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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

October 1

Ohio

Judge O'Brien, terminates 30 cases~
Meigs County Court Judge Pa·
trtck O'Brien completed 30 cases
Wednesday in regular court
proceedings.

Fined by Judge O'Brien were
Ne!Ue Cook, Syracu!l', $250 and
costs, three days in jail, 60 day
license suspension, OWl; costs only
for falling to cqntrol vehicle;
Randall Armes, Syracuse, $250 and
costs. three days in jail, 60 day
lk'ense suspension. OWl; Teddy
Osborne, ReedsvUie, $250andcosts,
10 days in jail, 60 day license
suspension, OWl ; Ralph Leesburg,
Bidwell, costs, suspended 30day jail
sentence, foi-feil Universal Carbine

.r

30 caliber · M-1 with two chips,
Revelation 22 long rUle, Jennings
J-22anda boxofcock!ightingspurs l
and equipment, transporting a
loaded firearm In a vehicle; Sharon
McMullen, Albany, restitution and
costs, passing bad checks; Rita
Bullock, Racine. restitution and
costs, passing bad checks; Dayle
Brooks, Reedsville, $W and costs,
left of center; Donald Sedgwick,
Tuppers · Plains, $5 and costs,

de~lt'e ~~uS!;~;~am Kllig,~

Pomeroy, Stu ana costs, ·unsafe-'
vehicle; Berneas Brumfield, Middleport, restitution and costs, passing bad checks; Kimberly Grueser,

Pomeroy, $5 and costs, no muffler;
Mazen Bunon, Jr., Utica, N.Y., $10
and costs, passing in hazardous
zone; Ernest Johnson, Albany, $5
and costs, no warning flags on
overlength; Jack Crowder, Elk·
view, W.Va., $10 a~d costs, left of
center.
Fined for speeding were Kenneth
Wlenlewskt, Vinton, $21 and·costs;
Daniel Williams, Ann Arbor, Mich. ,
$Zi a_nd costs; Joy Sauer, Mlddleport, $21 and costs; Dewayne
· Curtman, ..RacJne, $23 and costs; ·
Richard PouUn, J r .. Middleport, $21
and costs; Kirk Pennington, GaiUpolis, $a! and costs; Robert Smith,

Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Dept.

says the control tower should be
open 24 hours a day instead of 16 for

SPAGHETTI DINNER

O'Brien, Fla., costs only; James
Parker, Pomeroy, $22 and costs;
Chester Roush, Galllpolis, $22 and
costs; Richard Dornan, Waverly,
W.Va., $ID and costs; William
Lanh;lm, Huntington, W.Va., $22
andcosts.
,
Forfeiting bonds in Meigs County
Court were Benjamin Ewing, $50,
speeding; Edward Lampkin, CarolIna, W.Va., $50, sPeeding; Rodney
Jordan, Pomeroy, $45, unsafe
vehicle; DougBartram,Reedsvllle,
$170, posseSsing llJld se!Ung turbearlng animals without a commercial
propagating license.

AT. THE FIRE STAnON ON

Saturday, Oct. 19 from 3:00 to 7:00 P.M.

~ Monday-at-the-St:-PhHUp~Niefl

~ERVONE

Erma E . Stone 91, Route 1,
Coolville, died 'Thursday rmrning at
the Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg.
She was born at Falrplains, W.
Va. , a daughter (ithe late James E .
and Cordelia Parsons Pringle. She
was a fanner school teacher and
attended the Falrplalns Church.
Surviving are two sons, James
Stone of Coolville and Charles Stone
of Uttle Hocking; three daughters,
I W. Va .,·
1sabelle Sa rgen,t Rl pey,
Bonnie Cremeans, Uttle Hacking,
and Ruth Ann Nutter, Coolville; a
sister, Iva Marte Pringle, Ripley, W.
Va. , a nephew, 12grandchUdren, 11
great -grandchtldren.
Preceding her In death besides
her parents were her husband, Fred
Stone, in 1981, and three brothers.
. Services wUI be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the White Funeral
Home
COOivUie Burial
with Rev.
Wilson lnolficlating.
willJerry
be in
Torch Cemetery. Friends may call
lt tbe funeral home from 2 to 4p.m.
and 6 10 8 p.m. today.

Anna C. Huston
Anna C. Huston, Kl, Murray City,
fonnerly of Pomeroy, died Friday
morning in Pomeroy.
She was born July 7, 1902 at
Orblstan, a daughter of Matt and
Elizabeth Galvin Board. She was a
member of the St. Phillip Neri
Catholic
Church lnfdurrayCityand
of the Auxiliary
of the American
Legion there.
Surviving are, three sons, Raymom and John Huston, both or
Murray City, and Paul J. Huston,
Syracuse; nine grandchildren and
live great-grandclllldren. Preceding her In death were an Infant son,
two Infant daughters and a brother,
William Board.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.

•

Emergency squads
answer eight calls

Tontght ... rain likely. Low In the lower OOs. Southwest winds 5to 15
mph.
Saturday .. rain likely. High in the mid 70s.
Chance of rain Is ID percent today and 70 peroent tonight and
Saturday.
Extended forecaal

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Thursday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number
600. P.::K4
8348. - - Meanwhile, this week's top Ohio
Lotto prize of $1.~ mUllan will go to
one player who selected aU six
numbers In Wednesday night's
drawing.
The name of the player wUI be
announced after the Winning ticket

~

Seeond Av.,uo
Middleport. Ohio 46780

306 North

MMicLY ~Rco

0-··

.,..,,_
M.P. DIP."'"" M.a.
ZJnnra "- !!OP. M.a.

Hours: Mon .. Tues. &amp; Fri.
10 a.m.· I p.m. and 2-5 p.m.
Closed Thurs; led. 10·11:10 a.m.
and l-7:30
Sal. 10 a.m.- p.m.
Closed lost Sat. in every month

-lKG

-thlldren's and Adult voccinati011
-Athletic Physical (fin tor lolls. Southorn.
lastom and Wthaml Hi&amp;h Schoofs)
- lofmals

f·"'·

'

l~=::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===~==========1l

Seeks license
A marriage license has been
Issued in Meigs Coonty Probate
Court to Phillip Marcell Hood, 22.
and Usa Renee Deem, 19, both of
Middleport.

Veterans Memorial
A4misslons--Kathryn Hetzer,
ReedsvUie; Unda George, Cbeslilre; William Weaver, Middleport.
Discharges--David Johnson,
Ethel Hatfield, Donald Hood.

Will meet on Sunday
Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet 2 p.m. Sutxlay in the
museum on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Caryn Shoemaker wUI present
lnfonnatlon on using court petitions
ln research.

12

I
II

OFFER GOOD AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS ONLY.
Offer ends Demnber 31, 1985

3/4

TON •••••••••••••••'oc.,.••••••••••••••••••• S8995

1
1

CHIYSUI
~ar
""'P"'T COIPOIAnON
GENUINE PAm

CHRYSLER

COOPER :~~:::~.

1982 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE .................... S9295

d'Eiaganca Pkg., loaded. loaded. local car.

.
1984
CHEYROLD CHEVmE ...................;...... $4595

Dodge
Dodge Truclls

--

•

COOPER

~

Plymouth, DodgeMit~~r'
3~~~~1er,
.
•
614-992-6421

•'

VALUE PRICED USED CARS
1982 Olds. Cutlass S..,..me Broupni

1982 Old,mobile Cutlass Oera 2 Dr.

This car has been driven only 39,000 miles. One
of this kind is hard to find.

4 cyl., automatic, air, power steeri.ng, AM/FM

c..,,,., wltil But $ 799 5

1983 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Dr.

stereo.

Plied Rlg4t

"

$ 559 5

-.
'

1979 Chevrolet Cornaro

305 V-8, auto ., air. Looking for sporty car? Look
no further.

S3995

1984 Y.W. RABBIT 14 spd.J ........................................ S5495
1984 FORD LTD WAGON 4 Dr. Uoodtti) ..................... S8495
1983 BUICK LESABRE 4 Dr .....................................:....... 57995

I
I
I
I
I
I

1983 BUICK ELECTRA 225 LIMITED 2 Dr ................. $9195

Sharp.

.

1982 OLDS. CUTLASS SUPREME BROUGHAM 4 DR. ....... 56195
1984 G'MC

6 cyl., auto.

1/2

TON ........................................................... S7695

1980 MGB (Convertible) ............................................... S479S

Lass than 25,000 miles.

1979 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS 2 DR.....................JAY~ .. S299 5

614-992-6421
339 S. 3RD MIDDLEPORT
GOLDEN BUCKEYE CAID ACCEPTED
7:30•6:00 S~IVICE HOUIS

500 EAST MAIN

SMITH ELSON--MOTO
992·2174

IUICK·PONTIC &amp; GMC TRUCKS
We Have The Keys To A98etter Deal

POMEIOY

April 1982 census ligures are based on general
revenue sharing population estimates complied by
·
the U.S. Bureau of the Census.
Outgoing City Manager Chris Morris disputed the
results, saying they were not based on an .actual
census, but instead were based on trends. The next
door-to-door census conducted by the federal
government will not be untO 1900.
"They took the drop from 1970 to 1900 in the rensus
and projected that drop," Morris said. "The planner's
figures are based upon trends."
Morris said he estimated the city's population has
"stagnated" at around 5,IDO.

"There bas been some drop" In the number of
residents at the Gallipolis Developmental Center, be
said. "But we haven't had people selling. their homes
and leaving. Most of the houses are full."
The figures in the latest "census" show Gallipolis
with a population of 5,576 lh 1900, 5,1m in AprU 1982,
5,162 In July 1982, and 4,915 In April 1984. The 1970
census reported 7,490 persons lived in Ga!Upolis.
The figures will be sent to the Ohio Secretary of
State, who by law must Issue a proclamation
containing Ihe names and IXJpulatlon of all municipal
corporations having a population of5,00lor more, and
those having a population of less than 5,&lt;XKJ.
Thirty days after the Issuance of tbe'~roclamation,

the status of a local municipal corporation as a village
or city Is established. The community then has the
option to dispute the census and conduct its own
door-to-door census and submit those figures to the
secretary of state.
· But no matter whose figures are correct, Gallipolis'
population is shrinking and the only way, Morris said,
lo slow the reduction is by Increasing the area of the
city. The only way that Is possible Is through
annexation.
"If the city is not permitted annexation by the
county commission, " he said. "the city Is just not left
with a great deal of room to grow in ."

GALLIPOLIS - The dedication by Deputy Secretary Brown.
ofthenewGalllaCountyCourthouse
Brown was appointed to his
will be held Saturday, !Nov. 9, at 2 position as Deputy Secretary of
p.m. , with Clarence J . Brawn, Commerce on July 6, 1983. From
Deputy Secretary of Commerce, as 1965 until 19&amp;3, he was a member r:J:
guest speaker.
the U.S. House of Representatives
"This is t)leday we have aU looked from the 7th District d Ohio.
forward to for more than fouryears,
He was ranking Republican on
since the Iragtc loss of our fanner three Important committees and
courthouse by tire on Jan. 8, 1981," subcommittees during his IS-year
Commission President Verlln L. tenure In Congress, including the
Swain said in a statement released Joint Economic Committee,
today.
Energy Subcommittee and tntergo"We want the people of Gallla vern m e n t a I R e I a I I o l\ s
County to be a part at this Subcommittee.
·
celebration and join us as we . In 1982, Brown was the Republl·
fonnally dedicate the new GaUia can candidate for governor of Ohio.
County courthouse. "
Editor and publtsher of several
National, state and local dflcials Ohio newspapers from 1949 until
are expected to be present. The 1961i, he became president and
(Continued on page A3 )
ribbon culling wUI follow remarks

NEW GALLIA COURmOtsE - Tbe dedication
of the new Gallla County Courthouse wW be held
Saturday, Nov. 9, at2p.m. "'lbtslsthedaywehaveall
looked forward to lor more than four years, since tbe

tragic loss of our lonner courthouse by Ore on dan. 8, ·
1981," Commission President Verlln L. Swain said In
a statement released today.

Final easements being processed for water l~e extension
' '.

.

CLIP THIS AD

SPEAKERaan,nce J. Brown, Deputy
Secretary of Commerce, will
serve as maiD speaker at the
Novemher 9 dedication of the
new Gallla County Co!Jrthouse.
National, state and local officials
are expected to be present. The
ribbon cutting wUI follow remarks by Deputy Secretary
Brown.

4 sp., sliding rear window, 8,000 miles, AM/FM. V-8.

307 V-8, auto./overdrive.

-----------------------------~·
-'
.

614-985·3308

614-256-6877

699 S'

EXPIRES 10/30/85

Includes: Forencines with tloctlonic iani·
tion:
'lnstoll MOPAR/Chnpion spork plup·
'0 Adiuslldlt spetd .
Stt timina
•lnspoct nissions control syst.. st1ndlrd illlilioR of vllllclts oquipped with
crutor thon two blrrel corburelor,
slichtly hichor.

I West Main St.

St. Rt. 7

is redeemed
a regional spokeslottery
office,
a lotteryatcommission
man said today. The winning
numbers were9,12, al, 25,27 and28.

CHRYSLER

.A Multimedia Inc. Newsp•per

Courthouse dedication ·scheduled for Nov. 9

I HIS AIJ

MOST CARS
INCLUDES PARTS &amp;LABOR

$3995

Landon's Hardware

Ridenour Supply

Tilt, cruise, air, AII/FM stereo cassette, .clean
inside &amp; out.
$

PilJ',

~----~-----------------------,

TUNE-UP

CHESTER, OH.

Auto., aliding rear windows, tilt wheel, AM / FM.

fAX

WITH A TL'NE UP ANU

CROWN CITY. OH.

1985 FORD F-1 00 4 WD ...........t.tutM.••••••••• s1 0,900
1984 DODGE W-1 00 4 WD ..........-. •••••••••••••••• S9500

OIL, LUBE &amp; FIL TEA
ONLY

We Put More fr'e&lt;' Time fn You r Day

2 Dr.• V-8. tilt, oruise 8o more.

ELBERFELDS

The Pomeroy Fire Department
wUI hold a public spaghetti supper
tomorrow (Saturday) at the fire
station with serving from 3 to 7 p.m.
J)lnner will be SJfor adults and $150
for children. ·

~

deserves to p1ck up a bonus. Come on in
ard see me today and take home
Americ..1's number onr chain sa w and a
free carry case. Then I'll giVe you a coupon
so you can order your free .bar and chain.
Remember . .. winter isn't that far away!

1981 OLDS DELTA 88 .................................... S4595

We're celebrating 121
years of business
with special sale
prices throughout the
store.

95

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
On Thursday, The City of Gallipolis celebrated Its
!95th anniversary.
Or was It the VIU~ge of Gallipolis?
According to flgtlres released by the Ohio
Department of Development and Hxe U.S. Bureau of
tbe Census, GaiUpolis' population, as ri July 1984, was
4,880. That Is 120 residents below the 5,00l required to
maintain city status.
According to the report, the city's IXJpulation
actually dropped below 5,&lt;XKJ in Aprill984, with 4,915
residents.
·
The July 1984, as well as April 1984, July 1982 and

1984 DODGE ·ARIES STATION WAGON •••••••••• S6495

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports eight caUs
Thursday; Rutland at 1: 29 a.m. to
Nichols Rd. lor Helen Ebers bach to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 7: 52 a.m. to General
HartingerPky.forRyanPieroewho
was treated but not transported;
MiddlEport at 9:39a.m. transported
Linda George to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 10:38 a.m. was
called to an auto accident on Rt. 338
for Melvin Tallman who was treated
but not transported; Racine at 3: 03
p.m. to Coolville Rd. for Mary
OPEN
Putnam to Camden-Clark Memor- .
TONIGHT
Ial Hospital; Rutland at 4:45p.m. to
nL 8:00
Main St. for Cynthia Bailey to
SINCE 1864
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Chester at 5:24p.m. toamlnorbrushflre 1-----------------------:-1
on New Hope Rd.; Pomeroy atlO: 07
p.m. transported WUI!am Grueser
to Holzer Medical Center.

10 Sections, 74 Pages 50 Cents

Sunday, October 20, 1985

By,, the numbers, Gallipolis is now a village

we'U help you cut a lot more
wood with it. How' just choose a
powelful 240, 245, 330 or 360 (carry
rase models only) The chail) .saw comes
packed iri' the free carry c~se. Then we'U send you an extra guide
bar and chain . And that mean~ yuu'Ube able to cut a lot more
wood without spending a lot more money.
Ordinarily you 'd pay up to $93.00 for the
case, bar and chain. But anyone smart
enough to pick up a Homelite now

Auto., air, extra nice car.

Annhtersary
Sale ~

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Buy a Homellte®

~::2)~~
~t

1985 DODGE

-·Page A-3-

chain saw now and

4 sp., AM/FM, 11,000 miles. Local trade.

ELBERFELDS

Spaghetti supper set

Vol. 20 No. 37
Copyrightod 1986

(NEW ·CAR TRADES)

- H11t lamp ond Ultrosound treatment
-Prlftataf

Take-One ..................... Insert

in forecast

tmts -

UpToA $93~0

LOCAL PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

- l -Ily'
- Labar1tory 1nd office strep screen

IJeaihs ••. ••••..•. ............ ...... A~

Editorials ......................... A-~
Sports .. ..... ............... ..... ' C-1-8

weekend rain

+

~I

SOfVicoo Offered:
-F~mily proctiet of medicine
-Minor SurtiiJ (Suturinc ond hcision)

Along the River ............... B-1-8

Business .................... ....... D·l

Bob Hoeflich discusses cooking and weight·
watching - Page B-2

L;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::;:::;:=~~~~i:ii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~r

Phone 1&amp;1 41 992-3333

MIDg~·PCRT

James J, Kilpatrick on balanced budgets and
deficit control ,....- Page A-2

--Page B-1

~ _ .,. _. . .
~ I '.

Ohio lottery winners

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

WELCOME

·P age D-1

Free! Chain _.,mw

Weather forecast

Suuday tluoogll Tuesday
A chaiKle of rain sunday and monday. Fair Tuesday. Highs ln the
mid 60s .to mid 70s Sunday, Upper OOslo mid Ills Monday and lD lhe
ll08Tue8day, LowslD the liO!!Sunday.. mld40slomld50sMondayaod
upper 30o 1o mid 40s Tuftlda.v.

Head Start's
20th year

Sl.SO

cur

it's a caseofwberewefeellt'ssafer
with tbe tower open :!1 hours," the
~trport manager said.
Aircraft landings and snow removal operations would be safer with
the tower always open, Salyerssald.
. When the tower Is closed, a filght
sel')!~e station takes over and can
communlcate by radio with planes .
but has no radar and Is In an r1flce
from ·which the runway is not
vtslble, the manager said.

Catholic Church. Friends may&lt;l?all
at the Brown Funeral Home In
Murray City from 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday and anytime on Sutxlay
&lt;
with the family to be present from 2
The
control
tower is open rrom 6
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Burial will be in
a.m.
to
11
p.m.
and wlll open 30
the St. Patrick Catholic Cemetery at
minutes
later
beginning
Nov. 1,
BuchteL
Salyers said. He noted the tower was

CHILDR~N

ADULTS S3.00 -

open 241x&gt;urs untU October 1981. The
cutback came because of a lack r1
a1r traffic during particular oours.
"It's very Important to recognize
we currently have a safe airport but

safety reaSons.
Larry Salyers said Thursday his
letter to a Federal Aviation Administration official referred to the
early morning crashes of two air
cargo planes at thealrportthlsyear.
A pilot was killed In one crash.
If the tower had been open, the
fatal wreck may have been avoided,
Salyers wrote to Joseph Del Balzo,
Eastern Region F M director in
New York.

'

SPONSORING A

Airport manager wants tower open all the time
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!)The manager of Tri-State Airport

1986

•

By NANCY YOACHAM
'limes-Sentinel Stall
TUPPERS PLAINS - There's light al the end of
the tunnel for residents of Meigs County's SliversvUie
area who have been wanting piped water from the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District ror the past
five years.
Don Poole, a Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District representative, reports that final easements
are being processed-at this time for the much wanted
water line ex tension. However, he says, some lx&gt;ldups
have occurred with regard to the ea~ents.
Although there have been no problems obtaining

easements from people who will be served by lhe
extension, there have been problems from a few
people who already have piped water from Tuppers
Plains-Chester. Poole says that three such property
owners are wanting to be paid for easemen ts. He
contends that because the water district Is non-profit
- the money goes back into the system- the district
is not and never will be in a position to buy easements.
In conlructlng the extension, a new line must be laid
parallel with an old line along County Road 28
iBashan Road) from the Bald Knob-Stlversville
junction to the McKenzie Ridge Road junction.
With exception d the three mentioned above, most

property owners have already given the water
district pennlsslon to lay the new line. Poole says the
water district appreciates this cooperation and
"special and very stringent specUlcatlons" have been
written to accomodate these property owners. "They
remember what it was like when they wanted water,"
he adds. ·
Attorneys for the water district are now reviewing
maps of the area to be added to the Tuppers
Plains-Chester system, and are also reviewing
township road and county road pennlts to detennine
li all legal needs have been met.

PUCO a 'critic' of management

State Issue deserves
our support - Collins
GALLIPOLIS - "Unreasonable
regulations have crippled Southeast
Ohio's coal industry and put tens of
thousands of penple in our region out
, of work," State Sen. Oakley C.
Collins said Friday.
"But simply complaining about
lhe problem won 't solve it," the
Ironton Republican said, "State
Issue 1. which will be on the
November 5 statewide ballot , could
be the beginning of real solutions . .
Issue 1. if approved by Ohio
voters, will allow the state to Issue
$100 million in bonds for coalcleaning research.
··ohio coal is the Buckeye State's
most precious na tu ra l resource enough Ia meet our energy needs for
the next 200 years," Collins said. "To
simply give upon using It would be a
terribly sad mistake.
"Eindlng efficient and economical .melhods to safely bum Ohio's
high-sulfUr coal will get the overzealous regulators off our coal
industry's bark and pace theway for
an economic comeback In our
region."
Ohio coal production Is down 40

Poole Is unable to give an approximate date when
construction may be expected because' 'there are too
many outsldepeoplewehaveto rely oo." However, he
did say that the district Is "optimistic" about the
StiversvUie· ex tension.
Thirty-six customers In the StiversvUle area will be
served by the new line. A smaller Une on Skinner
Road will also be included as well as a smallllne in the
MlnersvUie area, and ~ small Une in East Letart .
Altogether, 50 new taps wUI be added Ia tbe Tuppers
Pl ains-Chester network through the extension
project.
!Continued on page A-31

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - The
chalnnan of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio says the PUCO
percent since 1970. The number of
views Itself as a critic of manageunemployed Ohio miners Is up J4
ment and will not hesitate to order
percent over the past six years.
changes It deems are in the best
Unemployment in some coalInterests of the public and utlllty
Intensive counties hovers above ID
company stockholders.
percent.
"That'soneof thepolicles that we
"Tragically, nearlyone-halfofthe
think we're supposed to be fulfilling
coal bumed in Ohio Is Imported;"
here," said Chalnnan Thomas V.
Collins said. "When you consider
thema. "That's part of 'our role
that 95 percent of Ohio's electric
under the statute that created us."
energy comes from burning coal, II
The PUCO has become a watchgives you some idea what the
dog against excessive rate InSUPPORTS L'!SUE-1 ---'Sen.
IXJtentlal growth In our coal mining
creases and as a protector to the
Oakley
C. Colllns, R-lronton,
Industry could be.''
public and to shareholders agalnsl
Friday voiced his support lor
"Issue lis a sure sign that we are
mlsmanagemen t In ut U!ties, Chema
State Issue I, which wW allow
not giving up at the slate leveL The
said.
research funds produced by pas- · the state to Issie $100 million In
The PUCO's increased activism Is
hondo! lor coal-cleaning resage of Issue l ean lead tocreate new
seen in last summer's order to the
'
search.
ways to use our state's own
General Telephone Co. to Improve
resources and stop the practice of
It s service as a condition for a rate
importing coal from other states."
Increase and Its recent directive to
Without new technology, Collins
"But the main positive Impact of the Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio to
says, Ibis trend w!U continue, as. ~ Issue lis that It will help create new diversify Its board of directors, he
many utilities will continue Import·
jobs," Co!Uns says, " jobs ln.ourcoal said.
lng "cleaner" coal from other
Industry and In other relat.ed
· "We view ourselves as critics of
states.
Industries.
!· management," Cherna said during
Because Ohio coal Is cheaper to
"A voteforlssueltsa vote for jobs an Interview In Toledo Thursday.
produce and use in Ohio,Sen. Collins
In Southeastern Ohio - I cannel
UntU Its reorganization In Januargues, passage or Issue 1could help
think of a better reason to believe in ary 19Kl, lhe agency had not been
keep consumer electric rates down. anything."
very active In that role, saldChema ,

•

who was appointed to the commission by Gov. Richard Celesle In
December 1984.
The five-member commission
rl1Uiates utUitles, transportation
companies, pipelines and water and
sewer lines operating In Ohio.
"If we don't speak out and teUthe
companies what It Is we think they
should be doing, who is?, he said.
UtUitles do not operate under a
tree market system, which governed by competition, belps sets
prices. Because utilities operate as
monopolies, the PUCO acts as a
substitute lor the rl)arketplace,
Chemasatd.
"The market tells the company If
they're doing a good job or not:" he
said. "The reason we exist Is
because there Isn't a free competl·
Uve market."
The commisSion also looks out for
the interests of a utUity's shareholders to ensure the management
Is efficient and effective In the
delivery of tbe services, he sa id .
Last summer the PUCO ordered
General Telephone to conduct a
management audit as a prerequlslt
tor receiving a rate increase, he
said.
•
The order resu Ited from serv Icc

complaints commission members
heard during public hearings for Ihe
company's proposed rate increase,
he said.
As ·n result , the commission
granled the telephone company
ooly a flflh of the $58.5 million It
sought .
"We put a little slipulalion on the
Increase," said Cbema. "We said,
'We're goingtoallowyou to ha ve lhis
modest increase, but, you have lo
use those dollars to improve the
level of service'."
In Its most rC'Ccnt action, the
PUCO has dlrecled Columbia Gas to
revamp Its hoard of directors so that
a major'ity was from Ohio and did
no! have ties to thl' mmpany or Its
subsidiaries. The commission told
the ga s company it wants to see a
plan for those changes by Nov. 8.
Columbia has prot ested I he movrand ha s lndlca trd II may ask for a
rehearing on the issue.
The practice of hav ing dirC'Ctors
from outsldc the company Is a
common one, Chema said. One
benefit of such divcrslftcatlon will be
toard memtlcrs looking after the
best interestsofthecompany,whlch
relate to oolh stockholders and
ratepayers, h£' said.

Community affairs forum scheduled at Portland School
PORTLAND - A forum to discuss community
affairs has been planned for 7 p.m. Wednesday at the'
~
Portland School.
Interested persons may prepare questions In
writing that they would like to bring uponlssu~ they
would like to hear.discu ssed In the areas ri schoOl and
township matters.
A panel of persons consisting of the present school
board and township officials, as well as candidates,
are being Invited to make up the panel which will
address the audience.

Invitations have been sent to Bob Ord, Southern
District Superintendent; board members, Susie
Grueser, Don Smith, David HUI, Dennie Evans, Joe
Thoren, and board and township candidates, Frank
Proffitt, Charles Pyles, Scott Wolfe, Shirley Johnson,
Eugene Long, Elson Dailey, Guy Rose, Max Folmer,
. Morris Teaford, James McHaffie. and Marty
·
Morarlty.
The group calling !he meeting points out that the
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session is being Offered as a gesture to promote and
maintain understanding and good wUI between the
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public and its representatives. This type r1 meeting
has had a long standing tradition In the New England
Slates sometimes having far reaching effects when at
times only a dozen or so people attended, they report.
Residents have a question they would like to have
considered can mail It to Marviene Beegle or Gayle
Price. Questions may be submitted to the moderator,
Mrs. Beegle, at the door belorethemeetingstarts and
oral questions wUI be accepted from the floor.
Rules lor the forum are: decisions made by the

~

moderator are final; only questions in J(OOd tustc and
deemed appropriate by the modera tor will tlc used;.

the moderator reserves the right ro interrupt any
answer because of limited time; the moderator will
try to select questions that seem most generally of
roncer11; each candidate for local offices wUI be given
a few minules to address the audience If he cr sbe so
destres.
Members of the arrangement committee for the
forum are Beegle, Howard Lo rklns, Max ine Diddle
Sellers, Price and Shirley JriKnson.

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October 20, 1985

Commentary and perspective
iunbaJI iim:tf - i".eutin.eJ A Division of

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Page-A-2

·; 1125 Third Ave., GaJJipolls, Ohio

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( 6H) -146-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L . WI NGETT
Publisher
; HOBART WILSON JR.
• Executive Editor

I'AT WHITEHE,\D

Assistant l'ubllsher-Controller

~

LF: ITE:HS OF OPli\ 10 :'\ J tt' wf'ku rm'l.!. th£'\ -.h\/U id hi' It'"~ th.rn 1011 \IOrtb
• lon ,E: . .\II lrtt r·rs ,r r r :-ub)N ·t to f'(llllnl! and m u ~l h(' ~ rg n I'd 11· i 1h n;r m!'. :..~ ddr r"~ :.J nd
~ r.-h •phonr numb(&gt;rs . 1'\ o un"l~nr&gt;tll!•llt•rs v:ill l::M • publbht'(i . l.l'IIPr s shuul d 1)£&gt; In
; I!Ood L rsl £'. :.~ ddrr ssinl! \~sUf'!-. not pnson.rlifi('S.

lfinger-pointing
•

As the state legislative investigation into the savings and lo1111 crisis
zeroes in on higher officials, the finger-pointing becomes rrnre vigorous.
State savings and loan examiners testified earlier that Home State ~-------Sayings Bank of Cincinnati had been a regulatory problem since 1975, and
they sent up red Oags on Its financial dealings starting In 19!11.
tlut Clark W. Wideman, the superintendent of savings and lo1111s during 1
!oOner Gov. James A. Rhodes' last term !rom 1979-&amp;'l, told the 1
Senate-House committee last week he saw nothing out-of-the-ordinary
uniu early 1982.
Wideman painted the picturre of a "tumultuous" time for the industry
!r&lt;tn 1979-1982, when almost every savings and loan was losing money and
!igtlting lor Its life.
•!At any given p:&gt;lnt during my tenure there were at least eight to 10 and
sodletimes as many as 15 to 20 Institutions with critiCal problems,"
Wi!leman testified.
From that perspective, the examiners' warnings about Home State may
noi have registered. When he finally reallzecl that Home State was
overloaded with risky Investments in government securities with a Florida
!irm, Wideman was reluctant to come down hard.
·iuwas difficult for us to say, 'we want you to stop the only activity that's
brilging money In, "' he related to the committee.
1)1 looking back, it appears that Wideman's mistakes, once re knew of the
serilusness of the situation in March 1982, were:
.:Allowing an examiner to walt untU July to start a thorough exam of
Hoine State, and until October to finish. It almost iooks as if Wideman was
letting the clock run out on the Rhodes administration and turning the
problem over to the next governor.
.:Trusting Home State officers to reduce their Investments In ESM
Goi-emment Securities of Fort Lauderdale with:lut a written commitment,
while at the same time permitting mergers and branching to take place.
Ftom Wideman's point a view, his tactics seemed sound to him because
... ...
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he ;i)ad no Idea ESM and Home State would fold. But they did, and his
tacllcs are now fair game for criticism.
\jlarren W. Tyler, the first director a commerce under GQv. Richard F.
Celeste, told the committee he studiously avoided the S&amp;L problem despit e
th&amp;fact he Is a former savings and loan executive.
Tyler said his resp:&gt;nslbiUty was adtl1lnistering the department, not
WAS!flNGTON - The armed
regulating thrifts, and he left that job up to the superintendent of savings
services'
safety record has come
. and loans, who Is a direct appointee ol the governor.
under
close
scrutiny In recent
'J'!Ius, Tyler shifted the blame to C. Lawrence Huddleston, the
months,
and
with
good reason.
superintendent, conceding the two of them had differences over
We've been protesting for tiro years
managemeni styiP.
Rhodes' vaunted claims of "good management" by his administration the military's preference for spendlng money on new hardware rather
are being exp:&gt;sed at the hearing for what they were: all bluster.
Former state Commerce Dlrector Gordon Peltier said he had no than correcting known diflcienc!Ps
knowledge about Home State's difficulties until Wideman told him In that often cause the needless deaths
of service personnel.
Nov'~mber 1982.
Even more dlsturbinng than the
Peltier told Rhodes about It and said Wideman w1111ted to threaten Home
mllltaiY's
dismal safety record Is
State with a "cease and desist" order on the lnvesiments.
the
standard
response to acclden ts
Rhodes said, "go ahead, teii 'em to clean up their act,"' and never again
that kill or maim men and women
was. a word sp:&gt;ken about it, according to Peltier. So much for tough
In
the armed services.
One
management. Meanwhile, Celeste, who Is tryingtoclimbout of a canyon .
disgusted
Army
ctficlai
called
it
the
of seandal within his administration, pulled a tactical masterpiece last
"fix-the-blame-and-forget -It synweek.·
Tyler was testifying before the savings and loan Pilllel and the Senate drome," in which a reasonably high
official In the chain of command
Judiciary Committee was hearing testimony from a former secretary In
but not too high - ls reprimanded
the Ohio Department ol Transportation about the hiding and destruction of
for
the safety fallure, whereupon
- rec&lt;irds apparently used for political purposes.
the
Incident Is promptly forgotten
Celeste abruptly canceled another appearance and, at the sametimeas
and the problem remains
the iwo hearings, he drew reporters to a press conference to announce his
uncorrected.
pian for ending unethical practices.
Who should really be held
Jt :worked. The governor received top headlines in some newspapers
aoout his corrective action while the other stories took lower billing.

The Oklahoman made a c;onvlnclng argument. Perhaps one-tenth
of the 36 mllllon recipients a Social
Security benefits are hard up. The
rest are not doing too badly. The
average per capita lnrome of
persons 65 and over is aoout $8,100.
Roughly 75 percent to !IJ percent a
the oldsters own their homes, and
lour out of live have pald df their
mortgages. They have m chUdren
to put through coUege. Many
retirees have substantial Incomes
fmm dividends and Interest.
II Is quite simply wrong, said
Bor.m, it is wrong and demeaning,
to exempt persons on Social
Security from the sacrifices that
others wUI be called upon to bear in
_the name of deficit reduction.
"We are fooling oorselves If we
think that our senior citizens do l))t
care about excessive budget delle Its, if we think they do not want to
partiCipate in an act that will put
this country back on solid ground. I

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

: ~ Four U.s.pilots .
~ who escortea a plane

carrying rnurd.erers
to the ground:

®
four Arab hljac.Ker..s
~ who drag~eO: an elderlY

:
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tourist from h\s whee.lcna\r :
ana shot him in cold blooa: :
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Guess who the PLOs friends call terrorists.

Secret.accident reports

MONDAY THROUGH WEDNEsDAY:
Fair weather through Wednesday. Highs in the mid to upper 70s
Monday, in the 60s Tuesday and in the low to mid 70s Wednesday.
Lows in the mid to upper 50s Monday, in the 40s Tuesday and in the
low 50s Wednesday.
·

have talked with many a the Satior
citizens in my home state of
Oklahoma, and ttEy have expressed to me that they are wlillng
to forgo all or a portion ot their ,
cost-of-living adjustment if eve- I.
ryone is In the same boat. ,.. They '
kriow that they will benefit more
!rom a balanced budgetthan from a
short-term cost-of-living
adjustment."
Boren drew support on the floor •'
from Minnesota's Rudy Boschwltz. · '
The idea of excluding Social
Security beneficiaries, he said, is
"very damaging." Twenty-two
pereent of federal spending goes for
Social Security. An untouchable 13
percent must he set · aside for
Interest on the debt. Thus the
budget must be balanced either by
significant tax Increases cr by deep
cuts In the remaining 65 percent.
The burden "really should he
shared across the board."
Steve Symms of Idaho and Pete •
Domenici of New Mexico also arose
to speak for the Boren amendment.
In opposition, Gary Hart of Ollorado did a little demagogulng for
the galleries;. John Kerry, the
Massachusetts Mouth, demonstrated his Ignorance oi federal
finance: Pat Moynihan of New
Youk said he could not think of a
greater disservice than to tinker
with a COLA for the old folks.
Moynihan thought Boren was acting "In a manner that Is less than
attractive."
'I'Ile Boren amendment, in my
own view, was absolutely sound.
Nothing but political cowardice •
supports the Indefensible notion
that persons on Social Security ;
somehow are superior beings,
exempt from the burdens that ;,
others must carry. After a certain • ·
· point, Social Security benefits
should be taxed just as ~her •
income-·is taxed .
A puslllanirrnus Congress, frozen
by the fear of losing re-election, will
not do what plainly ought to be
done .
Defeat of the Boren·
amendment made that lamentable
fact painfully clear.

State zone forecasts

In the nearly five years since !left
the U.S. Senate, I have lectured
extensively across the nation on
college campuses - a partial
return to my earlier career as a
They. are miserable and Irritable professor of history - and have
This is the question that all of
voters wlli be asking themselves in on wann days. (Many of the gained a variety of Insights into the
the near future. I guarantee that if make-do classrooms have no win- concerns and problems Qf oor
evecy voter ""uld spend a lew dows or ventilation)
institutions of higher learning,
In many of the classrooms the
hours of a school day at Gallia .
One growing concern that I have
Academy Jr. High or High School, teachers are confined to the small encountered is the Increasing diffi·
they would answer this question area around their desk. (There Is culty of recruiting highly qualified,
just no room to go !rom student to stimulating teachers !or America's
with a loud and clear yes.
student
)
For the past IE'W years I've heard
colleges and universities. It seems
This list could go on and oo.
my teenagers 1111d their friends
that the most talented and e!fo;ctive
The overcrowding and lack of young Americans are, for the most
come home !rom school complainIng about the conditions at their space makes it di!ficuit for both the part, avoiding careers as college
junior high and high schooi, and st udents and the teachers, yet they professors.
all' should be commended oo doing
never really gave it mum ti.:Jught.
The problem ls multifaceted,
This year I have had the opportun- as well as they do under such sad both In cause and effect.
Ity to llf? Inside the school and conditions.
A major reason that the brightest
We all must rememhe·r that these and ablest' of our youth are avoiding
clas~rooms . I know now that these
- young people definitely have some- students and future students d
teaching c;treers is financial Gailipoils City Schools are the there is mere money to be made
thing to complain aoout. For
upcomming leaders dour city and with a degree in business adminls·
instance:
nation. It Is up to us to help them !ration , medi ci ne, law or
The students hate study hall
become "The best that they can engineering.
because they have to study m their
he".
That can only be done with an
laps in the auditorium. (There is no
The cost of higher educa lion Is
adequate
education facility, re - now so high (and golnghlgher) that
avaliabie roqm for a study hall In
gardless of the locaton.
the high school)
many students go heavUy Into debt
Voters, we need your help, l'ote to finance their degrees. This
They eat their lunch outside ofttE
yes for the Gallipolis City Schools. further accents the need for a high
school building even In bad
C.V. Stockm1111 Income following graduation. "I
weather. (It's just too crowded in
Rt.
2, Gallipolis can't a!iord to break my parents,
the make-shift cafeteria, alsc no
cooking ficilities)
run up a $ll,&lt;XXJ personal debt, then
chase a Ph.D. for four years and
end up as a low-salaried college
Instructor. I've got to make some
bucks quick," one student told me
Today is Sunday, Oct. 20, the 293nd day of 19&amp;'i wit~ 72 to follow.
.at Duke University recently. This
The moon is approaching Its first quarter.
student hopes to be admitted to
The morning !liar are Venus and Mars.
Harvard Business School.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
At the University o! PennsylvaThose born on this day are under the sign of.Ubra. They include nia, I was told by a iong·tlme
AmeriCan novelist Fannie Hurst in 1889, historian and philosopher Lewis
professor that the better students
Mumford in 1895, actress Lawanda Page In 19:!1.

Does Gallipolis really
need a new high school?

Today in history

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are simply not going on to graduate classroom.
I do not have any easy answers,
school to prepare themselves to
but I do have a cou pie of
teach the next generation a
students. He added that it is no suggestions. First, givrn the vital
role that effective teachers play in
longer possible to hire a professor a
engineering. "Ali of our recruits the education of all the rest of us,
are now picked up abroad," he said. why not a provision in the
At Northwestern University, my government-backed student loan
graduate school alma mater, I was program that a portion, if not ali, of
told by one of the most admired the loan would he assumed by the
professors that he didn't have a government after the recipient has
single student who was preparing to
teach at any level - elementary,
secondary or ll(lil[erslty. "There is
j YOU 'ia,Mll/lK, A T/?1/LY
too much money, prestige and
11JHESM fDIUIATIOII alLY
social position In other careers, I
QliiE5 A/1Nj (1o/(£ ()1. 7/111(£
guess," he said.
A aM1.IIY. TI/IJJ'5 WHY THti
8CXMillS /1/1/.1. {JE 7!?ACKI3J)
The result of all this Is that those
FOR THti III5Ta' 7/€11/.UVES.
students who are now going into the
teaching field are all too often not
~- \
the best students, either academi -~=
cally or personality-wise.
"There are stUI young Ph.D.s
applying for college teaching jobs,
but many of them lack the qualities
of personality and leadership that
make for effective teaching," said
an old friend of min'e at Princeton
who was involved In recent faculty
hiring efforts. "I !eel as though I
am bt the business of screening
social misfits and academic oddbaiis," he said.
Obviously there are still a large
number of highly talentl!d and
capable professors on compus.
Many of these teachers, howeva-,
are doing little teaching. They are
so heavily Involved with writing
and publishing articles 1111d books,
or servillg as business and government consultants, that there is little
time left tor the classroom, to say
nothing of personal associations
with the students wtside the

Doonesbury

ontheextenslonwillbelnstaliedona
siteatopMcKenzieRidge.
Customers on County Road 28
betweentheBaidKnob-Stiversvme
and McKenzie Ridge junctions, who
are already on the Tuppers PlainsChester system, wUI also be
supplledbythenewtank.

ru~\:S~~~e~ns~~;;;n~ ~;:~:"~
these customers.
This
has when
been
adequate,
Poole said,
except
there Is a power failure. "If the

Courthouse••..._____(c_o_nt_ln_ued_fro_m_pa_ge_AI_l

what's in this report, the public has
no way of knowing whether the
cause of the accident was ever
fixed. That's how the brass hats
like it.
- The Pentagon argues that
handling Its Investigations behind
closed doors results in lEtter safety.
Clvillan aviaton accidents are
investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board under intense public scrutiny, Overt he past
20 yeasrs - including the years a
peace following the Vietnam War- ·
the military's air-safety record has
suffered in comparison with the
clvlllan safety iecord .
The Pentagon defends Its
pollcy of closed Investigations by
explaining that witnesses are promised confidentiality for theirtestimony. Is it saying that service men
and women can't be trusted to tell
the tmth in an q&gt;en hearing?

Locust Street wUI be roped off to
tra!iic from First Avenue to Second
Avenue forthe event.
Following the official dedication
ceremonies, open oouse and tours of
the newcourtoousewUI be available
until 4 p.m., Saturday. Open house
wUI he also be observed on Sunday, 1
Nov. 10. from 2 p.m. untU 4 p.m ..
During the open house time on
ooth Saturday and Sunday, officeholders will be in their offices at the
courthouse.

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SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP

TRUSTEE

Pd. tor by th e candidate.

Miss Paula's Daycare Center ..
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410 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631

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446 -8224

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We cordially invite anyone
concerned with Ohio's Child Seat
Belt Safety Program to attend a
slide and movie 'presentation
Monday, Oct. 21 19 8s at 7 p.M.

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Nancy Burton, Pre-School Coordinator, Ohio
Dept. of Highway S.afety, will make the presen·

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For the discriminating buyer ... Garage kept and
lovingly cared for. Low miles and actually clean _
as new! Red!

10% to 200fo Off on All Cameras
20% Off on Pentax Video Outfit

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 Second, Gallipolis

te

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tl9fmag

•Gotha'u •Tor •Bio9d Cult
•The Terror •Secret Admirer
. COMING OCT. 24: GHOST BUSTER
COMING OCT. 30: BEVERLY HILL COP

VCR RENTALS

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ale!

$5 PER DAY

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LOCAtED IN THE LOBBY OF THE COLONY THEAtER

PHONE 446-0923

10.75Wo*

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JAMES v
GLASSBURN
VOTE FOR

cars , with water up to the door
handles.
No deaths or Injuries were
repm1ed.

OCTOBER CAMERA SALE

RENTALS &amp; SALES

numbers: 306, 9820

put In a specified number of years ..,......
teaching? Second, why not a
••
student classroom-evaluation sys'
tem for teachers that entities the
more effective teachers to bonus
.,
pay?
)
•
Tnese are only pa,hial answers to
'
a problem that Is crucial to the
entire nation - attracting and
properly rewarding excellent
•
teachers and professors.

electricltygoesoff,thesecustomers
lose water pres;lJre immediately."
Once the tank is Installed and the
system is in operation, even without
electric ity, · the tank could stlll
supply customers with water for
about three days.
Funding for the water line
extension is coming from Jhe
Farmers Home Administration In
the forms of a loan and a partial
grant.
Original cost estimates for the
extension were in the neighoorhood
of $440,0XJ, however, exact figUres
have yet to he determined. As
pointed out by Poole. preliminary
engineering estimates 1111d final
costs as determined by contractors
are "sometimes two different
things."
The water district determines the
length of an extension by the
number of new taps to be included.
Payments from customers on a new
line mu st cover the loan payment to
FmHA Poole said.
The first taps on the Stlversvllie
extension were accepted In November of 198J.

--;:~M~o:to:rls~ts::::~~h=om::e~fro~mH

I

Friday night football games were
trapped when their cars stalled.
Rescue units were krpt busy
removing peoplP from the hoods of

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Lottery winning

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

:x:!~;~~~~:~~~u~:~e~~:~a;~

By United Press International
Rain will continue in Ohio the rest of the weekend.
The showers began in Ohio Friday afternoon and spread across the
state, especlaily in the north. Six hour rainfaU amounts for the period
ending at 2 a.m. were almost three quarters of an inch at ooth
Cleveland and Findlay. Some thunderstorms were in the rain area
also.
Early Saturday morning skies were cloudy over the entire state.
Winds were southwest 5 to 15mph and temperatures were very mild .
The early morning readings were in the upper 00s to lower 70s.
Showers and thunderstorms were in the forecast for Saturday with
highs In the 70s. Rain Is likely Saturday night and Sunday. The mild
weather will continue with lows Saturday night In the mid 50s to low
60s and highs Sunday in the mid OOs to near 70.
A nearly stationary front extended !rom lower Michig1111 across
northern Indiana and Dlinois southwest to Texas. High pressure was
over the plains, The front was expected to move across mrthern Ohio
Saturday afternoon or early evening then become stationary.

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta .

Indefensible.
Here are some ct the things you
might never have known if we
hadn't asked:
- Following an air crash In the
Army, Navy or Air Force, two
separate accident reports are
prepared. One, called the "collateral" report, consists ol statements
of fact and oome witness testimony; it is released to the public.
The second report - the
lmport1lllt one - Is Intended i&gt;r
Internal consumption only and Is
kept secret. It includes not only
!actual matter and witness statement, but also findings, conclusions
and recommendailons o! the investigators. In short, this report
contains the experts' best determination of exactly what ca used the
accident, and suggestions for correcting the problem.
Obviously, without knowing

(Continued from page A-l)
The new line will tie In with the

Ohio weather report

chalrman a the board oft he Brown
Publishing Company In 1965.
Since 1978, he has served on the
advisory board of Georgetown
University Center for Strategic and
International Studies and the advisory council of the American
Enterprise Institute Study of Government Regulation.
He served in the U.S. Navy from
1944-46 as an enlisted man, received
his commission In the Naval
Reserve in 1947 and served on sea
duty during the Korean conflict
!rom 1950 untlll952.
A native of Coiumrus, 0., Brown
received his Bachelor of Arts in
Economics from Duke University in
1947; and, graduated with a Mas·
ter's Degree In Business Administration from Harvard University in
1949. He holds an honoraiY degree
from Miami (Ohio) University. He
and, his wife, Joyce, have three
children.
The program will include a brief
band concert, just preceding the
ceremonies in front of the courthouse on Locust St., featuring ooth
the Gallla Academy High School
Band and ·the Gailla County
All-County Band.

Michigan.
In· Texas, flash flood warnings
were posted for $0Uthern and
northeastern parts of the state.
Flash flood watches were issued
from south central Texas to the
northeastern portion of the state.
Storms dumped an estimated 6
Inches of rain on Tyler, Texas,
Ooodlnghousesandotherbuildlngs,
washing out roads, and stranding
scores of cars and trucks caught In
high water on virtually every street
in !he city.

Water line•••

Northwest, West Central
Saturday night and Sund ay: rain likely. Low Saturday night 55 to
60. High Sunday In the mid 60s. Winds northeast 10 to 15 mph
Saturday night.
Chance of rain 60 percent Satu rday night and Sunday.
Northeast Inland, Central IOghlands
Saturday night and Sunday: rain Ukely. Low Saturday night near
60. High Sunday in the mid 60s. Winds northeast 10 to 15 mph
Saturday night.
Chance of rain 60 percent Saturday night and Sunday.
Miami Valley, Central, East Central
Saturday night and Sunday: rain likely. Low Sat4rdaY night near
60. High Sunday 65 to 70. Winds east to southeast 10 to 15 mph
Saturday night. Chance of rain 00 percent Saturday .night and 70
percent Sunday.
Southw.,i, South Central
Saturday night and Sunday: rain likely . Low Saturday night In the
lower OOs. High Sunday near 70.
Chance of rain 40 percent today and 70 percent Saturday night and
Sunday.

Top prioritY-__________G_e_or....:::...ge_M_cG_ov_er_n ..,

Letter to the editor

•

accountable Is especially hard to
determine In aviation accidents the single most deadly category of
mishap - because ttE services
refuse to release the ~rtlnent parts
ot their accident Investigation
reports.
For this reason, oor assocla te
Donald Goldberg took the Pentagon
to court more than a year ago to
obtain release of the relevant
reports under the Freedom a
Informa!ion Act. He has had the
invaluable assistance of Rayrrnnd
Battocchi, a former Justice Department attorney who volunteered his
services.
The lawsuit is still pending but its
has already proved enlightening.
Some of the Pentagon's most
startling disclosures have come In
the testimony of witnesses who
were desperately attempting to
defend the esssentiaiiy

By United Press International
Texas residents braced for new
flooding early Saturday alter heavy
stonns deluged parts of the state
1vith up to 61nches of rain, flooding
hou ses and roads and stranding
motorists.
Parts of lllinois and Michigan
were also· hit with heavy rain
Friday. Flooding was reported In
Chicago and in southwest lower

Extended Ohio Forecast

Hit the old folks ?______Ja_me_s_J._Ki-=--lpa_tr_ick l
WAS!flNGTON. - During the Among its , other ~atures, the
course of the Senate's debate over Senate blli provides for automatic
the Balanced Budget 1111d Emer- reductions ln COLAs (cost-of-living
gency Deficit Control Act of 1985, adjustments) 1n all but one federal
Oklahoma's David L. Boren offered program. u push comes to shove,
an amendment that he described, COLAswouldhavetobereducedor
tongue In cheek, as "a small wiped o~t for military and clvtlian
technical amendment." He knew pensions, for ral!road retirees, for
his amendment would fall, and It food stamps, for families with
did fall, 11·27, but hurrah for Boren depeodent chtldren - for a whole
anyhow. He had the guts to tackle host of entitlements. But not for
Social Security.
·
Social Security. That Is the one
Of the 88 &amp; EDC act Itself, the exempted class.
less said the better. The btll
Boren proposed to hit the old folks
mandates compulsory, graduated too. His amendment would not
reductions of the federal deficit really have belted them hard. He
until we get to a balanced rudget in would have guar1111teed Social
1991. These reductions would be Security retirees a minimum anual
achieved in part with mirrors, In upward adjustment of 3 percent
part with blue smoke, and In part (assumming the rate of ln!lation
through delegation of sweeping Increased by at ieast 3 percent).
p:&gt;wers In the president. Let me even If deficit reduction compelled
postpone further comment until the a lesser Increase: or no Increase, In
House has had its turn at slicing this • the other entitlement programs.
baloney.
He proposed, In brief, "to put every
Back to the Boren amendment. Amrican citizen 1n the same boat"

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-3

Weather:----. Heavy rains deluge Texas Satur-day

October.26, 1986

~~==================~======================================== ;
I

Pomtiroy- Middleport-GIIIipolis. Ohio Point Ple~sant, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

U.S. GOV'T CWARANTEED

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ASSOCIATION CERTIF1CATES

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Our entire invemory of Quality Diamond and Colored
Gemstone Jewelry (including all birthstones) ;ls we ll as
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now Reduced 20%!
9ENJOY OUR BEST SELECTION EVER

'

• High Liquidity-Active Secondary Market
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17/I0·21l

MKNOIII

/IHJIIT'S
·0'/al.?
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I

: Address

I

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I City
I Phone

•\

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I

'

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•'
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1201

certilicates .

State

I My Account Executive lif any) Is

Zip

_

·-------------------"- take the time to help you deltrmlne and ach/e..

1/nonclal obJttc:ll•n

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...

9LEGITIMA TE 20 1)[ SA VI Nc;s
QLAYAWAYS FOR CHR ISTMAS WHCOME
. -.

I
:

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JtwtiM
104 SECOND AVIHUE • 44eot147

�.........__,

-

Pomeroy-

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

'

-. Or;tober 20, 1985

October 20, 1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

I

Action of Teamster official traced

S&amp;L granted judgement in
·Meigs ·foreclosure action
POMEROY - In the Meigs
' Coonty Common Pleas Court,
Marietta Savings and Loan Co. has
·· been granted a$25,610.(11 deficiency
,• judgment plus Interest In a foreclo. ·sure action against John R. Acors,
·.Tuppers Plains, for property In
·' Ollye Township. With an offer of
. •$26,666.67, Marietta Savings and
". Loan was the successful bidder
•' when the property was sold at public
,··sale.
. Bank One. Athens, has been

awarded a $23,816.40 judgment plus
Interest In a foreclosure action
against Richard E. Rathburn,
Columbus, et al, for property In
Sallsbu ry Township.

mDk produced by his farm. The
order Is to be In effect 14 days unless
extEnded for further cause. A
motion for prellmln~ry Injunction In
the matter has been scheduled for 9
a.m., October 25.
In other court matters, an action
has been filed by Betty Stewart,
Cheshire, against Charles Kenneth
Stewart and. Vera Stewart, both of
Cheshire, requesting a judgment rt
$1344.98 tor merchandise sold to the
defendants.
Sherwood L. Meredith and
Mildred L. Meredith, Pomeroy, and
John B. Meredith and Sarah Allee
Meredith, Jackson, have requested
the partitioning of property In
Chester Township . In an action
against Charles Watkins, address
unknown, et al.
Reciprocal actions for child
suwort have been tiled by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
and Thomas Glaser against Jerry L.
Barber, and by the State of Florida
and Artie C. Jones against Antmny
Ray Jones.

A temporary restraining order
has ·been Issued by the court against
James W. Carnahan, Racine, In an
actlonflled by Milk Marketing, Inc.,
Strongsville. According to the entry,
the defendant Is restrained from
refusing to deliver to the plaintiff all

_.: ,W.Va. labor commissioner to
supenrise Wheel.:Pitt voting

•J

'~

WHEELING, W.Va. (UPI I The ballot counting for the United
; Steelworkers union voting on Its
:, proposed contract with bankrupt
• Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Coit&gt;.
will be supervised by Commissioner
j Jess Shumate of the West VIrginia
~ Department rt Labor.
~
The request for governmental
• supervtsloncamefrom PauiRusen,
~ director of USW District 23 and the
~ unlon'schle! contract negotiator.
'
"We have made this request of
'• yov. Arch Moore to assure that the
~ .l!lghest slandards are maintained
: ::dUrtngthlsprocess," Rusensald.
• ;. : ·"This settlement Js too Important
•• the USW members employed by
•:·!P
:•;VIe company and to those on
~: :Jietlrement to allow even the
•:i!OSSlbilltyofachallengetoexlst."
:~:; USW members have been mailed
:;:Copies of the contract, a contract
:·: summary and the ballot. Ballots
be postmarked by midnight
: ·' Wednesday to be counted, Rusen
~

!

'

·=·must

said.
"I have directed the labor
commlssionertobelnWheel!ngOct.
26 to receive the ballots from postal
authorities, and to observe the
tabulation process,'' Moore said.
"The state monitors will receive
the ballots from !he postal ctflclals
In Elm Grove (Wheeling) and from
there move to the tabulation site at
the Quality Inn at Dallas Pike."
II
About 8,200 steelworkers In West
VIrginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania
been on strike against the nation's
seventh largest steelmaker since'
July 21 when the company had
unUaterally cut Its wages and
benefits alter receiving approval by
a federal bankruptcy judge.
NogovernmentofficlalsofOhloor
Pennsylvania will take part In the
votemuntlng, union officials said.
Wheeling-PittSburgh has been
uooer Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Code
protection In an attempt to reorganlze $5Z7 million In debts.

•

CINCINNATI (UP[) -Contract
talks between striking workers at
the Fernald uranium-processing
plant and NLO Inc. have been
broken off until Monday, and when
tlie parties return to the bargaining
table, negotiations wUI focus on the
employees' pension plan.
Federal mediator Louis Man·
chlse said a pension expert wlll join

•
•
•
~

•
-

1'--G O

the talks Monday.
Health and safety issues that
triggered the strike apparently are
belng deferred forcbnsideratlon by
a committee Including representa·
tlves of Westinghouse Electric
Corp., which will succeed NLO In
about two months as ~ratoro! the
federally owned plant.

..

TO C HURCH [V[RV S UNOl\ V

UNTIR Rtl

Fill CUT

PORK CHOPS

ROUND STEAKS
II.

5IIIl01N

TIP ROAST
II.

II.

$)79

$)99

JOWL BACON
st.KED
$1.09 lb. II.

99(

$)79

filii!

GROUND CHUCK
w/'1.00

11.

lllot Purch•

99·(

Ub.
U"'lt

CENTER LOIN
II.

HAM SALAD
II.

$)39

$)89

LOIN END

11.$)19

3115.

$129

DUTCH LOAF
II.

$)99

failure to stop

GALLIPOLIS - A GaUia County
:· man was fined $25 and costs Friday
:: In Gallipolis Municipal Court on a
:: charge offalllng to stop following an
": accident.
:: Steven M. Nunn, 36, of Rt. 4,
:; Gallipolis, was sentenced after
:L pleadlngguUty to the charge.
A no child restraint charge
:: against Emerson D. BingJr.,Zl.of
•: Rt. 2, Gallipolis, wasdlsmlssedafter
:; he obtained proper restra ints and
:· Alvin R. Hylton, 26, of Rt. 4, Texas
:: Road. was fined $12 and costs for
-: failure to use headlights after dark .
:: Fortelttng $40 bond for traffic
:- violations were Sonja J . Owens, 31,
·: of Rl. 1, Bidwell, !allure to yield
:; one-halfoftheroadWay; SamueiW.
:- Cover, 38, ofllOJOhloSt., !allure to
:: stop In an assured clear distance;
·: and Martin J . Chasteen, 00, of
:: Patriot Star Route, stop sign.
:- Forteltlng bondfor speeding were
;; Juaqulne J, J\!Stice, Zl, ol 446 First
-; Ave., $38; Ussa M. Hill, 27, of 425
;. Green Terrace, $78 ~ Loren W.
:: Russell, 31, of Kerr, $39; Randy A.
:: Jones, 30, ofRt.l, Wellston, $38; !.H.
VIars. 64, of 1157 Second Ave., $10;
: • Paul E. Butler, 60, .of Rt. 2, Crown
:: City. $40; and Mark W. Pyles, 24, of
:; Rt . 3, Galllpolis, $39.

&gt;

&lt;

~

REMOVAL ~ This backhoe operated by Richard
Helton and donated for use by .JeHers Excavating
Friday was lending a hand to the Middleport Vlllag~

SLICED PEACHES
29 Ol.

2% MILK
GAL

CORRECTION

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Rep.
Thomas Luken, D.Ohlo, says It is
absolutely essential that financier
Marvin Warner appear before a
u.s. House subcommittee tnvesti·
gating the failure of ESM Govern·
ment Secfiritles.
The subcommittee, which In. eludes Luken and Is chaired by Rep.
John Dlngell, D·Mlchlgan, sent

CHOCOLATE MILK

$ 89
PUREX BLEACH

79&lt;

.BULK CANDY

In toclay's paper on Page 2
of our Cirlular -

CABBAGE
II.

It does not have awnt rib barrel as
illustrated. We art sorry for any in-

19&lt;

ROME OR JONATHAN

APPLES
3115.

89¢

BARLETT PEARS

4FOR$} OO

convenience to our customers.

f----------L-------------------------,----On late Sun., Oct. 20 'lllru n.., Oct. 22

fteOII C:NICl ¥OW . . and lOcal
buld'4l codiiiOr l)llrriltlcl .... Of
hi heatlf. CallfOmlo, WIICOnlln.
Michigan; anc1 MOIIOch.IMnl mew

Third Ave,. .

Gallipolis, Ohio, by the OhiO Valley Pub·

-·

ll~hlng Company/ Multtmedta, Inc. Second class postage paid at Gallipolis,

rwtrlct .... UM1 Of .... unit In dWell

lngs or bi.Mdlngl Of tunon

Ohio 45631. Entered a" second clas!l
mailing matter at Pomeroy , Ohio, Post

Oftlce.
Member: United Press Internallonal ,

Inland Dally Press Assoclatloh and the
Ohio Newspaper Association, Nationa l
Advertis ing Representative, Branham ,
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York. New York 10017.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

·:•&gt;;Mei~ sch00.1s scheduJe
•
~~
: in-senrice day Wednesday POMEROY - Students across
- Meigs County have a vacation from
classes Wednesday as teachers and
administrators head to Meigs High
Schoolforanln·servlceday. '
Keynote speaker for the session .
,
• · .wlll be Nancy Johnson of Creal
: - Springs, Ill., a former teacher,
. · . ;author and educational consultant
' • who will speak on the topic, "The
· 'Teachers Makes the Difference."
· . Following the keynote address at
. · 9:45 a.m., there will be group
• • meetings on grade levels In the
· ':Various subject areas conducted by
'Qrea group leaders.
The afternoon session wUI consist
Df two workshops. One will deal with
)rnprovlng school programs and will
be condu~ted by Johnson. The
second wlll be on a ·posit lve
approach to discipline conducted by
Michael Enright. Enright Is a
·teacher. lecturer, and author from
Saginaw, Mich. Participants wUI
attend the workshop ctthelrcholce.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunda~ Only
One Y ('oar ................................ $26.80
Six m on t h ~ ........ ............. ........ .. $13 .00

Ow 1.91,

KEYNO'l'E - Nancy .John-

son, Creal Sprlnp. m., wW
deliver 11M) keynote addresil at
the annual lnlervlce day for
Meigs County teachers and
administrators on Wedrtetldll)' at
Meigs High Scbool.

ALPHA EPSILON CHAPTER
OF ADK SALUTES ALL

TEACHERS IN MEIGS CO.

•••n aile

L-1---'........"'-"" Panly NoM, Ea.. 1.27

----1~1

Dally and Suaday

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lruilde Ohio
~2 Weeks ................... ............... 158.24
26 Weeks ........................ .......... 129.12
13 Weeks .................................. $14.56
Kales lllllolde Ohio
52 Weeks ................... .............. $59.80
26 Weeks ...................... ........... $31.20
13 Weeks ...... .......................... . $15.60

gg•

Sale Price lag. 1·
lb.• bag peanut
buller~. Great

.·.•--··• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

snacking treats at

·&amp; ~!~savings.

•••

•

MEW SHIPMENT JUST ARRI~ED

3 5 SUITES IN STOCK

. ' ~\

.~ ~

DeXter's
casual approach
to fashion.

'.;, 1.67

Liv. Rm. Suite
Reg. •259 .96

' ·' • Sale Price Bag. 16-

$159.95

. oz': bag lun-atze

SAVE $100

labyRuthor
lutlerflngllf ba11.
•Hefwt

41 00

/

5

.

•

,Y

5 97
•

Price
After

Rebate

Body filler

•

Finally, a shoe that's made to match the natural shape
of your foot and is a natural with what you wear. Walking ur standing. at work or at play, now·your feet can
always be casually stylish. And comfortable.
1
A casual approach to shoes. From Dexter. Shoemakers
lo America.
HOURS:
Mon. &amp; frl. Iii I

Tun., Wtd., Thur:
I Sal. til 5

for dents,
scratches, more.

--·K--

45.88
Shop Vac
5 aal. indoor I
outdoo1, wet

or dry vac.

-'
•

Anni~ersary

YOUCANA l MOST NAMf YOUil OWN PR ICE

Sale

Purlhase of Hart MEN'S PAlM BEACH MEN!S CASHMERE
5lhaffMr &amp; Marx Suit
YEAR AROUND
TOPCOATS
You Will Receive
BLAZERS
REG. $350.00
575.00 Worth of
REG. 1145.00
FREE MEitc:HANDISE of
0
50
Your Choiu.
NOW

$249°

$129

All Weather Coats

SAVE SS.OO

ly John Weitz •
Rtg.ll20 .... Now 59950

ON ANY PAIR
OF LADIES'

Dress Slacks

20% OFF

LEVI 'S
BEND-OVERS

LADIES'

SAVE 13.00

Save $4°0

On Your Purchase
Of Any Haggar

LEATHER
JACKETS

20°/o OFF

MEN'S
SPRING &amp; FALL

LADIES

SWEATERS
SAVE
LADIES FALL
KNIT TOPS

JACKETS

By Aberdeen

15% OFF

HOMAS CLOTHIER
OPPOSITE THE PARK -

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

WHO WILL SPEAK FOR THE CHILDREN?

ALPHA DELTA KAPPA WEEK

Save 41%. Our 1.61
Ea. Hytan Panlklll
panty '-e. Misses'
SIM, M/1.

Th(' Sunday Tlmes-Senrtn el wUI not be
respons ible for advance pa yment s
made to car riers.

AND OUR NEW LOCA noN IS
241 THIRD AVE. ·
IAcrosi from ·G&amp;JI

..
: .. ·

99¢

No subscrlpllons by mail permltted In
c e~rr le r service Is

accordlngtoLuken.

· PARSOttS
FURNTURE

IN CELEBRATION OF

I' •

appointed bankruptcy trustee for
ESM, aFlortdasecurttlescompany.
It was ESM's failure that caused the
downfall of the Clnclnnati·based
Home State Bank In Ohio, Its
subsequent closure and sale.
The subcommittee Is expected
take testimony on therelatlonshlpof
Warner, majority shareholder. In
Home State, and Ronnie Ewton,
majority shareholder of ESM, and
American Savings and Loan, a
Florida S&amp;L controlled by Warner,

THE FORMER WHOLESAlE .
DISTRIBUTORS HAS CHANGED
ITS NAME AND LOCAnON
()UR NEW NAME.IS

1:..
• •

.. .

One Week .......... .................. 50 C£'nls
On(' Year .. ...... .................... ..... $26.00

towns where motor
availa ble.

Warner a letter through his Florida
attorney, Hugo Black. The letter
requests Warner to appear before
the subcommittee Nov. 4 In Washlngton, and Included a list of 11
topics on which . Warner could
expect to answer questions.
Luken said the Investigative body
wants Warner to respoiul to charges
made by Thomas Tew, the court·

0

WINCHESTER RANGER
SHOTGUN IS
INCORRECR Y ILLUSTRATED

SINGLE COPY
.
PRICE
Sunda y .............. ...... ............ SO Cents

IIUer oontrol program by removing rocks and debris
from the Ohio River. The program Is under the
direction of Bernard GOkey.

Luken: Warner testimony 'essential'

99(

VAUIY 1111

$)49

WE NOW HAVE

tUSPitl-800)
Published each Sunday .

-

WE NOW SERVE
FRESHLY MADE
SUBMARINES!

:--Man fined for
~~
-•~

WE ARE 52 YEARS OLD- COME CELEBRATE WITH US!
GREAT SPECIALS ON OUR NEW FALL MERCHANDISE!
.

BACON,ENDS
AND P1ECES

Kansas City Teamsters leader, rose
Nev .. owned by Argent.
The government contends that to the presldencyofthe International
some of the defendants controlled union after the death of Frank
Williams and other trustees of the Fitzsimmons In 1981. only to resign
Teamsters Central States Pension In 1983 after being sentenced to a
Fund. Prosecutors said they would iO-year federal prison term for
show that the mob lea.ders used their conspiring to bribe a U.S. senator.
Influence with those trustees to
WID lams reportedly has agreed to
obtain $87 million In loans for casino cooperate with the government anrl
owner Allen Glick to set up Argent testify In the trial, which began Sept.
Coit&gt;. and to buy and refurbish the 23, to avoid se1vlng his prison term.
Stardust and Fremont.
Paul Steinberg, an employee. of
The government alleges the the Central Conference of Tea$5defendants c ontrolled Argent ters, identified documents showing
through Glick's managers and that from 1973 through theresl of the
skimmed millions from the com- decade, Williams belonged to the
pany's casinos.
seven-member policy committee
Williams, who for years was a that directed the conference.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPII Federal prosecutors ln the Argent
Coit&gt;. sklnimtngtrtalofnlnereputed
mob leaders have presented evl·
dencethat traces Roy Lee Williams'
rise to power In the Teamsters union
since the 1970s.
The nine defendants In the trial,
reputed organized crime leaders
· fromKansasCity,Chlcago,Milwaukee and Cleveland, are on trial
beforeajuryandU.S. District Judge
Joseph E. Stevens Jr. They are
charged with maintaining 1llega1
hidden control of Argent COit&gt;. and
with sklrnrtllng more than $2 million
from the Stardust and Fremllnt
casinos and others In Las Vegas,

Pricea good thru Oct. 26. 1986

OUR TOWN'S FINEST S.UPIR MARKIT

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

: Fernald talks broken off

The Sunday Times-Sentinei - Page - ~-5

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

What would you do if you saw an adult raping alit. tie child? Would you not be deeply disturbed and do
all within your power to save that child? Thousands
of children under 16 are involved in either child molestings or pornography each year. The FBI says that
one in four 12 year old girls will be sexually assaulted in her lifetime. America is shocked at the
sexual abuse of children that claim our headlines.
Child sexual abuse has tripled in our generation according to an -NBC telecast. "Silent Scream." Is it
any wonder that parents are afraid to leave their chi I·
dren in nursery schools and day care centers. What
causes people to commit such crimes? There is no
denying the fact that men and women who are canstantly exposed to pornographic material such as
Playboy, Playgirl, Hustler, Penthouse, and X-Rated
movies find themselves. entering into a fantasy
world. Their imagination becomes vain. These individuals become addicted until the more they see, the
more they want.
One pediatrician reported that a 14 year old son
had been purchasing pornographic magazines ad
reading them in his bedroom and after reading
them and exciting himself to the point that he
could not contain himself, he would go into the
bedroom of his 12 year old sister, of his 11 year
old sister, and of his 8 year old brother and rape
them several times a week.
There was a little girl brought into this Doctor's
office who was four years old. She had been
abused and lacerated. She was brought in by the
police. It seems her father, her uncle, and her
brother$· would buy pornographic 'literature and
would pass , it around among themselves and
would laugh and tell dirty jokes and finally when
. they were ready and tired of fantasizing, they
would take this four year old child and rape her.
· Many researchers believe that all this pornographic literature opens up to one taboo-forbidden
sex. The FBI reports in many cases of rape,
murder, and .child abuse, that the perpetrator
owns a large elaborate library of pornographic material. The Michigan State Police did a survey and
found that in 40 percent of all sex crimes pornography was involved.
SHAll I SAY MORE! I could say much, much
more but the facts are real. Pornography is evil,
corrupt, and is a threat to me, my ·family, the
church I pastor. the women and children on my
block, and in my community. Pornography is no
longer_in the big cities - it is here in our com·
munity and I am sick, I am angry and.upset. It's
time for decent people to stand up and put an end

pornography
.
pollutes

· BODY · SOUL · MIND
AVVARENESS VVEEK
~- • •N o n ·...,.., ,.. ~ ,

\

to this wickedness. How long wili it take for us to
wake up. Don't wait until it happens to you or one
of those you love.
Last year thousands of ci.ti~ens all across the
nation volunteered to hel·pehmmate pornography.
Approximatey 8,000 stores have discontinued the
sale of pornography in the last 16 months. The
three leading skin magazines have had a 31 percent decrease in circulation in the last 36 months.
NOW is the time to get involved. Will you help?
You can by:
1. You can pray for all those who are.involved.
The pornographers, ·the people they abuse, and
those who are trying to put a stop to po.rnography. ·
2. Become informed. Read your Bible. Especially subjects dealing wit~ purit~, holiness. and
morals. For more information, wnte - National
Federation of Decency, P.O. Box 2440, Tupelo,
Mississippi 38803. .
3. Speak up. Speak up in .defense for ~hat you
believe is right. If local retailers are selh~g material you find objectional, go to them and kmdly explain your objections.
.
4. You can write a letter to th~ ed1tor of your local newspaper. You may also wnte to TV sponsors
and local TV stations.
5. You can join forces and work together in your
church and community. I challenge the citizens of
Gallipolis and everywhere to go NOW in the name
of Him who said, "Blessed be the pure in heart, for
they shall see God." (Matt. '5:8). If interested call

- 446-4404 .or 446-0196.
Voss

of

·
Gall'

�Page- A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 20, 1985

October 20, 1986

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

Operations back to nonnal in Jackson County :
JACKSON. Ohio tUPl J - . Jack·
son County commissioners said all
county offices and the county jail
will retum to nonn~l operations
Monday, after flnanctal problems
forced severe employee and opera·
tiona! cutbacks.

The offlees and jail will open with
an $1J5,00J allotment from the
$HO,OOJ received through a recent
landsale.. .
.
Commtsstoner . Marvm . Keller
walked out ofaFndaymeeting alter
only 10 minutes. He was absent

when J'{lmmlssloners Ed Michael
and Ed Davis voted for the
appropliatton.
He left after learning that the
other commlss10ne;s had allotted
$27.167 to the sheriff sdepartment.
''That 'sa crock,"S:ellersdldashe

walked out. "I want no part of 11.
Whateveryouwant to dotoday,T'm
against it."
Mlchael and Davlsalsoapproved
a resolution that promised to cut a
proposed 1 percent county sales tax
to 0.5 percent after one year. The

Michael said ·the county can
expectanothercrlsls next year lfthe
tax fails.
Thesupplementalappropriatlons
were madeposslblebythesale o!the
former ·county ho~ property
Tuesday to the Jackson City School

proposal Is on the Nov. 5ballot.

D~':!~; 14 workers, laid off since

r
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I
' Stolen truck hits
Ruby Clare Young

Pleasant: one sister, Bernadine
Eads, Point Pleasant; one brother,
Walter
Crooks, Mlddlepoli, Ohio
POMEROY - Mrs. Ruby Clare
Young, 62. 7375 Cle\'eland Ave .. and tllree grandchildren.
Funeral services wlll be 2 p.m.
Wooster, f01111er ty of Meigs County.
Monday
at tile Main Street Baptist
died Friday at the Wooster Com·
Chu n~: h with the Rev. James
mu nily Hospital.
She was bom in Meigs Cou nty on Stinesprlng officiating. Burial will
.June 17. 1923. a daughter of the late · be at tbeSuncrest Cemetery.
Calling hours are Sunday, 24 p.m.
Raymond and Inez Mercer Ran·
and
7-9 p.m. at the Crow-Hussell
dolph. She had resided In the
Funeral
Home.
Wooster-Burbank area for the past
The body will be taken to the
.JO years. She was a member of the
church
one hour prior to sel'\1ces.
Faith United Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husband. Otho
Young. whori1 she married on July
Mina DeMeter
1942; four daughters, Mrs.
i\elson (Gathie Lee) Repp, Seville; ·
BRIDGEPORT - Mina Roush
Mrs. Gat}' (Louellat Grunader, DeMeter, 78, Bridgeport, Ohio died
CJ't'ston; Mrs. Inez Grunader, Oct. Gin Heartland· Lansing.
Dalt on. and Mrs. Richard Wise,
Born March, 16, lro? in New
Burbank.; a son. Everett of Shreve;
Haven, she was tile daughter of tie
rwo grandchildren; two brothers, late Homer and Ella Fishe'r Roush.
Clarence Randolph, Pomeroy, and
She was preceded in death by a
Edgar Randolph, North Canton.
sister, Mildred RUey, Clifton.
Besides her parents, she was
She was a netlred employee of the
preceded in death by a sister, Hazel.
Cook-Wait Laboratories Inc.,
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wheeling.
Monday at the Murray Funeral
Sul'\1vlng are her husband, Jo.
Home in Creston with Rev. Roy seph D€Meter; a nephew, Ted Riley
KellSI!y officiating. Friends may Jr., Mlddlepoti, Ohio and two
call at tile funeral home from 2 to4 nieces, Mrs. Vernon 1Patty) Roush,
and 7to 9p.m. Surxlay. Burial will be Mason and Mrs. William !Shirley 1
at Wooster.
Lee, D€xter, Ohio.
Funeral services were held Oct .16
at
the Holly Memorial Gardens,
Kathleen B. Strait
Pleasant Grove.
GALLIPOLIS - Kathleen B.
Strait, 58. Rt. 2, Galllpoils, died
Sa turday at Holzer Medical Center.
She was retired fro m Gaillpolls
Developmental Center. She was
bom Jan 28,1927, in Gallia County to
FA RM CITY 1'-IC
lh&lt;' late Andrew D. Bays and Della
POME ROY , OH
614 ·992 ·2181
Barry Bays. She was preceded In
dra.t h by her husband, David E.
Strait, Oct. 6, 1900.
She is survived by one son, Dav id
L. St ralt. Rt. 2, Ga llipoils; tllree
sisters, Clara E. Shaver, Rt. 2.
Gallipolis. Magdalene S. Randolph,
Brentwood, Md., and Margaret M.
Reynolds, Rt . 2. Ga\lipolls; tllree
brothers, Charles W. Bays, Rt. 1,
Crown City. James A. Bays,
GaUipolis. and Homer L. Bays,
Patriot Star Route, Gallipoils . She
was preceded in death by two
brothers.
She was a memher of Good Hope
Baptist Church.
S¢rvlces wUI be Tuesday,! p.m .at
Wllils Funeral Home with the Rev.
Allred Holley officia ting. Burial will
follow at Mina Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Monday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

2".

James Franklin Bush
'

September, will report to work

Monday, and 14 otter people,
wondng wltlxlut pay or with pay
trom private souroes, will begin
gettlng checks.
Only two workers will remain la id

· HURRY!

POMEROY - Kenneth Stanley Brown, Pomeroy, has been
granted a divorce from Tina Marie Brown, Morehead City, N.C., on
groun!ls of gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty In the .Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
In ·a divorce action filed by James E. Chapman, Middleport,
against Sally Jo Chapman, Middleport, the defendant has been
granted the divorce on grounds ct gross neglect of duty, ~ alleged in
her counter-claim.

Man released on $5,000 bond
POMEROY - William Hale, St. Arnant ,La., arrested Thursday In
Meigs County on a four year old warrant for non,payment of child
support, was released Friday after posting a $5,00)' cash bond set In
the Meigs County Court of Judge Patrick O'Btien.

URGENT CARE
CENTER .
....__;.)
HOLZER CLINJ

Water level to drop
REEDSVILLE - The water level of Forked Run Lake will be
dropped approximately slx feet on Nov. lin order to renovate boat ·
docks and beach areas. The water level should be returned to Its
normal pool by ll)e end of December, Park Ranger Randy Wachter
announced.

LOCATED AT OUR MAIN CLINIC
ON RT. 35 IN GALLIPOLIS
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 5:00P.M. TO 9:00P.M.
WEEKENDS AND HOLIDAYS 1:00 P. M. to 9:00P.M.
0 APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
448·5287

Veterans Memorial Hospital

.
Admitted: Mickey Sprouse, Middleport; Velma

POMEROY Quillen, Racine; Mlllle Price, Middleport; .Margaret Goett ,
Pomeroy; Floyd Reynolds, Mlddleport; Ruth Campbell, POmeroy.
Discharged: Walter Harris, Lawtlln Templeton, Michael Hewitt ,
Kat!ly Hetzer.

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EMS answers 11 calLs
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POMEROY - Eleven calls were answered by local units on
Friday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reporlll.
At 12.50 a.m., the Rutland Untt took Lisa Jarvis from Salem Center
to Veterans Memorial Hospttal; Pomeroy a t 1: 16 a.m. went to East
Main St., for Anna Huston, not transported; Tuppers Plains at 7: 16
a.m. took Dana Hoffman from TUppers Plains to Camden-Clark
Hosplt.alln Parkersburg; Syraclse at 8:15 a.m. took Pamela Theiss
from College Road to Pleasant :Valley Hospital; Middleport at 9:26

CINCINNATI (UPI) -A Clncln·
allegedly supplying !be Defense
Department with equipment lha t
caused a fire In a subma~ and
devices thatthreatenedtoknockout
a Navy ship's radar.
Spare Dynamics Corp. and Its
owner, Madan L.Ghat, were named
Thursday In an J2.count Indictment
that alleges the rompany would
submit properly manufactured
. Items to the government for
Inspection and approval, then ship

:t

MARLIN CAMPBELL

ON

•HOTPOINT and GENERAL ELECTRIC
APPLIANCES
•HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS
•RANGES
•FREEZERS
•REFRIGERTORS
•WASHERS &amp;DRYERS
•WATER PUMPS
•KEROSENE HEATERS
•CHAIN SHARPENING

540 Eat Main
614-991 -2181

HURRY!

Pomeroy

HU RR Y!

" We can't wail any longer."

SOUTHEASTERN
BU.SINESS COLLEGE

Can't wait to get you started in one of our many job skill
·
· training progrms such as:
Business Administration, Accounting,
Executive ·secretarial. Micro -Computer and M orel

•ohio Instructional G;ant Deadline Has Been Exended
Until NOVEM.R 29, 1985• ·
Early Registration Essential

Winter Quarter Begins January 6, 1986'
HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
AICS Arcr ed itation

GAIJ.,IPOLJS - A Gall1a County woman was cited by city pollee
Friday night following a two-vehicle accident on Eastern Avenue.
Officers said a pick-up driven by Jeffery R. Barcus, 23, of Rt. 2,
Bidwell, was eastbound on Eastern wlen he apparently made a right
tum Into the Kentucky Fried Chicken parking lot. Acar operated by
Stephanie R. Hemphill, 26, of Eureka Star Route, allegedly could not
stop In time and struck Barcus' vehicle In the right tront.
No Injuries were reported In the 11: 2.'ip.m. accident, which officers
said caused light damage to Barcus' vehicle. Hemphil.l was charged
with failure to stop In an as sured clear distance.
Officers are Investigating an apparent hlt-sklp on Vinton Ave.
A car owned by Brian W. Martin a Rt. 3, Bidwell, was parked at 24
Vinton Ave., when an unknown yellow vehicle a lleged!~ struck the
left rear of Martin's car and faDed to stop. Martin 's vehicle sustained
moderate damage In the 8: 42 p.m. Incident.

GAU.IPOLJS - A Washington Court House woman is listed In
guarded condition at Holzer Medical Center following an accident
early Friday mmping on U.S. 35 In which the car sbe was riding
struck a deer.
Bertha L. Green, 63, is being observed for possible · iilternal
Inju ries, hospital officials said.
The Gallla-Melgs post of the State Highway Patrol said she was a
passenger in a car driven by Linda M. Jones, Jl, of Washington Court
House, which was eastbound on 35, about one and two-tent hs miles
west of Ohio 7, when the animal ran In front of her car. Jones and
another passenger In her vehicle, 18-yer-old Wendy L'Gcorge, also of
Washington Coul'1 House were not Injured in the 6:20a.m. Incident,
which troopers said caused heavy damage to Jones' car.
A Meigs County man was cited by the patrol following a
two-vehicle accident Friday at the Intersect ion of Ohio 124 and
Rutland Township 174.
Troopers said a car dr iven by Mary J. Hawk, 21, of Salem School
Road, Langsville, was westbound on 124. and apparent ly slowed to
make a right turn, when a pick-up driven by Roger L. .Jeffers. ll, of
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, also westlxmnd, allegedly cou ld not stop in time and
struck Hawk's car from behin!l.
No Injuries were reported In the accident. wh ich troopers said
caused moderate damage to Hawk's vehicle and light damage to
Jeffers'. Jeffers was charged with failure to stop in an assured clear
distance.

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. DWI citation issued

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Our big sale starts with
annual percentage rates (APR)
on installment loans that are as
gcxxl, if not better, than
any body's.
But that's not good enough.
So we've knocked 10%off
our APR.
But wait,there's more.

A5.1-ume a 12%* APR. Hr!re's Jww our
Money Sale would UXJI'k.
Annual Pl'll't•nt:IJ!t.: f~:ll t ·

12, 0
\ linu• !l l"., .,f[ -1 2
.\ 1'1&lt;•
10.8
Fmal

AI'~

10.3%

o,\1%

-

OBSTETRICS I CVNECOLOCV
AND INFERTILITY
• Epidural Deliveries
• r .ubal Repairs

GALLIPOLIS - Donald G. Robinette, 39, of 17 Vinton St., was
cUed by city pollee Friday for DWI and weaving.

Rio Gra'!'de leaf pickup scheduled

:o .FFICE HOI,JRS
10:00 A.M; • 5100 P.M.

RIO GRANDE - Leaf plckop In Rio Grande will be:J'uesday and
Friday.
'
·· '

675~.700

Located: Suite 114 Medical Office Building
at Pleasant Valley Hospital ·
Point Plmant, West Virainia
·

Village trick-or-treat scheduled
RIO GRANDE - Trick or Treat In Rio Grande will he from 6 to 7
p.m. Oct. 30.
'The Greek CouncU at Rio Grande College will be sponsoring a
haunted house from 7:30 to 9:30p.m. on Oct. 25-27 at the municipal
bulldlng. A 50-cent donation will be requested.
Another haunted house has been scheduled at the municipal
buUdlng from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. on Oct. 30. There wUI be costume
judging and admission will bE' free.
The Rio Grande Marshal's office Y!UI be operating a candy-check
from 6: 30 to 9:30 p.m. Oct. 30 In the municipal bu ilding.

Custom Window Treatments

SAVE 15°/o-25°/o
•Custom Drapery
•Padded Cornices
•Swags
•Custom Blinds
Sale ends

•Sheers
•Vertical Blinds
•One Inch Blinds
•Verosol Shades
Oct. 31

Finished In beige·metallic with tan and brown cloth Interior, front wheel drive, automatic transmissionr
power steering and brakes, air conditioniug, am-fm
radio w-clock, tilt wheel, cruise control, luggage rack
and just 28,500 miles.

Professional Installation - Free of Charge

FliRNITURE GALLERIES
446 -0332

Comer of Second &amp; Grape, Gallipolis

..

POOl lit 01 SPA IN\'OICED .

~7.

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CIAL

'100 IOWI HOLDS YOUI PIICHASI
AY TWSI LOW DISCOUNT PIICIS

I

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WALL TO WALL

SWIMMING
POOL KITS &amp; SPAS
FlU WllliiiZING liT Willi AllY IN-GIOIND

•'

16132 - $2350"
tldll _ $ 211$0"
20••0 - 12175"

Complttt Kill I~ Stock
lrllo Other Size•

~·.~·~~·~
:::;..~..~'::.~~""'""'"""""""'"'"'""'""""'"Now
$45000
"'Open
304·
42.·4711

HOUDA Y POOLS, INC.

2973 Pletl••lnt

W. Va.

00

Monday E...
'fll 7 P.M.

French Quarter

LE

ARPET

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

~

.HOWWHISAVE.

5

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT.
GENERAL ALLERGIST

LIVING
ROOM
.
.
DIN~ING

ROOM

SAVE AN EITRIO.S%.
We11 take another 0.5%off
your APR if your loan payments
are made through an automatic
deduction from a Central Trust

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Reg. S79900
Value

HALL

-:

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•,
-•.•••·.
,

...' .

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...
(Super Value Satisfaction Guaranteed)

Call Today! 446•436 7
''You Can't Wait Any Longer"!
Financial' Aid Still Available!

W.oman cited follawing wreck

Woman 'guarded' af ter accident

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPIT,AL

SAVE I0%0FF API.

MGM FARM CITY

different, faulty Items.
The Indictment also said tie
company would often remove !be
approved goverM!ent Inspection
!eat from properly made Items and
place them on faulty Items.
Also named In tie lncllctement
which alleges conspiracy to defraud
the United States, making false
statements and submitting false
claln\s to the United States were
Rikesh Ghal, 33, and Shetla Ghal
Revis , both employees of Space
Dynamics.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

We Service What We Sell
CALL US

a.m. took Margaret Goett from Plum St., to Veterans Memorial;
Syracuse at .9: 37 took Eloise Adams from Mulberry Ave., to
·veterans Memorial; Middleport at 10: 30 a.rn. took Mary Gilkey
from the StonewoodApartments to Veterans Memorial; Middleport
at 10:50 a.m. took Mary McCarty from 102 Sycamore St. , to Holzer
Medical Center; Chester at 2: 01 p.rn. extinguished a combine !Ire on
the Keebaugh Ro2~; Orange Township was called to assist but the
call was cancelled; Pomeroy at 11: 31 p.m. took VIrgie Rawlings
from 320 Condor St., to Veterans Memorial.
·

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- A-7

Finn under·indictment

•

nat! finn Is under Indictment, for

CALL
MARLIN CAMPBELL
AT
MGM FARM CITY
AT 614-992-2181
FOR FAST
PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE

POINT PLEASANT- Roma C.
Rothgeb. 78. 2001 Jefferson Blvd.,
Point Pleasant , died Friday a t 8:55
a.m. a t Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Bpm Sept . 27, 1907 In Sand town,
Mason County, she was tile daugh·
ter of the late Walter W. and Ada
Paroon Crooks.
She was preceded in deat h by her
husband . D.W. Rothgeb, who died
on D€c. 7.1971.
·sbe was a member of the Main
Street Baptist Church , Fidellas
Sunday School Class and member of
the Point Pleasant Womans Club .
She formerly owned and opera ted
the Quick Clean Laundermat with
her late husband and the Rich
Va llfv Dairy.
SuN iving are two daught ers,
Su&lt;.anne Piercy, Orlando, Fla. and
Rebecca Dee Bateman, Point

Divorces granted

If your condition is
causing you concern, you
better not wait ...

NEED
SERVICE?

Roma C. ROthgeb

Marriage licenses issued

.

off - a employee In the audllor's
office and a secretary. Two other
positions that have been left vacant
will remain untllled.

I'

Funeralinservices
will beofat11
a.m.
Monday
the Church
Christ.
Henderson, with Minister Eugene
Zopp officiating. Burial will follow In
Concord Cemetery, Henderson.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home from 7·9 p.m.
Sunday . The body will be taken to
the church one hour prior to the
service.

.------- Local briefs·.- - - - -·
POMEROY - Marriage .Ucenses have been Issued In Metgs
County Probate Court to John Orner Mullins, 27, Ravenswood, and
Amy Marie flsber, 23, Racine; and Gregory Mark Tyree, 23,
Middleport, and Judy Lee Freeman, 16, Pomeroy.

veb.-icle•, man killed~------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
II

HENDERSON -James Frank·
'
B sh 48
LESAGE, W.Va. (UPI ) - One
m u · · Redmond Ridge, man was killed and two otters
Henderson, was killed in a automo- . Injured wpen a stolen pickup truck,
bileaccldentFriday nlghtonRoute2 driven by a 14-year-old male,
In Ca bell County. ·
colllded head-on with another vehi·
Born August 29, 1937, a t Ambrosia , hewas thesonofMelv!n'Bush of cle Friday night on W.Va. 2,
authorit ies said.
Gallipolis Ferry and the lat e
The victim was Identified as
Domthy D€11 Neal Bush.
James Bush, 48, of Henderson,
He was a member of the Mason County, authorities said.
Henderson Church of Christ, was a
The juvenile was Usted In serious
pipefltter and a member of Pipeflt· condition ttxlay at St. Mary 's
ters Local 521 or Huntington. He Hospltal,anurslng supervlsorsald.
served in the U.S. Navy from 1955 to
Homer ward, 56, of Bidwell, Ohio,
1957.
thedrlveroftheother vehicle,wasln
Surviving in addition to his father stable condition today at Cabell
are his wife, Wanda Yester Bush;
Huntington Hospital.
four sons, Jamie and Sha ne D€11,
State policesaldthe juvenllewas
both o!Redmond Ridge, Henderson, driving north In a pickup truck
Doug E. of Barto, Pa., and Jeff of reported stolen from Blacktop
Henderson; two sisters. Mrs. Patty ln!lustrles In Huntington, about five
Smith, McMonaca, Pa., and Mrs. miles from the scene of the 7 p.m. ·
DottieBeacon.Galilpolls,Ohlo; one accident.
brother·. Bruce, Gallipolis Ferry;
The victim was a passenger In
and two grandchildren.
Ward'&amp; car, pollcesald.

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

MULLINS BROTHERS BAND
OOOBER 23 THRU 26 ·

Thursday Night is Ladies Night
LADIES DIINKS 1/2 PIICE

PIOPII OBSS IIQUIIID
.UPPER ~YEI RD. IN IANAUGA

Reg. #75 -02-0472 8

· lndudes Corilp(ete Wall To Wall Installation Nth·Thick Sponge Pad And Your Choice Of
llalilywaight 1st f)lality Cut &amp; Loop • IV 0( Antron Ill ""on In Over 20 Different
Celor ConDnMions.
IN STOCK

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.RPET LA D
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4

446 1641

161 3RD AV£. ON TH£ CORNER
Same Locllion For Over 12 Years.

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�October 20, 1985

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October 20, 1986

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COLORS AND SHAPES
Five-year-old Andrea Neutzllng •
of Pomeroy learns about colors •
and shapes by playing Color ~
Bingo. Joing In the gamw wllh •
Amy and Head Start worker .,
Patricia Macintyre are parents :
Brenda and Mike Neutzllng of •
Peamck Avenue. Amy Is the
youngest of the Neutzllng's three
children and takes part In the
Head Start home-based prog-ram, In which a center worker
visits weekly lor I )\ hour.

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Head Start marks anniversary of serving the Gallia-Meigs area

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table and learn lolllletheutensllsand general manners
at a meal. They also have two snacksduringthelrday
at the center. After lunch, they Une• up lor
teeth brushing and dental hyiJene.

Start have been tracked by Marl in
Deutsch of New York University
an d rrxvn l!y published In USA
Today, Ms. Murray said. Deutsch
followed 1.200 children from the
progr am from tile mid·1900's
through 19M. The complete study Is
due out In 19136. and sheds light on the
success of the program among
low·!ncome families.
He found the 57 perrent of the
ch ildren get high school diplomas,
compared with .'li perrent outside;
43 perrent of I he males got co iiPge
degrees compared to 24 (l'!rcenl of
the male non-preschoolers. College
dcgr(('s wereobi atned by '5I (l'!rcent
of the women as opposed to 31
(&gt;'! rrent.
When it comes to jobs, Deutsch
notes 5.1 ·pl'rrent of .the men head
start grads hold fu U-t!mp jobs,
compared to 29 outside of the
progra m. With women graduates,
48 percent hold full-lime jobs,
compared to 17 percent of thoS&lt;•
outside.
'
Duetsch concluded that In th~ long
run , HPad Start gave children a
greater l!ngul•t!c ability ; enhanced
se lf·lmage; gave locus on the fu ture
and parental help with their
eduation at an early age.
The children at the Gall!a Head
Start program srem curious, pass·
lng a new face In lhE' bu ilding and
waving a hand, stopping to say
" hello," and offering to share a
toot hb!ll sh.
They havega !ned sell-conf!denCf',
an d wan I to share and Interact with
other adults. Many start out shy or
q~lc r , but that soon disappears and
they become anxious to learn.
To note the anniversary of Head
Stan, oJl('n house Is planned
throughout the W(('k ri Oct. 28, and
the public Is encouraged to visit the
fac!lil)l and SC&lt;' it firsthand.

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LUNCH TIME, FAMILY STYLE - One of the
tealning ~perlences at Head Start Is mealtbne. A
noontime meal Is senoed to the children, planned by a
nult111onlst lor the group. The children !lit around the

By LEE ANN WELCH
tile home-based program, and a
Times-Sentinel Stall
center staff mem ber vis its weekly.
GALLIPOLIS - A program In addition, the home-based child is
which had its beglnnlng 20 year sago brought to the center one afternoon
Is stUI going strong, and has w~kly for In teract!on and socia Jiza.
established Itself In theGallla·Melgs
lion, Ms. MuJTay sa id.
community . .
"We can servp more children by
Head Start was founded 20 years · using thE' center and home- based
ago by the U.S. Department of programs together." she added.
Human Services. and has existed In The home·based program arc
theGallla·Meigs area forthepastJO, ' one-to-one, wllh a par·en·r a major
according to di rector Chris part of the leachlngschedu le. Ar~as
Zimmer. He, along with Gallla
Included In thJs are Cheshlr£'.
County coordinator Lillie Murray,
Mercerville, Vinton. Rio GrandP
were with theprogram asirhegan In
and Gage.
the area.
Once the day begins at the renter.
Ms. Murray said the program In children lea rn shapes and colors.
Gallla County has grown to over !ll sharing, self-confidence and expres·
children at the center and 52 sion, an d Interaction with others .
home-based participants, while They are also encouraged In
Meigs County has 102, Zimmer sa id. hygiene and bru sh thPir teeth after
They are parr of a program which lunch. Pl ay Is both Indoors and
has served 9 million children outdoors, and closely SU(l'!rvised.
nationwide between the ages of 3
There ar e four groups of ch ildren
and 5 during the past 20 years, he at the Gall!a Center, 20 per room,
•
added.
and they act as a "lillie family."
The program Is lor tile low and They play together, share cloak·
below poverty·level Income tam!· room space and 1'111 family style. At
lies, Ms. Murray said, and provides tl1e same time, if t here Is a need for
more than just a lea rning ex(l'!- lndlvduallearnlng, It Is done.
rlence. "The children receive medl·
Operating on a $.'i00,000 annual
cal and dental care they may not get grant, Zimmer said the Head Starr
any other way," she noted.
project Is a pan of Wood land
Each child has medical, dental, CentPrs. Zimmer is in the processof
mental health, speech and hearing writing the nex t operating yPar's
and nutritional services, she said. As grant lor submission.
children enter Head Start, they are
"Children all share certain
screened for any handicapping · needs," Ms. Murray said, and it Is
conditions, med ical and dental the tJ&gt;IIef ofHead Start tha 1children
pmblems, and are Immunized, Ms. or low Income families can benefit
MuiTay noted.
from the comprehensivE' develop·
There are two types of programs mental program.
In Head Start , the cemer -based and
lmmed!atP!y, tire child gelS
home-visit situations. The center, medical, dent al and mental health
located In the old skating rink on ca re hemaynot haveotherwise; thr
Sta te Street, Is used by chlldren program stimulates creativity and
close In r o thec! ty.w heret he~r&amp;m be · curiosity and promot es socializa eas ily accessible.
tion, M s. Murray sa id.
Those who Jive farther our are In
The long·term benefits of Head

c

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LEARNING - The Head Start program In Gallia and Meigs counties
teach 3 w ~year-&lt;~lds a variety of things. At left, the !iludents begin
learning about travel, getting on the proper bus to go home, Above,
toothbrushes and animal CUPflare lined up lnthechUdren'scloak space;
which helps teach sharing .

'.

�-The 5

Tha Sunday Times-Sentinel . Page-B-3

Pleasant, W. Va.

October 20, 1985·

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

.Community calendar I ar~a happenings

~:

=:===.=~=============~==:':=if====:==:=:=:::=~~~~===~==========
~SUNDAY
GAlLIPOLIS - Good News dlnm!r at12:30 p.m., service all: 30 Gardner. Special singing nightly. study at Walnut Ridge Church, it an Club meets 7:30p.m. Tuesday :;:
GALLIPOLIS- Squire Parsons
cit the
[~jazarene, Sunday, 10 a.m.
~~ be at the First Church

---

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

SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1985

Limit

20

------

Steaks/Roast~~~ ••••• $1 09

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USDA CHOICE

Round Steak.~~~ ••••• $199

0A

USDA CHOICE

Ch uc k Roas.t ••.••••. $·12 9

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GALLIPOLIS- Big Bend Clv-

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CRISPY SERVE

tofo. •

1
.
1
· 1

Bacon ••••••..•••• ~~~ ......

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~~
POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS

SUPERIOR

Lunch Meats .~~~ ••••. $119

CALIFORNIA

Celery ...•.....~~~!..

...

2f$1

•

B~OUGHTON

BROUGfUON'S

24oz$1
09
Cottage 'Cheese
CTN.

•••

$2
79
$1
09
RC Cola ••••••••. ~!~~-.c:~
Ice Cream ••••••••••••
·
s
9#
·st r'u deI .............·.•.
Crackers •••••••••••••
DAIRY LANE

12 PACK

1

12 Gallon

ZESTA SALTINE

PILLSBURY TOASTER

'r

11•12

oz

•

••••
•••••••
• • • 'COUJ?m
•
• •••••

•

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GOlD MEDAL

•
•

•·····couPON·······•
• • • •

:

FLOUR
SLB.

BAG.
•

89(

Umit 1 Ptr Cuslome•
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Olftr Expirts Sat., Oct. 26, 1985

:A~·
•

· ····· ········~········

·'

•

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• • • •

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SHURFINE

:

SUGAR ·

:•

$139

limit I Per Cuslomtr
Go:..t Only At Powell's Saptrmarlctl
Offor Elpiro1 Sat., Oct. 26, 1985

., f I I I I I I I I

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.-...

SAVE EVERY DAY
TILL CHRISTMAS
•
DIAMONDS •••••• 2S% OFF •
WATCHES •••••••••• 20% OFF

DIAMOND AND
BIRTHSTONEAll 14K GOLD

•

'

$12995
WAS '169.96
SAVE '40.00
MATCHING NECIIIACE
IN STOCK.

14K GOLD •••••••• 30% OFF
STONE RINGS ••• 20% OFF. :

c;IG

m
;IG

VI'

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0

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REG

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••

S595.00

WHY PAY SAVE

MOREl S200

2MM TO 12MM IN STOCK

DIAMOND CUTS • ROSE GOLD

1---------t--------+- f:·, --~-----1
•

~~

7 DIAMOND
CLUSTERS

$6995
.

SAVE 130.00

YELLOW OR WHITE
ALL CLUSTERS 25'1. OFF

·'id¢ / ·; DIARMINOGND :

~~ ..c-- .'~

,.~ ,l JACKET

$26995

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· · · couPON:
THANK YOU CHERRY

21

oz.

99(

limit 3 Ptr Customtr
AI Powtll's Saptrmarlctl
&amp;pilrtl Sat. 011. 26, 1915 . '

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Good ·Only AI Powell's Saptrmarlctt
Offer E•plrtl Sat., Oct. ~6. 198)

.-

)&gt;

-zCl&lt;

0
2

•The total value of the double coupon may not exceed

$1 .00.
•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 51¢ will be
redeemed at face value
only ..
•Only one manufacturer's
coupon per item .
•The total value of the dou ble manufact_u rer's coupon
- cann(\t exceed the ~urchase
price of the item . Money
will not be refunded .
•This offer does not apply to
Powell's Super Valu Cou pons, free coupons . or any •
competitor's coupons .

•T.:ere is a limit of 20 coupons you may ·redeam .

I
CHRISTIANS WHO ARE SERIOUS
ABOUT WINNING SOULS TO
JESUS CHRIST!
Here California Evangelist Sondra Berry Young tell
of winning a satanist priest to Christ. See slides of
her witnessing to gay dancers in California and
witch doctors in Africa. She will be speaking

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25th at 7:00 P.M.
on the Third Floor Oddfellows Hall at the '
corn-er of Court and Mciin, Pomeroy, OH.
Call 614-446-7385 or 367-0337.

VI

•Offer is only good for pro duct on hand . No Rain checks .
:

•

VI

•This offer excludes cigarettes, or any other items
prohibited by law .

TOMATO SOUP

. PIE FILLING

Join
our 1986
Christmas Club~· .......
now and we'll
•
gtve
you a
present

1I-

0
.
0
2°/o Milk ••••••• ::l::N••• $149

BOX

~

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~

~

POUND

~

'2

·--

·

_____

A SMALL DEPOSIT' HOLDS YOUR
SELECTION NOW TILL CHRISTMAS

WAS 199.95

0A

DAN THOMAS ;...
&amp; SON
SHOE STORE
"'-::
DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS
.__.;.;..
..........
::;

CHRISTMAS IN OCTOBER
LAYAWAY SALE

I

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;
•
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r;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;~~~~

I

GRADE A

at Dales Smorgasbonl, Gaillpolis.

TUElDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke
GALLIPOLIS_ Riverside Study meets Tuesday, 8 p.m. with Mary rp;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;~ ;
Club meets Tuesday, home o!Rutll' Niday.
I
••
Mullineaux.
POMEROY - Drew Webster
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro- Post39,AmerieanLegtonAuxillary
MONDAY
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m'. at meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
GAlLIPOLIS - St. Peter's . Oscar's.
.
HARRISONVU.LE -SenlorCitiEpiscopal Churchwo)'llen meet
l'!londay,noon, ParishHatt.Dariene
CHESHIRE- Cheshire Chapter zens of Harrisonville meet 7:30p.m.
"""'
"Across from the Park"
Tuesday, town hall.
Wedge guest spea.ker.
OES meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

.

)&gt;

Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

RACINE -The Suruise Singers,
7:30p.m. Sunday at Racine United
Methoc~Jst Church. Revival starts
Monday through Oct. 26, Rev.
James Corbitt evangelist.

.

Coupons
FRESH PORK BUTT

Services tbrought Wednesday.

~~::~~~:~:~~:~t~h~t!m..

Oct. 20, 21, 22

•

p.m.

LITTLE KYGER - Revival . GAILIPOLIS-BruceStonewUI
Sundaythrough0ct.24,UttleKyger be at Grace United Methodist
Congregational Church. Special Omrch, Sunday, 7:30p.m.
singing nightly, Rev. John Lewis,
evangelist.
.HARTI'Ot;U&gt;, W.Va. - Grubb
Family Singers at Fairview Baptist
' GALLIPOLIS- Joe Mingus at Omrch,Sunday, 7:30p.m. · • .. ,
Bailey Chapel Church, Sunday, 7
.,
__::.:_,__ .. "·
p.in.
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Fred Williams to speak at Faith Baptist
GAlLIPOLIS- GallipolisBusl• CROWN CITY - Revival In Church, Sunday, services 10:40 and
ness and Professional Women meet
progress at King's Chapel Church, 6 p.m. ·
with Rev. Donnie and Truman
Johnson. Services 7:30p.m.
ADDISON - Addison Freewlll
'
Baptist Church t0 have Rev. Leland
:,EUREKA - Eureka Church of Haley, Sunday, 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Cal·
GOO revival continues through
tllollcWomensCiubmeetsMonday:
S,qnday, evangelist Virgtl PhUUps. ·
LECJ'A - Rev. Earl Hinkle In mass at 6 p.m., covered dish dinner
Services 7 p.m., special singing.
morning services at Walnut Ridge 6:30p.m. in the church halt.
Church
Sunday.
'
GALLIPOLIS - Child Safety
::GALLIPOLIS - Hlstorlcat SoSeat
program by Ohio Department
clety open house Sunday, board
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Wilbur
·
of
Highway
Safety, Monday, 7 to 9
riieeting1 p.m., meeting2: 30p.m.at Slack at Uberty Chapel, Sunday, 7
p.m.,
Miss
Paula's Day Care
n~w facllity, 414 Second Ave.,
p.m.
Caiter.
.
•
.:..~
upstairs. Speaker James Sand$ on
--~
Gallipolis history.
GAlLIPOLIS - Edna Ch~pel
VINTON
North Gatlla Band
homecomlngSunday,1p.m.,fealurBoosters
meet
Monday,
7p.m.attlle
ing the Taylor FamUy.
THURMAN - Thurman United
school.
Methodist Church revival Sunday
through Oct. 23, 7:30p.m. nightly.
RODNEY - Rodney Church of
Evangelist Tom Tumblin. Special God ~omecoming Sunday, dinner,
singing, nursery provided.
noon. afternoon service 1 p.m. with
singing by Saved. Sunday school10
:f:ALLIPOLIS - Revival Sunday a.m.
at Caanan Mlssonary Baptist
Church, evangelist Curtis Sheets.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Baptist Church wUI have Bruce
Stone singing in morning services,
Sunday, 10:45 a.m.

.•
•

You c'on &amp;ive Santa a
bi&amp; helpin&amp; hand nert
Christmas by joinin&amp;
the Ohio Valley Bank
Christmas Club Now.

"

You'll be surprised at how fist the small amount you deposit each w~ek adds up. Then next
Christmas that means a nicer surprise for everyone ~~ your sh~pptng list.
,
We'll even throw in a little surprise of our own: JOtn the Chnstms Club and we II make
the last payment for you. Now that's the spirit! Last payment free!
•

)·
'

Every Christmas Club Account is fully insured. By the way,.we
just mailed our 1985 Christmas Club Checks. The total:

~

$625.699.

•·
:..

Now that's a lot of nice presents for.a lot of nice pe~ple. Ma~e
sure you're on the list for Christmas 1986. Just stop tn any Ohio
Valley Bank Office.

D~osit Each

4g":e~~~
s 1.00
I 2.00

s 5.00

$10.00
$20.00

Receive Next
Year For
Christmas

s 50.00
s 100.00
$ 250.00
$ 500.00

$1000.00

Four Great Locations to Serve You!
•

Expect. more from

@hio Valley Bank

Christians, pleas, cut out this wanted poster and
post it in a local sto~e, post office, laundromat or
church bulletin board.

•

~

·••-:.

'•

�•

Page--:B-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 20, 1985

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

October 20, t985

.

Physicians' update
slated in Columbus
COLUMBUS- "Cancer Update
Nuttition - Detection. Treatment" is the topic or the .
American Cancer Society, Ohio
Division's 15th Annual Cancer
Symposium for Physicians. It will
be held Sunday, Nov. 17, at the
Fawcett Center ror Tomorrow
Columbus.
'
The program, focusing on breast
cancer will bring the latest Informa tion on prevention, reconstruction ,
conservation and psychosocial
issues .
American Cancer Society (ACSI
Ohio Division President-elect Dr.
Carl W. Groppe Jr., of Cll&gt;veland
will open the program. Guest
faculty, Dr. Curtis J. Met1lin, of
Roswell Park Memorial Institute
'Ri:

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

Youngs to celebrate anniversary
RACINE - John C. and Leora
Youngd Route 3, Box 83, Racine,
wUI observe their 50th wedding
anniversary with an open receptiOn
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the · Bethany
United M.ethOdlst Chun:h on Sunday, Oct. T/.
The couple were marrted on Oct.
25, 19:fi by the Rev. John Beddow at
Point Pleasant, W. Va. They have
three chUdren, Ronald Marvin
Young, Middleport; Rlc ~ard Robert Young, Middleport , and Mrs.

GARS HOMECOMING
QUEEN AND COURT- Rocl!y
Miller, center, daughter of RIchard and VIcky Miller, Gallipolis, was crowned GAllS homecoming queen by Blue Devn
irl-captaln Bruco O'Rourke (58)
during Friday's pre-game ceremonles on Memorial J!1eld.
Miss Miller wos sponsored by
the Junior Classical League.
Second Prmcess wos Courtney
Morrison, shown with trtcaptaln Jolut Slralt (21). Miss
Morrison Is the daughter of Mr.
and Jame8 Morrison, GaiDpo~
and sponsored by the SpanWt
Club. First Princess was Lorrl
North, daughter~ Mr. and Mrs.
Larry North, sponsored by the
student councU. She Is pictured
witll trl-captaln Todd Slone (10).
GAllS beat Jackson 37-11. A
Saturday night dance climaxed.
weekend homecoming activities. - 'Jbnes.Sentlnel plJolo by
Kellh Wilson.

will then address "Diet, Nutrition
and Cancer." Presentations oo
"Diagnosis," "Reconstruction,"
"Breast Conservation" and "Che·
rnotherapy" will take place the
remainder of the day.
Chairman of the planning committee and moderator ror; the
program Is Dr. Ernest H. Meese ol
Cincinnati. The program is being
offered for five credit hours by the
AMA, AAFP and AOA.
The symposium is open tO aU
primary care physicians and healthrelated professionals. For add!·
tiona! information, contact the ACS,
Professional Education Depart ment at (2161 771-6700 or your loca l
ACS unit office.

Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164 is
sponsoring the Scottish Rite Players
Club presentation of "A Rose Upon
The Alter" Tuesday, 7 p.m .. at the

Wigals note
•
anmversary

GALLIPOLIS- Roy and Lenora In Gallipolis. They are the parents
Mooney ol Rt. 1, Gallipolis cele· of six children, Opal Smith, Ernesbrated their 65th wedding anniver- tine Todd, Inez Miller, all c1
sary and also his 88th birthday Oct. Columbus; Emma (Curly) Bar·
6, with a iuncheon party given by blan of Dayton and Maxine Camp·
their chUdren. Alsp to help cele- . bell and Melvin Mooney of Gallipobrate were their grandchildren and lis . The couple has 22
grandchildren , 42 great great-grandchildrep.
The couple married on Oct. 2, !9:oJl grandchildren, and six great-greatgrandchUdren.

Holleys will note anniversary
. GALUPOLIS - The 25th wed ding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
James (Jeep) Holley will be
:observed on Sunday, Oct. Tl, with
.an open reception at the home of
Judy and Jerry DUion on Bob
McCormick Road.
The reception Is being hosted by
their daughter. Michele.
Mr. and Mrs. Holley were
married on Oct. 29. 1960 at the
Church of Christ In Christian Union
by thf.\ Rev. Everett Delaney.
Holley is the son of the late Audrey
G. Holley of GaiUpolls and the late

•

.'

Lentz

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Akln HoLter

Melissa Mae Thomas becomes
bride of Mark A. Holter June 29
POMEROY - Melissa Mae
Thomas and Mark Alan Holter were
united In marriage at the Long
Bottom United Methodist Church on
June 29 at 3:30p.m.
The Rev. Carl E. Hicks officiated
~t the double-ring ceremony before
!)le altar decorated with sevenbranched candelabra and the unity
candle arrangemeni which was
used In the ceremony.
The brkle is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Thomas, Long
Bottom, and the groom Is the son of
r,tr. and Mrs. Harold Holter, Long
Bottom.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the brkle wore a gown
accented with pearls and rhlnes-'
tones along with delicate schlfDI
embroidery. ChantUly-tace ruffles
cascaded from the waist to the hem
and flowed Into a semi-cathedral
length train. The brile's headpiece
of lace held a fingertip veil edged In
lace matching that on the gown. She
carried a cascading bouquet of
white lUies. pink roses, baby's
breath and Ivy.
Cindy Thomas, sister of the bride,
was maid of honor. Her dress was
noor length In pink and fashioned
with an tff·the·shoulder bodice. She
carried a bouquet of Ulacs. pink
roses and greenery. Bridesmaids
wPre Becky Eichinger. Pomeroy,
and Angle Glenn, Racine. Stacy
Holter. niece of the groom, Bremen,
was a junor bridesmaids. The

bridesmaids wore lilac gowns with
delicate spaghetti straps. They
ca rrled bouquets of lilacs. white
mums. and greenery.
Stephanie Holter, niece of the
groom, Bremen, was flower-girl.
Her gown was similar to the
bridesmaids with puffed sleeves.
She carried a small white basket ci
lilac petals.
Steve Holter, Bremen, served as
best man lor his brother. Ushers
were Rob Smith and Scott Van
Meter, TupPers Plains, and Tommy
Groeneveld. cousin of the groom.
Columoos. The groom wore a white
tuxedo and a pink rose boutonniere.
Best man and ushers wore grey
tuxedoes with white carnation
boutonnieres. Travis Thomas, Long
Bottom. nephew of the bride, was
the rtng bearer and wore a three
piece suit with a white carnation
boutonniere.
·Guests were reglstered by Judy
Holter. sister of the groom. The
bride's mother wore blue and the
groom's mother wore beige, both
street-length, with corsages of white
mums.
A recepton following the ceremony was held at the Long Bottom
Community Building. The bridal
table featured a three-tiered wedding cake made by the bride' s
mother.
They reside at Bremen where the
groom is employed by White's 011
Well Co.

Large Selection

Capt. Cltrhtlne Myers

Pvt. First Class Stuart M. Lentz,
son of Malcolm W. andKathrynM.
Lentz of Rural Route3, Bidwell, has
completed baste training at Fort
S111, Okla.
During the training, students
received Instruction In drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map eradlng, tactics, rnllltary courtesy,
military justice, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
His wife, Dreama,ts the daughter
of August Ratt of Rural Route 1,
Thurman.
He Is a 1984 graduate of Wilmington College, Ohio.

Myers
Capt. Christine L. Myers has
completed Officer School, an eight.
week Air Force Training Course to
held officers become more effective
leaders.
She Is the daughter ri Virginia D.
Wooten, 1032 First Ave., GallipoUs
and Henry L. Myers, Rt. 1, Patriot.
Myers is assigned to Grissom
AFB, Indiana. She !sa !975graduate
of Gallla Academy Hlgh School and
received a B.S. from Rio Grande
College In 1979.

'

·r------------------------1

lt\llher .. ."0

~m iHt

ior

...

~ondoy through Friday

9:00a.m. to_S:OO p.m .
(304) 675·7300
lOCATED: Suite 113
.

.
/'

.)

~ed1col OfficP.

Building o 1 f'ieosont Vo lley Hosp• tol
Point PleoJo o nt v:l'!~ t V.rg1nio

~

~-

-- --

20°/o to 25°/o
OFF

We will not be undenold
on diamonds.

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Sacond', Gallipolia

OF GALLIPOLIS

l

IS NOW YOUR NEW
Also in children's sizes.

The
Shoe Cafe

LEATHER

s~eonrl,

Galllpolio

Water. Bed
Headquarters
ALL STYLES
ALL ACCESSORIES
OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

GALLIA OPTICAL CENTER
LEATHER

\
I

William B. K ughn

•Taupe
•Black

We can ardor from
1in 4-11 in 11inu,
narrows, mtdins
and wid11.

300 Second, G·allipolis

tion but under the NewTestament Age. It was not established by John
the Baptist. for he proachcd it being "a t hand " (Mt. 3:1.2). Christ, the
~rca t.builc! c r, promised to build His church IMt. 16:18). He did not
build it during His public ministry, for He. too. preached it "is at hand "
(Mk . I : 15). Christ spoke unto the twelve saying, "And as ye go. preach.
sayi11g. Tire ki11gdom of heave11 is at hand" (Mt. 10:7). The Lord mstructcd the seventy to preach. "Thehingdom ofGod iuome nigh untoyou ..
(Lk . IO:Q). Christ tuughl His disciples lo pray for it, "Thy kingdom
cr""' .. (Mt. b: IO). The kingdom, the church , came not immediately
alter the dea th of Christ nor at His ascension (Acts 1:b). After He gave
up the ghm t. Joseph of Arimathea desired the body of Christ, and he
"wuifl•dji" tit&lt;• ki11Rclom of God " (M k. I5: 43).
E•tabllsh&lt;d In Jerusalem
l ~i: li i.ti1 ~1nd Micah proph~s ie d "rhm
lmttSt' {church)" would be estab li ~hcd in

/

---A vote "Yes" for the Gallipolis City

th e mountai, of the Lord 's
Jrnua/em from whence ''Ih e

-- ..

luw. &lt;111d rill' word of' llu• Lord" wou ld go forth (lsa . 2: 1,2; Mic. 4: I ,2).
Jtrusalt&gt;m mark s the place where the church was establis hed and where
the "wfJrd ofthr Lord " wa-. first proclaimed, "A11d that repentance and
remissiou ~f sins .sho t~ld b.- preached in his name among all nations. be·
R;,,;"R ur JnusRI•m " (Lk . 24:47). The law did go forth fromJerusalem
·'Rcpt•nl ,mt/ he bapti:ed n't'ry otre of yrw in th e 1wme of Jesus Chris;
jiJr the rt•mission qj'lil/5 ·' (Acts 2:38).

School District on November Sth
would ease over-crowded condi·
tions in every school in the district.
The .6th grades would be removed
from each of the elementaries in
order to form a newly organized
middle school, eliminating conditions such as those reflected in the
picture.

said umo them . .Verily I sU,\' untv you that there bt• some of them that
ltt·re. \\'hu·lr shall 11 0 1 , wstf! of death , till tht!~' have seetl th e
ki•gdom rd' Gud comr wit/1 power" (Mk. 9: 1). The'kingdom was to
c11mc wi th poH"er, and the apustle!t were to tarry in Jt&gt;ruJalem until they
he endued with powtr after _the Holy Ghost would come upon them
IAct&lt; I :k). and the Holy Sptrtl cam&lt; on the day of Peotecust (Act&lt;
2: 1-4). Pent.eco.,-r marks the beginning, "And as I ht'J.!"" w s_peuk, the
Holy Ghost {I'll 0111hem Wi m1 us at the beginni11g" (Act s II : 15).
Aftcl' the apostle~ were given the Spirit and the kingdom came with
powe r !~" 1he day of Pentecost, t~ e clturch is spoken of as being in exis1Cill'C , ... th(' Lord udded to the rii~I"CII ... And great .fear came upon all
lftt' clturt:h ... rhf'n' wns u ~:reut JWrsecut ion agai"Jl 1he church whiclt was
at Jeru.stlit'"l... Who lliah cleli vPreclusfrom the power uf darkness. and
lwth trmuldlt•d ll.f ;,tu tht&gt; kingdom of his dear Su, .. (Acts 2:47: S: 1t;

k: I: Col. I: i.ll.

The Gallipolis City School District
Bond Issue has been endorsed by the
following groups and organizo·
tions:
Medical StaH at Holzer Medical Center

.

The tru e ,·hurt.'" was established at the riglu timl' and the proper
pla&lt;·e aecnrcling to God:&lt;etrrnal purpt1$e (Eph. 3: 10.11 ).

For FrH Bible Cornspondellt't Count, Write ...

. Chapel

'

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:.

WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
~~~·J:o:W:: · AN_
D BLIND SHOP
....
.•.,...
-·

Hill Church o.f Chri.~t

Bulavllle Road • P. 0 . llo• 31)8
Gallipolis, Ohio .J.i631
Sund11,1 \lur"lllji!:

ltlhf•• Slucl.v !9: :111
WOf.~ hlp II: :wt

Sundn.v E~·••" lllll :
WurMhlp t : 1111

IAT,N

IC ,tdln
" ''' '!i.'itiM f' l' rmn

llu Klblt•"
lllloll,\' ' " '·11.:11

1:.» 11.m,
' IWt;. I\' fJ

t

S1111~1y, :J:JO 11

2 5°/o off

Suggested Retail Price

Made ltHtr In A•rlca by .Iuriine ton

Hllth• N nd,\·
i : ltlt p.l!l,

•.

'

•
•

Custom Length &amp; Made -to Measure

\\'i'Lhlt..,dlii,V:

.Q 1,,

./

/

JfWHJ

VISIT OUR LARGE
$399
RED TAG AREA ••• Only ~g~~lE
..
.
-

704 GRANDCENTIIALAVL •
VIENNA, W.VA ·

Dr. Robert Terry, Optometrist

548 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. 614-446 -1760
Mon . &amp; Fri. 9-5: Tuus. &amp; Thurs. 9-7:30; Sat. 9-3: Closed Wed.·

Establlsh&lt;d On Penlo&lt;ott
The kinxdom was lo come during the time of the apostles, "A11d he

ON BEAUTIFUL IM·
PERIALPATTERNS
. IN STOCK

,,

EYECARE PLUS EYEWEAR

The Lnrd \ church was not established during the Mosaic disPensa·

The
Shoe Cafe

•

'

When It Wu Not Eotabllahed

·WITH A5-YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY

Cuts for the entire family. Specializing
in: perms, color highlighting, nails,
•
eyebrows.
WaX I

I would like to onnounc~
the opening of my new office in
Point Pleosont , West Virginia
OFFICE HOURS

300

Rock oLAges offers you achoice of 6 different colored granites.
Whatever your requirements may b&lt;, complete satisfaction is assured
with Rock of Ages.
MON., lUES., THUR. &amp; FRI. 9 A.M. TIL 4:30

PEDIATRICS

THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE CHURCH

Save SO%

AMY SISSON &amp; DI~E EBLIN

from 9 a.m. to noon. The clothing
bank is located In the old highschool
at Cheshire.
·

M.D.

A MeJSUR«' From Th£' Bible ...

cl.w into Pvl;'nin~ .

ON PATTERNS SELECTED FROM
OUR MANY BOOKS

ANNOUNCING .2 NEW OPERATORS

CHESHIRE -The Gallla-Meigs
Community Action Agency will hold
Its free clothing day Wednesday

October Diamond
Sale

.1 lligator-prinl

Save Up To 35%

OWNER-DONNA FRANK
MANAGER-CATHY RUCHTI

The oldest existing zoo, opened In
1752,ls The Garden at Schoenbrunn
In Vienna, Austria.

WILLIAM C. CALLIHAN, D,

PH. 446-2327

DECORATE NOW FOR THE HOLIDAYS

992-32U

'
PROSPECI', Ohio - Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Wigal, 71Mi Water St.,
Prospect, Ohio, celebrated their
45th wedding anniversary Oct. 16.
Mr. and Mrs. Wigal were mar- .
ried In the Christian Church
Parsonage, Middleport, by a Rev .
McMUUan.
They are the parents of seven
children- Jack Wigal, Mt. Gilead;
J udy Smith, Taylors, S.C.; Phyllis
Ann Klein, Marton; Bryan, Mar·
ion; Harry Lee, Green Camp, Ohio;
George, Prospect, and Dale, who Is
deceased.
The Wlgals h ave nin e
grandchildren .
Wigal retired after 13 years at
Sugar Run MUI, Pomeroy, and 15
years at Prospect Farmers
Exchange.

Free Clothing Day planned by CAA

prp~c nt~ the t.1ming o(
lhP .,hoc. Elf:'g.mt

NEW PATTERNS NOW ARRIVING

POMEROY

0.0 . (Pete) Holley of Nitro, W.Va.
Hls wife, Judy, Is the daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. F.W. Brewer
of Logan, Ohio.
Holley ts employed at the Goodyear Plant, Apple Grove, W.Va.
and Mrs. Holley is an btstructor In
the Adult Education Department at
Buckeye Hills Career Center. They
attend Grace United Methodist
Church.
Relatives and friends are Invited
to the open reception, 2to 4 p.m. The
couple requests gifts be omitted.

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTSGallipoli,, OH .
352 Third Ave.

WALLPAPER SUPER SALE·

""'~J.tery

masonic temple on Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy . All area master masons
are Invited to attend. Refreshment s
11111 be served following the play.

fohn and Leora Young

Mooney anniversary celebrated

'

Jon (Sheila) Loll, Kennewick,
Wash.. along with eight grandchUdren, and four great-grandchildren .
Mr. and Mrs. Young lived in
Letart Falls for 25 years before
moving to the Racne area. He is
retired from the Union Barge Lin~.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
The children and grandchildren
who are hosting the observance
invite relatives and friends to
attend . The couple requests that
gifts be omitted.

Play being given ·

Roy and Lenora Moontry

'f

The Sunday Times-Sentinei_- Page- B-5

THE LINEN SHOPPE

53 COURT STREET
GAWPOlls;' OHIO
"Across from the Municipal Parking Lat"

1985·86
SCHOOL ' YEAR .

A classroom

located in one-haU of a former principal's office
at Washington Elementary. There are no outside
windows and as you can see "Sitting on the Floor

RQom Only".

Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Blue Devil Boosters
Philomathean Club
Gallipolis Jr. Woman's Cub
Rotary
Chamber of Commerce

.
Patd for by: ~t l tze ns Comm1llce
. . .
Cha trpersons: Or, Charles Holzer and George Bush . Ge neral Rettred
Gallipolis Ctty Schools, Mary Lowse Hennesy, Treasurer, 32 Evans Heights. GallipoliS, Ohio 45631

'

•

�October 20, 1985
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

Susanna Wise becomes bride
of ]ames Jeffrey Alleman

Ford- Shern

MIDDLEPORT- In a ceremony
Jennifer Harrison, Cheshire,
at the Heath United Methodist served
matron of honor for her
Church. Middleport on Aug. 17, sister. Bridesmaids were Renee
Susanna Wise and James Jeffrey Willis, Pomeroy, Karen Goggins,
Alleman exchanged wedding vows. · Middleport, and Rowena Averlon,
· The br,ide is the daughter of Pomeroy. They wore yellow batJs'te
. Roscoe C. Wise and Mary J. Wise, floor length gowns, with puffed
South Third, Avenue, Middleport, sleeves, scooped necklines with
and the groom is the son of JamesJ . ruffles, gathered skirts, with white
Alleman and Judith J . Alleman, ribbon sashes.
..
Parrish Ave., Point Pleasant.
Wreaths of yellow sllk carnations
The Rev . C.S. Zuniga Jr., per- and baby's breath fashioned by the
formed the doubil'-rtng ceremony bride were worn by the attendants
following music by Ralph Werry, who carrted bouquets of pale yellow
organist, and Lois Burt, soloist. carnations and white mums. JesZuniga sa ng "The Lord's Prayer."
s~a Cale, Middleport, was flower
The altar was decorated with two girl and wore an klentlcal gown In
seven-branch candelabra and ar- tea length edged with a ruffle. She
rangements of white gladioli and also wore a wreath In her hair.
pale yellow chrysanthemums. Fern
J. Joseph Beleman, Point Pleaand baby's breath lined the altar sant, was best man and the ushers
railing. Vows were exchanged over were Steve Harrison, Cheshire; Ron
an open family Bible given to the Rorrer, Point Pleasant; and But
couple by the groom's parents.
Brady, Auburn, Ala . Clad Spurlock,
Escorted to the altar by her Point Pleasant, was the ring bearer.
father. the bride wore a formal gown
The mothers of the bride and
of white taffeta fashioned with a groom wore floor-length gowns In
.;fitted bodice, high neckline, puffed green and corsages of yellow sDk
:Sleeves and an A line skirt with a carnations.
' butterfly train . The bodice was
Areception was held in the church
· ~nhanced. by a yoke of English
social room immediately folowing
. beer. The shoulders, bodice, neck- the wedding. The bride's table was
line and skirt were trimmed In centered with a three-tiered cake
&amp;nported Venice lace, and the skirt trimmed with pale yellow carnaand train were edged with a deep tions and white mums and greeney.
ruffle.
and topped with the traditional
The br ide carried a cascade miniature bride and groom. Asllver
l'iouquet of white rosebuds and pale ~ncb oowl andsUvercoffeeservtce
)teliow carnations and greenery.
completed the table decorations.
'The bride made her wreath head- The couple toasted with glasses
piece from which fell a vel! of Illusion which belonged to the late Sen. Tom
trimmed in tatting handmade by a Jones.
cousin. She wore pearls belonging to
Stephanie Alexander presided at
her mother, and capied a wedding the punch oowl, and Paula Horton at
fiandkerchief of the groom's great- the coffee service. Betty Fultz and
grandmother.
Pat Philson cut the cake at the

-

reception served by Eleanor Circle.
The dining room was decorated In
yellow and white. Guests were
reg.lstered by Crystal Bolin.
The couple resides in 408 Bradwell
St., Htnesvme, Ga.
The bride Is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Marshall School of
Nursing. She is a member of the
American Nurses Association and
the Marshall University Alumni
Association, and Is employed at
Liberty Memortal Hospital.

Alleman, a graduate ol Point
Pleasant High School and Marshall
University, Is a member of Kappa
Delta PI Fraternity, Lambda Chi
Alpha Fraternity, and the Marshall
University Alumni Association and
Is employed by Liberty County
Board of Education.
A rehearsal dinner hosted by the
groom's parents was held at the
Down Under Restaurant In
Gallipolis.

dlplomaorGEDandbe18yearsold
prior to class starting date and have
a valid driver's license. This course
Is certified by the State Department
of Education Certificate Number
062075.
To register, send a check or
money order for $ffi to GalllaJackson-VInton JVSD, P.O. Box
order covers all expenses relata! to 157, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674. The ·
the class. Registration can he made purchase of textlxloks w1ll also be
in person or by mall.
required.
For more Information contact! he
For additional Information conAdult Education program at Buck- tact Buckeye Hills CareerCenterat
eye Hills Career Center 245-58!li, (614 ) 245-53.16 extension 252, or
2-10 p.m. Monday througl! Thurs- contact your local EMS Station.

RIO GRANDE - The Gallla Jackson-VintonJVSD AdultEducation Division will he registering for
a, 4()-hour Electrical class until
F,.riday, Nov. 1. Class Is scheduled to
begin Nov . 5, meeting from 6-10
P,m. on Tuesday and Thursday

~enings.
This class will provide hands-on- 1·-:d~ay:::and:8:a:.m~.4;:p.~m:.~on~Frt~da;y:.~~~:;~~~;:~~~~
.

~~:~~io;ndinln~:~~~t~:~inc:~~ r~ICKiANz~~

well as In introduction to Motor
Controls and Solid State Devices.
I.ndlvlduals may obtain training In
one or more ct these areas.
Tuition of $60 by check or money

He Understands Your Cares
Expert Medical Services
At

TODAY

Mr. and Mrr. DaVid L Frecker
'·'

-,

Mtt4_f,................
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selection of a tamlly
l:n,&gt;uld be made now' while all
to partici pate in the choice
1ve It the careful
hough! it deserves . BARRE
will be happy to GUILD
with you in this
ltmpon:ant purchase. \ M

"::::;:;:.7,1

1984 MERCURY
FIDished In dark blue metallic with contrasting velour
Interior, v.e engine, automatic trans., air conditioning,
am·fm stereo, .tilt wheel, cruise contro~ quartz clock,
· trip odometer, full wheel covers and 31,000 miles.

'7,500.00

Meigs County

DECISION

1..':"'_,_ ......,...
~·-~

at BHCC

'

TOMORROW'S

lOitrl Monumet~t COiftPI'IJ
PDI'I'Irrtr~ . Qti!O - ti.nton. UIIIO

"MDIIII Of 1'111 INm'IUTI OF
COIIIIEMOIAnVE AITS"

Carol A. ·Braunlich trades vows
with David L. Frecker Aug. 2
PAII\'ESVILLE - Carol A.
Brauniich, Painesville. and David
L. Frecker, Racine, were married
on Aug. 2 at St. Mary's Church,
PainesvUie.
·
The bride is the daughter ofLe Roy
and Shirley Bruanlich, Kirtland,
Ohio, and the groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Frecker, Painesville.
The 7: 30 wedding was performed
by the Rev. Ralph Zarnick. Music
was prov ided by a 20memberguitar
group.
. The bride wore a floor length gown
with organza overlay and a border
Qf embroidered flowers at the hem.
She wore a derby hat with veil and
carried a bouquet of cascading tiger
lilies, Ivy and baby's breath.
Susan Donofrio of Willowick,
sister of the bride, was matron of
honor. She wore a lavender floor
length gown and had a wreath of
flowers in her hair. She carried a
bouquet of lavender carnations,
rosebuds, and baby's breath.

Jeffrey Frecker, Co lorado
Springs, brother of the groom, was
best man.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at Mountain Jack's
Restaurant to lowing the ceremony.
The couple reside at 29966 Elige
Hill, Racine.
The bride received a bachelor of
arts degree in psychology from
Cleveland State University and Is
employed with the Geauga County
Department of Human Services a a
social worker.
Frecker received a bachelor of
arts in history from the University of
South Florida, and his juris doctor
from Cleveland Marshall College of
Law. He is a member of Tau Epsilon
Rho fraternity, and Is asS&gt;ciated
with the Porter, Little and Sheets
law firm In Pomeroy .
Attending from Meigs County
were Susie Fisher, great grand·
mother of the groom, Mary Porter,
his aunt, John and Mark Porter,
Diana Ktng and Kara King, all
cousins of the jll'OOm.

GIANI11 FIOM QUAIIY
OWNED BY lOCI llF AGES

LOGAN
MONUMENT
VINTON, OHIO

Meigs Local
menu set

W. Main Street

THE OATH OF
HIPPOCRATES"

11

In accordance with the uniform
lunch program of the Meigs Local
School Disttict, the menu for the
week of Oct. 2Jis announced:
Monday - fish, green beans,
bread and butter, peach half, mill(.
Tuesday- macaroni and cheese,
salad, hot roils and butter, applesauce. milk.
Wednesday- no school.
Thursday - chill with crackers,
peanut butter san dwich, honey
cook, fruit , milk.
friday- cooks' choice.

PH. 38a-8803
POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

~

POMEROY- The Meigs Coonty
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the followIng activities scheduled for the
week of Oct 21-25:
Monday - Square Dance, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday - Chorus, 1-2 p.m.;
Exercise Class, 3:30p.m.; Parkersburg Mall Trip, leave Center at 9: 15
a.m.
Wednesday - Bingo, 11 a.m.;
BowUng, 1: lJ p.m .; Bloodmobile
visit from 1 to 5:30p.m.
Thursday- Ceramics, 10 a.m.-2
p.m.; Exercise Class, 3:l:J p.m.
Friday- Quilting, cards, games.
The center Is sponsoring an area
Arts and Crafts Festival Frtday,
Nov. 8, and Saturday, Nov. 9. To
date, 14 area crafts .persons have
Indicated they wl!l be attending tile
sale. Mark the date, this would be a
good chance to do rome Christmas
shopping.
The Senior Nutrttlon Program
menu for the week is:
.. .. Monday- Pork steak, scalloped
potatoes, lima beans, applesauce.
Tuesday - Meatballs, mashed
potatoes, Harvard beets, peaches.
Wednesday - Macaroni and
cheese, broccoli, tomatoes, butterscotch pudding.
Thursday- Fish sandwich, oven
browned potatoes, tossed salad,
cherry cheesecake.
Friday - Beef stew, cornbread,
plneapple and cottage cheese,
cookie.
Choice of milk, coffee or tea

Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
Richard C. and Mary; L Meredith
menus for the week of oct. 21 ~---------------------­
through 25 at the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, are as
follows:
Monday, Oct. 21 - Ceramics
Class, 9:l:J a.m.-noon; Chorus, 1·3
p.m.; Center Blooc Pressure
Check, 1 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 22 - S.T.O.P.!Physlcal Fitness, 10 a.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 23 - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.; American Literature
Class, 1 p.m.; Flu Vaccination at
Center, 9-11:l:J a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
(by appointment only).
QUICK! WE NEED THE ROOM
Thursday, Oct. 21- Bible Study,
- AND YOU GET THE
11 a. m.-noon.
SAVINGS ON QUALTY
Friday, Oct. 25 - Craft MiniBEDDING
BY BEMCO®
Course, 1·3 p.m.; Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Open Activities, 7-10 p.m.
SLEEP SETS. HURRY!
Menus consist of:
FROM
Monday - Hamburgers, cheese
sticks, mixed vegetables, bun,
applesauce.
Tuesday - Roast pork, au gratin'
potatoes, peas, wheat bread, gingerbread with topping.
PC.
Wednesday - Oven fried
chicken, mashed potatoes, green
beans, rolls, plums.
Thursday- Chill (eight oonces).
tossed salad, crackers, cherry pie.
lU.1&lt;.
Friday - Macaroni and cheese,
stewed tomatoes, green llmas,
wheat bread, pineapple.
Choice of beverage servEd with
each meaL

HUGE SAVINGS ON
QUALITY SLEEP SETS.

$89~0
BeDDID989
\\e talk

Bookmobile route set in Meigs
POMEROY - Bookmobile servtce ·ln Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs County Public Ubrary
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, Oct. 21- Carpenter (Laura's
Store), 3:10-3:40 p.m.; Dexter
(Church), 4: J()-4: 40 J1.m.; Danville
(Church), 5:20-5: 50 p.m.; Rutland
(Civic Center I. 6:30-8 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 22 - Portland
(Post Office I. 2: 1().2: 40 p.m.: I.etan Falls (Effie's Restaurant) ,

955 Second Ave.

446-1171 Gallipolis, Ohlt

3:05-3:50 p.m.; Racine (Bank ),
4:~6:()5 p.m.; Syracuse (Pool).
6:20-7: 50 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 23 - Chester
(Fire Station). 2: 15-2: 45 p.m.; Keno
(North side of Keno Bridge), 3-3: lJ
p.m.; Success Road (near 39060),
3:45-4:15 p.m.; Long Boltom (Post
Office ), 4:25-5: 10 p.m.; ReedsvUie
(Reed's Store), 5:ro-6:20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's), 7:208:05p.m.; BaumMdltion, &amp; 25-8; 55
p.m.

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PH. 992 -2688

'l~-~
§

malntffiance at E.!. Dupont, Washington Works, having 1\'orked
there for 25 years. Mrs. Meredith Is a
retired nurseand artlst, having done
murals and paintings for the Colin
Anderson Center In St. Marys,
W.Va. and Weston State Hospital.
She Is well-known for helping and
teaching tile handicapped, mentally
Ill and others In need of her nursing
skills.
Mr. and Mrs. Meredlthhavethree
children, Ron Meredith of Meredith
Manor, Waverly, W.Va.; Martha
Stutler, Pomeroy, and Judi Anderson, St. Augustine, Fla., six
grandchldren, and eight step
grandchildren.

Senior sechedule planned .

•.
.'·.

•

I
I
I
II
I

Tuesday and Thursday from 6:l:J
p.m. to 9: lJ p.m.
There wlll be some Saturday
classes scheduled .
Bob Bailey will be the Instructor.
Students must have a high school

•..

Teresa Irene Fonl
David E. Shem

SpagheUI supper
POMEROY - Public spaghftli
supper by Ladles Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, Thursday, 4 to 7
p.m. at· post home; adults, $3;
chlldren, $175.

Basic EMT class set at Buckeye Hills

E-lectrical class planned

Meredith Is a retired foreman of

The menu at · the Carleton
SchoOl-Meigs Industries for the
week of pet. 21 has been announced: ·
,Mmday - fish-bun, tots, slaw,
fruit, rnllk.
Tuesday - potato roup, pimento
cheese sandwich, celery-carroi
• milk.
sticks, grapes,
Wednesday - spaghetti, saure,
bread, salad, pudding, milk. \
Thursday- chicken, brown rice
gravy, break, cake, milk.
Friday- sloppy joe, baked com,
slaw, fruit, milk.

'

: RIO GRANDE - · The Gallla Jackson-VInton JVSD Adult Educatton Division wlll be offering a Basic
EMT class ! Emergency Medical
T-raining). Classes will he held at
Suckeye Hills Career Center on

POMEROY - Richard C. and
Mary L. Meredith, 377lll Rocksprings 'Road, Pomeroy, formerly of
Route 2, Washington, W.Va., celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 2.
Instead of ha vlng a single
celebration on the day of their
anniversary. lhe c'Ouple was honored with several smaller parties
as their health permitted.
Relatives from Texas, Florida,
Dayton, KentuckY. New York and
Washington, W. Va. were among
their many visitors during
September.

Carleton
menu set

.Mr. and Mrs. }ames
.a .Jeffrey AUeman

Pleasant.W. Va.

Meredith anniversary .observed

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Louis R. Ford Jr. announce the
engagement ·of their daqgl!ter,
.Teresa Irene, to David E . Shern,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel R.
Shern, Greenhills, Ohio.
She Is a graduate of Gallla
.Academy High School and receivEd
a Bachelor ot Music Performance
Degree trom Ohio State University.
Shern earned his Bachelor of
Music Performance Degree, Bas·
soonlst, trom the Indiana University School of Music, Bloomington.
Both are Ull!ler contract to the
Jackson, Miss . Symphony
orchestra.
A Dec. 28 wEdding Is planned at
St. Louis €athoUc Church.
·

as

Ohio~Point

·\·

•

300Jo to Poly/cotton,
SO%wash.,
off

• BaliOWHD C'R\Oiltl
Qtys. limi\ed. Reg. 14.49 and &amp;4.99
II'OW U.l4 AID $U9 PAIIL

45 ", 60".

• All corduroJColtoll8 and blendu, machlne wash,
44-45". Reg. from &amp;4.99 yd.
lOW ROM SUI TD.
• Gia«Ua checks Far crafts. more. Paly•/catlton, j
machine wash, 45" . Reg . 12.49 yd.
IOWSL7UD.

• c:allco Popular mini pMntsln many colore. 100%
cotton, washable, 44-45'. Reg. 13.99 yd.
lOW $1.7tfD.
• lmbrol41ry Don Stock up on your favorite I
colora from our reg. pMce ut.ock.
lOW .U% orr

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E.S Wblt!'$

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FAREWELL, MY LOVELY!
8.Htd MOnt 01Amtt1GU most lllWecl essays
•tWILLIAM RHVS

IIUIOIIAL
Thurt., Ott. 24, 1915, 1:00 P.M.
z.,. J-17.00
z... 2·1S.OO
k• Offiu, Mon.-fri. U-4
.

PHONE : 694· 6807

Tho fo1o&lt;nltll Artl Serlos is "''lPGttod, it

p111. by t11t Oiiio Alii Count I, fftl Midoost
Jlld t11t llo&lt;linc Ya~My 1111*. MJwts.

and

You'D hear 1\

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uaue Ortc. n••·••

Beautiful New 5hodes
of Winter White and Aqua Mint

Acomp~t.e llne of sewtn« machlnee at etarred ( • I
locations. Llmtt.ed qua.ntttteaat all Oilier tiiOrea.

Saleenda
Saturday,
October 26.

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Enjoy all you cure to eat of the~t· nighly •ru·•·ial•
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Wednesay. They're available along with your
choice from over 30 differe nt "'mps, •alarl,,
entrees, vegetables, desserts and lwwrag•· "·

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Page B·B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis,

Beat of the bend

Cooking demo set
by Weight Watchers

Ohio~ Point

.October 20. 1985

Pleasant, W. Va.

New .assignments made for OU physicians ·.

ATHENS - Dr. Christopher with special emphasis on prevenOlson and Dr. Edward Schreck wUI tion, including participation ·In the
begin new assignments with the ·Osteopathic Medicine and Surgecy
Ohio University Osteopathic Medl· in Des Moines ..• He Interned at
cal Center this rronth. Both physl· Lakeside Hospital In Kansas City
By BOB HOEFLICH
The Sweet 'nEatShoplnPomeroy clans formerly 1)'eat~ patients at and completed his residency In 1982
Thnes-8entlnel Staff
. has reopened and again Juanita the VInton County Health Clinic In in a cooperative program through
Ohio University and Doctors Hospl·
.
II you're a weight watcher- and . Little Is at the helm for the . November.
tal In Columbus.
Olson
transfers
to
the
Athens
tt seems that
restaurant. Hours are 7 a.m. to 4
Certified by the American Osteo·
many people are
p.m. Monday through Friday and medical center Oct. 22. He wUJ
carry
on
a
general
family
practice
pathlc
Board of General Practltlon·
you might want to
the shop wUI be closed on btlth
ers,
Olson
has been a fuU -tlme
attend a free
Saturday and Sunday each week.
cooking demon·
stration at 6 p.m.
Replacement blood is needed for
Wednesday at the
that used-by thelate;JakeBush, who
Senior Citizens
was a popular rural mail carrier.
Center In Pomeroy.
You can give in his name when the
RIO GRANDE - The GalltaOn hand to conduct the demon. bloodmobile visits the Meigs Senior Jackson·VInton JVSO Adult Dtv·
, stration wtll be the otflctal Weight Citizens Center from 1 to 5: 30 p.m. lslon will be offering several short
Watchers Chef Harve. Demon- Wednesday. BE' sure to advise the hourly classes in Clerical Training.
strated recipes wtll be avatlable at clerical help that you are gtvtng the These J6.hour classes wtll be In the
the meeting which is open to all replacement blood so that adequate areas of Typing - Beginning and
Interested persons.
records can be kept
Advanced, Introduction to Account·
lng and Ctvll Service Testing
I'm sure many of you wltl want to
The Meigs County Humane Preparation.
remember your old friend. Golda Societr and the Meigs County
Classes wilt meet Tuesday and
Mourning Roush.
Department of Health are again Thursday evenings from 6 p.m.-9
. She fell last week and Is confined teaming to sponsor a rabies cttnlc.
p.m. starting Oct. al.
to room400at the St. Joseph Hosp it al
This clinic wUI be at the Salem
Tuttton Is $45 by check or rroney
In Parkersburg, W. Va. Golda has Center FtreStationSaturday from 1 order with payment made In person
her 86th birthday coming up in to 4 p.m. Dr. Carol Osborne will be or by mail no later than Monday,
December..fiowever, she'd proba· the attending veteranarlan. Rabies Oct 28.
bly like to her from you now.
shots wtll be $3 and other lnnocula ·
iions wtll be available for pet
· Rick Boring of Reedsville and owners.
Robert White, Coolville, builder of
:stringed musical instruments. are
The Pomeroy Chamber of Com:one of seven pairs of master and merce will be 'hosting Its third
traditiOnal artists throughout Ohio annual Halloween party for the
who received" were given grants community at 7p.m. on Oct. 29atthe
through the Ohio Arts Cou ncil.
river parking lot.
Through the gmnt , Robert will be
There will be pumpkin carving
teaching Rick the technique of and costume judging.
crea t lng mandolins.
The chamber ts asking for a
Incidentally, remember that Von- helping hand. Merchants are asked ·
nie Sanford, coordinator of the Ohio to donal~ wrapped candy. Candy or
Gallipolis Education Assatiation
Arts Council program "Artists In money donations wUI be accepted. If
Education" wUI be· at the Meigs you want to help contact Tom Reed
·High Schyool for a worshop at 7:30 at !1.!2·2222 orSherrt Hart at 992-500&gt;.
on Oct 30.
If you'd like, you can just drop your
Robert Fox, the Ohio Arts Council donatljon to !be chamber office. Oh
coordinator for "Writers in Resi - - andgtftcertlftcates wUI be needed
dence" will also be present to help to award as prizes.
school personnel. parents and
others interested on just how these
Someone told me that the differ·
pgorams can be made available to ence between stumbling blocks and
stepping stones is the way you use
Meigs County schooL
them. Do keep smiling.

Cleric class
set at BHCC

member of !be Department of
Family Medicine at the College d.
Osteopathic Medicine since 1978.
Schreck began working out of the
NelsonvU!e family practice clinic
managed by the colJege In Doctors
Hospital Oct 17. He practices
general family medicine for all age
groups.
•
Schreck Is a graduate o( N!tre
Dame University and the Chicago
College of Osteopathic Medicine.

He completed an Internship at
Doctors Hospital at Columbus and
opened a private practice In
Lancaster In 1978. He joined the
clinic faculty at the osteopathic
college In 1981 and spent a year
practicing at the Nelsonville clinic
before being assigned to VInton
County.
~
Shreck Is certllled by the Amerl·
can College of Ge neral
practitioners.

1983 BUICK PARK AVENUE

$ports

~imes· ientintt Section

October 20, 1985

Byars' return successful; OSU dumps Purdue
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Tailback Keith Byars,
·making hts first appearance of the season after
recovering from a broken foot bone, rushed for 106
yards and scored twice within the last five minutes ·to
lift lOth-ranked Ohto State to a 41·27 Big Ten victory
over Purdue Saturday.
The Buckeye win overshadowed an outstanding
passing perfOrm'IJice by Purdue's Jim Everett, who
completed 35 of 55 for 497 yards and rallled the
Boilermakers from a 17.0 deficit.
Byars' first touchdown capped a 55-yard, 9-play
drive by the Buckeyes alter Purdue had finally
caught up at 27-27 on a 2-yard TO run bY.. James
Medlock.

Three plays alter the kickoff, Ohto State's Byron
Lee picked off an Everett pass and returned It to the
Purdue 48. It was the first Interception against
Everett In 153 passes.
The Buckeyes quickly moved In for the clinching
score, wtth Byars bursting up the middle from nine
yards out for the TO.
Purdue's other two touchdowns came on passes
from Everett to Rodney Carter of16 and4 yards whlle
Jonathan Briggs kicked a pair of field goals.
Ohio State's Jim Karsatos passed for three TOs and
finished wtth 14 completions In 26 attempts for 174
yards.
· Ohio State scored the game's first 17 points, with the

YES For
Gallipolis Schools ·
November S

Whirlpool Makes it Easier

vaccine, the department Is charging
just the amount It pays for the
vaccine, 56.85 per dose.
The department warns that the
vaccine should not be given to
anyone with an allergy to mercucy
(thimerosal ). Thereisalsoawaltlng
period of 30 days between the
admin istration of this vaccine and
any other such as OPT, polio, MMR
or yearly flu vaccine. '
The department will be administering the vaccine on Tuesday, Oct.
22, Nov. 14 and Nov. 26 from 9 to 11
a.m. and from 1 to 3 p.m. There are
only 65dosesavatlableand thesewUI
be administered on a first come,
first serve bas Is.

job Bank offers jobs for seniors
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Job Bank program with
headquarters at the Gallla Cou nty
Senior Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, has been serving employers
and applicants, 50 years of age or
older, who are triterested In fuU or

part time employment
Now Is the Ume to get your house
in order for winter .. Call 446-'IOOl
wtth your Job Orders for painting,
cleaning and general repair work.
The service Is without charge to
both employers and

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Mother·n-Law's Bouquet. It's a beautiful arrngement,
brimming with all her favorite flowers, available In a
color to match her favorite room and a price to fit your
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QUAR'IERBACK KEEPER - Anny's quarter.
back ToryCrawfonl keeps and runsasNotreDarne 's
Steve Lawrence (21&gt;) closes In afor the tackle In the

tint half of Saturday's game between the two schools.
Notre Dame defeated Anny, 24-10. UPI.

First all-Missouri World Series in 41 years underway
they were counting on the hard-throwing Jackson to
which was right before the Royals drafted me. I
the seven·game playoff victory over the Blue Jays.
help make up for that big disadvantage.
played left field and center field when oot pitching and
Frank White replaced McRae In the No. 4 spot 1n
Jackson, who went 14·12 during the regular season,
batted fifth or sixth.
Saturday
night's game. White batted cleanup for a
turned In a superb etght·hlt shutout against the
"The callber of pitching at that level is sure a lot
few
games
earUer In the year. ·
Toronto Blue Jays tn the fifth game of the American
different Some guys In J unior College just throw the
"
I
had
a
funny
leellng when I was first used there
League playoffs and had not pitched since that start
ball down the middle. I don 't want to strike out If
th
is
year,"
said
White.
"You know you think of guys
last Sunday.
runners are on first and second, I'm going to try and
like IJ!m l Rice, (Jack) Clark, (Eddte) Murray,
The 24-year·old left·hander did not miss a start this
bunt them over."
(Don
) Baylor hitting In those spots. I'm not that kind
season and was tied for second on the club in starts · The loss of McRae, a designated hitter throughout
of
a
hitter
but aU I cando Is do what !'m asked and do 11
with 32.
the American League season, was e~pected to hurt
to
the
best
or my abili ty."
"My shu tout against the Blue Jays definitely helped · ttie Royals offense considerably. McRae drove In 70
White hit a career high 22 home runs this season and
my confidence," said Jackson, "but that was hlstocy . runs during the season and knocked In three durtn·g
knocked In 69 runs.
You can't really go on the past You havetogoout and
throw your pitches. "
In addition to pitching In his first World Series,,
Jackson was also going to experience batting In the
ATHENS, Ohio iUPI)
major leagues for the first time.
Eastern
Michigan's Don VeHe had not batted since his college days four years
sting,
a
wide
receiver who also
ago.
.
serves as second·strtng kicker,
"I look forward to hitting," satd Jackson. "I'm oot
caught a touchdown pass and
sure what klnd of hitter I am. The last time I batted
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Base- batting champion Dave Parker of
kicked two field goals, including
was In the fall of '81 at Trinidad StateJuntor College,
baH
Commissioner Peter Ueberroth the Cinci nnati Reds, New York Met
a school record 52-yarder Saturpromised he wUI punish players Kelt h Hernandez and New York
day to lead the Hurons to a 27·21
Implicated
tn the recl'nt Pittsburgh Yankee Dale Berra, son of former
victory over winless Ohto Unt·
cocaine
trials
who bought or sold Yankee great Yogi BE'rra.
verslty In a Mtd·Amertcan Con·
drugs
on
ballpark
grounds, It was
terence game.
However, only retired outfielder
reported
Saturday.
The win snapped a 27·ga me
John Milner, aa former Pirate, Met
The players have an agreement and Montreal Expo, testified that he
road losing streak fort he Hurons
with
the oivners that protects them bought drugs on the premises of a
that dates back to the 19!ll
against
punishment for drug use baltpark. MUner said he hough!
season. Eastern Is 3-3overall, 2·2
"unless
they
either bought or sold cocaine from Strong In a restrocm ·
In the MAC. OU Is 0-6, IH.
the factltty.
drugs
on
tHe
premises of the stall of the Pirates' home clubhouSI'
VesUng replaced kicker Marlo
Domed Stadium Corporation offtcals have vtstted
Ueberroth
told U.S. at Three Rivers Sraqt~m.
ballpark,"
Ferretti, who Injured himself In
most domed stadiums In the United States. Th~· want
News&amp; World Report.
Should Uebcrroth ·be able to
the second quarter. Wsllng
a factltty to seat about 70,00! for football, to meet
Ueberroth
sa
td
"there
are
abou
t
determine If any of the players
converted from 42 yards In the
Modell's requests, and about 45,00) to 50,00l for
20 players who have been lmplt·
lmpU~ated In the basebaU drug
second quarter and added one
baseball, fotlowlng Bavasl's preference for a smaller
cated
by
testimony,
and
wewtll
talk
from
52
yards,
a
pers:&gt;nal
and
trials
did buy or sell drugs on
stadium.
to
each
one
of
those.
Then
we
wlll
school
record,
In
the
third.
He
ballpark
grounds, Usberroth said
"We're looking to build a state of the art factltty for
know
a
J
ot
more."
also
caught
a
nine-yard
scoring
"some
form"
of punishment would
Cleveland and, If possible, we'd like to have a
During
the
September
drug
be levied "during I m off-season."
pass from Robert Gordon in the
retractable roof," Gonslor said.
trafficking trials In Pittsburgh of
third quarter.
"The problem Is not better." sa id
Cuya hoga County voters In May 1984 defeated a
Curtis
Strong
and
Robert
"Rav"
Uebcrroth
, who succl"edd'd Bowie
30-vear bond Issue that would have funded a $150
McCue,
one
retired
and
six
current
Kuhn
as
comlnlssiotl('r
In Octotn
mUIIon, 70,®seat domed stadium. The estimated
batlplayers
testified
about
their
1984
just
two
months
after his
Mar!~~
all,
21,
VMI
16
average cost to taxpayers was about $14 per year.
drug
habits,
Including
Lonnie
Smith
triumphant
coordination
of the
W.VIL 13, BosiAin College 6
"The fact is that since the Ia~ was defeated and
of
the
Kansas
City
Royals,
who
is
tn
Summer Olympic Games in Los
East Mlch. 27, Ohio U. ~I
since the Ctvtc Committee title Domed Stadium
this year's World Series; two-time Angeles. "Cocaine use is not
OSU 41, Purdue 27
Corp.'s predecessor) was formed. we have been
decreasing tn society. So I'm
Notre Dame 24, Anny 10
working along the lines of two- thirds d the financing
reluctant to believe that all of a
Minnesota
22,
Indiana
7
from the private sector through the sale of loges and
Redskins
in
10-lO
tie
sudden
It has just gone away In
Pitt
38,
Rutgers
10
bonds," Gonstor said.
baseball.
I have private opinions
MlamiiO, West. Mich. 10
"It's a vecy good success story. I think you have an
OXFORD.
Ohio
(UP!)
-Gary
about the scope of the problem, but
Nebraska 28, Misaoun20
unprecedented level of cooperation between the state,
Gussman's 27·yard field goal tn !he It 's wasteful for me to start
Tennessee 16, Alabama 14
county and city governments with the private
third period provided Mtamt with a speculating.
•Georgia 13, Vanderbilt 13
sector."
10-10
tle of Western Michigan In a
"I ttstened careluUy to Nrw York
Nor1hwe~~tem 17, Wl!iconsln 14
Adomed stadium In the Central Market would give
Mld·American
Conference
gam~
Mets
player Keith Hernandez say In
Brown 22, ComeDO
the southern part of downtown a new look to
plagued
by
numerous
tu
movers
on
a
court
testimony that 40 percent of
N. CaroUna 21, N.C. State 14
comple!nent the recent developments to ,the north.
rainy
day.
players
I"Cre using coca lne a few .
Maryland 26, Wake Forest 3
"A dome In ctvlc charms would be tM best. thing
Gussman
missed
a
45·yard
field
yea rs ago ... Whilr'Y Herzog of St.
Clemson 21, Duke 9
that has happened to Cleveland in decades. The
goal
atlcmpl
In the fourth ;Jerlod
Louls
said 10, 11, 12 players on his
VIrginia
Tech
28,
VIrginia
10
Browns, of course, would · participate In the
that
could
have
given
the
Redsktns
team
were
using cocaine a couple
undertaking," Modell said.
llllnots ao, Mlch. state n
the
win.
This
tte
left
Miami
at
3-2-1
years
ago.
I
don't think any of these
Penn State 24, Syracuse 20
"The present facUlty Is adequate for the Browns,
overall
and
3-1·1
In
the
MAC
whUe
people
trted
to . overstate the ·
· Rloo 28, Texas Tech 27
but the dome would be the catalyst we need to take
Western
ts
0-5-1
overall
and
0-3·1
in
problem
...
they
tried to understate-·
Akron 38, Mol'l!head St. 9
Cleveland Into the 21st century.
the MAC .
it."
;

KANSAS CITY (UP!) -John Tudor of the St. Louts
Cardinals and Danny Jackson of the Kansas City
Royals, a pair of wPll-rested left -handers, were the
opposing pitchers Saturday night In the opening game
of the first all-Missouri World Series In 41 yeilrs.
A 50 percent chance of rain with temperatures In
the 60s was forecast for the 8:35p.m. EDT start.
Tudor was the best left-bander In baseball this year,
_ posting a 21·8record, Including 10 shutouts, and a 1.93
ERA. He was 1-1 against the Los Angeles Dodgers In
the National League playoffs.
Tudor's last outing came tn the fourth game of the
playoffs when he beat the Dodgers. 12·2.
"Sure the extra couple days wUI make me a Itttle
stronger but the only thing Is that I haven' ! been able
to ptck up a bait In the last few days because of the
weather," said Tudor. "I won't use not throwing on
the sideline as an excuse thoilgh. l'll either pitch good
or bad and that .wUI be tt.';
Because there ts no designated hitter being used ijl-.r ~
this World Series, the Royals were forced to play
without their regular cleanup batter, Hal McRae and

·OU beaten

Ueberroth will pun~sh
alleged drug abusers

Domed stadium plan gains
major support in Cleveland

DIGITAL
TRAVEL ALARM
RETAIL
VALUE

SOUTII BEND, Ind. tUPI) score wtth a 37-yard pass from
Allen Pinkett scored a touchdown Crawford to split end BE'nny White.
and ran for 133 yards to set a Notre
Notre Dame began the scoring
Dame career rushing record Satur· early In the first quarter, capttaJtz.
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UP!) day as the·lrlshdowned Army, 24-10. lng on a rare Army fumble In the
Valdez Baylor rushed for 141 yards
The Irish rose to 2·3 while Army game's first series.
and a touchdown and Chtp Lob·
fell to 5-1. The triumph broke Notre
Free safety Steve Lawrence miller kicked three field goals
Dame's two-game losing streak.
picked up the loose ball on the Saturday to lead Minnesota past
Pinkett broke Vagas Ferguson's 16-yard line and full back Pernell Indiana, 22-7, In a Btg Ten football
all·tlrne school rushing record In the Taylor moved the ball in from the game.
second quarter on a 17·yard run off 1·yard·llne six plays later.
The victory, Minnesota's fifth In
right tackle. His game total boosted
The Irish's second score ·came on six games, tiffed the Gophers to l-0
the new mark to3,556yardswlthstx an ll·play drive that began on their
and kept them Ued atop the
games remaining In the season.
oiYn 14. With five minutes to go tn the
conference standings. Indiana fell to
Notre Dame's defense stopJlell a quarter, Beuerleln htt flanker Tim 4·2 overall, 1·2ln the conference. .
Cadet wishbone offense that scored Brown In the end zone on a 19·yard
The Gophers rolled up 346 yards,
45 points against Boston College a pass.
all on the grou nd. All eight
week ago.
Minnesota pass attempts !ailed.
Army had to settle for a field goal
Minnesota never trailed after
five minutes Into the third quarter
taking a 13.0 halftime lead on two
when an apparrent touchdown
Lohrnlller field goals and an S.yard
pltchout from quarterback Tocy
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. tUPI)- TO run by Baylor. Lohmtller kicked
Crawford . to halfback Wtlllam Quarterback Carl Fodor passed for a 3J.yard field goal and added a
Lampley was called back on a 215 yards and scored two touch- 45·yard field goal on the final play d.
penalty. That cut the Notre Dame downs on 1-yard runs and Marshall the !Irs! half.
lead to 14-10.
fought off VMI's late btd to take a
A l·yard touchdown run by Gary
The Irish came back on !be next 21-16 Southern Conference triumph Couch Increased the Gopher lead to
possession. Pinkett scored on a over the Keydet s Saturday.
19.0 before the Hoosiers scored onan
1·yard dive, capping a 14-play drive.
Marshall, 6-1·1 overall and 2-l-11n 8·yard pass from Steve Bradley to
Notre Dame put the final three the conference, overcame record· Ernie Jones early In tbe fourth
points on the board when kicker sen lng pertonnances by VM I senior quarter.
Johp Carney hit a 21-yard field goal quarterback AI Comer and flanker
Lohmlller completed the scoring
to end an ll·play drive. Notre James Wright. Comer completed 18 ·vJth a 28-yard field goal with 1:12 to
Dame's btd for a touchdown failed of 34 passes for 325 yards and hts play.
when tight end Tom Rehder total offense of 365 yards set a school
The Minnesota defense limited
dropped a Steve BE'uerleln pass In record. His 246 carrer completions Indiana to 299 yards In spontng the
the end zone.
also became a VMI record.
Hoosiers' Homecoming before
Army's only ftrst·half score.came
Wright's 154 yards gained on pass 28,351 fans .
early In thesecondquarteron4.yard receptions also set a VMI record. He
Indiana's Bobby Howard rushed
run by halfback senior William snared eight , Including a 4.1-yard for J()j yards, but the Hoosier
Lampley, which cut the Notre Dame touchdown pass wtth 1:57 left to passing game suffered tn a steady
halftime lead to14-7. Army set up the bring the Keydet s within 2J.l6.
ratn.

Marshall tops UMI

Come in and enter the

POMEROY- The Meigs County
Health Department has purchased
a very limited amount of HIB
Jhemophilns,. influenza, type Bl
vaccine which it will start adminls·
tcrlng 1'uesday.
The vaccine protects two-year·
aids through fi ve-year-olds against
the most common cause of bacterial
mlnlngltls. This is the only type of
meningitis that it does protect
against. The ·vaccine should be
given only to children who attend
nursery schools (pre-school ). day
care or head start programs
because studies show these children
are most at risk.
Due to the high school of the

of two field goals and the Buckeyes looked In position
to blow the game open when the Boilermakers were
foreed to punt from deep tn their own territory
midway through the period.
A defensive holding penalty on the punt, however,
gave Purdue new life and Everett drove the
Boilermakers 95 yards to score, hitting Carter with a
16-yard TO pass.
Purdue got the ball back on ltsalwtthl: 55 left got to
the Ohio State five, from where Briggs mildelt 17-10
with his first field goal.
Purdue, now 3-3 overall and 1·21n the Big Ten, had
just 43 new yards rushing to 2.19 for Ohto State.

Gophers win again

Vote

HIE vaccine available

help of a couple fumbles and the early pinpoint
passing of Kllfsa!os, who completed seven d. his first
nine attempts.
The Buckeyes, now 5·1 overall and 2·1 In the Big
Ten, turned a fumble by Purdue's Jon Hayes Into
their first touchdown, going 39 yards In nine plays
with fullback George Cooper scoring on a 4·yard
shovel pass from Karsatos.
Ohio State made tt 14.0 on ·us next possession,
zipping 64 yards In only 7 plays, the payoff a 16-yard
TO pass.from Karsatos to Mike Lanese who made a
leaping catch over Purdue's Mike Weaver In the end
zone.
It became 17·0 when Rich Spangler kicked the first

Pinkett sets rushing record;
Fighting Irish defeats Army

Local lady executive's car. Sand-grey firemist.
Premier driving at an affordable cost. 86 Park
DON'T MISS THIS ONE
Avenue trade.

HElP US
FOCUS ON
EXCELLENT

-

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M~king your world ·a

ELBERFELDS

little easier
fll•rl•ii•
-····
1••oo '" tot•
'""
CM . . r,o Clllll

By RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The prospect of a domed
stadium In Cleveland, left In limbo last year when
voters rejected a tax that would have funded
construction of the faci lity, now is moving forward
wtth support from both the priva te and public sectors.
The non·profll Domed Stadium Corp., under the
chairmanship of businessman Allen C. Holmes,
wasted little time in going to work after being formed
last June. Officials say ground breaking could take
place next fall. Construction would take about 2'n
yeaFs.
Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell believes that,
this time, domed stadium plans are for real.
"If It requires some publtc referendum or some
kind of tax, there's always that doubt," Modell said.
"But under Allen Holmes' direction, this project has
the best chance It has ever had.
"!hasten 'to add that Cleveland has had a record
over the years of announcing projects that were never
started, but I think th is project i.s real. I'm more
bullish on this project than any project In recent
Peter Bavasl, In hts first year as the president and
operating office r of the Cleveland Indians,
Modej! 's confidence.
"It does not appear that It Is going to be bogged
by politics," BavasJ satd. "It has attracted tbe
1011tlcltl, private, publtc and civic srctors."
Project Coordinator Dave Gonstor says the Central
rlirrK"'· just south of Cleveland's landmarkTennlnal
bu Udlng, wm be the site. It offers easy access to
1terstates 71, 77 and 90 and tswtthtn walking distance
the mass transit train stop at Terminal Tower.
w
un..ctatis now are considering possible designs for

College scores

'

I

-'
•

�Page- C-2 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

:~T Wildcats rally

..

By SCO'lT WOIJi'E
Initial stronghold· when Johnson
'J'Imes.Sentmels&amp;aff
booted a 25 yard field g(,ai'ihrough
:: MERCERVILLE -Trailing 7-3 the uprights with just three seconds
:with under a minute left to go In the left In the period.
:iame, tile Hannan Trace Wildcats
The Wlldcats, who kepJtheir title
-tcGred a .,drarnatlc come-lrom- hoPes alive, started the drive on the
:llehlnd victory to defeat the Eastern 36 yard line and ran 10 plays before
:tagles l~7 here Friday evening.
being ha lted ~ a Eastern'sdefense,
-: Quarterback Jay Jarrell bolted setting up Johnson's kick.
:~to the endzone from five yards
Offensively, Eastern had trouble
!With 50 seconds remaining In the finding the endzone but received
~me to score the winning touch~wn. Jarrell's ID was set up by some help from Its defense, when
Bobby Epling recovered a tumble
:Jileke Barnes' recovery of an Eagle
~mble at the23yardllne. The drive on the Wildcat 10 yard line. In three
completed In six plays when plays, bulky quarterback John Rice
bulled hlswaylntothe endzoneto pu t
~radY Johnson 's kick spilt the
EHS
on top 7-3 with just 46 seconds
~plights.
remaining
ln the half.
!• Hannan Trace Is now 2-1 in the
•league and i&gt;-3 overall, while . For the winners, Barnes rambled
~tern drops to2-l in the SVACand fOr 86 yards on 19 carries, while Etc
Darst ran for 62 yards on 18 carrles.
!44 overall.
Eastern's
Brent Bissell Jed ·all
~; When the dust fin ally settled on
rushers
with
111 yards on 16 carries.
~VAC participants Friday evening,
:the league title race tightened as Rlce added 33onlOcaniesandRyan
:Hannan Trace, Southern, and Bearhs 24 oo!O canies.
Grady Johnson led a (Xltent
~u.thwestern all . posted wins,
Wildcat
passing attack wlth44 ~ards
•\hfowlng the hunt for the league
on
2
receptions,
whlle Phil Balley
i4?hamplonshlp Into a frenzy. Southand Jason Jones caught oneeach lor
~ Is now in thedrlver'sseat with a
17
and 15 yards respectively.
13,-Qmark, whlle the otherschoolsare
Defensively,
Dave Bart rum and
:tn tied a 2-1. Southern will play at Deke Barnes headed
the Wildcat
~thwestern Friday. North Gallla
brigade
wilh
11
and.
10 tackles
~ Kyger Creek are ().3 In league
respectively. For EHSRyan Bearhs
•Qiay.
led withl4tackles,RoyceBissellhad
~: After a delibera te first period that 12 and Tim Dorst 10. Bissell, Dorst
~w both teams battling It rut In the
and Bearhs had two sacks each,
:~ches, Hannan Trace took an
while Barnes had afumble recovery ·
forHT.
Eastern's ,Epling recovered a
fumble, Bearhs and Bryan Durst
had Interceptions. Barnes and
Bailey had two and onelnterceptlon
respectively for the winners: .
Eastern goes to North Gallia next
week, whlle Hannan Trace plays
Kyger Creek.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Notre
Dame coach Gerry Faust says he
h!ls no !Atentlons of resigning It he
has a losing season.
..... ···Faust deliled repoi'ts that said he
would resign !1 his team finished 5-6
this season, The Clnclnnjtl Post
reported.
"I wlll not qu l~"'he Post'quoted
Faustassaylnglrom NotreDame's
South Bend, Ind., campus. He was
repondlng to an article in Friday's
New York Times that said he may
resign a t the end of the season.
"I am trying to get in iouch with
Gordon White (who wrotethi!Times
article) to find outwhyhequotedme
. that way," Faust said. "What ltold
him was I don't know If I'd want to
return if we finished 5-6. Who wants
to be 5-6?"
Faust was quoted In the Times as
saying, "If we were 5-6, I don'tthlnk
I'll be around. Uwewlnallseven left,
It (the fu lure) depends on how well
we play."
Before taking the job at Notre
Dame, Faust was head coach at
Moeller High School In Cincinnati,

'·

f:

:was

Deke Barnes
Big fumble recovery

one of the most sucesstulhighschool

idter win
~verNG

........,.

[)(tparfm('nt

:~- VINTON - Southern moved into
;sole possession of first place In the
•Southern Valley Athletic Confer·
~nee race here Friday night with a
:~nvlnclng, 21-8 victory over 1984
'111-champion North Gallia.
•• Coach Bill Hensler's Tornadoes,
:•
.~rs of three straight games, all
~ the SVAC, owna3-5overall record
:4ntl ~ slate against league foes.
.~orth Gallla'srecord dropped to 3-5
:~~rall and~in theSVAC.
~ ·. Following a scorless first period
'Southern jumped Into a lW advan:
:l)ge In the second period when
~harlle Boso scored on a 19yard run.
· :Porter added the EP-for a 7-0 lead.
{..ater that period, Boso went over
~om 23 yards out. Again, Porter
:acJded the EP.
·~ Southern Increased Its lead to 21.()
' the third period when Boso
.QI
)'ambled 54 yards. Pete Roush led
~ the Tornado rushing attack with
~yardsin38carrles. Bosohad140
~ards In 13 attempts. North Gallla
)!cored Its only touchdown In the
~urth quarter but no details were
~allable either on who scored or

.. ..... 'l
1\&gt;nalt~ ........................................... 7·55

....... .,._

Pllnts .. ............................................. l-l'i.S

Eask'rn..................................... o
Ha nnan 'Tta&lt;'tJ o o 7-10

2

7

o

1

64.'i
J.J6

o.- 1

HT -GriKtj Jolln.110n '11 yard l'lt&gt;ld goal
E~ohn Rkr ~ya rd run tDav(' EdY.·ards kk'kf

HT-Jay Jarrell 5 Yi~ rd run !Johnson kick !

. ·coME'IN. AND SEE
OUR DISPLAY OF

SATELLITE SYSTEMS
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HOlE OPENS - Southwestern's Tbn Burnett
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Quarterb~Wk Justy Burleson (12) as Kyger Creek's

S&amp;Mdllp

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rkle SAJpply

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Both the
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lege, beginning at 5:15 p.m. In Lyne
Center.
Admission Is free for alumni.
After the ga rnes, a reception wlll be
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penhoU Dlsllibutlng of Jackson.

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jjlilh 445.
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• . High bowlt'r for Oty Insuranct' was
ftyllls Feri{Usoo 'A1th 005.
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tliah lxlwler ror Doolittle's was Marilyn Smllh

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SAVE 1480

I mile North of Holzer Hospttal on State Rl. !GO North

Whih•, Brown, Ula&lt;k,
·'fu n1 (;r~·t• n Rf"d, Sil n·r.

Check Your Phone Book for the Ia-. BIIIIIOk Store or Deller Nearest You

' ., ~ ·

Co mplf'llon.~

446-6592

•Corrugated Posphate Roofing
•Goes dl rectly over old roof
•Fast , easy Ins talla tion
•Won' t rust or corrode ·
•Provides added Insulation

See your favorite TV
shows, plus listen to AMI
FMI AC/battery opera-

:·
•'

.. .......ol..'l-2.1!1
· .. .. .. ... II

Motor Car Brokers

STOCK COLOR S:

Em

4

Yards
Pas~ uttrmpts .

SAVE 1

KC

.. ......... 10

ONDULINE. ROOFING THAT
GIVE IN TO THE ELEMENTS
THAT DESTROY METAL.

TOYOTA

. . . . . . . . 00. 8

SW

.. ..
ruSh I n ~~: .. .

•6,900.

,Lambert lll9.
.~ High too"! game - Franct.o; Flort.sl !ro:
Frand!i Florist ~; Simmons Olds, Cadillac
.&amp; Ch&lt;v. !116.
• High ieam thrl'f'-games - FranciS F'lorlst
"2923; Brenda's Boullque2898; SlmmonsOlds.
t;adUiac and Chev. :lrn.

Low AI S20 Per Month
On CltiLine•

emergency channel 9 to find help. AF
gain control, LEO display. #21·1537

Doing Business In Central Ohio Slnce1982
Fln1nclng Av1ll1blt

~.1-c M;l~s;;;.;;i.:;; ::::: ::::::::: ~ ~
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Our best! Auto-reverse plays and records
on both !BP8 sides. Dolby B-C NA. AutoSearch. Automalic bias selector. lft4&amp;1

Reg. 139.95
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'lbunday Swlrlren

W. L.
tland's Fumlture .............. ... ........ :u 16
bbU\.'1 &amp; Myers ............................ :~) 18
· ~·s Soulid System ...................... J) l8
.Jnf·~. on'5 Markel. ................. ....... ... ~ ;n
Cain. AIICI'ney .......................... ai 22

Low AI $20 Per Month on CltiLine•

7995

frlek - Frankie Dwtcan lll
•-lJOO series for this week. wf'l"e F'ranlde
003. Elaine Ryan :00 and PhyUis
!ilf&gt;.

Reg.
239.95 .

Record off-the-air or "live" with built-in
mikes. Stereo-Wide®adds depth. AC/
battery operation.lft4-n8 aaner~.. oxora

Save
•&amp;o
.

tlttt 453. High bowk'r for Flresldf' was Patti

Oct.

Save
'90 ' 14995

Reg. 249.95

,t.._~lral Supply won five points from
l'l""'kle Supply. High bowler for C.nll'al

.4

ll
28
14
12

\ High Individual lhrre games - Barbara
".Whittington 511 ; Shlrley M eadows~ June

~

••

32

.-francb F'lortst
•No. 2 tGIImorel
No. 8 1Splrcsl
,No. 1 (Manhews l
High Individual

~and 9\lrley Meadows too.

~l'l y Tol('f" wtth 457.
.. •11th Frame won six points fro m WOOlen's
UNnge. High bowler tor llth Frame was
fleltla Camdf&gt;n ~11h 469. High bowler tor
f ootf'n's Lounge was Roxannr Mooroe with

:·:

34

~

Dl,lanmrnt
~1 rst dQII.•rr;

$9614

NOW

WAS U0,775

half.
"We hung right In there," Boocat
Coach Mel Coen said. "We played
with more Intensity and enthusiasm
than we have all year. We got down,
but we came back."
Burnett was the game's leading
rusher, with J.al yards on 16carrles .
He had eight carries for l06yards In
the firs I half. Halslop added73yards
on 16 carrtes and J im Burnett
chipped In with 47 yards In eight
aitempts.
Bob Gordon led the Boocats, ~8
overall and ().Jin the SVAC, with 20
yards In eight carries while Jolley
had 10 ya rds In five attempts.
The Highlanders, ·7·1 overall and
:i-1 In the SVAC, wlll entertain
league-leading Southern Friday.
Kyger Creek travels to Hannan
Trace.

W~me- Shlrley Simmons
311; Barbara Whltllng1oo 193; Jufl(.' Lambert

bolnts from Toler Insurance. High tor
~chanJ's Electrical &amp; Hearing w~ Aileen
q&gt;ng wllh &lt;185. High for Toler Insurance was

•:m,ert&gt; was

Pools Plus

4.~oo~ . light brow~ exterior, sadie cloth interior, power steering, tinted glass. air con dtttomng, sport mmors, 2.5 liter E.F.I. l -4 engine. auto . trans .• sport wheel covers.
AM/FM stereo with seek &amp; scan &amp; clock.

steering &amp; brakes, cloth seal, carpeting, AM radio,
style steel wheels, rear step bumper, fiberglass t!lpper,
and just 19,000 miles on this one owner local truck.

:16

•Simmons Olds, Cadillac
and Chev. Inc.

.q,wler for J aymar Coal Co. was Frankie
~ • Richard 's

l'ls.
311

; Brenda 's Eou11que

look six (&gt;Oinl&gt; from
ymar Coal CO. High towJer for Canaday

alty was Francis Wood wilh

Skyline llowHnKIAn"'
Morning Glor ia~
Oct m, liM

.198 5 CHEV. CELEBRITY - "DEMO"

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EXPLORER
Long bed, V-6 engine, automatic transmission, power

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Local howling

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:boollltlf's ... ......................... ...... ..... aJ .Ji
00 00 00 . . oo . . . . .

0

21

"tooer Insurance ........ ... ........... , ... .. .. )~ 32
'Uih Frame
:11 32
)'Ire! Ide
11 ];
Qln!'day Really .............. .

By ,JOHN FRffiDMAN
intercepted by Bradbury, who ran it
'ftmes.Sentlnel staff
back 76 yards for the Bobcats'
CHESHIRE - U one of the signs second touch11own, cutting the
.of a good football team Is how wllllt Southwestern lead to 18·12 with 7:15
: races adversity, then Southwest- left In the game. KevlnJolley's klck
. ern' s Highlanders are ·a good hit thecrosshar . Burleson's attempt
·football team.
came on the first play after a JS.yard
, The third· ranked Highlanders, completion to Ha Islop, moving the
.. who practiced all week wllhout. ball to the Bobcat ll.
· All·SVAC candidates Benny Boyd
Southwestern was for&lt;:ed to punt
and Jim Burnett, saw a once- on Its next possession and the
. comfortable three-touchdown half· . Bobcats had the ball on their 32.
• time lead all, but disappear before However, on the first play, Gilmore
• adding a late touchdown to defeat fumbled a flea-flicker and Southw·
Kyger Creek, 25·12, here Friday.
estern's Danny Patrick recovered
"We didn 't have a good week of the IRII at the Bobcat 14.
practice," Soulhwestern Coach
Burnett put the gameout of reach
· &gt;1ack James said alter the g~me. three minutes la ter when he scored
, '_'But I can't be too dlsappointea his third touchdown of the game on a
•because we're H . .They had us on six-yard run. AndY Halslop added
Qie ropes, but we made the plays the extra point kick.
when we had too. It wasn't pretty."
Following a list less first quarter,
· The Bobcats were trailing 18.() at Southwestel'l! broke on top with 7:13
· halftime, courtesy of a 37-yard · left in the first half on Halslop's run
; scoring run by the Highlanders' on a sweep around left end. The run
Andy Halslop, and runs of 89 and capped a 64-yard, five-play drive.
•)hree yards by Burnett, before
After a Waugh punt on the next
;mounting a second-half comeback.
series pinned the Highl anders at
· After a series of punls to open the the ir 11, Burnett broke an cif-tackle
' second half, Kyger Creek, which play on the first play from
, had scored only 19 points In It s first scrimmage and ran 89 yards for
·seven ga mes, turned to its passing Southwestern 's second score wllh
;game and mounted a 79-yard, 5:54 left in the quarter.
·;eight-play drive, wllh David Pettry
Southwestern again forced Kyger
·scoring on a three-yardrun with 3: 18 Creek to punt on Its next ser ies and
'lefl In the quarter to cut lhe drove 54 yards In six plays wit h
tlighlander lead to 18-6.
Burnett going over from the three
Five of the eight plays were with 38 seconds remaining in thP
:Pasll's, with quarterback Tom
}Waugh completing three for 56
_yards. The key play In the drive was
•a 34·yard pass to Randy Sigman on
the second play of the drive.
'Southwestern was called for a
,personal foul on the play, movlngthe
,ball to the Hlghlander 27. After Rich
;Gilmore caught a Waugh pass for
•nine yards a nd threw one to Mike
Bradbury for 13 yards, Pettry
1x'nched It over from the three.
• On Southwestern 'ssecondposses·
,sion following Kyger Creek's SCOI'I',
a quick pass over the middle by
:quarterback J usty Burleson was

S11 187

SAVE 114 -~----...

!Late Bobcat rally falls short;
:Highlanders post, 25-12 win

'

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day. Please look for our ad
each Thursdar in the
Tribune or stop in our store
·and pick up a sale flyer.

oplional CD player

o :· ~i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

0000000000 oooo. 0000 00 .oooo oo• : . ;

NOW

Mike Bradbury (U) gets set to try to make the tackle.
Burnett gained 47 yards In eight carries as the
IDghiiUiders defeated the stubbom Bobcats, 25-12.

•

steve JIU'Idl

0

1985 CHEV. CELEBRITY EUROSPORT

CHESTER

Save Today on These and
Other Fantastic Bargains

0

4 Door, dark blue exterior, blue cloth interior, power, AM / FM stereo w/ cassette &amp;
c!o.ck. _power steer~ng, tinted_ glass, intermit~ent wipers, rear window defogger, air con·
dtltonmg, sport mtrrors , crutse control , 2.81ter V-6engine, auto. trans. with overdrive,
tilt wheel.
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985-3307

CIWIGE IT (IIOST SIOIIES)

;

SAVE S1419

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

WeetoiOd. D, M

,•

WE MUST SELL THESE. 1985's TO MAKE ROOM FOi
THE 86's ARRIVING DAILY.

COME IN OR CALL
FOR DETAILS .

~~n-,ru-.

:"

1985 YEAR-END
CLEARANCE SALE

SATELLITE
SYSTEMS

RIDEN OURS

The Sunday

SIMMONS ANNOUNCES

•.

1---------'-----------~

I

,,, Ntpu

76
2'.11

l.a;t tumblt'S .. ..

~

1

4
3

Tora1.1oards ................................ IJl
F'uml»t'!l ...
.. .. 3

:• Southern plays Southwestern In a
lljg SVAC showdown Friday while
~orth GaiDa travels to Eastern.

~

1~
~~

Pass UIINTlpl'llll\0
8
Compk'floll!l .. ... ..........
.. ...... 3
ln lf'rt'f'pt('(l by ...
.. ............... 2
Varm passln~ ............................:11

~statistics.

f.• Localw bowling

liT

E

lrst OOWns ........... ....... ..... .... .. ....... 8
Yards 1'\ilillllJI
............ m

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

football programs In the country.

Southem

In first

October 20, 1985

.Faqst ·denies story' that he will quit

•

!or 10-7 loop win

October 20, 1985

. .

POMEROY, OHIO
•

�..
I

Paga-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

. _,

October 20, 1986

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

·October 20, 1985

Logan all set for Gallipolis

COLUMBUS _ School records l! u rolled up 25 first downs, :m yards
tn bunches Friday night as the rushing, and 195 passing..
Logan Chieftains remained Wide·
The Walnut Ridge Scots, now 1·7
fuated with a 48.(1 pounding t1 netted live first downs, 23 yards
Columbus Walnut Ridge.
rushing, and completed three o!
Jun.tor Kelly Wolle ran the baU a; eight ·pas,ses lor 67 yards. Logan
times for 167 yards, Including rolled up a · 502 yard to 67 yard
toticlldowns runs ot five and two advantage tn total ~ense. •
yards tn the second period.
The last two UIS touchdowns In
Wol!e has now rushed i:lr t,:ro the !Ina! period came on a lour yard
yards and scored 11 touchdowns tn run by fullback Trey Palmerton
the eight Logan victories thus tar.
Arother mark tell wb!!n senior
!lanke~ D.J. Conrad caught selien
passes for 148 yards and three
-'LLG-"'""'
touchdowns, U!tlng hts season total .,.....
w L P or

P~int Pleasant ·,rips Pony Express

and a one yard blast by reseJVe
taUback Jerry Gabriel. Myers a1o;o
kicked slx o! seYen extra points.
Score by quarters:
Logan
· 21 7 6 M 48
Walnut Rldge
0 0 0 0 0
-Newark28Mal'Wia 7
MARIETTA - The Newark Wlldcats llmlted RDbble Benton to just
Con!lnued on C-5
~

r----------------------,
I
SEO standings
·I

to 37 receptions for 825 yards and 12
touchdowns.
•
Conrad gathered In a 14 yarder In
the first quarter, a 21 yard strike In
the third cante, and sco~ oo a 34
yardstrtketromKelthMyerslnthe
fourth period.
Myers, the multl-talented senior
quarterback, completed 12 o! 21
passes for 195 yards and three
touchdowns as the Chlettatn &lt;tfunse

..
•
•

~OVERS OWN FUMBLE - Gallipolis' Gamble Grant, (22) who observed hbi 17th l*thday

:

l"rrdlly, rushed for 81 yards tn

:

'r
•..

:~: :: . GALLIPOLIS-Gallla Academy . four-for-four the second hal! for 46

•~ • :Jllgh School climbed back Into a tte yards and one touchdown.

llavlnKToulh Year

"I went through one of tlxlse
::: seasonstwoyearsago (0-10). I know
:•: what Coach Hutchison (Dennis) Is
;:: golngthroughatthlsttme. We had a
:~: good chance to get a lot a people In
, •, our last horne game, plus It was
homecoming," Saunders said.
•:• The third-year GalltpoUs coach
:: : added, "Our seniors are to be
::: cqngratulated !or their etlorts thus
•,• 'fai': but we stU! have the btg one
::~ eomlng up at Logan this week."
-:· The Chieftains are 8-0 overall
:•: after Friday's 48-0 non-le_ague win
•: overWalnutRidgenearCclumbus.
•: UIS was the pre-season choice &lt;1
: • : both loop coaches and the news
;: : .zpedia to wtn the crown. GAHS was
•:• picked second this fall.
::~ Winner of the October 25 clash at
: •: renovatedHUltopStadlum wUl walk
:: : of!the field with the 19!ficonference
•:. crown. Logan has not won the loop
::: football title since 1977. GAllS has

::!

·-: gone 15 years (1970) without a grid
·&gt;.cHampionship.
': :- Logan has scouted Galltpolls
,'~ every game this fall . As one
: •&lt;observer pointed ou~ however, "It
:- will boU down to who blocks and
·: tackles the hardest and which team
• makes the fewest mistakes." There
&gt; is no ties In Ohio htghschool!ootball
:;: this fall. If the game ends ln·a tle,an
:-:overtime period or periods wUl be
::: played.
·: • Galllpolls Is 7-1on the season. Both
:•: the Blue Devils and Chieftains are
:::a-oln league play.
-: • · After Friday's shutout loss, Jack:;: son's third in a row, the Ironmen
:•: di-opped to 2-6 overall and 0-3 In the

;::sEOAL.

·: •
Nine Backs Used
. ::: Nine GAHS backs rushed 46 times
:-: for 203 yards in Friday's home
;; : finale . Gamble Grant plckedup811n ·
· : • 21 trips to pace the winners on his
&gt;:17th birthday.
::: : QB Todd Slone hit three o! four
::;!lass attempts for 70 yards and one
-: •touchdown In the first half.
::: Sophomore QB Tim NevUle was

GAHS totaled 319 net yards In 54
plays !rom scrimmage. The Blue
Devlls had 17!trstdowns.
Jackson finished wtth a minus six
net ruslltng (32 trips) . Mark
Hammond, who switched to taU·
back (hequarterbackedtheftrstslx
games) led JHS rushers wtth 42
yards In 13 carries. Jackson lost 67
ruslling In eight attempts, Including
18 on two punting situations. (JHS
grossed 61 yards).
Sophomore QB Chris Ervin was
five o! nine passing for 46 yards,
gtvlng the visitors 40 total net yards
In 41 plays. JHShadfourflrstdowns
-three In the second period.
How 11 Weut
First GAHS score came on a
34-yard reverse by junior wingback
Gary Harnson with 3:36 left ·Ill the
Initial stanza. Slone hit Gamble
Grantwlththetwopolntconverslon.
JunlorFBKirkJacksonslammed
over fnm the one (11:05) to open
Second period scoring for GAHS.
Slone htt Gary Harnson with the
two-point conversion to make It 18-0.
Slone pitched a 46-yard bomb to
splltendJohnStralt(7: 10) tomakelt
22-0. Slone was pUed up at theltneo!
-scrimmage. He ~u!!ered a back
Injury on the play and did not return
aftersufferlngbackspasms.

........

0e,lll1rnl!nl

G

Athens at Marrtla

' - .. w.,,.,, ru.,.,. o

· Jaclc!on at Portsmouth
Cool G!'O't'e at Rock Hill

211 c,...,P o
Im'""'
Newark 28 Marietta 7
211Poc••""'',. 12

~ley at Point Pleasant
Ironton at CAPE

"""eoo,,.

F1rstdowns .................................... 17

'

Yards rusllln~~: ................................... 220

61

Lolli rusbln~ ........................................ 17
Nt't Nshinll: ........................................ '113

67
.g

Pusatll"'TT~s ..................................... 8

9

Cornpletions .................................... l .. 7

o

Yards pe.sslng .................................... l16
Total yaniS ....................................... 319
Plays ................................................. 54

4&amp;

Return yards .................................... m

m

F:siiC

41

... . 3

2

Lollrutnb]f'$ ...........................

.... 0

()

Ptnalllrs ................................. .. ····· ·· "-40 . 4...:l
Punts ............................
........... 2· &amp;1 5- 162
!Clift bJ qMI1cn;
GalUpcHJI ................... .
. ....8 16 6 7-37
Jacluon ............... .
......... 0 0 0 ~ 0

......

I

I

Your Sovingolnou•od 10 f 100.000

B

507 Emmitt Avenue

ran.n TwtnlbW'a o

Waverly

JJ
C'hali!:rin

Areadla 311. Lltmy Benroo D
ArchOOid H. Swanroo 8
AJttland Cn!!rt\oiew l8. Mciii"OE'YUif 6
Avon 8. S t\rnhlnt 6

Ot.-nploo 6, LltJJny 0
Otan:bn 19, Wkkntle 16 (:loll

an NW 9, Narwcod 7
Cin O.PE !'A, F1nneymwn 0
an Wlttuuw :J6, Milford 6

Berberton 10, WamonsvUJtt 6
BarrewWe 11. Shactyllck&gt; 0
Bey 10, Fairview 0
Eleavt&gt;rt'J'I!Il'k 21. CmtervWI! 7

Cin
Ctn
Ctn
Ctn
Cln
Cln

Bl'iprt' 34, MUII!r 8

&amp;rjhotz Sprin1 ll. Selrlrlg 6
Bethel 21, Twin Vall(oy S 16
Jloftwl Tat€' 32, Wlllamstx.rrg 6
&amp;:dey 14, 8g Wall1ut 7
Bacll River 62. Plymouth 0
Buffton 56. Ada 0
B:larctnan l\ WarTm HardLna 8
8lyd Co !KYI 28. Ponarnoutl\ 12
BrookVOl('

Brooklyn

:n,

Puruoll 14, W}t&lt;!mlng 7
Sycamo~ 6, Glen Este 0
LaS.!k&gt; 2.1, CLn Elder Z
Turpin 7, C'Ln Anacrson

a

Moeller 56, Cln X..vler f.2
Princeton 28, Fa1111eld 1

ctn Waln.u Hlllll

:a;,

WG VltTORY ., - Point
Pleasant's Big Black Knights
ralUed Friday to capture a ~

homecoming victory over the
Huntington Pooy Express. 'lbe
victory pushes Potot's record to
~2 with three games left oo this
year's schedule.

CORRECTION

A

N

K

Quarterback Shwan Joy teamed
wtth Mike Wpence for the bne
Tiger 1'0, a 16 yard pass in the third
quarter as the Tigers were limited
to Gl yards rushing and 65 passing.
Newark, now 2·6, had 21 first
downs, 274 rushing, and 95 yards
passing,
Score by quarters:
Newark
14 7 0 7 7B
Marietta
0 0 7 0 7

On Page Two In This Week's October 10th P~e- Print The Winchester 30-30 1-evtr Actio,C
Rille, Model G9411E Is fncorrectly Advertised For •m.• Attet Rebate. The Corrett
Advtrtised•Y1i~ For This Gun ~ •m.• Atte~ Rebafe.

P01nt Pltu~nr.

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SALE PRICE

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Ohio River Road
Wheelersburg

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Portsmouth

574-2524

354-6611

•'
•
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..••
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738 East Main Street
Jackson

441 Second Ave~ue
Gallipolis

27 East Second Street

286-63SS

446-3832

(S 13)549-2472

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CJe Jndepmdm('(l 0
BNMWtk 31, Ooverlfaf 0
BuckpYl' Coural 7B. Wynftrd 7
IM'yrua 23, Norwalk 0
Bunort BPrklhirt" 26, Rlctunond Hts 0
~!Hz 17, W(lllsVIIIe 14 101!
~l d'Nel l 47, Frontltr 0
Campb('U :n, You"' Wllson ti
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..........

STAHL'S

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Little Hocking, Ohio

OCTOBER 19-27
LIFT YOUR SPIRITS HIGHI Enjoy the sights .
and sounds ol Christmas as never before In
the moat beautiful Christmas alore we've
ever had. Browse through the forest of trees,
each decorated In a unique and different·
theme. Choose from hundreds of ornaments made
from wood, brass, satin, velvet, glass and many
others. And gift giving Is made easy when you saa
our large selection of gift Items for the entire family.

-

We're ea•y to lind. Follow Ohio Route #50 &amp; #7_
, and
turn right at the Intersection ol Ohio Route #555. Let
uiliilp you make this a Christmas to remember•

.-

SEE ONE IT
Don't miss our Spirit of Christmas 5-K
Run on October 26.

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••
••

•,

'•

ROGER &amp; LINDA

8 PK.

C.rllsll! 42. Prt'bie 9iaYITI('(l 8
Clodarville 13. E Ointon 12 ~on
Cfollna '17, Dl'fhance 15
CereOO-Kenova !WVa1 41 Chesapeollkr

Arcanum 51, Natlmal Trail 0

wiping out the fine run-ba ck by
Riffle.
Six plays later, at 11:58 in the
sel'Ond quarter, Bordman cracked
over for his third TO. Rhodes' kick
made it Point 21, Huntington 0.
The big play of the 39 yard drive
was a 25-yard run by Darrell Mit·
chell.
On Huntington's next possession
and with the ball on its own 14,
Express quarterback Todd Aldridge
was intercepted the third time, this
one by defensive bac~ Marshall
Wooten who returned the ball from
the Ponies' 27 yard line to the end-

zone for Point's fourth touchdown.
Rhodes converted his fourth consecuiive PAT and the score stood at
28-0 with 9:45 left in the first half.
· Huntington's next series saw its
punter fumble the snap on a fourth
down kicking situation and Point's
Danny Hall and Kurt Doss dove for
the ball with Hall making the
recovery at the Huntington 33 yard
line.
Point needed only five plays to put
the ball into the endzone with
quarterback Rhodes sneaking in the
final two yards.
Rhodes' kick for the extra point
was again good, making the score
3~ at the 4:41 mark in the second
quarter.
Again the Blacks' defense, led by
Steve Gardner and Clifford Simpkins, held the Express after the
kickoff and forced a fourth down
punt with the Big Blacks faircatching the ball at the Express 31
yard line. Kinnard ran three consecutive plays of 20, five and six
yards for his second touchdown and
the Big Blacks' sixth TO ln the first
half. Rhodes' kick made it 42~ and
the score stood as the first half came
to an end.
The Big Blacks record is now S-2,
with four straight impressive wins,
and 4-1 in the Pioneer Athletic
Conference.

Continued from C-4
···----------~~~~~~----------

38 yards on 14 carries Friday night
as they posted a 7B· 7 non league
victory over the Martella Tigers.
Quarterback Jim Jones completed nine of 11 passes !orffiyards,
Including touchdown strtkes to Earl
Johnson for 10 yards In the first
period, four yards In the fourth, and
hlt Brian Abbett with a 24 yarder In
the second stanza.

·S AVllNGS

J

Can GlmM ll. M'a!L'I Jackson 9
Canal Wine 12, Lane F~h 0
C.nal Fulton NW 17, Sandy Val U

Ak:r East 7
Akr Hoban 12. Ala Sprklg 0
Akr Ellrr 9, Alcr Buchtel 6 (oil
Amanda U Col Ham '1\vp 19
Amlwst 15. ~ 0
Atr

Logan

CIVIC

r.w.r.. ~....._ .................. c.....

.

rn..
.......,
North 14.

.

The Point Pleasant Big Blacks
won their fourth straight game with
a 5tH&gt; romp of visiting Huntington
High School before a large
Homecoming crowd at Sanders
Field Friday night.
The Big Blacks offense executed
an awesome ground attack by
. running the ball 50 times for 351
: yards and seven touchdowns. The
·Big Blacks threw only one pass
during the game.
The defensive units were just as
good, intercepting fiv e Pony
Express passes, one for a 27-yard
touchdown. The Big Blacks also
sacked the Huntington quarterback
six times.
The defense and special team play
kept the offense in good field position
throughout the game.
Sophomore running back Charlie
Kinnard put on a dazzling display of
power and open field running.
Unofficially, Kinnard carried the
ball only 12 times but gained 183
yards and scored two touchdowns.
This was the finest game of the
season for the 5'10", 160 poWid
sophomore in his first varsity year.
In the opening quarter the Huntington team started out with a wide
open passing game that seemed to
confuse the Big Black defense. After
a few plays, however, the defense
solved the early problem and forced
the Ponies to punt with Point taking
possession of the ball at its own 26
yard line.
Six plays later the Big Blacks
were in the endzone with their first
touchdown of the night at 7:25 in the
first quarter. J Wiior Ryan Bordman
ran the final three yards for his first
of three touchdowns. Mike Rhodes
kicked the extra point and the
Blacks led, 7~ .

•.

.o

F'umbles . .. .... ..•.. .. ...... ........ .. .

OWo Hlp llchool Fllllllhl
By U•MH
lute•iill....,

.

·

The big play of the 74·yard drive
was a 38-yard run by Kinnard.
Following the score, Point
Pleasant kicked off and two plays
later Mike Barton intercepted a
Huntington pass at the Pony
Express 40 yard line and returned
the ball 40 yards down the left side
for a.n apparent 1D. The play was
. nullified, however, by another
penalty and brought back to the
Huntington 25. From here the Point
offense only needed four running
plays to crack the goal line for its
second score. Darrell Mitchell ran
three times for 20 yards and Ryan
Bordman ran the final five yards for
the touchdown. Rhodes kicked the
PAT and the Big Blacks led, 14'0,
with 4:46 remaining in the first
quarter.
After the kickoff by the Big
Blacks, the Pony Express started at
its own 27 yard line. The Express
could gain nothing on its first two
plays and on third and 10, Kelly
Riffle got Point' s second interception at the Huntington 40 and
returned the ball to the 14 yard line
befure being knocked out of bounds.
Another penalty brought the return
back to the Express 39 yard line,

UNDER NEW MANA8E~ENT
LANGSVILLE GAS &amp; GROCERY

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lrltt"!U'Pte'd~ ...................... ·................

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•

-.

.

111:t1.!21

•

tion whh low ooerltor f•U..ut.

,.· .

........
OdGIIer • fii'IW.I:

OF SOUTHERN
AND SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
SINCE 1891

gnp . ..., longlho from 1 I" to 21". •-.ncod....,. fer 111111 ,...._•

.

Marte!ta ...................... .................... l 2 33 86
Athens ............................................ 0 2 1633
Jacklon .. .... ................ ..................... o 3 6 8l

TO PEOPLE

lp~llon-

.•;

GallipoliS ................ ......................... 3 0 9'7 18

-FINANCIAL SECURITY

Tackle Bo Smith blocked Brad
Haynes' punt !or a two-point safety
with eight seconds left ·In the haU.
That made It 24-0.
Seccnd Halt
Junior Chris Howard's klckof!
deep Into the endzone (one ot
several) kept the Ironmen deep In
their own territory. GAHS marched
56 yards (10 plays) with Neville
going the !lnal16 on a keeper (5: 05).
Randy Amshary's klck was low.
Galli polls moved 32 yards In eight
plays after Chris Howard sacked
Ervin for a !().yard loss on fourth
down. Neville hit Strait with a
nine-yard strike (10: 38). Amsbary's
klck made lt37-0.
Andy Howard, Scott Bailey,
Bruce O'RDurke, Kirk Jackson and
Scott Miller were credited with six
QBsacks.

~~

'

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Joclooo . .........

c.=';,":;:".;.., 0

5 76 U8 .

or

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WE'VE BEEN PROVIDING

.:= :.~-~..........................~~
~.
.•••
HOMELITE'S
••.
..• '·
.•••• ' Tho ldoal high produe1lon - ·360
.. , .. a.to" vtllfltion leOIIIIDII oUIIIioM
tho handlea from t h e - heed, ,__, IP aMi folltu•·
•
lo¥ollhonko to Homolito'o Bohonoduol ollamllor--INew J.l.....,.
•
eA._.Lall •.. Inch homi·heod onglno. •Copocity . . .....,.
made ollar . •Unlquo cheln IMtoionlng. •IIIIIIMr"_... .......... .,..
•
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c"" c,... ...................................2 s 115 1211
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Atl'lfful ........ ....... .......................... , .. j

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Lottan ............................................. 3 0 69 :U

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Fn•day'S gn•d sco•es
a'

._.,____________________________________________
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rup1ey .................... ... ...... ...... ,...... &lt; ' ,. "

!IIX&gt;.U.Ool&gt;
Te.n

· ·~

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................... ~ 2 165 91

'l'llne&amp;&amp;nllnel photo. ~~ defender Is Scott
Brunton (IMI).

a ln.O v1c1ory over

::: :~th Logan for !trst place In the
::: :-'J!utheastern Ohio . League stand·
:.: ~ Friday night after a 37-0 grid
•: 'VIctory over visiting Jackson.
:-· · More than 3,(0) shirt-sleeve fans
;: :·1:"alched the Blue Devlls take a 24-0
:~ ; ::J!alftlme lead. GAHS Coach Brent
, • ·Saunders and hts stat! substituted
: •, freely the !tnal halt.

··········•••••••••••••••~
: i.: ~
.................1 • ,,. "

vlslllnK Jlld&lt;8011. ln backp'OIInd Is lullback Kirk

~GAHS regains SEOAL lead .
~~f~With Logan Chiefs, next loop
!~jppponent, with 37-0 victory
,'~

Pt. PINSMI ....... ,

r"-"" "'"""""'High'

Oe.k HIU 9 Rock Hlll6
w...riY n CoaJ Grow ,.

Jackson. Gran&amp; recovers bls own tumble In this

:

1 ~.

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Po~•

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MOST

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60 MO. UP TO 530 CCA . . ... . . .. 39.89
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Sot,.dly- 8 A.M.- 5 P.M.
Sunday- 2 -5 P.M.

GE

P~ZA-PH.
'

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446-9335

�October

1986

•

October 20, 1

,

Ret~d

White becomes KC's clean-up hitter ··

RIVAL ~L.\."AGER.S - Rlvlll managers lor the
World Seri&lt;os. Dick Howser, (left) of the Royals 1111d
Whitey Hel"lllg of the Cardinals held at pn!SS

KANSAS CITY (UPI)- The No.-4
spot In the batting order for the
Kansas City Royals Is as wide open
as the spacious Mlssourl countryside that surrounds the I-70hlghway
connecting the two World Series
teams.
How successfully that spot Is !Illled
looms as a major key to success for
the Royals in the best-of-seven world
championship showdown with the
heavUy favored St. Louts Cardinals.
Frank White, who nonnaUy hits
sixth in the lineup, has been moved
Into the No. 4 spot for the opening
game of the Series Saturday night
but manager Dick Howser Isn't sure
he'll stick with White for the entire
Seri&lt;os.
"Frank will be In therefor the first
game against the left-hander (Jolm
Tudor) ," said Howser. "After that,
I'm not sure. We'll have to see how
he does."
With the Royals' No. 1 cleanup
hitter, Hal McRae, relegated to
pinch hitting duties because of the
absence of the designated hitter pn
this year's Series, whoever takes his
place must contribute or else the
Royals' No. 3 hitter, George Brett,
wUl not get good pitches to hit.
"George becomes an easter aut
when he expands his strlke zone,"
said Jim Palmer, a former pitcher
for the Baltimore Orioles wbo Is

conierence Friday on the eve of the opening game of
the 1985 World Series. Howser obviously had the
funnier line here. UPI.

Manage~s

Howser, Herzog
like speed, pitching, defense

Wildlife notes

Bass fishing
worthwhile
•

~xpenence
BY TOM BELVIUE
Last weekend , Oct. 12, Igave upa
day of hunting to participate in a
bass tournament. I had never
fished a tournament before and
wasn't quite sure what to expect. It
turned out to be a very worthwhile
and enjoyable experience.
There were 53 boats entered In
the Grande Finale Bass Tournament at Ironton with 2 !lshermen
{JE'I' boat. It was a buddy type
!llurnament where you choose your
fishing partner . Dave Wyant and I
teamed up and were registered as
boat number 13. Lucky number 13.
Well, we didn 't win any prizes
with our one fish, which Dave
caught , but we did tie for 17th out 53.
That's not too bad for a couple of
ama leurs in I heir first tournament.
; I did find out that I enjoyed the
competition offered through toumament fishing. l plan to enter more
in· the future. If you 'have never
partiCipated in a fishing tournament you migh! also enjoy the
compe1itlon.
: Tree stands have become an
important Instrument to the bow
hunter. Tree stands offer a better
view of the surrounding area and
helps keep your scent above the
deer.
'!'he Department of Natura l
Resources would like to pass along
this information on tree stands.
Ohio law prohibits the erection or
ui.e of permanent tree stands on all
public hunting areas. It Is also
illegal to place spikes, naUs, or any
metal object in a tree to act as steps
or to hold a stand. Permission must
IJ!l granted by the landowner to
erect permanent stands on private
property.

Louts and Kansas Cicy play,
ballsare often cut off by the Dyers
He= g prefers.
Herwg employs switch-hitters.
He has five of them playing every
day In his St. Louts lineup.
Defense Is a requisite. You don't
make the finish line without it most
of the time. But onartllicial turf, it 's
as necessary as a spoiler on the back
of an Indy car.
Herzog likes pitching (what
manager doesn't'~ ) but can adapt.
This year he used a "Bullpen by
Committee." Last season the com·
mlttee was Bruce Sutter. '
You don't· believe "Bullpen. by
Committee" Is the coming thing in
baseball?
It almost got Toronto manager
Bob Cox to the World Series and It
did get Howser to the I-70Serles.
Notice bow Ho'\llser ·shilled his
starters to the bullpen fur the final
two games of the Royals' comeback
playoff victory over the Blue Jays?
By throwing five starters at
Toronto, and with the too days off
sprinkled In, Howser could keep two
starters available for relief.
Neither manager is that big on
bunting -It squelches the big inning
- preferring Instead to run and
hil -and-run.
St. Louts has more buners tha n
Kansas City but Howser wUI run
Lonnie Smith, wbo played the first
half of this season for Herzog, and

Willie Wilson when he can.
He has to. With nobody coming up
behind George Brett, Kansas City
has to scratch like a barnyard hen
for runs.
Howser adapt s more to his
persbnnet than does Herzog, who·
wheels and deals to get his kind of
player .
Herzog• made more deals than
Monte Hall to come up with his 1982
World Champions.
The addition of Jack Clark, who
hit the game-winning home run
against the Los Angeles Dodgers In
the playoffs, was a key move in
putting the Cardinals over the hump

DAVENPORT, Iowa (UPI) The fonner "San Diego Chicken"
dodged a legal tomahawk when a
federal jury decided a wounded
Cleveland Indian cannot collect
Injury damages over a slapstick
colllspon in a baseball game.
Following more than nine hours of
deliberation, theelght-memberjury
at the U.S. Dlstr1ct Courthouse
Issued a verdict Friday in .favor of
Ted Glannoulas, 35, now known as
''Thz Famous Chicken."
Don Schulze, 23, a right-handed
pijcher for the AmeriCan League's
Indians, had sought $154,1m in
damages in the suit. He argued his

thls ~son .

Note. too, that Herzog put
outfielder Clark, not able to cover
ground the way he once could, at
first base so he could get younger
legs In the outfield.
Howser, who' now has a threegame post-season winning streak
aft er falling to manage a winner in
his first 1J tries, Is going to have to
adapt to not having his cleanup
hitter .
Hal McRae Is out of the batting
order as this Is the year the
designated hitter can't be used.
NotiCe also how Howser adroitly
tries to keep Dan Quisenberry rut of
situations where he might have to
face a key left-handed hitter. Left ies
hit Qusenberr,• at a .320 pace this
season.

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Lucasvtlk&gt; Val 7, Ports ND 6
M~l90n Plains 12, Olntoo Muslt" 0
MMS Madl'iOn J6. Tol Woodward 6
Margaretta s. Por t Cllntoo 0 ...
Marlon Pleasaot ";fi. Mar Elgin 2
Mllrlemoru 46, Cl.n Indian Hill t! ,
Markin Local 14, Delptm S\ J ohn 2
MartinS f &lt;'f't'Y :J), Budr;eyr s 1~
Mason 21i, Ham Ross (I
Mautll'e :ZO, SylVania Soutt!VIE'Y.' 0
Maytlelell4, Lyndhu rst Brushr1
Maysvll~ 40, Wanaw RIVE'I"\\IeW 2Z
McComb J, J\rllnR!On 0 !UI'J
McDonald 33, Jackson Mllloo 6
MPadcM"brook 5, Woodsfield 0
. Ml!dlna 8, Olmsted fall!i 6
Mf'nlor 'll. Maple HIS 0
Miami E 7. Tlpp 01)' 0
Miami Trace :M, Cb-ck&gt;I.·IIW 21
Mid Madison 29 . Dlxr 20
Mid Fl'llwlck 'll, Lebano117
Ml~lt'lawn 28, Lima 21 WI~

13 18 .

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11 14

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18 7

2

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4

I0
3 0
4 0

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II 22

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SundQ'IG&amp;mes
VanCO\I\,'ef at NY ~~rs

Vancouvt'f

PtLUadl'lphla at Chic~
C)llpcy at W!nnlpeg
Edmonkln at Los Anlfl'k&gt;s

.

Mi~rk 7D, Mass PPI)' 17 Toll
MIIY'I'al R~ 7, S Ranlf' 6
MlniO Ju~tlon .19, 9JckpYe W 0
Mogadort' 41. Raot~~n 8
Mt Health~· n. Cln WoOOwarill4
Mt Vernon 14. Pkker1nK!oo 7
N Benti'T'a}'lor 14. Cln Hughes lZ

I

Transal(tions
Bu-

Dallas - Waived rookie drafl piCks
Harold Keeling and Tornrny Dav&amp;
Seanlf - AcqWft'(l cmlt'r C.Orw John·
90n trom tlll!watv« list. Football IndianapoliS - Atttvatfd balfbac): Cunls Dickey .
Pittsl:llrgh - Activated cornerback Chris

N Canton 21. AlBan«' 15
Napolron 6, 1'01 Whitrrer o
!'O"etsonvillf-YOI'): 54, Ak'xandl'r 14

New Albany :!, Lu cas 6
New Miami '11, MISs Val 6
New RJctunond 7, Wl'5U!rn

·~·New

"""""'

NHL - Suspendrrod Montrul foiward Chr\.'1
Nilan b eiK!tt ~11Ill£'!i . Cal ~ ry - An·
Minced !hat ct'lltrr Mlkl' Eavts k retiring
f'ff('Cfi\I P lmrrrdiatf'ly and laklnl!an as·yrl
und!&gt;tmnlnm JKIL'llbn v.1th ttw&gt; rlub. [)(&gt;troll
- Sml right wing Ray Stasrall 10
Adirondac'k ot 1t1t Amt&gt;rk:an HOC'Ieey
U:'ap;uC': retunrd cmter ShiiWII 8urT to
Kltchenl'r of ttr OntariO Hoc Wry l.t-!ijlU(&gt;.

NFL results

Rcad!AR: 17. Offi' Park 13
R.e\"tl'(" 14, Mtdina Highland 7
Rtver Val .n , RldgNale 6

No\TIONA!. POO"'11ALL JLtGUE
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Amrrt:•Co~

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NY .trot s
Mloml

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4 :Z o .007 Wi 108

N . En~~:

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2 4

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!ARlin
Sn!UI'

KC

s. """

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Rockfon'l Par kWay 14. S1 He11 r,• 0
Rorsstord 6, Anthony WaynE' 0 tOT I

S Ct'ntral 12. Maplf'lon 6
Sandusky Ptrktns :1. Huron 0
Smeoca E 21. N Balrtmol'f' 0

n .ml£Nus

Shakrr Hrs 16, E ClP Shaw 7
Sheridan '11. Crook9 ,1lk' 1.1

o .m 109t.E

0 6 0 .(Q) Iii 163

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Sherwood fa irview 7,

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Urbana has aile varsity game on
Its schedule, the finale against West
VIrginia Wesleyan and wUI play a
split varsity-junior varsity state in
1986. In 1987, however, the Blue
Knights will face a full varsity
schedule.
DeCola estimates he wUI spend
. "in the neighborhood of $'70,lXXl" the

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'. ·
:The Hannan High Football squad
cJiebrated Friday's Homecoming •
by shutting but the Oakvale Owls, 60. The Wiidcats, going in to the game
with a 2-6 record, held a tight
defensive str.~tegy throughout the
~arne, stopping all of the Owls' offensive efforts.
1The key to Hannan's victory was
sl\eer determination. "Our guys
never gave up," said Hannan Head
Coach Joe ' Johnson. "They played
with 100 percent determination. We
stopped their big plays-that was the
key to the game."
.· :The first quarter of last night's
cdntest saw an ~ score, with both
ll'!lmS blocking any and all touchdown attempts. The 'Cats' determi nation, though, made the second
quarter the breaking point for the
Hannan squad.
Wildcat sophomore Mike Wilson,
I'Cplacin~ an injured Ginny Adkins,
moved in for the offensive kilt when
he threw an aerial bomb to senior
Mark Hill who raced to the end zone
fm· the ·cats winning TD. The extra
point kick was blocked by the Oakvale defensive unit.
Coach Johnson credits a switch in
defensive strategy as the key to
holding back the Owls. "We swil·
ched to a H defense," said Johnson.
"Our guys did a good job witb the 4·
t That's what stopped their btg
plays."
The victori ous effort by the
Wildcats, thqugh, was a product of
teamwork. "I really can't single out
one or two stars of the·game because
everyone played so well," said
·.Johnson.
The Wlldcals capJured a total of
eight first downs, three by pas:'ing
and five running. Semor Gmny
Adkins made 83 yards in nine at·
tempts and sqphomore Bird Wilson
was one for one lor' a 75-ya~d touchdown.
Leading witdcat rushers were
Bird Wilson with 15 carries for .98
yards, Robin Legg with eight carnes
for 29 yards and Devin Conrad with
five carries for seven yards.
Top tacklers for I;Janrum High
were Mark Hill with 12, Allen Camp

High I now you n u l ~aw a hundh·

yuur O(&gt;W (' t.'ilin~.
If Y•IUhu y ju ~ t t IH' IIO IIH' b Il l' til t•s, Y&lt; 1\ l 'II )..\1 '1a sr.
AT&amp;T Lonf.t Di stann ' Certifkah·- ancl a f· - ~· ~ ·;u· l tnr it1•d
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12'

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Sl. l\" ing."i ~

on Armst rnng do-it ·yt ~ u r!-w lf t '(' i lin~ 1ilt•s and p;ult'ls.
Pltt.'i, if you hu y llw Arm s! rn ng fl rid or Easy ti p '
Kit ~ to pul ttwm up, .vnu 'II fl-1'1 a $10 AT&amp;T Lom~
Oi stann• Ct•rl ifkutP- and a lO ·y(•ar li mitt'd warranl yo n

than you need
to lor car
Insurance?

Hannan
defeats
Oakvale

NAME HANDS
SUCH AS

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a 1Qri9- distance

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AIOVt POMEROY OfF RT. 7 IYPASS
TAlE 143 NORTH TO ClRPfNTU
LEFT AT U. TRACKS. FOllOW THE SIGNS.

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Save on an

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DeCola has plenty of practice
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· room, but high on his priority list !sa

tO' I 12'
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4 2 0 .fiill66 131
4 2 0 .Ei7Ll8UJ
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J 3 0 !DHil 135
3 J 0 .!illl52 166

2 40 .113 lti90

Q ·.

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ray DeCala took early retirement two years
ago after buDding Urbana High
School football to one of the top
programs in the state. Now,
however, he may be facing his
toughestjob yet.
DeCola, whotumedoutnumerous
unbeaten high sd10ol teams at
Urbana, has taken on the task of
buDding a football program from
the ground up at Urbana University.
"It's a big job," DeCola said In a
telephone Interview. "We had to go
out and get the young men and when
you don't have an established
program, It's rough: You've got to
fight the rumors tt (football) Isn't
going togo."
But, pro~ DeCola, "it's here
to stay. We've got a president (Dr.
Paul Bunnell) who's gung-ho for
toothaU."
DeCola's team, made up of 50
players, nearly all of them freshmen, and playing against junior
varsity squads of other Division Ill
schools, has won three a!live games
going Into this week's contest
against Tiffin, the other new kid on
the Ohio college football block.
The two tosses have come at the
hands of Case Reserve and Dayton,
hath among the best small school
programs in the state right now,
whUe the wins were over West
Liberty (W. Va.). Ohio Northern
and Bluffton.
Urbana Is a member of · the
National A&amp;;oclatlon of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and, like
other Division • III schools, Its
scholarship money Is based on need.
DeCola urged the school to grant
"tuition waivers,'' to bring In some
better players, but was turned
down.
"They (the administration)
wouldn't go along with that," said
DeCola, "so we're strictly on
financial aid and It hasn't been too

Th1~

Phlla.

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Nlilaall Ct. S&amp;ct EMI
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Dallas
J J 0 !OJ 143 11!1
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F.d~on

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Oak Harbor U , Genoa ~
Oak Hill 9, Rock HID 6
Oak Glen t\\V111 II, Jt&gt;Jr Union 7
Obt&gt;rlln :W, N ~Ilk&gt; 14
OntarkliJ, Northmoor I'
Orrville 26, Fa lr lt-ss 0
Otli('ao to. Etniwood o
Pain Rtver&amp;de 1\. Ashtal:alla 0
Parma 1.1, I..ak""'·ood 0
Parma Val Ftw'gp 14, Clr His 7
Parma Normandy 6. Ga rfiPid Hts 4
PINid~R :Ji, Speact"n'illr 7
~Wry 21. Aurora 12
Philo JJ. Morpn 7
Port/JmOI.IUL W 8. MinfOrd 7
Porfli:t SE lt, C'restwood 6
Pymatv.ntn g Val 21 , Mattrws 0

llnf'b&amp;l'kf'l" Fulton Kukendall.

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Ind.
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0 ti 0 .Bll l20 192

i..oYt"land 41. M&lt;idf;ra 8
Lowfollvlllt" al, Beor Cen WR 14

18 13

Washtngwn 4, sunalo 1
Edmonton 3, Bosron :l

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day, Glannoulas' attorney, Elliot
McDonald, argued that "intent"
was the key to the case. He said
Glannoulas' was performing an act
and had no Intention of harming
Schulze.
The closed verdict was Issued at
about 5 p.m., but no further
explanation was available, court
of!lclals said.
Glannoulasworedarkglassesand
a Kansas City Royals baseball cap
pulled down over his eyes when he
appeared In court Thursday.
"Hopefully, when this Is over, lt'll
be over and I'll never be bothered ..
Wlth It again," he said.

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career had been hampered by an
Injury he suffered while playing for
the Quad City Cubs in 1981.
Schulze said that Glannoulas,
dressed In his chicken costume,
tackled htm as he rounded third
base after a home run durlng an
exhibition game. Schulze, a fonner
member of the ·Chicago Cubs
organization, said he separated his
shoulder when thetmmenfell to the
ground.
Gtannoulas said he Intended to
grasp Schulze In a bear hug, pinning
the pitcher's amns .·to his side so
neither man would be hurt.
During closing arguments Thurs-

Ashley
Improves On
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EBERSBACH

BLOWEa

NHL res.ull8

Brown from til.' lnJuml rne rve list ; walvt'd
ofll.'rlSive iJU&amp;fd Ray Snell San Diego Reactl\latfd Tight end Kl&gt;llen Wlru;kiw and
coJ'IIertla('k TI.'IT)' l..twls: rel'ast'd rortlf'r·
back Jim Rockford a nd NMin&amp; back

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) curtailed workout at Royals elimination, heshutouttheToronto
Jolm Tudor's most Important call Stadium.
Blue Jays2-0.
this season came from a friend who
Jackson, 23, went 14-12 durlng the
Jackson relies on a fastball and
slider and considers himself a power
discussed pitching mechanics.
regular season with a 3.42 ERA. He
Danny Jackson's biggest one gained promlnence in the playoffs
pitcher even though he struck out
developed last week when Kansas when, with the Royals facing
onlyll41n:nllnnlngs.
City manager Dick Howser named , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - him to pitch Game5ofthei\rrerlcan
League playoffs.
Having arnved in such varied
fashion, the left-banders opposed
each other Saturday night in Game 1
of the World Series, Tudor for the St.
Louts Cardinals and Jackson for the
Kansas City Royals.
1/•" steel construction
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The·Royals' leadoff hitter, Lonnie
Smith, and relief pitcher Dan
Quisenberry also are Important
keys for the Royals In the Serlss
because botharecomlngoffsub-par
performances in the Arrerican
League playoffs.
Willie McGee, Jack Clark and
Jolm Tudor are the big keys fa the
Cardinals.
'
Smith, one of baseball's best base
stealers, creates a lot of trouble lor
the opposition when he gets on base.
Despite hitting only · .250 in the
·playoffs, he had six hits in his last 14
at-bats.
Howser believes his tsam has
enough pitching tm defeat the
Cardinals, rut It may depend on how
well Qulsenberryperlonns. Quisenberry had 37 saves during the
regular season but was hit hard by
the Toronto Blue Jays during the
playoffs.
6Qutsenberry had a lot of trouble
with left-handed batters during the
season and -the ·playoffs. Leftbanders hit .aw against hlrn as
oppose&lt;! to .229 by right-handed
batters.
McGee also Is coming of a poor

Southpaws face each other in series opener

THE ECONOMY OF WOOD ••• .
WITH THE LUXURY OF AUTOMATICALLY
CONTROLLED TEMPERATURE

•• •

that."

playoff perlpnnance. He led the
National League in bitting during
the season with a .353average rut bit
only .269 against Los Angeles.
However, two of those hits carne In
the lastgamesohe maybe out.a his
slump.
Clark also appears to have his
homerun strOke backandthatcould
be a big boost for the Cardinals. H~
hit a three-run homer In the ninth
lnnlng to defeat the Dodgers ln the
decisive stxth game o the playoffs
after having hit ooly ooe homer over
the last month of the campaign.
Tudor Is a key because he was
baseball's best left-bander durlng
the season and may pitch three
games ln the Series. Tudor, ·who
went 1·1 against the Dodgers In the
playoffs, started the opener Satur·
day night.
·
The key players as selected by
UPI before the start of the league
championship series turned out to
figure promlneritly in the outcome.
The success of Clark and the.
failure of relief pitcher Tom ,
Nledenfuer was lnstrumentalln the
Cardinals' trlumph In the NL ':
playoffs.
1
Also, the failure of pitcher Dave 1
Stleb and the success of George ;
Brett played pivotal roles in lhe final i
result d the AL playoffs.
·'

'The Chicken' dodges legal hatchet

1\A.l\SA.&lt;; C'fTY, Mo. !UP! ) -

Both Dick Howser of the Kansa s
Ci t,· Ro,·al' and Whitey Herwg of
th ~ St. Lou iS Cardinals like pitching,
speed. defense- and winning.' Wlth
just enough power to keep you
legitimate.
H ~rzog , who managed Kansas
City from 1970-79 but lelt because he
couldn't get past the New York
Yan kees in three playoffs. loves
speed in the outfield.
One of the first things he did after
tak ing over the Cardinals In 198lwas
look for the fleetest outfield he could
find .
Willie McGee flts theHerzogmold
in center. He can fly, steal bases and
hit from both sides.
On artificial turf, on which both St.

serving as a color analyst lor
ABC-TV. "Without McRae behind
him, ht--ay have a 1endency .to do

The Sunday

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�October 20, 1985 .

Recruiting snap ·for Kirkhart .:
COLUMBUS (UP1)- For Roger
(Buzz) KlrlCbart, rECruiting players
for hls first Tiffin University football
team was a snap. The real problem
was taking care of those he got.
"We dldn"t start to recruit untO
March," said Kirkhart, who led
Tiffin CalvE&gt;rt to a couple of small
school state high school football
titles before resigning after last
season, '"and it really was!)'.! !h.a t
difficult.
"They rmllzed they were going to
have the opportunity to play and at
other schools, freshmen very sel·
dom have that opportunity.
"But, once you've got theplayE&gt;rs,
you've got to have facUlties lor them
to dress."
Starting In late July. Kirkhart.
.directed a project which saw the
revamping of a buDding into
lockerroom fac!l!tles.
'"It wasn't the bes~" he said by
telephone from T!lfln. "but it was
the bestwecoukl do at the timE'."
Then, It was time for hls new
players to report.
'"The first two weeks, there ,was

FAI18 TO SCORE -Brad Roblason, (%11) Meigs'

denied the end """" lor the first time tiM M!II!IOIIIoot
the team'slong gains of the night c1111e 011 pas&amp;elllop
Robinson from Mike Chancey. Chancey scorecl the
Marauders' only touchdown.

premier nuudng back lalled lo soore Frlda.v night as
Warren Local bandeclthe Marauders a 31-7TVC loss.
II was Melp' liN defeat ~the season. Roblnaon was

Warriors hand Marauders
By KEDH WISECUP
scrambling from the pocket. The
Sentinel stall writer
junior signal-caller led Warren in
VINCENT Warren Local rushing with 70yards on 11 carries.
quarterback Doug Huffman passed
·we had enough good breaks
to two touchdowns and ran for tonight to last us the whole season,'
another as the Warriors took over said Warren coach Robert Hlll. 'We
undisputed possession of first place just happened to be In the right place
In handing Meigs !Is' first defeat of at the right tlmeonacoupiE&gt;oftipped
the season, 31-7, here Friday.
passes and both Interceptions.
All three touchdowns that Hut· Going into the game. we trought we
fman accounted for came in the could run the ball against their
second half as Warren pulled away defense and would have to score at
from a 10-7 halftime advantage. The least four touchdlwns to win. Our
Warriors scored on three of four de!Pnse played excellent, holding
second half possessions while the them to only seven points." said
Marauders could penetrate oo Coach Hill.
closer than Warren's42 yard line.
Wan-en took a~ lead In the first
"We just got beat. Warren done a quarter on Steve Welsh's 25 yard
super job and we made some big . Held goal. After an exchangt! of
mistakes that really hurl. Warren punts to start the game, Warren
took advantage of our mistakes. A traveled 70yards !neigh! plays to the
good football team like Warren will Meigs eight. Two pass completions
make something out of the breaks it by Huffman. !&gt;yards to Curry Ryan
receives:· commented Meigs coach and 30 yards to Troy Eddleblute,
Olarley Olancey.
accounted for most of the yardage
A swarming Warrior defense was during the l!rtve.
the big difference.
Meigs came back to take Its only
Warren LOca!.now7-1overalland lead at 7·3 In the second quarter
7-0in theTVC. held Meigs to196total when It drove 96 yards In 12 plays.
yan:ls and did something no other Chancey, who capped the drlvewtth
teamhasdonethisyearandstopthe · a two-yard 111n, was four of lour
Marauders' big play offense.
passing during the drive Including
Meigs' longest gain from scrim- completions ol10 and lJ yards to J.
mage was a pair of 10 yard passes R. Kitchen. 18 yards to Rotinson,
from Mike Chancey to Brad and six yards to Phil King.
flobinson. who was denied the end
Warrentooktheleadforgoodwith
zoneforthe first time this year.
38 seconds lett In the first hall when
Huffman turned several potential fullback Dwa!n Roddy ran up the
losses into key gains with his
middle from live yards out. WLHS
had gone myards in 12 plays, all but
14
yards coming on the groond.
Friday's scores
The game•s turning point seemed
Clark ~'\\' :!0. C:nhil(n 0
to
come In the second quarter's final
C"iark S.E ll Wayi'I'S11llP I&gt;
Cla\1on Norti1rnoot 14. Gm:'lll'\l le 11
seconds when the Warrtors blocked
Clf&gt;. JFK lS. Ck&gt; S U
Olancey's 24 yard field goal attempt
CIP Colllnw-"ood 14. 0&lt;&gt; E o
(')(I fUxldeo!; 12. Clr Marst\allli
on the final play ct thP first hall. The
C'll' JoM Hay 22 . 01.' Unroln W 0
Marauders had traveled 78 yards In
('I(' Holy Namt" ll, B«Uord Cllllllrl1
(1r Luth W' 3:2, M«&lt;lrl a BUCIC~·t• 21 tOII
36 seconds on lour plays to the
{lmront 1\'E H. Milton Union lU
Warren six yard line with siX
Col 5 'li. Col Nonhlanct 7
Col Aradml~' &lt;10. r\ UniOn 0
seconds lett. After an · Incomplete
Col E ~- Col Crntmnk'l !l
pass !n the end zone. Chancey's
Cal Hartk-y C). Col Rtacly ll
Cci \\'tl('ts!OI"'(( 77, Col BrlW !I
three-point attempt was blocked.
Col Easrmoor ll. Col Mifflin 0
Warreri made It 17-7 with a
Col FrankUn Hts :1'1. DPla~~o·art" 'll
Col Brookna\rn 21. Coi.Mar-Frank fl
16-play, 74 yard drive that ate up
Col ln~dena&gt; 21. Cli LI!Kk&gt;n l3
over
minutes of the third
ColdwB IA' . ~. NN · 8rmJm II
COkr.l ln Jt 08 Hllll 0
during the drive

T£AM'

1);1~· CharThl ul :n. 08)' IJunbar 6
Dil~ llcobnonl 1{1, 0..~· Pa ltm;on 7 '
1\1). Northli4!:1' .l l. Vallry VI~· ID
Dublin 6. i3u(-kf')'l" Val 2
Dr&gt;lpl»!. .lf'lfi'I"SOII 22, Allm F: fi
r:.O,O.It&gt;!.l ~· n :12, IMUoo 7
E \anion 21. E Pal~! irK' 6
F'.o~~llak f' :\ 21. &amp;-drord JJ
t:lyrla .1, F'lndlav 0
:
Et;. na Cll th 14. Lorain Sout h\'ir.l' G '
F'alrland l~ . S Point 7
Fairb;Jn~ tl. M('('llaniMt.Jrg g
ra1rfK'Id t'nlon H. Bl&gt;riY' Union 6
F"lrf'land~ li. ( 'u' Ht~ o,4o, ,
Fnn":"ol Pa'r k i. 'na} ,\1radi.N.'dall' 2
For! f'l)'(' ~- Shi•ni!n!b.lh ti

VlMon County ................................. 4

Wl"'lstm ............. ............................. 1 7 106 2l6
FPder'aiHocklllg .................... .......... l 1 071~
Mlllft-.................................... ......... 0 8 J6 2Bl
Frtdlv"•~

Warn!~!.

J1 Meigs 7
NekonYWf"York 54 Altxaadl'r 14
Wellltoft 3:1 Fe&lt;k'ral Hocking lJ
BeiPft' 32 Mll~r 8

15
w
112
13

Ctmplcllollli ,........ .. ... ................... ...... 9
lnr~rrd lfy ........... . .....
.... .. ... 2
varm p~~uJ na ................................. !16
Total )'l rds ........................... .. -.. , .. 196

!1

- -.. .....................
Lost l'llmblrtj

.. ... !

·

0

_...,._

Punts ................

............... ......2·1.1-S

Mt-ta:s........... ..... ..... -................... 0 7 0 (}.... 7
JackSon .............................. ........ J 1 1 If- 31

l ndlllll l.akl" 2-1. Wa,vrw&gt;sfi eld

(I

Indian Vallrv roo 6. Ji'\l'f'l ~: kl n
Ironton 213. Grf'l'n~p CO 4KY 1 7
,J Mirrson t l. U&gt;d~emo111 0
Ken~ IC'In

1,11, W Gf.aUJtl ('_,(I

Krt t F'alrrmnt .'\3. 0.1,1 Wayrt' "11
I\(~ I Altrr lil. Dlly Col Wh lfr li
1\Jrtlood 40. Mld'flrld Cal'dlnal ti
Pandora.CIIboa 0
l..~&gt;rnon· MOII rof' 2!1, MlamL~bul"'!' 6
J..coxlngton 31, Mans Malabor fl
l.ltxorty IJnlon 8, Bloom Carroll 7
Uekinll: Val 22, Utlra 8
Llcklll$!' His H. Tf'ay~ Val t.'\
Uma &amp;t lh l'i. W upako111.~a H

OAKLAND, CALIF. - Kaiser last year's quarter.
·Aluminum &amp; Chemical Corporation
Sales In 1985's third quarter were
said that btcreased fabricated $526.4 million, compared with$548.8
aluminum sales imd !ower produc- million in the year-ago period.
• tlon costs sharply reduced its third
Prior-period amounts have been
quarter 1985 pre-tax Joss from - restated to reflect tbe anticipated continuing operations oompared disposition of trading activities.
with the year-long level.
Kaiser Aluminum during the quarCha!rmann and Ol!ef Executive ter announced that It Intended to
Officer Cornell C. Maler said the dispose of this business and in
compl\Jly"s pre·tax hss !n this September sold the fertilizer seg.
• year's quarter was $24.6 inlll!on, ment oft~ trading operation .
down 55 percent from a loss ct $544 · The company's net loss from
million In the same period of 1984, oontinu!ng operations In the third
even though price reallzat!ons from qu arter was $14.2 mlil!o~ or $.34 per
fabricated aluminum , sales de· . share, compared with $10.7 million
cllned by 11 percent on a year·!o- or $.25 per share in the same period
year basis.
last year.
In the third quarter, the rnrporaMaier said the reduction in the
tlon had a net Joss of $17.7 million or company's pre-tax operating klss
$.42 per common share, compared during the quarter was achieved by
with a Joss of $73.2 mllllon or $1.lll continued execution of Kaiser
per share In the 1984 period. The Alumilium's strategic plan . "The
Joss In this year"s quarter includes a overall trend In aluminum dell ·
loS$ of $3.5 mlilion or $.&lt;Jl per share n!tely has been up, as derronstrated
on the anticipated disposition of by a solid Improvement in the
Kaiser Aluminum's International division's third quarter operating
trading business and a negative' tax profits compared with results in the
provision of $10.4mUiion. Results in second quarter," he said. ""Our
the 1984 quarter Include a loss of production costs are down and wll!
, $60.7.m.Ullonor,~l.il! ~r~~refrom decline further, our fabricated
disPositions of the' company's re- products output and sales are up .
fractor!es and agricultural cheml· The continuing drop In aluminum
cals businesses as well as an Idle prtces Is making our task a tougher
aluminum · extrusions plant. A, one, but when all elements ol the
negative tax provision of $41.7 strategic plan are in place, the
mUlion !s also included In results for corpora ton will be profitable.

Adult &amp; Pediatric Uro1·ogy
•URINARY TRACT INFECTION
·•INFERTILITY •IMPOTENCE
OFFICES AT:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
675-6060
JACKSON GENERAL HOSPITAL
304-372-5650
BY APPOINMENT .

I
I

•

•
•

PUBLIC AUCTION

1976 DODGE CHARGER SE, ·auto., good work car.
1980 CHEVROLET (AMARO, V-8~ auto, new paint.

1964 INTERNATIONAL ROAD TRACTOR
1970 CRIMSON MOBILE HOME, 12x65, reconditioned,
3 bedrooms, 1112 baths.
·

.

~D~t:

0662

COLUMBUS - The average (EOG ), showed a one percent
household monthly gas b!ll has increase in. the bill from $70.76 to
•
increased slightly in five of Ohio's $71.36. Dayton Power &amp; Light paychedo lor some time. UPI.
eight major cities since June 1984, (DPL) had a slight increase from
according to a smvey released by $73.78 to $74.21. However, EOG is
the Ohio Office of the Consumers' seeking a fuel decrease at the
Counsel (0CC ).
Public Utilities Commission of
ATHENS - The Manager of
The small increases Indicate that Ohio. (PUCO).
Columbus and Sout~rn Ohio Elect ·
gas heating payments are staying
Columbia is the only major utility ric Company's Afhens Division,
relatively steady as a result of in the state that sets rates at the John R. Weeks, has announced the
actions by federa l and state local levei. MunJc!pal customers promotions of two employees to
regulators and cheaper gas oost, pay rates negotiated In rate positions In the Marketing &amp;
Ohio Consumers' Counsel William ordinances by CGO and municipal Customer Services department ef·
A. Spratley said.
.
· officials, 1\'h!le .the PUCO deter- fect!ve November 1, 1985.
The typical monthly gas bill mines rates for the five percent of
The Marketing &amp; Customer
(based on JJ,OO&gt; cubic feet ct gas) in CGO's customers woo live In Services department is responsible
Toledo has draped 3.5 percent from unincorporated areas. This prac- · for all marketing, customer blllln g
$92.49 to $89.22, and in Columbus tice has resulted in 455 different and Information. meter read in g,
from $88.76 to $81.58, eight percent , residential rates In Columbia's credit and collection and revenue
according to' OCC. Both c!t!es are 61-county area.
protection activities in the Athens ""
serviced by Columbia Gas of Ohio
"Mun!c!pal!t!es clearly are better Division.
(CGO). which showed a 4.3 percent off letting ihe PUCO set their
Howard E. Stevens of At~ns. has
decrease , from $86.74 to $83, in the rates."' 'sald Spratley. "'Many cities been named Marketin g &amp; C.stoaverage bill within Its territory.
have been reluctant to dJ this mer Services manager for tire
Likewise Cincinnati Gas &amp; Elect· because they have viewed the Athens Division, replacing Elton
_ric (CGE) reported a 3.1 percesnt PUCO as a rubberstamp for the Swart who Is retirin g Cktober 31.
decrease fron$74.79 to $72.43.
utilities. That just isn't the case 1985.
Four cities with increases, Cleve· anymore. This commission is
Steven T. Bodkin of Athens, has
land, Akron. Youngstown and taking a fresh , tough look at
been elevated to Marketing &amp;
Canton, all seiVed by East Ohio Gas Columbia, and I think consumers Customer Services' supervisor lor
"t';r~i'l
appreciate that. The clUes can get a
Athens Division. He replaces John
lEtter deal from the PUCO, than
from Columbia."
OCC also is encouraging munlc!·
palities whose rate ordinances
expire this autumn to fonn a
uniform rate coalition and nego.
tlate i' rate with the utll!ty. OCC
now offers technical and legal
assistance to &amp;&gt;me eight coalitions
comprised of more than no
municipalltles.
Spratley also criticized the wide
"disparity in rates within Columbia's
territory. For example, oome
consumers in Monroe County pay
the highest rates in the utll!ty's
area, ot hers the lowest. The typical
ratepayer In Stafford pays $129.4.1 a
month, but just a few mites away
other Monroe Cou nty consumers
pay li&amp;l .:&gt;J lor the sa me amount of
ga s. MarbJ.e Cliff (Franklin
, County) has the lowest municipally·
Howard E. Stevens
set )Jill at $75.96. The highest·
PUCO-set bill of$90.!Wi applies in the
unincorporated areas of 12 counties
in &amp;&gt;utheastern Ohio.

Pair promoted by C&amp;SOE

OVEC promotion

' 1981 DATSUN MAXIMA, 4 Dr., 6 cyl., loaded.
1981 DATSUN 280ZX, 5 spd., loaded, sharp.

mliCimJ

TElliS: Cash, Penonal Check ,.,with
Positive I.D.
. ,.
Ohio Valley lank rtHfYii the right to accept or reject any or all bids, and
all Items art subitct to prior sale. All vehlcl11 may be s"n at the main of·
fke, 420 Jhlrd Avenue, Galliolis until sale .day.

.0&amp;12

6 Pane I.................................. s119.9 5
12 Panel ~ ................................ 5129.95
9 Lite ...•..••.•...••.....•......•....••.. $149.95

OHIO VALLEY BANK

32" AND 36' WIDTHS

OWNER

LJ--Ip~k' ti.

BAUM LU BER

GEORGE E. WOODWARD JR.
AUCnONEER

Street- Chnter,.Ohio
PHONE 61.·915·3301

W. Main

NOJ HSPOIISIIU POl ACCIIINtS OllOSS OF PIOIITY.

-.---· .....

ON STRIKE - Hundreds of striking United Al&amp;o Workers line the
sidewalk of the Chrysler Corporlil!on's headquarters Friday. The
strikers were there both to picket and pick up what could he their final

.,

GUilD WITH SAFETY GLUING MAIEIIAL

.•

,..__

· October 2Q, 1985

The company proposal also
includes profit sharing. but a lower
new-hire rate ' than the union
wanted.
In Canada, where more
thanh10,00&gt; workers are on strike,
the newly Independent UAWCanada decided Friday torema!nat
the downtown Toronto hotel where
the talks are taking place rather
than break for the weekend as was
earlier planned.
UAW-Canada Director Robert
White said even though there was no
Indication of anY, movement, . the
union wanted to be on hand.
Analy sts said the strike w!ll cost
Chrysler $150 million if !t lasts two
weeks. Weekly strike benefits for
70.0CO U.S. workers. which go into
effect on the 15th day ofthewalkout,
w!ll cost the UAW alxlut $10.5
million.

Average gas bill
higher, OCC says

The following property of the Ohio Valley Bank will be offered for
sale at Public Auction. Sale will be conducted on the lot of Motor Car
Brokers approximately 1112 miles North of Holzer Hospital on State
Route 160.

Includes fingerjomt an{toxic treated jambs 4·9/16", with
row, Q-Lon compression weatherstrip and Fin-seaL Prefin·
ished oak and aluminum sill with protection strip.

~~~
t mliS!lmJ

Bieber said !terns holding up the
negotiations included a full economic. parity package that would
reward Chrysler workers for helping the au tomaker ·avert
bankruptcy.
"We are stlll far apart on key
Issues. including profit-sharing and
job securitY.'' Bieber said.
"I said earlier that I cannot
predict the length of the strike," he
said.
Neither'llide commented speclfi·
rally on proposals, but bargainers
were believed concentrating on a
second company offer calling for a
three·year contract with 3 percent
annual pay raises plu s lump-sum
payments In the first two years
aimed at repaying some of the
concessions workers made between
1979 and 1982.

;:::::.:::::::..::::::.:::.:..::=:..::.....;,:..:.____...:,_____________

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 19_85
10: A.M.

Insulated Metal Clad
Entry System !Assembled)

0610

SHRIKANT VAIDYA, ,r.tD.

r,J
2
.f.70
J.Jl~

7. i\shlilll fttrbor 3

10. Norton 1:

:Kaiser reports lower
:third quarter losses

o

.......... .. ........................ " 0

(Oo&lt;.tJTI t!+. Bl311('11&lt;'!;1f'r l2
r ;'·'"'" ,...., Ji , .1onatlll1n Aldf&gt;r o

l~odo;on

,,

79

f'fonal!k's ............... ..... ................. A-8)

r; i hvmbur~ 1~. 1\anws I.akolu 0
( ;ir.m-1 :JI, Poland 0

HolR'lllf&gt; ';.1 , HIII!Cf) 211
llolll!nd .'iprln.: li. M1lbun. Lakt• ()

By JAN A. ZVERINA
midnight Tuesday, costing the No.3
auto company an estimated $19
UP! Aulo Writer
DETROIT (UPI)- Negotiations million a day in the two countries.
· between striking Chrysler Corp.
The union "wants very much to
workers and the company recessed find a solution as quickly as (X&gt;Ss!ble
for the weekend with United Auto to end this strike," Bieber said. '"I
Workers union president Owen believe the company shares tha t
Bieber saying the union wants "a . attitude."
solution as quickly as possible."
In West Point, N.Y. , Chrysler
Bieber late Friday said he and chairman Lee Iacocca said Friday
other top bargainers would go to a the company had made a generous
meeting of the un!on "s Chrysler offer and refused tosayhowlongthe
Council -slltun:lay In · Huntsvllle, company could survive without its
Ala., to resume contract talks union workers.
1
Monday afternoon.
"1 hope the two sides can get
More than !l&gt;,tm workers in the together and reach an agreement,"
United States and Canada st111ck at lacocca said. ·

Next year, however, It will be all
varsity. '"We"ll have our hands fuU there,''
said Kirkhart. '"I think that's too
much schedule, but we'U play them
with the idea thatwewillgrow. We"ll
get better."'
Kirkhart, woo plays two-platoon
football all the way, Is in oo hurry to
rush into a league.
,..

You'll be happy seeing a low 9,900 miles on this
odometer. Artie white with red leather. Local

.. 1.1
-flrst cklwns ....... .... ..... ... ........
"
'i a...ru 1\l~hln,l{ ....... . ............... ... ........100
Pa.ua!ll&gt;mpls ................................ 13

~•nlinet Section D

N~· progress reported as Chry~ler-auto
.workers talks recess for·weekend

1984 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM

f;,m , ~&lt;;,l 12. l li~I 'WOXI 7

( ;ranrl \ ',11 :14 , F'a lqxm Hardln,ll' 0
r; l1,,1l..,i l'll' 31 . YrliO'II' Sprl n~ lfi
i:n.llf 'JIOf'l 'li. WC'Stland i
lllmnan Troc&lt;' 10. E Mi'lg_o; ;
Ha rdin :-&gt;:urttl&gt;rn 'li. Van Oun"fl T
llarrL~ 19, !'; COIIl'2r IIIII II
Hf'alll :II. H1•TJY1n l.akr·word 17

&lt;1 100 1M!
5 100 2nl

was a lake punt on fourth and five at
Trlm.ble f7 Vlnlon County fi
the Me!gs43. Welshtookasrortsnap
'1\'CO.._,
WLPOP
from center and rambled up the Te1m
Warren Ural ... ... ..... ........ . ........ . 7 0 :52 Sl
middle for 10 yards and a first down. Mtlp ....
............... 6 1 2g9 100
..... .............. .........&amp; 1 159 9f
Hutfmanscoredfrom16yardsoutto ~pre .....
Nelsonville- Vork .. .. ... . ................. ..4 J 211 131
cap the drive.
Trlmbko ................................. ......... ~ 3 lOJ 183
Warren scored twice In the final Alf'XAJidror ..................................... .a " 100 un
Vlllton Cou nty ............. ..... :. ..............1 t '!/152
five minutes when Hu11man passed Wf'llstoo ......................................... l 6 l061N
three yards to Cuny Ry;m and 15 FE'deral Hoctc~ ............................. l 6 6'1 UD
~ller ...........................................0 7 :ll 2.\1
yards to BrlanSchaad, lxlthcornlng Oftobera..-.:
Alf'Un&lt;U at Metes
on fourth and goal and followed Warr!n
Local at TrlmbltMeigs Interceptions.
Eil'lpre •t Ftdml Hcri: lnR
al Mlllfr
The first Warrm pick-off was by WelLston
Vlnlon Co.infy at Nebonvtlt&gt;-Yock
aii-TVC linebacker J. D . Anderson
and the second by Eric WUson, who
rambled Into the end zone on the
runback, oot the return was m1 Ulfled
by a holding penalty.
Meigs was led In 111shlng by
Robinson with 78 yards In 15 carries ·
whlle Jeff McElroy added 22 yards
In three attempts. Welsh followed
Huffman In 111shlnglor Warren with
52 yards !n"17 tries while Roddy had
32 yards In nine attempts.
Robinson also led Meigs In
receiving with tuur catches for 54
yards while King followed with
three receptions for 19 yards. Ryan
led Warren with two catches for 23
yards.
Meigs" leading de!Pns!ve player
and second to receiver, Huey Eason,
was sidelined for the game followed
the very first play. Eason suffered a
possible cracked ankle lxlne.
Warren needs wins over Trimble
and Belpre In the season's final two
weeks lor the sreond outright TVC
championship. Warren wont he title
in 1993 and shared the crown with
Alexander and Nelsonville·York In
1975.
Meigs plays Alexander Friday
nJght.

ro~ T orla 12. Or~ n Om; 0
r·r,mk.Jln -12. o :.:rord T-o~Ja.,qmd&lt;~ 1
rmlrrl'k iCM•n 411, Marion Cat h 19
F'n'mOn T 17. Ma rlon Hardi n ~ Ill
r.t~hann.t 1'1 Hry· rdtto;bu~ 1.1
r; ... llon 42. ~ h• • IIJI. 21
r ;&lt;~llipolis :r._.JH~k.~on o
r~ , .~,,

. .. ............. 4 " 219 ]ll(l
....... ......... . 4 4 m 1~

Al~~ .......... ... ., ....................... ...3

"ALL SEASONS"

·

·

A SOLID ALTERNATIVE

PtteiK!I .. .................................... .....7 1 266 100

Bel~ .......................................... .6 2 172 115

SPECIAL

Dav Oa kwood 10, Eaton l
Dil~ Carroll ~- Sprtn~r S ~

'ij;iJnes-

W L P OP

Warn!n 'l.ocal .................................. .7 1 266 'i'2

Coll:n'l Crawford 10. Rlvmhtk' ti
CoNmbLa 7, Kf")-Monr 0

Conl'lf'AU1 I\, MadlSOn 2
Ca;hoc'lnn 14. l.oudon•:Uif' 10
cr~~.· i n.eto n -&amp;!. Sprlna Carh CC'nl ti
frT~IIIlK' t!. C&lt;an:llnRtOn 7

first week or two, you get a lotmkids
go over the hill. It makes me ·
appreciate the freshmen who go to
other schools and stick it out lor· a
couple of. years untO they are able to
beat oomebodyout."·
Tiffin won its first three games
before dropping a 29-0 decision to
Dayton.
..._
The Dragons, who meet Urbana.
anotber first year football squad,
this week, are playing a junior
varsity schedule this year with the
exception of the. last game of the
season against Cumberland, Ky.

TVC standings
Trimble..... ....
Ntbon\/Wt'-York .

stunning, 31-7 _league defeat

one crisis after another," he said.
"Little things, like laundry. Our
biggest problem was logistics. Just
having things done on time. Getting
the locker room cleaned up. people
to.do our-clothes. managers. Things
you usually take for granted."
Kirkhart, fanner head coach at
Eastern }figh School. who spent 11
years at Calvert, was unable to
conduct the usual two-a ·day workouts in August.
·-we didn't knowhow to budget for
!1,'" he said. "We didn't know
whether we were going to have 35 Of
135 kids soow up. We had some
difficult times becoming a team
because we didn"t have a chance to '
be together.
·
'"But,'" he added. '"one thlng I
found oot. Kids play football at this
level because they want to play the
game.
""You've got to bring In 85 or 90
players if you want to keep ro. The

, DOWN- Workers are razing the lonner home and
buslness location of Nonna Goodwin on East Seoond
Street In Pomeroy. Mrs. Goodwin operated hlr Dorlst

retirement. A new office ooUdlng lo house an
!nsumnce agency will he bout at the locat!ori which L•
· owned by Elberlelds'.

shop In the location for many years before her

.•Ups and. ,down~. predicted for balance of trade

' COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Agriculiurewlll maintain a positive balance
of trade. but will suffer a drop in roth
export value and volume for the
fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. says
Dennis R. Henderson ,· Extension
!,.gricultural Economist at the Ohio
State University.
Agr!cultura I exports for the fiscal
·year 198i are expected to be aoout
$32 bllllon, down 16 percent from
19&amp;1, and Z7 percent from the peak
reached In 1981, Henderoon said.
' Volume w!ll decline by approx!'
f11ately
tO percent to129mllllon tons,
the fifth consecutive drop. Since
1981, export shipments havE'
dn~ppo&gt;d 21 percent. Nonetheless,
agr~'-ulture will generate a $12

billion trade sullllus for 1985.
Detailing export activity. Henderson said that world trade pa«erns ·
have dramatically changed. During
the past five years, the U.!). has lost
majorpon!onsofworld markets: 12
percent of the corn market. from 74
to62percent; 14percntofthew.heat
market, from 44 to30percent; and14
perc!'nt of the soybean market,
from 86 to 72 percent.
Since 1982. thE' valueofsh!prnents
to Western Europe and Asia - the
United States ' two largest blocks of
tradlng 'partners- has dropped 43
percent and 12 percent. respec ·
tlvely. Also, sales to Canada and.
Latin America have declined 5 and4
perce~t. respect!~flY. Partially of·

!setting these reductions has been
increases of 22 percent to the Soviet
Union and 8 percent to Africa.
Henderson offered these reasons
for agriculture ·s detertoratlngtrade.
position:
- A strong dollar that increased
the cost of U.S. goods relative to
those from other COI!ntr!es;
- A 20 percent increase In
non·U.S. production of grains and
oilseeds, encouraged in part by high
price supports In several countries;
and
-Relatively strong world prices.
lxlsted by lxlth the strong dollar and
U.S. ioan rates that encourage other
countries to maintain production
incentive prices.
·~

CHESHIRE - Louis R. Ford,
Jr.. P lant Manager at the Ohio
Va lley Electric Corporat !n"s Kyger
Creek Plant, Is announcing t~
promotion of H. Victor Wolle from
Maintenance Mechanic "'A" to
Mainten ance SupeiVisor, effective
October 1, 1985.
Wolfe joined OVEC in Septem-'
berr 1955 ~sa Laborer In the Labor
Department. In November 1955 he
became a Maintenance Helper in
the maint enance Depar tment ,
where he advanced to the (XlS!t!on
of Maintenance Mechanic ""A" in
November 1972.

Born who will also retire October
31, 1985. Bodkin will r·epon to
Stevens.
Stevens joined Colu mbu s and
Southern in 1955 and has served as a
residential sales repr·esentat!ve,
commercia l sales repr'Psrntat!ve,
assistant division manager, energy
services coordinator and area
manager durin g his career. Prior
to his promot ion, Stevens was
administrative assistant to th~
Athens Division manager.
Bodkin has been with Columbus
and Southern since March 19ffi,
when he joined t~ company as ~
power engineer. Before coming tq
C&amp;SOE , Bodkin seiVed ~arly five
years with Ohio Power Company,
another opera ting subsidiary of
American Elec tric Power.
C&amp;SOE "s Athens Division serves
customers in 10 southeastern Ohio
cou nties. It is ~adquanered In
At hens with area offices In Galllpo:
lis and Wellston .

Steven T. Bodkin

Liquor vendor allegedly
obtains special treatment

CLEVELAND (UP II - One of
Ohio's largest liquor vendors has
received preferent ial treatment for
its products through! ties wit h the
Celeste administration, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported today.
The newspaper sa id Clevel ander
Sy DeCesare, an exclu sive broker In
Ohio for Joseph F.. Seagram &amp; Sons
Inc .. has receiv!'d favors dating
from the first days of the
adm!n!strat!on .
Employees of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Cont ml sa id DeCe·
sare. who gave Ce leste a ca mpaign
donation of $! ,00&gt; in 19&amp;1, has
repeatedly used his politica l ties to
benefit hi s own interests.
DeCesare is also the presid ent of
Majestic Liquor Co. ,loca ted in a
Cleveland suburb.

DeCesare's influenct' bPga n in
mr ly 1983, when h1• uS£•d Th«K lor(• .
Celes te. the governor's brothrr. to :
help get a new S!•agram's jHodu ct :
introduced into stair liquor outlets .
during a mora1oriu m nn new :
listings, the nrw spapcr report!'d . ·
The liquor dcpar:mpnt also lssu!'d
J)('Ccsarp"sson. Michael. t~e solici- .
tor" s card nrr&lt;kd for alcoholic :
bevPragr salesmen. despite know- ·
!ng he had filro :&gt;fal se applica tion, :
obscuring his criminal record . The :
elder DeCesare swore to the '
accuracy or lh£• application.
Last .July. 1.\q uor Dtm:tor Ri·.
chard E. Carey's son, Paul, was :
hired by Seagra m to work in its :
1rade research department in New.
York. When wort! of the hi ring:
beca me known in Colu mbu s. Paul ;
Carey resig ned. thr repot1 said.

Bob Evans Farms
promotes Gallia man

H. VIctor WoHe

COLUMBUS- Martin L. Hash,
originally from BldweU, ha s been
promoted to restau rant manager at
Bob Evans Farms Inc., acccrdlng
to Robert S. Wood, exe::u t!ve vice
president and chief operating of·
fleer· of the company's restaurant
division.
·
Hash is promoted from assistant
man~ger or tbft. Chillicothe, restau-

rant to manage r of the mmpany's
Beckley, W.Va ., restaurant . Starting with the restaurant and sausage ~
company in 1977 as a grill cook, •
Hash became a manager trainee :
with Bob Evans Farms In 19!J&gt;. He:
is a graduate of Ga lllpoj!s Business :
College with an associate degree In
business administration. and .o(.
North Gallla ll!gh School.
•

�Page-0- 2 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

W.

Va.

October 20,

6. 1

1986

Earthquake jolts nation's East coast
NEW YORK (UP!\ - A brief eartlljuake jolted
people from sleep in the New York Clty area Saturday
and was felt from Philadelphia to southern Canada.
but no lnjulies or damage were reported, the U S
GeoJogtcal Survey said
The 6.11! a m tremor was recorded at a magmtude
of 3 8 on the Richter scale and was centered abou t 20
mUes north of New York City m the Mount

Vernon New Rochelle area said Bruce Presgrave, a
geophyslcrst at the survey's National Eartlljuake
lnformauon Center In Golden. Colo.
The sound was as~ the housewasexplodlng," saia
Adnane Markusen of Yonkers
An unusual event, the least selious of four
emetgenc~ ctassifrcauons was declared at Consoll·

dated Edison Co.'s lndlan Point nuclear reactor near
Peekskill There there was no damage to the plant,
which continued to operate, sald utUlty spokesman
Martin Gltten
Telephones ' at the New York Clty Police
Department were rlngmg off the hook with calls from
confUsed residents, said Sgt. Ronald Severin
'

9

Ohio-Point Pleasant,
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

Wanted To 8uy

21

We pay cuh for late model
chlan used cars

&amp;

co~al

heaters

SWAIN'S FUANITUAE, 3rd
&amp; Olive Sl Golhpoho Call
814·448 3159
Want to buy manuel ttre

changer Call 614· 256·
6251

Call 614·267 ·0766

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

Want to buy or rant used

/

I~::;;:::::::::====;::========~

and
Wrtte - M
D ~
Moiler,silver
Rt 2, Pomeroy.
Ohio

5

Happy Ada

HAPP140th
George &amp;

Columbus, Oh10

October 4 1985

Ruth!
2

Contract Sales Legal

Copy 1\io 85 976
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
APL 8500(391
Sealed proposals WIH be

In Memorram

In memory of 0111 son
Ronald E Champer. who left
I YNr todly Sad~ miSsed
by Dad. Mom, brothels O.Vid
James wne Arvr, dauaflters,
US

'"'" &amp; Debn

Dad and Mom Champer

In memory of
Ralph Reynolds,

Oct. 19. 1985.

Aftor the clouds lite sun
shmt.

After the Wlnter lilt spnna.
After tho slllwer lloero11bowFor life IS 1 cllanpable thmc
Aftet the ntcht the morn~nc
Btddrnc •II d11kness cease
Afttt hft s ares and sorrows

Tht comfort and swoetness of

"""

We love and mrss you. Ht·
lift. your Ststers and Fam·
tilts

received at 1h a office of the
O~rector of the Oh10 Oepan

ment of Transportation Co-

lumbus
A M

Ohoo 101UI 10 00
Oh10 Standard Tune

Thursday. November 7 1985

3 Announcements
NOTICE WANTED
tnfolmotiOII "' any ..,,....,ne
Hi&amp;tl School nluatos betweon
tilt r- of Al4 tlroutll 1954.
,_ -lieiHII&gt;
ur Traco AIINON Assn Sec
~ lhon. Rt 2. Box 75
Wirolos Olr. " oil 614-146-

0127 liter UlP M.

Galloa County Ohoo. m Park
Acceu Road '" ParTY Town
!l'l!p, by gr&amp;drng dri!UI'li"'Q and
paveng wnh asphatt concrete
on an aggregate base
Pavement Width - 20 foet
PJOrect Lengtf1 - 1,108 36
lin feet or 0 210 m1le

Worll Lengtf1 -. t 128 36
Ill feet

01

0 214 m1le

The Ohoo Depaotmont of

Transportation herab~ notifieS
all bidders that 11 will affimw

tivetv 11sure that

i1 My
contract entered 1nto pursu.,t
to thiS advert:tsement m~nonty
busin1111 ent811)nses Will be
oflorded lull opportunoty to
SJbmit bids tn response to thiS
mvitation and 'INII not be
diiCnmmatad aga1tst on the

grounds of race, color, u
for an award

MMmnum wage rates for
ttus PI)O«:t have been prflie

termned as requ1red by law
and are set forth n the bid

proposal '
''The date set tor co,let10n
of the work shall be set forth '"

the biddong proposal ..

Each bidder shall be required

to file with h11 bid a certW!ed
check or castuer s d'leck for m

amount equal to fMt per cent
of hll bid, but 11 no event more

MEIGS CO. FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
MEETING TUES.,
OCT. 22, 1985
CHESTER GRADE
SCHOOL
7:17P.M.

STEAK DINNER
TICKETS
Adults 13.00
Chtldren 11 00
CALL !192-?181
Or Contact 992-2181 or
any Board Member for
TICkets &amp; Reser~atrons

1

3 Announcements
Aac1ne Gun Sl'loot spon
sored by Racme Gun Ch.Jb
Every Sunday, begtnn1ng at

Card of Thanks

1 00 p m Foctorv Choke 12

We would hke to upress our
deepest app rec•auon to
fmmds and fam1ly for cards,
flowers and prayers durmg
my recent confinement to
Veterans Memonel Hospital
A spec1al thanks to Dr
W1therell, Dr Lentz the
nursmg staff, hospital per
sonnel. to our fnenda and
pastor Rev Melvin Franklin
and The Rockspnngs
Church May God nchly
bless you all Charles Dill
and Fam1ly

New Credit Cordi No one
refused

than fifty thousand dollars. "'a
bond for ten per cent of hiS bid,
payabfe to the Otrector

Bidders must apply, on tf1o
proper forms for

~aliflcetiOn

a1 learrt ten days pnor to the
date set for operung btds n
accordance with Chapter

1780

n1ans now acceptmg out-ofstaten also Dozena of
membert All aget Oetads

Yerd Sole good Coli 614
388·B449
2 puppleo •;, Pekenell8 Colt
614·245·6876
2 male yellow ktttena. 2 mo

old Colt 614·256·9359

43215

Cake and Candy Supply Block mole dog.l yrold; two
Shop Yl mtle east of Ham·

6

weeks

old

pups half

sonvolle on SA 143 Cake Doberman. 304-676 8072
bakmg and decoratmg for _or_8_7_6_·_23_9_6_ _ __ _
Over 150 1

msured

reasonable rates

Call 304 576 2336

ptans and specificabOns are
on file m the Department of
TransportatiOn and the offiCe
of tl'le 01strtct Deputy
Otrector
The D1rector res&amp;Nes tt'le
nght to re,ect any and all bids

Absolutly no hunt1ng or
trespassing on Old Town
Farm VIOlatOr! Wtll be
pro sec uted Charles C
LewiS

WARREN J SMITH
DIRECTOR
Oct 13 20

B

9 puppies, 304-875-1246

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
SPECIAL SALE

FRIDAY, OCtoBER 25, 1985
7:00 P.M.
All NEW MERCHANDISE

ALL TYPES OF CARPET. COLOR AND SIZES

All KINDS OF NEW FURNITURE.
ODOR PRIZES
COME EARLY AND LOOK

MARLIN WEDEMEYER-AUCTIONEER

245·5152 -

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1985
10:00 A.M.

Thrs rs the personal property of Clm Wells She IS
trl"a rest home Locat1on of auction 575 Bradway St
Mtddleport, Oh10
'ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Wash stand s oak dresser &amp; chest of dt awers wood hogh
cha1r mosc choars stands rockong chaor stand tables. AP
Donahue 111, morrots &amp; poctures sma ll drop leaf table l1me
oak do n10g roomlable w/ 6 chatrs ch1na cabonet buffet lea
pot, tea set pmk depressmn salt &amp; pepper, buller dosh lots
of m1sc cui glass and deptessron doshes wocker baskel an d
more
'HOUSEHOLD'
Amana 16 refrogertor, Frogodarre auto washer, Maytag elec
trrc dryer, krtchen table w/4 chaors hode a bed desk &amp;
chatr recliner, coffee &amp; end tables mrsc floor &amp;table lamps
B&amp;W TV, plant stands m1sc charrs metal cabonet Coop 25
chest deep freeze. metal bed, Hoover upnght sweeper (lliSC
pots, pans drshes and small appliances, lots of sew10g mate
nal, lots of nrce linens, and nrce clothes
MISC.""
Step ladder, metal lawn chatrs wood ladder miSe garden
tools, lois of llower pols step stool &amp; othet mosc

CLARA WELLS - OWNER
Cuh
'Not

ROBERTA A. WILSON, P O.A
Eats
Pos1trve ID
DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER

OhiO •
FOUND pa1r gluses lnfront
of Post Otf1ce, Galhpol•s

See

Key Johnoon•• 512

REWARD Now doubled.
please return ' Max 10mos

old Beaga Chdd,..n'o per
Moka Canaday. 614·446·
71i3B
S1lver and black male Poodle
lost in the VICinity of Monkey
Run Answers to the nama
of Cuddles Wear1ng a black
collar 1nd ftea collar Call
Found 1n Rutland, Mam St .
mens prescr~pteon gluaes

TV antenna to give away

Would the parson who took
my dogs from my property
on Oct 16th, please return

Coli 614·992·8926

1---- - - - - Puppies to g1ve away to
good home 6 wks old Pert

Garman Shepherd Coli
992·5824

6 reg11ter • alumm ptpaland

bog ooltank, ApplyY. 4 moles
Log cabin One day on Thurs

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Oct 19th.21at,22nd 23rd
Gene R1gg1 rBIIdance. top of
h1ll from Eastern Htgh
School
Hdme mterlor
Items, orl8ntal rug, boys
clothes(stzes 8 -18}, mens
IUiti(IIZB 42) 1adl81 9 · 10
11 12. mise i1ems Hours
10 00·6 00 Ram cancels
Movmg ule Several small
appliances, lot of new Tupperwara and mtsc 1tems
One dey only, Tuesday,

October 22 9 00 4 00

New Hope Road, Carpenter
restdenca

· .. Pt Pieilsa-n f ..
&amp;

614-992·3933

Mother Cat and 3 k1ttens, 1

Cell 614· 742·

$600 00 reword
Kapp

Elmer

LOST mele Bnt1any Spen1el.
reward 8100 00, 1f found
contact McClintock Wild

hfe. 304·675·4380 or 575·
8067

Vicinity

875·21 66
Pupp~ea.

and k1ttens, 304

675·7319 or 676 6937

Pubhc Sale
8r Auction

ISAAC'S
AUCTION
HOUSE
State Route 160. next to Post Offtce in VmSALE TIME 7:00P.M.

Constgnments taken on Saturdays 12-6:00 P.M. or
call anyttme through the week to make arrangements.

Wa. have new and used merchandtse.

DOOR PRIZES
Auctioneer: Finis Isaac

614-388-9370
Ant1que Auction - Nov. 2nd
If you are tnterested m selling your antiques
and collectibles ~all for more information,

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

from Galhpohs, take Route 141, turn leftonlo Roule
775 , turn rrght onto Patnot Cadmus Road Watch for
s1gns
Lookmg for merchandrse7 Try the Patriot Auction
Barnt We have all types of new and used men:han·
drse - appliances, furntture. antiques and collectors 1tems Somethmg for ewryone!
SPECIAL SALE
SATURDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1985 at 10:00 A.M.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS
Princess dresser quolls shaker style rocker. 1850 pnmrt1ve
table mad e wrlh wooden pegs desk, chaors, cabonets, oak
cou ch cast oron skollel Donahu e1ars stone 1ats ltbrarv ta
ble span geware, depressoon ~ass, and much more
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC IT(MS
Ken mote washer &amp; dryer, gas cook stove twtn beds, hogh
chaor stroller, 3sp Huffv boke trrcvcle metal wardrobe hall
tree, match ong freezer &amp; telngeratot, color TV, PVC f1ttrngs
(new) oatn tuo &amp; snowet t1tt1ngs (new I tow ropes, ro11away
bed 8 tracks FM /AM car rad 1os, swrng set, new bath tub,
new mold10g, self sea ling vanoty bowls new iJ8·hung doors,
ponv sadd les harn ess collars, ~ngle trees all ktnds of hand
tools &amp; much more
SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00P.M.
Door Pr1zes Gtven Weekly
Consrgnments accepted from 1:00-5:00 p.m. on Slturday
Have somethtngyou want to sell7 Contact M1rl1n Wedemeyer,
Auclioneer Arrangemerrts for prcl-up llf'ltce Milllllt.
Bam and Auctroneer aYa~lable for Publtc Aucttons on contract Contract rncfudes hauling end triRiportlng ell
merchandise.
Resrdent and Bustness Auction Servlet elso IYIIIablt
Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer

614/245-5152 - 614/388-8249

'•
8

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auctron

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE Eltate.

anythtng 7 m1 N of Holz:er
Hospttel or out180 at North

farm,
sales

Galho Ooalero t3 OO ; buy·
era Free Joe Joneo. Rt 1.
Bidwell, Dh 45814 814
367·7728

Weot Vlrgonoe 304 773
57B5 or 304· 773·6430

8

Garage Sale Fn Sat Man
9 00 ? 3203 Jeckson Ave

5 fam1ly yard sale 131
Lew11 St. New Haven. Oct
22 &amp; 23. 9AM toll 1

a:ro
II Till

~

Call 304·576·2921

W1nted to buy. used saddles
and otl'ler tack 304-882-

2782

CLASSIFIED ADS

asuper market

-·-·
11

18 mtlas northwest of Goihpohs, Oh "'Rt 160 or 7Vo mti!S north
of Rro Gronde on Rt 325 to ISAAC'SAUCTION HOUSE 1n Vonlon
Oh Corner of 325 and 160
Saturday, Nov. 2, 1986 At 10.00 A.M
ANTIQUES- COLLECTIBLES- GLASSWARE
FURNITURE Oak cane bollom hogh chaor (convert lo roc~eol cane

Ciretaker to hve-1n,

ISAACS AUCTION SERYICE-16141388-9370

AVON

SATURDAY, OCT. 26-9:00 A.M.

AUCTION

SAT, OCT. 26
BEGINNING AT 1:00 P.M.
On Leadtng Creek Road% mile from St. At. 1w1ll sell
the personal property of lhe late Anna Mohler as fol lows
HOUSEHOLD
Grbson ltost free tefttgetator Sunray gas range Smget elec
sewong machme (never used! d10mg room suote. sectronal
couch Eureka sweeper w/attch ,large elec fan , 2 coal wood
stoves 1metal and I wood wardrobe, new mtde door com
plete bed, Ad moral stereo, ~ep stool, 28 H alutllnum ext
ladder, 6ft alum step ladder, 6 alum ~otm wondows
ANTIQUES
2 dressers kotchen cabmet, glass door cupboard swovel
chart, odd chaots coflee grmder food gronder ~uare trunk,
d~hes, and many olher otems not lo sted
Thts sale Will follow the nle of Clara Wells at 575 Broad·
way rn Mtddleport. Not responsrble for acCidents or loss
of property
OWNER· WANDA FINDLING
AUCTIONEER: I.O..:'MAC::.McCOY . ·- _ ...
PHONE 985-3944

PUBLIC AUCTION
TUESDAY, OCT. 22, 1985
7:00 P.M.
LOCATION· 1415 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis. Oh1o

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
ABSOLUTE CLOSEOUT OF ALL NEW ITEMS AT
AUCTION PRICES
DEALERS WELCOME
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: A great opportuntty to get a
head start on holiday buytng Nice gtfts at auct1on
pnces. Be on ttme.
Electronrc games head to head baseball hockey race track,
flip over buggy lOY sttcks, remote control power rog Camara
highway patrol AM / FM stereo radros/tecorders table saw,
cordless telephone foot Bit ru JTC) , troublelite,
~deo cas
sette, lawn and leal cart 8 pc punch bo~ l set, Black &amp;
Decker crrculat sa!f1 musrcal Santas roll·away work ben ch,
UniSonrc portable 1v With AM /FMradro 3way power, garden
tools, assorted watches 10cludong Timex, gold cha1ns, other
assorted tewelty, also several ntce tools Porcelam dolls, wal
lets hats, sunglasses kntves, relish diShes relis h sets, ra
diOS
We are aoln&amp; to try carr best to sell co"'letely cart of all the
ttems mentroned above. Plus lots of other merchandrse
not ltsted Limrtld seating Come Early
Terms: Cash or check wrth proper 10
Sale conducted for Wholesale Distributors.
Auction Conducted By
McGHEE AUCTION CO
P0 Box 191. Gallipolis, OH
AUCTIONEER: BUD McGHEE
APPT. AUCT.. STEVE McGHEE
(614) 446·055~
Real Estate Brokers 1nd Auction.~. Book
now.

JVt

Ohto R1vsr Rd., St. Rt 62 &amp; 2 at the north corp
line of Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .
•
Match10g Wondsot rocker &amp; chaor mahogany game table
Duncan Plyfe drum table. oak dresse r nrce chold s rocker 3
pc bedroom sUJte oak hoghboy dresser, 2 glass ball organ
slools ntce bamboo book shell lobrary table chrna cab10et
talllern sta nd ntce old dtop leaf server w/wheels 8 day
kotchen clock old Edtson vrcttola 3 portable phonograph s
(cylin der) pat dates 1888. 1896 1888 wolh horns, very nr:e
Many cy linder records very !liCe oak record cabrnet 2/claw
feet old glass drsplay case Ia rev Voclonan settee, bow ltont
chon a parlor stand bow back settee taund parlor stand,
many charrs and rockers, small gate leg table oak wash
stand noce modern hode a bed matchtn gcoffee table &amp;end
tables ladoes ~ant top desk &lt;Ner sluffed chaor 3 pc settee
rocker &amp; chatr, many old poctutes and fram es 2 very n1ce
slagToffany type lamps, matchong Art DeVoe type lady figure
lamps !French) Hollywood bed, old record cabrnet talloce
cream stool baby bed 2 flat wall trunks, GE elec stove Ad
moral refrrgerator Maytag washer &amp; dryer, noce breakfast
set, krlchen cabrnets, small kolchen cabonet w/ llour btn
wash stand, 2 homrdrloets, portab le bar lloor lamp Oneoda
Silverware, 4 pc srlverplate coffee set. very nrce lg punch
-howl w/pedestal and cups, 12 very noce otllamps several
frosted &amp; desognoo lamp shades mce wooden roller churn
5 gal ston e churn, blue &amp; whtle butter w/lod blu e &amp; whrte
sponge bowl, A&amp;P coffee gnndet fancy wall mount coflee
gron der (Columbus OH I 3tall co flee molls 2 brass1cecream
scoops, store scales, ~d grease lamp 2 cherry seeders to
bacco cutlet cow bells, 2 brass washboards, shoe lathes
wash bowl, 3 blue Logan pottery gardoneers, 15 pes Rose
ville, porce laon cuspidor 2 very early bells, oron lion and
rooster banks Meakin polcher &amp; bow l 2 malchrng i1and
paonted vases (early !BODs) salter collec tron, napkon nng
collection 10 pes carn1val glass lg Hozey glass basket
1916 cast ~ron school hou se fish tank many fosh bowls &amp;
contaoners. many bord cages &amp; ~rd boxesand tela ted rlem s
bamboo bud cage , many l'lltfes bayon els and commemota
love sword. bealle body man dallne w/ pearl on lay ~d hand
accordoan table saw, scales feed sacks, many hand lools
rolls of chocken wrre totololler, wore fence, cast rron stove
mrsc lumber kotchen tlems 22 Spnngfteld nfle oron many
marbles. hobnaol, fancy perlume bottles hand pa101ect Aus
tnan vase, brass bookends several pes black amethrst
hand pamted prtchet noce compote Noppon &amp; Austnan pes
commemoratove plate collectoon 2 horse bottles (ambetl 14
pes Flo Blue Ben Franklin flymg krle small platter, lndepen
dence plate (Enochwood &amp; Sons) Allerton Eng chonese
plate. Lan caster Eng plate Wood &amp; Sons Eng gravy boat
Boston State House 1818 holplale (Eng 1 Dol Lyntax plat~
(SiaflotdShlte), Rtde of Paul Revere ISiaflordshlre),lg plat
ter bird and ftu~ desrgn Chmese falcon head handles on
diSh w/lid, Paysage Holland farm scen1 W Va State Hou se
w/other bldgs, cobalt butterfly tu mblet, royal copley, 3 co
bait Iiddie bottles, several buller doshes, many other rtems
too numerous Ia menloon

rate of pey woll be $4 33 par
thlt poonoon wrll be October
23. 1985 Ple11e contact
the local Bureau of Employ

.

Re·

the thmga free 1 Have' a party
of $150 end receive 840 In

free merchandlla or hove e
book party and rece1ve the
same Sp qu1te worrying end

book • party nowl Colt
Magnoloa Notz ot 614·992·
3561
Wanted lady to worit 1n
msurance off1ce Experience
end hcense preferred but not
requued for more 1nforma
t1on, wr1te to Offtce Man ager. 100 Unron Ava, Pome -

Local coq~any haa opamng
for several people full t1me
only Patd training pro
grams. paid vacation first
year, maJor mad1cel ~nef­
tts. Cell Man or Tuea. after

IOy, Ohio 46769

tunoty to oorn $250 to t300

. ''

.

''

•
•
•
'
·,

''•
•

''

~

~

liS Muot be rehlble Coli
614·992·6849 otter 6 00
pm
MONEY. MDIIIEY. MDNEYI
The ermy NaUonal Guard

can prov1de you w1th a

4662 for current federal lilt

1--------Euy Assembly Work I $600

part· time monthly

pay -

check . PLIJS qualified

per 100 Guorantaod PlY·
ment No expenence•no
sates Details send selfeddrentd stemped enve·

mambera could earn more

Help Wanted

r,....,.......,,....,....,::::::::::::::::::;;_,....,....,......

EARN S4.87 HR.

TOOLROOM
SUPERVISOR

needs your pnor military
serviCe eJipertence Enhtt
now for part time mondy
J paycheck, educalronal op·
portunit1es retirement 1n·
come, and much more "Call

304·675·3960 or 1·800·
842·3619

We need ass1stance in evaluating and responding to daily work reports submitted by
our agents throughout the state. No experitnce necessary; Paid to complete training.
Work at home. For mformation send selfaddressed, stamped envelope 9Yz mches
long to: AWGA, Dept. E, Box 49204, Atlanta, GA. 30359.
._,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....-,....,....,....,....
_ _ _. . . . .

Four

open

temtorlas.

6

atortong Tueadoy AVON
Call 304·676·1429
Too busy to h1ve a party In

I

-

QH. manufacturing facility for atool room Su-

oervisor. The successful candidate should be a
journeyman toolmaker with proven toolroom
$upervisory experience to manage a m~ium­
sized toolroom.

We are a successful Fortune 500 company/wtth
multi-national operations which manufacture
alld distribute a wide variety precision parts
for lhe general industrial, aerospace, farm and
construction equipment. truck and automotive
tndustries, as well as Teplacement markets.
Th1s New York Stock Exchange firm operates 40
plants, more than 50 d1stnbulion centers and 5
resmch fac1litles.

at

To receive condifential consideraton for this position, submit resume indudinl SIIIIY histoiJ and
reqpirements to: Personnel Maneger. Federal-Mogul Corporation, Precision Forged
Products Division. 2160 Eastern Ave .•
Gallipolis, OH 46631. (No agencies, pluse,

'

SHERWOOD &amp; MABLE COSTEN, OWNERS

j

'

••

Ci)FEDERAL
MOGUL

lo:=7==::======
23 Professronal
Services

1--------Water wells drilled and aervaced Prk:as on request Call

room house on approx V.t
acre of land 1n Dutchtown

Mlnenvllle. Ohio Priced
reduced Coli 614·992 ·
3171 for more 1nformat1on
2 large bedrooms, new
kitchen and laundry, com·
pleta with appliances newly
remodeled eir conditioned,
large lot, former McBride

residence College Rd • Syr·
614· 742·3147 or 614·992· ICUI8 Coli 814-992 5324.
6006
House and approximately 1
PIANO TUNING AND RE acre for sale Apple Grove.
PAIR back to ochool dio· 304·675 6406
counts.

free estimates,

1- - - - - - -- -

Ward's Keyboard. 304-675· Rod barn style houoe, 1,226
6500 or 676·3624
aq fl: liv1ng space. 4 acr11.
total alec fireplace, 2 car
garage, shed and work1hop

304 87&amp;·6739.

31

Re ol Esl ale

ochooto, hospital. grocorv. 3

Homes for Sale

bedrooms upatalrs, living
room. kitchen. dining room

Good neoghborhood Now

3 bedroom full basement.
eat ~ in
kitchen, carport,

roof, many other improvements Serious Inquiries

$2,500 &amp; lake over poy· only 304·675 1214

ments, Plants Subdlv1110n

--------Reduced all br1ck. formal
dining end hving rooms, 2
By owner . Must sell-moved. full baths family room With
3 bdr ranch. one cargarege, fireplace. eneched garage, 1
walkmg distance from North acre ground 304-676·

Call 614-446·7360

Gallio Hogh School Reduced 3431 or 875·3030
to t29,900 Call 614·3BB· 1
-------Kavlor Store Bldg on lot
8711
1&amp;0x100. 7 roomo. will
In Rio Grande new 3 bdr .. finance. 304·882· 2297 or
full bument. mea lot Large 882 2407
rear decks With valley view

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

Pnced to sell 039,500 Woll 1conolder mobile home trade 32 Mobile Homes
on Coil 614-446 BOJB
for Sale
3 bedrm • large kitchen 1
beth, utility room &amp; garage

Mobile home 1978 1\ioshuo
12•80, 2 br, elec heot,
central air, ttova. refng ,

undorpennlng 304·458 ·
1817
60 It Buddy houoe troller
e4.000 See Bill Angell or
call81 4·266 1964 Eureka.
Ohio
1979 Boyvtew 14x70. 7•24
oxpondo, 3 bdr , 1y, beth.

3

2 bedroomo, 12•50 allelact
ric mobile home Good
condtt1on All new carpet,
new hot water tank Patio
70x178 level lot 3 car

gerage with worll bench A
borgoln at •16,900 See 11
Unley Han's East V1na.
racme

3071

Ohio

614 -949-

1974 Hotly Pork. 70•14,
two bedroom Nrce apptian ·
ces end new carpeting
throughout A bargain et

110.500 Moy remain on
prtMntlot 614 742·3033

304·675·6284
197414•70Schult13,527
below blue book. bloclco.
underpennlng. new carpet,
2 porchoo 304·895·30B9

underpennong 304· 458
1817
11h bath, air cond, total
electric, building undarpen

Advance your career by
accepting the rewarding position of Store Manager'•

54 Mlac Merchandrse

woth HARDMAN's HOME
CENTERS The right condl

1973 Now Moon 12•85
Rental deluxe Ma1n St .
VInton Ohio In need of

repair Wllloell for tl 0,000
Coli 614·245·6818

By owner 6 grooms. 2 baths,
g1rage , fireplace, uc

neighborhood walking d11·
tanco city school Colt 614·
446 03BB

Coll614 446· 2206

614-992 7314
Nur11ng care In priVIte
hon. Room for two pa ·

tientl s 500 a month Colt
814-992 3696

WIU baby11t on my home
Very reliable 304· 676 ·
2973
Would care for elderly per
son In their home dey or

Goorgoo Crook Rd
614·448 4723

Coli

Government Homes from

$1 tu·repairl

between

hours

7AM

to

Aloo dolin·

quent tiJI property

Call

B06·8B7·8000 ext

GH·

4662 for mformat1on
By owner Remodeled 3
bedroom house on Rt 33
New F A furnace Large lot

Priced in the mtd twentlet
Both propertln generate
polttlve cash flow and 1re

fully occupied. For oddl·

8PM. full or port tome . Phone t1onal Information cell after
6 p m ot 814·992·7177
J?4·676 · 1~17
\

part1ally furniShed, wood
burner ceiling fan. IIJ cond ,
porch • underpinning

Tavern for sale 1n Mlddle

port D·l . D 2. 0·3 Call
614 992 9975

POMEROY, 0
992· 2259

35 Lots 8r Acreage

NEW LISTING - Commer·
ml - Pttm e lo caloon on
Matn Streel at lhe cornet of
Sprong Avenue Apptoxrma
tely l08x200 Has been
elevated and all crly utrlitoes

Large tra1ler space for rent
on Bulav1lle Add1son Rd

Coll614·387 0232 or 614·
446-4286

are

50 acres wtth % mtnaral

righto f22 500 Coli Hob
atettar Reelty at 614 7423092

NEW LISTING - Pomeroy
- Nrce levellol woth a large
2 story home Has 8 rooms,
3 bedrooms huge lamrly
taom donmg room and afull
basement $27,900 00

2 level lots tor sale Greer
Ad 7 mtles from town

304-676·6689

PRICE REDUCED - Close
10 Salisbury School l arge pretty lot one lloot
plan, 2 bedrooms donong
room outbUIIdmg and now
lUSt $18 50D 00

Renlal s
41

Houses for Rent

Fall Rental Speelail New
condomm1um overlookmg
ocean m North Myrtle Beach
near 18 beautiful golf
couraea, calab1sh and res
taurant row 2 bedrooms,
sleept tlx w1th kmg size
beds, IICUUiin master bath
ou11tde swtmm1ng pool
Spec11l fall r1tes $250
weekly Also accepting ratarvetlons for summer of
1986 U25 OOd1scountfor
early bookmg before 3-186 For mform1tron call or

NEW USTING- Emllent ~
cation mMlldleport 111d a do
uble level ~~ I floor plan okler home Will be a ground
home for you Garden 'Pa;e
111d storage bu1kln g; Wants
$29\MIOOO
HIGH ON A HILL. near t&lt;&gt;Vn
ThiS mont laton has a garden,
barn fencon gand ahouse thai
needs some work You may
need a 4x4 but what av~w
Reduced to $15 500 00

wrlto The Medocol Shoppo
Inc

665 Jackson

~va1lable

P1ke,

Gollopolls, Oh 45631 Coli
614·4~208

LIFE ESTATE ONLY - Coon.
try propertv neat Tuppers
Plam s Hou se needs so me
work and we ate offerong
only lhe 10lerest of the Ltfe
Estale Call tor delails

$200 pluoe utllltrea Colt
448·4416 otter 7PM
4 bdr housa1n country Hud

opprovad. a250 plus dep
Coli 614 38 7·0200 or 614446·4664

POMEROY - Really a ntce
home for the proce J.4 beil
rooms 2 floors of liVability
equipped krtchen, many ~her
niCe features and iJ~ed to
sell at $24 900 00
REALTORS
Henry E Cleland Jr
. 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dott11 Turner 992· 5692
Jo H1ll 985 4466

46 Space for Rent
SUBJECT - Rtlltl space
located at 42 Court StrHI.
Lafayette Mall. Gallipolis.
Oh1o Square footaae of
1,157 selltng space and
11.7 square feet of storaae
space on the second floor
of tho lafayette Mall
Call 614 -446·7653
9·3o trl
Monday thru Saturday

rn

a·oo

![Ill'

FOR RENT OR LEASE
With Option

•'

'•

''

To Buy

•

u.800 catt 614 448 9290 ave

LARGE AIRY CALFORNIA BRICK RANCH
3 bed10oms, 2112 ceramtc baths.lg ltvmg room,

•

54 Misc. Merchandise

dtmng room. fam1ly room , new k1tchen palto
w1th gas gnll.

'•

OCTOBER SAil

REFERENCES NECESSARY AND
ONE MONTH RENTAL DEPOSIT REQUIRED

10' •111 SA1EW11 DISII
Comploto S119 5
Ouollty Systems
Servi::e Avallab~

Ntca 3 bdr ranch style
home, 1/4 mtla from At 7, on

$23,000 Collect 614·423_6_2_8_9_ _ __:..._ __
night e~~tc refrances. phone By owner S1ately 3 bad
30::=:4=6=7=6::::2=0:::6=0==== l"rooom houM ot 10 E St •
:
Pomeroy 6 wooded acres
16
Schools
Fomily •room. doning room,
Instruction
F A hoot. 2 baths. bas•·
mont. gorogo, $27,000
Collect 614·423·6289
820.000 yeerly pouoble lnvestment -Rantal PropPrepare at home for Post erty for sala·1) 6 unit
DHice JOb tests Write Fed comblnltlofl re11denllal·
(36135 Jl. P 0 Box 3008. commercial rental property
Hottooob\lrg. MS 39403
In Middleport Pricod In the
tow fortieo 21 Two unit
duplaK house on aslzelot In
18 Wanted to Do
a nice area of Middleport
Witt babysit In my home.

lnformatoon call 1614)446·
8641 or 614·446-7880 or
814·246 -5146

Real Estate General

For sale or rent with 32
acres In Eureka Rt. 7 acro11
from Dam Good condition

Vacancy for the eldefly In
our home Tra•ned and flf.
teen years expenence Cell

675 57t1

central air, stove, retrlg .

nlng. porches, 812,000
304·675· 7829

Situations
Wanted

alec 2 br
home. reasonable rent Oep
requ1rad Call after 6, 304· -

! 974 Pelrle11 mobile home. 4th Ava . Gatlopollo 2 bdr

good cond Call after 2 1 m

Weover, 304·682·2646

12

unfurmshed an

For &amp;ale or lease 16 000
square foot warehouse located at 47 Sycamore
Street, Galltpoht Oh1o Fee
tures Include commerc1al
garage. three loading docks.
and a Vtkmg dry p1pe
sprinkler system For mora

FurniShed house 131 Rear

1980 Tidwell. 14x70. 3 br

d1t1 wtll have a minimum of
four years of reta1l ltort
management axpartanca
and Of a degree In Butman
Admlnlstr"8tion Hardware
butlding supphes product
knowledge desuable

---------

614·367·7406

Mobile home 1976 Nashua
12x80, 2 br. elec heat.

3 bdr l'louse for sale Call
614·446-3178

$70,000 Coli Hobatotter ences 8125 Call614·949·
2911
Realty ot614 742-3092
Efficiency cottage $55 00
week. u1tlllt81 pe1d, phone
Busrness
34
304 675 3100 or 876·
Buildrngs
5609

CA, vinyl underpinning, ftre place. 2 new porches Call

am

Call 614 -446· 1358

For rent, small house 1n
country Couple only Refer·

814 246·9538 otter 8PM

814·949·2388

To sell Avon Cell Manlyn

1

rented lot, new elet:t fur ·
nance, AC. outbuilding, low
utllit1e1, axe cond cAll

14x70 mobile homo

2 story home, full basement,
delached garaA•· cloH to

Coli 614·992· ceo required Coli Blackburn
Realty. 814·446·0008

1969 Vindole 12x60, on

bedrooms, 1 'h bath a, gaa
furnace Price reduced Call

304 4&amp;8-1904

25276

We have an 1mmediate open ina in our Gallipolis,

Pawn Shop 430 Second
Ave , Golhpolll. OHoo 614
446·0840

ter 4 30

The W1seman Real Estate
Agency haa several n1ce
homes for rent atertlng at

Call 614 446 3760

163 acres w1th 3 bedroom
brtck veneer home

twenty-nine years without
meaningful dialogue - why
start now?"

orders and receiVe "FREE"
g1fts from Mam-Macll Call

sent11l Excellent benefitS If
you are look.ng for a cl'lel lenging expenence wttl'l 1
growtl'l company, apply to
dly by ~endmg your resume
to C Stan Hardman Prall·
dent, Hardman Home Cen
tors. 8o• 969 Spencer. WV

-

,........
-

~"'"~"'

your honwl Why not take up

Proven leadership olclllo eo

..

~

,

than 820.000 on aducationet
bonoflto ENLIST NO WI Call
304·675·3960 or 1·BDO·
own methodo, car helpful
Apply at 417 2nd Ave • topo· Elon Vltol· 716 34 t 8 842 3619
Room lB. between 8 lOAM EntorpriM Rd • Fl Pierce. Fl
The Army National Guard
334B2
lo 10 OOAM, Mon ·Sot
11

personal belong1ngs as col(pteral Only 6% mterest
Call or v11it today frank's

Someone to tear down two
dwellings for the butldlng
material Located 1n Gallipo-

Sell Avon make Call614·446·9346

per wetk MaJor company,
no experience, prefer our

I

PRESTON MUSTARD, AUCTIONEER-(614) 286· 5868
TERRY LLOY0-(614) 216·1229
licensed &amp; bonded In Ohro and West Vrrarnta •

ToyandGoftPertyandgetall

Need someone to bush hog

aggreulve mature indiVIdual
who qJallfy to tra1n 11
A••stanl Managers Oppor·

Thrs rs en all day sale ofvery mce collectrbles.lunch wrll
be avatalblt
1

MUSTARD'S AUCTION SERVICE

not heve a Fr1endly Home

81,200 PER MONTH
DELIVERY. DRIVER ,
SALES

J

Terms· Clsh end good checks wrth 1.0.

Worried about Chnstmas?

How are you goong to getlhe
thongo tf1o kods wantl Why

hour The closing date for

Government Jobs 816.040·
•59,230 yr Now horong
Als1stant Manager tra1nee
We have 3 opemnge for Call 805·687·8000 Ext R·

\

PUBLIC AUCTION

aon, ot 614· 742·31 13

41i% Coll614 446-3368

'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

time pooltlon \Yith flBKible

gency Inc • Pt. Pleooont Colt lOAM 614·446·7441
--------304·676·6104

sp1der glass

Wavecrest
IIISCELLAN EOUS l.omp~ pctures wal ~an ter a.ffee gnnder card Ia
bi!s wash boaod tlfoceopcales sba11ht razors haw doppers. brass can
d~ ho~ers 1ew~ry ~ewy boxes beaded pu"e con purses. morrors
doesser sel hunk on lrunks, pertu..., decanters compac~ "'"sors
8fownll! camera serv11g tray 'lases hgunnes pen sets New Ha'leo
clock chna base eoob&lt; clock !Jladoup~ porcelan l•ed coffee pot
McGJffey2nd reader drawoni knole i&gt;"Oiraclor Phioo rad~ Loberty Bell
loghl )Ugl lr•h maol soooteo, me!JIIoys
AUCIIONER'S NOTE Thos rs 1 p1rtt1l hlltnl llort merchandiSe
woll be commc 1n Any!Mie mtorested tn selhnclheor antoques and
collectibles, call for more 1ntorma11an
POSITIVE I D - CASH - LUNCH
Not respoa!lblo for lcctdents " rtems aflor thty are sold
INSPECTION Day of Silo-From 8 00 1 m

quate msurance coverage
Interested persons should
contact R Charlea Holltday
Director of Spac1al Educa

814-448·21 66

pohs Dh 45631

bottom child's rock1ng cha1r maple and oa~ chdd's rockm g chatr
w1lh doll bed (21 youth chaors walnutlamtong chaor lern stands,
brass and marble llowersland (21 galeleg tables DuncanPttyfe doo
P leal table 3 legged gun ~ock table walnut loldong d1oectoos
ch:itrS rush chau 3pc hardwood 11eneer bedroom su1te (bed , dres
ser vamty) other tables &amp; charrs
depress1on etched chma coOOlt lnsh porcelam Germany Austna
N1ppon Bavanan Czechostovakta l)'essed glass Shawnee pottery

qu1res en 1nd1viduel that
worka well under preasure.
mud be accurate with figural, end have a sincere
concern for the low income
experiencing a heat related
emergency Thtl Ia a part·

Need Cl'll'lltmes money?
Sell Avon Not necen•rv to
knock on doors Call for mfo

One certified Medical Tach
nolog1st weekdays Send
resume to box 300, 11 care
of ~ tha Galhpohs Dally Tnbun-a. 826 Thlfd Ave , Galh-

22 Money to Loan

.... ...

..............._""
"We've managed to survive
:- ,,

HOME OWNERS·Refononce ~~:::::::::::::::=-1~~~~~~~~~1
32 Mobile Homes
3 30 Profer your home ot to tow IOKod rate Use equoty 31 Homes for Sale
for Sale
th11 t1me within close drlv1ng for any purpooe Leeder - - - - - - - - ciotonce of HMC Cell 614- Mortgage Co . 614·692· 36 acres houae. 6 rooms.
3051
446·4449
bath. workohop. garage. Rt 1971 12x651 Oekbrook 3
1 60 Selling cheap For 1nfor bdr.. H1 botho. geo heat,
The Melgo Local School Need money? D1d you know colt 1· 304-273·5046
new carpet, IJIC&amp;IIent cond,
D11tnct11sHkmg a qualified that there 11 a place m
S5.950 Cell 814·448·
individual to trenaport a high Gallipol11 where you can 1 ecre whh house. 2 bdr . 0176
school student to and from borrow 81 00 810 oil. rural water. septic tank,
Athens Htgh School on a $100 00, etc , euHy with · mob1le home hookup,
1972 12x80 Champion 2
da1ly ba111 Interested per- out red tape of the large loan $12.500 Call 814 3BB
bdr , gu heat. carpet
sons must have a vahd 1nltitut10na? On the spot 9856
througl'l out very clean.
dleuffer's hcansa. a car loans With no walt1ng or
$4,950 Call 614·446·
safety mspection and ade- credit checks. using your
0175
For sale by owner, 2 bed-

Employer

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

N1cely remodeled farm
l'louse garden 1360, free
get . Cheshire area ref I
dep Prefer work1ng couple

$70.000
7BB1

Ch1ld care needed tmme
d1ately weekdays 7 00 to

Management tramee for
convemance atore 8t. de,1
Apply 1n person at General

ment Services Office We
are an Equal Opportunity

Empl oym enl
Services

AUCTION

~"'rose

11

hours, wortun{/t20 hours per

for everything.

Public Sale
&amp; Auctron

Help Wanted

weak for 11x montl'l1 The

antique, hquid•tton
licensed Oh1o IJnd

AUCTIONEER Fmls ls11c-CLERK lortlyn ls11c

B

Wanted used waal'lers, dry
era refngerators, ranges,
sweepers. wortung or not

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Old Tome Traders Oay Evorv
Sat &amp; Sun Sell or trade

GLASSWARE CarniVal glass, 1111desrence

Part S1amase kittens 304

ton, Oh.
FROM GALLIPOLIS, TAKE AT 141 , TURN LEFT ONTO
AT 775. TURN RIGHT ONTO PATRIOT CADMUS
ROAD WATCH FOR SIGNS

Rt 7, front of NatJOnWIIB

bofocato
2360

blue older kotten, 304 675
379B

·· ... Pomiirov
.... -······-··· - ·4·--- ---

Rt 2 Bo• 296 Steele Rd
H Clegg Farm, Northup

Giveaway

Dr, call 614·446·3647

6 Lost and Found

Second Ave , Gallipolis, OH

wrote GOCJS CTF Diroc·

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO

Coli 614·992-

No hunt1ngortre•au1ng on
Mynas Farm located on

4

t1ves 65 E State St • Su1te
312 Columbus, Oh1o

Ofloce or call 614 992
2668

choldren
3677

FOUNO Automobole part

10n County

The children's trust fund
board announced that
granu are available for ch1ld
abuse and neglect
commun11y-bued preven
t1on programs For guide·
l1nes and pre-apphcat1on

Candee the Clown 1s tn
town! Candee does partl81
ann1versane11 grand open
mgs and vtsits your friends
at hospital She 11 registered
at the Pomeroy Employment

4 mon old mete mtxed breed
dog to g1ve away Loves

come on out 7 mlteoout 160
from HMC, oH Clerk Chapel
_R_d_o_c_t_1_8_._,_9_,_&amp;_2_o__
Moving d1nette set, sleeper
sofa, d11hes. pens, Levt's,
slacks ~ze 31 16 Belmont

11

Store. 240 N. College. Rio
Mrddloport. Oh 614 992- Gronde. Oh Oct 16·1B.
1 PM to 6PM
3476
Gtllta Meigs CAA
1958 to 1962 Rutland Year The
Home Energy Asslatance
Books Pla11e call cott.,ct, Program has an 1mmed1ate
814 448·1375 and atk for opening
for an Intake
Judy or 614·992· 2849.
Worker This pj!Srtlon re·

Yard Sale Wmter clothes,
water bed lots more so

1

614 · 99~·

Buying dally gold , 11lver
coma, nngs, J&amp;Welry, sterling
ware, old coins, large currency. Top prices Ed Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd Ave

Gallipoiis· •
&amp; Vicinity

3 free ki1tena muced Blue

$2 00 Hotlbolly Heorto Club
Loovaoy. WV 28878

Cloestnut Rodge Road. Me·

Yard Sale

Ben11 type dog &amp; 3 pupa Cell
614·387·0644 between 6
&amp;6PM

Singlet Club for Wen Virgo

614·445 0294

5525 Ohoo Revosed Code

Publtc Sale
8r Auction

V111·Maatercard

charge Solve your water
problems, c•ll for more
Information 304-675 -

SWEEPER and sewmg ma
ch1ne repa1r, parts, and
suppltes
P1ck up and
dehvery Dav11 Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m1le up
Call
Georges Creek Rd

614·742-3033

7

Grveaway

Colt 1 619·565·1657 for oye 1 Coli 614 448·3199
mformat1on 24 hours
Gorto ctothmg, aozea10·12 &amp;
Uae our water filter '" your other clolloeo Call814· 246·
home for 3 d1y1 free of 5064

3 Announcements

eve ry OCCUIOn
different type a of pans. tops,
and candy molds Nestlea
candy melts $1 79 lb Call

4

4 omoll b,..od pupp101 Call
814 3B8-9661

guage shotgun•

for Improvements '"

nabOnal ong1n 11 consideratiOn

8

Announ cem enls

Pubhc Notrce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
OEPARTMEIIIT OF
TRANSPORTATION

45789 or call
7760

Part Time or Full Time
13031769·3200 EXT 2407

Small farm for sale 6 acres
fenced Jn, bern, ch1cken
coop, pony shed , 3 bedroom
house , bath, kitchen. dtnlng
room l1vlng room caller
Woodburner Pnced to sell

By owner, 36 ecres four $350 per month Coli 814·
bedroom l'lousJt, two car 446·3644
garage, barn, outbudd1ngs, I ~-------­
natural well free gas with Eureka, l'llce one story 2
m1neral nghts Also two bdr • Will rent, lease or land
bedroom house and lot contract Oapo11t &amp; raferan-

8 p m at 814·992 7177

" Bustness Man ' Own your
own Steel Bu1ld1ng Dealership MaJOr manufacturer
selectmg dealer 1n available
areas H1gh potenttal profits-

Clot 614 446 4306 or 814
446 ·1171

Farms for Sale

$28.600 Call 614 992
~143 or 614 742·2289 of

t1onal mformat1on call after

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE 8ads rron.
wood. cupboards, chatrs,
cheata baskets d11hea.
atone Jars. anttques. gold

33

Houses for Rent

Trees- Pnvacy- 3 bedroom
home, l'lerdwood floors
large k1tchen. full b1sament,
1 Yz acres. c1ty scl'loot tys·
Jem , newly decorated, *350
month, ref &amp; dep required

1982 14&gt;70. hke new call
614 448 6231

fully occup"'d For addo

ooxophone Call 614·446·
88B1

41

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Investment -Rental Prop erty For 1111e 1 }6 unit com
bi nation res1dent ial commerclel rental property
in M1ddle~ort Pnced 1n the
low fort1es 2) Two un1t
duplex l'louae on a size lot in
e mea area of Middleport
Pr1cad tn the mid twent1ea
Both properttel generate
pos1t1ve cash flow and are

We buy purebred pupp1EII
Docktor Pet Center, North
land Mall. Columbus Ohto

iunbaJI ~imts- $entintl

LAFF-A·DAY

Business
Opportunity

that you do bustneu w1th
people you know, and NOT
to •nd money through the
mail unt1l you have inveltt·
gated the offering

WANTED TO BUY used
wood

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0-3

Va .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAUEY PUB
LISHING CO recommends

Jom Monk Chev ·Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
614·446-3872

The tremor, which lasted only seconds, was felt
from Philadelphia to southern Canada, Pesgrave
satd
" The whole house shook," said Morton Baum of
New Rochelle
In Riverdale, Karen Rotter said she was roused by
"a deep kind of a growling sound"

W.

\

••

For Rent or Lease Wtth Opt1on to Buy $580 mo

446-2206

or

•'

446-2734

Col

446-8561 or 4411-4316

AUTOMOTIVE
SALES
ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING
DEALERSHIPS IS NOW
INTERVIEWING FOR THE
POSITION OF SALES
REPRESENTATIVE.
•
.Call Mr. Gilmore For
Appointment
Between 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.

614-446-9800

•
I

Real Estate General
Jusllwo blocks from the crty part Walk to the &amp;roc·
ery, schools. church. shopptng and to one of the
many at1tv1t1es at the park that go on downtown

.
It's aframe two story ho!JII wtlh four bedrooms two
baths, for!1181 dinina.lafle kitchen w1th eattn&amp; ~rea.
Libraty With cherry bookshelws. cherry panphng
and wtth a arand vtew of the nver. Spactous ltvin&amp;
room with woodburn1nc fireplace. Upstms sttttng
room wtth nwr v~ew Sc~eened porch, two caraaraee
and storap build ina.

WISEMAN REAL EST ATE AGENCY
446·3644

'

i1

•

''
''

•'

1I
I

I

••
•

�''

Page- D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel
41

Houses for Rent

44

Clean

2 atory house in ·
Middleport. $200. month. If

Apartment
for Rent

42 Mobile H Oll'es
for Rent
12x60, 2 bedroom. fur·
hiahed. in Syracuse. No
more than 2 children . $226
per month plus deosit and
utilities( water paid). Call

614-992-6867.

For rent with option to buy.
2 bedroom housatreiler on
acre lot . Good location. Call

614-992 -2794.

Mobile home for rent . 2
bedroom. unfurnished. in
Cheshire. S260 . a month,
$100 . deposit plus electric.

Call614 -387-7710.

44

Apanment
for Rant

Furnished ept . 2 bdr., 131 'h

James Jacoby
Housin g Opportunity)
monthly ren t sterts at $169

lor 1 bedroom and 8204 for
-2 bedroom, deposit 8200,
located near Spring Valley

and Cable TV available.
office hours as possible 10
1m to 4pmand7 pmto9pm

Monday-Friday, Call 814·
446 - 2746
me11age.

or

leav e

Nicely furnished mobile
home. eff. apt .• central air
and heat in city. adults only.

Call 814-446 -0338.

~2

bdr. apt., good location,
redecorated. utilities partly

paid. Coll304-675-5104 or
304 -876 -6386 .

Largo 2 bdr. opt .. 2 both,
fully cerpeted,

refrig . 8t

slove, 11 Court St .. 8325
mo., ref. &amp; dap. Call 814·
446 -4926.

children, no pets. Call 614 ·

Furnithed apt. 919 2nd.

446 -1637.

Furni1hed attic apt . utilties

Coli 446-4416 after 7PM .

paid. $176,919 2nd .. Shere

Furnished 3 rooms &amp; bath,
clean, no peta, adults. ref. It

446-4416 alter 7PM.

dopooit. Cell 614 -446 1619.

An eild play,
but whose?
By James Jacoby

Plaza end Foodland, pool

4th, Gollipolio, $196 water
paid. Coli 446 -4416 afte• Upstairs unfurniahed apt. ,
cllrpeted, all utilities paid, no
7PM .
AVe . • 176 utilities paid .
Share bath . Men preferred .

44 ·

BIIHE

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equa l

bath, man preferred . Call
2 br apartments in Hender-

NORTH

lt-lf-11

.A Q 3

"K 7 4
• 8 s4

.9!1 2

.

When It looks safe enough to keep
cashi ng tricks, a defender will nor·
mally do so, and as quickly as possible.
That's all right, as long as he realizes
that he may be painting himself into a
corner. He might do better by not tak·
mg his tricks until later.
Againsl four spades, West Jed the
king of diamonds. Because there
seemed nothing better to do, he continued with the ace and then the jack. De·
clarer ruffed , played the jack of
spades, then played the heart ace and
king and trumped the third heart. A
spade back to dummy's ace drew the
defenders' remaining trumps. Now
that hearls and d!amonds were elimi·
nated from the North and South hands,
it was time for declarer to lead a low
club from dummy. When East played
low, declarer stuck in the eight West
had to win and either play into declar·
er 's A·Q or give a sluff and a ruff.
Now try the hand as declarer if
West plays a trump at trick two. South
can play the hear t A-K, trump a heart
and exit with the diamond queen. West
plays another trump. South can win in
dummy and ~uff the last diamond, but

.KJ6

Real Estate General

COMMERCIAL BUILDING m downtown busin ess
distnct. Suoer localion 1n Gallioohs. 44 ft. fronla2e
includes 2 new stonelronts. One 11le extens1Vel1
remooe 1ea Loaas ana loaas ot storage space m
rear . Full basement and 2 other floors lor addi·
tional storage. Newer gas furnace. Across from
pubhc parking lot.
#115
TRULY EXCEPTIONAL - Outsland~ng decorating
and plannin g wenl 1nto I his 4 BR Cape Cod. 1.3
acres ol manicured lawn head down lo the riw,
pnvately located on the edge of town. Beaul1lul
formal dining room, eat-in "counlry" kitchen, 2
beauli(ul balhs and lull basement. Owner looktng
for smaller residence. have reduced prtce to
$75,800.
#103
UNDERGROUND RAILROAD - Thisfine old bnck
Colonial home is ju sl walling for the fight lam1ly to
move in. Many families mthe last 140 1ears ha ve
enjoyed good times mlh1s one. Three large bed ·
rooms, very attracl1ve old lime lireplace, eal-in
&lt;itchen, large family room. 2 ~ baths and base·
ment. Best of allis the b1g shady lawn. Includes 2
exira lois. Pnce reduced lrom $106,000 to
$78,000
#Ill
UNIQUE Y·SHAPED BRICK HOME - Overlook ing
all of GallipoliS, lhis spac1ous 3 BRranch offers
over 2200 SQ . ft. of graciou s living space. Florida
room wilh calh edral ce1ling, ltreplace, 2\7 baths.
dtning room, den. plus salellile dish, 2 car ga rage
and 22 acres with pond. Free gass on propert yfor
healtng. $109,000. Will sell hou se. pond and 2-3
ac. for $75,000.

Referenctl required . Call

814-446-4840 liter 5PM.

Riveroide Apto. Middleport.

··A 8

tQ7

Special rat11 for Senior
Citizen•. $130 . Equal Hous-

.AQB

East

2 bedroom 1partments .
New Heven , WVa . Newly
remodeled. In town. 614 992-7481.

South

I+
2+
Pan

Pw

1+

P~

One or two bedroom apart·
manti in Pomeroy. Furnished or unfurnllhed. Rent

Opening lead: • K

nogotioblo. Coli 814-9926723.
then what? This time he can't get to
dummy to end play West- and, in fact,
he is en~ played himself. What's the
lesson here? Don't be in a hurry to
cash out your tricks if by so doing you
may be giving the declarer enough en·
tries to achieve a winning end play.
•I tiS NEWSPAPER ENT'1RPR19E ASSN.

~76-1365 .

Nice 1 and 2 br apartments

2 bedroom ground floor apt.
downtown Pq_i nt Pleasant.

46 Space for Rant
Mobile home lot 1 mile out
No1ghborhood Rd . •50 por
morith plua water dep. Call

448 -1340.

CO.UNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

614-992 -7479 .

Trailer 1pace evailable. Aqua
Vist1 Trailer Court in Syra-

cuse . Call 614-992-6867.

Trailer spaces, amall child ren accepted, Rt. 1, out
Locust Rood back of K &amp; K.

304-876·1078.

Merchan rlise

room furnished apartment.

46

Furnished Rooms

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

46 Space for Rent
Mobile homo lot, 12'x60' or

Pomeroy Fire Stetlon . Call

a. Neil, Gallipolis. Coli 446-

Furni1had AP,.rtment for
rent, no children. Available

oftor Oct.3. Coli 614-9922749.

Real Estate General

Maple book cose bunk bods
with mattresses. 81 00 . Call

614-985·4440.

•tv"

Country
oak furniture.
hand crafted and finished .
antique reproductions. Paul

Conkel, Rt. 7, Tuppora

Plains.

2 bedroom eecond floor apt.
Total oloctrlc. Acrou from

814 -992 -7314.

61 Household Goods

Call 614-446-0756.

smaller, 176 weter paid. 4th

4416 oftor 8PM.

Mobile home space . 2 mi.

from Golllpollo on Rl. 688.
One child accepted . Ref.

req. Call 614-448-3252 or
814-446-3413.

Mollohan Furnituro, Rt. 7,
Kenauga . 1 yr. free finance.

Coli 814-448· 7444. 6 pc.
wood

$400.

livingroom suite

Early American Couch &amp;
choirt, f100. Call 614-4450137 oftar 6PM .

Real Estate General

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

-... ....... -... ............. _..
NEW LISTING -Gel your money's worlh with
this ver1 attractive and spaciou s 2 story home.
Decorated in excellent tasle and in "move in "
condition, Ihis 3 BR beaut1 oilers more than mosl:
large comforta ble family room with slone fireplace, su nken formal living room, formal dining
room , formal entrance, bea uti ful oak staircase, 2
f11ll halh&lt; nlus extra hall bath in laundrv room,
large 2 ~ car garage. All on a beautifull1 lands·
caped FlATI ac. lot. On ly 2 milesfrom SpringValley. $89,900.
#203

SINCE 1943

NEW LISTING' IN TOWN- Very nice 3 BR home
1n excellenl neighborhood on Quiel slreet. This
home has had excellent care and includes large
family room, din tng room, 2 baths, fireplace,
woodburn1ng stove, garage and carp ort. Very
clean and won derfu l place to raise children.
Owner purchased anolher home and desires
Quick sale. Priced at $59,000.
#124

REAL ESTATE

REALTOR

446-3644

FOR $59,500 ITS THE BUY OF THE YEAR- 4
DRs, brick and lrame wilh 2baths. Colon ial dining
room, nice big eat-in kitchen and huge famil1
room. 2lire places and just4 blocks from sc hools.
If you don'llike the price, make us an oHer.

Ike Wiseman - 446 -3796
B . J . Hairston - 446 -4240
Clyde B. Walker - 245 -5276
David E. Wiseman ~ 446 -9555 ·

IF YOU WANT TO LIVE IN TOWN CHECK THESE
FEATURES!- Excellenllocalion on 2nd Avenue.
Older 2 s!or1 with no mamtenance alum. siding.
Modern roof, deep lot wilh garage. Outstandin g
kitchen. 2 baths, 3 or 4 bed rooms, mod ern lorced
air fu rnace, and formal d1ning. ll's nicely rede·
corated, clean and ready to move inlo. Th1s is a
ver1 desirable home at lhis price . $39,000.

#111

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Oliva St., Galllpolio. Now
8o uaed wood-coollloveo, 8
. I!C ,"'(ood LR oulte $399 ,
bunk bado 8199, ontron
recliners $99. new &amp;. used
bedroom auitea, ranges .
wringer washers. &amp; shoes.

2 bdr. chairs 8! a continoua
cleaning broiler oven . Call

814-246-5084.

53

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,

Seriou1

tion , 876. Call 614-448·
9697.

Wood dining room table and

"

==- "

A " 5iii..L." IS
AN AP'P'AIU.iU~
THAi MAI&lt;E5MANY
PEOPL.E THI~.

#128

~
~

~

f

I
1

f

Antique nine piece dining
room suite, ha1 a lot of nice
carving, must see to appri-

ciata. Ona of • kind. 8676.
304-896-3688.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon.

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

Beautiful antiquo birds eye

maple bedroom suite, sleigh

Auger type woodapli«er, fit a

$286

$746. Detk $110

bad, highboy cheot with

up to $225 . Hutches, 8660 .

mirr9r. dreaser. with mirror,

4. 6, 8 lug wheel dar or
pickup $250. Coll614-266·
6240.

Bunk bed complete with desk-mirror, $760. 896·
mattrosoaa, $276 . and up to J686.
$396 . Baby bado. $110 .
Manressea or box springs,
full or I win, $63., firm, $73. 54 Misc . Merchandise
and f83. Queen oats. $226 .
4 dr. cholls, 849 . 5 dr. Firewood-cutup slabs, 1
chests, $69. Bed frames, truck load $100, 2-8180 .
S20.and $26 .. 10 gun · Gun Pickup load. you haul $16.
cabinets, $350 . Gu or HEAP accepted . Coli 814electric ranges $376. Baby 246-6804.
mattresoaa, f25 a. $36 . bod
fromes 820. $25, a. 830, Houae coal. lump It stoker.
king frame $60. Good eelec - Zlnn Cool Co. Call 614-446tion of , bedroom suites. 1408.

rocken, metal cabinets , ! - - -- - - - - - ·headboards $38 a. up to House coal. Lump It stoker.

U5 .

linn Cool Co. Coll814-4461408.

Used Furniture -- Metal
office desks. 3 miles out

Gas double oven stove. 876.

Bulovilla Rd. Opan 9om to Ph. 448·1312.
6pm, Mon. thru Sol.
1 - - - - - - - - -614 -448-0322
King wood &amp; coal heater
with blower, used part of 2

GOOD US EO APPLIANCES
Waohors. dryero, refrigerotors, rangeo. Skaggs Ap-

winters, $200. Call 614367-7409.

1------_;;...::..;;::..__

pllancas, Upper Rlwer Rd.

Grain fad freezer beef . Call

baoide Stone Creal Motel .
814-446-7398.
County Appliance, Inc .
Good used appliance• and

614-446-0760.
Firewood

cutup

slabi.

Pickup load. You haul $10.
Coll614-388-8614.

TV 1011. Open SAM to &amp;PM .
Mon thru Sal. · 614-448· Mattreoa for tln~la bad. like
1899, 627 3rd . Avo . Galli· now with bedding, 840. Call
614·388-9809.
polla, OH.
Valley Furniture. new &amp;

usad. Large taction of qual·
ity furniture. 1216 Eaatem

Ave .. Gallipolis.

oven &amp;
range combo. Call$14-4487879.
·

Microwave electrk:

Print answer here: ..

IYe•st~rda)r'S I

(Answers Mondoy)
Jumbles:JEWEL FRANC BOTHER FEUDAL
Answer: If you're not carelul aboutlendlng an ear you
might get lhis- IT CHEWED OFF

54 Misc. Merchandise

60 PERCENT OFF I Floohing
arrow tigno 82691 Lighted,
non-arrow $247. Unlighted
$199. (Free lottaroll SH

locally .

locally.

304-676 -4631 .

Sat.

Pets for Sale

1816 Cue Unl·loedor, good
cond, hydraulic

drive. 83.100.00. 304-46B·
1031 .
Sullair 160 portable air
compreaaor , good cond.

83 ,260 . 00 . 304 - 4681031 •
- - - - - - - -830.00

876-3917.

quantity .

deliver

in

town;

alide

projoctor-ocreen 840. good
cond . 304-675-2381 ,

Contact: J.F. Word, 304·
882-3229.
Full size aleeper

sot.. good

cond. 304-773-5212.

4313 .

At Brunicerdi's ... :·: No repospiano gimmick1.J ust
honest piano values.. We are
never under sold I Brunicardi
Music Inc . Corner 3rd . &amp;

1811Bd

Court St., Gallipolis, Oh io.

Wurlizter Spinet piano, good
cond. Recently tuned . Call

614 -446 -7879 .

For sale: Spinet-Console
Piano Bargain . Wanted :Responsibla party to take over
low monthly payments on
spinet piano. Can be sean

ville , IN 46176.

9790.

Dragonwylld Cattery Ken nel. CFA Himalayan. Pe rsian
and Siamese kitten s. AKC

Chow puppies. Cell 446 3844 alter 7PM .

949-2544.

weeks old. Cell 614 -992 6013.

Real Estate General

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
SPUT LEVEL HOUSf w~h 3
bedrooms. 1 complete baths,
dining room. living room and
lar&amp;l' n~creation room. Located on 8 acres. l.ar&amp;e farm
pond. Racine area.

squirrel

l BEDROOM MOBILE HOME
on 3 lots in s,racuse.

Palomino mare. 54" kid -

OLDER HOUSE with 3 bedrooms on corner lol in Sjr·

Elkhound

female

dog. 304 -675 -3638 .

broke, $200. Olhers. 304882-2762.

otacked, $26 .00 load, 304676-4373.
O.E. two door , refrigerator, · 57

Musical
Instruments

good cond, 860.00 . 304676-5123.

raol cheep. 304·773·6208.

1 Tame snare drum. 1 Peavy
260 amplifier. 4 microphones. 1 fender precision
lNin guitar, 8 channelltereo
Peavy mixing board. out·
standing buys. Call log
Cabin Recorders. 614-446-

Briarpatch Kennels All bread grooming. Indoor·
outdoor boerding facilities. locally. Wrlle Credll Man English Cocker Spalliel.
. ager: P.O . Box 537 Shelby-

Firewood hauled but not

Electric wheel ch1ir, new ,
lncludea.bettery charger and

Musical
Instruments

Peavy base amp bw speak ·
en. exc. cond . $200 . 304·

cuse.
1 BEDROOM, all electric
house with crawl space. On
approx. I acre of land. Just
south of Tuppers Plains.

HOME NATIONAl
BANK
949-2210

676 -1645.

good cond . Coli 814-4487025.

Reel Estate General

~
r

f
~

•

"

1 ACRE, more or less, of land on Texa sRoad. City
utilities. Very good buliding site ahd garden
space. Included for sale is mobile home. Wa s
$17,000, reduced lo $14,800.
#317
20 ACRES BARE LAND -Excellent building Slle
near Rio Grande and Soulhw eslern High Sc hool.
Includ es crop land and wood s wtlh plenly of good
road fronlage. $17,000.

SPLIT-LEVEL - 10 yr. old multi-level
a
scenic vtew from the living room picture window.
Surrounded with mature shade lrees, the 1438 ~
SQ. ft. provides comfortable livabilit1 in the 3 bedrooms, lR With fireplace, kitchen wilh dining area,
I ~ baths plus TV room . located off Rt. 160 near ~
hosila l. $58,500.
#407

~

\

NEW LISTING -COLONIAL DOLL HOUSE
Charming modem 2 story home located in good
neighborhood off Rt. 35. This home offers 3 bed·
rooms, l'h baths. family room, formal dining, central air, garage, deck and a professionally landscaped yard. Owners transferring and must sell.
$49,900.
#1011

SOUTHERN IIUS

.
QUALITY IN EVERY DETAIL- 3or4 8Rbnck
home offers a 20x40 lamil1 room. 3 balhs,
krtchen wilh OW, d~p l. , microwave and lrash
compaclor. din ing room, intercom system.
cenlral air. 2 car garage, dec&lt; and a 20x40
pool Over $100.000. Call lor appotntmenl
today.

ON£ OFTHIS AREA'SBETTER FARMS - 101
acres. f!l /1. lois of fertile bottom ~ nd . pond,
new lences, large barn, modern 3 BR home, 2
balhs. Call lor more mlormat1on.

~

FRIENDLY RIDGE ROAD - 25 17 A m/1,
approx 5acres tillable. 900 lb. lob. base.Older
2 slory home ~,;;s LR, kitchen, dtmng room,
balh. Barn on property.

~
f

YOU'll ABSOLUTELY lOVE THE INTERIOR! Here's a beaulilully decorated home thai you ca n
alford Don't IU SI dnve by, lei us show you th e tn ·
lenor of lh ts charmmg 3 BR m-R1o Grande. Ever·
ylhing's new - th e wall s. w1nng, plumbtng, fu r·
nace. ktlchen . It' s on a doublelol w1th large gar·
age. $54,000.
,
#101
'

RfSIDENTIAl - COMMERCIAL - OR BOTH!
- Very nice b&lt;ick homelocaled al 225 Third
Ave hashad excei ~OI care and offers 1424 sq.
M. o( living area Wllh a lull partially finiShed
basement. Also leatures a carport. worltshop
and a 28x38 roncrele block commerc~al type
bldg. with 3 ba15 formerly used as an
aulomOIIVe repalf soop. Call for more
1nlorma110n.

Real Estate General

NORTH GALLIA ESTATES - Morgan Twp.
JOOx300 lot Asktng $3.9JO. Owner 11111
consi1er linancing.
GENTLEMAN'SFARM - 35 acres m/1,moslly
I1IL1ble. 3 m1les north o( Rodney. Spnn&amp; well
and county water. fenced and cross fenced.
lobacco base. Very nice lor 4 bedroomranch
style oome w1lh kilchen. LR. balh. breezeway,
woodburning ltreplace Call lor an
apiJ(lntment
THE PRICE ON THIS HOME IN CENTENARY
HAS BEEN REDUCED - Home featurs 3BRs,
I ~ baths, equipped &lt;nchen. dinetle, cent. air,
natural gas hea~ covered patio, unattached
garaga Call for an appoinlment.
COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL - INDUSTRIAL - 50 acres. more or less, vacant land
ideal lor investmenl or any type development
Road frontage on U. S. 35 and Mitchell Rd.

HIDDEN LOCATION ..:.. WHAT A NICE SURPRISE!
You'll enjoy co min&amp; home to this yeryclean 3BR home ew!IY time . You mi&amp;ht appreciate the 1.3 tcre lot &amp; country
surroundinas tho most, or maybe the well planned layout
of 2000 plus sq. 11. of livin1space willapp881 to you most.
Onl1 six years old and still like the day,it was built. It in·
eludes 2full baths, ~tchen l11p enoua!lfor 3 cooks,l~rae
family room (presently unfinished, but owner will complete to your satisfaction at cost of materials), dinin&amp;
room &amp; 1 cat praae. located in Green Township. ~mile
from Rt. 141. Owner disaustld it hasn't sold. Will help fi·
nance. Only askina $59,000. 10% ISIUmable mortpca
(balance approx. $41,000).
*303

WISEMAN

YOU CAN OWN ALITTLE BIT OF COUNTRY 5 acres, m/ 1, on St Rl. 141. Nb! ooe story
home has alamly room·v.il hwoodbumer, lull
basemE!It, heat puflll, cent air, cistern, well
and county waler. Green school. Call lor an
appointment

BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Greal'lnvestmenl lm
I he buyer. l ocaled onGraham School Rd. Each
umt offers 2 BRs. living room, balh, k1fchen
w1lh slove. refng, OWand dtspl .. laundry. la~ge
carport, central atr and slorage areo.

21 Real Es1ate Agency

2800 SQ . ft. home w h1c~ tncludes large living
room and dm tng room w1lh cathedral ceiling, den
w1lh fireplace, la m1ly room w1lh lirepla ce, 3 full
ceram1c baths. 3-4 BRs, lu111 eQuipped kitchen
and 2 ca r ca rport. Ver1 good buy at $59,900.
#401

f

Limited

White bedroom suite. alec .
Boor. 30" polo. Like now.
$100. 614-992·2219 altar Troy Built Tillar. horse fireplace, 2-13" anow dret
model. electric atart . Used with studa, womena golf
6:00p.m.
only 2 houri. $999 . Girls 10 clubs. 304·882-2796.
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, apeed bicycle. Very good. 1-::---------hot dip reblueing, oil typal of 149.99. Call 614 -992 - Frosh honay •4. qt. 111(111
3684 Mon through

$96 .00, coli 304 -875 ·
3486 .

working

56

cond,

Severe! other kitchen Items.

$199. (Frao lottertll SH Hurryl 1 f8001 423·0183,
locally. 1(800)423-0163. anytime.
(Aiao giant blimp aolol)
1- - - - - - - - -

9:00-6:00 .

good

67

Chest type freezer 22 cu.tn .•
19 in. color TV , both in very

Ir OSECLUDED
WOO~ED SETTING ·- Overlooking
h10 R1ver. There s plent1 of livtng space mIhis

~

mouflage • deniru. clothing,

per bundle, containing ap- ing 81200. Coli 814-992pro•. 1'11 ton, fob. Ohio 5947 after 6:00p.m.
Pollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 614-992·6481 .
Six hot water rediatoro .
Phone 614-992-7663 or
60 per cont offl Fleohing 614-992·6364.
arrow oigno8259111 Llghlod,
non-arrow 8247. Unlighted 50 percent offl Fluhlng
8199. (Free lottertll SH arrow sign• 12631Lighted,

gun1mith work. hist service,

TV.

6 adorable ·Paek -A-Po o·
Peek puppies. All colors . 6

Sem SomervHia's East of
Ravenswood. Junction In-

Compound bow - Brown

Block. brick, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain

dependance Rood· Old Rt. Kitchen table with iaaf and 6
21, Fri. Sat, Sun, 1:00 • chelrs. S&amp;aeper aofa and
7:00 P.M. (Dallvery 304· chair. 2 twin beda with
oprlngo. Hide-a-bad couch .
676-3334)

ator, stove, aink. table. hot
water tank end couch . Ask-

non · errow 8247. Unlighted

46_·_2_
78_3
_ _._4_
_·_ _ __
_814
1

Baag14s for sale. Call 614 ·

Mixed hardwood slabs. 112.

quantity .

Gallipolis Block Co.. Pine
St ., Gallipolis, Ohio Call

2 coal haatera, phone 304-

boots, packt, accaoibrlas.

Limited

blocks, cloy tile. Delivery.

7 yr. old coon dog. Call
. 614·446-9780.

Equipped with bod, rofriger-

Hurryl1(800) 423-1063.

21 " RCA conoole model
colored

Firewood.

converted

Into camper.

Building material, concrete
blocks all aizes, lentils, flu

with blower. 8300. 304- State Block, Rl. 33: New
895-3964.
Hoven. W. Va . 304-8822222.
Color console TV , phone
304-773-9186.

Surplua. Regular Army Co- vered, 304-882-2637.

Imperial tabla &amp; 4 chairs.

Call 814·446·4113.

Building Materiela
Block. brick. sewer pipa a.
wind ow s. lintels . etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Call614-246-6121.

deli ~

""

l!ettar built wood group, 1962si•tyslxpesaengarbuo

NEW LISTING - Quahty sta rter home in ooe of
the nicest neighborhoods.Localed mGreen lawn·
ship, only a lew miles to shopptng. Th1s 3 BR
maintenance lree ranch IS perlecl for the small
lamtly. Country surroundtngs wh ile slill haVIng
the securit1 ol a few neighbors. $44,900.
#106

~

54 Misc . Mercha

2 cheira, 304-676·66 33 ·
King Wood burning stove

55 Building Supplies

w~h Ir

mo

•

r I XXI J"

--------- f----------r----------1
Myert presouro water tonk
120 gel. a. roll bar for omall
truck. Coll614-448-4671.

about losing

wolght7 Contact Gloria
Grote. Rt. 2. Bo~ 282,
Lotort, wv. 25253. 304882-3152 .

Lovesaat excellent condi -

Wood table with li'x chairs
to

64 Misc. Merchandise

Exercill bench. some bar

kitche~n cabinet, tide board,
7 piece diningroom suite,

in excellent condition. 61 4·

8286 . lo $896. Tables, $60
and up to $126. Hide -abods, 8390. and up to
e550., sofa bods $145 ,
Roclinaro. $'226. to 8375 .,
Lamps from 828. to $126 .
pc. dinettes from $109 .. to
436 . 7 pc. 8189 and up .

7:-::-:::---'-:':~~;:" -

Mlnolta comere art 100
35mm caoa, fluh. 8100.:

plo. 8200. Call 614-446- one'lelter to each square, tv form
four ordinary words.
8002.

lamp table . 8326. 19 20a
9x12 Oriental rug. 8260. All

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Times·Sentinei- Page- D:s

bells UO. oflor 3 pm,
304-676-3504.

4 pieces of wicker. Rocker.
planter. magazine table and

614 -446-3159 .

Colonial hutch for sale ma ·

'ftft\irulffilf ~ THATSCMMBLEDWORDGAME
\!:!# ~~~~ by
Arnold and Bob Lee

~

Antiques

refrlgarator. Call 614·446·
Now livingroom su~ea $199 2316 or 614·448 -3897.
$599, Iampo, also 'buying

coal &amp; wood stoves. Call

54 Misc. Merchandise

Sofas and chain priced from

304-895-3460.
In Middleport, Ohio, 2 bed·

October 20, 1985
51 Household Goods

ing Opportunhioo. 614-992 1·304-882 -2568.
7721 .

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

2t
Pan

1 bdr. apt. for rent, leundry

downtown . 304 -675-2218
Apartment for ront St. R1. . 8-6
141 8250 month pluo eloc.

SOUTH
+K J 10 8 4 2

North

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houael . Pt. Pleasant

apartmen t. Pt. Pleasant.
References. No Pets. 304·

paid. Call 814·446-3474 .

"JI096 3
• 10 6 2
+to 1 3

tAKJ93

Apartment
for Rent

ond Gallipolis . 614-446·
8221 .
.::..:.:.__ _ _ _:--:-:-;
FOJ rent small furnished

Ctose to HMC, traah 8t water

• 97

44

borhood . Furnlohodunlurnlthed. No pato. $226''
pluo utllltieo. Coli 814-446·
n29 .
room, $225 mo. pluo dap.

EAST

WEST
• 6s
"Q 52

West

Apartment
. for Rent

2 bdr. gerege, w11h1r·drver
hook-Up. Reiklentl•l neigh·

son. 304-676-1972.

..

October 20. 1985

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

inlerested 304-882-3722.

,.

' """'' ·'

ESTATE AGENCY

17 ACRES, m/1,approx. 6 miles north ol Holzer
Hosplal and approx. 1.1 mile off Rt. 160. Flat
land.

NICE BEGINNERS HOME - $21,000! - 3
BR ranch. kitchen, living room. balh, natural
gas heat. ctty schools. Call for an appoinlmenl

..

.

•
ADDISON TWP. - Approx. 7 miles hom
Gallipolis. 39'h acres more or less. Flonts on
township road. A!l woods and b1ush. $8,900.
THIS HOME HAS A LOT TO OFFER! - Bnck
and slone Cape Cod style home lealuresliving
room wilh beamed ceilings, woodburner, buill
1n lxlokcases. kitchen with eye- ~v~ oven,
dinette, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, ~orm .-ndows.
double garage, cily school districl. mce
ne~ghlxlrhood. Call lor an aqP&lt;lnlment.
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - 102 acres. more or
less, mostly clean htll pasture. lroolson 3roads
near Mu dsoc~
JUST WHAT YOUVE BEEN lOOKING HiR! In-town conven&gt;ences, exira nice
4 DRs,
~rge &lt;ilchen, LR, DR bath. large front porch
ana small screened back porch, gas heat,
unattached one car garage Call lor an
appoinlment

lo'

COMMERCIAL BLDG. - PERRY TWP. NEAR CORA - 6.000 SQ. N. steel butld~ng
tdeal for anyone tnIhe 1ruc&lt;1ng, drillingor mtn·
tng bu~nss. Owner may oon~der leasing or h·
nancing Call lor more inlormation.
103 ACRES MI L. SPRINGFIELD TWP.
Approx. 96 A. bllable, older home has 5 BRs,
balh, lR, k~chen . coun11 water, 40x60 IXIIe
bldg, 40x60 lobacco barn, various oilier
outbUildings.
BRING YOUR HAMMER &amp;NAILS! - 111slory
home located al62llnoon needs some work.
full basement, city waler. cily schOOls.
$13,000.

NI.W LISTING - Near North Gallia HS Tri-level home offers 3 DRs. lR, bath. 24x20
family room, carpeling, eleclr~ heat, nice deck,
attached garage. Call for an appointrrenl.

CLAY TWP. - 100 ACRES M/ l
Overlooking lhe Oh ~ Rtver. Owner reports
some ltmber. City schools. Owner ma1 mnsider
some hnanctng.
COMMERCIAl BUILDING - 62x80 all steel
construction with lirep100I msulalton, has
overhead crane, offtce and baths. formerly
usoo for boal sales and repa11. Located across
from Silver Bndge Plaza w1l haccess lolhe Oh1o
RIVer. Potenhal ~nlimiled.
$8,000 - 11 ACRES - CHESHIRE TWP. Vacant land, sepl~ lank on jloperty. Call for

more inlormatKln.

DON'T lET THIS ONE GET AWAY - 3 BR
ranch oo 12 actesm/1,wtlh loisol p1ne 11ees
Th1s home has I Rwtlh hreplace, ktlchen. ball!,
Catpelm~ 2 car gara ~e w1th openers, elec. BB
heal plus a new heal pump, """ 12x20
"-covered·reer deck anda 12x 161Jithly bldg.Call
lor·an appo~nfmenl.
·

TOWN - Nice one slory home
fealu ring kitchen. lR. family room . dintng
room, full basement, carpetmg, gas hea l,
Ctly waler. 2 car unaHached bklck ga~age .
WHITE HOLLOW ROAD - WA LNUT IWP. 23 A m/1, all paslu re, 21tory home ha~ 3 BRs.
ball1.lR. ktlchen, lull basement, wellwaler. SW
school d1slncl
YOU'll liKE LIVING HERE - 3BRranch 1usl
m1nules from lown on Rt. 141. Olher lealures
tnclude kitchen w/ range, relng, DW. d ~pl .. &amp;
oven, LR with !replace, balh, full basement
deck. fencer! back yard. gas heat. cenlral atr,
cily school d~lnct.

ADDISON TWP - Possom Trol Rd. _ 93
acres m/1. all wonrls 0111 """ un prnpPlly
$2 1.900

r .. ,

200 ACRES Ml. FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - Approx. 65 acres ltllable and 135
acres woods. Comfortable lwo slory home
offers 4 BRs, balh, kilchen, ltvtng room. famtly
room. lwo ftreplaces. oorn. 2 large screened
porches. l ovely QUtel sellint

THURMAN AREAfS ACRES OR20 - Ono·
year o~ ranch lea lu re~ I)8~ 1q H of IIVIItR
Mea. 4 BRs, I balhl. ktlchrn. lennty room
12&gt;24. l R. d1mng IOOtn COIII•'IIrn:. ' "'' RB
heal, Andersen U1errnopam•s. rrrunty wa!Pr .
SWschool drstnct. Call tor . m r~ppom t mrn:

APROXIMATELY 3 MilES FROM RODNEY -

CENTRALLY LOCATED - GREEN TWP. 22 II Ac. mi l w1111 lrool•w· on Sl R1 141 ""'
Ne1ghoorhood R~ Also acl1on" Sanrle" H1ll

remodeled, 3 DRs, lR, kilchen, balh, gas anli
wood slowe, carpelmg, counly water andsmall
pond.

more clelalls

4 ~ acres, m/1,all bllable. Older home has been

GREEN TOWNSHIP -150 Acres.m/1, approx
40 acres til~bl a IObacco barn,dr~e-lhru shed.
melal cattle barn. A~rox . 1.\ acre lake oo
property.
LOTS Of FRONTAGE ON 1!1. 160 NEAR NGHS
- Tobacco base, 2 BR home, 3 ponds,
exc~~nt inveslmenl. 321 acres. m/1

SubdrvrsrOn Owner (mancmp, .r11.1rlahiP Olll lnr

'

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 " -"' mmr or I""
located south of Mercer"llr Appro, ?0 A
ltllab~. Balance woods. loharrn tJa\1' OWner
11111 help hnance
RACCOON CREEK HOMESITE - OH""
boaltni anti l11h1np lol we 11
100x600 and haselt•clnc. wMrr ta pan(f sepl1c
tank Call lor more delatil
~wtmmn&amp;

-l
.,

�'

October 20, 1·985 .

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
57

Musical
Instruments

61

Farm Equipment

20 ft. heavy duty 3 or 4 oxlo.
Baldwi n Fun Mac hin e, like

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Hoy &amp; firewood. Coli 814·
448-3929 eltor 8PM .

l owboy trailer. made for

new, $2, 000.00, 304· 77 3· dozer or hoe vse. good con d.
$1 , 150. Call 614 -388 ·
5007.
8896 oher &amp;PM .
58

Tr~ nspo rl ~ tion

BN Ford Tractor 62 model,
like new . Case baler 230,
Ferguson Wagon new oek

Fruit
S. Vegetables

bad. Cai1614-992-7889.

l-:c:----::-:-----:--bushel. Now Open daily. All 63
livestock
fruits, vegeta bles. Jacks
Market, Rt. 36. Henderson. 1- - - - - - - - -

71

Apple.· All vari et ies. $5 .00

Reg . American seddle bred
horSia lor ule. Cell 814·
256-6481 or 614-448·
1642 ext . 478.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

Farm Equipment

Ragiatered Arabian horses .

Autos for Sale

Ma ssey Ferguson , New
Holland, Bush Hog Sales &amp;
Service . Over 40 used
trac tors to choose hom &amp;
co mplete li ne of new &amp;
used equipment. Largest
se lection in S.E. Ohio .
Specia l 10 % discou nt on all
parts f or cas h sales only,
un til Nov. 15.

Also locust postl. Coli 614·
367-0569 or 814-7379.
yrs . old . Coil 61 4-682·
7277.
4 Angus steers. grein 1eed.

Roady to butcher. Coli 814·
388-8280.

Power Pock breeding. Goobel Angus Farm, Coolville.
Ohio. Call 814·887·3838.

App. filly brad ond ooddle
$300.00 . Reg . Polo. Rack·
ing Stallion 8800.00 . Pinto
Yearling Golding 1500.00.
ro tar"j tiller. 11 ft. feed 304-675·4614 .

1977 Ford Thunderbird. red
&amp; whit e, 64,000 miles, full

po wer, no rust. fact . alum.
wheels, axe . cond ., $1,695 .

Ca ll 614-388·8896 oher
6P M.
Real Estate General

Real .Estate General

REAlTOR
Home Phone

992-3535 '
THREE BEDROOM BRICK
has family room, dining
room, modern kitchen. l 'h
balhs, build ings, fenced lor
cattle or horses. 50 's
A GOOD BUY - 3 ood room
home rn good location close
lo town. Ill baths. Ow ner
has relocated , needs to sell.
Low 30's.

3 BEDROOM HOME has large
lam1ly room, lireplace, 2
baths, equipped kitchen. din·
mg area. deck, good neighbors, la_rge ga rage. 50's.

TOP CASH poid lor '80
model and newer used cars.

Smith' Buick-Pontile, 191 1
Eutom Ave .. Golllpollo. Coil
814-448-2282.

1970 Nawpon Chryoler 1976 Plymouth atotlon ·
70 , 000 milea, excellent wagon. 380V8 motor. P.B,
cond ., $660. Coi181 4·448· P.S. 8250. or boll offer, Coli
61 4-98&amp;-4226.
9289.
'

71 ·

1979 Folrmont. 14K70wlth 1980 blue Turbo Trono Am
o 24•7 Tipout. 3 bedrooms, 31.000 mlleo, auto. trono ..
2 full bltho, on rented lot.
optiono, price 85,800.
E•colient condition. Clean. Coll614·245-5078.
With or without AC. Colil - - - - - - - - 614-992-2251 or614-992 - 1977 Cutloos Supremo PS.
3869 .

· PB,

AC~

cond . Coil

axe~
~14-446 - 4672 •

cruise. tilt,

•

1976 Cordoba OK. work cor,

best offer. Call 614·446-

no reasonable offer refused . .

4491 or 448-3888.

Coil 614-266-9367 .

1976 Chevy 9 po110nger
wagon . Excellent tiroa. good
battery, body In good condi·
tion . 8750. Call 614-992 5006 . Leonerd Bass ,
Syracuse.

F-16 RACINE AREA - Well
kepi 46 acre larm w1lh a
nice 3 BR home. Has 3 BRs,
lull basement. cosy lamily
room. Must see to appreci·
ale.-Call Larry 992- n26.

reo .

Judy DeWitt - Realtor - 388-8155
J . Merrill Carter- Realtor- 379- 2184
Becky Lane- Realtor- 4-%-0458
Jim Cochran - Realtor - 446-7881
Virginia Smi'th- Realtor- 388· 8826
Phyllis Loveday - Realtor- 446 -2230

F-9 MUST BE MOVED .
Nice Doublewid e. 3 BRs, 2
baths. partially furnished.
Good buy. Call larry 99 2·
7726.

POMEROY - Business Bldg.
Renta:J. lots ot extra space.

We have several more list·
inas in the area. For more
information please eatl .

•

Your local realtor is Larry
Durst and can be reached
at home res. 992· n26 or
office 594-3543.
906-A East State Street
Plaza Center
Athens , Ohio 45701
Business 594-3543

-5 rm . one Hoor oo
l ·iinii•nn . Gas lurnace, porches
garage. $20,000.
It's nol what you pay, but
what you get. Certified
Appraisals.
Sue Murphr, Milton ll:oush
Htltn, Virgil •• lruce Ttoford

Housing
Headquartets

446-4206

.

Ow1wr Hru LmVf're d PricP rn Se ll - Grt't'fl T wp. Modern brick ran ch. ·I
I H• tlroorn ~. lir·in /{ room. Jorrnnl tlininjl. modforn kirc:hen wl di .• lnvu.• hl! r
_ rrrn,ce. JuiiiJaM• m«&gt;nt. /nu · utilitit•ll. G a.~ hPnt f' d &amp; l't'ntral air. A r·r r~·
11 iN' h nr~u•. LarK'' back )'artlrd tr~•f'.'l .
.

1-l.RJ !Icrt•.• Mnr P nr Lt•u - Gre(•n Twt' · Lar!{t' J. ,~ IM•droom ht~m l' . £xcellt•tlf l'i~· w and lorotion. PRICE D REnl'Cf:D - in ;o·.~.
\'till .~ 1'if /a jli' - Lnt /J of flriWf"r~ . .•hrufJ.,, larf(P pine I rni. 11lu ~ n t•e ry well
dl'.•i~-[ n (• d hmrll' . l"ea1u res a formallit•inf{ ronm. famil y roo m, 3-4 bvtlru om .~. I '! l1 nt h.lf. complete kit che, n w/ dis hwa!lw r. sfm:f' &amp;: rf!jri/(f' rator.
Pitli.~h~· d ha .~t• m P nt w/ rnrp £&gt;1. :! oor l{nra{{e an d st~parat e wood .• hop . a
larl{t' co rNe(l ba ck pvrch . /{a·• ht•nl . IT'a.•hingron Elt~ m .. ntary.

Uio Grtlrl di• A rt'O - 9acrf'JJ . more or lt•.u. :J BR 2 ..rory home. Cellar , .H or·

an.d 2 Lou .- .J or 4 bed·

ro oms. kit chen, prrden spact&gt; .
Unattach ed two au gor~e . Price

129. 700.00.
Att ention Nt•wly wed.• :- Home co mplt rely jurni1hed. New micro ~ovt.,
re mo tt&gt; control color T V. d eep freeu! and bed•, •ofat , lompt, end.ta,ble
an d d:inin~ and lot~ of tJtMr thing•. 4 ,b edroorm, 2 b~tla&amp;. LR. dtnmg,
mmwrn kit chen. Na«' f•n ced back yard. Packalfe deal only J40 ,000.

Good cond i tion ,

W.O.

1973 CJ -5 Joep. 304 en·
gino good oond. C.tl eltw
10AM, Mr. Vonco614·446·
7441 .

1982 Ford F250. 4x4.
Heovy ·duty, VB. 4 ~-.
AM-FM. dual tonko, posi tnoc, lock -out hubo. opeciol
point. 18000. firm . Coli
614-992· 3318.

1983 Hondo V45 Mogno
4 ,000 m._s, excellent con-

trans, air, new paint . Will

for small car . Call
1979 Manto Carlo. VB, trade
614-446 -2300.

eep pockup, uc.
2 849 ·
sharp car. Call 614-992· cond
1973.. J13,200.· Coli oftor
10AM. Mr. Van~ 614·446· .
1978 Mustong. Now ~res. 7441 .

NMdl engine wortl . S495 . - -

74

76

Mqtorcyclu

1974 Sporutor, low miles.
Call 614-992-8679 elter
5PM .
1986 Hondo 3 -lor, 250
SX, I 1,300. 1984 Hondo 4
wt-let . 200 TRX. 11.500.
eon614-367-0832'.

75

Boats and
Mo.t on for Sale

Motorcycles

550 Suzuki lor pans only.
Coi1 614-245-5040.

dition, new windshield &amp;

motorguord. S2,250. Coli
614-367-0683.

Jolin boot for

614-256-8417.

au.

1977 15' C....rMner (Mu560) tr ~ houl , wlill tlvu
windshiold, with 1978 90
ond Shoreline tniler, good
cond. Full .., ... 13.000.
Coli 614-258·8768.
1977 17ft. SuraaftTrihoul
10wi111YB. Good condition .
Aoking I 5000. Colt' 814992-5947 eltlf 5:00p.m.
12 ft. Lo-' River Jolin
wi1ll 3 hp goo motDt. Ph .
304-676·2966 eltor 3 p.m.

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

- - -- - - -

.

77

sidi ng . replacement w in-

Mr. Auto RipaN' ia hi ving a
btfore winter speciaL We
w itl dean inside and oU-t pkls
wu: for 125. Alto , we will
g r - oil fittingolor $0.50.
Coi1814-949-2044 or 614 992-8637 lor on oppoint·

Fetty TrH Tri mming, nump

romovol. Coli 304 -676 1331'

i ng. \"i nyl aH:Iing. ttormdoors
and wlnclows. Free utJ.·

motu. Coll614 -992-2772 .

Home
Improvem ent s
BASEMENT
WATE RPROOFING

D .l nd M. Contracton. Vi nyl

RON 'S Television Serva . dow s. intu&amp;atin g... roofing,
HouM coils on RCA. Ouour, new and · rtmoc~M i ng . con·
GE. Specioling in lonlth.
Coli 304 -67&amp;-2398 or 614 - crota . Coli 304-773-S 131 .
446 -2454.
J.ond L. lnm llltion. Roof-

Auto Repa ir

81

Uncondi·t ionallifetime gua rantee . Local refer&amp;r~c es
furn 1shed . fr&amp;e e-st1mat es

Call collect 1-614-237 -

0488 . day or night Rogers
Bas.ement WaterprC&gt;ofing

·

Rotary ()I' cable tool dnlling
Most wells completed same
day . Pump sale s an d seN tce

304-895-3802

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campen
1988 16 h . Troutwood
&lt;!1._. ll ,OOO"_ CIII 614448·41 13..
1973 Dodge 20 ft . mini
motor homo. fully equipped,

16,700. Co li 614 -446 4230.
1979 HO!MOY 5111 -

travel t7ai"r 35 ' . S11i0\11
inquir•• only, 814·388 -

8547.

D - Huntlt'l Spociol. All

fum-. -

· gao-oloc.

water Mtter. front and rur
dining. lklops 6 COmfOr11 ·
bly, fully soll-oontoinod,
lrig.-- r l f, plenty of
1191 - t9700. 304-89!&gt;1

1955 De10to, Hemi engine,
pb. automatic trans .. 1983 Silvorodo Chevrolet
runs good . Will take 8850 . pickup, ps, ps. V-8 eng ine.

51 000

For IIII:Wondohioid lor 75 to
82 Ford • on . Phone 614742-2440.

Home
Improvements

Home
Improvements

fiborglou body motomorno,

ps.

new tires '

81

81

- 0 -7

Coli

Coli 814-992 -3684 Mon. 1985 Chovy pickup tNdc .
"'slooou!lh Sot. from 9:00· P.s .. P.B .. V6 . out o.
: ·
S6,900. Like new! Coil
614 -949-2650.
304 -895-3886.

Serv1ce s

The

ment Md cirections.

HP Mecr. with power trim

74

Auto PerU

&amp; Acceuoriea

1979 GMC 4x4. 50.000
miles. Mocnonit:olly u ool·
lent. Noods r.ilgato ond rear
tendon. 12999. Con 614·
992· 3684 from 9:00-5:00, 79 Yomol!o 260 din bike.
304-675- 2158.
Mon. tluou!lh Sot.

1975 Pontioe. Looks nice. 1976 Ford F-100 otandord

automatic, air. good tires. -:-:-:::-- - - - - - -

36815.

plus

mileo. 16125. L. l . Smrth.

GREAT POTENTIAL1n this growing business. Grocery
storewittl equipmen~ inventory. Snack shop area. Only
2 groceries in area. Catr tor more information. Located
1n Racine.
#951

79 vo•••wagen Rabbit. 905 Mossman, Pt. Pl .• WV.
51500. 304·676·6963.
304-675-3222 .

EVER SIEAL A HOUSE? -These anxious ownersare
wiling Ia deal. 2 StillY lrame. 4 bedrooms, formal
dinin&amp; family room, 2 fireplaces, 2 baths, krtchen
includes d~hwasher, range, d~posal, basement,
garage. City convenience. Safe neighoorlxiod.

~

IN-TOWN LOCATION - 2 stillY
excellent condlion. 3 bedrooms, new~ remode~
bath upstairs, ~ bath downstairs, livingroom, k~chen,
d in~g room, fami~ room. recent~ rep~ced carpet,
central ar, carport, front jX)rch, back oock.

1952 Chevy busineu mens

' 82 Chevrolet pickup. 4 wh

coupe, all redone. 15,000. drive. 304-576 ·21 19 .
304-875-3470.
1974 International. 1 ton
1984 Calavier stet1on we· truek. 304 -773 -5430 or
gen. 4 cyl. , 5-sp . ac, am· 773-5785.
radio,
cond . $6,900 .
304-675-5258, 10· 5: ofter 1975 GMC, C6500 dump, 5
5, '937-2686.
speed transmiuion. 2 speed
ule. PS, 10· 20 tires. 6Y53

••c.

Buy your Clr in West Virginia
and you 'll have protection of
West Virginia Attorney Gen·
ral Brown .

CAN1 BEAT THE PRICE - 3 bedroom home, bath,
large l~ing room, dinilg!oom, k~chtin, beautWulfami~
room with lirep~ce.look out yoor window and see the
woods oohild. Nat. ga~ cent. air, carport, storage.
Priced at $39,900. Awrox. ll mile from ciij.

87

3.68 ACRES- Surveyed wooded lot at SR 7 near

Gallipol~ locks and dam. liS' river frontage. land on
both sides ot highway Building or mobile home srtes.

$5.900

#923

DON'T OVERLOOK THIS HOME - $49,500. The
outside ~- gorgeous,_but you will absolutely love
the mtenor. Beautifully decorated, everything
looks new. Excellent kitchen with all latest conveniences. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home ·has also
been professionally landscaped . All at aprice you
can afford.
#1002
UNBEATABLE $12.500 - Wrth alittle WIJ'kthis frame
1\1 !tory home cou~ be adoD house. Spacllusrooms
throughout lArge treed lawn. Garoon area. Great
investment prllflertv,
_
~~2
lDYELY COUNTRY S£TTING on 9\1 acres. Just 4m1~

.

OWNER HAS DECIDED TO SELL ON lAND CONTRACT
in order lo make rt pos~ble for you to be the proud
owner of this·very nice 209 acre farm. Apprrn. 90 acres
tillable, rest pasture wittl very littlewoods. 2story larm
home wrth 5 bedrooms, 50'x75' barn ..machinery shed,
3 garages, tobacco base.

11&amp;47

PRICE DROPPED TO $39.900 - Owner anx~us lo
sell th~ 1\\ slofy 2 IJ' 3 bedroom home in good
corrd~i:m. Fami~ room, lirep~ce. basement, 2 car
garage and n~e tree lnoo l'h acre yard. Locate:! in
Green Grade School area.
#1009
REMODELED HOME NEAR VINTON - Nice
decorating in th~ 3 bedroom, 1'7 story home. Vinyl
~din&amp; lam1ly room, large kitchen, dining room,
Insulated Windows, rural water. 'h acre yard wilh
garden-area. $32,000.
#919
COMFORT AND WARMTH RADIATE THROUGHOUT
- Jacksm Pike. Charming 3 bedrooms, bath, cozy
lamtly room, natural gas heal. city water, sewer. E•·
cellent 2 car garage. Chain link fence. Landscaped
lot
#993
NEW LISTING - STATE HIGHWAY RESTAURANT
- Opportunily knocks when you check out this
investment. Seating tor 54 , serves mellen! tood.
Repeat custom-ers. Ofll'n 7 davs a week. Owner
will finance wtth reasonable cash down. OWner
wants to go to Florida. Call immediately lor an appomtment.
#1025

NEW LISTING - LOVELY BUILDING SITES $6,500. Wooded acreage perfect for buildin g
close to Holzer Medical Center, rural water, Kyger
Creek ScMools.
#1024
BULAVILLE·ADDISON ROAD - Owne~ anxilus to
sell th5 4 OOdroom ranch w~h lull basement Includes
recent~ ~ep~ced roof, 2 full baths, 14'x25' family
room, ful~ equipped kichen, 12'xl5' screene:l deck,
8'x8' deck central air, garage. N ear~ \\ acrelollocaled
less than 1 mile lrom Rt. 7. $43,500.
HOllE AMONG THE T~EES with 2.8 acres, only
m~nutes hom town. Lovely family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs. living room, eal·in
k1tchen and full furn ished basement. large deck
on ba ck with 'scenic view

#1010
DON1 PASS THIS ONE BY - 3 bedroomranch with
attached garage, ful divided basemen!, fireplace, gas
forced air hea~ within minutes ot tow~ Owner Wlluld
consider trading tor large home.

#913
NICE STARTER OR RETIREMENT HOME - level
floor plan. 2 bedrooms, living room, lamily room
or dining room. City convenience, large backyard.
Room lor a garden. located 929 4th Avenu e.
$30,900.
#1013
IDeATED IN l'WINGlllN- Older 2story homewth 3
bedrooms. kitchen, 1~. ·r09m, bath, nice front porch,
large unattached garag~ Ltiliij bldg,celar house, l. 75
acre lawn. (lose to m~ es.

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~ l»~.i Centu r)· 21 Real Estatt&gt; (urpur.uilon tb

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•Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor, Pll . Home 446-9539
ACROSS

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

6 Slnke
10 Aihletrc group
14 Fall mto d•suse
19 Parts remammg

Vans S. 4 W.O.

Super Beetle for 80 chivy 4• 4 350 en gino. 4
porto 8300.00. 304-675· blrrell, loodod. Coli 614·
7241 '
379-2706.
BULAVILLE·PORTER ROAD
- ASSUMABLE !DAN
6 rooms. 3 bed rooms. base·
men I, fronl porch, ba c~ sun·
deck. electrtc and / or wood
burner fA lurnate. whrte
steel s!d111g, satellite di$C.
Rural water s1stem. 11'• 20'
hvrng room. 6 acre lot Sman
donn payment lake ove
loan. See It and g!'t all de~~ ~~ now.
W
643

Real Estate General

'

3 BEDROOM HOllE
Sl9.900.00

1.55 acres rn counlry. front
porch. 5 room lume. ooe
bath, IXliJntry krtc!len, 16'lll'
ootllde storage budd1t~ A
!lJOO IJ!gmJ home for tluse
•to oart a home it th!IXlllr&gt;ITy
t641

#949 '

north of Rio Grande. An attractive 3 oodroom energy
• effiCient ranch, mcludes 2 baths d~ilg room
equ!Jped kitchen, lull basemen!, heat pump and
garage. Call aoout detait . $55,000.
#1014

DON1 PASS THIS ON£ BY - It's bar~il 17i:ed ~~
on~ $45,000. AttractiVe 3 bedroom, ~nyl and br~k
ranch tust m111utes from toontand ltosplal. A ne~~er
deluxe_knchen and din~g area. 2 baths, rewer carpel,
full l11~hed basement viiM lam~~ and roc. rooms, 2
lweplaces, nat gas,_central ar,and 2 car 111raga Won't
last long at lh5 priCe. lmrred~le possessbn.
#1012
lDCATI_ON - $49,000 - Just whal you need,
conven~nt! 1 ! 3 bedroom ranCh located al Sl. Rt 35
c~e to ltosprtal. Srtuated on approx. l4 ac. Plus extras.

PRICE REDUCED - $30.500 - Addison - 3
bedroom ranch, 1 bath, k~chen with ealng area. full
basemml Located on tld Rl 7. Good starter home for
young couple or investment.

#956
WHAT A DEAL - $38,500. Owner says sell now. Mtnt
condition ready for you tomove in. Nice carpetingand
new draperies, range, refngerator. ll'x24' family room
with woodburner.

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#968
HOME AND 6ACRES - $19,900 - Located on St Rt.
7. love~ river ~ew. 2, pass~~ 3, bedroom home.
Partial~ furn5hed. Nice barn. Lots of road (ron~

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NEW LISTING - AUTUMN SPLENDOR - 6acres
NEW LISTING - SOUTHWFSTERN AR£A surround this beautiful brick chateau. Main level · Charming 4 year old brick and vinyl 3 bedroom
has complete kitchen , i wi11g room , dining area
rancn. tormal om mg area. Located ala oead end
w1lh l11eplace, 2 bedrooms, balh. Top level has
road. Pnced lo sell.
master bedroom, bath, balcony. Full divided baselil026.
ment
WILL
SELL
ON
IAN
D
CONTRAC:r
_
8
a:
res
modern
#1023
ranch home, barn,outbu1~~&amp; 3 oodroom dinilgarea
.bath, beaut~ul roll~g land wrth frurt and walnut trees'
ATTENTION HORSE LOVERS - Make an appoinlmenl
Pond, spnng Located al ScoN1111 n. $34,000.
'
tooay lo ~ew this 39 acre farm. You will appreciatelhe
quality of materia~ and workmanship to b~kl large
#9n
horse barn. Box stalls, 4 bay machine shed. Cement
HAVE YOU MISSED THIS ONE? - One story six room
watering troughs. E!cel~nl cropland, recently limed
m
odern house in ciij -2nd Ave. Clean ood very gxx1
and fertilized. 3 oodrooms, 2 baths, 24"x56"
cond rt~n. lull basement, like new gas furnace,
doublewide placed on permanent foundation. Use
backyard, roomlor garden and lawn. Front porch that
erther rural or well water.
~ hard to leave. Mother, Dad, 1115 E n ~e. Price
#924
reasonabla Call us today. lmmediale p=~n . let us
NEW LISTING- GREAT FARM LAND - 62 acres
help!
ol fine clean land, 2 ponds, some limber, good
#962
well , county water, mobile home hookup, new
FIXER
UPPER
$18.500
S
tarter
home,
fence
tnvestment property, I ~ story frane, 3 bed room'
#1016
balh, natural ga. Owner has moved southaoo wanls lo
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S~l.
NEW LISTING - 10 'acres'suroound I his 2 story
#989
home with senic view ol woods. Home has 3 bed rooms, bath. eat-in kitchen, lormal dining room ,
NEW LISTING - MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE l1ving room, den. Small barn, 2 car garage, garden
$29,900. Exira nice l4 'x70' mobile home, 2acres
area. Located at Pomeroy.
w1th pond, rural water, s11uated at a slate high#1020
way. Owners say sell '
BUILDING SITES - Purchase oneot all three oflhese
#999
horne srtes. Each site apprO&gt;imately 140'x254'. Road
BRICK RANCH - Located on Sl Rl. 1413 bedroom,
frontage. Rural water 'avai~ble. ,IJI deared. Surveyed.
large bath. nice eat-1n k1lchen, hvmg room, lull d1v1ded
located at the Bidwell-Rodney Road approx 2 mile
basement, fireplace, attached garage. Lovely 11? acre
from Rodney and Sl Rt. 35. $6,000 per ~1.
lawn wilh lrees and shrubs.
#979
11941
194 ADElAIDE DRIVE - Remodeled J ~room
VACANT LOT - $6,500 andil is all yours. &amp;cel~nt lot
ranch 1mile westoltownon St Rl 14l.lncludesalum.
IOO'xl80'. Rural water available. plus electric on lot.
sidin&amp; rool recently replaced, nal gas heat • Owner financing availab~ to qual1f1ed buyer. located
woodburner, full baseme~ garage. Assumable
St. Rt. 775, a short d~lance lrom the county park
mortgage. Priced at $39,900.
enlrance. Call tor a slllv.ing

#940

REDUCED TO $20,000- OWNERS WILLING TO
SACRIFICE - 3 bedroom home s~uat~ on a
wooded 1 acre yard. Includes new walls, And er·
sen windows, etc. large detached garage and
small barn. Needs some siding wor k done, bul is a
GOOD BARGAIN.
H978
TREES, WILDLIFE, NATURE - If you are inlerested in
wildl~e this property ISfor you. 118 acres ol woods,
s11all hunting building, drilled well, good lishin&amp;jX)nds.
mineral rights. Just wamng lor the Interested hunter.
#930
GET AWAY FROM IT All and IJlPY the beauty of
nature w~h this 28 acre I arm. Older l'ome in need ot
repair. Barn, cellar and cellar house. Drilled well.
Part~l~ wooded. ProductN~

~894

4 BEDROOMS - 4 A.CRES - seclude!j, roomy ranch
home 1n m1n1 condrtion. 2 ba th~ kwely liv~ng room
lormal dining area. Woodburner. range, refrigerator:
. washer and dryer included. 2 rural waler taps. Barn
w~h horse stall, garage v.ilh worksho~ Owner w111
accept mobi~ home or valuables lor down payment
#970
RENTAL PROPERTY - l ocated al Llrner Rl. 7 rear
aav School. 2 bedrooms, bath. hving ruom, kitchen.
Alu·m. sidin&amp; carpel washer irrtd dryer l'ookup. Rural
water. lot approx. \\ acre.

I \1 STORY ,HOllE PlUS 6\1 ACRES 11/l
8 rooms-4 bedrooms. I baltl ~us sOOwt!r ., t.baseiiSI'mluet!lll( rural
waler ~em. garage. M 11 !lJOO IXIdbon. 6'1 acres mil Lm cl
space. R£0UCED You can buy thrs home and acres ltl my

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21 Wetght ol lnd1a
22 Falls 1nto error
23 Unproductrve
24 Brooks
26 Flower
28 Foretoken
29 S1amese naltve
30 D1spalched
32 Goddess ol

11634

SOMEONE WANTS YOUR HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALl US!!

as:sumtnn See thrs In home.

3 BEDRM .. 2 baltls, I 'h acres. more ll' lesS. localed along
Shoestnng RK!ge l.4Ml SQ. ll AII!Jr $34,o:xl 00.
/

tli27
S7 ACRES. MORE OR llSS
1 barn Olester lwp.tn Megs County. approx. 38 acres trial*some woods, aptJ"O.I. 12 ~ Scm !enatg lJM!Iy Site 1o luld
~ away from M!yooe else. PI-one il!ld oo lite litsl to see and

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buy this pbt rJ land

1979 14'x56 MOBILE HO.
UBERTY - 2 bedrooms, bath wrth &amp;arden tub, showe. lot•l
'electrr&lt;: - also h1e:l for woodburne!. all carpeted, 1mrtiech·
ale possesYtlrl . Beauulul blue an(! whrte - Ike new WISile.
Etcellent buy al $7.190 See rt now.

98 Tenms scores

99 Gels up
101 in1ury
103 Malay canoe
104 Conducted
105 Secluded valley
106 Near
107 Bone
108 Traced
110 Sod1um cn1o110e
1 11 Teulon•c detly

112 Stem

vegetation

33 Workman
34 Stalemate
35 Mrsdemeanors

115 Nejjat1ve prellx

37 Small skm tumor

39 RIVer tsland
40 Dimtn1sh

41 Relarned
42 Reqwrement
44 Peeling
46 So11
47 Ordmary French
brandy
48 Foray
52
53
55
57
58
59
60

Female student
Poslscrrpt. abbr
Leak tnrough
Overhead ra11
Baseball ream
Walked on
Nate of scale
62 Harvest goddess
64 Sailors
66 Cooled lava
68

Pre h~~:

twtce

69 MOtJnlams of

llMU SETTING WITH SWIIIIIIIIG POOl
5 rooms. bath. 2 cat garage, naW gas. f,l fu'nact. 1II1Ww ar
~ saiEI1e tWt. S&gt;mlrrmg jXlOI (18 ft dtlmeterj, garden
lll300. teoced rn badyard. Stirage buldllg Pos!lble loan

95. Handle Wt1h Sic 111

113 W tn ter veh•cle

50 Potsonous

FINISH 0 YOURSnF
And save omev ThiS 6 '"""" 4 1&gt;m1om roto...1 home 111he
altrntry w/approx. 891&gt; a= Cleat~ 10 raiSe yoor dllinn
Srnal farm pond stocked W!lll bass a'ld '*'e llfl lobltto base.
l.tis II bmt&amp;. PI-one MW b .tn 3fliX*Ibrelt Pnced ill $19.900

· ..'if:
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COUIITRY HOllE
St Hwy 160 cilse i) togl1lChool Noc:f lrtwlt Jlll'th.

bul&lt;fl caOO&gt;e!S a'ld dti sis !inkrn k.lchm, balhwithsOOwel. l.tis
c1 shade trees a'ld lnlt trees Garden lll300. 84 acre of IMd.
lliown-fl.W.bon. 8 rooms. 41led11)011'1S. Must sel PI-one oowb
an •IJIOUirbllel1l Pnced at $26.900
•2G6

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#963
95 ACRES VACANT lAND inGreen Township ol Sl Rl
141. Tobacco base Main~ wooded wrth marketable
limber. 'Mthin 7 mi~ ollown. Call for more details.
#957
NEW LISTI_NG - 6.7-ACRES , more or less of vacant land. _
25'x50 ' building, located at Centenary .
Owner Willing lo take mobile home in orl-trade.
#1021

l.ocat8j M

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87 Mate
89 S1m1an
92 Preen

1 Hurry

1031 ' '
73

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Ask Younelf This Ouestion-lhett List W'lllllls
•

sion. '72

NEAR SOUTHWESTERN HIGH SCHOOL - locatetl
just 5 miles south of Rio Grande. Situated on a2 acre
'shilJed lot This redecorated 4 or 5 bedroom home is
just for you. Includes 2 n~e balhs, family room, formal
d1mng .room, basemen!, 3 ca r garage. Very nice
decorattn&amp; Thermal w~dow, aluminum ~din&amp; fully
carpeted, insulated, fireplace with woodbLrner. Priced
to sella! $59,900.
#916
GREAT UTILE FARM - I ~ story home with 3
bedrooms, balft, dining room, kitchen, living room,
basemenl Barn, garage, 35 acres plus gas well on
property. 15 additional o:res cropland can be bought
eKtra. Addison Township

Eur ope

70 Evergreen lree
71 Dmes
73 Fiona a c•ty

75
7
78
80
81
82
84
86

Climb1ng palm
H1ndu garment

Snares
Locates
October brew
Sheltered
Sllrred up
Declare

117 Repr oach
I t9 Myself

120 Skm of frUII
121 Proph_elesses
124 Undergarment
126 Doom
t27 Alrgh t
128 Hunllng dog
130 JUf!'P
132 Motner of Castor
and Poilu•
133 Rage
134 Fru11 seed
t35 Walk
137 Hail
139 Hawar~ an wreath
140 Contest
141 Expenses
143 Seasonrng
145 Rtver . m Spa1n

146 " The Cotton
Stale "
148 Pretentious

homes

150 Causes
152 Substances
153 Separate
154 Short 1acket
156 Catk1ns
15 7 Place for combal
158 ~ar god
159 Trans.achon

160 Out ol date

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DOWN
1 Vast lhron&lt;JS

2 Reach

72 Biemr shes

3 Member ol

7-! Ar ticle

Order ol the
Mysl1c Sl1rrne
4 Golf mound

76 Telluoum

5 Penods of lime

79 B11ghr srar
83 SIIICh
85 Closed s-e&lt;;ureiy
86 Among
87 Wan
88 Genus of maples
89 EQually
90 Tolled
91 Chem1cal

6 Sa1nt abbr
1 Tenms sl rok e
8 Frsh sauce
9 Elaborate
exh•b11 10n

10 Doctnne
11 Goddess ol
diSCOrd

12 Macaw
13 Manuscrr pl
abbr

symbol
77 Denude

compound

92 M1deas1 org
93 Wrlhsland

14 Fat ot swane

9.4 Ex ts ts

15 Sk1ll
16 Sham
17 Penam1ng to o!o
age
18 FiniShed
20 Merganser
23 Pari of skeleton
25 Break suddenly
2~ 8ejjrnn1ng
28 Gasp for breath
31 Igneous rock
33 Male deer
36 Oceans
38 Woody plant
40 Alchohc
beverage
41 Hastened
43 Food program
45 Land

96 Clayey earlh
97 Small valley

surrounded by

water
46 Negatron
47 S1mp1e10n
49 L1feless
51 Zodrac srgn
52 Wad,ng b~rds
53 Bard
54 Mast
56 L1ked beller
59 Carry
60 Conliagratoon
61 Dry
63 Played lead1ng
role
65 Sk1dc!ed
67 Commercials
69 Gu1d0 s low note
70 Slammers

100 Stgn on door

102 T1drngs
105 Heredttary factor

109 Lejjal dcx:umen1
112 Actress
Haywonh
113 Conveyed
114 Stop
116 Permrt s
118 Crava1s
120 D1ffuse
121 Ral,onal
122 Coionrzes
123 DepOSIIS
125 Sponsors
126 Antmal s tact tl e
organ

127
129
131
132

Tibetan pr~esl
H1n0 part
T1ps SOtJih Ame11can
am mal

133 Male sheeps
134 S1a11ons
136 Entreal y
138 Armed bane
140 Fes11ve
141 Sollcrtude
142 Bnslle
144 Pound down
147 Prohlbrt
148 Vetucle
149 The sun
1&gt;1 Ocean
153 Father
155 Compass po1rt

~0

ClOSE TORIO GIWI D£ 01t 325
649 acres mae IJ' les!.. W!ed ~ SOJth cl Rxl Grandf ern St
Hwy. 325. l.tis rJ large. t.IP1111! trees. BeaWfw buldrlg Sites 11 th!
YIOlds H)CIU ~ ~ees. thiS 6 wNi jCU want

fi631

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NEAT 2 BEDRODI, one ' floor home. along Ch;lham Ave.
Addibonal storage buJidlng along rear alley Buy oow for
$25,000 00.

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ACREAGE: 46 acres, ad13tent to crty cl Ga~polls. $21 ,500.00.
~ACRES, below Eureka, $13,500.00.

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#981

BRAND NEW - $42,900 - Bel he l11sllo makelrns3
bedroom, 1 bath beauty your home. Charmmg and
aftordable. Situated on one acre wooded lot.
#961
#912
#976
truiOtt•e rur th~ ~A P. ® un~ "'- t ra dt'mar~~ tJI.Ct'l11 ury'tl Ru l Estate Corporatiun. l'nnH•d in l'. S A. ~;~u.11 1I!Jih tr!lmin Emp l u~l'r.
EACH OFFICE ISISDEPESDE~TLY OW SEll A~D OPERATED.

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WHY SETTU FOIT£WNG THE WHOlE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN 1£L1 THE
WHOLE WOILD?

Detro i t D i ese l . ·~~i~ 11 ,
$4,500.00. Phone

'72 VW runs good rebuilt
engine, plus spere transmts-

"Jl.'' bu ifdinll. ueu; .• h,.dfor m1tf1' or h rJr!le.~. New Jenc('l. J;'ru it tree.,. Cit y
50,,,

top lor short bod lor full sill
PU . Coi1614-266-9367.

Gall 614-985-3565 .

NEW LISIING - LOVELY 2 STORY HOME - Features 4 bedrooms, den, oak hardwood lloors, oak
staircase, large kitchen, utility room . You also get
135 acres oliand, tobacco base, large bar n, mineral r1ghts..
#1022
Hric lf HomP - Entry h n/1 adjocc•nt Jn rm ai LR. bo w IVindn w. ~o rmol
d in irljl ruom w/ wnin.. co alinl( &amp; IH!auli f ul waU f t&gt;X. ~ode rn lut che n;
fn m i(Y m nm . w. b. firf'pl acf' and pnt in dnn r.•. back .patio. 4 bP dr~o nu.­
fu ll &amp; ~ ~ lxrrh~ . F;nidwd ho.~J· mf•n l w! rN'. room .1 oor I(Ora~t• . _ land~­
cnprtl lo r .~. lmmoculah• ca rt•d for C'W! Iom built hnm fl. Ctt y , chonh.
f'ri t.·t&gt;dlJO '.t. Po.u ible loan a.~ ~umpl io u !

leer camper top for k&gt;ng bed
small sire PU . Also camper

Vans &amp; 4

4--183FordRonget4K4
v- 8a~tomatic . bucbt . .u .
86900. or trode tor full aize
4x4 of equal •liue. Alter 5
p.m. coil304-875 -1874.

POMEROY - 1\\ batMs. 3
BRs, gas F.A.Iurnace, range,
refrig, basement. carport &amp;
lg lot. 20s.

RACINE- Handyman reeded, 9 rms., one nice acre &amp;
resl shrubbery.

Trucks for Sale

73

37,000 miles. UOOO. Coli
Chevy " ton pickup,
614· 742-2370 or 614-992- 1977
$1 ,800. Coil oher 5PM.
2414 ond Ilk for Judy.
614-446 -7637.
1982 Ford Eocort, 2 door, 1985 a'Mc 'h ton PU, 31
good condition, new brake•
miles. 19, 240.66. Coll614and muffler. light blue color. 446-2533
8AM-5PM .
Call 514-992-3870.
1984 Dodg~ % ton . 318
1976 Choveno 4 opeod. CJ
., 4spd ., AM - ~M. PS, PB,
New tirea and brakes. Cell 13.000 mi., 16,295 . Coil
614-986-3827.
614-446 -0662.
Ser&gt;~ces

POMEROY - lg. 3 BR
home, lull basement, gas
furnace, lg. front porch and
dbl. garage. 20s.

NEAR MEIGS HIGH - · 8
Acres, 3 BRs, woodburner &amp;
lots of trees.

72

1983 Plymouth Reliant, rod,

~'" Ollenng CENGUARO'" Insurance

Autos for Sale

4 cyl., auto .• 2 door, air . 1959 Stud. for ports, 1100.
cruiae con1rot. AM -FM ste· Cali 614-367-7118.

COUNTRY- Like new 3 BR
ran cM. Ref., range, disM·
wa sMer, lg. dining, tun basement &amp; dbl. garage.

RACINE - Nice 6 rms. Re·
modeled, equipped kitchen,
full basement, garage &amp; lg.
yard.

71

1977 Dodge Aspen
PS, PB, AC , ono ownor.
wagon, $700. Coli 614-441llgood cond. new lirea. 304·
9780.
675-1888 aher S PM.

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MIDDLEPORT- 7 rm . me
floor, 3 BRs, near stores. Gas
furnac e &amp; elec. B.B. heal.
Stove, refrig. &amp; nice carpeting.

Autos for Sale

1 976 Buick, 2 door. auto .

79 Buick Skyhowk PS. PB,
air, good cond .. 81 ,600 or
~

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

1977 Gnnd Prix. n c. ·n Bonneville, one O'MIIf,
cond , PS, PB, AC. good exc. cond . $2,000. 304 tires, tih wheoi..Cotl 814- 675-2337.
448-1387.

"'"ny

POMEROY- Lg. corn er lot,
2 BR one floor home, su nporch , steam heat, full basement &amp; dbl. garage.

F-14 STARTING OUT? Can
be purchased (urn ~ hed or
unlurnished. Nice 3 BR
home with a 1 car garage
overl ooking lhe Ohio River.
Call larry 992·7726.

Pnol

Autos for Sale

71

RACINE -lg 2 story lam·
ily home. Bath, carpeting,
garden , &amp; auto. coal heater.
Only $18,500.

006-A East State Street
Plaza Center
Athens, Ohio 45701
Business 594-3543

'fura EMat•·~ mul clubhn u .~t&gt; privil f'J{f' .

Autos for Sale

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1 - 16141- 99~ · 332!.;

'

$85.000 -

good body, leu engine
.825 . Collll14-4411-7879.

RUUOR "
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

5 ACRES -Sou. Schools, T.
P. water &amp; elec. available.

H,~tu t•

1--------1975 Voikowogon Bootlo

71

Real Estate ·~

CATHY BURDETTE. \8il-ll118

ir~

1981 4 dr. Chevotto 88.000
mlloo. •1 .800. Coli 814448-4719 .

TEAFORDm

BON N IF ST UTES. BROKER'

.'lchools. Prirr d

Autos for Sale

. -

SYRACUSE - 7 rm. frame &amp;
3. 75 acres. 3 BRs. lg. shade
tree. All utilities.

F-15 VERY NICE HOllE in
Racin e. 3 BR, 1~ b a th s, finished basement, 2-c ar detached garage situated on a
very wel l kept lot. Call Larry
992·7726.

linda l. Riffle

1977 Mercury Cougar, 1978 Chevotto 4 dr.. hatch81700. 1975 "Dodge Dart bock. 4opd. 2 newflberglooo
for p1rt1,_ Motor end trent· front lendoro for 78 Chev·
minion good. •1&amp;0. Coli roiot lull olre pickup. Coli
614-446-1769.
814-742-2927.

71

Real Estate General

Registered Angus bull
calve,. Power Play and

grain bins &amp; full line of Agr.
eq u ipment . C omplete line of
Ve rme er hav equipment.
round bale fe eders $78.,
grinde r mixers, 3 pt . hitch

2 bottom 14 in. pull-type
plow good cond .. S86. Call
61 4-388·8895 ofter 6PM.

Autos for Sale

1978 Nova &amp; 216 rolley
wheolo . Coli 81 4 -446·
8031 .

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIP·
MENT
Chiekono Super X Crosa, 8
614-446-1675.
wook old. s1 .26 ooch. 3045% inten t on Long tractors, 675·2636 .

bunks S105, post dri\lert
S760 . 8 HP woodsplitter
S9 50, pickup truck racks.
seeders, mineral feeders,
Wheel Horse lawn mower .
Woodburning stoves, free
standing , fireplace insert a..
ad d on furnance . Check our
prices on pipe gates &amp; corral
pane ls. Good selection of
used trac1ors &amp; used
equipment!

71

shape, 82.000. Coli 814·
256-5417.

Rag . Simmentel bull, v2V2,

Oh io. 614-285 -6451.

Autos for Sale

77 Mustang new part•. new
tires. new paint, excellent

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 West. Jackson ,

71

October 20, 1986

..

30 ACRES, lDwer Rr1er Rd.. $110.000.00.
4 ACRES, lclwer River Rd., $60,000.00.
16 ACRES, along Rl 554, near Cle;tire. $10.000.00.
t ACRES. 2 lots. adjacent to Galli1)111s. $6,000.00.

••
••
••
•

3 B£DRII. HOllE WITH SIUCRES -lDcated along Graham •
School Rd. enjOy the comfort cl rural Irvin&amp; 10 mrutes from •
Gallipois. $ll.t?J OO.
I ACRE TRAILER LOT, Rt 160. $5,000.00.

t
t

SELliNG YOUII REAL £lUTE IS .IIG IUSIHUS.... ••
UU AN IIPIII£NCEO WOOO IIULIT SAI!SPIRSON

r:.tll
i,

1

1 •

/'J~&gt;•Jrl
,

~

~1'\h

u,.,,,,,

' •'

r

J

1 ()fJf,

1 1

lrl
r

LOW DOWII PAYIIOO - OWNER FIIWICIIIG
Ate yoo loolong for a 2 OOdroom Oie!t&gt;olow1g !tie ()lo Rrver ..ell
little mallllenaoce ilegl1ner l1lme 01 retlrene~t home. We ltlve c.

mo

1979 BAYVIl'W
12'x60'. 2 bedfoom tlome. Urge hlttg room -..Ill expa1ldo, trod
knhen Wilt diS/IwasM IMrailfl, ~rge ~CO\Ieflll!M
new IIISI1e a'ld txt Buy this one a'ld IOOYI! 11. 11 buy
rrowe.,
by rentu1g the ld I 6 preseftlly 91M,! M See I llmy

caro

11636
OIILY Sl 990.00 - VACMIINID
II acre approx.ln SedJon 5 at Green Twp. M St. H-rrt-588.appox.
2 miles ~om Galopolls. Won't last lll1g at ttws llfiCt.

tlill

VACATION CAIIP BY BlUE WE
Owner flnant.rl&amp; surdedt. nrraiwm, !~!!*: S)llm1. e1e1:1nc. &amp;ty
j with campng trailer or wtlltoul Cooaetl1 PiCllmt Its~ 811!'
and move nght rn_
Fea1~1e

•

Synca.cate

'

�Pomeroy-

D-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel
81

83

Home
lmprovemants·

vtce. atump remo'lotal, 304·

1178-2010.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

Good -1 Excavating, base·

ments , footers, driveways,
se~itic

tanks . landacaping.
Ca I anytime 61 4· 4464637 , Jamet L.. Davi•on. J 'r.
owner .

814-367-0823 or814-38777 41 night or day .

General Hauling

Haul limestone, sand, gra ·

J.A.R . Construction Co ..
Rutland , Oh . 614-7422903 . 8osomento, Footoro,

Pomeroy. 614-992-389 1.

&amp; Ditcher. Dump
lNG. 'Rt. 1, Box 355, Galli- ·trucks. &amp; weter -ges-sewor-

Also pools filled. Call 614266 · 1 141 or 814-4461175 or814-446-7911 .

vel,dirt. bulk or bag fertilirer
and lime. Excelsior Salt
Works Inc . 638 E. Main St ..

Dump truck service. 304·
676-3190 .

alectricoi lines .

_ji;;·rl!llf!l!l~!f--finnn !l!!i!fJ .!MY!JJJS

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 16.3 Soc. Avo .. Gallipolis.
614-446-7833 or614-4481833.

CROSS COUNTRY Cl-EARANCE SAJ.E

0

PH. 304-295-7845

........ ..,.,.....- ....

W.Va.

Heats to 3,000 Sq. fHt PRE-SEASON

•use frH Standing or
As Firepla11 ln~ert
*Glass Door
• Air light Ash Pan

,_, ............. IN

SAlE

WANT ADS

SIZE

Pt8&amp;'80RI3
P205170Rt3
P185175Rt4
P195l75RI4
P205/75AI4
P205/75RI5
P215175RI5
P225175Rt5

REG.
66.50
70.74
72.21

SALE

75.11

42.88
44.88
47.88
51.88
57.88

B0.62
84.44
87.42
9i.62

38.118
39.88
39.88

CHILDERS
SAW SUPPLY

• steel-belied all

PH . 388.-8564

season radial

Echo-Husqvama
Chain Saws
Special Chain Price
16"

$'tAU .

S3~ss32

~8669

Pi65/801li3

P195n5RI5

fl0.00-20" f14.00
USED SAWS
REPAIR WORK
HRS. 8-6

CHOOSE YOUR PAYMENT PLAN
• *NO MONEY DOWN
*90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
*NO PAYMENT TILL DECEMBER
*SPECIAl DISCOUNT FOR CASH

t***********l***************
:

i

!t
J

PREPARE FOR WINTER
HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW

!

~

WHERE TO BUY?

:

JEWELL'S

:

:

J NEW MOBilE HOME FURNACES AVAilABlE *

WORTH A TRIP FROM ANYWHERE
tBRING YOUR PICKUP!

~

OLD6 TIME HEATING CO.
7

i•

miles below Gallipolis on Rt .

OPlN DAILY 12 TO 7 P.M.: SUN. 12 TO S P.M.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
PH. 992·6030

$

930-1 mo J!-

*** ******""*·***************** '

nRE SALES
Main St., Rutland, oh.

EXCHANGE
204 North Atwciod
iio Grande, Oh.

PH; 742-3088
If you don't see your size, call us~·; Optn a.-6 Mon.·Sat.~ Fri. I PH. 245-5131

ssoo INSTANT CREDIT

-NASHVILLE VACATION
j

ORLANDO-DISNEY WORLD

4 BIG DAYS-3 GREAT NIGHTS

4 BIG DAYS GREAT NIGHTS

Here's What ~ou'll 8et...

Here's What You'll Get...

*FREE! Deluxe Room Accommodations For A
Family of Four (2 Adults &amp; 2 Children
Und'r 121

*FREE! Deluxe Accommodations For AFamily
of 4 (2 Adults &amp; 2 Children Under 121

*Continental Breakfast for Two (1Day Only I

*FREE! S250.00 Worth of Discount Coupons
For Restaurants, Stores &amp; Attractions

*A Certificate That Makes Your Trip Transferable to Relatives or Friends

*FREE! All Day Pass To Magi' Kingdom® or Epcot Center® (Admits One Adult)

*Transportation Not inc:luded
At The Sheraton - Nashville

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY NEW
85 OR 86 MODEL.

* Certificate That Makes Your Trip Transferable To Relatives Or Friends.
•Transportation Not Included
NO GIMMICS • NO LAND TOURS
JUST FUN IN THE SUNIII ·

LOTS

OF

•DAYTONA
BEACH

•ORLANDO
DISNEY .WORLD

z

•

Y.O.UR CHOICE OF THESE
FABULOUS VACATIONS
•NASHVILLE
VACATION

-:-------.:..-----..__----'---------...L~-- ~-----------------

••

en tine
~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday, October 21, 1985

Sections. 12 Poges

26 Cento

A Multimedia Inc., NewiJ)~per

Reagan uses anniversary for pre-summit gains

12" S8,00 . 14" SB.75

30°/o OFF

_____. . . ._____

Vol.36, No.129
Copyrighted 1985

'I• Mile N_orth of
Sll11r Mtlllorlal lriclp
431 Flaml,.o Drt ..
GaNipolis, Ohio

"ft, Dslimg"

Cover c:.;op usage

a1 y

YOU IEEP KEY.

I" Gas Pipe ............. I I'

Photo, story on Page 7

County Agent's Comer on Page 12

City, Oh . Call 614-2661470, call Eve. 614-446 3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphostorod.

••try storage nHd _
YOU STOlE IT.
YOU LOCI IT.

500fo MORE HEAT FR
EVERY LOG.
SAVE ONE-THI.D OF
EVERY LOAD.

"

Photo oo P~~~!~! 6

R &amp; M Furniture Manufac·
turing, St. Rt. 7, Crown

Private Spocll to mHt

4" Sewer ............. $3. 70
4'' (11 ................... $1 .00
I" 160# Water ...... 19&lt;

.

'

'New business , "

CONVENIENT
STORAGE UNITS

PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS

'·

Haunted House

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

Business
Services

$SAVE$

Cards ·l n driver's seat·

· · ·.
oo PliP'S
. World Serleii ~

Wells, cisterns, pools. Fast,

reliable servk:e. Call 614·
266 -1240 . or 814 -2&amp;6 -

mates . Call 614-446-8038
or 614 -992-7119 anyti""'.

Concrete work. Backhoe' s,

James Boy1 Water Service.

Waugh's Water Service . S7

landscaping. etc . Free esti·

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-. Dozer
polio. Coli 614-367-0576 .

cistern•. pQola filled . Phone

1 130. Reaaoneble rates.

Cor. Fourtt, and -Pine

or

85

---------

-

Dozer Work land clearing.

Gollipolio, Ohio
Phone 614-446 -3888
614-446-4477

General Hauling

Ken· s Water Service. Wells.

Starlta Tree and lawn Ser-

· 82

86

Excavating

Ocrtober 20. 1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W . Va.

FUN

DAYTONA BEACH
4 BIG DAYS-3 GREAT NIGHTS
AT THE DESERT INN OR THE LA PLAYA OR THE
AMERICANO BEACH LODGE

Here's What You'll let ...
*FREE! Deluxe Accomodations For AFamily of 4 (2
Adults &amp; 2 Children Under 12)
*FREEl Basket of Fruit Upon Arrival
*FREE! Welcome Morning Coffee
*FREEl $250.00 Worth of Discount Coupons For
Restaurants, Stores &amp; Attractions
*FREE! Walt Disney World® 1-Day Passport (choice
of Magic Kingdom® or Epcot Center®) or
Sea World® ticket. Admits One Adult.
*A Certificate That Makes our Trip Transferable To
Relatives Or Friends

YAIEN YHIU SEPTEMBER OF 1

•Transportation Not Included
NO GIMMICS • NO ,LAND TOURS
JUST FUN IN THE SUNil I

WASHINGTON (UP! I - With the first superpower
summit in six years just a month away, President
Reagan wUI use ceremonies to mark the ~Oth
anniversary of the United Nations this week lo
stren!llheri his hand In Geneva, Switzerland. ·
Amid tighl security that has made 'New York a
logistical nightmare, Reagan and scores of other
world leaders wUI converge on the United Nations to
offer views on . peace from often wildly dlvergen't
political perspectives. .
·
The trip is viewed by the White House as a critical
step for Reagan in the pre-summit public diplomacy
thai has been under way since late sununer In
Washington and Moscow.
During a round of apiJearances that will include
talks with visiting dignitaries, social evenls and a
speech lo the U.N. General Assembly, Reagan will set

the stage lor his Nov. 19-20 meeting with Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev.
A principal goal for Reagan wlll be to showcase
Western solidarity and step up a campaign to wrest the
public relations Initiative in Western Europe away
from Gorbachev.
But when thepresldenl sllsdown lodinnerwllhother
Western leaders at his own pre-summll swnmit
Thursday night, the smiles, handshakes and group
pholos will mask nagging strains and recent
irritations.
The guest lisl alone shows that ail is not as well as
U.S. officials :Vpuld like.
.
French President Francois Mitterrandturned down
the invita\lon lo meet with the Western leaders to
demonstrale . political Independence from

piracy of I he Italian luxury liner.
Even if Craxi was to attend, it would be in the role of
carelaker prbne minister of a government torn by
crisis as a result.of U.S. anger over his faUuretohold
Palestlnian leader Mohammed Abu Abbas for
prosecution.
The New York tripcomesal a plvolal time. Not only
is the summit nearing, but lhe U.S. approach to lhe
most contentious issue - Reagan's "star wars"
missile-defense program - remains lhe focus of
controversy and, al tbnes, confusion.
Reagan can beexpecled lobe pressed by lheallieson
his commitment to keep lhe missile-defense program
within the development and lesllng conslralnts of the
1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty- a senslllvepoin1in
Europe- and slmlghten oul mixed 5ignals from the
administration In recenl weeks.

Washington.
Instead, he offered to meet with Reagan in Paris
before the summit to lay out his impressions of
Gorbachev, fanned during the Soviet leader's recent
visit to France. Reagan, with no plans no ex lend his
summlt trlp, has declined.
Hopes lor a finn display of allied unity in New York
were further jolted last week by U.S.-Italian tensions
over the Achille Lauro affair and the consequenl
coUapse of the coalltjongovernment headed by Prbne
Minister Bettina Craxl.
The prospecl that traxi would skip New York
threatened to whittle the "swnmit seven" - lhe
United States, Britain, West Germany, Japan,
France, Italy and Canada - down 10 the "summit
live" and underscore the diplomatic fallout from 1)1e

12 people die
on Ohio roads

Meigs gets
$443,630 grant
Meigs County has received a
S443,600 grant from the U.S.
Departmenl of Ihe Interior, Officeo!
SurfaCe Mining, according to Rep.
Clarence Miller, R-Ohio.
The money will be used lor work
on seven coal !nine reclamation
projects under Ohio's abandoned
mine lands program.
The projects are part of a nearly$5
million gran! from the State of Ohio
for work on 581'1'Ciamatlon projecls.
The program wUl be administered
by the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
In addition to Meigs' projects; five
area wuntles received $2,026,6861or
18 projects. Gallla County I'I'Celved
$217,360 Air work on three projects,
Athens County received $313,3281or
six projects, Lawrence County
received $539,407 lor two projects,
Perry County $915,631 lor live
projects and Musklngum County
$«1,960 for two projects.

The funds wUI be used lor design
needed corTectlve measures as well
as actual construction of projects
ranging from the sealing of openings
in abandoned mlnes to removing
slides and hazardous structures.
"This grant," Miller said, "!sa big
step toward remedying the existing
reclamation and abandoned mine
problems thai exist In oor part oft he
stale, and I'm pleased thai these
condltilns are being given the
an en lion they deserve."
Meigs County projects approved
include: Fairlane Drive, Middleport, mlne drainage, construction;
Grover, surface mine, final ~ign;
Hoover, Peacock St.. Pomeroy,
surface mlne-mine drainage, final
design; Kingsbury Creek, surface
mine, final design; Meigs Underground No. 1, openings, drainage,
final design and construction;
Pagevllle, phase 3, surface mine
final design.

By United Press International
Twelve people, lncludlng a motorcycllsl and a pedestrian, were killed
in lraffic accidents across Ohio
during the weekend, lhe State
Highway Palrol reported today.
At leas I eight of the 10 victbns of
aulo crashes were not wearing a
sea l belt, a patrol spokeswoman
said. Seat hell lnlorma!lon was
unavailable on two of the victbns.
There were four deaths Sunday,
seven Salurday and one Friday
night. Twodouble-falallty accldenls
were reported during the counting
period, which began at 6 p.m.
Friday and ended at mldnlghl
Sunday.
Killed were:
Sunday

AMONG HONOREES - Two fonn~ir Ohio State
Unlverslly football greats from Pomeroy, 'llppy Dye
Wid Fred Crow were among the 1935 team members
honored at a SW Fraternity banquet tills past
weekend In Columbus In reoognition of the 5tlth
Mniversary of the squads' championship season: Dye
IUid Crow are shown above looking over newspaper
clippings from lhat memorable sea59n on display lor

Port Clinton: Donna F. Meyers,
39, ColumbuS, and Essie Shade, 81,
Toledo, ina two-car accident on Ohio
2 in Ollawa County.
Middlelown: Tlmolhy C. Hell, 25,
HamUion , In a three-car accident on
a But ier County road .
Port Clinton: Annelte Bertok, 26,
Pori Clinlon, In a molorcycle-car
accident on an Ollawa County road.
Saturday
Canlon: Andrew Lamlclle, 24,
Louisville, when he was struck by a
Iruck while he was walking along a
Stark Cou nty road.
Cleveland: Mark D. Benson, 26,
Cleveland , In a one-car crash on a
Cleveland city street.
Warren: Chrl~topher P. Hlnes,l5,
Warren, n a one-car accident on a
Trumbull Counly road .
Paulding: Chesler E. &amp; hiller, 62,
Spencerville, and Don A. Fenstermaker. 17, Rawson, when thelrcars
collided on. U.S. 127 in Paulding
County.
Akron: Salva lore M. Caslonz.o,40;
Ca nl on. in a one-car accldenl on
Ohio Sin Summit County.
Delaware: Erik E . Wells, 15,
D!'laware, in a one-car crash on
Ohio 52! in Delaware County.
· Friday night
Clnclnnali: Kacsar Bernard, 16,
Clnclnnall. when I he car in which he
was riding collided with three other
vehicles on a cily sll'l"et.

the dinner IUid program at Faucett Center. The event
featured all lour OSU Heismann Trophy winners as
speakers. .,.e. 19.'15 team members aL-;0 attended
Saturday's game against Punlue as a group. Dye,
lonner college coach Wid athletic director, mw
resides in Fort 1\lyers, Fla., while Crow, a Syracuse
resident, practlcL.,.Iaw in Pomeroy.

Fingerprints put
new light on 1932
Lindbergh mystery Elderly hit by home repair scheme
TRENTON, N.J. (UP!) -The · ro fingt-rprints were ever obtained.
In the hall century since, Anna
kidnapping oil he Lindbergh baby,
Hauptmann
has maintained her
lhe "crime of the centuty" thai
became a symbol of tragedy husband 's Innocence. As many as25
people have claimed to be Charles
befalling the famous, has a new
Lindbergh
Jr.
lwist: Flngerprinls thai may be the
Robert
Bryan,
a San Francisco
child'5 have been found, attorneys
lawyer
who
also
represents Anna
say.
Lawyers for Anna Hauptmann. 1-!auptmann and a man who clabns
wile of the man execuled for killing 10 be the Lindbergh's son, said Ihe
Charles Lindbergh's son. and a man prints may prove the body was not
who claims to belhesonsaid Sunday that of Charles Lindbergh Jr.
"These are not the prints lhat
fingerprints recenlly recovered by
the slate police could prove the oo by were in state police cuslody. These
are other prints." Bryan said.
was not murdered.
In 1976, he.said, state poUce told
The finding of nine sets of
him
they never had fingerprints.
flngerprtnls, believed to he those of
Charles Lindbergh Jr.. "Is of Bul classified correspondence betremendous sign ificance," said lween state police and FBI Director
Trudy Maran, a New Jersey lawyer J. EdgarHoovershowedtheydid,he
rrpresenting Anna Hauptmann In said.
"The significance is lhat if they
her $JOOmilllon wrongful death suit
· filed over the 1936 execuUon of her are the child's prinls, it will setUe
wbether or not he Is Charles
husband, Bruno.
Lindbergh
Jr.," Bryan said, referThat sull, rejecled last year by a
ring
to
his
cllenl. "They could be
federal judge In New Jersey, now Is
meaningful or II may be much to do
before the Supreme Court.
The existence of flngerprtnls has about nothing."
The papers, which conlalned the
been conllnned by Col. Clinton
·
flngt&gt;rprints,
were found in thE! borne
Pagano, superinlendent of the New
of
Harold
Hoffman,
New Jersey's
Jersey Slale Police, who said,
"We'll have a numberollnlerestlng governor at the tbne of the crime
issues to discuss," at a Tuesday and Hauptmann's trial. Hollman, II
Is believed, thought Hauplmann
news conference.
was
innocent and borrowed the
The delalls, however, wUI not
papers
to conduct his own
change the verdict, he said.
investigation.
Hauptmann, a Gennan-born carpenter. wasconvictedolkldnapplng · The disappearance of evidence
the baby In 1932 .lor $50,0)) In has fueled lheortes that Hauptmann
ransom. killing hbn and dwnping was!ramedorhadaccompliceswho
lhe body in a shallow grave near Ihe were never caught.
Former Attorney General David
Llndberghs' Hopewell, N.J .. home.
WUentz, now!MJ, prosecuted lhe case
The kidnapping, occurring five and says the jury reached the proper
years after "The Lone Eagle" made verdict.
the first nonstop solo flight across
Although Hoffman offered lo
the AUant!C, galvanized tile world's commute Hauptmann's sentence If
he admt.tted guUt, Hauptuiann
attention.
All hOugh Lindbergh identified the refUsed. He was executed April 3, ·
deCOmposed body as lhat of his &amp;~n, 1936, maintaining his IMocence. ·

COLUMBUS (UP!). - Franklin
County sherlll's deputies say lhey
wUl seek an indictment against 11
Circleville men who allgedly use a
home repair scheme to fraudulenlly
obtain thousands of dollarS from
elderly women in Central Ohio.
Detectives say the men claim to
be employed by Mid-State Home
Maintenance of CirclevUie. fbey
use high pressure sales techniques
10 lntbnidate the women into paying
thousands of dollars for jobs which
are never completed, authorities
say.

Three Columbus homeowners
have paid the men more than$44,00l
during the past nine months for
repairs lhat were never made or
were performed haphazardly. Delectlve Dan Casrer said.
"The basic scam is to knock on the
person's door and offer lo clean the
gutters," said Caspe. "Then once
they are ln. lhey will do a lot of
unsoliciled work and tell the woman.
she has to pay."
A 79-year-old Columbus woman
was given a bill for S2,570 for house

painling, ailhough lhe men only
pain led as high as Iiley could reach
wilhoul a laddrr, Casper said.
"The woman said lhey charged
her too much. so Ihey came oown lo
${00," the delecllve said. "She only
paid them $400 and said they had lo
come back for lhe resl, bul lhey
never did ."
He said an ffi-year-old Columoo s
homeowner paid lhe men l8,500 to
cut her bushes, trim her trees, clean
her gu ners and repair her two-yearold roof.

.,

.

Opening set
for newest
Meigs store
NEW CASTLE, Pa.- Conslruction of the new 45,00) square loot Big
Wheel Discount Department Slore
at 4Im Laurel Qlff Road, Pomeroy, is expected to be compll'ted in
preparation for the store's grand
opening on Satunlay, Nov. 23. ·
Acconllng to Harold Graber,
construction manager, title and
carpeting have a!so been inslalled,
which completes the work on the
store's interior, and many of the
fixtures are assembled and in place
now. Store manager Tim Custer
noles lhat merchandise Is arriving
dally. Items wlll be ticketed and
str'OCked in over 80 departments,
Including family fashions, comestics, housewares, shoes, hardware,
automotive, sporting goods, and
lawn and garden.
The new store will employ
approxbnately ~3 people. The
Pomeroy store is the 31st Big Wheel
Store In Ohio operated by the New
Castle, Pa. based chain of 78
discount departmenrstores.

....

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"

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i;ul

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KODAK AWARD WINNER - Bethany Ellen EaslrniUI Kodak Company. Aw~ were open to
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