furnace Nice modern kitchen All of this
lor only S23,000.00.
C·O·U·N·T·R·Y
Remodeled 4-5 bedroom home with fireplace
located on 53 acres of ttllable and pasture land,
pond, b;;srn, large metal bUilding, tobacco base. All
this for the tow, low price of $42,900 Call for more
details
, '4-n
28 ACRES \/A CANT LAHD
Hunter't Parad1se. Lots of building sites along old
State Rr 7 facing the Oh10 River. Lots of timber.
Lo1sof value for a low price.
1 44'
3 BEDROOMS"""l ACRES M. OR L.
Mobile home 14'x70' 1976 Freedom, 11!2 baths. Un·
aerpinning, lots of built-In cabinets, range,
refrigerator, dinette set. Air conditioner and other
furntrure. Rural water, nice land for gOOd parden.
All of this lor onfV$22,500.
1425
' INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN GALLIPOLIS
Brick and frame -4 apartment house on lower 2nd
Ae. One apartment 5 room5. bath, 2 bedroom~ Three (3) one bedroom apartments. ~lve In one, let
the other three pay fOr thiS home. Calf now.
1 4N
HOME-2 ACRES IN THE COUNTRY
7 room home with 3 or JIOSIII&gt;It A bedrooms, kitchen
with built-In cabinets, Slorm WlnciOWI and doon.
Laroe chicken house, storage buldlno. 2 Welts plus
rural water, on 1 State lilohwty. All this lor only
$36.~.00. Call lor apt?Ointment now,
Ulo4
6 ACRES, 7 ROOM HOI\AE-BARN
3 or 4 bedrooms. tobaccd base. electri( range, built·
In woOdburner, f.uel oil F .A. furnace, iota of fruit
trees, grape arbOr, strawberry petcll, 3 terM
tillable, aSIUmableloan. Pllonefor moredttalll.

'*

NEW LISTING acre farm, situated ne;;Jr
Vinton . 50 acres bottom
land. woods, has 3
bedroom house, new
heat pump. Needs some
work Blacktop road to
trent door . ·Also. has tg
barn and 100' x20'
storage shed. Owner
well sell some farm
equ1pment
Call for
more information

1

I

COMMERCIAL BUILDING In downtown
Gallipolis, 3,795 sq, 11. ot
lloor space, rear en·
trance ' from service
alley, also side door entrance. • Rented IPflrt·
ment on 2nd floor, 3rd
story storage. can tor
more information.
LOOK•ING
FOR A
SMALL BUSINESS
building with an aplll'l·
ment overhead? We
have 1uat ltsltd this
bull~lng on Ollve St. anct
selling 11 tor S11,ooo.oo,
Better lOok at th1s ono
today ill

1 ACRE ~OT located
along Kemper Hollow
Rt.
Rural
wafer
ava1l8ble. $4,000.
MOBILE HOME IN
VINTON, has entrance
lot, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths
wlth
carport
and
coVered porch All for
$25,000
HOUSE fOR

be~rooms,

locatod
... ve.

RENT~J

baths,
127 Garfield
month.

SW.oo

2

'

IN VINTON 2
be.droom home, situated
, along Rt. 160, FA lur·
nace, SO'x249' lot, Ideal
begmner
home
or
rettrement home for
$15,000.

IF YOU HAVE BEEN
LOOKING for a com ·
binatton home and
bus I ness opportun1ty,
we have 1t! Located in
downtown Gallipol1s
and ·zoned commercial ,
but wtth restdentlal use,
roo Ntce, neat 1.'124 sq
11 home with tSustness
buildtng 1n rear Owner
will help f inance, or
hna"ce entJrely Wl1h
25% down payment.
Th1s 1s a quality piece Of
real estate Let us show
if to you today I

·

MAKE US AN OFFER - Owners tran
sferred and must sell their 2 story brick
home on nearly llh aces on Rt 588 3
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, energy efficent
woodburning FA furnace, insulated,
deck and more. 50s

FOR
RENT
2
bedroom apartment ad·
iacenl to volf course.
Retrlg, and range fur·
nished, a&lt;lults only. No
pel$,

WOOD REALTY,
ll LOCUST ST., GALL

IS

8V2% MTG. - NEW LISTING - Very
attract1ve brick ranch on Rt . 325 at
edge of Rto Grande 3 bedrooms, 2
baths~ famtly room, fireplace, formal
dining, heat pump, 2 car garage, plus
nearly 1 acre. Over 2,200 sq. ft of living
area
HOME OF 2 ACRES- $12,900 - Smali
2 bedroom home in Vinton. Has hookup
for mobile home and 2 sheds Glenn
Summit Rd.
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - LOW IN·
TEREST '· 2 story home In Rio Gri!lnde.
3 bedrooms, full bas.er]Utnt, dining
room, Iaroe yard. ~lent rent~l
property. Only 525,000.
·

1
1
I

.

0 NER AN)(IOUS TO SELL - ' You
cTn buy thts 4 bedroom home and flnan ·
I ce ar below market interest rates. Of
fers 2112 baths, family room, WOOd·
I burner, Iaroe equipped kitchen, dining
room, 2 car garage and 18M36 in-ground
pool. Over 1h ac, yard. Located off Rt.
35. 60s. Make us. an offer

I
I
I

'
THIS IS NOT A MISTAKE UNBELIEVABLE WE'RE NOT
KIDDING S35,0110 buys thfl 4
bedroom home. Has &lt;1110 sq. tt, family
room, 2 flreplacn, 21'&gt; .baths, 3 car
garage 2 ec. waa&lt;lod lot with a super
r l - view, $35,000 assumable
mtg.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLECozy 2 bedroom home in Vtllege of R10
Grande Has extra •nsutat1on, nat. gas
hear, butlt· tn cabtnets 1n k1fchen, util
room&amp; large lot. 20's. S5500 down.

I

CONVENIENT
LOCATION
MULBERRY AVE.
Between
Wash1ngton Grade School and GAHS 1
storv home offers 4 or S bedrooms for
your qrow1ng family, 2112 bath~. l7x25
L R , tam•IY room W1'th WB stove, com
pletely equipped k1tchen and a lar~
!7-Crecned 1n porch F 1sh in your own
'' -'C k yard Owner may help fmance
bhown by appomtment Call Ranny
Blackburn - 446 0008

9'h% MtG. ~ Nice sized 3 pedroom
alum. sided home on Kelly Dr. Has
lar~ equipped kitchen, family room,
nat. gas, cent. air. 15x30 pool, 1Sx50
deck. plus 1 acre yard . $48,000.

S YR. OLD SPLIT-LEVEL- features 4
or 5 BRs, 3 ba1hs, 30 ft. LR, 2 famtly
rms., 2 woodburnmg fireplaces, large
kitchen and dining area, 2 car garge,
one of the county's n1cest pools (20x50)
and a truly professionally landscaped
lot Locat'd on Debby Drive. Owner
says sell . so call RANNY BLACK
BURN for a personal showing. You'll be
pleased ou did.

TASTEFULLY
DECORATED
Owners must sell thts roomy ma 1nt
free home near town Includes 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ·2 ftrepla~es. huge
rec . room, family room, basement.
brand new..,lfchen w/mtcrowave, 2 car
garage, nat gas and cent air . Low 60S.

RIO GRANDE AREA - R10 Center
point Rd. (Cherry Ridge). approx. 75
acres woodland 1 fronts on 2 rds ., county
water available. Owner may help
finance. Priced to sell at $400 per acre.

PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES You Wtil enjoy the care this attractive
1nck home has been given. 1m11aculate 1ns1de and out . Plush carpet,
lovely ftrepface, 3 bedrooms, d1n 1ng
r?Om, equ,pped kitchen, nat. gas, cent.
a1r, 2 car garage and corner lot. S59,900 I

,,

I
I
I

bed~oom 2 srory home Has fireplace, I

f~m11y room wtwoodburner, 1'h story,
dm1ng room, na't gas, cent. air, new
carpet, garage, Insulated, plus a tree'
house retreat (Must see) $49,200.

I
1
-1
I
veer
I

MAINTENANCE FREE' HOME
Alum . sided 3 bedroom home near
town. Has nat gas heat. cent . air,
garage plus li,. acre yard. $42,900. t
buyer protection

R~NUL PROPERTY- RIO GRAN-I
DE - Located 1 block from tampus
makes th1s 2 unit apt a real bur , E"ach
u.n•t could have 2 bedrooms. There 1s
I h baths. lull bf1sement wltamlly 1
roo'!l, gas h~at. 2 kitchens, lots. S38 ,600

••
•

OWNER SAYS "MAkE OFFER" - ·
1200 sq ft. 3 bedroom horne off R t. s.s 4, 6 I
ntce StZed rooms and bath Insulate-d
Over 'h acre Will cons1der mobiiC
home 1n trade. L.ow 30s.

'
•:

1

1

j'

LARIAT ,DRIVE- A very attractive
and spacaous 4 bedroom brick home off
R1 35 has ~ulppcd kt1chen, formal
dining area, den. 2 fireplaces, femilv
room [huge). full basement, 2 baths.
,
rec room,garageandC'arport . Nat QltS I
and cent. air. 70s.
·

I

a.

'a.

-..ndl•roeconc.-...Pitrklng. Will
rent all ar p1rt. can Ike Wltemen tor
dltltlla.
·

FOR SALE OR RENT

ott '--"

Low, low

Rl- Rd. I'IARIIICe,
ba.......,t
garage, M9W In today
$3.1,900 or $275 mo.

a.

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

ROOM TO ROAM- This lovely brick
ranch offers lot5 of gOOd living for your
grl!Wfng family, 3 BR's, 2112 baths, large
kitchen
LR, formal dining n)'l., 2
fireplaces, WOOd burning srove, cent
air, garage, full basement with family
rm., bar &amp; laundry. Located on epprox.
2 ac:res on Stae Roure 554 between
Porter &amp; Eno. Pr1ced to sell at $59,500.

a.

,

1

1

PRICE REDUCED TO $37,9001 Nice 3
BR low maintenance home is less than 3
yrs old and features large LR, dining
rm., kitchen, barh, part basement
utility building and almost 2 acres nea;
Route 218 City schools
LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN·
CHER plus 78 ACRES of ' land In
Cheshire Township offers lots Of good
liv1ng for your growing famlly:--/-ltome IS
just like new with 1438 sq ft . of living
area plus an attached garage 2
spacious BR's, 2 baths, 8x27 LR, 10x24
ki1chen with refrig., disp, OW, double
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays in
laundry. Land Is mostly rolling pasture
land w1th approx. 25 acres wooded. Call
for appointment.
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fran
tage on State Route 588, Fairfield
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd.
Excellent tor farming or development
Older 5 rm. &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
s11o inciuaed. Owners will consider sell ·
1ng smaller tracts of shorr term f.nanc·
lng. Call for more information
JACKSON COUNTY FARM 106
acres M/L, approx. 30 A. tillable,
balance pasture &amp; woods. nice 2 s'tory 7
rm. home, new 40x80 metal barn.
several other buildings, must sell soon.
Call for other details.
GUY AN TOWNSHIP- 108 acres m/1,
located south of Mercerville. Approx. 20
A. tillable, balance woods, tob base.
Owners will help finance
CLAY TOWNSHIP - Raccoon Creek
frontage, 1'12 s'tory, 4 rms and bath
down, upstairs unfinished, gOOd barn,
garage, shed, near Blue Lake, city
schools. Asking $42,500.
FARMER'S FARM - One of Guyan
Township's finest . 106 acre mil, ap·
prox. 45 A. fer'tile.bottom land, balance
pasture &amp; woods. Nice modekitchen &amp;
familY rm 14X18 LR, aMached garage,
mans 56x104, also incluaea IS 20x24
steel garage, workshop &amp; several
sheds. Owner is retiring &amp; will help
finance .
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pasture farm, mostly rolling &amp; hi I·
ly grassland with approx 10 A wOOded,
lots of springs, 1112 story home has 4
rms &amp; bath( large ba~rn , tobacco base,
fronts on 3 roads in Walnu1 Township.
OHIO RIVER VIEW- Approx. 8 acres
wooded land, nice building site, county
water, located on Route 7 appro)(. 5 mi
south of town . $6,500
OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE- in the
wilderness of the Wayne National
Forest. 5 to 9 acre tracts of woodland
now available. adjoining thousands of
acres of government land Public hun·
ting, fiShing and camping permitted.
Prices start at $3500 with financing
available .

SALE I

NEW LISTING-· Assumable loan only $3,800 down,
int. rate Payments $3S3 71 Including taxes
and ins Modern 3 bedroom ranch, large llvtng
room and kitchen and dintng area Only 2112 years
old
IMMACULATELY KEPT - Just like new custom
built 14x70 mob1le home, 3 bedrooms, large lovely
I1V1ng room, modern built in kitchen, d1ning room.
all carpeted , large covered pat1d Storage butldtng,
9xl0 with good dry cellar all sitt1ng on PJ.t acres of
Qround Shown by appt only Priced in the low S20s
9:W~b

S·U· P·E·R L ·O·C·A·T· I ·O·N- WILLOW DRIVEJust l1sted An exceptionally nice home. Prates·
stonally landscaped Featuring a large rust1c fami ly room with massive stone t•replace. bookshelves,
bay wmdow and beamed ceilings. Large spac1ous
formal entry Modern k1tchen w1th pantry, formal
dining room and living room. Everything for your
comfort Sef'ting on the edge of town on a •sem•wooded lot . Shown by appo1nrment.
LOVELY BRICK RANCH - Setting pretty on 5.8
acres nicely landscaped . Lots of space and charm
adorns 'th1s 4 bedroom home Formal l111ing room
and dtning, large mOdern kitchen. full basement,
fireplace in famlkly room, 2 car garage attached
workshop and a barn Th1s home reflects tender,
Iovin~ care and rryt vol!le. Shown by appointment.
Land contract99b Int. rate.
TIRED OF YOUR JOB?- Be your own boss 1 Now
you have the opporrun1ty 'to own your own bust ness!
A well established business wtlh complete inventory
and a 1973 G.M C serv1ce van National Service
Center warrant•es. Several commehial contracts
1n torce 0Wr'1ers wtll help finance SO% and on the
job training if needed! Call for more detlls. $30,000

J

I

'

Handmade walnut gun ,, )' ·
cabinet, will toke Sl.lOO.
Call367-7238.

1 yr old Homellte super 2
chain saw, $75. Call 446·
0159

27 ft rravel trail~r. self
contained &amp; furnished . 77
Chrysler 36,000 mi. Sell
together or separately . Call
256·1291.

30' Sunray electric ranoe,
36' copperrone gas range, · ·
-Whirlpool washer &amp; dryer,
Whirlpool dryer, 19' par
table B/W TV . Elliotts, call
446·3733.
,•

Blazer
Swap Shop .
Clothtng, dishes, stove.
Buy. sell, or trade Sand
Hollow-Criner Rd

Snow plow for sale side
power angle, exc cond.
Call388·9848

SALE I

SALE I

:
I

l

':$
I

•..,
•h
, .,.
" "'
~

L·O.C·A·T·I·O.N - 620 ith Ave., 4 BR,
2'12 batlls. Iaroe LR, formal dining rm
complete kitchen with dlsp., OW com
pactor, refrigerator and range. t
fireplaces, garage, new alumlnur. 1
siding and •torm windows. Shown b1
•ppornlment onty .

0008.

..
'

..-..

•

I

•'

. •'

'

SALE STARTS MONDAY, OCT. 19

'

ENDS SATURDAY, OCT. 24

4f/J~
Rodney, Ohio

)

Emil Gore

.'' . ''

·"'-.,
-"'
.' .·.."
,
'

·-·

::~ 1!

614-24 5· 5600

r----------------------R_e_a_I_E_s_ta~le-Gener~a~I==~=====================:~R~e~a~I~E~s~ta=l=e=-==G=e=n=e=r•=l==================~-=-=-==~~- ~·~
·"
•

CANADAY
REALTY

IB

Ron Canaday, Reahor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, ReaHor 446-3636
REAL10R ·s Susan Gilliam, Assoc. 245-5208
25 LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

JACKSON PIKE - 152,900- Walk to
shOpping center, grocery or movies.
N1ce 3 BR brick and frame ranch. 1112
baths Family room. Kitchen has ample
cabinets, range. Utility room with
washer and dryer. Attached garage

THANKSGIIIING AND CHRISTMAS
cooking would be a joy in this beautiful,
efficient kitchen. counter space galore
plus range, dishwasher and disposal.
Spaciou51iving room, 3 BR, 2 full baths,
, full basement t!lnd anached garage.
Two brand new home5IOCated in Gre-en
Acres Subdivision jusr completed. You
can choose your favorite carpet colors.
$56,000

OPEN HOUSE
'SUN., OCT. 18
2 TIL s·
354 THIRD AVENUE IN GALLIPOLISWatch tor our OPEN

HOUSE sign.

Oozts with charm, gorgeous entry, bridal staircase.
formal dining, br1ck petlo In secluded rear yard.·
Owners have given this hOme a French touch I Stop
' by and see. Assumable mortgage.
·

\

MITCHELL ROAD- $45,1100- Greet
1ocat1on ... near shopptng, Holzer
Hospital. 3 year old brick ranch on onehalf acre lot. Eat in kitchen fully equipped. Fully carpeted . Attached garage.
Electrtc hear pump. Highest electric
bill last winter . $59,900

OWNER WILL FINANCE ON LAND
CONTRACT- IN THE CITY Sheltered
by trees, flowers and shrubbe.ry. Den
and kitctlen are futl of sun from sun·
burst window Cathedral ceiling with
paddle ceiling fan. Open stairs,
fireplace In living room. 3 BRs, 2 baths,
full basement. Beautifully restored
througout. an almos.t llterarv qualitY
about the home. The lot has river fron ·
tage.

'

PRICE REDUCED TO 135,000.00
•sSUME Hj, LOAN - Over 1500 sq. ft.
ot llvln~ area PLUS 'alull basement in
this 3 BR ranch . Owner IS leaving the
state end Is anKIOU&amp; to sell. Make
YOUR offer first. Located on Ingalls
Rd. Call RANY BLACKBURN at 4.16·

't

until these are sold.

on Rt. sea At

I

11

NO TRADE-INS AT THESE PRICES
.
Hurryl Prices good only

I

I

1

.

'

More than 100 pieces of
brown underpinning for 1
mobile home, used iust one
year A seven and one half
feet by 58 Inch wide oval
rug. and white uniforms
s1ze 9·10. Call A46-3065 after
• .30 PM.

GORE'S CHAIN SAW PLACE

Bnnnie Stutes-Realtor 446-4206
James Stutes, Assoc. 446 -2885
Dallas "Jim" Love 446-2627

'

,j

stove~

Regular
No. to Sell
Sale
s Stihl Model /I 015 L-14" Bar ...... . $187.95 $169.95
322.95
298.95
2 Stihl Model /I 028 WB-16" Bar
322.95
289.95
1 Stihl Model# 028 WB-16" Bar
329.95 •
4 Stihl Model /I 031 AV-16" Bar , ... . 361.95
294.95 .. :
1 Stihl Model /I 031 AV-16" Bar . , .. . 361.95
'
8 Stihl Model /I 032 AV-16" Bar .... . 387.95
349.95
1 Stihl Modell! 038 AV-20" Bar . , . , . 567.95
387.95
443.95
5 Stihl Modell! 041 F B-16" Bar
399,95
491.95
2 Stihl Model II 042 AV-20" Bar
439.95 ,,.
519.95
1 Stihl Modell! 048 AV-20" Bar
611 '95
698.95
1 Stihl Model# 051 AV-20" Bar
599.95
667.95
1 Stihl Model# 056 AV-20" Bar
589.95

INVESTMENT PROPERTY- 6 acres of woodland
only 1 mile south of Rio Grande on St Rt. 325.

JOHNS CREEK ROAD Near
Mercerville and Crown City mines., 1973
Duke Crown Royal mobile home.
14'x65', 2 BR, woodburnlng stove, flat
lot with welL bargain priced. Call a'bout
this one.

:
•
:

•

STIHL CHAIN SAW SALE
If you have always wanted a Stihl

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLERemodeled home Includes s rms. &amp;
bath, carport, stove, refrig.. dish
washer, mobile home pad, almost 6
acres on 588 2 mi. from town $30,000

I1 I
Ii

Nti

lrKIIW brick colonial building Willi a
Cllglllflod •
N. Till free stan-

,WALNUT ,TOWNSHIP - Beef, hay &amp;
gram farm. 80 acres, m/1, appro&gt;&lt; 35 A
gOOd cropland, 10 A. woods, balance
pasture. good fences. 9 rm./bath, home
was built In 1872 ~ has been partially
remodeled, SOxSO cattle barn with con·
crete floor, large silo wfth auto.
unloader, several sheds. large pond,
springs, stand1ng crops go to new
owner. Call RANNY BLACKBURN lor
mor elnformation 446·0008.
·CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted
building lot. 1.22 acre, nice wooded ser·
ling, cily schools. $5,900.

I '
I1 "- I
I 1

n.

HUNTINGTON TOWNSI::tiP __, 11 !.
acres m/ 1 va cant land, fronts on Rae
coon Creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd Approx
31 tillable &amp; Jhe billanc.;e wooded Under
S400 per acre .
BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx. SIJ:~ acres located on the
Graham School Rd., co. water, over 300
ft. rd. frontage, Green Grade School &amp;
Gall Ia Academy High SchooL $10,900.

EXCELLENT
LOCATION
I
BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME_ An
catching 3 bedroom home situated o~ 1
acre on Rt 588 Nearly 2 000 sq 11 1
f•nlshtd living area lnclud~s a lar'oe kl~
NEW LilTING - Very nice brick &amp; chen, 2 baths, 2 firepacH, family room
tr•me With aver 2,0110 oq. ft. 3 ~~;.{:!e~· basemenr and 2 car, oaraoe'
bedrooms. l'h balM, 2 llroplacH,
faiJIIIY room, oquiiJI)Od kltchon, full OWNERS MOilED- HOME PRICED I
-mont
"rage. M KI'H With TO SELL - Vory convenient loctllon
1-bam. City Schooll.
.
off Jackson Pike. rt1is malnt. free 3
bedroom home has 2 '"II batns, lamiiY
OWNIRI DEIPER,IITE- Must
or room, fireplace, nat gas hear, cent. air
rent 1 yr. old malnt. tree homo lull and2cargarage Ontv.SSI,900
I
mlm.t... from - · Family """"·
woadbumer, nlu kite._, large &amp; 1111 JUST LISTED - Specious~ bedroom
lat. 696 payment. W,500. fm· homo close to lown Hat 3 full baths, 21 '
flroplacea, large lamlly raom, formal
mediate poiMIIIon.
dining, full basertn!nl, net. 111•, cent
IIROFUSIONAL OI'FICII BLDG. air, 2 · car oarag•
fencod Ylll'd.
I'DR IIINT _ N"rly new very at· POSSibloHj,assumptlon.Onlyk,500. ·

a.

•

LAND CONTRACT - Owners have
been transferred our of state &amp; musr
sell this month. Lovely 3 Br. ranch w1th
LR, kitchen, laundry, garage, almost
new carp~ and flat lot within walktng
distance of school. Easy terms for a
· qualified buyer
OWHER WILL FINANCE Great
family home with 3 Brs, 2 baths, 1Sx27
LR with gas fireplace, large modern
kitchen With range, self cleaning oven,
OW and disp , laundry with washer an
dryer, part basement and over 6 acres
of land at the edge of town Call Ranny
Blackburn, 446 0008
HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a
hunting lodge, vacat1on home, elc
Rustle tog home 1s built from hand
hewn beams and has a sleepling loft,
modern bath. large stone firepla ce
and approx. 27 acres of woods tn the
Wayne National Forest. Extra land
available. Easy Terms.

4 or bedroom home
spac'
1n town Has 2 fireplaces, famtly room,
den, formal dming, 2'h baths, full
basement, nat. gas, cent. air, etc Ex
cellenr constructton and care Could
eas.ty be adaptable to professional of
flees Call for •nformat1on

e-;

For sale wood &amp; coal
Call256-1427.

Saw' - Buy Now!
SPECIAL PURCHASE of
DISPLAY &amp; DEMONSTRATOR SAWS

1011 2ND AVE. - Very nicewett kept 3

NEWLY RENOVATED
J bedroom
home,
Situated
on 4J'xl73' lor. just
wa1tmq for you to come
entOY
the
new kt'tchen and bath.
New f.a. natural gl$ fur ·
nace and all new carpet.
If you're interested ypu
can have it all for
$29,900 00
PERFECT LOCATION
for small bus1ness or
rPmortel r~nd move Into.
Loc.llf&gt;d on rhe main
corner in Ewington, lot
stze ' approx
S6x170' .
Buy this property now
lor $20,000

NEW LISTING- Neat
3·bedroom
cottage
located in Bidwell.
Situated on 166'661 lot.
with another 166'x66'
lot. Buy all lor S8.500.00 .

46 ACRE FARM - Very good small
farm w1th approx 15 20 acres crop,
pasture and woodland Over 2,000 lb.
tobacco base. large tobacco barn. well,
streams, timber and an,. attractive 3
bedroom home· in - good condition.
Located near Mercerville on SR 218.
$52,500

For sale 19' color TV, 1125.
• cu It cement mixer with
motor. 1215. 300 gal , IU&lt;If
tank. S20. 6 HP mini bike ..
,m,ootorp~-~6- 7205:.~Y$ !&gt;Ike,
· ·~~
- ~.

'

excellent starter
home for only
and low, tow mon·
fhly payments.
bedrooms, fireplace,
kitchen w/ranoe plus lh ec. vard. Citv
schools. washington Elementery.

WE HAVE SEVERAL BUYERS LOOKING
FOR LOW INTEREST LOAN ASSUMPTION
AND HOMES IN ALL PRICE RANGES
YOURS COULD BE THE ONE. LIST WIT
US!

..

Flat Allis model 6E dozer
with cargo wench, Flat
Allis modeiS&lt;IS rubber tlre
end loader 21/4 yd . buCker,
completely overhauled
with new engine, bOth
i1ems In exc. condition.
Blaine King 304 372-6390,
R1pfey, WVA.
Firewood for sale mlx@d
hard wood, $35 whole, $40
split stacked and delivered.
Calt446·9607 or 2&lt;15·5506

'

H614)·992·3325
COUNTRY - Will fake
trailer in on th1s home.
Nice large modern kttchen, -furnace, 3 ntce
size bedrooms, bath, ful!
basement and large tot
130,000
MODERN ~ Can you
beqt a heat bt•dget of
$17.50 Th~s 4 bedroom
ranch is really neat and
large w1th 8 closets Has
a large basement w1th
garage A fam1ly will fit
the bill
R~CINE N1ce 11J:1
story 8 room home.
Natural gas furnace,
catpeting,
spacious
rooms. Basement and
large lot Modern kit·
chen (equipped), storm
doors and wtndows on
large lot
POMEROY - Nearly
pnvate 3 bedroom
hOme. Elec baseboard
heat, modern bath, lots
of Carpeting, insulated,
storm drs and windpws
Riverview lot. 132.500
IN THE WOODS Atone and quiet with all
citV ut•llties. Cedar
closets, washer-dryer
roam, natural gas for·
ced a•r furnace rh1s
pta~e 1S for you JUST
$21,500.
• ASSOCIATES
Helen Teaford, Sue
Murphy , and Helen
Teaford.

:

..

RIVER VIEW - $31,000 - Beautiful
view of the Ohio illd only a lew miles
from city. Immaculate brick ranch,
tully carpeted, large eat-In kltch"" w1th
ctoul:)'le oven nnge, nice front POrch and
patio, blacktop drive, storage building.
City schools.

ON THE EDGE OF THE CITY ,,
overlooking lhe beaulllul Ohio, Lawn
goes to the water's edge. Immaculate,
newly decorated. Family room has
fireplace, slate hearth, plush carpet,
plant window. Two bedrooms, full
basement, cent. air llery loW gas
budget, Garage, pello. Auumable 9%
mortgage. 542,900.

FARM ... 56 ACRES Beautiful
pasture and meadow land, some
wooded. Fenced. Good barn and other
outbldg. NIce 3 bedroom home,
fireplace, knotty p1ne paneling_in living
room, krtchen has built-In oven, counter
top range ang4111ishwasher Clty schools.
Green Elementary. Approx 3 miles
from Gallipolis. $94,000.

'

ENO - $100,000 - Beautiful building
sites along blacktop roaa .. . rural water · ,.
available. R lch crop land also some
tlmtier . Over 100 acres. Call for a
5hoWing. You'll see this is good in·
vestment property .
DAIRY FARM OR BEEF CATTLE ...
$117,000 Good production farm 60 acres
tillable, 80 PCISture, rest timber 2 pon ·
ds, also frontage on Raccoon Creek.
GOOd fences. 1050 lb tobocco base.
30'K75' loafing shed with concre1e floor .
Milk shed with pit, Olher bldg, tor hay
storage. Very nice 3 BR, 'trl·level nome
with formal dining and family room.
This is one of the best produr;ing and
cleanest farms in the county .
TWO ACRES - $6,500 - Site cleared,
drive plus 26'x36' POUred loundat1on.
&lt;1110 concrete blocks.

'

�•

,
Page-0·8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

54-MiSC: ;;;trCi.indlct
150,000 BTU

S4

space heater.

Phone 388·9777,

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Polnt Pleasant, W.Va.

Misc. MtrChlndiCI

Discontinued cabinets. ' top,
stove, hood, sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 61S ·

Gravely tractor &amp; mower, 2318.
$750. Call after 5PM 367·
04a2 .
Lamp and lamp repair. An·
tiques ana reproductions .
- ------.,- - - - - COLEMAN fuel oil heater, From$10. Call675·3638.
651000 BTU . Call245-5545.
' '
.
Brand new disc for J point
F t r ewood sp li t &amp; de-livered . hitch. Paid s80o. w ill sell
$35 . truck load, or S6.5 . a tor S550. 675·5774.
cord . Cal l 614·8.43·2933 or
61A-843·2452 .
Koh ler wheatiights, leather
dog .coilar, leads, train ing
Firewood $30 , pickup load . scents, break ing rt:ents,
949·2870 after s p.m.
brass name -plates. dog
l~ed . 615·2098.
·
2s:ooo BTU a ir conditioner .
61H67-6636.
Fi'rewood for
843·2621.

GoBese tablets or capsules

sen. Ca ll 614·

•

r

.·. ~:-·,..:; p'

----.

br--ondlloi&gt;IM

.

smallest bUIIdlpg oppro&gt;c ,
1,200 so. fl. Must move lm·
mediately and Will sell
cheap. Coil Johnny Kalen·
ski toll free 1·800·24tHl065 or
1-800 2A8·032),

II

I HAFFC I

Riding mower $275, mower lr~-G=-=-Is=:r=
· :::E:-:D::-11.
$70. 10 speed bicv2le $45, .
bike rack ss, weed eater SS, f-.!::lr~V,.:::;"'ir-t-11-1
wheelbarrow SlO, window
.
~ ..J
.
fan $5, tool s Sl each. 576·
,
c

Manure spreader, M trac·
tor. pickup truck, hay
baler. post hole driver ahd
.digger. 2 antique bath tubs,
2 14·11; hay trailers. Myrtle
Holter, 949·2558 .

WHA' 'THE C!IAL.L.EIT
DANC£11:5 5HOUL.Dt(;
HAVE NAMED
THEIR' c:I'\UC:.HTER .

I

IGLENEf
I I I

Now arrange the Orc:ted letters to
loon the SUfPI'1Ia ~RPer, as s~­
ge.-1 by IN! abOVe cartoOn .

()

J

Winters,
Rio Grande, 0 .
Call
245·5121.

(Answers Monday)

1 Jumbtes: ROBIN

oWner will finance . 614·256·
12~6 .

614-992-2181
For
Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas - ( Diesel
Heating Oi 1.

PRICED RIGHT.

10ft. x 6ft. brolnd new farm
tra iler. $250. 615·5174.

STEEL BUILDINGS FOR SALE ·
FROM MAJOR MFGS.
48x72X14 for $9151 .00
30x48x12 for 55650.00
24X48X10 for $4998.00

CALL

EFFIGY FRIGID
lOOked-

Yeslerdays i Answer: How the auctioneer
"FOR-BIDDING ·

t:;:::::-;;.:~;;~::::,:;::::~~~~;;;;:::'::1
Pets tor Sale

56

Twenty gauge metal
sheets. Enamel, porcelain
coatea. Many build inq
uses . Will not rust. Sizes 4
tt . by 8 fl ., ss .60. • fl. ~Y 10
ft ' 17.00, 4 fl . by 12 fl .,
$8 .00 . Tuppers Plains,
Ohio. 614-667 ·3085 or 614·
667·3302.

DINER

Pets tor Sale

56

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy T.ay jor at 361·
7220 .

till

3 horse gooseneck trailer.
$1,500, 992-7157 .

I I I I ) ~egister~i;::t;::~ HOrses

Building Supplies

br ick,

,lluto lor Sole

71

1981

Plymouth

Auto for Site
1978 Ford Fairmont, gOOd

11

Hor lzen

Mise-r. 4 dr., 4 spd. trans., condition ,· OOQ'd

Registered Walker Coon
hound. Mostly Joe House
breeding , Call 614-949-2523
or 614-949·2083,

fOr sale. Quality show hor·
ses, boarding &amp; trainJng.
Can or ~aren Beam,
Gallipolis. olol6·0183.
For ~ale Registered spot·
ted boars, 2 sows with 12
pigs . Phone 388·8419.

1978 Plym.oul~ Volare, 6
cyl ,, automatic, po~r
steering, air condition. Call
$2,800, after ~ : OOPM. 3792n6.

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

·sa

--· .. -.... ......

7c2_ _T'-r'-'u"'c~
ks~
for
~S~•~
I•~­
1976 Ford Explorer 250,
Auto. 4·Wheel drive, new
tires, .fiberglass toppe r,
$2,850. Colt olol6·9285. ,

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

1980 Cutlass Brougham all

Regi ste r e d
m a le
Schnauzer . $80. Phone 882·
2236.

1980 Dodge Colt, exc. cond.
Twin stick trans., A.C. Call
olol6·1724. Price $«95.00.

AKC Registe:red female
boxer pups, 4 months old,
fawn and white, .$150 firm .
Call after 5:30 576·2919 .

1974 Vega stationwagen,
automatic , ps, pb. 882 ·3267.
1971 Ford Maverick , new
front eng, new radiator,
runs gOOd, $}00. 895·3828.
79 OLDS Cutlass, loaded,

AKC Springer Spaniel pup·
pies. 6 weeks old, II'Yer and
white, black and white.
Call after s pm 1-304-429{814.
English coonhound ,
months. $75 . 895·3599.

:=::a"\t.oth
t.leu pfnal tow•r)
*CorftP.O!'enl $y•t•m•
*Portable Radios

*'--·

*AutomobiiORodlos
*Tubes &amp; Slmlconducton

'

All fVpa of batt•rlat &amp;
· Cho'll'!rt .
PIIONE 99:1-2276 9-24
Btadbury Road · 1 mo .

eAwnino.

AKC Registered Doberman
pups, 8 weeks old, tails bob·
bed , wormed, 2 males. 1 · '
female, bla c~ and rust. ·
1125. 458·1513.
---~- -~

1971 Ford dump truck .
$3200 . Call614-985·4395.

304·675·4087.

1974 Ford Cour ier. Auto.

Radio and heater . Rough .
Call 614·992 ·3916 after 5

39 CHEVY sedan with a
rebuilt motor . Asking
$1500 , 304·576·2602 .

p.m .

1960 Corvette, 56 Plymovth
Belve dere, call after 5 p.m .
304-882·3320.

For sale or trade. 1972
Dodge pic k·up truck. Call
614-742·255 1.

1978 Ford Fairont. 4 speed,
gOOd condition. call 8823145,

1977 Chevy pickup, 305
engine, ps , pbf automatic , •
12295.00. Phone 675·3054.

I

ALL STEEL.

°From 30x30"
SMAL.L. .,

CLOSE TO TOWN must see.

Beautiful new doublewide,
111045
JUST LISTED! Convenient In-town
location . Older two story _. bedroom
home. Large kitchen with old fashion
pantry. Natural gas. Off street parking .
School bus pickup. S29,900.
11893

SMALL FARMmain bath, kitchen,
closed porches &amp; parrlt l&gt;a,serner11.
shed, garage &amp; 27.41 acres
be;oul'lfu
land . 18 acres tillable &amp; about 700' of
road frontage . Just waiting for that
parttimefarmer.
1896

PRICEJ b~~~~~;~.~ story,
living room,
garden area.
and churches. Owner·s

$37,000.

,

Pomeroy, 1'h
woodburner In
front porch end
hospital, stores
anxious to sel.
N845

TERRIFIC STARTER HOME - This 3
bedroom, 1 bath with large lot has it all.
Tastefully decorated , Includes fam ily
room. dining room and basement.
Route 351ocation. Priced In ~AO's. 11739

HAIR REMEDIES
Mark Mora ·
end Cindy Cuthbertson.
Stvli51S:

New Hours:
Mon.ll:OO·I:OO

Tues. 11:10-5:00

RODNEY - 2 lots set up for 4 renta l mobile home
spaces.
N016S

COMPARE !II Where else can YOU get 3
or .4 bedroom home wlth -2.4 acres for
$19,900, Rural water, fruit trees. Nice
garden area . City school system. 1757

GOOD BUY - Frame home. fully carpeted, needs
repair, owner wnats offer .
w0185
UPPER ROUTE 7 - Bl.xk building and lot for
residential or commercial.
110014

RESIDENTIAL

HAPPINESS FOR SALE - New ra nch, brick &amp;
frame, family room-fireplace.
N1495

PRICED TO SELL.- In the low 30's Is
this 2 bedroom home. A kitchen any
woman wold be proud to own. Garage.
Basement . Large laWn. 4 miles from
HMC .
U12

LOWER: RIVER ROAD fireplace, garage .

Nice ranch, 3 bedrooms,
II 74~
- ·-- --Ranch with full basement. lot with
N 0295

BELlOMY
LANE
use as a 4 bedroom home or 2-2
bedroom apartments. Live In one and
rent the other . Nice lot. Patio. Priced in
U04
the $40's .

.

6 ACRES - Two mobile homes, storage buildings.
N0014

SUPER FARM - Large house, several buildings,
195 acres, call for details.
N0175

SUMMER PLACE or live year round in
this lovely 2 bedroom home. Living
room, 1 bath, kitchen adn .69 acre,
11842
located on Blue Lake Drive.

Good house, 2 large barns, some

N9000

HONEYSUCKLE DRIVE overlooking
the river. 2 story older home and 3.6
acres. ,3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room,
kitchen. part basement. Priced In the
$20's.
U32

Large tract of vacant land, se"Yeral

noeo

21!2 ACRES -

Gooa building or mobile home site,
Add Iso~ Twp.
N0006

YOU CI!N STILL BUY A NICE HOME
UNDER UG,OOO- Country living and
room to breattle in this 2 bedrOom home
with bath. Living room, kitchen and en ·
closed porch (could be bedroom or ·
den) . Aisohos2acresolllnd .
1120

Two large barns, nice pond,
beautiful rolling land, 150 acres.
N1200

GOOD BARN -

Beautiful Colonial
I 0528
acres.
1 1010

RIO GRANDE - Nlc'elot, 78'x160' .

156410

RT. 588 - '12 acre lot, only $3,000 .

, 1003

SEE MOM'S EYES SHINE When she
sees the Inside of this modern, clean 2
or 3 BR house . Money saving well built
fireplace. It also has full lfasement.
Well insulated. 1.10 ac. of land. Garden,
535.000.
1101

ARNOLD ST. - 2 nice level lots, SA,OOOor$4,500.
'
'0045

MOBILE HOMES
PRICE REDUCED - Comple1111y fur·
nlthtd with ~&gt;&amp;autlful furniture. Mobile
nome has 2 bedrooms, 2 full bathS. tor·
mol dining and lovely expondo ..lomlly
room. Patio, walks, concrete driveway
end
1
acre
of
lawn.
IUJ

GOOO L.OCATIO,.._ Close lo town, 5 acres building
site.
·
I 1IGO

2

0

Free Estimat~
'J ames Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

•Dryers
•Ranges
•Disposals

· •Dishwosh•n

1()-7-1 mo.

•Hot Water Tonks

9-5-tfc

•

Camping
Equipment
Shasta travel trallor, $700. ·
Stove, ret, &amp; sink Included.
Call 381·9025.

SWAIN

,
D

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Damn Bloomer, Realtor, 446·2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

10% INTEREST- OWner financing on
this beautifully molnlolned 3 be&lt;troom
mobile hOme. Expando plus lam 11 Y
room with woodbur-. Pella. Oora91.
!~acre.

· ,..,

'

SPLENOID RETREAT -

New house

90% complete, 1296 sq . ft . 5.91 acres of

land. County water now bfling Installed .
Septic tank . Discover the beauty of this
area. Near wavne Nationlll Forest.
530,900,
'894

LOTS

FOR

SALE

BUILO AS YOU WISH- 2'12 lots In the
village of Rio Grande. Close lq school,
post office and stores. Water and
sewage available.
1140
LOTS - ONner is willing to sell these 2
:llts close to Blue Lake on a land con·
tract . 100x107 and 100&gt;&lt;99.9. $5,000 each.
N791
Docking privileges.
1 ACRE LOT - Located on state high·
way, has drilled well, and Is ready for
the home of your choice . Priced at
53,500.
1876
5.4 ACRES or S ACRES - Are YOU
looking for a tract of land for the home
of your dreams? 5..4 acres partially ·
cleared and partially wooded or 5 acres
of mostly woods. Make your own
choice.
1
1177·1878

GREAT L.OCATION
VALUE Is offered by this neal
bi-level home with 3 bedrooms, 21h
baths, fireplace in Irving room, 2 car
garage ord much more. Would po$sibiY
consider land contract to qualified
buyer. Call now.
1791

RESIDENTIAL
PRICEO TO SEL.L - A gOOd beginner
or for small family, 2 bdrs., bth, living
room, kitchen and dining combination,
util.lty room. Centrl air. 2.4.5 acres. All
for $19,000.
UJ9

00 YOU ENJOY : efficient fireplace?
CMnging seasons? Children play ing
disturbing no ' one? Consider this 1-977
sectional 3 BR home, 1550 sq. fl .. 2 full
baths, showers, 3 walk·ln closets,
1stand kitchen, 1.6 acres scenic oak
trees. Affordable price.
1 861
YOU BE THE JUDGE and tell me If
you don't think this well maintained
home Is not worth !he asking price . 2
bedrooms, baSement. Laroe storage
oree. Owner willing to help wltn down
payment. Rutland. $24,900 .
I 890

,--~

NO RESTRICTIONS on these tWo
50x159 lots. Rural water ·and electric
IVIIIABL.E , 1§,1??. Owner will sell on
land controcttoquolifled bUyer. 1718
NEW LISTING - IIUILO TO SUIT
YOUrself on this ID.Iacres. Will sell in 2
tracts. City, or rural water available.
Natural gas and sewer available. Witln
s minutes of town.
1805
2 ACRES - 1-1 for log home. , '•r·
!lolly wooded. Water ,and electric
available. City school district.
1 895

RESIDENTIAL
WANT A IAROAINr- SH,NO Will bUy
this nice ranch style, lhree bedroom
hOmo. Living room coriNIIetl, kitchen·
dining room, utility room, l'h cor
gor-. All IIIII siHing on approx. en
acre.
1171
' '

..

' I

'

•

PRICE REDUCED 'on this Impressive
brick ranch located on Krlstle Drive.
Home has formal foyer; living room ,
dining ·room, family room with FP, 3
BRs, 2 full baths. 2 car garag~, central
air-and Immediate possession.
t1 131

FISHERMAN'S OELtOHT - Hove
your own frontage on IIHt Onto R lver an
tnls 4.45 a1:r11. Also has a 14&gt;C24 bldg.
presently used tor bteul'; shOp. 2 story
home with 3 bedrooms, 341'4 J)arn,
tobacco bose and MUCH mor~ .
1156
\

BARGAIN PRICEO - $12,110 - 3
bedrooms, living room, eat·ln kltchenr
utility room, 1V. acr11. Plenty ot room
for the children to r,loy a. to raise e few
animals. Southwe&amp; ern School Dl&amp;trlct.
I
IU

"TOUCH OF CLASS"- Elegant cedar
A·frame Chalet with 3 bedrOQms, walk·
in closets, family room In basement
with woodburner. Large deck a.nd
covered patio. Much more, must see to
appreciate. Rio Grande.
1 183

A~poUIItm . .ts
not •twns
IIICftMty . FMtr..-ty Kut ·II·KUrl

hautySttop.

.,
I

ACREAGE
THE BUY OF THE WEEK - 56 acres,
vacant land. Approx . 25 acres good
tillable, rolling and levelland. Approx.
4,000 lb. tobacco base 1st year, The rest
pasture, wooded are:a. Abundant with
deer, other wildlife. $22,500.
1817

MILlER ElECTRIC
SERVICE
FiOr all of your

520.00
$25.00
530.00
$35.00

.
.
•
.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.5, Rl . SOEiiSI

G.uw,vilte, Ohio
A uttll!rlzed John Deere,
New Hotl11nd, Bus h HD!!
Farm Eqvfpment
Dultor
FAR M EQUIPMENT
PAR TS &amp; SER'V!CE

wave Length For
Longer Hair

KAY'S

USED EOIJIPMENT
t- No. 1600 Oiuet Ford
Tr;actor w/ Cab
M0 0-~010 Diesel J .O. Tr iictor
MOO·ltl t l?ow New ldc.t corn
Picker
,

·BEAUTY
SALON
PH. 992-2725

1

169 N. 2nd

Middleport, Ohio
9·20-1 mo.

'---------''•'-''-q

.----=-::WO::::-.R::-:K;-11 12

Truck• for s•t•
Scottsdale 10 19n model
Chevy pickup, V8 engine,
one owner , good tires,
automatic, new brakes,
priced below blue book
. listing . Lionel L. Smith, 905
Mossman Circle. 675·3222.

~ir·

Lol George Mllior
cMck ·your pr•sent elec·
trlcolsystom .
'
,
Rtlldential
&amp; Commercia I

PRICE REDUCED on this 45,86 acres
located on Graham School Road, 22 ..42
Woodlllnd, 22 •.44 pasture, small stream
and 400' road frontage . Priced at
$26,000, Make us an offer.
, 741.

BOGGS

Now517.50
Now $22. SO
Now 527 .so
Now $29.50

\ilg nttds.

Call 742·3195

FARMS

2-8-ttc

73

VInyl&amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
'-·SIDING
CO.
,,

25 ACRE FARM - Just Listed Owrer will work with you to buy th is
farm . 2 mobllehomes, tobacco base,
minerlll rights. Will sell part QC all of
farm, 1 or 2 mobile homes wllh less
land. Possible land contract .
If 870

"'"qtllul, Custom
lultt . . rltll"
1 1w tree siding
Illites, Mf.llll or

JIM LUCAS
Ph. 742·2753

10·12·1

PRICE RECUCEO - LANO CON·
TRACT - Buy house &amp; 50 acres or
house &amp; amount of acreage you want.
Approx. 15 oc . tillable, presently used
for paature. If ou want to buy, this
owner will try &amp; work with you. Pr iced
11837,000,
#784

....

No lurlllly Ctlll

•

3·11-lfc

.WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP
(Pomeroy , Scrap
, Iron
&amp; Metal)
Now picking up

(un~

prlcn
paid tor auta bodln,
scrap Iron and met11s.
1 milt well of Fofr·
grounds an Old Rl. 33.
Mort.·Frf •.l::lfl to 4:00
After Aug. J
Ph.HJ-6564
1()-12-lfc

•uta bodift, Top

1;;:::;;~;~:;J;=:::::;;;:==~
naRD

MINt. FARM, CL.OSE IN - 7 acres well
lenc:ld, 1181 lbs. tobacco base, 32'Xol8'
tobacco born, 2 acres lirTJb&amp;r. 3
bedroom house, well Insulated . New
vinyl siding. Storm doors and windOW&amp;.
Low ulllllln. OWner says aW!rage bill
Sl6oummer,S«&lt;w1Mer.
1852

,.

SliMun
Ol CO.
.(SOHJO)·

APPIIOX. 5 ACRES ..!. MOdtl small
f•rm. barn, machine . shed, chiC:ken
hOuH or used for develoment. Ranch
tYIMI home. 5 rooms and bath. Strong
spring ct.veloment or rural water is
available. c - t o Rio Grande.
IU7

.. ...

:J J ,
I

J•.

caM Qllec:t
·
9·21-1 mo .

vans&amp;4W.D.

1976 Ford Van, good cond.,
new radials. Must sell,
$2,000. Call.u6·ol394.

---,.-----'""1-------'""1

HOME SWEET HOME - 5 rooms lotal.
Barn, outbuifdlngs, grape arbor, fruit
trees. Approx. 15 acres tillable, 20 acres
pasture and rest wootled . 7 acres total.
Priced In low 40's'.
U44

-'

(

992-6259

PLASTERING
ceilings, com··
merclal and residentlill,
free estimates. Call . 256·
1182.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning .' featured by
Haffoll Brothers Cuslqm
carpets. Free eStimate~.
Call446·2107.

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE ~ quality and ser·
"Vice. call675·1582.
PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.

·~========~~========-t----------120 yrs, exp. Call388-9652.

III.W OfttllfCI,

·~

I

•

PERM SALE
SEP1. 21 thru OCT. 24

Wetls.IO:OO·I :OO

Thurs. 11 :00·1: DO
Fri. 10,10-5:00
Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 9n3021

BIDWELL - Ni ce Older home, large level lot, with
or without furniture .
11 IS72

PRICE REOUCEC - Nice rolling land, 5 acres.

•Washers

78

~::::::::::::::~~============::::~~=======---------~STUCCO
textured

RIO GRANDE - Beau tifu1.4 bed room, dining room,
N 5550
custom cab.

8~

· ALL MAKES

SMITH NELSON
MOtoRS INC.

Mobile home, 2 bedrooms,
N1016

ROAMING ROOM - Good building Site,
Grahom School Rd.

985-3561
PARTS AND SERVICE

1970 Frolic travel trailer . 22
~SERVICE
----------+----------1"-------:----~ ft., self conlained . $2,000.
KaMaltt SWain, Auct.
99:1·5983 .
c.r- Third r. Olivo
COMPL.EYE
RAOtATOR
"YOUNG'S
SERVICE
11
Home
CARPENTER
From the Sm1llest
. Improvements.
Hia,terCore ta .the
SERVICE"
Largest Radiator.
11
Home
F &amp; K free Trlm;,lng,
_Addona~nd
Improvements
'stumPrem'
oval. 675·1331.
remodeling_
Rodletor Spocllllll
..
t'
STANLEY
STEEMER
. ·- ~:t!"G a~CI gutt•r
NATHAN BIGGS
. Carpet Cleaning
used Color TV Sets tor
u Yn. ExiNirfonce
_ COnrm work
olol6·4208
Sale.
_Plumbing and
NEW
PHONE
NO,
•lettrial work
JIM MARCUM Rooting
{Fr" Esllmotes)
spouting and siding. 30
V, C. YOUNG Ill
276 Sycamore Sf.
years experience . Free Stark's Tree Tr'lmmlng. In·
Pomoroy, Oh.
992 ·6215 Of 9f2·131A
M iddleport,tOhio
es·t im4tes. ~emodeling . sllred. 304-576·2010.
Ph, 992·2174
11-o,.Ofllo
9·21-tfc
CaU 388·9857,
9.3Q.tfc.
5· 7-llc

NEIGHBORHOOD RD. - Lovely ranch with pool,
full basement .
II 1SS6

YOUR PRIVATE FARM home, large barn, .43 acres .

For Fast Service

SWAIN ' ,
AUCTION BARN

OPEN

PAXTON RD. -. Mobile home and lot on land con·
tract .
N1556

IN TOWN lots.

Coli Ken Young

Insulation
Storm Doors
Storm Windows
Replacement
Windows

NOW

IN TOWN For sa le or rent, ranch with fu rnitu re.
N0028

bottom land, 142 acres.

•
•
•
•

ouallly AulobOdy &amp; Paint
work. Insurance work
Welcome. Sunroofs installed from S200·S230. Auto
Trim Center, 4&lt;$6-1968.

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

Nice ranch with basement,
II 1042

NICE FARM -

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

SiltS

Rt. 3, Box 54
Recine, Oh .
Ph. "4·843·2591
·
6· 15-lfc

0

Knp This Ad far
Futui'• R•f.r•nce

Farm Buildings

Utility Buildings

Cottage on Musk·
#'0016

L.OTSANDACREAGE

mo.

.,

Sizes from 4x6 to 12X40

CHESHIRE AREA 1ar9e lot.

1N TOWN wood fence.

1974 Honda 450 , good con·
dillon. 5600. 458·1931.

10 ''

.OFFICE 446-7013

CHESHIRE AREA furn itu re stay s.

CONSTRUCllON

New Homes - extensive remudel·
ing.
,
•Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years ·
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011
992-7656
B·20· tfc

10·8·1 mo. pd .

r..,

Leb•nDn,

ROUSH

Custom Hitchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms, 'remodeling,
plumbin, electric, and
heating.

Ph. '304· 773-5131
Mason, w. va.

letc, 141(, ltiC CCloSS
" - ......,. sll...... I.... lrlllf
te T.,_ Pllftl. Alii lor
T-.
,..lcll every·
dlyl Or - MTI Celno,

Oren91, Salls,.,ry, Bedlord, CIHts111r, Sllom,
Scipio,
Rullend,
HlrriiOIIYIIIt lAd Mkldleport,
1o-12-1 mo.

10·8· 1 mo . l!d.

• Painting

Fr.onk Rote Cons!, Co.
RemOdeling repair,,_
construction. ell types,
Froeolllmatn, all wor~
fully
guaranteed . Residential, commer· .. ·
clal , Industrial and min·
ing, electric work .
MSHACerl.
olol6·o1627

Goillo .., _ . 1111rll•

Sutton, Letart, Olive,

If no Ans. call742· 2070

•Rooting

·P&amp;S BUILDINGS

ENJOY T.HE WEEKENDS ingum River . -

townships:

Located Smiles north of
Albany on fl 6J1, on the
Dale Scott Farm.
614·6370

CONSTRUtnON

• Kitchen Cabinets

446·4960 or 256-.1560, 6-9 P.M.

BAIRD &amp;FULLER (B
REALTY
''"""

Se-al Jobs
Open Sat. &amp; sundays

CONTUCTORS

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

Ph. &amp;4Hfl2
S5.00 Mantllty
Servlna lho. latlowlng .

Transmission Specialist
Rebuilts·Repairs

C. R. MASH.

Services Offered

Box 65, Portllncl, 011.

DEAN'S AUTOMAnC

D&amp;M
• Remodeling
eAiuminum &amp; -·
Vinyl Siding

CALL ROBERTS CONSTR. CO., INC.

0

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE·

•TeleYitlonl

Chevy 2 112 ton dump
with Cadltllac uphol_sle ry, 1976
truc
k.
heavy duty 16 ft .
new Mlchitan · tires, ex. bed, twin
hdist , well equip·
cond. Call olol6· ol385 .
ped, lOw mileage, ex . cond .
Call 304'372-639Q, Ripley ,
Ford Mustllng 1975, PB, WVA .
PS, auto. Call 245·5669 in
evening .
1979 1 ton flatbed, good t ~
cond. ·c all olol6·3960 after
1970 Olds 98. body exc . 4PM .
'
engine needs repair, 1175.
Call 245-9375.
1977 CHEVY
Bla zer ,
$1,700.00. Callolol6·4964,
1976 Fiat._. dr., 5 spd., AM ·
F M r adlo, good con d.,
$1,000. Call 367·0405 afler Stu~ Se rvlce· AKC 'Old
English.Sheepdog , 895·3624..
5PM.
extras, exc. cond. can -446·
1970.

~~

4

69 Oldsmobile, 4 dr., deluxe

Jumbo Bobwhite Quail, -6 '
week old to adult sizes. 614·
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
985·ol345.
Henderson. WV. FJ'hone 675157,4 or 675·2881.
Bred Herford Cows for
sale. Contact Harley Rice.
1978 Mu stang II , 4 CYlinder,
667·3369 ,
4 speed, am-fm radio tape
deck, ac , 38,500 miles,
1 Heretrod Heifers. Call $2500. 304·937 ·3244.
614-949·2268 .

ORAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC 57
Musical
Instruments
black Chow puppies, CFA .
Himalayan, Persian and ---'=~==~--­
Siamese kittens. Call 446· BUNDY Trumpet with
3844 after 4 p.m.
case, excellent condition,
Al l steel c le ar span
$125. Callolol6·4327 .
building sale. 40 x 48 x 14ft. HILLCREST KENNEL
$5, 137.00. 40 X 66 X 14 ft . Boarding all breeds, clean
Sale,
Bundy
$6,577 .00. 70 X 125 X 16 fl. indoor-outdoor facilities . For
$21 ,574.00, F.O. B. Factory .· Also AKC Reg . Dober· Saxaphone, $200.00. 446·
_.
__. ._ .. ,.,
loiJJ.
Call 1·800·848•2988 til7 pm .
mans. Call446·7795.
1 Yamaha acoustic guitar.
BRIARPATCH KENNEL ~ 675·2668 .
71
Auto for Sate
56
Pets for Sale
Boa rding and grooming . -=====;c:
1980 · Buick Century exc.
Toggenbu,rg Mubbin doe, AKC Gordon. setters.
Frui;;,==== cond.
Call446·8310 after 5.
wi ll kid March 1982. Phone English Cocker Spaniel$ .
&amp; Vegetables
458·1514.
Call olol6·4191.
Extra large pumpkins. S5 . 1978 No'Ya . 1981 Harley
Davidson. 675-4824.
Registe(ed
Appaloosa Beautiful AKC registered each . 675-1981 .
mare, gentle. bred to Quar· Boston Terrior puppies .
ter sta ll ion. To foal in early Call olol6·7432 .
Go"Yernment surplus cars
March . Caii614·59J·7390.
and trucks now a'Yailable
- · ····--· · · · · · ··· ~
' Beegle pups,
through government sales,
3 Full blooded
under SJOO. Call 1-114·.569·
Availab le for adopt ion. black , tan , wh ite marking.
02,.1. Open 24 hours for vour
Young m a le
Beagle, Starting totrall . SJO pc , 388·
61
directory on how to pur·
Farm Equipment
mixed-breed coon dog, 9354,
large male Irish Setter,
- - - - - - - For sale Ford tractor, 801 chase .
sm all
black ·and ·white Toggenburg Mubbin doe,
female . Meigs Humane will kid March 1982. Phone Power Master. F irst class 1976 brown Maverick, gOOd
Soci ety . 992·6505.
shape. Call 388-9909.
conditi.on, $2100. 675· 1636.
458 ·1514.

LAFF -A· DAY

gas

structuralsJeel carries full · AM radio, exc. cond, SS,200. mileage, 4 cylinder,
speec:t, cute~ ~2-3145.
factory
guarantee. 446·0499 ask for Phil.

Prlnt,;,.werhM: (

down.

61
Form Equlpmont
Buildings at factory all
parts accounted for all

Case dozer. delsel
blade. $5,500. 949·2057.

26' TROUT WOOD · trave l
trbiler a nd ca mp si te on
Raccon Creek. Close to

Tex·tan saOdle, excellent
conaition . 67 ~ · 2 098 ,

8

QUEEN size mattress &amp; I L-'-p-i?-~'lr'-"'ltir&lt;;'it"-:r
box springs, 304-675-6524.
~ _,1
'-. .)

Bu ilding materials, block,
sewer pipes, windows, li nte ls, e,t c. Claude

New Crop Apples· Red and
Golde n Delicious, Winesa p,
R9me aeauty , Grl mes
GDiden and Johnathan·
Retail and Wholesale, any
q~anity available . Also
fresh Apple Cider. Pum·
p~ins .
homemade Apple
B~tter and more produce
defights. Bob's Market,
Mason , WV . Open 7 days .
Phone 773 ·572 1.

I I

Royal· Chef gas cook stove.

Slabs for sale . $15 pick·up
truck load . North of Rac ine
on Carmel Rd .

S500

\.!{1

UMa"anele . . . lour Jumblel,
1M* ID Nd'l . . - .. lq.,lorm

Baby bed and high chair.
675·1394.

55

River .

.....
one

2861.
GTX 5000 tube type ce , '
0 104 mike, super scanner
and S sections of tower.
$250 f irm. 895·3422.

B~by walker . S15. Cal l' q14
74.2-2981.

Ohio

~

and E·Vap water piUs at
Fruth Pharmacy .

$75. 615·5490.

__

"fj9~1HATK£" - I D - -

54 Misc. Merchandlct _
Reduce safe and fast with

Oct. 18, 1981

CONTRACTING
el~rekhoe
D EXCIYttlng

eSeptlcS=m.s
eWater,
r&amp;
Gas Lines
eDII!'APTruck ·
eTrenc:ller

LICtnMCI. lonljed

Pia. 992·7201

1970 Ford Van, windows all
around, green &amp; white,
69,000 actual miles . Call
olol6·ol807.

-------

Ford van camper. Call 3889909.
step van camper,
Chevrolet, 20 ft. long, new
307 motor, 4 sp. trans., self
contained, $2,000. olol6·4219.
1979 Bronco, Low mileage .
A. C., c .c., p.b .• p.&amp;., atn·fm ,
CB . 949·2196 Iller 4,

anytime 773·5150,
JEEP for sale . 80
cherokee. 12000 miles, 4
wheel drive, excellent candltlon,pflone30H7s-2535.
74
Matorcyctll
All used bikes drastically
reduced tor lmmetllete
cle•rance. Betz Honct•
Sales, u,c:er Rl. 7,
22•.
Gallipolis.

1m Honda motorcycle•
350, low mllftge, like . - .
Cell 304-372-6390, Ripley,
WVA.

Are high interest rates
kHping you frbm a new
hOm~? Then put e now look,
on vour present one. We do
all tYpes Of custom building
ana remodeling . For
quality, professional ser·
vices call : Terry Grav 895·
3386 or John Wamsley 773·
5527.
~--

12

Plumbing

1'

1 Heating

CARTER''S PLUMBING
ANDHEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone o4&gt;16·3888 or olol6·«77

.

---- - - - - -- .

BING'S CONCRETE CON·
E,xca v•tina
STRUCTION · SpecialiZing Bl
~
in concrete driveways) 750 and 1000 gallon
sidewalks,
patio, PLASTIC septic tanks.
basement, garage floors Slate and County op·
and etc. Free estimates. 11 proved . Tolel weight 300
years experience. Cali 367- lbs. Haul In your pickup
7891.
truck . Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, located 3 miles
FERRELL ' s
WINDON South of Jock5on"" St. Rl.
GLASS SERVICE Home 93. 2116-5930.
ma lnta ina nce
and
remodeling . Phone 388· EDWARD'S Backhoe and
9326.
Dozer Service. Specleliling
ln .sepllc lank . 675·1234.
French CifY Painting
Residential . comlnercill, BACKHOE and Septic lank
interior,· exterior, paper Ser"Yice . Larry Siden·
hanging , and texured strlcker. 675·5580.
ceilings , Ph. 367·7784or367·
7160.
'
,
84
Elec:trlcal
I Rtfrlterltion
Call 4-46·2801 for termite,
roach, bird. rodent. spider, $EWING Machine repairs,
an.d fleas control. Free service. Authorited Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
estimates. Bill Tltemas.
Scissors. Fabric Shop,Pomeroy, 992-2284 .
H &amp; M CLEANING SER ·
VICE Steam &amp; or pressure
WfSh trucks. trailers, JACKS REFRtGERATtO·
mdbue homes. farm equip· N.. air condition service.
ment, etc . Phone 388·9376 commercial, industrlll.
or 446·3829.

Phone812·2079.

CJ5. 675·6975.. •
1910 CheVY ~ (On, lour
Wlletl drive, tour opeed, PS,
CB, many extras. Call

MOBILE
HOMES
MOVED, REASONABLE.
57~· 2711 or 516;2866.

L.OCKSMITH
Service,
Realdentlal, automotive.
Emerwency servke. Cawt

882·2CI79,

RON'S Television Service.
specj,,lzfng In bnlth arid
Motorola, Qua111r, end
hcluse call•· .,...,. sn-aJte

.,·-1454.

,v

'
cave•• Appliance R11111r•
Weshen, drY- pt~m­
blng, elec:t~·"•rr•l hen·
30H76-2921
dymen. P

01'615-1689.

' ' .-

IS

Generll Houllng

JONES BO,YS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367·0591 .

86.

M. H. Repair

MOBILE hOme Sklrllng,
70x14 from $220. to $49,5.
· K &amp; K Mobile Homos ,
· Pt. Pleasant, WV
67S·JOOO'
17 ·

Uplltllstory

TRt~fATE ,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. AWl., Oelllpplls.
AM-7833 or 446· 1833.

RiNOI.E$'S SERVICE ox·
perl.-cf meson. rooter, .
c•r~Mt.ter, · tlectrlcl8n,
oerierll rt~S and MO~
re-11119. P
30H75- 1 SO&gt;
6i'5-4L
2GIIor675·· ·

c; l '

r.

1ol!'erv Rt.
.,... nt, l0-4·

SUNDAY PUZZLER

,...

~~========~~=.J ....
es F1r00

'-CROSS
1 Mlnitests
8CUmblng

plllnt
'
11 Endurar,c;:e

-·

18 Biblbll

t9EsMnce
' 20 S.. &amp;Okjiers
21 Confirmed

23/Vrow

poison
24 Time gone

whirlwind

6eAC:t
67 Partners
89leading

"'"-

126 RR depot
' 129 Talks '
131 Oetermlna- ·

71Shulup

132 Tlp

73 Mild

133 Legal
matters

76 Shoats II
from......,
79Macaw
81 Through

134 Greet letter
136 Sea eagle
137 Hospilal

-

sec lion

138

M~ter­
ranean -·~

82 Obscure

by

.......

26 POker stake
27 Concerning

84Winds .

2'9 carouse

85-d

139 AMA.
be&lt;

90 PeriOnll

Shore bird
141 Free of

87 Cozy rooms

30 ~~le

31

genu•
Sassy

92 Underwortd.
god

1•0

mem-

1•2 lake ol

puzzle
tame

youngstor
32 lnsacl
33 Bo Derek
number

93leveas
95 Fiber plant

34 Paradloe

98 Both ot OS

143 Absurd
story
144 Degrades

99 Dad

146 long-

35 Those in

·~-

36 Wor1nless

38Langul911es
40 Fo0tllke

part

.. , Bank •

llw\ ""'"'"'

104 Kyle or

CJOI•

46 DiphthOng

by .

U Magic rOd
49 Sooth Afrl-

con village
5 t "LallongC'In"
...ol. .
52 Paper meas.
53 fink

.......

54 Pub-game
55 Errand

S7 Welghlqt
lndta
58 Chemical

60~11o-

.6t

Suitable

62Floh
64 Down: Pref.

legged bird
148 tnatructor
, .. g Rocket
150 College
otllelllo

-·..,

151 CcJnde.
........ ng

toe Guido's high

45Fatnt

~cetve

103 COI'I'Ip&amp;rl-

Tobin -

•2Warm

toucn

101 Below, in
poetry

105 lnlllcol

43Lift1l)rty
47

97 Tear

-

110 Foot """-'
112 Trw1aflxa
113Cooltng

11-t T.,.onlc
dolly
115 Butgundy
and claret
t17 Hindu
ga-monto
118 Turns

around

DOWN

1tt.atersofa

31 Wire nail
33 lnS1ruments
35 Bard

36Camp

stjeller
37 Bread
Ingredient
39 Be In debt
41 Shakespearean
king
42 Difficult
44 Dens

47llbera,ta ·

48 Rover
49 Windy d ay

loys
50 Pillages

54 Judged
·55 Johnny

Bench's

oe••
56 Shade ol
Glnerence ·
59 In direction
ol

· steamer
6 Pen•s

, 1 Aoman road
8 Had brunch

....

mountain

-

12 Tantalum

hoi.tat
123- Elolo
Unto

oym ...
13 Daoert

124j=gifl
125

14 Dug tor ora
15-

,..,.,,...,V'

nec:lc holr

86 Rips·
88 Herrlmer'a

96 Negative
prefix
98 Emtfges
~lciOriouB

99Ac;t
100 Put on

one's guard
102 Rabbltl'
relatives
104 Tears

pressers

70 Insect
7t Goat's cry
72 Transgress
73 Coffin
75 Metal
fasteners
77WaU.Ch
or Whi!ney
78 Dran agcy.
80 Cheek ·•
83 Horse 's

'

,.,

••

&lt;1

f"' ,

.)

:l

..·).

.'.
'

..,,
••,,

105 Swift

..
..,.'.,

106 Colonl107 Handktd
109 Uine

'.
'

'

entrances
1 11 Scatter
11 2 Fr~ ticket
113 Autumn

"'

..

116 Diocese
118 Mk:higan,

·'.•

lor one
1 19 Pinochle

term
122 Visions

'..

124 Alit

125 Mud
126

Hindu

131 Ungers

68 Laundry

·•...'"'

loll«

91 NFL score
94 Tale unlawfully

lone

63 Group of

•

targets

Uusical

60Siyloo0

'..·•',

89 Plntal duck
90He!Joo-

guitars
128 Pigpens
130 Silkworm

three
66 Liter par1
67 High peak :
Abbr

11 Puta Otlt, as

121 Coolcod ..

30 ASian sea

S Abbr. on a

120 S......, Klr.l

- K-

22 Buys baek
23 Sacred
Image
25 Auto's need
27 Rested
28 Trap

6t

119Huge

.......

17 Conjunction
21 Make ready

2 Asylum
3 RuSSian Cit)'
4 Marry

9 A continent:
, Abbo-,
10 Biblical

troclc

announcement word

mammals
tlon

74 Former Au$Siln ru1et

16Weddlng

127 AQuatic

132 Slngl"lf

valce
135 Turkish
· regiment

137 Singing bird
136 Surfeit
140 FortlMr
PortugUI!Ie
eoln
142 Time periOd

143 Hlnl

&lt;

!

.
,.
..,,
' ·'

goddess
sym~

·,'

l

~

i

Abbr.

148 Thallium

;

,f

144 Meter part: •
145 Baseba• gp.
147 Etrth

'~·.

&gt;'I

"'.,
•'

'

.

'' 'J

.,,'
'
''
'
,•I

�.,

lG-T

w. va.

Times-Sentinel

Hoeflich's Beat of the Bend

Who~ps!
J

•

.

We goofed-In last week's column, I mentioned that Judy Martin Cavote was
the first drum major of the Mid·
dleport High School marching bani!.
Well- BS it turns out. that really
isn't accurate. In
the mid 1930s,
Melissa Henneasy
,.-~-.
r
Vivian, now of
California, was
the first drum
major of the Middleport band .
Bob
Melissa wore the male cootliine of
that time with tall shako hat and
carried a lengthy heavy baton.
-By the way, that baton was so big
and heavy that it couldn't have been
·twirled with a _motor. Melissa was
quite attractive fronting the band.
And Melissa today? Well, she's
rubbing elbows with movie and
television stars in conjunction with
her work with Children's Village,
established to house abused
children, at Beaumont, Calif.
· Melissa now goes by Ann and she
recently co-chaired a gala
Hollywood premiere of Burt
Reynolds' new picture, "Paternity"
and the entire evening was planned
With the idea of raising funds for
Children's Village. And that it did!
To the tune of some $300,000, in fact,
and one Of the highlights was the
auction of a 1928 Roils Royce. By the
way, Florence Henderson - now,
you know her - drew raffle tickets
during the event.
Among those attending the red
carpel affair were Sally and Art
Yarnelle, Donna Marie and Robert
Reed, Rolna English and Guy Hovis
of the Lawrence Welk show, Erik
Estrada and Beverly Sassoon, Ted
and Rhonda Fleming Mann and of
course, Bert was there , ac·
companied by Sally Field.
The premiere was held at Mann's
Chinese Theater. The event was
marked with celebrities and auctioneer was Red Buttons.
Melissa was shown with her
husband, Larry Vivian, in one of the
newspaper accounts of the spectacular night. She looks great!
Melissa is a daughter of the late-Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Hennessy, Mid-dleport residents for many years.
-She has two sisters, Mary Eunice
Harris who resides in Columbus, and
Kathryn, whom I somehow have lost
track of ,location-wise.

•
.

.

-}

.

''iii

Everyone has a "thing" and you'll
be surprised that the big hobby of
Middleport Police Chief . J. J.
Cremeans is coming up with a big

. pot of chili. Now this Is not your run
of the chili. It's thick with a variety
of Ingredients and extremely ''hot,"
. buttakemywordforit- just great!
Rutland's popular Garnet
Williamson will he observing her
.90th birthday on Thursday. In spite
of some health problems recently,
- - - Garnet remains at her home on
Salem St. No doubt, her many frien·
ds will make her 90th a memorable

occasion.
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,

Daughters of the American
Revolution, Is asking you to display
your American flags tomorrow In
·· recognition of the bicentennial of the
Battle of Yorktown. Also, the chapter is asking churches to toll their
bells for three minutes at 12 noon
tomorrow to help mark the occasion. .
I'll be lislenlng .

Health officials receive complaints
POMEROY - The Melp County - stallen have charged exb -•Idly . .a.itb Department ~Milan lnifelli'll
=ithve ~~~.,:0 hlgb pricea IUid line done Wile- aiepllctank(ORCS'IOl-lf.Dtl-17).
,. ''""'~'-"' uuceptable work. Tb1l department Is
In onler to become a !fowM.ocl IJt.
properly inslalled oeptlc tanks.
1IIU8lly contacted after prublems staller, applleanll mut uve
A homeowner may inltall hla own begin to appear.
'knowledge of State and r:.oc.J Coda,
septic lank. However, anyone InCounty resldenll are aiiJo remJn. make appUcation, IUld be able to
stalling tanks for the public must be
ded that they 1111181 purchaae a aepllc purchase a $2,500 perfOI'IIIIIICI
Ucensed by theThis
Melga
County Health
Department
is-required
under
HE 2H5 and HE ~ of the Ohio
Sanitary

Code/Home

S~wage

department that some unlicensed In-

Mrs. Aaron Kelton, fonner residenb

Dorinda Wilson Nardei, secretary
at Pomeroy Village Hall lor many
years, writes that she and her family
are survivin'g thelr move from
Pomeroy to Bridgeville, Pa. In fact,

. mentand~~-~~~~~~

__. . . _ . -..... ..._.,

ty for their aaalstaDCe ami

cooperation.

'

. 1lelldlnll planning to have •

,..
tic taDII hwt•lled should find out If

;bonded;;~·

;;;;;;;;;the;lnlll;;•;ller;;la;li;cea;;•;d;anil;'

!17th 'ANNIVERSARY' SALE
CONTINU-ES ALL WEEK
..•..
.
~

Sale Price all over the store - men's department - boys
wear - women's and children's wear. on the second floorplus many values in the furniture department on the 3rd
floor. Now is the perfect time to buy what you need for you .
and your family.
· .
·
.

Funds received
. J'()MEROY - State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson's office reported the ninth advance distribution of
1981 state motor vehicle registration
fees totaling $13,999,938.05 to Ohio
counties, cities, townships and
villages. Meigs County's share was
$13,621.54.

' .

OPEN FRIDAYS TIL 8 - OTHER WEEKDAYS TIL 5

'

•

·ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

A schedule of area programmilag,

activities and events,

she says that she likes it. Can you
imagine? Dorinda's husband, Anthony, is now with the Neville
Chemical Co. and as of Oct. I was
promoted to labor supervisor of the
company's environmental group.
Sandy Luckeydoo of Middleport
has been confined to Pleaaant Valley
Hospital with a foot infection which
. did require an operation.
However, he not dismayed, San-.
dy's Gingerbread School, now
located in renovated "Winnie-thePooh" theme quarters at 186 North
Second Ave., in Middieport, iii continuing for three to five year olds.
Through advance planning, Mrs.
Karen Triplett and Sarah Johnson,
aided by Margie Walburn, Velma
Luckeydoo and the helpful mothers
of kids attending the school Is able to
continue its quality curriculum
during Sandy's l!OBpitalization.
Sandy's loot problem, however,
did cause a postponement of the jointly sponsored open house which was
planned by the Gingerbread School
and the Carpenter Dl!nce Studio.
The school layout and space suited
Shirley Carpenter so well that she
now uses the areas as her Middleport studio. The open house will,
hopefully, emerge just a little later.

'
The Mella caant)&lt; a.bb DeiiM!

ELBERFELD$

Disposal Regulations.
The public should be aware that
reports have been received by this

Jeff Warner Is a patient at Rive,.. Marriage licenses
side Hoopilal in Columbus and is
having a bit of a rciugh time.
GALlJPOIJS - The following
Jeff was injured in an auto ac- people filed lor marriage licenses
cident recently on his way home during the past two weeks in Gallia
from Athens. He was taken to ' County Probate Court
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens and
George F. Garnes, 25, GaWpolis,
th~_n moved to the Columbus hoopilal
unemployed, .and Kathy A. Smith,
for back surgery. Jeff operates 24, Gallipolis, personnel dln!ctor.
Ebersbach Hardware Store these
RusseU E. Roach, 50, Oak Hill,
days. You might want to send along operator, and N. Faye Miller, 38,
a card to Room 6010.
Patriot, medical secretary.
Neil A. Ully Jr., 24, Huntington,
Mrs. MaXine Wolfe has returned
W.Va.,
assistant manager, and
home from visiting her son and
Tami
L.
Bush, 22, Gallipolis, sales
family, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Moore
clerk.
and daughter, in Richmond, Va.
While there, she visited Mr. and
now living in Quinton, Va. The
Keltons were delighted to see "home
folks." Maxine, a nurse, helped care
for Mrs. Kelton during one of her
hospitalizations.

====;;==·

G~tank;;;pe;;rmil~f;•Oi;•;il;;;heM;e;tp~Coun~~ty;;bond;;;·

•• •
••

.

"We've got the best selection of clean,
late model used cars in the area, .and

October 18 thru 24

~'

,.

A guide. to area entertainment

'

•,.

.
•

,_
,.

•

Includes complete
•

'

. listings

Rock On
page 16

There's free parking at the meters
in the Pomeroy business section on
Saturdays now. Just tlllnk, you can
save as much as 80 cents. Don't
mouth that around, however, or
some governmental group will
figure out how to get it away from
you. Do keep smiting ...

Soap Opera Review,

page9

Judge ends 15.cases
GAIJJPOUS - Fifteen cases
were terminated and one continued
Friday in "Gallipolis Municipal
Court.

Area Happenings,
page·6

John F. Games, 29, GaWpolis,
charged with dlaonlerly conduct,
forfeited $'14 bond; charged ·with
open container, fined$20 . .
Charged with failure to register,
Diana L. Wiseman,~. Hamden, forfelted $40 bond.
-Jesse L. Thornton, 30, Mount Vernon, charged with expired
registration;forfeiled$30 bond. ·
Each charged with failure to obey
~ flashing red !ligna! and forfeiting
$30 bond were Keith R. Miller, If,
Rt. 4, Gallipolis, and Lisa D. Woodward, 22, Rio Grande.
JoAnn Black, 33, Reynoldsburg,
charged with failure to obey a traffic
control device, forfeited~ bond.
Charged with DWI, Gregory A.
Shelton, 25, Gallipolis, case continued toOcl: 26.
Forfeiting bond f&lt;r speeding
. were:
.
Evelyn D. Gore, 43, Englewood,
$26; Michaei:1P. ,Ryan, 25, 'Dayton, ·
$26; Thomas L. Bqlla, 25, Rt. 3,

Melvin J. Kirby, 39, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, charged with DWI, fined
$300, sentenced to 10 days in jail,
driver's license suspended for thr~
years and placed on one year
probation; charged wjth driving under suspension, fined $15, six months
jail sentence suspended and placed
on one year probation.
Each charged with DWI, lined
$300, sentenced to four days in jail,
drivers' licenses suspended for six
months and placed on six months
probation each were James T. Dennis, 48, Clay, W.Va., and Donald L.
Henry, 22, Kanauga.
Jewell A. Blake, 23, Rt. I, Reedsville, charged with reckless
operation, fined $100.
' Charged with driving under
Sll8pension, Melvin Cordell, 24, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, lined $50, six months jail
sentence suspended and placed on Proctorville, PI; Jennifer Sc41one year probatiun.
· berry, 21, Rt.l, Tllurman, $26.

•

Irving's "Hotel'

page 15

Bac~tage, page 8
Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
•

Patrol cites man in Friday wreck

..

GAIJJPOUS - The state highway patrol cited a Vinton man in a
two-car accident in Gallia County
Friday night.
The GaWpolls Post said James M.
Marcum, 52, WBI southbound on
County Rd, 10 _
a t 7:30p.m. when his
car coiUded with a northbound auto
driven by Barbara J. Boller, 23, Vin'
ton, on a hlllcrut.
Moderate damage WBI reported to
both veblcles and Mareurn was cited
for DWI and fallure to yield.
The patrolinv«&lt;ttpted a two-car
collliiCIIlin BldweU -ly Saturday.
ACCGrdlng to the rwarl, J.ames M.
Coe, 11, Bidwell, was noriNJound Clll
Rt 110 at 12:20 a.m. when be .attempted to make a righl _tum C11Jt!!
.
'

Rt.564.
Coe !ben turned left and COllided
with IIIOiher northbound vehlde
driven by Larry C. Willlton, 24, VIJI.
toq, Moderate damap·· done to
both vehlclel IUld no "citation wu

Issued.

,

'

Troopers AU! 1

•

," ' .•

wldde drlvt11 by ·

Jolla A. Nt11D1111, II, Grna•ooil,
!Dd., .... unPie to ltDp 11!1 • 7 In
Gallia Colully II ,,. ,!'-BL llld.
strudi: and ldlled. cliiB Cllb ro&amp;d.
The patrol Mid . . . . lriQer

~ bJTIIIIotb1 A.Sj ~*'

Bmtl6amUie, w.v•.. clamagecl after It
IIIII lilllil
two Iller an Rt. 7lil GIIJia Oc 11 It
2LID. Salllrday.

*-

..'I;

.,I,
'

'

j

' '

••••• ••••

'

'

'

' • I f

f ,

t •

I

0

t

0

t

&gt;o • o 0

I

I
0

o o
0

0

o

0

f

I
0

0

t

0

t

0

f

'

I
0

0

..

.. '..' '
'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="195">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2785">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="46797">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="46796">
              <text>October 18, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="831">
      <name>angel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3197">
      <name>calvin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1783">
      <name>fraley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="197">
      <name>halley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="178">
      <name>lambert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7503">
      <name>lancaster</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="249">
      <name>montgomery</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="708">
      <name>woyan</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
