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                  <text>Page-12--The Daily Sentinel

-

Eastern board oks soilsunrey

Judge ends 21 cases

Members of the Eastern Local
School District Board of Education
. approved tohaveasoUinvestlgatlon
and topographic survey completed
on the hlgh school property tn
conjunction with a proposed build·
ing program when It met tn regular
session Wednesday night.
The board also hired the archltecturalfirm of Easley, Lee, Vargo and
Cassady to do prelimtnary planning
on the state buUdtngprogram for the
district. ·
Employed as a subsUtute secretary was Kathy Osborne and Keith
Weber was named as a substitute
custodian. Suppiemental contracts
were issued to Debra Lee, junior
varsity girls basketball coach, and
Scott Wolfe, junior high basketball
coach.
The first reading of a new

Four defendants forfeited bonds Wheeling, W. Va ., $24; Randall
andl7otherswere ftned intheMeigs . Marsee. Johnstown. Pa., $20; Eric
County Court of Judge Pa trick Pearch, Albany, $20; Delores
O'Brien.
Crump, Point Pleasant, $22, and
Forfeiting were Charles Cow· Erma! Walker, Crum, W. Va., $21.
man, Belpre; Aleranda Adams, Others ftned were Teresa Ferrell,
Youngstown; George Keeton, Co- Syracuse, S5 and costs, defective
lumbus, $50 each posted on speeding exhaust; Janice Mash, Pomeroy, $5
charges, and Juanita Dalton, Che- and costs, expired registration;
shire, $45, defective exhaUst.
Gregory Dingess, ChapmanvUle,
Ftned and assessed costs on
possessing a deer that was illegally
speeding charges were James
taken or deer which person is not
legally entitled to, $5 and costs;
Older, New Haven, W. Va., $20;
Randy Stewart, Rutland, $2; WU·
Wlltlam Stead, . Columbus, lm·
liam Howard, Virginia Beach, Va. ,
proper passtng, $10 and costs . .
Nancy Ad;lms, Reedsvllle ,
$22; John Aspel, Athens, $20; Eldon
Clark. Caldwell. $22; Jerry HNub- · charged with disorderly conduct
bard, Pomeroy, $20; Jerry Pinson, was assessed costs and ordered to
South Potnt , $20; Reginald Hart , refmtn from the plaintiff.

Meigs County happenings
Divorce sought
Patti K. Johnson, Middleport, has
Hied for a divorce in Mel~ County
Common Pleas Court from Ricky L.
Johnson, Rutland, on grounds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruel!J;, Gary Lee Smith, Rutland ,
has also filed for divorce from
Cathertne Smith, Pomeroy, chargIng gross neglect of duty.

Court .actions filed
An action to marshall liens has
been flied tn Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by the Ohio University
Employees Credit Union, Inc ..
Athens, against Paul Aikman,
Linda Aikman, and Honoree Aik·
m an, allofAiburquerque. N.M. The
suit s tems from nonpayment on a
promissory note for two parcels of
real estate in Salem Township.
As stated In thecomplatnt,onMay
18, 1984, judgment was entered in
favor of the plaintiff against the
defendants, In Athens County Com·
mon Pleas Court. No payment was
made a nd a current balance of
$12,971.95 is due the plaintiff. The
. plaintiff claims a valid lien upon the
real estate in question and asks that
the lien be foreclosed a nd the real
estate sold to pay the plaintiff.
The Farmers Bank a nd Savings
Co., Pomeroy, has filed suit against
Paul E. Smith and Donna J. Smith,
both of Pomeroy, for nonpayment
on two promissOlY notes, one for
$6185.33, the other for $5976.55, for
property in Middleport .The plaintiff
Is requesting that the property be
sold and the proceeds from the sale
applied to the judgments.

Williams returns
to Mason County
Rohert L. Williams, 19, Middleport, this morning in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court waived the
extradition proeess and return
voluntarily to Mason County to face
charges of breaking and entering.
Williams was charged by West
Virginia authortties on two counts of
breaking and entering.
Williams was arrested by the
Pomeroy Police. Conducting the
investigation leading to the arrest
were Pomeroy ·Pollee Lt. Harry
Lyons and members of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
Wllliams is also charged with
breaking and entering the Ohio
Valley Bulk Stare and the Excrlsior
Oil Service Station, both on East
Main St. Some Items taken have
been recovered and police report
tha t Williams has signed a
confession.

To end marriage
Peggy Wallace Platt and Larry A.
Platt, both of Albany. have filed for a
dissoiu lion of their marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court .

Three eme~ncy runs
Three calls were answered by
local units on Thursday, the Mel~
County E mergency Medical Servl·
ces reports.
At 1: 11 a.m., Thppers Plains took
Ronnie Johnson from the scene of an
auto accident in Tuppers Plains to
Camden-Clark Hospitai In Parkersburg; at9.: 20a.in. , Pomeroy went to
Wright St. for Charles Corder, to
P leasant Valley Hospital, and at
10:07 p.m.. Thppers Plains took
William Grueser from Thppers
Plains to Holzer Medical Center.

POSTMARK!
Visit our Sanr. J!ost Olllce and
select a colorful letter fREE!
It's our way of uyinl Merr1
Chri slmas 1o chi ldnllof ~u,.es.

.

ELBERFELDS
,, .,.

Music for
Christmas
-Page B-1

1 The Glory Landers will

Bob Hoeflich discusses the season - a time to
remember - P~ B-8

Inmate found hanged

•
·lUttS

PORTSMOUTII, Ohio (AP ) -A
24-year-old Portsmouth man arrested on a trespassingwarrantwas
found hanging In his j all cell
Wednesday. evening, Portsmouth
. police said.

I'

From
1 to DECEMBER 23
There Will Be A Daily Drawing For
. · Purchase •
•
JUST SIGN YOUR TAPE REGimR RECEIPT AND THE WCKY
WINNER Will BE REIMBURSED 111E AMOUNT OF PURCHASE
We Feature A Complete Assortment Of

OLD FASHION CANDY FOR SALE

DOUBLE MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS
*EVERY SUNDAY*
•The total value of the double coupon may not exceed $1.00 •Any manufacturer's coupon
greater than 51¢ will be redeemed at tace value only. •Only one manufacturer's coupon per
item. •The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon cannot exceed the purchase
price of the item. Money will not be refunded. •This offer does not apply to. Powell's Super
Val!J Coupons, free coupons, or any competitor's coupons. •This offer excludes cigarettes.
or any other items prohibited by law. •Offer is only good lor product on hand , No Rainchecks. •There is a limit of 20 cou ns ou may redeem.

Don 'f Mitt Out

*STOREWIDE SAVINGS*

In The Meat, Produce &amp; Bakery Departments
Additional Savings At Powell's Super Valu

Look for our Weekly Specials in
our regular ads. During December we will feature seve.n {7) addi- ·
tional daily store coupons which
. will reflect fantastic values.

"MYSTERY
SPECIAL"
Eretg Sundsg

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quanlilies

STORE HOU~S
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 _
PM

298 SECOND ST.
EROY, OH.

Ohio weather:

Along the River ........... B--1-B
Illl&lt;ilness ...... .. ........ .. .. ... E-1

•
•
ra1n,
snow m

Deaths :.................. A1, D-2
Editorial~ ......... .... ........ A-2
Fann .......... ... .... .......... E-3
Sports ........................ C-1-ll

today's forecast
--Page A-3--

entine
1 1 Section&amp;. 1 1 8 Pages 50 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Sunday, December 2, 1984

d

WASHlNGTON (AP) -There continues to be a n
erosion of the corporate share of the federal tax
burden, according to an Ohio congressman who has
released a government study on tax rates of the
nation's largest companies.
Rep. Don Pease, D-Ohlo , said the study shows that
corporate income tax receipts accounted for only 6.2
percent of all federal receipts in 1983, a drop from 8.0
percent in 1982.
"We are approaching the point where there is
effectively almost no federa l corporate income tax,"
said Pease. "And it thrusts more and more of the
responsibility of providing revenue for the federal
governme nt on individuals rather than
corporations."

Th~ 6.2 percent share for corporations doesn't
represent their total contribution to federa l revenues
because ·It doesn't include the Social Security and
excise taxes they pay.
" To fairly portray the picture of what the corporate
tax burden Is as a percent of corporate income and be
able to show the trends in that, you have gOt to
consider aU taxes that corporations pay of any kind ,"
said Rachelle Bernstein, manager of the tax policy
section of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Pease, a member of the House Ways and Means
Committee, had asked the Joint Committee on
Taxation and the Gj&gt;nera i Accou nting Office to
conduct the study.
T he study said:

-As a percent of total federa l revenue, corporate
Income tax receipts fell from 26.5 percent of the total
in 1950 to 6.2 percent in I983. wh ile persona l income
taxes jumped from 39.9 percent of total nxeipts in
1950 to 48.1 percent in 1983.
-In 1983, U. S. incom e tax ra tes on li.S. income by
Industry ranged from 35.6 percent to minus 1.0
percent. The lowest effective tax ra les were on the
chemical, paper and wood produc ts , and const ruction
Industries . while the hig hest rates were on soaps and
cosmet ics. wholesale and trucking companies.
Pease said the corpora te in com e tax should account
for at least 12.5 percent of total federa l ren•ipls. as it
did In 1~.
"(Althoughll don't think a ny figure is sacrosa nct,"

.

I

ordinance is a copy of the Gallipolis'
By NANCY YOACHAM
ordinance. Long was able to explain
'lllnes-8enttnel Staff
POMEROY - Pomeroy streets who would be affected by the income
are rumbling with talk over tax.
Pomeroy Village Council's recent
"Anyone who lives within the
action on an emergency income tax. village or works within the village
An ordinance on the new tax has and has earned income will pay the
been given one reading, with two tax,'' Long said. "Businesses and
corporations within vUlage limitS
more required:
A resolutldn was ·passetl al a will pay on their net p rofits and wtil
regular meeting of PomeroyVillage withhold one percent from their
Council on Now. 19 stating the employees' wages. Businesses opnecessity of a one percent Income erating within the village, but
tax was "to avoid a fiscal em er- without anofflce,willpaytaxonlyon
the amount of money actually
gency after the first of the year."
A special session of council was earned whill' in the village. For
then held Nov. 26 and the 32-page example, route salesmen."
Although county · welfare and
ordinance, patterned after the
Gallipolis city income tax ordl· highway department employees
nance, was given its first reading ai'e paid through the Meigs County
Courthouse, within thevlllage, these
a nd a pproved with minor changes.
Pending two m ore readings and employees will be exempt from the
approva ls, the Incom e tax will tax, according to Long, because
become effective in Pomeroy on th~&gt;i r places of employment are not
within the village.
Jan. 1, 1985.
Long said that In Gallipolis,
Mayor Richard Seyler and
m em bers of council blame the high sheriff's deputies who might spend
costs of evetYday expenses as the six hours of an eight-hour day
outside the city, pay incornetaxonly
reason for the proposed tax.
"The village has been operating · on the two hours spent at the office
on approximately the same Income within the c!Jr. Hence, accurate
since 1970, while expenses have records are Imperative.
Long said that "where you work
quad rupled," sla ted Seyler at the
overrides where you live." MeanNov. 19 meeting.
VIllage officials have been una ble Ing, if you live in Pomeroy but work
estimate how much inronie will he in Galli polls (or any otnerplacewith
an income tax ordinance), you will
generated by the lax.
In a telephone conversation, Terri still pay Income tax in the place you
Long, Gallipolis tax 'examiner. work.
In the Novemeber election, Pomeagreed there would be no way to
estimate how much money would be roy residents voted down a four-mill
generated. Even thoughnoestlmate operational tax levy. That levy
has been given, Sey ler feels " the one would have generated approxipercent tax will stJII not be enough mately$59,000. Had the levy passed,
a Pomeroy resident with property
for the first year."
Because the proposed Pom eroy
(Continued on page A3)

he said. "'Maybe it ought to be higher than that. "
The s tudy al so found that U.S. corporat ions, while
averaging a tax ra te of I6 .7 percent on dom est ic
earnin gs, pa id foreign IaxE's of :,l.3 percent on forPign
earnings and a combined 29,2 percent on all incom e.
As other research has s hown, the use of credits a nd
deductions ca uses tax ra tes paid to vary widely from
one industr:- to a nother. alt hough a ll aN' theoreti ca lly
subject to the sa me 46 percent rate.
" It ~ms to m e tha t if we have a tax code tha t we
tr.· to represent to the pub lic as bein g a fair tax code,
we .can 't have' the ki nds of variat ions of effective tax
rates th at show up in thi s st ud~ 1 ," Pease said .

The study was based on annual .repons from 218
.
large u.s. corporat ions.

- - ·Guiding Hand

Village streets rumble
with income tax talk

FOR THE
CHRISTMAS
HOUDAYS

(20) s2soo GIFT CERTIFICATES

'

Inside:

Study .shows shift in tax rate burden

DAYS!

·chocolate Drops, Orange Slices
Bonbons, Peanut Brittle, Gum Drops
and Chocolate Covered Peanuts

Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
'

CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION

SIQN UP

Art Buchwald presents cheers for a weary Santa
Claus team - Page A-2

not be
singing Saturday evening at the
Apple Grove United Methodist
Church. Their appearance has been
cancelled due to Illness .

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

AND

THE PROOF IS IN THE

'A tax on U.S. consumers'--Page D-1·

WILLIAM R. WICKLINE

(2} CABBAGE PATCH DOLLS

FROM SANTA ~LAUS
SANTA CLAUS, INDIANA

Admitted-Sea Sublett, Racine;
Dora Roush, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Mary Wipple.

.

------~---·

:To sing Saturday

In compliance with provisions of Section 5712.03 of the
Ohio Revised Code, there will be published in th_is newspaper
during the next few weeks a list of those p~rson~ who are delinquent in payment of real estate taxes m Me1gs County.
If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements made
with the County Treasurer to pay not later than 48 hours before said pubication, the parcel will be removed from the delinquent list before advertising.
·
All delinquent lands will be certified for forec!osure by the
County Auditor unless the taxes, assessments, mterest, and
penalties due are paid. .
·
.
,
The said list will be ready for publication on December 7 and 14.

OF

An order to destroy contraband
has been issued by Judge Charles
Knight in Meigs Count y Common
Pleas Court allowing She riff James
J . Proffitt to dispose or a quantity of
marlj uana ga thered over a period of
time from June 12 to Oct . 2.
I n a reciprocal ac tion for ehlld
support. William J . Halley, Syra cuse, was found to be de linquent in
r hlid support payments and was
ordered by the court to brtng his
obligations current. The suit was
brought against Halley by the State
of West Virgina and Mary Halley,
Parkersburg.

Veterans Memorial

.

Next week, Dec. 3-7, W!Ul be the
last week for leaf pickup in
Middleport. Residents are asked to
rake their leaves out to the curb
where they will be picked up by
street department personn_el.

Delinquent Taxpayers .Notice

FOR OUR DEC.• 2.4 DRAWING

Destroy order given

medication pollcy was given wit]!
approval slated ior the,.D ecember
board meeting. Vacation was approved for 12 month employes to
include the day after Thanksgiving
and the day before Christmas.
James Huff, faculty member,
was on hand to present copies of
federal and state programs being
offeredsothatboardmembersmay
review them. Richard L. Roberts,
district superintendent, presented a
sbort report on the capital confer- ,
ence held recently in Columbus. The
next regular meeting is set for Dec.
19.

--

Leaf pickup reminder

Vol. 19 No. 43
Col¥ighlod 1984

TROPHY BUCK - Duffy
Craig, Pomeroy, shows off IW!
1.2-point, ZOO pound buek which
he baggro Thursday momtngon
Pleasant Ridge. It is the second
deer he has taken tn his several
years of hunting. Unemployed
for some time, Craig said he was
delighted to get a deer since the
venison will help with the
lamUy's food budget.

Maniage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to George Franklin Ellis, 22,
Rutland, and Barbara Ellen Chappelea r. 18, Pomeroy, and to Dannie
William Jacks, 24. a nd Myrtle
Leona Grogg, both of Shade.

Friday, November 30, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

looks toward
'new beginning'
By ,JOHN FRIEDMA.l'l/
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE - Adm ini strators of
the Guid ing Ha nd School a nd Gall co
Sheltpr·f'd Workshop say they look
upon the passabe of an additiona l
one mi ll levy by Ga llia Count ;•'s
voters No,·. 6 as" 'I new beginning.'
The levy . whi ch will prov ide an
addition a I $-100 ,000 a ;•ea,r for the
fi nancially troubled facil ity, will
allow the school 10 purcha se it em s
and do som e dcs pcrotel;· needed
work on the building. according to
Supelin iC'ndenr .John Riffe. Principol David Ra tliff and Workshop
Diree tor F ra nk DiClemente .
Rille sa id the school has budgeted
$788,00l for 19&amp;5. an increase of
approximately S315.000 ov&lt;'r " ·hat it
will spend in 19&amp;1.
The 1985 budget. Riffe said, "will
jus t about mC'€'1 expend itures. with
per haps as much as a five perCent
canyo,T•r ( pmfil J. "

Funds have lx'cn appropia ted in
the 1985 budget. Rille sa id. tor
purchasing two school buses. buid ·

\

'I
'\ .

ing mai nte nanCE' and repair, repair -

'

ing the roof. pain ting the building
inside and out. carpeting som e
areas of lh&lt;' school. rf'pa irtng
plumbing. pa,·ing some areas of the
p;;rking lot. purchasin g workshop
and school s upplies ond rmova ting
the g)'mnas lum .
ThP workshop has plans to
ewntua u, · l&lt;'aw 1ht•school bui lding ,
whet\' is is now located in the
gymnasium.

l

'

Reno,·a tlon of I he gymnasium

CHRJS1MAS PARADE - Some of the 113 units
enfered In Saturday's annual Christmas parade tn
Gallipolis head down Serond Avenue to t he dty park.

With the theme of "The Birth of Christ," the parade
ushered in the Christmas season In Gallla Cou nt y.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Keith Wilson \.

after the worl-ilihop leaves will be a
"tremendous'" projrc t. costing at
leas t S20.00l. according to" DiCle1Continued on page A3 )

Meigs commission places freeze on county ·expenditures
POMEROY - A freeze was placed on all county
expenditures Friday by the Meigs County
Commission.
"'ntere should be no more expenditures without
prior approval from the board of commissioners."
said Commissioner· Richard Jones. "This type of
action must be taken to Insure fiscal responsiblllty."
He said it is "not the intention of the board to
ellmlnate necessary expenditures."
Jones said the action was needed to see where
money Is spent and to-insure there Is enoug h money to
finish the year.
A letter from John Anderson, president of Pomeroy
Vlllage Council, was read at Friday's m eeting, asldng

the Meigs commissioners' office to handle the
administration of both of Pomeroy Village's grants
for sewer line extension to the Pizza Hut Restaurant
on West Main Street. The board expressed willingness
to administer the grants.
Late In the summer, the Ohio Department of
Economic Developm~nt awarded Pomeroy a grant
totaling apRroxlmately $59,000 for the sewer lin€'
extension. The commissioners later awarded a
$32,000 block grant to the village to allow for the
hookup of several homes in direct line with the Pizza
Hut extension.
However, no official approval has come from the
state regardi ng . the commissioner's block grant.

Approval is expected soon .
In carrying out ·the administra tiori of both g rants,
thE' two projec ts wUI be treated as one, and Pomeroy
village will no longer be involved in the tra nsact ions .
By Tuesday, if a bidd ing document is rE&gt;ady, thE&gt;
commission plans to offici ally authorize the sewer
line project for public bidding.
In further action , the commission discussed a water
drainage problem at the county infima ry . Jones
suggesting an independa nt contractor be hired to take
care of the problem .
Water. sevE&gt;ral inehes deep. continua lly backs up
near the sidewalk of the building, oft en making it
difficult to get to the front door. J ones a nd

held with the president, have
focused on Imposing a selective
spending freeze that would restrain
outlays tn 1986 to $830 blltlon, the
projected sum of expenditures on
government programs In the cur,
rent nsca,Jyear.
Within that total, some programs,
like defense and Social Security,
would continue cllmblng1 butothers
would be pared or even scrapped
entirely . Interest on the national
debt, expected to run at about $130
bUllon in 1985, would · not be

restl1cted.

House

Alter meeting with White
Chief ol Staff James Baker, Robert

J. Dole, the newly elected Senate
majority leader. indicated strong
congressional support for a freeze .
"I think there Is the makings of
maybe an agreement that we ought
toadoptthefreeze concept,"hesaid,
"I think that'saboutwhereweare."
"There is a lot of support," said
Dole, R-Kan. "Go back and look at
thevotesofDemoeratsandRepubli·
cans; I think there's a majority
there for the concept. If we can put
together the right formula for a
majority Of votes In the Senate, I
think we ought to do it and do It
quickly next year."

A not.,er meC'ting IX'tw('{'n thf' conunissioners and

humane society rcp rrsr•ntatin's is srhPdulro for
Jan ua ry. at which tim&lt;', m&lt;'thods for impro,·ing
proble ms at the pound wil l be d iscu~sed .
1Cont inurd on pn.:c A-.1 1

Survey: citizens cheat
on taxes; think it's OK

White House sounding out
Congress on budget proposal
WASHlNGJ'ON (AP) - White
House aides, portng over ways to
slash the budget deficit, are taking
soundings for President Reagan on
whether Congress would agree to
hOld spending for government
programs In 19!16 at its current level.
White House Chief of Stall James
A. Baker an(lbudgetdlrectorDavld
Stockman met Friday with Influential Republicans on Capitol Hlll,
capping a week of Intensive discus·
~ions on fashioning a new budget
plan for the 1986 fiscal year which
starts on Oct.1,1985. 'l1te plan Is due
In Congress early next year.
The talks, some of which were

Comm ission Prcsidcnt Dayid Koblcnt z pl an to makp
a decision the fir·st of the we.&gt;k on the employm ent of
som runC' to corrf'Ct tht; s ituation.
Ko ble nt z repor1('d on last W&lt;'&lt;'k's mC'f'ting with
Pom eroy resident Do rothv Fi sher and ot her
mem hers of the Meigs Cou nt&gt;· Hwnan&lt;' SociNy . The
board agreed tha t impro,·cmr•nts ne&lt;'d to be- m;ide at
the county's dog pound. Hom•,n·. improwments are
qucstionablP due to a lack of funds .

. KEEPING TRACK Budget Director David Stockman goes over a book containing
figures on the 198.'1 federal
bud&amp;et prior to embarldns on
work lor the 191!6 lecleral budget,
Friday nipt . In Washington.

WASHINGJ'ON tAP ! -Amelicans are admitting they c heat on
their federal income taxes but figure
it Is OK because rich people are
getting away with even m ore .
Nineteen percent of ta xpayers
responding to a na tional poll
admitted they havechea ted . Almost
one In four thinks most people cheat.
And at least half believe a qua rter of
all Americans are not te lling a ll to
the Internal Revenue ServiCe.
And that distu rbs the IRS. "This
survey clearly indicat es that our
system is In real trouble,'' IRS
Commissioner Roscoe L. Egger Jr.
sa td F rida y. H e offered the Treas-

ury Dcpartmenrs tax-overhaul
proposa I as onP solu tion.
"I thin k it '"ould be difficult to fi nd
any reasonabl; · obieclivc person in
this countt-;· who would argu e th at
our currentlxxi&gt;•off ax laws does not
ClY out for a move toward fai rness
and simpliflea lion." Egger said in a
speech to the Soul h Shore Chamber
of Com merce in Bos ton.
"Any tax practitioner, any tax
adll) inl stra tor. any taxpayer who
has wor ked with thP Internal
Revenue CO(! knows thar It Is
probably the biggest mish-mash of
staMes ImaginablE'," he said.

�December 2, 1984

Comment

and perspective

r---Weather:-~

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Page A-2

.
''

'. .

December 2, 1984

The Justice Department ___J_am_e_sI_.K_i..,..-tpa_tr_ic_k
.11~

~m:N

~~

· 825 Thin! Ave .. Gallipo6s, Ohio

•

(614) 446-2342

Ill Coort St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-21!16

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publis he r
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHffEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

'
;\ssodatt'd

A MEMBEK uf TIH ~
~. Inland OaUy
American Sew~paper Publi'ihers A.'tiOClation.

PJ-e.i~

1\.'isodaUon and thP

LETI'ERS OF OPIMON are weii'Orned. tht•y should he k.."i.'i th1111 SOOwonb lon,;. AU
k!tltrN are suhjet,11o editing and must he slgnNI with ntune, addres.-. and telephonenunl-

her. No Wtilgned lette~ will he puhllstlt'd. U•tters 'ihould he In good taste, addre§§lng issu~. not ptT!Mlnalltles.
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Second term ·course
for' education agency
President Reagan is fa cing ~orne big problems as he sets a second-term
course for a Cabinet agenci' that provided some of the most unlikPiy
sucresses of his first four years - the Education Department.
The unbidden resignation of Education Secretary T.H. Bell has set off a
sucression scramble among conservatives who chafed at Bell's leadership
a nd who feel it is high time to put that post in the hands of a true Reaganile.
Regardless of who gets the job, Washington's powerful education lobby
is girding for a fight over what the lobbylsfs say are inevitable Reagan
efforts to sepk billion-dollar budgets cuts in student aid.
William Clohan, a former undersecretary of education, predicted, "I
think 1985 Is going to be just' like 1981" when Reagan tried to push through
major reductions in education spending.
Congress went along with some of the first cuts as part of Reagan's
overall tax-and budget -reduction plan in 1981, but even conservative
Republicans rebelled In 1982 when the president came back with a plan to
pare the education budget by a third to less than $10 billion.
· 13&lt;&gt;11, trying to fulfill Reagan's promise to abolish the Education
Departme nt, proposed downgrading it in 1982 to a non-regulatory
foundation, with most programs Intact . But that scheme died with bare!)' a
whimper.
Reagan had no success in pressing othe r conservative education
proposals , including tax breaks for p\·ivate schools a nd prayer in public
ohes.
: But Reagan got better res ults after Bell' s National Commission on
Excellence in Education sounded the a larm about mediocrity in U.S . .
schools in 1983.
Suddenly, the president, who had not set foot in a public school during his
first two years in offire, was at the head of the school reform bandwagon.
To the dismay of Democrats who had planned to blister Reagan with the
eilucation issue in the 1984 cam paign, his approval rating on school issues
sqared.
.
· Last January, Reagan proposed a fi scal 1985 education budget of $15.5
billion - a record, albeit by a slim margin. Congress went one better.
boosting thP budgPt to $17.9 billion, a 16 percent. jump.
Bell said a t his final news conference that he had recomme nded no cuts
in the fisca l 1986 budget that the admi nistration must send Congress in
January .
; Now, with Bell already back in Utah, presidential counselor Edwin
Meese III, who four years ago derided the agency, reportedly suggested at
a:Ca binet meeting that Reagan try again to abolish it .
, And the White House personnel office created a stir by supporting the
efforts of conservative lobbyists to hold screening interviews for two
leading candida tes for Bell's job. Willia m J. Bennett, chairman of the
National Endowment for the Human ities, and Boston University President
John R. Silber.
Ben ne tt . in particular. has strong support a mong conservatives hostile to

Bell.
. Education lobbyists have been beating the drums for former Minnesota
governor and congressman Albert Quie, a moderate Republican who
served on Bell's excellenre commission.

TI-le AMeRicaNg;
3ReN'T Tije ONLY
owe~ wHo ReTRieve
~aTaLLiTe~.

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WASiflNGTON - The Heritage resources effectively" In the matter · bill. The disagreement on this issue French Smith to gain "hands-on"
was so profound that no departmen- control of his department. "Many of
Foundation, this city's most conser- of legislation to reform our criminal
tal lobbying had a chanre of Justice's shOJ1comings are the fault
vative think tank, has just pub- law. Early In the ~th Congress the
success. A president proposes, the of some of the attorney general's
lished a massive volume of criti- administration Introduced Its omniCongress disposes; no admlnlstra· chief assistants' and of the simple
cism and recommendation. The bus bill. After its most controversial
tlon Is going to get everything It fact that most of, the department's
work criticizes what the foundation features were set aside, the blll
staff lawyers do not share, or even
asks
for.
perCPives as failures of the Reagan finally rocketed to passage In the
are hostile to, the Reagan agenda."
on
the
The
Heritage
report
administration, and. It proposes closing days of the Congress In
Precisely. The Identical dl!flculty
Justice
Department
also
reflects
various legislative, executive and October. Says the report: "If this
crops
up In eveJY' department In
the
frustration
that
presidents·
judicial Initiative for the next four victory had been achieved much
every
administration.
To an unberegularly experience. Harry Truyears. It Is an Impressive earlier, as It could have been," the
a
president
- any
lievable
degree,
man complained bitterly at his
compilation.
department could have won the
president
Is
the
prisoner
of the
lnabUity to get cooperation from
The chapter on the Justice sidetracked measures also.
entrenched
and
tenured
bureauexecutive agencies. Dwight EisenDepartment, however, calls to
This Is baloney - the kind of
hower fumed that the bureaucracy cracy. The State Department probmirid a couple of proverbs. One baloney that Is served up by
was like a feather pillow: If you ably ev!dences this problem more
teaches us that you can lead a horse Ideologues whose naivete thrives In
thumped It at one place, It plumped than any other, but they all share it.
to water but you can't make him
the warm culture 'Of a think tank.
up somewhere else. Kennedy, A president needs obedient Indians
drink. The other tells us that any There never at any time was the
Johnson, Nixon and Carter at who wUJ carry out his orders
enterprise thaI demands strong slightest possibility of getting the
various limes railed against their cheerfully, enthusiastically anq
leadership Is doomed to failure 1111
whole of the original crime hili
effectively. More often than not,
Inability to Get Things Done.
has too many chiefs and not enough
through Congress. The votes werSo, too, with Reagan and the what a president gets Is a crew of
Indians.
en't there In the OOth;. they won't be
Justice Department. The Heritage foot -draggers.
The authors of this chapter .are
there In the 99th. The ·same thing Is
The Heritage report urges the
report comments on the "failure"
sharply critical . of the Justice
true of the department's efforts to
administration
In Its second term to
of
Attorney
General
William
Department lor "falling to use Its
win enactment of an Immigration
crusade boldly for racial policies
based upon the principle of colorblind justice. The foundation opposes the system by which 10
percent of a federal construction
contract Is set aside for minority
contrctors. It demands an end to
racial quotas In public housing. It
asks the Reagan administration to
seek court judgments that will put
AN~
an end to i-aclal ,balanre busing.
The report ca lls for "continued
resistance to attempts to Increase
the scope of federal regulation
under the guise of clvll rights." All
this is sound doctrine.
It Is generally anticipated that
President Reagan nex t month wlll
renew his nomination of Edwin
Mepse to sucCPed Smith as attorney
general. Now that the report of
independent counsel has dispelled
the miasma of Innuendo and
allegation that onre clouded the
Mepse nomination, the Senate
should move swiftly to get him
confirmed. Thereafter it wlll be up
to Meese to knock some heads
together and cmpel obedience to
Reagan's directives. This is muc h
easier said than done, but Meese
~TTA II-~
will 'have to give It his very best
HUt.Mf@t~S't I'O~ wo~STA~-.,.-e-~er,~,...
... shot.

Rain~
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N01Hi NG IS

Cloudy Saturday night with a chance of snow developing northwest
by morning; lows in the upper Ws to mid-30s. Rain or snow Sunday
with highs from the rnld-30s to the mld-40s.
NOR~T.~T CENTRAL

fOSiflVIZE~

Saturday night: cloudy with a chance of snow by morning; low in
theupperWs. Sunday: snowwithahighin themld-30s. The chance of
precipitation is 40 percent Saturday night and 90 perrent Sunday.
CENTRAL lAKESHORE, EAST I..AKE&gt;HORE
NORTHEAST INLAND, CENTRAL IDGiiLANDs
SaluFday night: cloudy with a low around :ll. Sunday: snow,
possibly changing to rain; high in the upper 30s. The chance of
precipitation Is 10 percent Saturday night and 00 percent Sunday,
MIAMI VALLEY, CENTRAL, EAST CENTRAL
Saturday night: cloudy; low :ll to 35. Sunday: rain; hi'gh 40 to 45.
The chance of precipitation is 10 percent Saturday night and 00
percent Sunday.
SOU'n~WENT, SOUTH CENTRAL
Saturday night: cloudy; low :ll to 35. Sunday: rain; high in the
mid-40s. The chanre of precipitation Is 10 perrent Saturday night and
00 percent Sunday.
LAKEERlE
Winds west to southwest and diminishing to 15 to25 knots Saturday
nij;:hl ; variable winds 10 to 20 knots Sunday m orning, becoming
easterly 15 to 25 knots In the afternoon. Average waves 4 to 7 fept
Saturday night. Snow or a mixture of snow and rain developlrtg over
the west end of the lake about daybreak Sunday and spreading east.

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REVENUE ENHANCEMENT

nn

The nation's weather
By The Associated Press

War against drugs'----_______J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n ·
The reasons f~r this failure are
complex. But the administration
Itself cannot . avoid Its share of
responsibility for the situation.
The National Narcotics ·Border
Interdiction System, headed by
Vice President George Bush, was
touted as a major effort to seal the
nation's borders to dope smugglers.
Unfortunately, It has proved to be
an unmitigated failure in its stated
mission, and Is now being written
off by critics as nothing more thari a
costly political publicity stunt.
Francis Mullen, a career lawman
who heads the Drug Enforrement
Administration, has complained
bitterly that at best NNBIS has
masnaged to get In the way of the

professionals' attempts to crack
down on drugs, and at worst has
demoralized employees In other
agencies by Its shameless attempts
to hog the spotlight whenever any
sucress Is achieved In the narcotics
war.
The latest development, sourres
told my associates Donald Gold·
berg and Indy Badhwar, Is a review
of the border-Interdiction system by
the General Accounting Offlre. This
confirms that the ad hoc group is
woefully Ineffective,
If the government's borderInterdiction effort Is a flop, so Is Its
lackadaisically directed campaign
to cut off the supply of Illicit drugs at
the sourre: the farn'ls 'where opium

poppies, coca pla nts and marijuana
are grown overseas. The conrept
had a simplistic beauty: .If growers
could be persuaded to plant legal
crops, the supply of narcotics for
American addicts would be cut off
before the stuff ever arrived In this
country.
Unfortunately, there is no crop
known to agriculture from which a
fa r mer can reap such a large and
certain profit. By an irony of
botany, the weedllke plants that
produce the world's Illicit drugs are
&lt;'aster and cheaP,.r to grow, and
less susceptible to the vicissitudes
of nature, than rice, corn, wheat or
other life-sustaining crops.

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roday in history
Today Is Sunday, Dec. 2, the337th dayofl!BI. Thereare29daysJeft In the
Y!;ar.
-Today's highlight in history:
, :On Dec. 2. 1982, In !be first operation of its kind, doctors at the University
oCUtah Medical Center Implanted a permanent artificial heart In the chest
otretired dentlst Barney Qark. He would live for 112 days with the device.
.·On this date:
• In l!nl, Napoleon was crowned emperor of Franc.. in a glittering
~mony a t the Cathedral of Notre Dame In Paris.
1816, the first savings bank In the United States, the Philadelphia
savings Fund Society, openl'Q for business.
ln 1823, President James Monroe outlined his doctrine opposing
Epropean expansion In the Western Hemisphere. .
: ·rn 1840, William Henry Hamson was elected President.
&lt; In llli!l, militant abolltionist John Brown was hanged for his raid on

.

:·In

~r'sFerry.

·1n 1942, a nuclear chain reaction was demonstrated for the first time by a

!lrooP of scientists at the University of Chicago.
' 1n 1954, the U.S. Senate voted to condemn Seh.. Josepb R. McCarthy,
Ro"Wis., for what It called "conduct that tends to bring the Senate Into
dtsronor and disrepute."
: ~ 1961, Cuban leader Fidel Castro declared In a nationally broadcast
sJ)!ech that be was a Marxist-Leninist and would lead CUba to.
Communism.

..

escalator."
"It's these kinds &lt;1 mistakes that
could ruin our Christmas. Let's
review the plays on this black·
board. T1le IIDe Is here, a 1!0-pound
kid comes up ll!ld sits on your lap.
What do you do?"
"{ask him what he wants me to
bring him,'' McMurtrie lllld.
"NO YOU DON'T. Youas"khlml1
he's been a good boy. If he says he
has, tben you tell him he dellerves a
new Schwinn bJcycle, an Apple
computer and a radl~trolled

boat . He's not expecting that and
neither are his parents. But 11 we're
going to put sales points on the
board we have to play hardball."
"I gotcha, coach. Our game plan
Is to hit the high-priced Items first.
Suppose the kid says he just wants a
hot wheel car Instead?"
"Tell him hot wheel cars are for
kids who have been bad. Those who
are very, very good deserve to get
something really, really nice. And
remember this, you dumbbells.
Make sure you tell the kids to repeat
to their parents what you promised
them BEFORE they got out of the
store.
"Too Tall , you let a little girl run
all over. you. Why did you leU her
she wouldn't get anything for
Christmas?"
"Because I was tcylng to stop her
from pulling on my boanl."
"Well, that was a stupid play.
You Should have told her 11 she
stopped pulling on your bean! she'd
get a $150 doll house."
"I nt!Ver thought of that."
The manager was livid. "You call
yourself a Santa aaus? If you
fumble the ball once more you'll be
playing for the Salvation Army next
year. Matlowsky, your job Is to
block a motller who Is dragging her
kid away from the electric trains.
Four mothers knocked you down
and got to the parking lot on your
side of the store. What happetled?"
"I was crouching down, giving
their ldda peppe~mtnt sticks, .a nd
they bllndslded me," Matlowsky

sald.
"So '&amp;&gt;n't crouch. Make the kids
reach up to you. We don't · make
anytbiDg on peppe~nilnt sUcks."
The manager got tears In hsl
eyes. "Men, I'm going to tell you a

story. About 10 years ago I had a
Santa Claus playing for me named
Jack Ripper. Just before the 1974
Chr.istmas Bowl, he got a hernia
when a 250-pound kid sat on his lap.
I went to the hospital, where he was
In great pain, He said to me, 'Coach,
some day when the team Is down,
and inventories are up, and the
Barbie Dolls and pinball machines
aren't moving, tell the guys to go

Doonesbury

out there on the floor and win just
one for the Ripper.' "
There wan'! a dry eye In the
locker room.
The manager said, "NOW LET'S
GO OtiT AND MAKE THEM SPIT
UP THEIR CREDIT CARDS."
The Sa11.ta Clauses grabbed their
hats and beards and broke down !he
door as they ran out of the locker
room for the final half.

More snow fell In the northern and rentral Rocky Mountains
Saturday, while light snow fell from the northern Plains across the
upper Great Lakes to western New York.
Rain was scattered over the upper Ohio Valley a nd the south
Atlantic Coast states, while dense fog plagued portions of the Gulf
Coast and the Tennessee Valley.
Heavier snow accumulations by early Saturday included 51nches
at Lewiston, Mont., 3 lncbes at Gr.angev!Ue, Idaho, and Brigham
City, Utah, and 2 Inches at Great Falls, Mont.
Two to 8 Inches of snow were expected to fall over Montana, Idaho,
Wyoming and Colorado, and travelers advisories were posted for
parts of those states.
Seven Inches of new snow fell Friday at West Yellowstone. Mont ..
with 4 Inches reported at Salmon, Idaho.
A high wind watch was issued for the northeastern Colorado
foothills, where a wind gust of 41 mph was reported Friday evening
at Estes Park.
'
A travelers advisory was Issued for the Olympia, Wash., area,
where wet roads with temperatures below freezing produced
slippery roads.
Temperatures around the nation a t 2 a.m . EST ranged from 9
degrees at Yellowstone Park, Wyo., to 78 degrees at Key West, Fla.

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Guiding Hand looks to 'new

beginning' :~

(Continued from page Al)
mente. "We'll have to finish the
noor, replace the electrical wiring,
paint the walls and redo the
doorways so they wUJ mept modern
needs," DiQementesald.
.
The 169 Board of Mental Retardalion and Developmental Disabilities
has applied for a $1.1 million state
grant to either build a new facility
capable of handling up to 100cllents
or purchasing and renovating an
existing building.
The new building, 11 It comes
about , will help the workshop In Its
ablllty to perform its contracts with
area Industries, DIQemente added.
"Thewaythingsarenow inthegym ,

Freeze

one minute an area may be used for
finishing, another minute It may be
used for sanding and another
minute It may be used as a lunch
area," he said.
·
The state may fund up to 100
perren , of the building, but 111t does
not , DiQemente said they would
look at either setting aside some of
the levy money In a buildlngfundor
obtaining bank financing for the
amount not funded by the state and
repay the loan with money collected
from the additional levy.
"We're not going to paint ourselves in a corner,'' DIClemente
said. "We are going to look at both."
A program to be added, Ratliff .

EUREKA

*

SUPER SAVER
HEADQUARTERS!
FEATURE-,ACKED
EUIEIA WITH
VIBI~ROOMER II
BEATER BAR
...........

(Continued
from
page
A-.ll
00&amp;.....-_ _ _ _
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The certification of additional
general fund money totaling
$8,166.03 was presented at the
meeting. That money is to be broken
down Into $3,161.03 to the board of
elections and $5,005 to the ins4rance
account, official bonds account, and

Tax talk...
(Continued from page AI)
assessed at a value of $10,1Ul would
have paid $40 in taxes.
In comparison, an Individual will!
a yearly Income of $10,00J will pay
$100 a year In income tax.
Seyler said the tax levy would
have only provided minimal help to
the village and other means of
raising funds would probably have
been necessary even if the levy had
passed.
According to Ohio law, Pomeroy
residents have no referendum In the
matter of the one percent tax for a
period of one year. This is the hlghest
amount or income tax that can be
enacted without a vote. However.
residents can petition to have the
measure put on the ballot next
November.
A Pomeroy Tax Offire Is being
readied at village hall. The tax office
is tobe locatedinwha twas the water
departmen t's offlre. The water
department has been moved to
another office in the building.
Officials are looking for an
experienced tax administrator to
e nforce the provisions of the
ordinance.
The ordinance will be read for the
second time on Monday evening at
the regular meeting of village
council.

Lottery winning
numbers: 424, 4219

the utility account.
An additional $3,766.50 In receipts
from the landfUJ has been rertified.
Both of these cert111cations were
funds over and above what had been
a nticipated for this year.
Fund transfers approved by th&lt;'
board Included $9,791 .12 In the
auditor's office; $U,700 at the
Carleton School; $850 at the county
lnflrmary; $2,400 within the Vete·
ran's Service Administration:
$1,458.00 in the probate office a nd
juvenile court; $1,483.87 in the
tuberculosis otfire; $5&amp;3 In the
sheriff's office; a nd $146.48 for the
dogwarden .
·
A question of an animal claim of
$300 for three goats was tabled at the
mE'Ptlng.
Approval was given to·a request
from Bob Byer, d irector of Meigs
County's Emergency Medical Servlre, to advert ise the sale of two
outdated emergf'ncy vehicles.

1--------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----

M.I.Hummel "Coffee Break:'
only for members of the
Goebel Collectors' Club
We have "Coffee Break " for your in&gt;pcction! It \ another
!Ieasure from Goebel ofWeSI Gcm1any. available onl y to Cl ub
membec; . !f you·re no1 a member. ask U&gt; how ea;y it i&gt; to join .
And let us put this authentic handmade .. M . I. Humme l .. figurine
Into your hands. $90.

CIRCULAR
IN TODAY'S NEWSPAPER
TRANSFORM-AUTOBOT CAR
The m•nufacturer ia unable to ship .
No rainchecka wtll be IIIUed.

WINDMERE MINt PRO
1200 WATT AIR DRYER
Tha Correct Reb•te 11 $6 .00 . After
Rebate Price i1 •3 .96 .

IVER JOHNSON .22 CALIBER
PU~P RIFLE

The supplier •• un•ble to ship . We
will subStitute the Remington '&amp;72
Speedm11ter Pump Rifle .
We •re 10rry fof eny inconrtanienca
may Mve CtluHCI our cuat:o"'*'•·

Goebel

FRANK RIVAS, M.D., F.A.C.C.

Bringing aualiry to life since 187j

HEART SPECIALIST
'U.S.A. BOARD CERTIFIED

r--0-~••, ~

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Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases
of Heart, Arteries and Veins.
Cardiac Catheterization - Pacemakers

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c tub"

ANNOUNCES THE RELOCATION OF HIS OFFICE

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the centers .
Also establi shed, Ratliff said.
According to Riffe. two Items
would he "daily Uvlng centers" needed that art&gt; not Included In the ..
where the children can lea rn to take . 19&amp;5 budget are pla;·ground equip· .
careof themselvesathome.An area ment a nd a garagP of some sort for
atthe school has been designated for bus maintenance.

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'Ho' Ho·' Ho'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Art-Buchwald
----

The weary Santa Claus team was
sitting on benches, staring at the
floor In the Emporlwn Departinent
Store locker room.
The manager was punching the ·
walls . "You guys are stinking out
the joint. We're down 10 perCPnt In
sales from last year. Not only Is my
job on the line, but If we don't win,
the game Is over for all of you. This
second half Is going to make all the
dltferenre. Now, so you can get It
through your thick heads - one
more time. Whom are we trying to
beat? ..
"A SLUGGISH ECONOMY," the
team shouted In unison.
"Right," the manager said. "The
most vicious kind of an economy
there Is. And 11 we lose this year,
what will happen to the country?"
"WE'LL HAVE A
RECESSION ."
"Okay, let's get down to specl1lcs," the manager said as he stood
In front of the blackboard. "Olewlcz, how come you let that kid get
by you without his mother purchas·
lng anything In the store?"
"I'm sorry, coach. I gave him a .
solid push towanl the toy depart·
ment, but somehow be sUpped
around me and ran down the

By The Associated Press
While the weekend will start orr with some sunshine and dry
weather, that w1Jl all change on Sunday. A storm system will develop
In the Plains states Satunlay and move quickly toward Ohio.
By early Sunday, rain and snow will spread into the state. Current
Indications are that the.snow will be limited to the northern th{rd of
the state while the rest of the state will get rain.
Significant snow Is .possible In northern Ohio, especially In the
northwest Counties. Anyone planning travel or other outdoor
activities Sunday should keep abreast of the latest weather forecasts.
Overnight temperatures In Ohio were relative ly mUd for this time
of year as the mercury stayed In the mld-30s for much of the night.
Sunday high temperatures will range from the mld-30s to the
rnld-40s.
On the morning weather map, a low pressure area was In eastern
Canada with a cold front through eastern New York to the Florida
panhandle. A high-pressure area was In the lower Mississippi River
valley. The cold front wUJ move off the East Coast while the
high-pressure center moves east, slaying south of Ohio.
Another low pressure renter was over Wyoming. This low will
move to Missouri and then head toward Ohio, bringing the rain and
snow to the state ~unday.

omo

BUT NIEllTRAl.l"ZATION

WASffiNGTON America's
drug problem will grow slgnlllcantly worse in the next year, and
the Reagan administration's highly
publicized efforts won't solve it.
This dire prediction is based on
cold, h'ard reality that no amount of
rhetoric and good Intentions can
soften: The world supply of cocaine
is greater than ever; It Is readily
available virtually everywhere In
the United States; and it Is cheaper
than It has been within memory.
Cocaine has now replaced heroin
as the top-priority target of federal
law enforcement officials. Yet
depressingly II ttle progress has
been made In curbing the traffic,
much les stamping It out.

snow for Ohio

State zone forecasts

.....

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-3

'

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY : a chance of flumes
Monday; fatrTuesday and Wednesday. Hlghs35 to45andlowslnthe ·
Ws.
'

•

·A Division of

Pom.roy-Middleport-Gollipolis, Ohi-Point PleaiCiflt, W. Va.

OPEN DAllY TO 5 P.&amp;
MON. &amp; Fill. TO I P.M.

1
1
I
1
1

1

417 Seconcl Avenue
P.O Box 328
Gallipolis . Ohio 45631
(614) 446-2125

0 1am interested in Go~~&amp;rnmenl National Mongage
Association certificates .
Name ______________________________________

~~ss ______________~------------------City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State - - - - - ' - - - - Zip _ __

I ~ ----------------------------

·~···············

�Ti.....S.ntinel

Dec.••"- 2,

Ohio-Point PleaiCint, W. Va.

1984

O.Cember 2, 1984

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Red~ced

charge-·
leads to probation

·Have a Mer
Cb111tms1 Spe~isl

Poge-A·5

Christmas .... -

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis Johnnie A. Gravely, 39, Charleston,
woman was fined $25, received a W.Va .• $36; Dennis D. Foul, 27.
00-day suspended jaU sentence and London, s:u; Steven S. SOvine, 22,
was placed on one year probation Dayton, $38.
after pkadln g ·no contest to a ·
Charles J . Beard, 18, Rt. 4,
reduced churge on attempted Gallipolis, $39: Robert 0 . Cook. 50,
assault In Gallipolis Municipal Proctorville, $39; John K Hoops, 32,
Court Friday.
Jackson, $39; Anita J. Miller, 33,
Tammy Cox, 428 Third Ave., had West Manchester, $39; Maloy F ..
•
by Zodiac
&lt;
been charged with assault tn· Nelson Jr., 41, Wheelersburg, $39;
REG.
\
conneetlon wlih the Nov. Sassault of Charles A. Reed, 18, Petersburg.
S120.00
a GalllpoUs woman.
W.Va., $39; Alphonso Thompson, 37.
Sentenced to ten days In theGallla
Charlotte, N.C .. $,'19.
County Jail, fined $300. placed on 18
Todd W. Darst, 21. Troy, $40;
months probation for DWI was
Steven P . Krna, 24. Lule, N.Y .• $40;
Timothy D. Robinette, 24, Rt. 2,
Fred S. Mason. 25, Waterford, $40;
Crown City. Robinette's driver's
Amanda S. North, 18, Rt. 3,
license was suspended tor lW days
Gallipolis, $40; Vernon R. Slack. 31,
on t~ charge. He was fined $12 and
Charleston, W.Va .• $40; Douglas G.
sentenced to 10 days In jail, to he
Reineke, 36, LaVale, Md ., $40.
served consecutively with the DWI
Lynn D. Ellis, 40, Reynoldsburg,
514 E. MAIN
POMEROY
sentence, on -a charge of driving
$41; Michael A. Hoover, 20, Middle:1011 Second .-\ ve.
992-6910
without a license.
port, $41; James B. Morrow. 29,
Lafayette '!all
WE ACCEPT
MON.-SAT. 9:00-S:OO'
Sentenced to three days in jail,
Columbus. $41; Donald E . RanaGallipolis . o.
FOOD STAMPS
FRI. 9:00-7:00 ·
fined $300, placed on 18 months
slnghe, 37, 587 Jay Dr., Gallipolis,
probation and receiving 60 day
$41;
Melinda D. Siegel, 23, 1----------------------L-----------------~-license suspensions for DWI were
Columbu_s. .
Loyal M. Holman, 24 , Racine, and
Cathy Y. Cooper. 33, Middleport.
Sammy L. Nibert, 23, Rt. 1,
$42; Jack 0. King, 50, Ormond
Gallipolis. A charge of driving left of
Beach, Fla., $42; Cynthia A. Sexton,
center against' N ihert was dis32. Rt. 2, Bidwell. $42.
missed In .exchange for his plea on
George D. Murphy, 30, Proctorthe DWI charge.
ville, $43; James R Butler, 21 ,
In other traffic cases, Terri L.
Newport News, Va., $45; PhillipS. ·
Halley. 28, Rt. 1 Cheshire, was fined
Harding, 33, New Boston, $45;
$12 for speeding and Donni Saxon,
George A. Osgood, 18, Proctorville.
22, Rt. 3, Bidwell, wasflnedS12forno $46; and Noel C. Neal, 24, Clear
driver's license.
Creek, W.Va., $47 .
James J. Miller, 25, Waterloo.
forfeited $40on a charge of failu re to r--- r - -- -- - ---1
control and Victor E. McQoud, 28,
Rt. 3, Bidwell, forfeited $40 bond for
disobeying a stop sign.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Gene B. Nance,'!/, Colerain, N.C.,
$37; Paul M. Cupp, 30, Circleville.
$38; Bruce E. Keyser, 35, Wayne,
W.Va., $38; Lester Mayhorn , 46,
Edgarton, W.Va., $38; Everett L.
Cook. 47, Greensboro, N.C., $39;
IN TODAY ' S NEWSPAPER
David K Haynes, :B, Findlay, $39;
EVEREADY HEAVY DUTY
Jolm E. Park, 35, Rt. 2, Bidwell, $41.
BATTlER I ES
Reaford Ward. 48, Rt. 1, EwingWHICH APPEAR ON PAGE 24
ton. $42; Nelson Prater, 57, HueysTHE PHOTOGRAPH WHICH 15 USED IS
ville, Ky., $43; David B. Vinson, 19,
I NCORREC'T . THE BATTERIES WHICH
Livonia, Mlch.,$43; HaroldKLilly, · AR E ON SALE· ARE THE EVEREADY
HEAVY DUTY BATTERIES . THE PRICE
54. Bickmore. W.Va ., $44; Susan E.
AND REBATE INFORMATION ARE
Tolliver. 21, Spencer, $44: Mary L.
CORRECT FOR THE MEP,VV OUTY BAT ·
TERIES . WE ARE SORRY FOR JI.NY IN ·
Fallon, 35, Rt. 2, Patriot, $45; and
CONVENIENCE THIS ERROR MAY HAVE
John H. Gloss, 55 Halliday Hts .•
CAUSED OUR_CUSTOM.ER S .
Gallipolis. $82. ·
Forfeiting bond for speeding were

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR
Sl 5 IN FREE GROCERIES

FISHER FESTIVAL
BONELESS SMOKED

HOLLYWOOD

SPARE
RIBS

HAM

$149 ·

Ll.

LOIN END

HALF OR
SLICED

La.$1 79 La.$189

PORK
;CHOPS
T-BONE
STEAK

LB.

$119

ll.

$349

ll.

$189

ll.

$229

ll.

$259

CENTER CUT

PORK ·
CHOPS

BOB EVANS

SAUSAGE.
OPEN HOUSE - The Meigs County Museum Is
obse"'lng an open house today from I to 5 p.m. Theme
· of the featured exhibit Is "An old Fashioned
Christmas" with antique toys, dolls, and wearing

appw-cl on display. Shown here adding a 6nlsldng
touch to the exhibit are left, Mrs. V ada Hazelton,
Green Thwnb worker, and SheiTi Han.

ROLL

been pre pared for the open hou s~
and will remain in place· for Ihe
holiday season.
Nearly 50 a ntique dolls from the
collections of Dorothy Fisher.

Police check three accidents
GALLIPOLIS - City police cited
Ga ry T. Nuner, 17. Rt. 3. Gallipolis,
for assured c lear distance in a
two-veh icl~ a ccident on Eastern
,\ venue Friday.
Officers said Nutter was unable to
stop in time at 6:33 p.m. and struck
therearof a vehicle driven by Terry
.J Eutsler, 19. Rt. 2, Gal lipolis,
causing severe damage to IUs own
VPhiclc and slight to Eutslpr's car.
Eutsler was stopped for a left turn
onto Birch Lane when the collision
occur red. Nutter suffered minor

:~~~~~m

SUPERIOR

Shirley Huston. Dorothy Amberger,
Annie Chapman and Nancy Reed
a re included in the exhibit.
Other fea tures of the display are
antiq ue chil.d ren 's toys Including
sleds, wagons, doll utensils, lee
skates, and books. There is a lso a
collection of old Christmas· cards,
ornaments, antique pictures of
Santa. and a wide display of period
c lothing a nd shoes.
In conjunction with the open house
a bake salewlll be held to benefit the
museum. Cake. breads. cookies a nd
a t he r baked goods :.vii he for sale
during Ihe open house hours.

Resources were Thomas R. Haytess
Jr .. 24. Lakeland, Fla., and George
R. Hatcher, &lt;10, and Daniel E.
Blaker, 29, both of Lake Park, Ga.
Jailed on DWI charges were Keith
L. Williams, 20, Rt 2, Vinton . a nd
James C. Plants. Rt. 2, Point
Pleasant. Plants was also charged ~;;;;;;~~;;;~;;;;;;~;J
with Improper lane usage.
I

rr:::::::::::::::::::::::::;l
Wa II·paper

Supermarket

1 cenf

the accident. but was not

Police investigated a two-car
accident at Second Avenue and
Locust StrePI Frida)·. David E.
Wiseman, 2.5. 513 )1, Second Ave. ,
was backing from a priva te
dliVC'way and was struck by a car
driven by Kim L. Steger, 19, Rt. 2.
Patriot. a l 4:53 p.m. The rp was
modet·a te damage to both vehicles.
Police were ca lled to the Silver
Btidge ShoppingPlazaatl:28p.m.
Frida y when a ca r driven by JohnS.

·

s le
t)

q

Fostc&gt;r, ;&gt;3, Kanauga, struck the
Sears store.
Foster told officers hP was going
to the Slore to pick up some
pa ckages when his brakes failed
and the car stmck the wall below a
window. Noda magPwasreported to
Foster's w•hicle.
Cited h)' police for DWI Saturday
mor ning was Gregory R. She lton,
28. Rt.:l. Gallipolis.
Meanwhile, three men posted
bond Saturd ay and were releasro
fmJTI the Ga llia county Jail on
.
-hd
'h
ch arges of spo 11 1g tmg eer WJt

Hu r ry In For
Best Select•"on
763 THIRD· AVE.

HUNTINGTON
704 GRN D CENTRAL AVE.
PARKERSBURG
MON. THRU FRI. 9 A M.-9 P.M.
SATU RDA Y9A.M.-5P.M.

firearms.

liSP 5~5-ROO
,\ l\lullhn~dla New110papf'r
Pu bli shf'd NIC' h Sundav. 825 Third
Avrn uf', by lh &lt;' Ohi o Va'IIC'y Publ\sll -

inf2 Co mpany - Multimedia . Inc.
muiling muller· al

Po mf' ro~' .

Ohio.

Pos1 OHi rf'.
Mf'rnbC't" T hf' Associat('d Pr&lt;&gt;ss In l and Dally PrC'.'&gt;s A ssoc i:J ii on and the

Newspa p(' l' Pu bli ~ hcr s As ·
.'.;ocit.llion , Na tional Ad vPrt isl ng RPprC's£&gt;ntat i v(' , Branham. 1717 Wf'!il
N! n(' Milf' Roa d , Suitf' 204, Df' troit.
Mi ~ hi~ o n . ~807:, .

SU BSCRIPTION RATES

On£' Month ................ .............. $~.Rll
~INGLE COP\'
PRII'E
5tl

Cent~

No s u!Jsniptirms h ~· ma il pl'l'm it lf'd
in wwns whron• mot or ('aJ'l'i(lr f&gt;f'n·JC'r
I~ a v;J ila bll'.

Thf' Su nda ~· Timl's ·SPntinl'l i.~· il l no t ·
b(• rt"'s ponsl bl(' ror

&lt;:~ d l ·a n rl' pa _v mPnt ~

ffi,j(ff' b ,V C';IITif't'S,

MAll. SUBSCRIPTIONS
S1mday Only·
_vea r ........... .... . . . . . _. $26.Rfl

one
Six mor&gt;lh&gt;---------- ................ St -1.()(1
nany •nd sunday
&gt;MIL suust;RII'TJO:-~s
ln~ld c Ohio

,2 w"'k&gt; ..................... ______ $,._2,
2 ~ ~~", •k-, ···· ·····---- · · --- ---- -~'"1 ~;

1 . ' , ' ..............................,1 ,1 .....
Rah•&gt;OutoddcOhlo

c~

Week &gt; ...................... .. .. ... $,g_Rfl

I j;~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

_FALL VALUES

ARMOUR

STEW
BEEF

ll.

Sl89

ll.

$169

BONELESS

·cHUCK
ROAST

Retail 1574.95

$48900

ca1h 'n carry

Cli275HN

24" SUPERSET- SPECIALLY PRICED

FIG
BARS

32

oz.
ans.

oz.

VALLEY BELL

2%
MILK

EVAP.
MILK

$299
oz.
2/S1 09

RAINBOW
10 CT•

2/$3

·69&lt;

1LB.
BOX

TO HELP US REALIZE THESE GOALS. WE CONTINUE TO UTILIZE THE MODERN FACILITIES OF HOLZER CLINIC IN GALLIPOLIS. YOU WILL FIND US
AT HOLZER CLINIC EACH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FROM 1:00 P.M.
TO 3 :00P.M. OR BY APPOINTMENT. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE
CALL (IN GALLIPOLIS, CALL 446-6136) OR WRITE
..
DILES
326 w. UNION STREET
-.
P.O . BOX 611
&lt;&lt;Ctl)) HElliNG
ATHENS. OHIO 46701
......
TELEPHONE 1-814-694-3671
(Out l)f Town Call Collect)

AID

AID

~

If you have been injured on the job and desire
professional legal representation for your
Workers' Compensation claim, call for further
-information without obligation.
William R. Hamelberg
Attorney at Law
1030 Dublin Road (Route 33)
Columbus, Ohio 43215

LEATHER

SllllrJC

EVERYONE

GENUINE
LAMBSKIN
Men's .... 130.00
- Women's .. '28.00

Ll.

9:00 A.M.-3:00P.M.

69&lt;

COWHIDE

SUEDE LEATHER

SINGLE
ROLL

Plan To A#fend

$1800
MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S
42

Out Celebtafion.

$2QOO

oz.

lOX .

- LETTUCE .BANANAS POTATOES I

89( 25(

Tuetday
Oecembet 4, 1984

Guess How Many
Pemies Are In The
Jar, Clc~~t~t Will
Win A $100 Bond.

NATUI.ll

·CALIFORNIA GOLDEN 'RIPE MICHIGAN
/

With An Old Fa1hion
Chti1tma1

IWl

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

~s.

Decemhet 4, 1904_To Decemhet 4, .1984 .

Cbtittmss Gilts. FOR

'

79&lt;

•

·INJURED ON THE JOB?

MOOSE GRAIN

~~:~~E~ ~~z. 89(
ASSORTED JELLIES

•

nniVBtiSt

S2QOO

SALTINE
CRACKERS

-

fh

•

PRIDE

YANISH AUTOMATIC
0

Ll.

GIFT'S FOR EVERYONE

Plus

$169

$ 09
1

ORANGE SLICES

OUR GOALS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN TO PROVIDE RELIABLE INFORMATION, MEDICAL REFERRAL AND DEPENDABLE HEI&amp;RING AID
·· SERVICE. WE ARE. IN OUR 36th YEAR.

AI The

Dep.

14

CORN a oz.
'TWISTERS
TRASH
BAGS

420Z. ·
CAN

oz.

DAN DEE

The
Shoe Cafe

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods

SHORTENING ·

-BUTTERMILK 'I' GAL
WISK
64

$89 95

THRIFT KING

VALLEY BELL

~~~GENT

.

NOW
SAVE S30.00

·. FOR CHURCHES, CLUBS
AND ORGANIZATIONS

CALL COLLECT (614) 488-6945

$179

GAl.

LUDENS

TROUBLED BY HEARINQ LO$$ ••.

8-16$ 149

FIRESIDE

"PR.ANI&lt;"

1 0°/o .OFF BULK CANDIES

.

PEPSI-DIET PEPSI
PEPSI .FREE-DIET
PEPSI FREE

j$
4
1
BIRDSEYE
AWAKE u oz. 69(

POTTED
MEAT 3 oz.

CARNATION

1 ONLY SPECIALS
CXB 1S8WR
19" REMOTE

ASK ABOUT THE NEW

$239

BONELESS

¢ . . . . "~;·; ; ;,

OR

FOR

$229

A m ('r · i c ~ n

Arrested
by lhewildlifediv
isionof 1
th~
Ohio Department
of Natural

..

ROUND
STEAK ll.
SIRLOIN TIP
ROAST ll.

GROUND _BEEF
LB.

$139

BONUfSS TOP

LEAN

~f' ­

1.1 Vl ": l" k!i ... .... .. . ..... . ............... $15.1)(1

GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples filed for marriage licenses
recently in GaUia County Probate
Court .
.Jeffrey M. Speiss. 40. Gallipolis,
Gallipolis Developmental Center
superintendent, a nd Sheila L.
George. 29. Gallipolis. hospital aide.
.JoS&lt;"ph R. Gleason, 26, Rt.l, Point
Pi('asant. laborer, and Kelly D.
Pullins. 21, Rt. 2. Bidwell, at borne.
l\1ichael E. Thompson. 20. 273
.Ja c ~son Pike. U .S. Army. &amp;ndMary
L. Nida. 1~. Rt. l. Thurman, at
home.
Benton C. Goddard, 64 . Hometown, W. Va. , retired, and Mildred
Kemper, Leon, W.Va., housewife.

FRESH

SHOULDER
-STEAK ll.

$1.39

LB.

89 (

PORK

BACON

f' ond c lass postagt" paid &lt;t 1 C allljX&gt;IiS.
Ohi o .J ~6-1 L F:n1 C'r&lt;' d as st'cond c lass ·

:lfi Wf:'eks .............................. ~:11 .211

Marriage licenses

FRANKIE
W.IENERS ';Kg_z.

. PRE-SLICED

iunba!! 'limN . limtintl

By C~tr rlt•r or Motor Route
O nr W('d &lt;. ............ ........... :... .. $1.10

NOW IN
PROGRESS

RUMP
ROAST
SIRLOIN
STEAK

$1.59

LB.

Open house set at Meigs Museum
POMEROY - Open house is
being observed today (Sunday) at
the Meigs County Museum. B~ner­
nut Avenue. 1 to 5 p.m.
Several special exhibits . have

BONELESS

DRAWINGS ON DEC. B, DEC. 15
DEC. -22 &amp; DEC. 29
NEW DRAWING EACH WEEK

·lD LB.
lAG

Tangerines
...

89&lt; 10

$

fOR

210 CT.

I Ell'S

MOOSE

1

· GRAIN
LEATHER

FLEECE·LIIIED

&lt;.rarl's

snoe stoMI

DOWNTOWN GALliPOliS

Ftee Ref1s1hmenta
snd Cs/endst1
Fot Evetgone. ·

�Page-A-6-The Sunday TimeS.:Sentinel

COLUMEUS - William P. Ew·
ing, 70, Columbus, formerly of
Gallia County , died Friday in
Riverside Methodist Hospital ,
Columbus.
Born Oct. 15, 191~. in Ewington,
son of the late George P. and Esther
J . Ma tt hews Ewing, hew as a retired
General Motors employee.
Surviving are his wife, Naomi;
and a daughter, Mrs. Orlando
(Rebecca ) Mejia of Columbus,
Graveside services will be held at
2 p.m. Monday in Vinton Memorial
Park. with the Rev. Elizabeth Lilly
officiating. Fdends may call at
Rutherford-Corbin Funeral Home,
515 High St.. Worthington, from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. today.
Loca l arrangements are by
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton.

Virgi l C. Holley
GALLIPOLIS - Virgil Clyde
··Bud': Holley, 74, 655 Buhi-Morton
Road, Gallipolis, died Saturday
morning in Holzer Medical Center.
Born AprU22,1910, at Charleston,
W.Va., son of the late Homer a nd
AUce Hatcher Holley, he was
self-employed.
He married Josephine H. Thompson, who survives, on July 15,1931, in
Mason County, W.Va.
Also surviving are three daugh·
ters, Virginia Rinehart of Colum·
bus , Emogene McCown of Dayton,
and Joann Anderson of Charleston;
two sons, James of Charleston, a nd
Ken of Gallipolis; a brother, Vernon
of Gallipol!s; four sisters, Elsie
Walters. Virgie Marion and Velma
Hol!ey, all of Charleston, and Mary
Zitkus of Sa rasota, Fla.; and nine
grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.
He was preceded in dea th by a
grandchild .
Funera l services will be held at2
p.m. Monday in Willis Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Robert H.
MacKenzie officiat,ing. Burial will
be in CentenaryCeinetery. Friends
may ca ll a t the funeral home from
6·9 tonight.

.
Minnie A. Lowe

MIDDLEPORT- Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie A. Lowe. 82 ,
fom1erl y of Middleport. who died at
her home at 4115 Fourth St., N.E.
Canton following an extended
illness. were held Tuesday at the
Grace Parish Church of God in
Christ, Canton.
Mrs . Lowe was born in Athens,
Tenn .. Feb. 2fi. 1902. She resided in
Midd lpeort for a number of years
and had been a rPs idenl of Canton
for the past 20 years. She was
preceded in death by ner husband ,
.James Lowe. in 1981.
SUJYiving arc a d&lt;Jughter, Mrs .
El sie LouiS(' .Jackson a nd a son,
11obert Kerr. bot h of Ca nton; three
stepda ughtNs, Mrs . Sigmona
Thompson and Mrs. Necola Des·
monel. both of Canton , and Mrs. Sue
Pendleton. Charleston. W. Va.; a
sistE•r, Mrs. Estella Riley. Can ton, 19
g randch ildr en. · 18 great·

REE;DSVILLE - . Reedsvtue
Postmaster. Mrs. Margaret Nesselroad, who goes backtothethreecent
stamp and the penny postcard,
retired Friday completing 27~
years of work with the U.S. Postal
Service.
Friday was a busy day at the
small Reedsville Post Office as
patrons reciprocated for the "extra
mUe" service Mrs. Nesselroad has
provided over the 11 years she has
been postmaster at ReedsvUle.
Cakes, gifts a nd other farewell
mementos arrived through the ~ay
as patrons said their "gooctbyes''.
A collector of milk pitchers ,
baskets and flowers, Mrs. Nesselroad is a resident of Long Bottom.
She was a clerk at the Long Bottom
Post Office for 16\ol years before

grandchild)'en~

a nepheW and two
nieces.
·
Offlcatlng at sen~ices was Elder
Wilbur Allen, Jr. Burial was in
Sunset Hills Memory Gardens.
Canton.

Harry J, McNeely
FERNDALE, Mich. - . Harry J.
" Bud" McNeely, 56, Ferndale, died
Thursday in Troy, Mich.
He was born April 29, 1928, in
Huntington, W.Va.
Surviving are his wife, Jewel ,
whom he married in 1952; a
daughter, Mrs. Mark (Dreama)
Jividen of GaWpolis; three sons,
StevE' and Tony, both of Ranger,
W.Va ., and Rick of Ferndale; a nd
fo ur brothers, a sister and eight
grandchildren.
Funeral services wUI be held at 11
a.m. Monday lli Ranger Church of
Christ, Ranger, W.Va. Burial will be
in Ranger Cemetery.

receiving the appointment to head · Smith Is the route carrier
the ReedsvlUe Post Office.
MrS. Nesselroad has done a bit of
Mrs. Nesselroad commented that stamp collecting over the years in
she plans " to aU up the rocking chair conjunction with her postal service
and learn to keep house and cook
work and considers her best ones to
aga in" now that she is leaving the
be two pages of John Glenn stainps
postal service. She has one daughwhich are four" centers".TheGlenn
ter, Mrs. Margaret Cauthorn who
stamps were held back from the
resides In Reedsville, and two
public until Glenn's trip Into space
grandchildren
Alllson
Cauthorn
who
attends , Ohio
Wesleyan
at
Delaware, and Abigail Cauthorn, a
sophomore at Eastern High School.

was successful. However, theywere
ready to go and at the proper time
were released to the public.
Esther Smith of Chester has been
named the officer In charge at the
Reedsville Post Office untn a new
postmaster Is named. The appoint·
ment is expected to take several
months .

Use indoors or out. Also use
as a booster seat. Easy end
safe to carry.
AGES 1Y•· 4
Monogramming Available

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.
GROUP OF MEN'S

GROUP OF MEN'S
LONG SLEEVE ·

ARROW

DRESS
SHIRTS
REGUI.AR 3.00

RETIRES - ~. Margaret Nes.selroad receives good wishes from
Lou Jordan, Zanesville, U. S. Postal Systems examiner, upon her
retirement foUowing2'lY, years with the U.S. Postai ,S ervlce,onFriday.
Mrs. Nesselroad holds the framed certificate appointing her to the
position of Reedsville Postmaster II years ago.

I
~

I

CUT YOUR OWN AT

BRADFORD'S GROVE
PRE-CUT TREES AVAI LADLE

I

GALLIPOLIS - Funeral serviGIFT SHOP ITEMS
ces will be held at 2 p.m. today in
Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east onto Rt. 681, go 4miles to Milepost
Crown City Wesleyan Church for the ~ 13, turn south on gravel road I Y, miles to grove.
·
11ev. Oma Williams, 93, Crown City,
WATCH FOR SIGNS
who died Thursday in Pinecrest
!!!
Hours: 1 0 Til Dark
Care Center.
The Rev. Fred Shockley a nd the
Rev. Erie Cox will officiate. Burial
will be in Crown City Cemetery.
ArrangE"ments were by Waugh Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
Born May 1, 1891, at Mercerville,
daughter.of the late John Lafayette ·
and Mariah Evans Sievers, she was
ordained into the Pilgrim Holiness
Conference on Aug. J.J, l.!l4D, and
at tended camp and conference
meetings for 22 years. She was
minister a t Crown City Wesleyan
Church for more than 14 years.
She was preceded in death by her
husba nd, D.C. Wllliams, in 1932; by
a son, Chauncey, in 1970; and by six
brothers and three sisters.
Surviving are a son, John Meredith William s of Crown City; and
three grandchildren and three
sisters.

$1488

S16 99

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~
CHRISTMAS TREES . I
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SHIRTS
REGULAR S11.50

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PAIR

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PAIRS

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Participant
•Free Gift Wrapping
•Free Boxes For Your
Gift Wrapping

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Sat. 11-6

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Retail Value)

Syste m s from $1695
installed

378-6158
SONY dealer

HOLZER CLINIC lTD.

URGENT CARE CENTER
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

AT THE
MAIN CliNIC ON ROUTE 35 NEAR GALLIPOLIS

Staffed by Family 'Practitioners and
Pediatricians for treatment of urgent
illnesses and injuries.
Other clinical specialists available for consu,tations. Enter the Clinic at hospital Emergency, Room entrance.

MONDAY-FRIDAY
SATURAY ·SUNDAY
HOLIDAYS

S P.M.-9 P.M.
1 P.M.-9 P.M.
1 P.M.-9 P.M.

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ELECTRONICS
~--

,·

Revco diMrlct supervisor; and Andy Bragalone, ·
p~~arnw:y manager. 'l'lte new store's hours are 9
a.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 10 a.m.-6

r-;:===;;:.;;;===~=~::;~=;;:::::;::::::;

OFFICE 1\DEL·OCATJON
I,
.

J.C. WOOFTER, M.D., F.A.A.D.
BOARD CERTIFIED DERMATOLOGIST

A special

meettngoftheEa~temLoca!School

District Board of Education will be
held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the high
school to discuss personnel.

WHERE: 224' E. Main St. (EAGLES
.

BLDG.)

DR. RIDGWAY OFFICE, POMEROY, OH .
·

·

WHEN: 2nd &amp; 4th Thursday Mornings
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL : 992-3380

---·----

GALLIPOLIS - A Rodney man
was treated and released from
Pleasant Valley Hospital Frtday for
injuries suffered in a motorcycle
accident on Ohio 588 in Gallla
County .
William C. Darley, 41, was
westbound at 1 p.m. when he
reportedly lost control of his
motorcycle on a curve and went
down, according to the Gallla-Melgs
post of the state highway patrol.
The patrol investigated a hit-skip
. accident on 0 hlo248inMeigs County
Friday.
The patrol said an unknown
vehicle's left s ide mirror caught and
shattered the mirror of a vehicle
driven by Francis M. Andrews, ffi,
Rt. 1, Long Bottom, at 7:15p.m.
Andrews was eastbound at the
time of the colllslon. The other
vehicle left . the scene. the patrol
said.

NO PAYMENT TILL
FEBRUARY 1I 1985

N CHRISTMAS DELIVERY
SHOP THE AREA'S
LARGEST
FURNITURE
STORE

SPECIAl
PRICES
IN EFFECT
NOW JHRU

DESK
MANY STYLES
IN.STOCK

DBEDROOM
SUITES
DLIVING ROOM
SUITES
DDINING ROOM
SUITES

Upper Rt. 7
Next To' Betz Honda
Gallipolis, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT - Beginning in
January the Middleport ·Pomeroy
Rotary Club which has traditlon~Uy
(or years met for Its dinner sessions
on Friday evenings will move to
Monday evenings. .
This was announced Friday night
tbeclubmet at the Middleport
Heath United Methodist Church.
Tile meetings wiD rema.ln at the
church and wfll be held at 6 p.m.
each Monday. Hank Cleland was
named program chairman tor the
first two Monday meetings in
January and Bernard Fultz was
selected program chairman for the
§econd two Mondays that month.
During the meeting presided over .
by President Bill Francis. It was
announced that the annual Christ· ·
mas' party for Rotarians and
famll1es will be llekl on Dec. 14at the
Middleport Malonic Temple. All
mem~ are asked to get In touch
with President Francis Immediately to let him knOW If they and
their lam Illes plan to attend.
Attendance at Friday night's
meeting was one of the best records
In a number of years wlth86 percent
of tile members present.

when

,.

DWATER BEDS
DLANE
CEDAR CHESTS
DHIDE-A-BEDS
DGUN CABINETS
DHOOVER
SWEEPERS

Tbtrt
Art onderlul

Thin'Us Behind
,Our Door1...

CREAT FOR
OAO,
CRANOOAO
OR YOIJR$ELF

GUN
BINET

LARGE SELECTION

IN THE TRI-COUNTY

AREA. ·

LAMPS
MIRRORS
PICTURES
A WHOLE STORE
FULL OF
SELECTIONS

Rotarians change
weekly meeting day

NEW COMPACT
CAMERA VC-200A

Pediatric patients should phone
446-5287

URGENT CARE CENTER HOURS

Mullins, the building's owner; Mike Michelsen,

Windun this month.
First also reportLod that plans are
completed fur the Resource Conserva tion and Development Projeet
t RC&amp;D i at the new Meigs County
Landflll . Construction is planned
for next spring.

ACNE, i;)ISEASES. TUMORS &amp; CANCERS OF THE SKIN

Cyclist has
•
• • •
mtnor
IDJUrtes

GALLIPOLIS - Entries In the
steer sale In the 1985 steer sa le a t the
Ohio State Fair must submit a
noseprint of their animals for
positive Identification.
Gallla County 4-H Agent Fred J .
Dee! said t11e noseprint must be
placed on one side of a three-by-fiveinch card, On the other side of the
card should be the exhibitor's name
a nd other pertinent Information.
The card will become part of the
a ninnal's permanent competition
record.
Dee! said that noseprints - like
fi ngerprints - will determine
individual identity for the animals.
Dee! said the animal's nose mus t be
dry ofperspirationwhe n the imprint
is m ade on the card, but the card
needs to be pressed the correct way
to avoid a s m ear. Prints of entries
that do not match will be disqua lified, Dee! advised .
Instructions on noseprlntlng are
a vailabie from the county extension
and 4-H offices. Assistance on the
prints wiD be ava ilable at the county
weigh-In a t EEE Ranch on Jan . 26.
Youths planning to enter the fair
competition should submit noseprints of their steers by Feb.l. A set
of two cards should be made, one for
the entrant's tlleandone for thesta te
fair sale. The state fair print shoUld
be sent to Jim GOard, livestock
supetvlsor, Ohio State Fair, 631 E.
11th St., Columbus , Ohio 43211.

Ca non's advanced technology brings you hi-li
stereo video recording . With the new VR·40A
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SONY Watchman TV

for a time to be seen

EAST MEIGS -

REVCOOPENJNG-1benewRevcoDrugsstore
at 308 Second Ave., Gallpolls, opened Saturday,
replaetng the tonner facWty at 314 Second Ave.
Present for a rlbboQ..,ultlng ceremooyFrlday were,

Steer entries
must include
•
nosepnnt
too

·--------------~-------~

Come in and Register for

BY THE POST OFFICE
HOURS: Mon.- Fri: 2·6

approved for Gary Wolf, 147 acres
in Olive Township and Ed Aderer,
88 acres In Columbia Township. A

Meets Tuesday

COURT ST.

Sl'~TiiHS

ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

were

CHAIR

SECOND &amp;

sn.vmmnm

DtSHES ON DISPLAY

Meigs
County. agreements
Cooperator

cooperator •gnoement was can celled fo r Douglas Chapman, 162
acres in Salem Township .
Roben First, district conserva·
tlonist, reported he Is working on
f"rm plans for Bill Kennedy, Mike
Wamer •nd Virgil and Brian

from~ft.Ed~.merehan~:~m~wwg~~e~r.~,J~mm~es~--~~m~.~S~wOOB~Y~·~------------------------------------------~--JL~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

SA'I'IiUI'J.Ii

ORAND OPENING

.
.
.:
:

TYKE •HIKE

Recalling her long years with the
post service, Mrs. Nesselroad says
that it has been a job with much
personal satisfaction and reward
over the year. The Reedsville Post
Office has one rural route - one of
the longest In Meigs County-which
ru ns about 88 mlles a day. Grant

For Concert Hall Sound In A
Super Compact System

OfJR SHOWROOM

POMEROY - Plans for pro·
posed reclamation projects for
Meigs County through the Division
of Reclamation were outlined •t the
recent meeting of the Meigs Sol!
and Water Consen~atlon District.
Mitch Farley, Division of Reciama·
tlon, presented a list of projects for

NOW AT RASCAfS

Nellie Evans Morgan

Rev. Oma Williams

Reclamation projects outlined

fr=====================~:

GAlLIPOLIS

OAK HILL - Funeral services
will be held at 1 p.m. today in
Kuhner-Lewis Funera l Home, Oak
Hill , for NeUie Evans Morgan , 68,
218 Madison St., Oak Hill, who died
Thursday In Oak HUl Hospital.
The Rev. James Hanna will
officiate, and burial will be in Sardis
Cemetery, near Oa k Hill.
Born Jan. ll. 1916, in Gallia
County, daughter of Myrta Parkins
Evans of Oak Hill, and the late Alton
Evans, she was a retired t('acher In
the Oak Hill school system.
Sur.oiving are her husband, Paul
Morgan; two daughters, P aula
Jorge and Lynn Gnaegy, both of
Michigan; a grandson; and a sister,
Ann Da niels of Virginia.
Memorial contributions may be
made to Oak Hill Library.

The Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Reedsville postmaster, Nesselroad retires

Area deaths
William P. Ewing

December 2, 1984 .

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

Give the gift of
:----- . personal.~, . .~.
114

't'IP

Empire's 4 most wanted home gifts
lor giving or receivinG now priced at
special Holiday savings!

DINETTE
SETS

WOOD
.ROCKER
COMPLETE
SELECTION

LAY-AWAY
FOR

THE
HOLIDAYS

�The

Ohio

Timet-Sentinel

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

December 2, 1984

:Fire damages
five buildings
- WHEELING. W.Va. (AP)-F!re
officia ls planned to begtn their
investigation Saturday into the
. causeof a fUethatheavUydarnaged
· five multi-story buildings in down·
town Whl't-~ lin~.
TWo firefighters were injured
trying to contain the fire, which
officials beli eve began about 3: 18
· p.m. Friday in a shoe repair shop on
Main Street, said Larry Carmack of
the Wheeling Fire Department.
No houses were near the area, he
said.
He said officials don't know how It
began.
The fire was brought under
control around midnight and had
been extinguished by early today.
Carmack said the fire appeared to
be contained to the five brick-and·
wood buildings, but at l east one
other building was damaged by
smoke and water.
Wheeling Fire Chief Cliff Fligar
was overcome b y smoke and Lt.
Robert Kucera was injured when he
fell through a roof. dispatcher Vicki
. Bentz said.
They were taken to Ohio Valley
Medical Center for treatment and
were released, according to a
hospital spokeswoman .

'

1t'imes.· ~eadin:el

Section~
December 2, 1984

HALLELUJAH!

Anne

Fischer leads the Comrnll!dty
Choir In "HaOelujah" fnlm
Handel's "1be Messiah" In
preparation lor the Dec. 9
perlonnance. Members of the

choir and on:heslra come fnlm
GaDia, Meigs, Mason, Jackson
and VInton counties and number

.

approximately 100 strong~ Ms.
Fischer, an Instructor at Gallla
· Academy High School, coconducts lhe concert wllh Mer·
lyn Ross of Rio Grdllde CoDege
and Community CoUege.

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:Two injured
in accident
POMEROY - Two pecple were
. injured, a vehicle heavily damaged
: and its driver charged as the result
: of a one car accident on Mulberry
Ave. at 7:10p.m. Friday.
Pomeroy Police said a car driven
by Ladirner Jeric, Athens, struck a
utility pole across from the Pome·
roy Elementary School. He and a
· passenger, John Tiemeyer , Route 1,
. Middleport, were taken to Veterans
· Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Unit a ndTiem eyerwas
admitted for treatment of injuries.
Jeric is char·ged with driving while
intoxicated. police sa id.
Police are also investigating a
hit-skip. A l9l\l auto owned by Cindy
· Hartenbach, Lincoln Hill, was
sideswiped about 8:46 p.m . Friday.

More than just conce_rt,
'The Messiah' provides
learning, fun, experience

. Emergency squads
answer six calls
POMEROY - Six calls were
answered by loca l units on Friday,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Ser\'ices reporis.
At 3:5.'i a.m. , Rutland went to
Meigs Mine l for John Ator, to
, O'Bieness Hospital in Athens;
Middleport at Jl:13 a.m. went tot he
office or Dr. James Conde · for
Elizabeth Beaumont, to Pleasant
Valley Hospital: Pomeroy at 3:54
p.m. to Pomeroy Cliff Aparemtns
for Lucy McCune. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy · at
4:28 p.m. to Brick St. for Della
Roseberry. to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 7: (Y7 p.m. to Mulberry .
Ave. for John Tiemeyer and
Ladirner Jeric, injured in an auto
accident. to Ve terans Memorial,
. and Racine a t 7:59p.m. took Chester
: Francis from Bald Knob Road to
· Veterans Memorial.

...~
.'
•.

.

·~

ENTER HERE - Co-conductor Medyn Ross directs a section on
their entraooe In Handel's "Messiah." Ross, along with Anne Fischer
have been worldn&amp;- on this production for the past six Sundays,
preparing the Community Choir for the perfonnance Dec. 9, 2: :.1 p.m.,
In the Fine and Perfonnlng Arts Center Theater at Rio Grande CoDege.

Delinquent tax list
·will be published

By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Every Sunday, approximately 100 pecple rush
through dinner and give up their afternoon , all for the love of music .
" The Messiah" has become som ewhat or an every-other-year
Institution in Gallia County, and Merlyn Ross and Anne Fischer are
dinecting the production- again.
Ross, professor of music at Rio Grande College and Community
College, said he has been directing the community·IA1de production
for the last 18 years. but the concert has a much longer history.
"It probably began about 40 years ago," Ross said. but it was not
done on a regular basis as Is the case now.
Peiiormances have been all over the county - beginning at the
Ohio Hospital for Epileptics (now Gallipolis Developmental Center),
and progressing to old Washi~on School, the gymnasium at ihe
college, Grace United Methodist Church and finally moved to the
college Fine and Perlorming Arts Center: Theater in 1974.
This year, "The Messiah" will be presented In the theater Sunday,
Dec. 9, 2:30p.m .. and involve around !ll singers and between 15 and
18 instrumentalists~
The singers and musicians gather every Sunday from Gallia,
Meigs, Mason, Vinton and Jackson counties, and the community
choir Is really a family affair. Parents bring the kids , brotners bring
each other and Ross brings hisiA~fe, daughter, a nd granddaughterall four months of her.
Why would a man do this sort of project for tht&gt; last 18 years?
Ross said·he wanted to give the college stude nts the chance to sing
oratorio and give the string players a chance to perform again.
~'And lt 1S fun." '
Ross and Ms. Fischer put the singer and instrumentalists through
two straight hours of non-stop singing and playing, and he sa id It
really isn't too difficult. He also said the music doesn 't change too
m,uch, although Ross admits to adding parts not previously
performed by the community group.
"The people involved have done this for quite a while, a nd the
newer and the students can pick it up fast." Ross said . The singers
and musicians range in age from 15 to "probably 'l:i."
And just what does he get out of It personally?
Satisfaction. "To see a job done as well as it can be."
And besides the job well done. the students learn in the process.
Ross said. "They learn chord structure and to follow the music." He

F AMILV AFFAIR - Sharmon Rankin seems obtiv!O.:.S to the events
around her, only her teddy bear and thumb mauer. Her lather, Vinton
Rankin, Is part of the Community Choir per1onning Handel's
"Messiah." WhHe lather and mother sing, Shanmn sits, sometimes,
and has been heard helping the chom~ ou some of the songs.
also added the instrumentalists c an pick up a little m ore fi ness in
the ir c raft.
Included in Merlyn's Messiah musicians. along wit h the singers,
are nute, cla rinet. oboe, french hom. trombone. trumpet. cornet,
~~olin, cello, piano, kettle dmm and synthes ized bass and
ha rpischord.
"Ba ch and Handel would ne1·e r bi:'l ievP electronic instr1lmf'nts
could sound likf' strings," he said .
But Ha ndel would probabi)' be pl ea sro with the outcom e of about
100 people who practice two hours weekl y for sLx weeks to present
"The Messiah."
LEADING AND FOU.OW.

POMEROY - A list of property
owners in Meigs County who are
de linquent in paym e nt of real estate
taxes will be publis hed in the Friday,
Dec. 7 edition of The Daily Sentinel.
However, if de linque nt taxes are
paid in full or arrangements are
made with the Meigs County
Treasurer to pay the delinquent
taxes not later than 48 hours before
the Friday publication, the parcel
will be removed from thedelinquest
list.
All delinquent la nds listed will be
certified for foreclosure by the
Meigs County Auditor unless the
taxes, assessments, interest and
penalties due are paid .

lNG - Merlyn Ross directs one
of the choral numbers from
Handel's "Messiah," ·making
&lt;:ertain not only the singers, hut
the instrumentalists come in at
lhe proper time . ROss. a professor of musk at Rio Grande
CoUege and Community College, ha.• ht.&gt;en leading the
perlonnant.-e e•eri other year
for the last JR. and said that
despite the work, the concert is
"fun to do." • Ross said i•
uncertain exaclly · when the
Community Choir. began perfanning "The Messiah," he
heUeves it has been done 'around
40 years.

Breakfast meeting
slated at Ponderosa
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Retail
Merchants Association will hold a
breakfast meeting Tuesday at
Ponderosa Restaurant.
On the agenda of the 8 a.m.
meeting, sponsored bytheGalllpolis
DaUy Tribune, will be recap of
Saturday's Christmas Parade and
the association's Christmas
promotions.
Members are reminded to mall
their checks for Christmas decorations and Shop-A-Rama participation fees. Merchants should the call
the association· office to make
reservations for the breakfast.

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Photos by
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�Page

S-2-The Sunday 'firMS-Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Pleaaant, W. Va.

December 2, 1984

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

Allisons to observe anniversary

Robin Leah Burnett, George Wharton wed
GALLIPOLIS - Robin Leah
Burnett and George Jackman
Wharton were united In marriage
by Pastor Bruce Harrls at Grace
United Methodist Church til Galli·
polls on Aug. U .
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Burnett, Kanauga,
al}d the groom Is the son of Mrs.
Kathleen Dripps, Cobbs Creek, Va.,
and Frank Wharton, Naples, Fla.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a white satin
gown with a high English net yoke
and fitted bodice trimmed with
alencon lace and beading. The
semi-princess style skirt was ga.
thered at the sides and fell to a

Foilowlilg the ceremony, a lllltret
and Thomas Burnett, Gallipolis,
chapel·length train. ·She wore a hat
brothers of the bride. AU of the.men dinner was held at the Holiday Inn. ···
of shlffli lace with beading, silk
In the wedding party were attired til Serving the cake l"ere Beth Thompflowers, and satin ribbOn trtm.
son and Carolyn Taylor, frtl!nds d.
grey tuxedos.
Serving as matron of honor was
Organist was Mrs. Edith A· Ross the bride. Music was provided by
Jo Ellen Garbesl, Washington, Pa.,
and Andrea Klesllng, cousin of tile The Last Shot Band.
sister of the bride. Bridesmaids
After honeymooning in Berbride, was soloist. Registering
were Tina RIISSell, Gallipolis, and
muda,
the couple now n!!lde at ·, ·
guests
was
Lori
Meadows,
trtend
of
Cynthia McLaughltil, San Fran·
7il996
Detroit
Road, RockY River,
the
bride.
cisco, Callt., friends of the bride.
Ohio.
They wore. matching gowns of
orchid taffeta.
Serving as best man was Peter r-------------,....:...------~Ganya1'(!, Bay VIllage, Ohio, trtend
. - • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • • . ,·-.

6~.:n

of
were Christopher
Laughlin, Bay VIllage, and Steven
Herbig, Ctilclnnatl, friends of the
groom. Ushers were John Burnett

I

J

·

I
M

LADY'S SEVEN
DIAMOND CLUSTERS

I
.------------------1 I
MARE PLEASED TO HAVE VERA -ZUSPAN
JOHNSON Of MASON JOIING OUR STAFf.
ALSO EVELYN WHITE IS BACK
S500 OFF PERM SPECIAL
$200 OFF HAIR COLORING

l)

Mr. and Mrs. George Wharton

Katies korner

Seven Dlaiu!h,

~antiques.

, The window holds a Hoosier
:cabinet, pie sale, quilts, old fashion
;'baby highchair, small trainer
:sleigh, granite ware and baskets to
name a few.
• To put the icing · on the old
:fashioned decorations white .lights
surround the windows. From what
·they tell me the window is
;outstanding.
; It would be worth your time to
• take a peek.
: Also. Top of 'The Stairs, located on
' Second Street. has the old-fashioned
; look.
; All windows in Pomeroy are
· attractively decorated. Francis
: Florist always has a beautiful
• window as does Clark's Jewelry,
: Elbertelds, Pomeroy Flower Shop,
; I could go oil and on.
: The Bend Area Merchants Asso: elation is promotiong the Old
; Fashion Christmas theme and a
; good one It Is. Pomeroy merchants,
' you are doing a fine job - keep It
•~ up.

i , On Sunday, November 25, Pome·

roy

~
merchants held an open house
; ~hich was very successful. Rumor
' has it tha t a similar event will take
: p,lace before Christmas. Let's hope
: !OJ it was stimulating in more
: ways than one.

•'

: I was so sorry to learn of the death
: of Charles Russell and Grace
• Jones.
I was out of town at the time and
was unable to pay my respects.
• They were both fine people and
i long time friends.

i

$89.00

422 SECOilll¥1., GlWPOUS, OH.

'

Costume
institute
.
g1ven a grant

I -·
I

,.

JACKm
REG. S79 to S160

. $4900
TO

S11200
38 to 44
MANY STYLES I COLORS
INClUDING lUTHER

Campus

'

R.P.M.
Regular 167.50 to

. ...

.....

$5600

.,
.. .,..'
~

. .

"'

lEST SEifCnON
OF 50111, STRt~S

·•

LARGE SELECTION

~/;:.,anu

TONE ON TONE
14 1/t to 17 1h

SIZES 36 TO 42

If you are planning to have
Santa Claus deliver your
Christmas diamond,
Now is the right time to
Make your selection .

..
..

&amp; lONGS

••

Playtex
Maidenform
Bali
Bras, Girdles, Slips
Panties and
Camisoles
Regular 16.50 ta 529

$455
TO

Bobbie Brooks

l

,
1
;
•

'

~

Well, I suppose most of you out
there are about ready for the big
day, Christmas shopping completed and all gifts wrapped?
You think that's funny - well
now not really. I just know you are
more organized than I am and have
everything under control.
Oh well, If your not you have
plenty of lime- that's what I keep
telling myself. Just walt, Christmas
will be here and I will still be
plugging along, well maybe coast·
lng a little.

• And so it goes --do_have a nice .
week.

COME IN AND
SEE II TODA Y1

Lifestyle
Fu.NI1U.E

INTRODUCTORY
SALE PRICE
•FREE DEUVERY
•FREE PARKING

$74

OPEN DAILY TO s P.M.
MON. &amp; FRI. TO 8 P.M.

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFATION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN
CORNER OF THRtO &amp; OLIVE • GALLIPOLIS • 446 -3045

SHOWCASE

.

est
or ess • • •

$J50

Massive modern pi Ilow-back
rocker- ree l iner.

Regular $19

ENTIRE STOCK

They're the most rewarding gifts you can
give! Roomy and comfortable, they have a
special device that allows you to fully re·
cline while only inches from a wall! All are
tailored in beautiful decorator fabrics, too!
And for this week only, the prices are more
comfortable than you'd believe possible!

-

..

.,. .COtCI • .,... • .......

.......

..""" .... ~ Ollll.olltv

-

New Ship!MIIt
Just Arriwtd

Trad itional rocker-recl iner
with tuf ted baclf

gaulg~

·•
.,

CREW NECK SWEATERS

AT LEAST

WHAT IS A Bed-in-a-Box?
_STORABLE, OVERNIGHT COMFORT!
THE PERFECT GUEST BED; EASY CAllY,
EASY SU UP, EASY STORE

'

.,., .

sao

TO

·,$1680

-

..

$1190
TO

NEW YORK tAP ) - United
States consumption of ice cream In
1983 totaled more than 887 million
gallons, or more than 15 quarts per
person, according to Chocolatier
magazlrie.
It says ice cream is consumed by
over 98 percent of all U.S. house·
holds with &amp;I percent of the
population buying ice cream at least
once a month. Over one-third of all
households are considered heavy
users of the cold stuff since they eat
at least one gallon every two weeks .

-

..
.
'•.,.

SPORTCOATS ·

Regular 51 7 to 52 4

Americans and
.
tee cream

Ltfest_y}e FURNITURE .SHOWCASE

.,'",

Pillow-bac k recliner with
extra th1c k sea t.

"

$295

JUNIORS
S, M, l

30°/o

MANY
COlORS
&lt;-JC.......;;=.J . )

g).&lt;---=.) . . . . . . ,/

CHECKING ACCOUNT
IN SOUTHERN OHIO

OFF

---

Katie, we love you and may your
·
l
Also !Ike to send belated best
wishes to Norma Goodwin.
;
Norma never forgets others on
i birthdays and anniversaries. I
J really don't know how she does it .
, You can almost bank on a card
when an Important date Is coming
up. She Is fantastic .

Pointotlias • PoHed &amp; Hanging lloskot'
Foliage Plants - Polttd I Hanging las·
ket'- Christmas Cactus, African Violot'Christmas Treos. Wreaths, Gravt lfrm.
ket" Condit AriDiigino•ltf. llamemadt ·
Apple Butter &amp; other novoltits.
Open DaUy 9 to 5
Sun. 1 to 5
PHONE 992-5776

...
.

AND

DRESS SHIRTS

1
M=~:~~dr:
!s:':h~~~rts be
omitted.

r-;.==:;;;~::::;:;::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::·

recliners by

0

Sweet, lovable Katie Guth will be
~ markingablrthdayonDecember3.
• Katie will be 92.
i Katie Jives on Mulberry Avenue,

1 day be a great one.

o,,g,,,
F"

"
....

i

lI ~~~e~~· lo~!e~ h~":rd~ro~aio11::.

Now

Ch,lrtm~t

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Arrow, Van Heusen
·AND Artemus

. Hatting
reception
be S\le
Ann
Boatlc,theBetty
Gooch,will
Esttvaun

Hubbarcfs Greenhouse

NEW YORK lAP) - The
Costume Institute of the Metropoli tan Museum of Art has been given
an anonymous grant of $250.001
The money is to be spent over a
flvl'-year period for physical lm·
provements, conservation research, and curatorial study .
' ·The Costume Instltute'scollectlon
consists of over 45,00) objects
representing five centuries and five
conttilents. Its library houses over
78,00) Items.

...,,

MEMBERS ONLY and
Campus

Electric an~ Furniture Company.

Classified advertising pays off

Mr. and Mrs. John Allison

.

·.r ~ ••

rt====================~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::__::::::::::::..::·::·::·:·::-::·::·:·::·::·::·::·:-::-::-::•:'·::-::-::·::-:·::·~-: ·

i
I

The couple are both former
school teachers. they were the

...

Compare at $110.00 ·

Merchants
•
nottee
season
By KATIE CROW
' Times-Sentinel Conoespondent
It's beginning to look a lot like
·c hris tmas llowntown Poml'roy that is.
. Down at Meigs
Tire Center, John
;F ultz, owner, in
•keeping with the
'theme "Old Fashioned Christmas,"
:has outstanding decorations, all

II.

'

I! ~TAWNEY JEWELERS

CALl TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT
DIANN, EVELYN, VERA OR JANET
773-6404- MASON. W.VA.

I;·

They were married D€cember
10, 1934 In Catlettsburg, Ky. , by the
Rev. A. P. Keyser. They are the
parents of one son, John J. Allison

ownen and operators of the Allison

I ,;

I
I
I

THROUGH DEC. 8TH

J·'
~· ,'
,
.

I
II

JANET'S HAIR GO ROUND
' ' !i i ~l'

Mr. and Mrs.
John Allllon .of 132 Por111nouth
Road, Galllpolla, wm ob!lerve their
I!Oth wfCidlng annlveriary ~. 9
frQm 2· to 4 p.m. with an Qpen
reception lor friends and relatives at
the Senior ·Citizens Center In
Gautpons.
She Is the daughter of Edward T.
and DovleCarter Jones and heist he
son of Arthur and Estella Gal·
la~~gher Allison.
They attended college at Rio
Grande College, and Allison at·
tended Ohio University and Wilmington College, receiving a B.S. In
Education from Wilmington.
GALLIPOLIS -

The Sunday Times-S.ntinei-Pag• S-3 ·

Skirted trad itiona l rec liner
with T-c us h10n .

Shadow line
ROBES
AND

~1~

LeTIGRE•

SLEEPWEAR
Regular S1'4 ta 160

$980
TO

$4200
IAIGI SEIImoN
Of COlOIS, STYlES

BOYS'
SHIUS
SLACKS
a• SWEATERS

SPORTSWEAR
Regular
S30 Ia S80

$2100

Regullll' '17.50 to Sf2

TO

$1225

$5600

TO

AND FUlKS

S1540
MANY

smrs 1 c01.oas

SIZES I TO 20

$

JUNIOR

Compounded D a i I y

SWEATERS
JACKETS ·
SKIRTS
SLACKS
&amp; TOPS

'

.'

·,

''

..
.

LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
3 Miles 'Out Bulaville Road

·.
,

; .
,,.,.
~

Come try our apece·aevlng
Well-Sever recliner!
Sit back and unwind In this comfortably plush Wall Saver®.
The squashy pillow back, thick T-cushion seat and padded
arms offer total relaxation. Versatile design In a sleek
fabric with tufted accents goes great anywhere!

't

::

$295

'

441 2nd Avenue
GaUipolls, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-3382

PHONE 446-0322

~

rufted·back recliner In

a

$225 ~1~.,...~, -

L-----~M~o_n_d_a_y_t_h_ru__sa_t_u_rd_a_y_9__A_.M__._'T_ii_S__P_.M_.___________po_p_u'a_r-de-slg_n_. __________~l

�Page BA-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point

December 2, 1984

W.Va.

Pomeroy-Miclclleport-Gallipolil, Ohi-'oint Plea1ant, W. Va.

Calendar
•

SUNDAY
POMEROY - A musical lor
Christmas, "The Reason for the
Season," will be presented Sunday at 7:~ p.m. at Mount
Herm on United Brethren
Churc h. T~xas com munity. The
public is in\·ited.
POMEROY - Re,vival servi-·

BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT NOW AT SALE PRICE AND RECEIVE ANGHER CHf11STMAS GIFT FREE

ces will begtn Sunday evening at
Burlin g h a m Com munit y
Church, with Evangelist Harry
Wringler. Services will begin
nlghtly at 7 a nd continue through
Wednesday.

MONDAY
CROWN CITY - A revival
will be held at King's Chapel
Chureh, starting Monday and
ending Saturday. Services begin
nlghtly at 7.

f.

BUY ANY 2 or 3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE AT THE SALE PRICE SPECIALLY MARKED FOR THIS SALE AND RECEIVE YOUR CHOICE OF THE
FOLLOWING: 6 or 10 GUN-CABINET, ASMALL or LARGE CURIO or
A 4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE FREE.

.

FREE FREE FR EE FREE

CURIO
Up To

GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Branch Meeting of AA UW will
be Monday. 7: 1~ p.m ., at the
home of Betty Kyger. 1!»4, for
the a nnual Ch tistmas Goodies
Tasting Party. Musica l program will be by the Madriga ls.
KANAUGA- The re will be a
Neighborhood Watch mreting
for citizens and businesses in
Kanauga. Monday, 7: :lO p.m. a t
the Holida y Inn. For infOtmation , contact thi&gt; She riff's Department a t 446-1221.

c,~j

II

~ ·~

j

•· ,

.

v

FRIGIDAIRE MICROWAVE
OVEN - A $390 VALUE

END TABLES' :I

-·. [11~ .
'

I

PERFECT CIIRISTMAS
C/FTS!

FREE.

$28° 0

REG. S59 95 NOW
*MARBLE TOP STAND
*CHERRY GALLERY STAND
*OAK MAGAZINE TABLE
*OAK TELEPHONE STAND

$2

-:. ..

-

ROLL TOP DESK

BUY ACURIO OR GUN CABINET AT TttE SPECIAL
SALE .PRICE AND RECEIVE A S30 .TELEPHONE

YOUR CHOICE

BRASS HALL TREE
$79 95 NOW
800

BUY ANY LA-Z-BOY OR
BERKLINE RECLINER AT THE
SALE PRICE AND RECEIVE
A $30 TELEPHONE FREE.

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

.

.

G ' N CABINET

-GAL LIPOLIS -The children of
Lro na Whitt and Kenneth Ra lph
a nnou nced their forthcoming wed ding Dec. 8, 7: .10 p.m. a t F ir"
Baptist Church. c;·a llipolis . with the
Re,-. Joseph God11·in officiatin g
Open churc h will be obs('!Yed .

ALL

Rec0ption will fo llow at home of
th0 bride's daughter. Mrs. Kay
Hockma n. K_q :;or.

ZENITH CONSOLES
MARKED DOWN FOR CHRISTMAS

lowe~f

Meigs
school
menu set

p,;cu Atoundl

LECTA -There will be Bible
Study with the Rev. Earl Hinkle
a t Wainut RidgP Church. Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m .

P.O:VJtROY - The school lunch
pi'O&gt;!ram in thP ~1Pig' Local School
Di strict forth(' ll'('('k of[)('(' . .1-i ha s

GALLIPOLIS - Ga Iii polis
Rotary will meet Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at Oscar's. ·

lx'cn announc'l 'ff .
I n arco rd.:-1na• ~..dth thC" uniform
lunch program. rhc m {'nu " ·i\l lx• as

VIRGINIA HOUSE

9!.

WOOD TABLE &amp; CHAIRS
Reg.

sno

NOW

$49995

1':!11-il':l~--~ Bill 'ES::&lt; ~ ~ 1':!11 'ES::&lt;I':!II ~ 13::1 !E$;11 i!OI B~

• Broyhill'_

MIDDLEPORT - The annual
bazaar and luncheon of the Hea th
United Methodist Church, Middleport, will be held Tuesday
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

NOW

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville PTO will be sponsoring a
Christmas baza ar a t 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday following the regular
PfO meeting. The public is
invited .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club Christ mas party
wlll be held at 6 p.m. Tuesday ~I
Trinity Church whe re dinner ~&lt;1ll
be served. The group will go to
the home of Dorothy MorTis for a
program .
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post :19, American Legion, will
hold its Christmas dinner at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the post home. A
meeting will follow the dinner.

MATTRESS CLEARANCE -

1st COME 1st SERVED!!

3-New Sealy Queen Size Mattress ........................~~!~ ..S99
1-Queen Size (Blue) Pair ...................................... $199.9 S
2 -Mismatch Full Size Pair .....................................~~!~...599

u·

BUY ANY 2 TABLES IN STOCK AT REGULAR
AND GET A THIRD ONE FREE!

$899 9 5

Regular $1966

NOW

HeJlth

GI proble1ns
Uy Lawrence Lamh, ~I. D.
DEAR DR L.-\MB- I 11·en t to a
gastrointest inal speciali st becausP
I was ha,·ing an unusual am ou nt of
gas and stomac h bloa ting .

blt)(Ki a nal~· sb . :\'ot hin g showPd up
\\'rong at all.
ThC'n hr gan' !11P su mP pills ~o

$99995

"' "''cu lled l.ihrux. I don·t like the
pi lls. The)· make me drows)' and
causE' rn~· n r'l~(' .:J nd throa t to dr:v out .

I read 1h'" th is dru g u·eat s
s)·m ptoms ont ,· a nd will not get to
the root of the pm blrm . I would like
to know v.: hat isca usingal l th is gas.

Is it pos&lt;ible 1hat l l'ould havr some
food a ll0rg:.·?
Thr doctor :tskPd if I sm oked ,
which I do not. and told me to cut out
caffri nr. which I ha,-r do n!'.
Dt::AH HEADER -The Librax
rna~· not })(' .1!'. bad a~ ~~ou sC'E' m to
think . It

WEDNESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - Grace United Methodlst Women will meet
at 7: :Kl p.m. Wednesday for a
general meeting in the chapel.
Marianne Campbell will have
the program and Installation of
officers for the new Year will be
conducted. The executive comrnlttee will meet prior to the
. - meeting at 6: :Jl p.m. Hostess will
. be Martha Unlt.

ta llows in al l schoo ls :
Morlda~·: Ha mburgl' r on bun.
frmc h fri es . mixed fr11it dn&lt;:l milk .
1'uf'Sdo): Pizza bu rger . corn.
pcachPs. ca ke and milk .
\\'ednesda)': hamburger gra,·y.
mashed pot a tocs. gr('('n bean s. jello.
hot mils a nd butter· and milk.
T hursd a,·: Chili. c heese wedge,
peanut butl er sa nd11·1ch. pears.
mil k.
F'rida_,·: Cooks' choice.

The doctor ordered a s10m ach
and gal l bladder X-ra,- plus a stool

Example:
BROYHI_LL CHERRY DINING. ROOM SUITE, CHINA, 6 CHAIRS

MIDDLEPORT - A regular
meeting of Middleport Lodge363. ,
F&amp;AM. wUl be held at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday. Refreshments will be
served following the meeting.

REEDSVILLE- OliveTownshJp Trustees will meet In ·
regular session at 6: :JJ p.m .
Wednesday a I the Reedsville
Fire Station. Meetings will be at
6: ~ during all of the winter
months.

CALUPOLJS - Mr. and Mrs .
Norman Snyder a nd Mr. and Mrs .
Donald Dilliner of Belpre are
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
child ren. Tammy S. Snyder and
Btyan .J. Di lline r.
ShP is a 1979 graduate of Galli&lt;.
Academy High Sc hool a nd is
presently employed a t Ohio Valley
Bank Co.
He is a 1979 graduate of Belprt·
High School. and recently com pleted a tour of du ty with the U.S.
Marine Corps, Kaneole Bay, Ha wa ii. He is present ly employed at
Camde n-Clark Hospital. Parkersburg , W.Va .
An opc•n churc h wedding will take
pla ce Dec . 29, ·a t 7: .10 p.m . in St.
Mark 's United Methodist Church,
Belpre. The couple will reside in
Belpre.

Whitt - Ralph

A '500 VALUE

TIJESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - French City
Garden Club will meet at noon
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Marie Lucas. The re will be
potluck a nd gift s will be
exchanged .

!

SnyderDilliner

-:·····--j1
.

Value

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis ·
Junior Women's Club will meet
Monday at Woodland Centers.
New members are to meet at 7
p.m .. others at 7:30 p.m. Bring
a n ornament and a snack .

GALLIPOLIS - DAR will
meet Monday, 7:30 p.m., a t the
home of Mrs: Charles Murray. A
Christmas program will be
given.

BUY A BEDROOM SUITE AT THE SPECIALLY MARKED SALE PRICE AND GET YOUR
STAND FREE AND RECEIV-E YOUR CHOICE OF the following: QUEEN or FULL BOXSPRING AND
MAnRESS, 4 PC. aEDROOM SUITE OR FRIGIDAIRE MICROWAVE OVEN FREE.

•soo

CROWN CITY - The Rev.
Morris Wickline will be guest
speaker a t King's Chapel
Church at 7 p.m . Monday.

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Heart Associa tion will
meet . at noon Monday in the
French 500 Room at Holzer
Medical Center.
·

1-lERE ARt JU Sl A FEW OF THE SAVINGS

Gibson
Model RT19F SWM

REFRIGERATOR
Reguldr Price

$799.95 W.T.

$

64995

Gibson·

Gibson·

WAS '319.95

, ONLY 5 LEFT AT

$

24995

Model RT14FIWM

REFRIGERATOR

5

Black Glass See- Thru Door makes it
easy to check prol(l'ess of foods while the
oven is cooking.

Cycle End Signal alerts youwhen a
timed cycle has ended and the timer
reaches zero.

· Removable Glass Tray catches
boilovers and drippings. Removes easily for
cleaning at the sink or in your dishwasher.

cont~1i n ~

L ibrium. which is

a tranquilizer. plus an antispas modic. Somr peop le e xperience gas
pains lx-ca usr of a spasm in the
colon. The spas m litterally cloSes
the colon and traps gas behind the
spasm . The gas then builds up
pressure a nd caust?S symptom s.
Without the spasm . the gas passes,
often unnoticed and without causing symptoms.
'
You can It~· a n Pli m ina ti on diN .
Do n't eat or drink a nyt hing exeept
distilled water. s tea med rice and
lean meat for a few days. Use no
seasoning except salt. It is a tetTible
diet , but i1 your gas symptoms ;go
away. the n you ca n be fairly certain
that some food s or beverages ani at
the root of the problem. Then add
one food it em at a time each few
days.

�Pwtt

~The Sunday Ti;_s-Sentinel

December 2, 1984

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. VQ.

2, 1984

Brenda K. Boggs, Timothy Stephens wed
-

.

POMEROY - Brenda K. Boegs, and pink silk buttr!Ues Intertwined
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. BUss A.
the I'Oiel. She also a
Boggs of .Reedy, W. Va. and heart-shaped locket, a i1tt trqm her
Timothy James Stephens, sono!Mr .. matron otbonor ,earrings, glttofher
and Mrs. Edward Stephens, Palm sister, and her mother's amethyst
Beach, Fla. wereunltedln marriage ring.
on Oct. ~at 4 p.m. by the Rev. Jan.
Matron• of honor was Barbara
Griesinger.
Lawson Bays, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
The private outdoor ceremony and brtdesmald was Amy Marte
was pedormed at the Stephens'
Mace, Riverton, Wyo., niece of the
farm In Meigs County. The outdoor bride. Mrs. Bays was Wi&gt;re a
. altar was centered with one large chemise of burgundy, featuring
butterfly candle flanked by two button-cuffed long sleeves and a
single tapered candle.
high rolllng neckline. Miss Mace
G ultartst and singer, Michael wore a pale fuchsia fitted sldr\
Rhodes provided the wedding accented with rows of vertical lace
music. ·Selections included "Take
trtm to correlate with her longMe Home, Country Roads" and
sleeved ruffled blouse. Both·attend"Islands in the Stream." The ·a nts carried bouquets of pink roses
e ntrance of the attendants and the
and baby's breath trimmed In white
brtde was to the accompariiment of
ribbon.
"Annie's Song _" An integral eleBest man was Daniel Sorden of
men t of I he actual ceremony was the
Palm Beach, Fla. Ushers were Dale
performance of "Wind Beneath My
K. Anderson, Albany, and Paul
Wings."
Beavers, Athens. Ms. Zerelda
The bride wore a full-length gown,
Richards, Spencer, W.Va., regisstyled from the antebellum era,
which she created. The fabrtc was
calico print with a mauve back- .----------~--'-1
ground accented with pink flowers. ·
The fitted bodice was fashioned With ·
elastic forming the off.the-shoulder
Sou the rn effect, with !)owing three- ,
quarter length butterfly sleeves.
The skirt was gathered to a fitted
waistline and featured a panel in the
center front which fell Into a V shape ·
below the na tural waistline. There
was a 12-lnch deep full gathered
ruffle which encircled the gown.
The bride's bouquetwasofmauve
a nd pink roses With baby's breath

amona

~~- . \

Stephens, Brenda K. Boggs

~: $frif6r .aaivities
· ·.' Galfia Cottnty

mashed potatoes, mixed fruit.

~·

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
thl! ·week Q1·,l)ec . 3-7 at the Senior
Ci!&amp;:ens ~er, located at' 220
- ·Jadotson Pifie, are as follows :
, .. ·Pifonday. Dec . 3 - Ceramics,
Clt!Ss 9:30 a.m.-noon; Chorus. 1-3
p.!tf.
· 'Pllesda)lj.~· Dec. 4 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10: 31)'·a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 5 - Legal
Services, 10 a. m.: Vinton Bible
StU'(jy, 1 p.m.; Crown City Mobile
, Unit, 1 p.m.;;CardGames, 1-3p.m.;
American &amp;iterature, 1 p.m.
Thursday, .Dec. 6- Bible Study,
11 a.m.-noon.
Friday, Dec. 7 - Staff Breakfast
and Meetlrig, 8-9a.m.: A rt Class , 1:3
p.m. ; Craft Mlni ·Course, 1-3 p.m .
·'
The Senior Nutrition Program
-;:. wtlt:serve the following menus:
ll4onday - Sa usage part y,
. creamed peas , spiced apple slices,
~!: peats , rolls.
·
Thesday - Baked macaroni / cheese, kale, beets, je llo/ lopping ,
bread .
Wedn esda y - Mt&gt;&lt;Hioaf, noodles,
broccoli and eaulinower,' gingerbrea d, rolls.
Thursday - Pinto beans/ham ,
-·'. coleslaw, peaches, cornbread.
· · F)lda~ - Roast beef, green
. _" beali~. !'(lashed potatoes. fruit
cocktail , rolls.
Choice of bevl'rage served with
each meal.

Meigr Cottn!JI
POMEROY- The Meigs Counry
Senior Citizens Center, Mulben y
He ight s. Pomeroy. ha' the following activities scheduled for the
week of Dec. J-7:
Monday - Phys ic a l Fitness ,
11 : 45 a.m.: Squa re Dance, 1-:1 p.m.
Tuesday - · Trip to Huntiilgton
Mall, (pave at 9::!0 a.m.; Physica l
Fi Tness. 11:45 a.m .; Craft s. JO
a .m.-noon; Chorus Practice. 1-2
p.m .; Nutrition Educa tion at U : 15
a .m. b)' June Rhodes, R.D.
Wednesda y - Socia l Security
Represe nt a ti ve.· HI a .m .· noon ;
Phys ica l - Fitness, 11 : 45 a. m .;
Bingo, 1-2 p.m.; Bowling, 1:30 p.m.
Thu rsday - Holiday Bazaar, 9
a.rJ\.·4 p.m.
Holi day )3azaar, 9
Friday .a.m .-4 p.m.; P ublic Dinner fro m 4
to·6 p.m. , ftie menu is c hoice of beef
stew or· d't&gt;amed baked chicken,
'), Wttlf ('Ole S)aw, mil , and beverage
~,, \'t)r ·f2.50, pie, cake a nd ice cream
exthi, round and square dance
(roM7to 10 p.m. with music by the
Sti:fngdustrrs, a dmission $1.
. The following week , Jay Warnslev, attor ney for the Area Agency
o~ Agi ng , will be a t the center on
TuO'sday, Dec.l1 . from 9: 30to 11:30
a.m. ff y&lt;J).l arP owr 60 and have
· iieiia for lega l service s , call Leafy
" Chasteen a t 992-2161 to make an
appointment.
-The quarterly birthday party will
ft.:;rllurstliiy, Dec . 13. Wednesday,
De(!. 12. af1 p.m. will be thP second
program onMain tenanceofHea lth,
s ponsored by the Holze r Medical
C&lt;r,.er anti Hol?.cr Clin ic Ltd. The
. : s~kers will · be Dr. Charles E .
HafU,r Jr.t'And Susan M . Cheney,
"' R.~.
~
·· ··~
. .
'IJite Sefllor Nutrition Program
menu for..tre week is :
, MondaY:·- Wien&lt;'r. sauerkra ut,

-

given

Tuesday

~

·

Chicken-rice casse·

role, green beans, biscuit, oranges
a nd ba nanas, sugar cookie.
Wednesday Roast beef,
mashed potatoes, slaw, va nilla
pudding over bananas in graham
cracker crust.
'
Thursday- New England boiled
dinner, applesauce, pum;Jkin cake.
F r iday - Macaroni and cheese,
peas and carrots, pears, bran
muffin, pie.
A c hoice of milk, coffee.or tea is
available with meals.

r;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;l

tered auests. A fireworks display
pi'I!IM!IIted at the C!)nclualon of the
ceremony whlle Rhodei performed
" YourLoveHasL11tedMeHigher."
An outdoor reception followed the
ceremony. The main reception
table was covered with pink
overlaid with printed cloth of
mauve, pink and purple butterfiies.
The wedding cake was an elevated
foot·and·a-half purple butterfly,
flanked by double candleabra and
crystal punch service with pink
punch.
.
Reception aides were Ga ll Hecky,
Athens; and Debra Watts, Pippa
Passe, Ky. · Another table was
decorated With a floor length beige

cloth and overlay of deep purple and
two 12-lnch net (uchsla and plllk
butterflies. Amy Marie Mace pre·
sided at the refreshment table.
Another party was gtven In honor of
·the bride and groom by closefrtends
and family following tlle formal
reception.
Ms. Boggs received her M .Ed. in
community counseling from Ohio '·
University In June and is currentlyc
taking a yearsabbatical to complete
newspaper and journal articles.
Stephens Is a professional portrait
artist.
They plan to reside in Meigs
County.

your
a1Ut'
appreciate 365
a year •••
1et It lor yourself!

the trouble
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c f 'J:cvthr&gt;a~lf''r'l Oh10

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Nobody worka harder to get your

PER ROOM

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1
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Good U,e cnrpet
• Thru Dec. 22 · - 1013 . , . _ , _ . . , ........,,..,.,,,..

Give

By the Eclitot'll
of Coaswne., Reports
The basic functional difference
:bet:we.en a $200 stereo receiver and
that sells for '$lXl or .more, at
discount, is In the power of the
amplifier. The higher-priced units
also have special features and
computer technology that makes
those models very convenient to
use.
Consumer Reports' electronics
engineers tested :bJ receivers In the
s:JX).plus price range. They deliver,
on average, nearly twice the power
·
of lower-priCed mOdels.
Bvt that doesn't mean they can be
played tWice as loudly or that you'll
necessarily receive better sound. It
does mean that you can tum up
their volume somewhat more
Without rtsklng the hard and
poten !Ially s peaker-da maglng
sound known as cUpping.
You may need that extrapowerlf _
you play music very loudly or want
to hear the unusually strong, deep
bass sounds of organ music. You
might also neect the extra power If
you want to flll an unusua lly large
room, or -have the sound carry
·clearly from the living room to the ·
.
dining room.
Nearly all of the receivers
received high marks in the engineers' tests. Differences were
negligible among four top-rated

Not worth

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for Christmas
0

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SPECIAL OFFER; LIMITED TIME ONLY

ASK US!
GALLIPOLIS
TRAVEL AGENCY
446-0699

Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Times-Sentinei- Page-8-7

The

Higher priced stereos deliver exaCtly what you pay
models - ll1e Sherwood S2660CP,
$400; the Mftsublshl DAJU5, $330;
the Scott 359RS, $400; and the
Onkyo TX35, $345. ,
There's ·not much to fault In 11
other models that also rated highly.
They are the Akal AAR32, $330;
Realistic STA2270, $400; Yamaha
R70, $465; Sony STRVX550, $300;
Marantz SR6:bl, .$400; Pioneer
SX50, $380; Harman-Kardon
HK5901,525; Hitachi HTA4F, $340;
NC RX44; $330; Fisher RS255,
$250; and, Nikko NR 700, $380.
Because the highly rated models
all performed so well, prlce is as
good a factor as any on which to
base your choice of a receiver. But
check for discounts. Some brands
normally sell for 25 percent or more

off 'list price.
Consumer Reports' electronics
engineers say that the extra money
you pay for these receivers also
buys a lot of convenience. For
Instance, you don't have to fuss over
the precise tuning of radio stations.
Tuning Is handled by microcomputers . You just choose the station you
want - the receiver )akes it from
there.
You can preset buttons for
stations that you listen to regularly,
the way you preset stations on a car
radio. On some receivers, each
button can preset two statons- one
In FM and one in AM . On others,
buttons switch to AM or AM
depending on the station asslghed to
each .

Monday thru Friday
9AMto9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
WAl k IN ()R tALl H)JI

AN

A~~OIN I ~Htf

446-9510 .
A NfW DIRfCTION IN HAIR Of SIGN"

Dear Meg

llc:alL"d

·-:.

Ohio

By Meg Whll!'omb
DEAR MEG -Myboyfrtendand
I graduated from the same high
school in June of last year and we're
studying at the same university.
Jerry Is on a partial scholarship and
took out a student loan , so he is
always up against the wall as far as
m oney is concerned. At the beginning of our sophomore year thi s
September, he was short of money,
so I loaned him $500. To do this, I
had to make a withdrawal from my
savings account . I wouldn't have
done It except that we're practically
engaged, or so I thought.
1'wo weeks ago J er ry stopped
calling. I. left three notes at his
dorrri, but he dldn 't call m e until last
night. He a pologized and started
hedging when I asked what was
wrong. Then the truth came out:
He'smetanothergirlandthlnkswe
should break up "for a while." I
asked him about the m onty and he

NOW AVAILABLE AT THE
C&amp;S BANK NO PAYMENT
UNTIL FEBRUARY 1_, 1985 ·ON
ANY NEW 1984 OR 1985
MODEL AUTOMOBILE. JUST PICK
OUT THE ONE YOU WANT AND
COME IN AND SEE US~ THIS IS
A LIMITED TIME OFFER, SO ·
DON'T DELAy BUY TODAY!

Many receivers have special
mOdes and sWitches to accommodate marginal reception. Some
have special tone controls, in .
addition to the usual bass and treble
controls. that let you customize
tonallty to suit your taste on the
program material.
With most models, you can hook
up two tape decks. That lets you
copy a tape. The unusual · tape
faclllty might also be used to
·connect an equallzer, a noise

reduction unit , or as an extra Input
for the audio from a TV or video
cassette recorder .
Some · receivers have station
displays that ca n be read frorn
extra-high and extra-shallow angles - an important fea ture if you
plan to Install the unit on a low shelf.
Wor a special reprint of Consumers Union 's evaluation of burglar
alarms send SJ for each copy to
CONSUMERS, P.O. Box 461, Radio
City Station , New York, N .Y . 10019.

Be sure to ask for tlw reprtnt on
burglar a larms 1.

r--"'-----'-------------------1
Ollti!JO

rom

fii"eJiibi;.':":"'-------------~

IS PEACE WITH GOD ESSENTIAL?
William B. Kuglln
"And l&lt;lt the peace of God rule in y&amp;ur hearti to the which ye are
coUed in one body; and be ye thankful" (Col. 8:15),
"Peace" describes t he "harmonious relationship between God and
man, accomplished in the gospel." The only way w~ can ~. at peace
with God Is to accept His terms of peace set forth m the gospel of
peace" (Rm . 10:15) by which we are called (2 .Thess. 2:14). The good
news (gospel) is that Christ came to save sinners and to establish the
truth (gospel) that is able to set us free from sin, "And ye shall know
the truth and tlte truth shaJJ mtlke you free" (Jno. 8:32).
.
Peace And Baptism
Peace is made possible by Christ's blood, "But now in. Christ Je""'f.
ye who B&lt;nnetimes were far off are made n1gh by the blood of Chnst
(Eph. 2:13), To be at peace with God, it is of necessity that we ~ontact
His blood . The only way we contact His bl(!od is to be "baptiz;ed mt~ hu;
death " (Rm. 6:3) where His blood was shed (J no. 19 :33,34). In b'!-ptlSm,
the "old man is crucified with him, that the b~y of Bin m1ght . be
destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve nn (Rm. 6:6). Commg
forth from the watery !!"'ave (baptism), our sins have been washed
away by the blood ofChr1st, and we, having died ~o sin, are freed. from
sin (Rm. 6 :7). The soul is pure and clean. We, havmg entered Chrtst by
baptism (Gal. 3:27), are new creatures In Him, "Therefore if any man
be in Chmt, he is a new creature; old thmgs are pa.ssed away; behold,
aU thing• are become new"l2 Cor. 5:171. and are to "walk tn new;ness of
life" (Rm . 6:4). The spiritual inan (heart). is now clea.n, meetmg the
conditions through which comes the forgiVeness of sms. He IS now
saved and arlded to the church by the Lord, "And the Lord added to the
church dmly such as should be saved" (Acts 2:47).
'peace 1D The Church
God bestows upon the obedient believer peace with Him through
Jesus His Son. The obedient believer now experiences the ne~
relationship as a "new creature," and enjoys. the unity and peace thiS
relationship brings by way of t~e gospel. He ts m t.~e church , the bOOy
of Christ, where God allows HIS peace to rmgn, And that he !"1ght
recoocile both unto God in one body by the eros•, havmg slam the
enmity thereby" (Eph. 2:16). Everyone in the church is encouraged to
be thankful for the peace that God has given in ,tile body. to all t hose
who obey. Is it possible for man to be saved wtthout bemg at peace
with God? If he does not have to be a member of the church, the bOOy,
where this peace is offered, he could. To not be a member of the church
is to disobey the Lord, turning away from God by turning away from
· the church. To tum away from 'the Lord is to turn away from His peace,
and we separote ourselves from God. God is willing to meet us onl.~ in
the body of His Son where He has prorrused \~" P,eace. To enJOY. t~e
peace of God which pa.sseth aU understandmg (Phil. 4:7), and wh1ch IS
essential to the saving or our soul , we must be a member of the church!
For Free Bible Correspondence Course, Write ...

s•·

HOLIDAY
SALE

PRICED
REG. '11 0

CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDEAS
-•Candles &amp; Wreaths
•Curios
•Pictures
•Mirrors
•Crystal &amp; Brass
Atessories

•Silk Floral
Arrangements

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

Butavl te

I

0. JOH

Road • P. Bo•
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 I

Sund1 y Momln1 :

Sundl)' t:Hnln1:
\\onhlp 6:00

Bible Stud y !J:JO

w,dnt'sdll):
Blblt 'itud J
7:00p .m.

WontJip 11:30

M.ldl o
" MHSI!IH t·ro~

Tht 8ibk' '
()aily • WIEU

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Stree t

Member FDIC

Silver Bridge Plaza

Spring Valley

II :SS 1. m.

.. 111, Blblr ·""~;.tn" • wo~·.:.n· O•!llunda} , 7:Ju~
,.._ _ _,...,....,...,...,...,.~~--·.. .......,.,

promised
pay ItIt back,
butother
I'm 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~=-----;-------------J_
sure
he's he'd
spending
on the
gtrl. I'm so mad I can' t think of
a ny thing e lse. I'm out a boyfrtend
and the $500 it took me a ll summer
to ·earn. LEIT BEHIND,
BOSTON, MASS.
DEAR LEIT - You may get
your money back, but I wouldn't
was te time worrying about Jerry.
He's only doing what comes
naturally. You a re both too young to
tie yourselves down. The college
years are for meeting people and
dating, as well as for getting a n
education. Write Jerry off as a bad
investment, at least for now.
DEAR MEG - When a bride Is
escorted down the aisle by her
TWO
father or whoever is giving her
BLUE
FOX
away, on which side of him-should
she walk? My traditional church
wedding Is only weeks away and we
are having a m a jor fight on this.
REG.
Tartar sauce
My dad, who is left -handed and
has fought all his life for his rights
as a "lefty," Insists that he takes m e
TWO
down the aisle on his left a rm .
BLUE FOX
Everyone else says I should be on
' his rtght. -what would you do? BEWILDERED BRIDE, COHOES,N.Y.
REG.
DEAR BB - I have a soft spot for
$900
all the wor ld's lefties, whose lives
are shaped by an often insensitive
1 RED FOX
right-handed majority. However,
since the operative word here is
" traditional," your dad should give
REG • .
In gracefully .
.·
S3600
That's because the groom will be
waiting for you at the rtght of the
1 RANCH MINK
a ltar, and your mother. with whom
your falber will be seated, will be in
the first pew on the left.
Write to Meg care of this
REG.
newspaper. She will personally
S1500
answer only letters that contain
1 BLUE FOX
self-addressed, stamped envelopes.
Questions of general interest Will be
·discussed In future columns.

JO·ANN . FABRICS'

Down·

Bndge

__________ _

FURS

11

Make someone feel merry~'
Merlin Olsen

Se nd the Twin Ca ndle'" Bouquet
from your fTD®Florist.

•Grave Blankets and Wreaths •Christmas
Arrangements - Live, Permanent and Silk
•Door Wreaths •Swags •Candles •Candle
Rings •Ponsettias •Potted Plants *Terrariums
BE SURE AND REGISTER FOR A
CABBAGE PATCH DOLL TO BE GIVEN
AWAY ON DECEMBER..24, 1984

.

REG. PRICE

EVERYTHING
IN

*

$350° 0

ssoo

Garden green

Delicious fried okra

Fresh cole slaw

Lemon
wedge

PANT COATS

S70QOO

THE STORE

PANT COAT

$2900°0

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
106 BUTTERNUT AVE.
PH. 992-2039
POMEROY, OH.
·
OR 992-5721 ·
We Accept All Major Credit Cards, And Wire Flowers Everywhere.

Send your thoughts with special .

Now Served with Garden Green Beans

JACKETS

JACKET

$1 00000

care:·

Southern-style

hush puppies

Cornmeal breaded, country-style fish fillets

.

GIVE A Gin CERTIFICATE

$10 Off
Any Perm
Over $30
Now though

1 21 1~ / 84

LONG COAT

Available In any amount,
gift certHlcat~JS are perfect to
give or recelw.

A Gift For You

*

Extra Special Bargain fabrics
and clearance merchandise
not included in this 20% off sale.

with • copy of thia ad

WALK-INS WELCOME
·Siver Bridge

Plaza

446-3353 .

SILVER BRIDGE 'PLAZA

Exercise helps
fight disease
WASHINGTON (AP) -SomeS to
10 mWion Americans suffer from a
boll€ disease called osteoporosis
that mainly affects older persons
and Is morecommonamongwomen
than men, according to the Health
Insurance Association of America.
symptoms include back pain,
, bolE fractures and physical defor. btlties. But you can help prevent It,
say medical authorities, with a
simple exercise program and by
aettlng sufficient calcium in your
diet - ,by drinking a glass of milk
daUy, for example.

n.

~:;oo

•

$3900°0

Garden Green Beans •

· Garden green beans have been added to our
menu and may be substituted for french fries
or cole slaw on any din her.

Black Cherry Tart!

Plump, sweet black chenies lightly glazed instde a cnsp graham cracker crust and topped
wtth whrpped toppmg.
¢

It's out of thiS world!

CUSTOM TAILOIED SUITS By Raspini
lEG.
S250:S260

NOW

$149°0

.I
AU

69

MONDAY ~~DAY ALL DAY SPECIAL
t ·

2-Piece Fish Dinners

Each dinner includes: 2 golden brown fish fillets, natural-cut french
fries, fresh cole slaw and 2 hush puppies.

®

$3.99

Caatain
D's®
a anaTitttle aealood place®

�Page

~2,1984

P..8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Group accredits HMC
for three-year period

Beat of the Bend

A time to remember
By BOB HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel staff
'Well, I didn't know that.
• I'm told that
.Don Johnson,
Route 1, Por tland
- he's the husband
the
fanner Shirley
McKelvey and
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
Jolmson -was seriously mjured in
a recent motor vehicle accident.
Don was In Intensive care for flve
days at the Holzer Medical Center
as a result of injuries he received
but he Is home now a nd is making
· slow but satisfactory progress. Don
received, among other things,
fract:ures of both ankles and an arm
broken in two places. He, of course,
is In a wheel chair: You might want
. to send along a card or note of
encouragement.

of

I'm still wondering what happened to 1984 - seem s impossible
that the Christmas season is
'already upon us. doesn't it?
While there is ple nty of time, l do
want to remind you tha t Meigs
County has 23 of its residents
confined to the Athens Menial
Health Center this holiday season.
There are 15 men a nd eight
women and the annual program to
gather Christmas rem emberanccs
for these folks is unde rway. You are
to leave items a t the Davis-Quickel
Insurance Agency, corner of W.
· Second and Cou11 Sts. in Pomeroy.
Ite ms may include a ny type of ·
personl!l goocls suc h as socks,
scarves, hose, combs, cosmetics .
candy etc. - but nothing in glass.
Items are not to be wrapped, bul
Mary Martin who is heading the
program would apprecia te it if
you'd also leave some paper and
bows to be used when the gift s are
wrapped.
Congratulations to Beula h and
Arthur Stra uss. S. Thi rd Ave ..
Middle port , who marked their 50t h
wedding anniversary with a ceie·
bration last Sunday.
Many people a ttended the obser·
vance and the couple received
many gifts. However, the re is one
little problem . Among the gift s was
a lovely brass beil a nd in the
process of moving the gifts from the
observance location to the Strauss

home, the card was iost from the
bell . Beulah and Art love the llell
and want to express their thanks to
the giver . Would you please give
them a call on it?

l;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=1"

FREE CANDY
DEMONSTRATION.

Cabbage Patch dolls are again
the big rage a nd again apparently
are quite difficult to local&lt;'.
Two of The Sentinel gals Rhonda Ha nnahs and Nancy Yoa·
cham - have been trylngforweeks
to !.ocate dolls for their children.
Nancy needs three and Rhonda, .
one. It seems they have been put bn
waiting lists arouhd the world and
not hing develops. We daily get a
progress report but it seems their
names just keep getting onto more
lists- a nd stUI no dolls materialize.
The season provides money·
ma king situations for many Meigs
County organizations. The Big
Bend C!vitan Club has joined the
throng and is selling fruit cake (our office staff sampled it - not
bad! ) and the Meigs Unit of the
American Cancer Society Is taking
orders for poinsettias.
If you are a fruit cake persoo (it's $3 a pound) and want to help
the C ivita n Club contact Mrs. Lee
Miller, Pomeroy. Or if you 'r e into
poinsettias, orders can placed by
calling the local cancer unit on
Tuesday and Thursday afternoons
between 1 a nd 4, or you can cail
992-54fl0 or 992-:!896. Orders can be
picked up or delivered . The price is
$3.50 for a n average six bloom
plant .

Pomeroy

merchants are en·

house program.
thused a bout last Sunday's open
An earlier report did not name
the workers for the open house a t
Francis F lorist Shop, not counting
the Happy Harvesters Class of
Trinity Churc h which served refreshments . The group included
William a nd J o AIUI Francis, Mrs.
Kathleen Francis, Kathy Reed,
Alice Loom is. Carol Erwin, Judy
Williams and Susie Francis. The
flower shops in Pomeroy are the
ones who originated the Christmas
season open house idea.

Adkins said.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medical
Center has been awarded continUed
accreditation for three years by the I
Accreditation Committee of the
Board of Commissioners of the
Joint Commission on Accreditlltion
of Hospitals (JCAH), according to
an announcement by Charles I.
Adkins. Jr., hospital chief executive
WITH EACH S1.00 PURCHASI
officer.
Adkins said that the officilil notice
of the accreditation stated the·
(CANDY MAIER IPS)
award was based upon a review of
WHEN: WED., DEC. 5
the findings made by the team of
three surveyors who visited Holzer
TIME: 10 A.M.
Jyly 31 and Aug. 1. "The accredlta·
&amp;
tlon of the hospital represents a
joint effort by everyone associated
WHERE:
with Holzer Medical Center, since
the survey In which participation Is
voluntary, Is designed to Include all
52 9 Jackson Pike
· of the activities of the hospital that
446·2134
GalliPolis, Oh.
have an influence on patient care, "

FREE CANDY MOLD
3 GRAND PRIZES

12 P.M.

2 P.M.

DJ CRAFT SHOP

ACCREDITATION- Dr. Charles E. Holzer Jr., president of Holzer
Medical Center staff, watches at Tltomas E. Tope, right, JloBrcl of
Trustees chalnnaa, affixes the three year accredllation seal lo the
hospital's Joint Commission of Accreditation of Hos~ cenlflelde,
held by Charles I. Adkins Jr., chief executive officer of the hospital.

WELCOME TO OUR ANNUAL

Ch,i1tms1 Open Hou~e

'

Meigs Bookmobile schedule set
vi~~~:i~;cou~~~:~~~: ~:::~:~ g;:·i s'::~~:e.., (~!::
the Meigs Cou nty Public Library
under con tract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, Dec. 3- Carpente r (Laura's
store), 3:10.3: 40 p.m .; Dexter
(Church ), 4:10-4:40 p.m.; Danville
!Church!, 5:20-5:50 p.m. ; Rutland

6· 20-7 · 50
. Wedn.,"roay, Dec. 5 - Chester
(Fire Station), 2: 15-2:45p.m.; Keno
(north side of Keno Bridge), 3-3:30
p.m .; Success Road (near 39000),
3:45-4: 15 p.m.; Long Bottom (post
office), 4:25-5:10 p.m .; Reedsville
(Reed's s tore), 5:20-6:20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's), 7:207:50p.m .; BaumAddition,8:10-8:40

SAT., DEC. 1 AND SUN., DEC. 2 ,
, 12:00 TO 5:00

*FREE REFRESHMENTS &amp;DOOR PRIZES
*fREE· PLANTS FOR THOSE 16 AND 0VER
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY . ·

POTTED &amp; BASKETED POINSEniAS, POTTED &amp; BASKETED FOLOLE RRANGEMENTS DOOR
IAGE, AFRICAN VIOLETS, CAN
A
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- WREATHS, LIVE H.OLLY TREES &amp; CHRISTMAS TREES, CEMETERY
WREATHS &amp; VASES, GRAVE BLANKETS 4ND MUCH MORE.

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
r~(~P~os;;;t~O~ff~l~c;eJ~,~2~:1~0.~2~:4~0~p~.m~.;~~Le~-;;;~p;.m;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~SY~R~A~CUS~E~,~OH~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~PH~·;';9~2;·5;7;7:6~,
(Civic Center), 6:30-8 p.m ..
Tuesday, Dec. 4 - Portla nd

tart Falls (Effie's Resta urant),

Sport

· ~imes- ~tntintt

•

PHII.ADELPHIA &lt;API - Quarterback Nate Sassaman nished for
154 yards and touchdowns of 9 ;md 6
yards as the Cadets overpowered
Navy 28-11 Saturday to srlap their
seven-game winless streak in the
college football classic.
Fullback Doug Black, A1my's
sing le-season rushing leader,
scored on a l·yard touchdown run
and finished with · 155 yards.
Halfback Clarence Jones added ro
yards and scored Army's other
touchdown from 6 yards out.
Anny, 7·3-1, scored on its fi rst two
possessions to take a 14-0 lead with
less thana minutegoneinthesecond
quarter .
The Cadets m ade it 28:3 early In
the fourth quarter o n Sassam a n's
6-yard touchdown run.
Navy, 4-6-1 , managed just a
40-yard field goal by Todd Solomon
in the first half, a 6-yard TD pass
from Bob Misch toChrisWeller,and
a two-point Misch -Weiler conversion with 8: ffl to play.
Anny's last victory over Navy
was a 17-14decision in 19'n.They tied
3-31n 1981.

Cross 45-10 In college football.
DQugFiutle, who ledthreescorlng
dr)ves In the third quarter, finished
with 13 completions Ill 25 attempts
for 276 yards and boosted his
major-college career records to
11,317 yards of total offense and
10,579 passing yards.
·
The Cotton Bowl-bound Eagles,
who e nded their regular season with
a 9-2 record, held just a 17-10
halftim e lead as Holy Cross, a
Division I -AA power which ended Its
campaign at 8-3.
A44-yard touchdownrunbyTrroy
Stradford, who had caught Doug
Flu tie's 17-yard scoring pass on the
first series of the game, gave the
Eagles a 24-10 lead with 3:54 gone in
the third period.
barren Flu tie scored on a .JI-yard
TD pass from his brother and a
20-yard run, and Kelvin Martin
m ade it 45-10 on a 39-yard Doug
Flu tie scoring with 3:05 left In the
third quarter.
Holy Cross scored on a 32-yard
Tony Mellnk field goal and a
two-vard run bv Peter Muldoon.

Boston 45, Holy Cross 10
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)
Boston College quart.erback Doug
Flutle threw for three scoring
passes Saturday a nd his younger
brother Darren scored the first two
touchdowns of his career as the
elghth·ranked Eagles crushed Holy

LANDOVER, Md. tAP) - Horace Broadnax scored 18 points and
David Wingate added 15 as topranked Georgetown used a bal·
a nced attack to easily rout Southern
Connecticut ~46 In a coilege
basketball game at the Capital
Centre Saturday.

Georgetown -:omps

DePaul Rips UCLA
ROSEMONT, Ill. (APJ- Datlas
Comegys scored 19 points to lead a
balanced attack Saturday and the
sec6nd-ranked DePaul Blue Demons raced to a 8().61 triumph over
UCLA,
It was the second straight victory
for the unbeated Blue Demons.
UCLA, traUing 3().21 at Intermission
and never closer than seven points,
fell to 1-2.

· SMU romps, 89-57
DALLAS (AP) - Sophomore
Te rry Williams, making his first
start, scored 17 points·and collected
12 rebounds Saturday to Ignite the
ninth-ranked Southern Methodist
Mustangs to an89-57non-conference
basketball victory over outclassed
Northweste rn Louisiana.

Page wins by KO
SUN CITY, South Africa (AP ) Greg Page of the United States
knocked out Gerrie Coetz.ee of South
Africa In the eighth round to salvage
his career by winning the World
Boxing Association heavyweight
championship Saturday night.

Saturday's scores
rdk~·

Foothall S..'OI'f'S

B y TIM· ,\~datn Pn,..;
EAST
!\l'm,l· ~ - :\&lt;J\-:'- 11
&amp;ston Coii('J!C' ~ :1 . Holy Cnl!'s 111

W l'TH
Ahtb&lt;ima 17. ,\uhurn 15
(imrl!lu T&lt;1:'h '1.'"1. Crorf!i&lt;J

Tmrv '"'*"'

:.!!.

\';mdl'rbilt

I~

U

Cage scores
Salllrday'Joi ( ' ~f' Bo.~&gt;thi&amp;D ~"""
8)1 th&gt; i\!Nlt.baed f"'n!M\i

t .:A.'ft'

_,

Alft·l'd 51. RPI ~7
[);•!aware !"11. Prln('('IOO -18

I don't mean to intimidate you,
but you just " ain 't" gonna ·get
nothin ' for Christmas if you don't
keep smiling.

(.it'Or~'tov.· n f(l.

So. Coofl('("tkut 46

:\'l;mharta n Hl Lthigh ~7
Ma!&amp;lchUS('n ~ ~- NPw Ham JlShln• ~1
VIllanO\'&lt;! 61. Tcmpk&gt; ill

Cit ad!' I !n. l.t'OrJ:iu St . Tl

MtDWI'81'

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
·

25TH

&amp;

FISHER CONNEcrs ON LAYUP.,... Meigs' Dave FWier puts up a
layup against Miller Friday night 1111 the Milrauden1 roBed to 1111 easy,
6741 TVC victory. Mike Chancey paced lhe winners with 19 polnls.
Keith Wlse&lt;.1lp photo.

JEFFERSON lVE.

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•Physical Therapy
•Acupunctu re
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_ _______________

IN THE LAFAYETIE MALL

........

DrPaul 8£1. UCL\ fi1
I ndiana ~ - otoo U. 73
10\l'a 111. l"our~ MallOn Rl
loW!I St. 7[, Crt&gt;i)l: llion Q;
l&lt;llnsa.o:; tfi. Drfotroit &amp;l
1\llchiRiUl 61, G«lr¢a 57
1'\ulr(' Damt• H'1, Sl. Fu:m d.~. Pa . ~5
f'ropJx&gt;rdlrll' In, WIC'Illta St. 8l
Wl!iC'Onsln 61. W:tshlnJ;Ton SL ~
SOU11fM.'DiT
So. MMhodlst. 1!9, 1\' \\' l.mi slana ~~

Meigs rolls over Miller in
Tri-Valley loop ~opener, 67-44

•G .D.T.

-·-··---- . . . ,,. ___ __ ......,;.;.._,_ _,__. .... .. - -- --·..---···----. ...... - - ......... - . . ,. . .. · -·----·-·--·..----·~.._ -·- · -. - . .... .... .. ~ - ... ·--· - ~-- ..- ~· -· . . ... .,.. ,,, ·- . . . . ..... - · ~ · r •"~ -~·

December 2,. 1984

A•nty Cadets topple
Navy by 28-ll count

~~-

POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER

Section

By KEITH WISECUP
· TIJnes.Sentinel Staff
ROCK SPRINGS- Behind Mike
Chancey's 19 points and 12 re·
bounds, Meigs began TVCcageplay
with a 67-44 runaway victory over
Miller here Friday.
Tied a t 6-6 three minutes into the
first quarte r, the Marauders utilized
their big height a dvantage. along
with some fine passing for a 28-2 roll
that brought the scoreboard to :W-8
with five minutes left in the first half.
Cha ncey, who was both the
game 's leading scorer and rebounder, t~ llled 13 points in the

Meigs breakaway. The 6-4 junior
forward chalked up his game totals
in two and a half quarters of play.
Junior ~ard Rick Wise was the
at her Marauder to crack double
figures as he banged home twowhlle
Dave Fisher, Brad Robinson, and
Shawn Baker had six apiece.
Miller's Keith Roberis and Rusty
Craig had 11 each · to pace the
Falcons, who were playing their
season opener.
Meigs' largest margin was 36
points when the winners held a 63-27
le ad in the fourth quarter's opening
minute.

Clears Bench
Coach Greg Drummer began
substituting as early as the second
period as all 11 Marauders saw
considerable action.
Meigs led 24-8, 43-18, and 59-27 a t
the quarter marks.
Unlike in t he Meigs opener a week
ago (a 53-48 loss to Athens), Coach
Drummer was pleased with the
Marauders' intensity. " I was ha ppy
to see our Intensity the way it was
early In the game . Our guards
(Wise, Chris Kennedy, Robinson .
and Rodd Harrison) improved their
Continued on C-2

Gallipolis slaps .58-41 defeat
on Waverly for second win
WAVERLY - Gallipolis handed
host Waverly a 5841 non-conference
basketbail setback before a large
crowd in the Waverly F ield House
Friday night .
The victory left Coach Jim
Osborne's Blue Devils with a 2-0
season record. Coach Willie Hobbs '
Tigers suffered their fi rst Joss in two
starts.
Good Lesson -Hobbs
"Gallipolis gave us a good Jesson
on the way basketball is supposed to
be · played," remarked Hobbs,
whose Tigers had beaten the
Gallia ns three years in a row at
Waverly.
, "We figured we had to hold them
under 50 point s to win," Hobbs
continued. "They rebounded better
tha n we did. They played defe nse
better tha n we did. T hey took bette r
shots than we did. You do those three
things, and you're g oing to be in
every ballgame you play," Hobbs
added .
"We were totally impatient on
offense. I told our boys not to try to
m ake a comeback all a t once after
we were down 18. Our impatience
and thei r rebounding were the keys,
plus Gallipoli s used a tot offresh kids
and still con tinued to keep pressure
on us."
Hobbs concluded. "They have two
fine guards, but if you stop them .
their Inside people will hurt you ."
His statementa were a proven
point. In the first half, itwas the fin e
shooting of senior guard Dan
Dressel a nd sophomore guard Gary
Ha rrison which gave the Gallians
15-8 and .JI-20 quat1er advantages.
Inside People_Connect
In the second half, senior post men
Kev Carty a nd Todd Bergdoil
carried the scoring load . Through it
a ll, senior forward -guard Brett
Bostic made a lot of things happe n .
picking up 10 assists and three

DRESSEL DRJVE&lt;l- Gallipoli• guard Dan Dressel ( in center, ann
extended ) was called for charging on this play during the Blue
Devils-Tigers cage game at Waverly Friday night. Dressel finished the
game with 13 points ..on right is GAllS guard Gary Hanison (10), who
added 13 points . 11ge r defenders are Cl".tig Teeters (:W ) and Eric
Breitenbach (32).
rebou nds along the wa:&gt;.
· Once again Coach Osborne wa s
fortuna!~ to get nine or 10 players
into the game early, and midwa,· in
the second half. All13dressed got to
~ee action before the final gu n.
"When you pl a~'l h at hard. it takes

a lot of effort on ewryone's part to
help out. We had that effort tonight,"
said Osborne. " Our outside shooting
kept us going the fi rst half. We were
able to get it inside the second half."
I t was another excellent defensive

Continued on C-2

North Gallia opens campatgn
•
with 78-60 WID over Oak Hill

humbles
OUfive .

.,

game at Waverly. GAllS won, 5841 to remain
unbeaten in two starts.

•

Indiana
BLOOMINGTON, 'Ind. (AP) Sophomore guard Steve Alford
scored 23 points, Including a perfect
seven of seven performance from
the free tbrow line, as 12th-ranked
Indiana downed Ohio .University
00-73 in nonconference college
basketball Saturday.
. The Hoosiers jumped to an S-1
advantage and were never seriously
challenged, building their lead to
J8.5 with 14: 00 to play in the first half
as forward Mike Gioml had 10 of his
14 points in that span.
Indiana led 46-29 at ha iftlrne after
· shooting 57 percent from the field,
making 16 of28 shots. The Bobcats,
meanwhile hit on only 8 of 24 from
the field (33percent) In the first half.
The Hoosiers hit seven of their
first nine soots to start the second
hall, taking a 62-35 lead after six
minutes and reserves saw plenty of
action from theq on . The Bobcats
had one spuri midway In the second
half, scoring nine consecut'lve points
to cut their deficit to 70-53. Alford
then hit two tree throws with 8: 10
remaining and Marty Simmons hit a
layup tor the HOOillers, who evened
their record atl-1.

PRESSURE VS. PRESSURE - Waverly's Craig
Teeters (34) applies preorure on GAllS guard Keith
FeUure ( 11) during Friday's non-league hardwood

CLOSING IN- OU • • Mille liWtier (11) IDob for help M Wayne
Diddle (SI) aiNGdllo.llabloelml'llllwi ltl..... flntquarier action al
Frldlly's NG-OU • ..-e.
Plrlltee potlted a 78-tl win over tile
Oaks.
.

n.e

,,

VINTON - With four of its · when we've been 0.6 at the
the !inC' with th rC'&lt;' minu tes IT&gt;m ainplayers breaking into double fig - Christmas break. This win rea li v
ing and sa nk two to bring the lead to
ures, North Gallia m ade an auspi · helped them . attitude-wise."
70-56.
claus debut on the new basketbail
Wilson noted that in the first half.
From tha t point on, the Pira tes
season Friday \\1th a 78-t&gt;l victory the Pirates suffered 12 turnovers,
ail owcd Oa k Hill to score four
over soon-to-beSVAC opponent Oak but cut the losses to six in the second
add itional point s.
Hill.
half, a nd praised the team's overa ll
Shooti ng-wise, NG connected on
The scoring was led by sophomore quickness on the floo r.
. 3&lt;1 of its 61 field goa l attempts for C\2
Mike Kemper , who taliied 29 points .
After getting ahead in the sPCOnd
percent. a nd sa nk 10 of 14 t1ics on
Also getting double figures Wftre quarter:NG held a slim lead until
free-throws for 71 percent . Oak Hill
Paul Leewithl4, Wayne Diddlewlth halfw ay through the canto, when the
was 46 JX't'C&lt;'nt t22 of 48 ) from the
12 and Todd Deel, who added 10.
lead increased to eight points and
fie ld, a nd sa nk 11 of 24 a ttempts on
The Oaks' Mike Fisher led the held steady unti l thecioseofthe half.
charity tosses for 45 percent .
Jackson Countlans inscoringwlth 23
The Oaks tried to pl ay ca tchup
tn Ihe rPSPT&gt;"e tilt , the Pira tes
points. Arlc Yates supplied another during the third period. but were
fo ug ht back from an ('arly Oak Hill
11 points.
plagued by turnovers and cold
lead, tied and then It'd. 24-Z:l. at thp
Oak Hill provided a threat in the shooting. Bot h teams played sloppy
half beforp winnin!( the contest.
first quarter, as the lead changed as the Pirates committed 18
:il-45. Doyle Ca ilihan led the Little
several times before the closing turnovers to the Oaks' 10. NG had 25
Bucs with 2.3 points w hile Todd
buzzer. Tied 15-15 going into the rebounds a nd eight steals. with Oa k
Holstein additionall1.
second quarter, the Pirates estab- Hill grabbing 20 rebounds and five
Mike Hale was top scorer for the
lished the lead and never looked stea ls.
'
junior Oaks with 22. and Todd Copas
back.
OppOrtunity knocked for Oak Hili added eight.
"We made a lot of young when, after a spectacular recovery.
NOKTH Gt\liJJ\ ( ~K ) - Kf'mpPr 14-1-29:
mistakes," Pirate Coach Bruce a foul was called and F isherstepiJed
Dt&gt;&lt;-1 ~- 10: \\' . DidrliP .1- h-12; l('(l 6-2-14·
Thmnon Hl-2: H nmmoncl~ 1-0-2: J . Diddl~
Wilson noted afte rward : "It seem ed to the charity line. Fisher sank one to
H9. T...a. 34-tll-'ll\.
!Ike we settled down In the second make the srore 66-56. but failed on
OAK IOU. ( fll ) - f'l!'hrr 10-.1-2.1: Yatrs
half. The bench really helped us out. the second try .
&lt;1 -.1- 11 : O:lpas 4-1-9; Wt'aV£'1' 1--4-6; Brinton
1-0--2; Gaines :\..- l -7; Cmbtm' 1-0-2. Tucak
It 's a big moral win for these boys.
NG scored again, and with Ill- 12-«1.
Some of them have been around another foul called on the Oaks
Soore by quatt..,.:
Nor1h Gattta .............. .. ., . t5 19 IR 26-18
immediately afterward, Lee went to
Oa k H ttt ........ .... ... .. . ... .. . . t 5 I&lt; L; t6-Ql

�Pag&amp;-C2-The Sunday Time..,Sentinel

·Q-allipolis ...

G,\U.D'QIJl! 1581 -

H ~1Tison

WAVIliiLV {l]J- Strlckland4-IJ-8: Brown
1.0.2: Brf'ltf&gt;nbach S. l -19: TE,'flte-rs().('t..(): Sword
llX&gt;: Tacken 4.().8: Case- 0.0.0; Conley 1-0-2;
Hampton tHHJ; Owens 1-ll-2; Browdtor tHHI;
DeW...,;e ().j)-0; . Downing tHHI. TOT~
l0-1-41.
Bs QIIUII&lt;rs:
Gallipolis ........................... 15 1l\ 12 lfi.o.:il
Waverly ..... :........................8 12 5 16-41

ller!&lt;doil 7-ll-14;

Bostic 1.0.2: Carty 4-&amp;-12: Dn&gt;s.o;£&gt;1

~.1-1 :1:

5-J-13: FellurE' l.Q-2; Slone 0-0.0;

Atkinson ()..()..Q; Pasqualp 1-0-2: Stra it WO:
Spletf' 0.().(): HollidaY 0-0-0: Saunders 0.()·0.
TilT~

M eisrs .. ·--~----=Co=nt~ln:::U:::ed:.:f:.:ro~m~C~·!.l

Continued from C.l

effort by the GaUtans. Waverly was
cOinfug off a 66-52 victory over AAA
polver Chllllcothe at ChllUcotho:&gt;. the
Tigers' first win over the Cavs In 24
years, and appeared fired up tor
Friday's homo:&gt; opener.
Defense Shines
·GAHS limited theTigersto20!ield
goals (out of 51 attempts) lor 39
percent. The Tigers were one a! six
at the foul Uno:&gt; (16 pertent) . WHS
had 26 rebounds, ninP by Eric
Breitenbach, and 14 turnovers.
:Breitenbach paced the Tigers'
att_ack with 19 points. He was the
only Tiger lri double figur&lt;'s.
,!:'our Devils scared in double
figtires. Bergdoll led theattack'A1th
14 points. Harrison and Dressel each
h3d 13. Carty tossed in 12.
:GAHS hit 24 of 50 field goal
atto:&gt;mpts (48percent) and was lOaf
15 at the foul line (66 percent).
The Do:&gt;vils picked off 28 rebounds,
13 by Carty._GAHS hadlOturnovers.

U-111-58.

I SVAC standings

\

'I'EAM
WLPOP
North Gallla .................... .... . 1 0 78 00
Hannan Trace ...................... o o o o
K)'ger Creek ............
. .... 0 o 0 o
Southwestern ..........
-.... .. 0 0 0 0
Ea§tern .......... .... .. ............... o 1 li.1 7.:1
SOUihE"rn . .. ... .... . .. .. .. .
.. . o 1 :n l~'l
~ wuk's re:suiL-.:
Oal!lpolls 65 SoulhE&gt;rn J7
Federal H or kin~ 7'1 Eas lf'rn fi.'j
North Ga llia 78 Oa k Hill 6.'l
Tueiday'!i game.:
.SOut hw&lt;'S tern at Oa k Hill
F or t FryP a t K ~'j2'£'r C rf"t'k

Fairland at Hannan n·ace
'Friday's g~es:
North Gallla at Sollth Prn
Kygf.'r Cn'(&gt;k a 1 F:astt&gt;rn
Sout hw£o£tern at Hannan Tn.J('('

Blue Imps win
game at buzzer
WAVERLY - Sophomore guard
Todd Miller 's shOrt jumper from the
front of the foul circle at the buZZer
gave Coach Jack Payton's Gallipolis Blue Imps a 39-37 non-league
basketball victory over Waverly's
reserves here Friday night.
The victory left GAHS 2-0.
Waverly dropped to 0-2. WHS lost Its
opener, 4240, to Chillicothe's re-servo:&gt;s last Saturday.
The Blue Imps built up 8-5 and
18-14 quarter leads in the first half,
but fell behind 31-30 after thrre
periods.
Eric-Splete's free throw tiro the
score at 35-all with 2:04 left. Tom
Cassady's tap-in put tho:&gt; lmps back
on top, 37·35, with 2: 01 remaining.
Waverly's sophomore guard, Jeff
Miller, hit a short jumper at thel :42
mark. Then came Todd Miller's
winning goal at the bU12er.
Kirk Jackson's 14 points paced Ihe
Blue Imps. Miller led Waverly with
19. John Dyko:&gt; added 10.
Box score:
GAllS RESERVES (39) - Miller :kl-6;
Cassady 2·3·7: C. Howard 1·2-4; Jackson
~;-•H4 ; Splf'te 2·2·6: Holt ().().0; SpPnt"Pr ()..()..();
~a mo n f)..().O; F'lnley 0.2·2. ror.u.s 13-13-39.
W~VERLY RE&gt;iERVEN t37i - Ramsev
O. H ; Dyk&lt;' 3-4·10: MIIIE'r 9·1·19: Davis 1..0.2·:
Pollard fi..O.(]; OsbornE&gt; J.().2; Thornsberry
J. J.J. TOTAlS 15-7-37.
By quarters:
Ga ll ipolls ..... ............ .. .. ....... 8 10 12 9-39

Wa verly

December 2, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Pl«&lt;sant, W. Va.

...... ...... ...... .5 9 17 &amp;.-37

play !romlastwrek," said lheMelgs
third year mentor.
Miller coach Bruce Stamer

_ _ _ _ ____,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,..
_-- ------:----:---:-::-::-:--- · .
Meigs made 26 of63 from the field
MI!IG!I ii'IJ - •1• YC•&lt;M""..,.' Mtkoa.......,.
'""" p,,.,;
nii'WI ••'""'·
S.l-19: Daw F'lshtr 2·2-6: Rick Wist&gt; J.-6.12: Brad
ByqUUtera:
(41 percent) while canning 15 of 22
lloblrool:I0-6: i.«' l'owl&gt;ll 2·l·&gt;: RoddHam ... ~&gt;J:
Mltk. ............................... ........ .. i to ',_.. •
free throws (68 percent). Mlller hit
Shawnllok...- Chn•K"'nro&gt;244; Chris Shonk
Mol., ........................................ ,. " " ....., •

thought his baUclubplayedbetteras
on 17 of43shots (40percent) and only
the game went along, buiMelgswas
l,Oof23 free throws 143 percent).
just too much for his shorter
Control Boards
Falcons. "We trlf:od to play them
The Maraudersoutrebounded the
man·to-man, but they were jus! too
Falcons 40-31. Jay Carpenter fol·
big. Meigs Is a good ball club.
lowed Chancey with seven rebounds
Our offense was terrible In the whilo:&gt; Roberts led Miller with n!nl'.
first half. We didn't move the ball
Tho:&gt; Maraudets had 15 turnovers
well, but played better in the second
and 1\.flller 18.
MilLER ' " ' - snan Tolh t-&gt;•: ""'c~,.,..n
hall. We became stuck on eight
l-1&gt;~ Mllw
Keith """"'' ' " "' R"'IY
points and I dldrft think we would . Crtlg
4-.l-tl:"""~,_,
Jim Crawford
U-4: John l)eror(&gt; 1.0.2:
ever get off It," commented Starner. e.wTh&gt;n'""" 244: na-. Slld&lt;dom 244. rorAU&lt;

,,.,......

Lnn•""·

---Local bowling---

.

TVC standings
TVC CAGE S'UNDINGS
(A.LL GAME!!)
Team
WLPOP
Belpre ...................... ............. 2 0 100 131
Al&lt;'xandcr ............................. ! 0 94 68 '
1'r1mblo ................................ 1 o 66 65
Meigs .......... .. ... ... ...... ... ......... ! 1 115 CJ1
fed~:&gt;ral -H ocklng ........... .......... 1 1 139 131
Nelson vlll~York ..................... 1 1 121 129
We llston ....... ................. ..... ... O 1 7J 86
WarrmLoca L ........... ............. o 1 68 s.a
Miller ............... ................. ... 0 I 44 67
VInton Coun ty .............. ...........0 2 96 i.l2
tTVCONLV)
T..m
WLPOP
Alexa nck&gt;r ........... ... ... ............ 1 0 94

68

Meigs .. ...... .................. ..... ... I 0 67 44
Belpre ................................. l 0 116 73
Nel.sonvUitLYork .. ... .. . . ,, ..... .. 1 0

69

Trimble ........................ ... .... . !

66 65

o

61

Warrcnt..ocal ... ... .... .............. O 1 tJ3 94
Ff'&lt;koral-Hocklng .. .. ........... ..... 0 1 65 , 66
Wellston ............................... . 0 1

73

86

VInton County .................... .. .. 0 - 1 61

GS
67

Miller ........... .... .................... 0 I 44

Ale-xander 94 Wa1Ten ~a l 68
Nelsonville- York ED VInton County 61

Dec.tc ......

Meigs at NeLsonville- York
Alt&gt;xander at

Tt1mble at Miller

Warren Local at VInton County

,--------------1

YOUGIT

WHAT

PAY,OR

W L P OP
Belpre ........................... .. ..... 1 0 fi3 26

Mt&gt;lgs ............ ........... ............ 1
Wai'Tt'fl Loca l ........................ ]
Fedf:&gt;rai· Hock.Jn~ .................... 1
Ne-lsonville- York ....... .......... . 1
Vlnlon County ............ .......... . 0
Alt&gt;xanck&gt;r ..................... ....... . 0

0 00 54
0 48 43
o :E 24
0 37 Jti
1 ~ 37
1 43 4R
Mlllt'r
... ......
.. 0 1 54 tiO
Tt1mble ...... .......................... 0 1 24 39
Wellston ....... .. ..... ........... ...... 0 1 26 6.1

Belpre 86 Wells ton 73

Ch,itfmaa Spe~ial
NOW TILL CHRISTMAS
• LAYAWAY' NOW

ChP.v. 2273: FrancLs FloriSt 2233.

1'18.
Brenda's Boutique ...••.... ........................ 62

Team

Oan'.s ........ ............... .. .. ............... ....... .. so
Francis Flortst ..... ............... ....... ........... 46

SlmmoM Olds, Cadillac

and Chov ........................ ................. .. &lt;2
Pools _Plus ........ ...... .. ........... .................. 34
The Fabrtc Shop ............................ ,...... :11
High Ind. game- FranMatihews2ll; June
Lambert 193; Barbara Murray 186.
· High lnd. three-games - June Lambert
527: Unda Arthur 4%; Fran Matthews ~92 .
High learn game - Francis F1orlst 8;&amp;6;
Brenda'S Boutique and Simmons Olds,

Cadillac and Chev. 700: Brenda's Bootlque
and Pools Plus 768.
High

team

three.llames

-

Brenda' s

HE're- are ttl&lt;&gt; standlngs ror the Wednesday
Nlte Ti mbersplltters for the we«&gt;k of Nov. ~.

1!184.

W. L
Montgomery Ward .......................... lil 36
Last Chance Ca1·ry.OUt .............. , ..... 67 :JT

Team

Lynntronlcs .. ............. .... ................. &amp;a 40
Cardwell Dairy ........... .. ....... .... .. ..... ~ 45
G &amp; B Exxon .................................. !ll 46

Tawney's Studio .. : .......... .. ....... :..... .. 54 50

Baldwln'sG uns .......... 1.............. ...... 53 51
DyerBro1hers ....................... .. :...... ~ 54
ConvE'nient Food Mart ...... ...... ........ .46
Spring Valley Aces .......................... 40
Mitchell Appilanet"S ......................... 37
County Hig hway ..... ....
.. ......... 28

58

61

li7
76 ,

Wellston

(RE!!ERVES(

Tlimble D6 Federal· Hocking 65

........

Momln!IGiorleo
Nov. I, 11114

Belpn: at Federai·Hocking

Team

No\'. 31 Garnes
Meigs 67 Mille-r &lt;W

~-..

8ou11que ~: SimmOru; Okl, Cadillac and

WINTEIINSUUTION ·sALE

sears

AND DIAMONDS

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

Rio Grande defeats Glenville .State for
seventh in row, five hit double figures
P~LIPPI, W. Va . .- Gll'nvlllo:&gt;
Wolfeand(iregVerhotfassuredRio
States Plonrers battled Rio Grande · Grande of the victory.
down tothewlrehereFrldaynlghtln
Curry led Rio Grande's attack
the opening round game of the ~
with 19 points. Greg Verhoff added
Glenville State Invitational Basket·
16, JoeVerhoff15, Wolfe 13andMike
ball Tournament.
Smith 10.
The Redmen took on a t011gh
Jerry Mowo:&gt;ry had stX of Rio
LaRouche, Pa., quintet Saturday
Grande's 14 assists. He finished the
. night In the championship metre.
game with nine markers.
.. Five Redmen scored In double
RloGrandecontroUedtheboards.
.figures as Coach John LawhOrn's
37-32, with Joe Verhoff and Curry
cagers chalked ,up their seventh
picking off eight apiece.
The Redmen had only eight
consecutive triumph against no
setbacks. Glenville dropped to(}.2on
turnovers , GlenvU!ewas gulltyof19
theyear;
miscues.
Rio Graqde built. up a 55-44
Rio Grande connected on 32 of 56
advantage midWay through the
field goal attempts for 57 percent.
second half afto:&gt;r taking a &lt;13-36 The Redmen actually won It at the
halftime lead.
foul line, sinking 20 of 22 a !temps for
a si2zllng91 percent.
The Plonerers came storming
back to grab the lo:&gt;ad at 74-72, with
The Plonrers were 3&lt;l of 57 !rom
two and a half minutes left In the
the field and 12 of 14 from the foul
game. A key bucket by Dan Curry,
line .
plus clutch foul shooting by Kent
Rio Grande will host Bluefield
State College at Lyne Center
Monday night.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Box score:
reservesmadelttwolnarowasthey
RIO GRANDE (84)- Wolle 5-3-13•
2
3 9
buntupablg27-6secondperlodlead,
but had to hold on for a 60-54d~&gt;elslon &lt;&gt;4·16: Shaw 1-0-2. TOTALS 3%-oo-84.
overascrappyMUierreserveflve.
GLENVILLE
STATE
Steve
H
Morris
14-6; Matt
Bullett(!Kll6412; Steve
uey Eason and Phil King led UnvtUe H -15: Rich Moore 10-3-23;
Coach Mick Childs' Little Maraud· ~ Watts 6-1-13: Ken Taylor 4-3-11 .

.

INSULATED PROTECTION
AGAINST
HEAT, COLD
AND RAIN!

g~~:g=:~h!de24of33 It

Wtlet keeps vou more comfortable
· SlJ'Tlfnef and winter, helps seve energy,

frre throws whlle the Little Falcons
connectedon12ofl7. Theroughand
tumble game saw 39 personal fouls

p&lt;olecls auainst teaks, ends root-COllting,
end helps save ycu money on utility bills 7
lt'slhe UNIFLEM IJIM ln11111ated Aluminum
Mobile Home Roof Svstem, now at Searof
UNIFLEX IJTII Is cusoom·lnctslled 0Y11 y010
p&lt;osent roof by Sea•' Authorized lntnoloro.

whlstled,lncludlng24agalnstMIUer
and 15 on Mo:&gt;igs.
Meigs strays from home for the
nrst time this year when u goe.s to
NelsonvU!e-York Tuesday. Meigs
returns home Friday against VInton
County.
Box score:

Increase your home's value, comfort, and
belutyl Calf your nearest ~ara store now
lor • I1H olllml!t.

15°/o OFF

SYMBOL
of heartfelt love

MilLER IM) - Rick 1\ ichoL~ ~:.. l:o: Ro1
Jo' ankllatl'iflr :.! -1·5: C'nli~WUsonWJit HobbiP P &lt;n1on

.f. J.!J: Dt~\'l'Sii('i(dol'n 4·:l·10: Jf'ffG immla.n li-1- 1: Carl
M~'I'I"S Hl-:J. lUfi\l$ Zl -1:!·54.
MEIGS (Iili i - oain.k 84'ck('r .f.2·10; Phil K in~

RIDENOUR

H ·l2 : Si t'\'(' M~r 2·~9: Hw•1• Ea.&lt;;()n :!·H-12: .JPliSI'
ll ~· [lrd :!·11-l : Many Harl1·2-ti: Marn· r'tlrv•fl.:!-2: ,lf'rf

SUPPLY

Nrl-.on W-2. TOTAU 111-U.C.

Fiberalas
Mesh
Aluminum
8 Ft. to 20 Ft..

Luxury sedan model, 4 door, l_ight desert tan wil1 dart&lt; brown velour irl
terior, V-8 engine, automatic overdrive transmission, tilT wheel, cruise
control, e~m - fm stere o, air cond .. power wind~N~s, pow er.: doOf' locks,
power

hr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~

PR-E-CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
I
A c·: .

eu·v

HAI.N SA
WITH ALL THE
TRIMMINGS
·

Mill&lt;• r........ ... ... ........ .
MC'Iw; ... , .......... .

985-3308

ALL BIRTHSTONES AVAILABLE
APRIL SLIGHTLY HIGHER
FREE SIZING

AVAILABLE YELLOW
OR WHITE

------

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

C•fl Cu,t Millet At

Y•-trwtrow

446·2770

Sllret Bridge Pl•z•

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
2691

tw

¥1~

Et-='1
e

70 oo··
.

.

$·

Model 330

•16" or 20'" guide bar lengths
•Power packed 3.3 cu. rn engine
•Power Tip,e ga.s welded and
sprocket tip guide ba rs rncrease
cutting power and dura.bil ity
•Vibration isolation reduces fatigue
•Mulli·chamber Softone'• muffler

FREE ACCESSORY KIT INCLUDES:

redu ces noise level
.•Professin.al style front and rear
handguatd s
•Racker · Ill"' Series 38 chromed
chain mtnimtzes kickbac~
•Automatic chain oiling
·~~g'gmtion tor taster, '""' stan-

Cany case extra c hatn f1le and holde r
quart o f ba r and chain o il o ne-half pint
of 16.1engine oi l Homellle i Bcobscn
mesh cap
·

•Heavy-duty gaSttline chain saw; bui•
lo Jell large tr.., and cut large
amoun~ ol fire wood regulatly
• Sate-1-l tp@ anti-kickback device

1 7 ItT T II:!'
Y ~L

l·l door, Hl door, ~oth finished in R
teriOrs and loaded with options .

SEO standings

Athens .............. .................. ... 2 2

2.11

Both Were 12,900. $ave 1,000

MonumC:!:!t \

.. .. 0 I

POMEROY, OH.
AT POME!IOY·MASON BRIDGE
LEO l. VAUGHAN, MGR.
PHONE 992-2511
VINTON
W. MAIN ST.
JAMES 0. BUSH, MGR.
PHONE 311-1603

WheE'Iersbul'f! .................... ... 0 0

o

Pt. Pleasant .......................... 0 0
OI('SalX"akl' ............... ............ 0 0
Friday'~ ...SEOAL 8(.'0refl:

0

0
0
0

0
0
0

614-992·2181

POMEROY

1982 CHRYSLER NEW VORI&lt; ER
5th AVENUE
4-door, blade with grey leather interior , V·Bengin e, air cond .·, tilf wheel ,
'cruise control, a m·fm stere o with tape, power windows, power door locks"
po.ve r sea t, power an tcnna , rc,a r d efogg er , wire wheel covers , a t1 sea so~
radifliS ,&lt;~ ndjustlJ,OOOmites .

Was 10,900. $ave 1,000. NOW ONLY '9,900.~

W L P OP
78
.Jackson ..................... ........... 1
Gallipolis ............................. .. 0
Ironton ... .. ............................ 0
Log:an ............... ...... ...... ...... .. 1

RE~.

$74900

Jackson 75 Ironton 63

-

RE!!ERVES
Team
WLPOP
IJ;mton ....... ....... ................... 1 0 44

NOW
ONLY

$9.97

GAL.

Custom colors slightly higher.

CAROLINA
LUMBER
AND
SUPPLY
COMPAN-Y
312 Sixth Street 675-1160
Point Pleasant
Store Hours: Monday·Friday 8 a.m. · 5 p.m.,
Saturday 8 a.m. · 12 noon
Copyrlgnt

OMiion of Grow Group, Inc.
'(

liB-&lt; 01Ml0 &amp; RlOYnoldo Co.

Logan .. ... .... ..................... ... 1
Gallipolis ..... ....... ............. ...... 0
Athf&gt;ns ........................... ...... 0
Jackson .........
.0
Tolai!l
2
Friday'8 reMIIte:
Logan 43 Athf?ns 35
Ironton 44 Jackson 33
Dec. 7 pmea:

"FLOWER. WOOD

Lo2an at Ironton
Norttl Gallla at Southern

·sALE

Ironton at Waverl y

.Jackson at Wheele-rsburg
Gremtleld at HlllsOOro

NEW PIJIIIUIIIIURBEft

Spany luiiiiiY, !IMni:lld etectlonics
and per1arm1nce.

Tile Mlltllc Wlgon .. .111811 2 and a big
111111, or 5 llld a smaller load, enn
o~nal selling for 71

*9288.

&amp;' . . .

"PINECREST''

Friday's scores
T~·axl MadiSon IW. ~- Ill. OT

"TUrsa rawas Val. .W. MassUion
.

~

•9597"

QUALITY BACKED BY 5 YEARI. . . MILE PIIOI'ECIION PLAN.
E"'Y - A:wal&amp;ih lilllll a.,.. _. l'lyiiiGIIII- at11o
llr I ,...
Jllilel
Hmllld •••1111• pcaalllll Md...,..., Ml lhcsqll
•• EIIJ••••~~~~n. DIH' w

Vlmna MattkwR

.

.as, McDonald :n

ROOM SUITE

Wltd.!.WO'Ih 67. Norton 59
Wal~h Jfflull 00. Canton Central Ml
Wapillulnrol&lt;~ 51, Nt&gt;wark ~1. 0T
W:u'!'f11'1 H ardlnJl tlt . NP"o~o1m F'allli ."i l
Wai'Tf'll Kmnt&gt;dy 61, Warrm Champion

wli~ comn flt11.

Wan-m:l\'lllc ~. &amp;achwood :n
Watkm MffOOiial T.J. Heat h b1
WPII""lllc 00. Swthl'm l.a'e~l .J)
W. Carroll!on ffi. Oxford Tala w:a!lda 6ol

dllllis.

W. Gt&gt;aURa «J, Chanbn :II
.
W. ML~Sidnli!\lm to, Zanfti. R011«rans
w. Unbn tn, Lyndlbw'a ('Jay !18
Wt"!!lervllit' S. M, Worthln«'UU 4A
Wlllant n. Bt&gt;lkovuP 71

:e

YWrJR. Llbfrty 45. W. Brandl !10, ()'J'
Yoo~. Ra~ 4!1, Akron 811('1\ff&gt;l :B
\'W11t. Un\lllftf !!t, YWJI. Wlllilln \1
Tract" 8), WHtfall ~

:z..r

z.....vu~o

•

'r

SALE

•

WortNnglon Chr. m, Mans. Christian !'JIIi

GAWPOUS

. Was '6,200.'" $ave 1500.1111 NOW ONLY

'5,700.00

STOP IN AND SEE:
Merrill, Jay an~ Alan Evans
IOPe·n Monday thru Friday a a.m.-a p.m
Saturday a a.m.·3 p.m.

..

~~

Xfnlu 81, Dey. Jeftcnorl 6:l

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE, Inc.

ther
conditioning, am·tm c.assene stereo, power &lt;~ntE'Inna , power windows,
pBNer door lock s, power sunroof , rern d ~ fogger , cruise control, altoy
wheels , rfldi&lt;~l til" es and only 58 ,000 miles on th ls Jocil ll y owned trad{'-in . .
icc Car -

REG. S849.00 ·

"

Oeducttlllt

AND PI.YMOOTII&amp; TIOAY!

446-0842 ' ·

5 PIECE

Tu..~law

WllmlnA'Oil 1?.1, Wall*lgton C.H. ~
Windlt.an'l 74, PalrU.•IYUk&lt; Hai'V(')' ~
Woodsfield '18. Bealli\'UJtt. !':fl

300 THIRD AVE.

$598°0

Llndm-McKlniE'V at Ponsmouth

NEW CIIIIII.EIIUIEII

•

'7,500.00

Was 18,500.00 $ave 11,000. 1111 NOW ONLY

REG. S899.00

ChE'sapealc:e at Symmes Valley
Waverly at Whl&gt;elersburg
Oak Htll at Rock Hill
Wilmington at Glft'nfleld
Dec. 8fiiUIM'II:

&amp;ALl TIE

4·door, dari&lt; blue metalhc w ith m&lt;~tching velour interior, V-8 engine;
aut om a tic o verdrive tran smi ss i on , c I i mate con tr o I aI r condit ioning, amf m 8· track s terco, ti It w h ee I. crui se co ntr ol. pow e r sea t, pow e l" windows,
. power door locks, power antenna , wire wh· covers, new a Jl season radia Is .

ROOM
SUilE
,,

Gallipolis at Athens

Northwest at Minford

*9293"

II

1981 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED

5 PIECE

Coal Grove at South Polnt

· flln!ly slzl iuxuryiO challenge Buick
Century and Ohla Clen for hundl8ds
leu!'

SJ19 S.OO

2

Frlday'li I"''.!Slllb:
Logan 78 Athens 66

NEW PlYMITII CAIUJEiJ.! IE

1111

EDROOM SUITE

AttK&gt;ns .................................. o

'!'Giah

SAVE $3.

1

5 PIECE

T•arn

$7437*

1111

1

SEO!\L VARSITV

•••AEIIIDYNAMICALLY RE-DUIGNED. OUR 2.2 LITER ENGINE
HAS BEEN REFINm 18 GIVE YOU I. . .ED PERRIRMANCE.

.

i

"TIFFANY MANOR."

GalllpoUs 58 Wa\'erly 41
Northwl"St 72 Clay 47
Grwnfk&gt;ld n Madison -Plains 43
Minford 77 Rock H11171

TM

'11,900. 00

JACI W. CAISIY, MAIIAGII

77

0

Your Choice Only

FARM CITYI INC.

Ironton ................................. o 1 63 Tl
Sootht'111 ....... .............. .... .. .... 0 1 37 66
South Potnt ... ....... .................. o

1111

MGM

~

71

1

LOGAN
MONUMENT

.. .......... ... 1 1 107 110
Portsmouth ................... ......... 1 1 136 131
Northwest ............ .................. 1 1 125 113

Rock Hill .. .. .. .... .. .. .

1111

1

Waverly...... ...

• Highly washable.
• Water clean-up.
• Spatter-less formula.

4·door , light French vanilla with dark brown v e lour interior, V -8
automatic overdrive transmission, t ilt whee l, cruis e contro l, power seats,
pONer windows , power door lock s. power antenna , r e ar defo g .• air cond .,
am· f m c assetfe stereo, cu stom wh ee Is, plu s mu~h m ore! Sharp Car!

.. .... ... 4 !I ?.! 1~-'o:l
. ... .. .... H 1:1 15 !1)-......Ul

Team
" ' L P OP
Logan .. ............ .... ............ ... ... 2 0 144 119
Grt't'nfll'ld .............................2 0 143 !I!
Gall ipolis ...... .. , ..... .... ........... 2 0 124 78
Jackson ................................. 2 0 157 126

FLAT WALL PAINT

Was 112,50000 $ave 1800.00 NOW '11 ,700.00

.

A.LLGAMES

DEVOE®
WONDER-TONES
INTERIOR LATEX

vinyl top , plu s much more.

1

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (API
- Princess Megan, ridden by Juan
Picon , won the featured Ohio
allowance race at Thistledown.
Princess Mo:&gt;gan raced the six
furlongs in 1:13 2-5 Friday topay$5,
$2.60 and $2.20.
Cold Needle finished second and
returned $3.20 and $2.20, while
thlrd-placo:&gt;She'sAGypsypald$2.20.

CLARK'S JEWELRY
113 COURT ST.
342 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY. OHIO

11

"

Thistledown results

STINt.

drivers seat,

8~· lfUrtl!f'!i :

CHESTER, OH .

WAS S16995 SAVE S4000

INVENTORY ·REDUCTION SALE!

DISHES

====;;;;:;!

AN ENDURING

•

.

Half~~~~o. 43."Gtenvllle:lli.

ers with 12 apiece and Donnie
Becker added 10 and Steve Musser
nine. Miller's Rick Nichols was the r;::::::;;;;:;;;;:~-

M otor Car Bro k ers

· '

z.t~l.O~ryJ. ;J-;~hofi"Jn:15~ ~ ; v~t1:~~

Sale Ends Jan. 31st

14K GOLD BIRTHSTONE

1984

Reserves win

Mobile Home Roofovers

The Stihl 028 Wood Boss plenty of muscle. Easy to
handle. Wood Boss•• dip its
teeth in and won't let up uritil
you do. There are lots of chain
saws on the market, so why
buy Stihl7 Simply because you
aet what you pay for!
{

o.c.mber

~~~

SHOP EARlV FOR SElECT CHOICE

s, C..IDclm e

"

'•

�Page

C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 2, 1984

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

·Bucks are just. happy to return to Pasadena
PASADENA. Calif. (API - Although Ohio State
and Southern California have met In the Rose Bowl on
six previous occasions, their date this New Year's
Day will seem almost likE' the first time tor both
schools.
ThE' last time either played in Pasadena was in 1!91
when Southern Cal defeated the Buckeyes 17-16 to
squarE' their Rose Bowl series at 3-3.
·
"Ohio State is happy to be here: it seems like a long
time. " Buckeye Coach Earle Bruce said Thursday
during a news conference at Tournament of Roses
headqll8flers. "Obviously, we have a lot of athletes
who haw nevet been able to play in the Rose Bowl
before now."
"We feel very simllar to (he way Ohio Slate does,"
said Troja~~s Coach Ted Tollner, who wlll make his
first appParance in the Rose Bowl. "We don't have
any Individual on our team who has ever experienced
the Rose Bowl.

Bruce said his Btg Tm Conterence champion
BuckeyE'S, 9·2, will Ignore the fact SootllemCallost Its
final two regular·season games after wrapping up the
Pacillc-10 title with a victocy ovf!t Washington on
Nov. 10. So wUI the Trojans.
'
" Obviously, it hurts whenever you lose, but time
heals," said Tollnff, whose team Is S-3. ''The weeks
we've given our players off will be a positive thi,ng for
us.
"Our two-game losing streak wlll have no effect at
all on the Rose Bowl game. This game Is wry
Important to us. You don't get many chances to play
In the Rose Bowl, so the game itself gets a ll your
attention -when you have the chance to go."
\
Ohio State will open pr;~etlce In Columbus next ·
weekend. Southern Cal will begin Its preparations
Dec. 14. Bruce said the Buckeyes wUI dO most of their
work at home before flying to Callfornta on Dec. 26.

"Our football team Is very excited."
Bruce remembers the 1!91 game, when the Trojans
won in the waning moments on a long touchdown
drtve featurtng the running of Heisinan Trophy:
winning tailback Charles White. and the blocking of
giant offensive tackle Anthony Munoz.
This time, he sees Ohio State as having less
expertence but more talent, a nd he also sees Southern
Cal posing the same kind of challenge it did five years
ago.
·
"We were a very expPrienced team then, but we
weren't as talented as we are now," Bruce said. "In
1!91, we also played one heck of a USC team, with 10
first-round draft choices, a Heisman Trophy winner
a nd a guy, as big as this room in Munoz.
· "Obviously, It's quite a challenge anytime you play
USC In the Rose Bowl. They've been there a lot of
times a nd they play very well."

Both coaches agree the game sh8pPs itp a.s a
matchup of tht&gt; Buckeyes' explosive offenl@,
featuring tailback Keith Byars, and a Trojan deferue
that reat.ures AII~Amertca linebackers Jack Del Rio
and Duane Bickett.
"I know of the USC defense by reputation," Bruce ·
said.' "I know they're big and strong, and they hit
hard. Byars Is a big, strong,phystcalrunner.Pius, we
have an offensi~ line that's very good. I think It wW
be a big matchup."
·
"We've seen Byars on film and he's an
eyecatcher," said Tollner. "You take the No.1
tailback In the country and match him up agalnst
some of the honors candidates we have on defense,
and tt makes for a great combination.
"Both teams believe in getting after each othe!'. I
th.lnk tt wDI be a very physical game ... a nd a very
exdli!lg one.''
·
'

Browns, oddly enough, ·still
in post-season playoff race

~~

.,

CLEVELAND (AP ) - Coach .some breathing room. If Pittsburgh
Marty Schottenhelrner takes the · loses at Houston on Sunday, the
reasona ble approach aJ1d refuses to Bengals could also afford to lose In
admit his 4-9 Clevela~~d Browns are, Cleveland without being eliminated.
oddly enough, still In a race for the
"I won't talk about the playoffs In
National Football League playoffs.
the offseason, in training camp or
But Sani Wyche, coach of the !&gt;-8 now, " Schottenheimer said . "It's a
Cincinnati Ben gals, was un· waste of energy. Our only focus Is
abashedly watch_ing the scoreboard our game with the Bengals."
last Sunday as the AFC Central
Schotlenhelmer was a defensive
Division-le ading Pittsburgh Steel· coordina tor the last time these two
el's trounced San Diego.
teams me t. But after the Bengals
"It could go down to the last two beat Cleveland four field goals to
games," Wyche said. "They (the three Oct. 21, Sam Rutigliano was
Steelers) play a vecytough finishing fired as the Browns' head coach.
two. It doesn't matter which two,tof
Under Schottenhermer, the
their last three games) they lose, as Browns have won three. of .five
long as we do our part and win our games.
last three games."
"Defe nsively, we're playing with
Such talk is a commentary on the a greater degree of consistency,"
sad sta te of the once-proud AFC Schottenhelmer said. "Offensively,
Central.
we have reduced dramatically the
Pittsburgh, at 7-6, has a two-game numher of sacks, Interceptions and
lead over Cincinnati and a three· pPnalties, those things where you
gam e edge over Cleveland with hurt yourself.''
three games to play. The Browns
WychesaldheexpectstheBrowns
a nd Bengals meet Sunday in to be better this time around,
Cleveland .
particularly · on offense, where
The Browns' chances for a title quanerback Paul McDonald has
are ridiculously slim. They must been imp.roving every week.
win three straight - including their
" They're protecting hlnn better,
fi rst ever In Three Rivers Stadium a nd he's gettilig an awfully lot more
- while Pittsburgh must lose three consistent," Wyc he said. "I asswne
straight , if the Browns are to claim that's !rpm confidence and just i&gt;ure
the division .
experience."
By comparison, the Bengals have

j

.. ..

.

'

.

'

t

...~

\""'()

~ •f/
il'

"I!'

.,. '
."&gt;

l~\.'t"~--,vt·9

ARMY ADVANCES- Anny's Clarence Jones

plunges ahead for a first down during first quarter

action as Navy defender Bob Plants, right
baekground, falls to the ground. (AP Laserphoto).

Lloyd
seeking
No.l,OOO
MELBOURNE , Austra lia (API
-Ch ris Evert Lloyd will be seeking
the J.(JXJt h singles victory of her
career wh&lt;'n she takes on Pascale
Parad is of France in the third round
Qf the Australia n Open Tennis
Championships al Kooyong on
Sunday.
If she wins, as expected, the
29-year-old right-ha nder from Fort
La udf'rda le, Fla .. will be presented
with a set of ctysta l by the Lawn
Tennis Associa rlon ·of Australia a nd
a cake bearing 1.COO candles by the
Women 's Tennis Associa lion.
Parad is. however, is looking
forward to the cha nce of thwarting
Lloyd a nd joining he r unseeded
compatriot Sophie Amiac h in the
fina l eight of this Gra nd Slam
tournament.
"1 e njoy playing agai nst the lop
players. a nd if I serve well I must
have a chance," sa id the 18-ycar-old
Paradis, who was just 5 years old
when Lloyd firs t s ta rted on the
circuit. Paradis moved inlo the third
round by upsetting 13th-seeded J o
Durie of Great Britain, while Lloyd
Is seeded second here. behind
Mat1ina NaHa tilo,·a .
Na vratilova , who has captured
bot h the s ingles a nd doubles c rowns
in the last six Gra nd Slam
tourna ments. plays American teen·
agPr Kathy Rinaldi in he r third·
round m a tch Sunday.
In l~e men's singles. lop-seeded
Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia faces
Tarik Behabiles of France in his
third-rou nd march, while No ..1 seed
.)oakim Nystrom of Sweden tackles
Am&lt;'rican Dan Cassidy.

Temple thumps Toledo, 35-6
ATLANTIC OTY, N..J. tAP)Temple Unversity tailback Paul
Palmer says he wished the game his
ca reer-high 148 yards helped win
against a bowl-bound team was not
the season final. ·
Temple, 6-5, defeated I he Univer·
slty of Toledo 35·6 Friday night,
inc reasing to three a winning streak
that Included a 42-10 victory over I he
University of Cincinnati and a 19-17
cUff-hanger over West Virginia,
another team headed for a post·
season bowl game.
"In a way !wish t.heseasonwasn't
over. 1 wish we could play some
more teams headed to bowls," sa id
Palmer.
Temple Coach Bruce Arains said
he saw his team beginning to pull
·
together.
" I just wish we had about three
more games . I feel that we have
turned the corner now,'' he said.
Toledo, S-1-1, is bound for the
California Bowl Dec. 15 against the
University of Nevada -Las Vegas in
Fresno, Calif. West Virginia plays

.
'
The old pro, Julius Erving, knows
the transition is far from over, but he
says the new starting role occ\Jpied
by rookie Charles Barkley may help
the Philadelphia 76en; "feel more

secure. "
Erving Ignited a third-quarter
burst Thursday night that helped tbe
76ers blow open a close game and
beat the Ponland Trail Blazers
126-116 in the National Basketball
Association.

JACKSON SCORES - Aubum's Bo Jackson (34) scores on a
two-yard nm In the first quarter against Alabama Saturday at Legion
Field. Giving chase to Jackson Is the Tide's Brent Sowell. ( AP
Laserphoto ).
.

.

ThE' Washlngion Redskins will be
in the best of aU possible places
Sunday - home- wh ile the Dallas
Cowboys a nd New York Giants
. struggle In separate gam es to
regain a share of first place in the
National Football League's convoluted National Conference East.
The Redsklns, with precious extra
days of rest and practice before their
next game, In Dallas Dec. 9, took a
one-half gam!' lead In the division
'!hursday night with a 31·17 victory
over the Minnesota Vikings.
" We're probably i1i as good shaPE'
as we can be. We're 9-5 and they
have to catch us," Joe TI!eismann,
t

Texas Christian University Dec. 31
in the Bluebonnet Bowl in' Houston.
Going Into Friday night's game,
Toledo's defense was ranked fourth
in the na tion, holding opposition
teams to a n average 93.4 yards
rushing pPr game.
The Owls gained 265 Yards on the
ground - nearly three times that
average. Temple was also success·
fulin the a tr.
Sophomore quarterback Lee
Saltz threw two touchdown passes,
Including his longest of the season, a
74-yard toss to Keith Gl08ier In the
third qua rter that made the score
~- Saltz completed seven of 14
pass attempts for 174 yards.
Toledo quarterback A.J. Sager,
a lso a sophomore, completed 19of35
throws for 183 yards, but was
intercepted twice. One errant toss
was grabbed tn the third quarter by
Temple linebacker BobPIIkauskas,
who ran 20 yaros for a touchdown .
"We had some success and we
didn't make things happen," saki
Toledo Coach Dan Slmrell.

He said his team, which held the
ball ·nearly three minutes longer
than Temple but was held to227 total
yards, just failed to capitalize.
"If
had scored earlier in the
second ha lf on some drives. It would
have been a different story."
The Rockets trailed 14·6goinginto
the third quarter.
They got their only points from
kicker Dave Walker, whose49-yard
first-quarter field goal opened the
scoring. Walker kicked another field
goal from 23 yards in the second
quaner.
Saltz's first touchdown pass carne
53 seconds into Ihe secondquarteron
a26-yard toss towtde receiver Willie
Marshall . The Owls scored next on a
Zl·yard run by Shelley Poole .
· The Owls' final points came 3:37
into the fourth quarter; when
Palmer scored on a 2-yard end run.
The game was played on $35,(0)
worth of sod In historic Convention
Hall as part of Temple's centennial
celebration. It was the fi rst football
game played in the hall .s lnce 1973.

we

76ers beat Blazers, 126-116

Washington home today; Dallas, Giants
struggle to .regain share of first place
By The Associated Press

The BengaJs,' meanwhile, are
likely to slart Turk Schonert at
qua nerback. Having worked with
three quarterbacks this Season,
Wyche appPars ready to settle on
Schonert for the rest of the year.
Veteran Ken Anderson is still
troubled by a shoulder injury.
''I'm feeling corifident back
there," said Schonert, who com·
pleted an impressive 20 of 23 passes
last week as the Bengals beat
AUa~~ta 35-14 . "The more things you
see, the more pressure situations
you're goi ng to he under. How you
react to those wtll determine how
you'Udoas astarttngquarterback."
Pruitt Reactivated
The Cleveland Browns have
reactlva ted running back Mike
Pruitt and placed Charles White on
the injured reserve list.
Pruitt has been on the Injured list
for four Nationa l Football League
games, after undergoing art hros·
copic surgery last month to remove
a piece of loose cart ilage from his
left knee.
White, who has been troubled by
muscle spasms for three weeks, was
put on the injured list because of a
pinched nerve in his neck that
doctors believe was ca using the
spasms, Coach Marty Schottenhel·
mer said.

the Redskins' quarterback, said.
The Giants, who play a "road"
game in their own stadium against
the host New York Jets, a nd the
Cowboys, who play in Philadelphia,
each areS-51n the NFCEast .
In another key Sunday game, the
San Francisco 49ers, already the
champions of the NFC West, can
guarantee themselves home games
throughout their playoff tenure by
beating the Falcons In Atlanta . II
would gtw the 49ers a 13-1 record
with two games to go. No other NFC
team could do as wen:
Mtamt, too, haS clinched Its
division title. Like the 49ers, the
Dolphins are pursuing a home-flelt;l
edge for the playoffs, but they need

(

.

more than just a victory Sunday
against the defending SupPr Bowl·
ch'ampton Los Angeles Raiders.
Miami ts 12-1, butthat leavE's them
only one game better In the overall
conference standings than Denver
a nd Seiitlle, tied atop the AFCWest
at 11·2.
Whichever team falls to win the ·
Western Division Is almost certain
to be in the playoffs , anyway, with a
wlld card. In fact, Denver, playing
Sunday in ' Kansas City, already ts
assured of a playoff berth. Seattle,
which hosts Detroit , ts not.
The Raiders, meanwhile, are ~
and In dangerofmlsslngtheplayoffs
entirely. They're only one game
ahead of New Engtan,d In the
conference .standings for the AFC' s

••

other wild card. And LA plays what
appears to be a slightly tougher
schedule - Detroit and Phlladel·
phia along with the Dolphins whUe
the S-5 Patrtots face St. Louis
Sunday, followed by Philadelphia
and IndianapoliS.
Also on Sunday It's Pittsburgh at
Houston wtth theSteelers7-6holdlng
a two-game lead over Cincinnati in
the AFC Central Division; the Los
Angeles Rams, 8-5 and In pursuit of·
an NFC wlld earn, hosting New
Orleans; Cincinnati at Cleveland,
Indianapolis at Buffalo and Tampa
BayatGreepBay. OnMondaynlght
tt'stheChlcagoBears,champtonsof
the NFC Central Dtv!slori, at San
Diego.

· Barkley, out of Auburn Unlver·
slty, scored 16 points and had 13
rebounds to aid the76ers. Alongwith
Akeem Olajuwon of Houston and
Michael Jorda~~ of Chicago, Barkley
has been one of the NBA's most
Impressive rookies this season, but
he did not make his first start for the
76ers unttl Thursday night.
Erving, who scored 11 of Plllladel·
phia 's first 13 points in the third
quarter, called Barkley's skills
"extraordinary."
Erving wound up with 28 points,
and Moses Malone had 30 points and·
15 rebounds for l&gt;htladelphia. Clyde
Drexler topped Ponland with 26.
In the rest Of the league, Houston
defeated Atlanta 116-102, Washington downed Detroit 114-!0i, New
Jersey ripped Indiana J.23..1ID,
Dallas defeated Sea tile · 118-98,
Milwaukee beat New ·York l.J.8.100,
Utah beat Denver 116-W, the Los
Angeles Lakers beat Kansas City
1ll-121 and Chicago beat the Los
Angeles Clippers 104-100.
·

Dominique Wilkins scored 31
points for Atlanta .
Bullets 114, Pistons 100
Gus Williams and Frank Johnson
scored 21 points each to lead
Washingion to it s ninth victory in 11
games. The Bullets held Detroit
scoreless for thr first 4:48 of the
fourth quart&lt;'r as Washington ran
off eight points to ta ke a 91 -!ll lead .
Cliff Robinson had three of his 19
points during the riln.
lslah Thomas led Detroit with 31
points.

Nel• 12:1, Pacers 100
Buck Williams scored 19 points In
the second quarter· as New J ersey
raced to a 66·53 halftime lead over
Indiana, 'which lost.for the 13th time
in 18 games. Willia ms finish~ with
23 point!\, Including a patrofbaskets
In a 1().1 tear early In the second
quarter tha t gave the Nets a 44-35
lead.
Nets guard Michael Ray Richard·
son and Pacers forwa rd Bill Ga rll('tf
both were ejected in the third pPriod
for fighting.
Rockets 118, Hawlls 1111
Maverlti&lt;s lOll, Sonlc:s 98
Ralph Sampson scored 30 points,
Dallas led W-9'2 wtih 2:48 to play
and the Rockets steadily pulled
awayfromAUanta for a ratht&gt;reasy then hung on behind the offPnse of
victory. Rodney McCray's dunk Rolando Blackman to beat the
shot gave Houston a :J5.131ead with . SuperSonics. Bllickman scored six
5: 10 left in the first qii8J'(er; and the of · Ills 23 points In the final two
7-foot-4 Sampson and frontcourt minutes as the Mavericks ended a
rna te Olajuwon took over from two-game losing stn'ak .
Mark Aguirre had 26 points for
there. Olajuwon had 11 rebounds In
the first quarter alone and finished Dallas, and Tom Chambers ha!l a
with 13.
season· high 31 for the SOnlcs.

'

De*'lher 2, 1914

The Sunday Time5-Sentinel Page C-S

Pvmeroy Middleport-Gallipolit, Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Trimble,_Nelsonville-York, Alexander, Belpre cop loop wins
GLOUSI'ER - Chuck Davis' 18
foot jui11PE'fwlth30seconds left gave
Trbnble a cl~ 66-65 Trt·VaUey
LeagUe win over Federal-Hocking
Frtday night.
David led the defending TVC

champs with 22 points as Trimble's
AU·TVC pPrfomner Scott Gatchel
was held on only eight points.
The Lancers' Randy Matlack,
who missed the ·potential game·
winning shot with seo,'en S€COnds
left, drtlled 15 of i8 free throws

e nroute to a 35-polnt performance.
JEDEIL\IriiOCKING ·(85) -

Ma)Jack JO

1 5-~:

Talto l.fl.2: {)&gt;rf{'t' 2.(1...1; Ethrf.&gt;w• Hl-2: E\a.mhart
· ~10: Wa11o01 1·0-2; TaJtach 2.{).4; Kln~a&lt;k'- l-fl.6.
TOT.US :;:,...IWJ.
t'R.IMIIU (•J -

i.at" tv1 l.fi..8: S t ~ rrurn 0.:.!-2:

MOJTilWln 4· 1·9: 03\1S IH·l ·22; Sa\l 'P 4·1·10; j ( 'fll\ie'l'

264 : Lent '-3-11. TOTAI.S~Ii&amp;
B)'~ :

F'f'd. Hod:lnJ;: ................ , ...... , ......1,.2 1.2 18 Zl-ffi
Trlmi:Jf' ....................................... .J l H 19 :U-66

Logan and Jackson win

~ - F&lt;.od•ra i· Hovkinl&lt; :fl. Tr1mb1P2"1.

69-61. Jay Kline added 19 points for
the Buckeyes and Steve Hamon led
the VIkings with 16.
VIN'J'ON COUNT\' (il )- Hamon 7·2 16; BolkndPr
:l· l ·!'i: Mat¥ 2M: Alman :l-:l--~: GUIUand .H i-l2;

Sau ndt-1"!1 J.2.of: Ar~~:an br1 £tll 2 h".. Boo! Jw&gt; .l-0-t.
'lUI'AU\ t'J.IHJ .
NEISO!Io'VU.L&amp; 'II'ORi. 1• 1 - Wa fi('I"S -l·.l-11;
Rrn t l+")' .l-3-9; i:JIIIkl('k

Sa \' ill(t' 2.().4; Klinl' S..l- 1!1:
M- 1 1).~ . 'IUfAL4('1;5,-I!f.4Mi.

8 yqqri4!N:

VlntonCo...................

.. ..... 10 12 12 lHil

as the Eagles scored 20 or more
points In all four quarters for a
high-sc oring 86· 73 win over
Wellston.
·
Shawn Jenkins paced Wellston
with 21 points. The Rockets nar·
rowed a 21-polnt Belpre lead to
within nine points in the final
quaner, but could not manage to get
any closer.

Spartans 94, Warriors 68
ALBANY -Alexander shot a hot
56 pPrcenl from the field and behind
Athens High transfer Brian Blic kle'e 24 poin ts, outscored Warren
Local 94-68. J im Ingram led the
Warriors with 15.
~'"IU&lt;t1\' 11)('.\.L l ao! ) - P altfl('r 4 J I I. Hutfm &lt;tn

lngrarn 5-~}- l 'l. l~1h ~,l7; Hi-:.-•&lt;m 1 Vi
Mltctu-n :H-8; .11'1'1...-'fl I 0.:./, J\lkJH -1-h-P., Ho.:~n 3l:~
John"'O 1..().2.1'01'1\Ui U l2l-tll .
J.ll.:.!,

Nci. -Yor k ...... _. ...........................23 H l3 19-ffl
JACKSON ~ Deadly free throw ~m : D. J . Coorad 1-14; Mi)c&lt;•Hoocl O.J.I : Troy Wfijthl
AJ.t.:XM'Df..R {M J - f'Prrl!&gt; 7 2 16; Jl'flm; 4.0 7•
fteMnn - N 1i soovllk~ Yor k :rr.Vlmrin COJnry.))
1)..4.111; .Jim Wald2.()...1 : Kt'l t h Myr·n~ :./ .S. IJ~ K&lt;'l'lj' \' o r~
Buckeyes
69,
VIkings
61
Com.P\'4 ~1.1 : f'ampb'•II24H : BUc lr:IP 12 .().:.!~ . Fa ric-~·
shooting carrted the Jackson Iron- !t-7·11.TOTALS ..s-1S.
Wt:U.STO~ f TJ J - RJCP 3.{).6; Nf'wman 6-4. II&gt;:
H }.8; J...au.'SIJ11 2.2,.;; SltidP~'i ().';'.7 G rl~sr n 2 1 ·~ :
BUCHTEL - Nelsonville-York
Unda ~r J':J .1: fo~ rkk ~~fl- 111 : R~~ll'r I 7·9: Jf'nlr:.lm.
St'Ote hy quartri1t:
men to a 75-63 SEOAI.. victory over
\1.1isotl! l.l 'lt.n'.U.~ 38-I.IHt.
Belpre 86, Wellston 73
H 21 : [)(lck 2 2-ti: Malorll'' I·U-2 TOT AI..S '5-%1 ·'73.
Athms .:.................
..... I ~ '0. 7 :!2-~
shot
a
sizzling
58
pPrcent
from
the
H~ qualtt'f'!l:
ft y qaart.:rs:
the Ironton Tigers Friday night.
l.~an .... ............ , ............ , .... IIi:() t:.! '.!l-?)i
BELPRE - Jim Miller dropped !A'(' !I~ ton
Wa n-&lt;'f1 IJJC&lt;I)
~ l i I~ :!1~
field
and
behind
Btian
Bullock's
26
..
..
ZI
12
11~ ~'71
18e"' e~-on· - l...o ~an ·B, A!hPn".Tl
The lronmen saw Vince Wolford
1\Jf',!iolnt. ·l
To ll. lb ~!:t-1
in
25
points
a
nd
Russ
Logue
added
16
R•lpn•.
.
.
........
'
!
!•
21
:fJ
'8).-lfi
points, defeated Vinton County
Jk.,..•r.·l.,.- W&lt;:~ J l'r "'l t ~~ ·8 1-111 · i\ ll'•&gt;~ana•r 4~
shoot a pPrfect 13 of 13 and Pat
St~ens hit 16 of 21 free throws as r----:---~~----------:-----~-----------------------....:.----:----Jackson scored 13 charity tosses in
the second quarter, and then
convert 15 of 161n the fourth pertod.
A total of 30 persona'! fouls were
whistled against Ironton, resulting
In the loss of Ryan Ainsworth and A.
J. Edwards, and enabling Jackson
to convert 35 of 45 for the rontest.
Playing their first contest of the
season, the Tigers deadlocked JHS
12·12 pfter one quarter, but were
outscoied ].9.7 in the second period
UmHe' &lt;0 moo&gt;" " " " " ' 90 ' ' ' '
as Jackson took a 31-19 halttlme
free replacement peri od de livers up to 315 cold c ranking amps . Recom ·
lead.
me nded for vehicles with li mited powe r options. Maintenance free' at an
The lronmen remain undefeated
eco
nom y pri ce. Reg. 30 .88
In two outings as Stevens finished
with 30 points and Wolford 23.
Steve Willis, an All-Ohio football
standout at Ironton, paced his team
With
with 16 points from his post position,
•
exc
hange. Limited 50 month warranty 180 day
with Bobby Lutz adding 12.
free replacement period delivers up to 380 cold cranking amps. Recom· ·
Jackson sho t 36 percent from the
ended
for vehic les with m oderate amount of power options. Reg . 37 .88
field on 20 of 55, had 45 rebounds, 19
turnovers, ' and 16 pPrsonal fouls.
Brad Poe grabbed 15 caroms for the
winners.
With
The Tigers hit 25 of 59 fielders for
•
excha nge. Li mited 60 month warranty 365
.
42 pPrcent, made 13of17 at the line,
free rep lace ment period delivers up to 540 cold cra nk ing amps. Exceeds
claimed 24 rebounds, a nd had 14
new
vehicle manufacture speci fi cati on. Mai ntenance free' Reg. 44.88
turnovers. Willis collected 10
'Never needs water und er no rmal condilions.
rebounds.
Box score:

L~\~' santa' s

Great ...

7~

27•88:.';:'"' ·
34 88

41 88

IRO~~N

fiJ) -

R~·an

Ainsworth :t-1-11:

3.00ou

DouJZ

GambiJ II ~l l : Da vidP h illl~H).8: TorttWam•r .~fi:

~1 1"\T' Wlllls .J-14- Iti: A . . !. F:dll'&lt;lrd.~ :W-4: Mlrtlo.&gt;l Bacnn
IJ.I -1: Jamf'!&gt; l.c&gt;wb; 1-2-.J: boobv LUll 6-f~l:l. TUI'AL"i
5-I:J.G.
.

IA&lt;'KSON !75 1 ~t ("\-rns

Retread A7813
Snow Tires

Vinw Wolford 5- 1:1·:!.1: Pa r
1M: Brad it.;· :.:H I:

7·16-.ll; Rod Mil h&gt;r

Brad Mr('orklo:&gt; 1 - &lt;! ~ : Brian Ra;pll:•m· 1.(1.2: Shanf'
IW 0.1 ·1. 'IDTAL"'i ~:ti-75 .
.
!k'On' ""quari--=
11'01'11011 ....
. ... .................. t.! 7 21 Z:i--6'1
•Jacic!QI ..............,. .......... ........... 1:! 19 17 17-7:1
ftt.Mervt' ,..."': hnllfoo .W. ,/uck~ll .1.'1.

·.

Logan 78, Athens G6
LOGAN- Four Logan Chieftains
scored In double figures Friday
night as the host team defeated
Athens 78-66 tn the SEOAL opener
for both teams.
The undefeated CJ;tlefs hit 52
pPrcent of their fi~ld goals and
cashed in on 26 of 39 free throws to
stave off the Bulldogs.
The first half was nip and tuck as
the teams enjoyed sma ll leads with
Logan emerging on top of a 16-15
first pPriod lead .
In the second stanza AHS slowly
built a 35-33 lead with one minute
left, but the Chiefs out scored them
S-2 to grab a 41·37 halftime lead.
Logan controlled the second half
and eventually built a 71-551ead with
1: 56 remaining In the contest.
Coach Kirk Hardman Inserted his
subs and the lead melted to 10 points
as the Athens starters took advan·
tageofthegift.
Jack Milll;'r's 24 points led the
winners with Kerry York getting 17,
Troy Wright 16, and Keith Myers
addlng10.
Senior guard BiliFlnneartypaced
Athens with 21 points with Chris
Gertg adding 11.
The Chiefs canned 26 of 50 field
goalis, made 26of39free throws, and
snared 41 rebounds with York
grabbing 15.
LHS was also whistled for 21
personal fouls and 21 turnovers as
they go to 2.0 on the season.
Atht&gt;ns, now2·2, shot 43pPrcenton
29 of 66, conve rted eight of 18 at the
line, and daimed33rehounds, elght
by Gerig.
Chris Leonard and Jeff Dean
fouled out as Athens was hit with 28
personals and committed 18
turnovers.

8781 3
E7814 .
F7814 .
G78 14 .
G78 15 .
H761 5

-sa~
Snap
Windshiel~

Snow Blades

Reg. t9
1.

Limi t 4

34.88
Magnum
Fog Lights

4-3000-2WS , 4-3001 ·2WS .
Reg . 44 .95

eJ

19.88

Re~

16.88
Sale

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

22.66
.2686 ,
.. 29.66 .
31 .88

19.88
. ' 23.88
26.88 .
28.88
. ...... 3t .88 .
28.88
' . . 32 .66 '
29.88
. 33.88
. 30.88

3.99
Pylon ·

Washer Fluid

fieg.

·4.88

Chieftain
Socket Set

3.29

Zerex Anti-Freeze
and Coolant
Help s preven t freeze ups . b otlm ers and
corros 1on

3.49
Superior 500
Sport Grip

39.88Reg

Sun Super
Tach :II

To help yo u see yo ur way through
the snowy weat her.
4.49 •

Reg.

Reg.

40 piece set SA E or Mein e.
7.95

Warm m w1n ter. coot 1n summer
Red . B lu e. Black Bro wn
4.95

15.88

1.88
Round

6.88
4.88
Rectangular

Amber Louvered
Sealed Beam
Fog Lights
Warm in w inter, coo l in summer
Head lamps
4·001 1-2WS Reg. 18 .95

#6014 , #4001 ' #4000
Reg . 2.99

Reg

Save ove r 15 00

Dipstick Heater

Sealed Beam
Headlamps

Re g 7.99 #WA 10 FCC

15.88

U65 I , #46 52 Reg. 5.49
#6052 Re9 . 6.88

Box score:
..t.~ t•J - Bi ll f'1nnf'&lt;u1y ~1-21 : .Jt'ff Dl•an
l ·H·l: .ladr: Wa rman J..n.6: G.'lltf Dahl&gt;lkn 4~: 0\rl!i
l.ronard:w.G: T. C. H oward 1-U-2: Man .Jadan iJ..O.ll:
~l"\'C' Maro!mb6 lfl·2: Dilllf' Mr Ailisk'r :!--.~~ 0\ ris
Gm~t ~ t·n. ror..u.s s-lHIJ.
. LOGAN rn11 - J rk Mill('!' S..&amp;'l-1 ; Sron Fmnr

College

srores

f'rtdM)" II {'flllf&gt;p'

~

SOIITR
Alubama lit, KA'It ~atf' Gl
Alabama liri, Kmt St 6f
Aubu:'n 61, Ala . Bl rmln¢\am

8t"'O"t't'l

~

Bapflst hi. Bt&gt;ttlu rr-Cookman ~
F'lorlda M. FlOrida St . Ill
Gror!lla Soulhr'l'ft 70, Ed'rrd 62
Grorgla 1't-ch !16, Teni'IC'!IM'l' '1\&gt;&lt;'1"178

Old Dominion 107, S.C..Aikm 7'.l

Sooth F1m1da m. l..ontl; Island&amp;&amp;.
VarxPrbill 'if7. Yak&gt;Tl

...........

err

E. Mki\lj;tan 8!;, Dlk'lfl;o Sl . 7ti
Nort hrm Iowa 61 , South Carolina SL til ,

ar

Ol:J:rltn ii. Olive-t ~
S. llllnot!&lt; 61 . MI!YD.n1·Kansas Clry
Voongstow n Sl . 1'1 . Alatwna Sl. M

,.,.,.,..,.,..

~

14.88pai
r
1
O.OOou
109.88
All Kenco
Reddy Heaters Mechanic Style

9.88
Tailgate
Protectors
Brig ht aluminum and
Chrome Steel.
Reg. 12.95-14.95

Running
Boards

Hard[n..Sjl'l"'rn)f''l i"J, O.Uas Baptist f!l

FARIIll!T
Air Fon1• 78. Idaho 67

Prtcu In ollocl December 2, thru December

Arizona N. TuiM 111
,
f'.ont.i$11 $ . Cent. ~a~llfnR1on 61
Nt,&gt;o.·. ·Lal Vl'jCaa Ill, ColOrado St. 78
Portland 46. E . Wasldllg~a~ f4

209 UPPER RIVER ROAD

446-3807
~PEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

91. Mary'o !Ml, Col·!&lt;oo llletlo 61
Wyc:rnq: II, South Dllllot• 74

_,...
,.,._

TlllJIINAMI!m

-

...

. . New 0......,.

.

.

Put the heat where it belo ngs .
Reg . 129.68

Car Ramps

pair

Sturdy steel construct ion w 1th
wheel wells.
Reg . 19 .88

99.00

Two Ton
Professional
Floor Jack

Reg.

129.95

�'

Page--C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Honor 16 TVCplayers

MAC pursuing other bowl appearances

POMEROY - Sixteen players
from the Tri-Valley Conference
were recently named to the Associated Press' AU-Ohio Football
Team, including 12 on the Class AA
team a nd four more on the Class A
team.
Among those on the Class AA
squad were Meigs' Tony Weich,
Mike Chancey, and Brad Robinson.
Weich was named on the special
mention selection while both Chan-.
cey a nd Robinson were named on
the special mention teams.

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
- Officials of the Mid-American
Conference say they kn9w they
haven't done enough to ensure that
MAC teams get bowl bids, but say
that could change with better
marketing and more winning
teams.
Toledo will be the only MAC team
among the 36 NCAA Divison 1-A
schools going to bowl games this
year. The Rockets take on NevadaLas Vegas on Dec. 15 in the
California Bowl, which matches the
champions of the MAC a nd the
Pacific -Coast Athletic Association
each year.
"We're not pursuing other bowl
games as vigorously as we should
and we will," said MAC Commissioner Jim Lessig.
He said marketing the MAC is his
top priortty between now ' and the
1985 season, with a preseason press

W!'lch is a 270 pound senior tackle
while Chancey is a 190 pound junior
quarterback-kicker and Robinson a
160 pound junior tailback-middle
guard.
TVC champion Belpre headed the
number of picks among league
schools with five. Quarterback Lee
Holder, the TVC's offensive player

of the year, .was named to the first
team offense. Other Eagles on the
squad included Roger Ruble, Ernie
WUUams, and Nathan Carr on the
special mention and Russ Logue on
the honorable mention picks.
Other TVC performers on the
Class AA team included Ryan
Carsey (Alexander) and Jay Kline
(Nelsonville-York) on the special
mention and CUnton Sa under tAiexander ) and Pat Bohyer
(Nelsonville-York) on the honorable
mention.
The TVC's defensive player oft he ·
year, Danny Lackey,·was named to
the first team defensive squad in
class A. Lackey is a 200 pound senior
linebacker from Trimble.
Also from Trimble named to the
squad were Paul Jewell and Steve
Campbell, both honorable mention.
Miller's Ray Jenkins was named to
the third team defensive squad.

tour of the Midwest by several
conference players and coaches
1
anllcipated.
Also tentatively planned Is a visit
to New York by Lessig and coaches
of two conference teams to show off
the MAC and Its top players to
representatives of national sports
publications.
Lessig and BowUng Green Coach
Denny Stolz said future bowl
invita tions also could depend on
victories, scholarship availability,
and the financial condition of the
bowls themselves ..
" We're better than a lot of teams
going to bowls," said Stolz, whose
team went 8-31or the seaSon but got
no bowl Invitation this year. "I've
never said we'reOhlo State or Notre
Dame, but I've always said we can
compete against other schools.
"You'd have a hard Urne convincing Miami (of Florida) that the

December 2, 1984

Mid· American Conference ls_n 't l-A.
Miami beat Cincinnati (in Its last
game), Cindnnatl beat Louisville
and Louisville beat Houston, which
can still win the Southwest Confer·
ence. There's certainly room to say
we'd compete in a bowl game."
Tile Southwest Conference has
four teams going to bowls.
Stolz said MAC schools also would
have a better chance of getting a
bowl invitatlon if the number of
footliall scholarships allowed per
institution was increased.
Tile MAC Council of Presidents
has raised that number from 75over
a four-year .pertod to 85 since 1982.
MAC coaches would liketheirteams
to be allowed a maxtnnum of 90
scholarships, which Is still five
fewer than the NCAA's maxtnnum·
for Division I·A schools.
"If we get 90 scholarships, our
won-loss record against other Div-

Remington

MINN KOTA

870: VENT RIB,
12 GA: FULL C;; ;,;HO;;,;,;,K;. E- · I

MODEL

'279

ision I-A_schoolswilllmprove50or60
percent," Stolz said.
The success ot the MAC In
postseason play also depends on the
bowls, Lessig said.
"Our bowl future depends on how
many bowls continue to be a
success. Some, like the Peach Bowl,
have had financial problems,'' he
said.
'
"If all the bowls survive, we have
an excellent chance of getting a
second team In three or four years.
But that team would need arecordot
9-2 or a minimum of 8-3 wlih some
sort of player draw like Brian
McClure," Lessig said,-referring to
Bowling Green's . record-setting
quarterback.
Conference officials are expected
to extend Ute CaUfornia Bowl
contract with the PCAA tllrough Ute
1989 season.

MODEL 35

']0995
MODEL 65
95
'179

95

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C7 •

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

Wildlife report...
By TOM BELVILLE
Special Co1T1!8pondeot
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio and West
Virginia's regular deer gun seasons
ended yesterday. As of this writing,
however, the final tallies are r.ot ail
complete. Both states are showing
very successful seasons once again.
We won't know if any records have
been broken for another week or so .
According to the West Virginia
Department of Natural Resources
a few less bycks were taken the first
week ot gun season this year than
last year when more than 50,000
were taken.
It you didn't score in West
Virginia there Is still a two-day doe
season In designated counties for
residents only to be held Dec. 7 and
8. Also a one-day muzzleloader
season will be held Dec. 15 for all
. license holders who have killed less
than two deer. During this . hunt
does may be taken only In counties
h.aving the two-day doe season. In
all other count!~ it Is bucks only.
In Ohio large numbers of deer
kills are being reported. The Gall Ia
County checking stations I checked
with through Wednesday report as
follows: Cremeens Guns In Gallipolis, 400; Swain's General Store at
Crown City, 41; VIllage Market at
Rio Grande, 267; and Drummond's
Store at Mudsoc, 10.
It you haven' t gotten your deer in
Ohio you still have the three day

Auburn slips past Alabama-Birmingham

Vegas tripped Colorado State !18-78.
player of the ye11-r last season,
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Auburn
did
not
lead
in
tlhe
second
triggered
a 23-2 burst in the second
Last week, II was Alabama muzzleloader season Jan. S. 9, and Birmingham's tum to sneak up on h.alf untU Moore's foul shots put the
half that furthered tht&gt; rout. Berry
10 to get -your buck or doe.
' some ranked teams. On Friday Tigers in front 00-59 with 56 seconds
finished with 15 points a nd 12
Here are the names of some
left.
Chris
Morris
made
another
foul
rebounds.
night. it was Auburn's turn, and the
successful Ohio hunters in our victim this - Iinne was No. 11 shot with 20 seconds remaining.
St. John's, which will play St,
area: Brent Halley, eight point;·
-e.
who
did
not
start
.
finished
Moo.
Bonaventure
in tht&gt; championship
Alabama-Birrnlngham,
Mike Northup, ll point; Randy
12
points
and
six
rebounds
.
with
game toni ght, has won the first nine
In the ~reseason Top TWenty,
Martin, eight point; Billy Swain,
"They got the big baskets when . Lapchick Tournaments, named for
Alabama-Birmingham was not
eight point; Jell Barnes, ll point;
the late St. John's coach . Mullin has
ranked,. yet the Blazers got there by they had to get them." AlabamaRay Myers, eight point; Cody
been the tournament' s most va luaknocking off then-No. 2 Illinois and Birmingham Coach Gene Bartow
Boothe, spoke; David Gillenwater,
ble player the last three years.
No. 19 Kansas in the Great Alaska . said. "Auburn's a good team .
nine _po!nt; Mark Mooney, llpoint;
Keith Lee scored a career-high 39
They're going to win a lot of games."
Shoot out Tournament.
.Joey Russell,10point; Tim Phillips,
points as Coach Dana Kirk regi.sBartow was disappointed With his
But on Friday night, Auburn
and Brett Wilson.
tered .his JCXlth victory at Memphis
downed Ala hama.-Birmlngham 61 - team 's foul shooting. AlabamaState by beating Arkansas State in
59, helped byfreshmaqforwardJeff Birmingham, which got 24 points
The West Virginia black hear Moore's two key tree throws in the from Steve Mitchell , shot only 5of 11
tht&gt; Mid -South Classic.
season opens Monday, Dec. 3, and
from the foul line ln slipping to 3-1
Lee, a 6-foot-10 senior forward,
final minute.
runs through Dec. 21.
scored 2'l points in the fi rst h.alf. The
"He got the rebounds when they this season. Auburn made 11 of 16
Last year 129 legal bears were counted and he got somecrittcalfoul foul shots in Improving to 3-0.
Tigers led 32-31 at intermission
taken In the "Mountain State."
Top Twenty
before charging in front and into the
shots," Auburn Coach Sonny Smith
Randolph County led the way with
All-America guard Cluis Mullin
tournament final against Southern
said of Moore.
44 kills . Tlie bear population In West
California .
Other Top TWenty teams did not scored 25pointsasSt. John 'sopened
Virginia has shown a steady
by
coasting
pa
st
La
William Bedford, a 7-foot center.
its
season
have much trouble. Third-ranked
Increase for the past few years.
scored
15 points as Memphi s State
fa
yette
in
the
first
round
of
the
lOth
St. John 's routed Lafayette 93-47,
According to game biologists the No. 5 Memphis State beat Arkansas
a'n nual Joe Lapchick MPmorial. won its first game of thp year.
late season which was begun last
Washington 's forward tandem of
State 79-62, No. 8 Washington . Tournament. Mullin, a 6-foot -6
year should help the population
senior,
helped
the
Redmen
cruise
to
Schremp! and Paul Fonier
Detlef
downed Ball State 66-55, No. 18
considerably. It .seems that sows Georgia Tech defeated Tennessee
proved too much for Bali State in the
a 41-20 lead at halftime.
(female bears) den up earlier so Tech 96-78 and No. ~ Nevada-Las
Walter Berry, the junior coll ege Sun Met Classic. ,
males are more likely to be.t aken in
the late season.
Last year moretlian 70percent'of
the bears kllled were mates. Only 10
counties are ope_n to hear hunting.
Most hunting is done with dogs.
· OPEN 7 DAYS
Residents must buy a four-dollar
MON. thru FRI. 8 to 8
bear damage stamp while nonSATURDAY 8 to 6
residents pay an additional oneSUNDAY 9 to 5
hundred dollars to hunt bears.

''lte're out to earn
your business!"

Lyne Center Schedule

WINCH£51£R

Week of De&lt;. I, lll34
Dale - G)'JIUl8Sium
Pool
~· 21-J:':KJ p.m . Open Rec .................................................. .... .. 1-J::W p.m. OJX'fl Swim
. 6-8 p.m . College Rec ... ........... ......... .. .. :.............................. 6-8 p.m. College Swlm

MODEL 120 • 20 GA., YOUTH MODEL

Dec. 3 CIORed ........................ .... ..... ...................................... .... 1t30-12::W Fitness Swim
7:.)} p.m. Redmen vs. ...... .......
. .... ..... .. , .......... .ChJSt'(!

Schremp! scored 20 points and
For1ier got 15 as the Huskies scored
the game's tlrst eigl)t points and
never trailed in its opener.
Ball State managed to score the
final e ight points of the first half and .
trailed 34 -31 at intermission. The
game remained close until a 6--0
burst gave Washington a 58-47
margin with 3:041eft to play.
The Huskies will pl ay · Fresno
Sta te in the Sun Met title game.
Bruce Dalrymple scored 24 points
In helping Georgia Tech pull away
from a one-point halftime lead over
Tennessee Tech .
The Yellow Jackets went on a
2'3-10 burst to sia n the seCond half
and later ran off a 17-4 burstthat put
the game away.
Dalrymple gol 15 points in the
second half. Yvon Joseph finished
"ith 19 for Grorgia Tech. :l-0.
Anthony .Jones scored 19 points
and Richie Adams had 17 to pace
Nevada -Las Vegas over Colorado
Sta te.
The Runnin' RPbels trailed 48-46
at ha lftimc but a 12-point streak
early in I he S€&lt;'0nd half put them in
command . UNLVis
·

Bluefie ld Stat(&gt;

'159

95
'349
STEVENS MODEL 311 DOUBLE BARREL SHOTGUNS

95

MODEL 25M · MARLIN 22. MAG. BOLT

20 Ga. or 410 Ga.
95

Choice

•I• s1-11mRno

Jtmington.
~==:--12 Ga. With Vent Rib

CAMO FINISH

$19995

MAGNUM
HUNTER

$11995•

7 p.m . W . Va , Tedl vs. DykE'
9 p.m . ~mE'n vs. Edward Walf'rs
Dec. 8 CIOSPd-Bevo Francis Classic. ...............................
Womf'n's Schedul(&gt;

pee.

'6995

"CAMFORCE"

10% REBATE

GAS LINE
ANTI·FREEZE
•PREVENTS GAS-li NE
FRIEZE-UP

1

~.,::' 00

. .......................... .. Closed

4 p .m . Championship
Men's Schedule
7 p.m . COnsolidation '
9 p.m . Championship
g 1 -~ p.m . Open Rfic .......................................................... 1-3: :ll p.m. Open Swim

ZEREX
ANTI FREEZE

•REMOVES GAS-liNE
MOISTURE

M&lt;'n's Schedule

2 p.m. Consolation

FISHING REELS

REMINGTON "SPORTSMAN" ,12 PUMP

~~""''

'199

Dl'c. 4 6-8 p .m . Colk'ge R&lt;&gt;e ...................................................... 11:Jl-t2:30 Fitness Swlm
6-8 p .m. Collegt&gt; S",'im
J:lEic. 5 CIO!'ed .......... ......................... .-............... ., ..................... 11 :30-12:30 Fltness Swim
7:lJ p.m . RedJTl('n vs. PikC'villc .................................. ... .................... ....... Closed
Di'c. 6 &amp;8 p.m . College Rc&gt;c ........... ... .. ................................. ...... ll :.?l}-12: 30 F llness Swim
6-8 p.m. Coll£&gt;g:t&gt; Swim
Ore. 7 Closed-BC'vo Francis Classic ........................................... ll ::MJ-12:30 F ilness Swim
Women's SchedulE'.. .................. .. . . . . .. . .. ... . .. . . ..
. ....... ... ............... ..Closed
2p.m . DykE' vs . Wilmington
4 p.m . Rio Crandf:' vs. Thoriw :~ More

36!.!

PER GAl. AnER
MFG. REBATE
LIMIT 2 GAL. FOR
REBATE. LIMIT4
AT SALE PRICE.

UP TO 440 CCA •

8 p.m . CollegE&gt; Rec. ....... .. ....... ........... ... .. ......................... 6-8 p.m. College Swlm

60MONTH

43!.!

MAINTSWKI fm IAOII!fi

SALE PRI(:E 3.44 Gal.

COI~AIIS Will HUP YOU WITH THI
RIGHT fOPQUMifY IAnERY fOR

UP TO ~40 CCA'

'1'0\M W . OCO: YOURS NOW!

FROM SHIMANO

ROLL AROUND·H.D.

BAnEIY BOOSTER
/CHARGER

lOW-30
MOTOR 011

50-375AMPS

RELOADER
SPECIAL
2-STARTER
KIT

9989

MEC
600 JR.
RELOADERS

SNIPER

12 or 20 Ga.

All tOols needed to sl art reloadin g eMcep1 dies and

WIDE ANGLE

she ll holdror .

Includes Aeloader Specral -2 press. load•ng block, case

Model 1245 lpln-Cut Combination

3 X 9 X40MM

lube kit, primer tray , powder fu nne l. 5·0 ·5 powder scale
and speer reloading manual.

$6995

'9!~1ATE

TREE STAND KIT

49.95
BUSHWACKER TREE STAND KIT

34.95 .

Allor Rebate 17.95

PJI'..-111!2!

lEBCD.

EZ-SIDER II

CHROME TAILGATE

PIOTEOORS

HEAD CLOTH

TWO· PIECE
CAMOUFLAGE SUITS .

'19

95

SPITFIRE COMPOUND

Scope &amp; Mount
SHOOTER &amp; liGHTER VERSION Nol Inc luded

$

WEIGHT -'
CAMO 2-PIECE

WINCH£STU MODU 120

12 GA.

DEER GUN
95

MODEL 120 · 12 GA., DEER COMBO

REO HEA'D HUNTING
l'rin ·

lo·~~ ~lfr.

R.-l•;lh'
I\t:t Cll~t

Afte-r lh•t-.at,

'49.95
• 515.00

$34.95

4 PIECE SET
IUIIII

1!-11!!!!!!!!!!~.,1

FLOOR
MATS

~

w ~ JUII! I l

99m9

PICK-UP TRUCK

REAR
BUMPERS

CUSTOM

INSTALLIT
YOURSElF!

6999

FOXFIRE COMPOUND
Scope &amp; Mount Not lnncluded

$242

'18995

8999
·~y ~~

110
"

MUSICAl
HORN

5flcktl

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PROGRAMMABLE

STEERING
WHEEl
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llrm,

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CoiC..W.H.M

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'2495

1488

8-K ARROWSTOP
TARGETS

$159

'29'5
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53 -9110. 53 -9iJO

ANY INITOCK

• l!!mmD

99
cusroM2999
49

HEADERS

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No. !U-11010. !3·9030

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After Rtba1e
110-95

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'1395

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'"2499

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liKE PIAP+O

SIMULATED SH&amp;I'5KtN

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SALE 18.99

..

=15~

-

14•C!I7~•2

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 a.m.-8:00' p.m.; Open Sun., 12 noon to 5:00 p.m.
Pleasanl &amp; Mason on St. Rt. 62 Next to Mason Co11nty Falrgrou1Jds

Silver Bridge Plaza-Phone 446-9335
"WE .MAKE

Bill Kelly
Manager

IT RIGHT"
==~~~~~~------~------------------------~--,,,

J

�Times-Sentinel

Ohio

· ONLYONDULIIECOVERS

High school scores
a,,..--......,

ONo H.S.IIo)'l, P

l'llSE'-Westem 74. Ca~if\.Mfllon . 62
Clarlon 1Pa.1 State Tournammt
Cmtral St . 113. Pa('(' lli

NFL results

-

Nltlklnal Foothall inpl'

F'rid&amp;J'» .....
Akron E. 00, Akrm Hoban ~
Akron N. ftl, Mffilna SUet(')"

x·Miamt
l'PY.' F.n$1:1:md

S.Y.. INs

o

.bl~

:0!1 'M1

.462

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an

Indi ana polls

~!IO

A'OJ]f')'J,,P

Buff alo

l 12 0
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C'll1ctnna1l

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4
2

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HWSIOO

6
8

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9

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.154 un :li.1

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~a nt('

11

2

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LA R&lt;lldt' t'S

II
9

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II
0

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6

7

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Dallas 1£'8. s-.an lt&gt; 98 ·

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tl)l , LA ClippPr'S 1(1)
L.A . Lakcn 13:1, Kansas C'lty 121
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Now's a very ~ time to buy the beautiful,
affordable AllArnencan home you've always dreamed
of. If you buy before January 20, with your home to be
built and delivered before ~ 1. 1985, we'll sweeten
the deal With a free $12,000 TIGR.
,
What's a TIGR? It's an abbreviation for 1reasury
Investment Growth Receipts, which combine the
safety of U.S. Treasury bonds with exceptional earnings. At maturity, your TIGR yields $12,000- yours
to use however you like.
Now you can make two of your dreams come true
at once. Owning your own home, and having the financial seCurity of a good ·savings plan. To find out how
you can get a $12,000 TIGR with your new home,
visit your authorized AD American dealer soon.

Parm~

Vallf'y ForRf' :'t.l Shakf'r Hts. 4.1
Sardinia Ea~tf'm ~~
f'rolt•ll;burR SprinR. 87, E. Pall'Stlnl:' ~1
Plra ~ ant 70. Rl\'('f Vol. 54
rlcyroJd-;bu~ 56, Col. \\'(':'!tlund .'lR
RldJ:t'OOir fil. \ard!nll!ton ~r2
RI:P;sftrd 7fl. E:ITTM'mrl ~!i
Sa ndu.~ky St.Mal)' fn, M ans. St.PC'lrr 7.J
~b)('s ~.

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Shl•twood Falrvh•w it. F'..dgenon 49
Sl dnl'~' ti7, Piqua .n
Sk;.'\'UI:' a!, Fronll£'r 51
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.,

Sf~· 71. Cu~·u~ Falls 5(i
Str11 .~bur~ !"'I), Sandy \'al . 4!;

Slr{'('lo;boro 76, CVCA !ll

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.

Stroop'l' lllC' 71. lk&gt;rt~&lt;t ."12

Ti! llmadw-o 48. Ran~&gt;nna 47

Rt . 50 West
Athens, Ohio
(See models on display)

Tf'il.YS Val . ~. Cahal Wlndti'SlC'I' . ~1. OT
Tlfflrt Cohlmbian ~l Rlll'\ru~ 4fi

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$12,000 'I'IGR. .

~

I'OSt(IJTI !fi
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Spring. Sooth IW , Da~·. MPadov.'daJ(' ffi
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Grand VaL 51. Bloomfield .jl
Grand\.'I&lt;'W ~i . .Jonathan Allk'r 51
Grf'l •nl'\' lt~· .ill. 't'cllow Springs 4.'i

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Tol. Rowslwr rJii, Tol. Woodward 4!1
To!. Cm tral W. Tot. Start Jr,
To\. Df.&gt;Vllbis.~ 60, Tol. Wal!f' $
Tol. Ma('(lllmer il. Tol. Llbb('Y

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~~--~~~~~'

f,,

SJOO U.S. SAVINGS BOND
BUY ANY 4 OF THESE RADIAL TIRES
AND RECEIVE A $100 U.S. SAVINGS
BOND FREE!

ALL SEASON
RADIAJ.S

.owest price all year .

• Whitewalls

SALE ENDS
DEC. 22
• All season steel·
belted radial

• High traction

home now,

and get a

Dft()l.i iJr Gl, Mli!C'I' City 61

Day. CilwYhlul 1.1, Da~·. Stc-bbln~ 61
Day. Christian 61 , Triad i'l
Day. Northrid2;r 70. National Trail ~9
Dily. Pal!ror.;on 81. ( In _ T aft i1
Dlly. Whll!' ~. Sprt~ . N011h 00

. IX'Iawart' 40, \\'C'S!cl"\ill£' N. :II
Del pM~ ~~JaM 61. C£'Una 5fi
Dublin m, Marys1•ll!t&gt; ~
E. Cantm til. Canollton :I.'\
E. ('linton 52 . Wayne;vUJp ~
Eaton Hi, An·anum 5fl
Elida Ill, Bowling GIT't'fl .'l:!
E lkhv.11 Ind. ~. Emmanurl Bapt. 6t
Elyria Cath . ~. Mld\1PW :i2. 0'1'

new All American

MI .V{'rnon R Whitehall 43
('I;Nwalk ~. UPJI('r Sandus)(:v 48

f)an\'lllr&gt; ~. LoodOnvillf' Tf
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MoiU'OC"V111£' 81 , NN' London 78
MI.Ht'allh,.\' 7t Falrfirld 6:!

19, Bhdfton :l2
C,opl&lt;"y 87, l'ir-IP :.S
Cory · Ral'!~l 00, PanOOnt·GliOOa ;J.'j
Oalron 1:6. Camon Tr!nlly 6!1

F'ranklln Furnm:.,-· Grt'l'fl

~7

Mt'adowbrook 51, Fon Fryf' -12
Mktlll'frM'n Fmwtdc 6'\, Mlamlsbut·,g 411

C~r~?Ron C'la~· n. Fostoria 2li
ClrTvUk&gt; 6!1, Akron Mancmter

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992-7034 or 592· 1418

~

Moo
CHEVROLET
OLDSMOBIU ·

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.

Sign of the

Time1

To Help Ce/eb,ate Thi1
UpcominR Se.aton _

OUR LOT IS FULL!!!

75
LATE MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
NE~D

TO LOWER OUR INVENTORY BEFORE THE
TAX MAN BITES!

ALL REMAINING NEW '84 MODELS

A 1 DISCOUNT PRICES.

GMAC &amp; BANK FINANCING

4fllll25~

car care centers

RIO TIRE EXCHANGE

245·5.131

205 NOITH ATWOOD
COMPITEI IAUIIC.G AVAIUIU

New Metro 25 chatge accounts opened in minutes.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation suffered a $9.2 billion foreign
trade deficit in October, the governm ent said · Friday, pushing the
yearly total past $100 billion for the
first time ever with two months left
to add to the unwelcome record.
Commerce Secretary Malcolm
Baldrige, blaming the robust
strength of the U.S. dollar, said the
deficit for aU of 1984 still appeared
headed for a $130 billion total that
would nearly ·double the previous
one-year record. Both he and
private economists pred.icted even
worse figures next year.
In October, the Commerce Department report said, U.S. companIes' exports rose slightly while
Imports from abroad declined.
Americans actually imported
. more oil than in September. But
there was a big drop In imports of
cars, clothing and other manufactured goods -an expected development at a time th~U.S. economy
was slowing d rastically and consum ers arid businesses were buying
less from aU sources.
The October deficit was down
from September's $12.6 billion,
which was the second-highest on
record. However, David Ernst, .
senior economist at Evans EconomIcs in Washington, said the decline
was small comfort.
" It's sort of funrty that $9.2 billion
Is viewed· as gOOd news these days,"
he said, referring to the fact that
such a total would have been a
record for any one month in
previous years.
The recent drastic slowdown In
recent months has reduced the
amount of consumer goods and

He said the office is obligated by law to comba i
unfair trade with tariffs, quotas and other means
regardless of their effect on consumer prices.
Papovlch characaterlzed Reagan's program as "a
frontal attack against unfair trade" by countries who
subsidize 11\elr steel Industry, dump products a t
discount prices. or divert huge amounts of exports to
the United States because other markets are closed to
them.
Schorsch said the president's st~l progra m will do
little to influence the direction of the steel industry
because It lgnor!'S other Industry problems shrinking demand, the growth of a global steel
market, and the displacement of Integrated steel

glaAts by sma Uer. more modern, more efficient
mini-mills.
··The program doesn't change the . long-tern\
prospects of the U.S..steellndustry either for better or
worse, " he said. "Steel import restraints ... don't
rna terially address the three major problems."
Papovich agreed that " the industry's problems are
certainly much bigger than just trade. Our
commitment Is to provide them with stabUity (by)
takilig unfairness out of the marketplace."
He added , ''The steel indus try has told us many
times that they can competP If we take the unfair
trade out of the system. That's what we intend to do,"
he said.

Mike Sickels or Roger Dillard.

t
'

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - WOllam J . Schroeder. weary but
fort !lied with one of his favorite
.frozen treats, took twotrialrunsona
!)Jrtable machine to power his
mechanical heart and ''tolerated It
wry we ll." doctors said.
The 52-year.,id federal retiree
from Jasper, Ind., was hookro to the
lHxmnd. banery-operated pump
for 22 minutes Friday afternoon,
five days after a Jarvik·7 mechanical heart was implan ted in his chest
at Humana Hospital Audubon .The
portable unit was reattached for an
hour Friday night to the air tubes
that will be Schroeder's life lines.
The Heimes Portable Heart
Driver. developed by West German
scientist Peter Heimes. "performed
accord ing to expectations a nd he
tol erated it ve ry weU," hospital
offi cials said lat e Friday in a
statement.
Schroeder "had two Popsicles
while he was on it." the statement
said . "All vital signs are good. He Is
stiU listed in critical but sta ble
condition .
" Hi s recovery is continuin g to

progress satisfac toril;•. H&lt;' was
somPWhat mor&lt;' tired Frida;·. so his
rPsl a nd sleep periods are JX&gt;ing
ex!Pnded."
.In . fac t, Scil1"oedN wa s "ex·
tremely worn out." sa id Dr. Allan
M

HElMES HEART DRIVER - Peter Helmes,
from West Gennany, holds up his portable artificial
heart driver during a press conference in Louisville,

Ky., Friday afternoon. Artificial heart recipient
William Schroeder wa.• hooked up to the portable unit
prior to the press conference. ( AP La.o;erphotu).

La n~in g,

r hainnan of Hum ana

Heart In stitu te In ternational. Joca1ed at thP hospital. He said that
was not unexpected since Schroeder
had been "qui lt&gt; actiw" 1hP day
tx&gt;for&lt;'.
But i1 will mf'a n tha1 Schroeder is
at least several days away from
full;• enj oy ing the H eimc~ dri vrr's
main fea,ture . f r

f&gt; f'

d 0 m 0

r

movC'mt:•nl .

faces aimost certa in disbarment, according to Judge
Angelo J . Gagliardo, disciplinary counsel of the Ohio
Supreme Court .
A flve·man. seven-woman commom pleas court
jury deliberated for atxJut eight hours Friday befon.&gt;
returning its verdict.
Colburn, 36, showed no emotion when Common
Pleas Court Judge Jotm B. MarshaU read the verdict.
Col burn had contended he shot Albrecht. 39, in
self-defense following more than one year of

harassment. threats and assa ult s by the l'ictim .
Albrecht, an unemployed physical educa 1ion trachcr.
is the ex·husband of Colburn's g irlfriend .
Albrecht was unarm&lt;'&lt;l on the e\·cning or the
shooting as he strode toward Colburn's car at a
downtown iil tersection, accordi ng to tria l test im ony.
Colburn allegedly cracked op.&gt;n the car doo1 ·and fir&lt;&gt;d
one shot between the door and wi ndshield .
Colburn remains free on $7,500 bail p&lt;&gt;ndin ~
sentencing. Defense attorneys Richard L Eisnaugle
and James Scott Smith ha ve30 days to fil ~ an apJx•;.d.

E isnauglc sa id he was surprised by thP vPrdict. ·:rth ink he's innocent." he sa id.
Coss sa id he was not confidPnt as the hours passed ,
but "under 1he taw, the re was no quest ion of his guilt. I
wonder('() if the jury would feel sympathy for him ::
The verdic t probab ly rende rs moot a motioq
(X'nding in I he Ohio Suprpme Court to for(e :
Port smouth C lry Clerk .Jackir Coriell to ce rtify as ·
valid p&lt;&gt;titi ons filt'd to bring about a recall election on ·
th0 councilman. who took offlCf' in .Januaf)'.

.---......---------Ohio briefs::-:----------__,

f
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446-3672

business machinery that Americans are willing or able to buy from overseas as well as from U.S.
companies. ·
By aU accounts, the main reason
for this year's soaring deficit in
merchandise trade is the high value
of the U.S. dollar in relation t.o most
other nations' currencies, a situation which makes foreign goods
cheaper for Arnertcans to import
and American goods more ex pensive for foreigners to buy.
"These continuing problems underscore the need to cu t the budget
deficit to reduce interest rates
further to lower the dollar,"
Baldrige said after the new report
was released.
Many economists believe the
huge f~eral budget deficit tends to
push interest rates higher by
increasing government demands
for the limited money available to
txJrrowers and by Increasing fears
that inflation will begin rising more
rapidly, They also say high rates
attract foreign inv&lt;&gt;Stment that
propels the value of the dollar
upward.
Such a situation has crippled or
!'ven crushed some companies that
compete with foreign producers.
Baldrige, In his prepared statem ent , did not give an estimate for
the 1985 trade deficit . But he did say
thar "the worsening trend should
slow next year."
Ernst ventured ari estimate of
about $150 billion, adding that "the
only way next year's deficit could be
lower than this year's is I! we go into
a full-fledged recession" - something neither he nor other economists expect.

PORTSMOUTII, Ohio (AP) -JosephL.Colburn, a
city councilman and attorney, is to be sentenced
Monday after being found guiltyoffelonious assa ult in
the April 23 shootiilg of William Albrecht .
The minimum sentence for the offense is three-to-15
years. But the charge against Colburn also carried a
firearm specification, adding three years to the
sentence and ruling out s hock parole or probation.
said Highland County Prosecutor Rocky Coss. who
was sent to Scioto County to handle the case. .
In addition, a lawyer found guilty of such a felony

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.'
1616 IASTEIN AYE., GALLIPOUS, OH.

Shroeder tries
portable unit

Portsmouth councilman guilty of .assault; awaits .sentence

:

Car Values!

60 MONTH FINANCING AVAILABLE TO
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS.

SEE US IN THE YELLOW P~IES

f

Jim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile

WE

producing nations to win voluntary impbrt ceUings,
and says the agreements shOuld reduce imports to 20
percent of the U.S. market.
Schorsch said the 20 percent penetration would
prompt an average 6 percent hike iil steel prices, a 5.1
percent rise in domestic steel industry profits, apd a
$3.4 billion transfer of Income from consumers to steel
companies - $1.8 billion to domestic , $1.6 billion to
foreign . ·
.
Joseph Papovlch, director of steel trade policy for
the Office of U.S, Trade Representative, said his
office. has not calculated the Impact of the restraint
program on consttrilers.

Nation suffers foreign
·trade deficit in October

of mate r ial currently on hand .

!!lESTER

Parma 59, r.arlldd Hts. :i6

D£Crarf Rl\'f't'Sldc' !'iti, Botkins -Ill

squart&gt;~

LUMBER

Lorall'l 8roJksldt• fll. Cotum~a 4ti
Lorall'l Calh. 81. AmhPrst Sl(ll(&gt;l£' 54
l&lt;raln SoolhVIt'W ti6, Lorain (ll.'al'' i~·

U!1:t'land M , Madt&gt;lra ~
lutiY:oran W. 73, Klski IPa.t Prw 69
Mans. Malabar ill. Mansfield fill
Maple His. 82, Wlllw,ghby S. ~
Mat11ns I'Prry fli, Toronto 56
l\olcCJaln 7i, Madbon Plains &lt;1.1

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Ewrgn1•n IIi. S%';mto.n R\, OT
F'all'IM~S ~1. \\'. Holtnl'S 52
Fall'\'ll'w Pat'k .'l!l, Rocky Rl\'t'r
Fc-lklty ffi, WPsl&lt;'m Brown rl'l
F'ol't . ll'nnln~!; 70, Arlington ~l

200

Loddand 93, On. Coontry Day 44
l.JJfj!an 'II!, Attnls 00
London~. SIR WalJ'lut 47

Coni'~ CIT'~ I\it'W

W L T Ptr&gt; GF G,\
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Mllw
i't\Jill . runnln~ Q.a('k
Pli!n'd
Chari(;; \\'hi!{', ru1111ing buck . on ttl' in ·
iun'd H''OYC' lisT.
!'&gt; J.:W YORK ,JFT'S-Wain'(! Skl p L.1nt •,
1!.·kn ~l l't" bilck . R!•ar!l\'31rrl 1\urt Sulm.
wldl • tl'l1 'il'('r.

( 'amt.-"Kie-Mt'llun Thurruunml
Wi•s trnln~lt ' r. P&lt;t . ~ . Mnunr l'niOn

Dlv'Won

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Lincoftvlf'W 73, Ada ~

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Wi\LL-., OONFEREN('E

F'O(rm ..u.L
Su.UonaJ fo'oothull IA.'Itt(tA•

Col. Eastmoor

I

, I'J' V."¥1'0~1'1 '

D

T.h e Lifetime ROofing

Uma Cath. 71, Van W~rt 61
l.lma Tctnplf&gt; 74. Da~·. TE"rf''PIP !'1.1

Cui. W~t til. Col. Centmnlal ti2
rot. Whl'ts tom• 62. Col_ Marion·Franklln

Natlonu.l Htd.t'y Leiii!UC
By Tht' A_-_•lated ~

Transactions

Lima 00, Findlay 59

Col. !'&gt;ot·tiiJand ll, Co l. [)(&lt;Salrs :II
Col. !=iout h !'8. Col. MJmln :'i6
Col. Tt('{' ol llfr 11!. Col. C'tuistJan .jJ

NHL resulls
PaUriek

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~QUARE

endullne~

Licking Val. 12, Cran\'illf' 61

Col. Acadl'my 61 , w_ Jetf('t'Son J4
C:Oi. Hftthcroft 119, Col. ln€k&gt;pm ct&gt;nre 71i
Col. F.ast Sl, Col. Bri,2:Rs 4!1
Col. Franklin His. 67, Pid«-rbl.etoo 57
fol. Hamlltoo Tv•p. 49, Fa i r11t~d Union

Df'lroit at Sl'alllt•

J..a.

A COVERED

Lallngton 55, Sparta Hli(hland 46
Ueklnp; His. 59, Mlllersport ~1

W. Rrw;pf'l·r 42

Cl("'.•clantl at Bostm
1'\r~· .JPI'Sl'.l ' at Philadf'lphia
ClllC&lt;Ji!O at LA. Lakl'I'S

51, Bristol 50

I..L&gt;rrnn-MonmP m, Lroanoo &amp;i

Cl&lt;". East !II, be. Llnrolli·W..'H
Cl&lt;". Gllmour Ill. Cit'. Grlsw~d 46
Cl(•. Hawkell ~. Richmond His. :n
Cit•. Mm1ihall 6:.!, Cle. Rh(XIE's "19. OT
Cit'. Sl.lfimatlus 71, Parma Padua ~
Cllnton.Mar;;sle 62, Little Miami 47
CIQ\•cflca r 50, Midpark 48
Coldwau-r 91, Bath rf.l
Columtiana 76." LI5bon 60
Col umtJlana CresM~' !'ii. Rrrlln Ctr .

Own~

Friday'"

E

\.\f\.RR,\~m·.

l..eelonla Got, S. RanRe t3

ClayrronJ 52. Unk&gt;ntown Lak£&gt; &lt;14
l1f'. Adam~' 67, Cl". E . T('('h 61i

5 1~

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Ufl11ME
UMmll

l .o~ kc•land 49, Indian Valley N. 44
Lancast('l' Fisher 1l, J;ltme Union 52

~mwmt

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Kmt~t~.MmOOmaffi
Kin~ A&lt;'ad. 61, Elyrta Chr. 51

5I

( ln _Gm&gt;nh.llls 6i, On . Nortil\l.'f'SI &lt;18
Cln . Indian Hill 5.1. MariM!ont !'i t
Cln . LaSalle- 00, Cln . Woodward ffi
Cln. Mc!'&gt;ld\olas m, Cin. St.Xa\1f'l' 48
· Cin . Pwwii·Mar ian n . NON·wd 5i
Cln. Sycarnon&gt; 'l'i. OrPr Park 4J

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Jack3on·MUton 00, Farminl(10n .S
Kenstoo til. Twllllburg 51

Cln . Eldl'r R:!, Cin . CoiNaln 57
C'in . f'orrst Park 52. Cin. Walnut Hills

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• Less condensation
than metal ·

Indl&gt;pPndenoo 'iT, N. ~al !m ~

ntllllrothl&gt; 49. Hilli ard 38
Lin . Baron 65. N. CollpgP Hill 63, OT
Cln . CAPE 7:l, Conn('r, K~·. il

Dtvlsion
12 .1

Datla!i
Lila h

al Minnesota

Sunday, Ilrf&gt;c.
C'lnrlnna tl at CJ(.&gt;V(&gt;Jand

.611

WASIDNGTON (AP) - If President Reagan's
voluntary steel import restraint program succeeds,
consumers will put $3.4 bUllon into the pockets of
domestic and foreign steel companies over flveyel!rs.
a non-partisan analyst said Friday.
"The program represents a tax on U.S. consumers.
and a transfer of Income to domestic and foreign
producers. There's no value judgment In that- it's a
matter of public .policy," Louis Schorsch, a steel
expert with the Congressional Budget Office, told a
st~l trade conference.
"It's not clear whether this program could be a net
benefit or net loss to society," he added.
The administration is negotiating with major steel

than metal

lncllall ValleyS. 57, MaiVE'rn 46
Jackilon Cenler 58, Koustm Sf

Bloom.C&amp;ITOIJ 81, Logan ~Jm 56
Budi:E')(' Central 57, Wynford !'6. OT
Bu~ N. 7'l, Minao 61
Bucl&lt;&lt;'w Tran 00. Bartll':-,·JJlfo 1~1
Cadll. 11;1, 13uckL'H' S. 51
Ca!dweiJ 47, wafplford 41
Canfi(&gt;Jd 51, Niles McKltlll'Y J7
Canton Scuti16t AUIIU1C'C' 58
Canton TimkPn W, Akron GarfiPid +I
Cardinal 5t!, Fain;or1 Hardin~-! 50
Chagfin Falls T~. Ck•. Dran~ lit

.Gll · 4
.5006
.&gt;121 71 .,.

1

Ql, Pt&gt;ttlsvUif' 50
HOOaon $7, Medina HJghllllld 5I
HIMI.son W. Rl'!it'rvP ~. Cit&gt;. Ha~ 47
HW"m II( , Vl'I'Tnlllm 41

'l"nn..- ~...u.... Section
Oecernli- 2, 1984

Steel plan called 'a tax on U.S. consumers'

.

• Easy to install
• Absorbs noise better

HG~Ratc

BI'XIey iti. Buckf'}'f' Val . 40
Blark RIVer &amp;J , Mapl€!'1 on 45

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Milwauket•
C'hlta~o

Monday'!&gt;i Ganw
New York .lets 17
Timrsdu.y, Nov. 1!$

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Atlanta

0
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N.Y. G iani .~
WashlnfZlpn
Dallas
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. • Won't rust or corrode, ever

HWsdaW ED, SmlthvUle (if

Bay 74. Olm&lt;&gt;ted Falls 48
Bedford &amp; , Euclid 42
&amp;:lltofontal.n(&gt; 00, Lima Sha1''rft' 52

E4SI'ERN CONFERENCE

~

HU!storo 61, ctrclevllle !':8

Ash labuli! !n. Madison 62
Avm LakE' &amp;1 . \\'(l§t!aJ(f' ta
A~'(lf"S\·JIIe 73, Patrick H('llry 9&gt;

National Ba!ooketbd A!tildatk.

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Atrnd:la 57, Vanii.M' 49
Archb:lld fi1. Wausron 59

NBA results

:11:1

Grovfi)Crt ~ UP!X'I· ArllJ!gton; 47
Hamilton 11, Fairborn " ·
Hamllloo Badin &amp;J. Sprinaboro G1
fbmltton Rais 4.1, Cln . Flnneyluwn t2
Hrorm l..aklwood Ri. Utica t::t

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Amelia t.1, BMtw&gt;I·Tate 41

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-State/ ational

LIMITED WARRANTY.

Grf!ftlfibq Gn!en 63, Jboveno ~

Amanda.Oeai"('T'{{C&gt;k 61. Uberty UniOn

t\MEIUC.-\N OONF'ERENl'E

100RROOfWITBALD'mME

Cret'I'IOn 116, Kmtm ~ ~

' re-I

December 2, 1984'

W.Va.

Point

Grimshaw heads prosecutor's group

North A! rica for a centu1y.

17,000 chickem die in fire

COLUMBUS (AP ) - Lynn A. Grimshaw, the Scioto County
prosecuting attorney, has been · elected president of the Ohio
Prosecuting Attorneys Assocation.
Grimshaw, who has lieen prosecutor since .January 1977, assumed
his association duties today as the group concluded its annual
convention here.
Ross County Prosecutor Richard G. Ward was voted
president .elect for 19S'i.
Eimer Spencer, the Adams County prosecutiilg attorney who is
retiriilg. this year after 24 years in office , was named "Outstanding .
Prosecutiilg Attorney" of 1984.
Spencer. who successfully prosecuted Robert. Dale Henderson in
the slayings of three members of an Adams County family, was
among several people honored by the group Friday night.
Alan C. Travis, an assistant Franklin County prosecutor. was
selected as Ohio's ··outstanding Assistant Prosecuting Attorney."
His selection marked the second time In four years that an assistant
prosecutor from Franklin County was chosen by the s tatewide
associa lion.
Two members of the Mansfield Police Department, Lt. Phllip
Messer and Det. Robert Mortimer, were chosen "Outstanding Peace
Officers" of the year.
Robert E . .Secoy, an investlg~tor In the Williams County
prosecutor's office, was named "Outstanding Staff Person" for 1984
by the group. He was cited for his work in Investigating sexual abuse
crimes.

Celeste welcomes foreign investment

PATASKALi\ , Ohio tAP I- More than li.OOO chickens died in a
$2.'iO.lXXI blazp that d&lt;"slroyC'd a barn at the Ba skin Chicken Farm

Hydrologist warns of drought

"

ATHENS (AP) - An Ohio Ur1verslty hydrologist warns that the
drought-induced famine In Africa is only a preview of what could
happen if large sources of water beneath the Sahara Desert aren't
tapped.
"Enough water, reached by wells, lies beneath tbe desert to
produce 5 million tons of wheat per yel!r," said Mold Ahmad.
professor and chairman of OU's department of geological sciences.
Ahmad warned that "massive starvation and famine will occur by
the year 2(bl" If wells aren't drilled.
.
· Ahmad directed a 25Q.well project on the Sahara Desert that now
produces water' for 90,000 tons of wheat annually. He said he
predicted the current food shortage in a series of at11cles published
nve years ago.
Ahmad estimates there is enough water under the Sahara to feed

'

early ~lurda y m Orning. fire officia ls sa id.

TOKYO tAP 1 - Ohio Gov . Richard Celeste, heading a 41-memb&lt;'r
trade mission to Japan , says he welcomes foreign invesUnenl in the
U.S. as a way to reduce trade deficits.
Celeste, whOse party also will visit Taiwan and South Korea, told
the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan that Americans who Jess
than 15 years ago debated the merit of foreign firms expanding into
the count ry now go out of their way to attract companies from
ou tside.
"The United States is burdened with a foreign trade deficit of J:lll
billion U.S. dollars. including :JO billion dollars to Japan a lone. Our
economy cannot s usta in this · unchecked flow of money and jobs
overseas indefinitely," he sa id Friday.
"For America to shape a coherent domestic and global eeonomic
strategy over the next severa l years will take a great deal of polit ica l
energy, leadership and cooperation. Meanwhile, Ohio and the Great
Lakes are not waiting for Washington .to realize this."
Celeste arrived In Tokyo on Tuesday, and has been urging some of
the 35 Japanese firms with ties to Ohio to expand their activity in his
sta te. Ando Screen Co., whic~ makes mining and (X'trochcm ica l
iildustry equipment, said Friday it will establish manufactu1in g
facilities in North·Canton. Ohio.

Polution case settled
COLUMBUS ( AP\ - An agreement has been reached with
('..eorgla-Pacific Corp. to end "serious environmenta l problem s at
the firm's 1'E'Siil plant" on the city's south side, Atty. Gen. Anthony
Celcbrezze Jr. sa id Friday.
The settlement imposes a $120,000 penalty on the company ,
Celebre= said In a news release.
He said the agreement followed an Investigation and lengthy
negotiations with Georgia·Pacific as a result of an explosion last May
In a kettle used to make resin.
•
The blast released a cloud containing resin. phenol and other
chemicals that drifted over residential areas. A second explosion
occurred In July.
·
"Today's settlement requires Georgia-Pacific to take steps to
ensure there will be no further explosiom! whi~h would threaten the
residents of the area," Celebrezze sa id. ·:tn addition. it requires the
·completion of a series of projects designed to deal with Wl!ter
pollution problems caused by spillage of chemicals onto the soil , even
·
beyond what Ohio law requires."

'

AtxJut 70 firefi ght ers from Pight depm1menrs had to be call&lt;&gt;d in to
fight the fire at the f:um abou1 thrf&gt;€' mileseas1 of here. The bla7.L' was
rcpo11cd at 1: ~lll a.m . and was dC'C larcd und&lt;'r control atxJut an hour
later. sa id Lt . Richard Conaway of thP WI'S! Licking FirP
Depa11men1.
Con:twa\·
. sa id invcs liga10rs from the sta te fire mars ha l's of1iC&lt;'
would bP ca llt'd in Monda;· to ht•tpdCIP1minc a cause. H&lt;·said several
other buildings attached to thdiO-by·lOO tool ba rn wcrP saw'&lt;l from
damage.
" It iyas fully involved when Wf' got rhPrP and to prot&lt;'Ctthr olh&lt;' r
buildin gs we n!'eded a larg&lt;' \'Oiumc of water ." Conaway sa id .
expla ining why his d~partmrnt ca ll('(! in hPlp from surrounding
~

areas .
Conaway sa id each of 1hr chick&lt;•ns u·as \'aluC'd ' " $1 0.

Nine injured in accident
WOU&gt;TER Ohio I AP t - !'\i nc pcopl&lt;'. including six high school
ch('('r!caders on their wa\· hom e from a basketball game, Wf'1'f'
in jured in a traffi c accident F1"iday evening .
The State Highway Patrol sa id th &lt;' a('('idenl occurt'd shortly aft&lt;'r 7
p.m . when a car driven by Da,i d Kornhaus. Ti. of Orrville. ran a
stoplight at the intersec tion of U.S. ~J() and Ohio 52 in Wayne Coumy.
Hf' crashed into a car d1·i\·en bv Linda M . Wie&gt;rwille, :li, of Woostc•t·.
Mrs. Wie1willt&gt; was tra nsport in g the fr€'Shman chwrleading squad
of Wooster High School home from a basketball ga m&lt;' at nearb;•
Dover Junior High SchooL
Mrs. Wie1wille sufferC'd a llroli cn &lt;'O IIartxln&lt;' a ncl a possibl&lt;' back
in jury . according to th&lt;' pat roL Sh&lt;' was admittC'd to WoostP r
Community Hospita l, wht•n' her condition was unava ila ble thi s
morning.
Also injured were Karen .J. Schultz, 14; Jennifer L. Wie1wilic. I&gt;:
K1isten L Sa lyards, 14; Shaun T . Lee. no.agP given ; and .JanettP T .
Vu, no age given .
Miss Schultz was in ~&lt;UardC'd condition at WoostPr Communi ty this
·
m orning. while Miss 1.£&lt;' was list &lt;'&lt;I as fair .
Miss Vu was also admitted to Woost er Community. but her
condit.ion was not immedla.tely available.
·
Miss Wie1wU!e and Miss Kinde r wel'l' taken to Akron C'hildrPn 's
Hospital. where ooth we1'E' list&lt;'&lt;I as satisfactory.
ThP sixth girl. Miss Sa lyards . was treated and releast'&lt;l for cuts
and bruises .

-------

�December 2,

1984

Pon-y-Middleport-GallipoliJ, Ohio-Point Plea5ant, W.Va.

1914

Sunday Times-Sentinel

31

Coleman, Brown wanted by county
DAYTO!'!. Ohio (AP)-Hamilton
County Prosecutor Arthur M. Ney
has asked a federal court judge to
order the transfer of Alton Coleman
and Debra Brown to Ctncinna t1 for
trial on murder charges.
"The public Is aware that two
alleged serial killers are attempting
to use their status as federal
prisoners to avoid trial on more
serious state charges," Ney said
Thursday, asking U.S. District
Judge Walter Rice in Dayton to
order the transfer.
Coleman and Ms. Brown, both of
Waukegan, Ill., have been charged
or are wanted for questioning in a
series of crimes ranging from
robbery to murder in Ohio, Indiana,
Dlinois. Michigan, Wisconsin , and
KE&gt;ntucky, authorities have said.

case believe that If their cllents are
convicted of murder and sentenced
to die, tbere's a legal question about
whetherthetwowouldhavetoserve
their federal term before they could
be executed.
The maximum sentence for
kidnapping Is Ilte In prison. but tbey
could be ellglble for parole In 10

They were arrested July 20 In
Evanston, Ill.
On Monday, they pleaded guilty In
Dayton to a federal charge of
kidnapping Oline Carmical Jr. on
July 16. The Kentucky college
professor was found unharmed,locked In his car trunk, In a Dayton
park July 17.
Rice Is expected to sentence the
two within tour to six weeks. A third
suspect who was Indicted In that
·case, Thomas Harris, of Lexington,
Ky., has yet to stand trial.
Coleman and Ms. Brown's defense attorneys In the kidnapping

years.

Ney ·wants the two brought to
Hamilton COWI!y to stand trial on
potential death penalty charges tor
the murders otMarlene Walters, 44,
of Norwood, and Tonnle Storey, l';,
of Cincinnati. Ney said that moving
the couple Immediately to Hamilton
County Is "Imperative" because
"witnesses memorieS fade, . or
witnesses become unavailable, evidence can become lost. ..

Meetings slated
CHESHIRE
Gallla-Melgs
Community Action Agency has
slated meetings to elect low-income
represen tatives from Gallla and
Meigs counties to the agency's
board of directors.
The meetings for both counties
will be held at the Guiding Hand
School In Cheshire at 1:30 p.m . .
Friday. The meetings are open and
the general pubUc Is invited to
attend.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted ~-Sa brin a

Drake, Long
Bottom; Dorothy Jenkins, Middleport; Lucy McCune, Pomeroy;
John Tiemeyer, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Larry Cummins,
HE'Ien Burk har t, Margarf' t
Eichinger.

Hospital News
HOlZER MEDICAL CENTER
. DISCHAIIGE'l NOV. 28
Heather Annstrong, Elsie De-

lawder, Geneva Durham, Lulu
Fisher, Mrs. Timothy Frazier and
daughter, Frederick Hoffman,
Franklin .Hughes, Catherine Hysell,
Carroll Kennedy, Phllllp King,
EleanorMatthew,ErlcMcWhorter,

~~~~~~y~~~~7::~~~~;~~

A rea death s

III, Harold Will.
BlR'niS
Mr. and Mrs. David Frazier, son,
Galllpolls; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
McNeal, daughter, Oak Hill; Mr.

Arrangements are by Ewing
Funeral Home.

Charles Corder
POMEROY - Charles Corder,
297 Wright St. , Pomeroy, died
Saturday morning at his residence.
Born in Sullivan, Ind., son of the
late William H. and .Jessie Stanley
Corder, he was a retired design
engineer for North American RockWE'll, a retired ME'igs High School
teacher, a World War II Air Force
veteran and a member of Disabled
American Veterans.
Surviving are his wife, Joan: a
son, Michael of Columbus; a
brother, William H. of Benfield; apd
an aunt, Helen J. Stanley.
He was preceded in dE&gt;alh by his
parents, two sisters and a halfbrother
,Funeral arrangements wiU be
announced later by Ewing Funeral
Home.

lnfanl Klein
POMEROY -Billy Joe KIE'in, 10
months, 31993 Welchtown Road ,
Pomeroy, died Friday night in
Children's Hospital. Columbus.
· Born Jan . 24 . 1!\'!4, he was the son
o( Robert and Tammy Shuler Klein,
who survive.
' Also surviving are two brothers,
Robert Allen and Brian Scott , both
at homE'; maternal grandparents,
Beulah Mae and Ross Shuler; a
step-grandparf'nt, Glennis Shuler;
rrreat-grandparents, Everett and
VivlanCoy; pa temalgrandparents,
Lilwrence and Patricia Will Klein;
alid paternal great-grandparents,
Harold and Etta Will.
Graveside services will be held at
1 _p.m. Monday in Rock Springs
C~E'tery. wtth the Rev. Roberi
R?binson officiating.

and Mrs. Mark Roush, son, South
Webster.

James E. Turley

NOV.29

POMEROY - James Earl TurIE'y , 68, 1100 Powell St., Middleport,
died Friday In St. Mary's Hospital,
Huntington, W.Va.
Born Feb. 29, 1916, in Huntington,
son of the Ia te James and Angle
Porter Turley, he was selfemployed and a retired construciion
worker.
Surviving are his wife, Dessle
Barnhart Turley: a half-brother,
Standard Cardwell of Proctorville;
and nieces, nephE&gt;Ws and,couslns.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church, with the Rev.
Da Vld Ferrell offici a tin g. Burialwill
be in WE' lis Cemetery. Friends may
call at Ewing Funeral Home from
5-9 ~.m. today.

Dan Arnold, Ricky Barnett,
Patricia Bissell, Linda Boggs,
Jennifer Butcher, Robert Conkle,
Wilma Cooper, Mrs. Loren Cox and
daughter. Oarlce Foglesong, Wlllle
Geiger, Mrs. Thomas Gilliland and
son, Paul Gwinn, Millard Hammond, Hettie Hapney, J:&gt;au!tne
Johnson, Clifford Jones, Sherry
King, Morris Martin, Charles Mills,
Joy Ramey Sr., Bobby Reynolds ,
Charles Riedel, Edward Smathers
Jr., Darla Thompson, VIcky Waldron, Birdie White.

smms
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Maynard,
daughter, Wilkesville; Mr.andMrs.
Robert Qualls, son, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Jeffrey Simmons, daughter, McArthur.

;:::::::::::::::::::::::::=============ii1

~

THE ORANGE TWP. VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPT. WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE
V.OTERS OF ORANGE TWP. FOR
-YOUR HELP AND SUPPORT ON THE
RENEWAL OF OUR EXISTING FIRE
LEVY.

THAN!&lt; YOU,

ORANGE TWP. VOL. FIRE DEPT.
Paid Pol. Ad.

11 for

FREE
GIFT
:wRAPPING

DO YOUR
DON'T
CHRISTMAS
WE
SHOPPING
HAVE A
BOYS
EARLY FOR
GRANDMA
SIZES
BEST SElECTION
CORNER
8-16
WE ACCEPT
FOR THE
VISA AND
SUITS - PANTS

SMALL FRY
ON THE
GIFT
LIST

STARTING
MONDAY
OPEN
nL 8 P.M.
NIGHTLY

SHIRTS

MASTER CHARGE

•DONM()OR •LEE
•SEDGEFIELD •JACK TAR
•JONATHAN •STRONS

SHOP
DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS

HOLIDAY
DRESSES
•MARTHA
MINIATURE
•1RYAN
•PEACHES 'N
CREAM
•CINDERELLA

PRE-TEEN

;

ivnwat.

.

Public Notice

c..,_,.,

PUBUC N011CE
Malga c-ty, Olllo. Ciotti's
Recorda: ~ Book 127.
""""691, &amp;e3, 11911
In tho ,...,. Of: The Plttobulgll
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: THE STATE OF 0110,
ACTING BY AND THROUGH
THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES.
DIVISION OF RECLAMA·
TION, REQUIRES ENTRY
ONTO THIS PROPERTY AND

TO WHOM IT MAY CON·
CERN: THE STATE OF OliO,
ACTING8YANDTHROUGH
THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES,
DIVISION OF RECLAMA·
TION. REQUIRES ENTRY
ONTO THIS PROPERTY AND

eo.r c_.,

Wh ereas, there IS near the
to wn of Parnerov. tn Salisburv
Townsh•p of Me•gs County.

Oh•o. an area wh•ch •s su bJect
to extreme danger because o f
one open dnll entry 1nto an
abandoned undergrou nd mme

Whereas. th e State of Ohto,
acllng by and through the
Department o f Natural flesour ces. DIVISIOn ol Aecl amatto n
pursuant to Tttle IV ol the
Surface M tnlng Control and
Reclamauon Ac t of 1977.
U SC 123 1.et seo . w• shesto
enter lipan the affected properttcs to do all thH1Qs necess arv or
e)(pedmnt to protect !he pu bite
healt h s.:r fety. and general
we lton:~ from the Jdverseeffec ts
of past coa l mtntng JCtlvt!les.

and
Whereas the State of Oh to.
ac t•ng by and throug h the
Deoanment of Natural Resources D•v•s•on of Rectamat •on.
pur suant to Tttle tV of the
Surf ace Mlntng Con trol and
Reci Jmat•on Act 'a( 1977 .
U U S 123 1 et seq. wtshes to
enter upon the affec ted properltes to do all th tngs necessary or
expedten t to protec t the pu bhc
health saf etv and gen eral
we ll ar e from the adverse effec ts
of pas t coal mtnmg aCIIVtttes

and

In Memoriam

In mamory of WAlia Haning
who pa-d aw.., 33 yaara
ago. Dec. 3, 1981 . You aN
gone but not forgotten by
your family. WIM: Anna.
Children: Eugene. Robart,

Carol

Kr:~on1.

In memory of our parents
who PIIHd aw1y one veer
•go. Julia Marla M1nlay,

WhP. reas. the mmeral owners
of the property tden ttft ed above.
where entrv must be ma de to
abate the adverse effects of
past coni mtnmg act!VIttes.
cannot be located. and
Whereas. Sect1on 407 of the
Surface M1n1ng Con!f ol and
Recl amut ton Act of 19 7 7 30
USC 123 7 et seq provtdes
for Mtrv by the State of Oh10 liS
&lt;~g ent s employees. and conlrJC tors to do all necessary
wo rk. to Jbar e th1s danger to th e
publtc heJith. sa fety and gcnP.ra l welfare hom the adve tse
r. ff.ects ol past coal m1n1ng
BC IIV III P.S IJy !)OS I1111=J flO IIC8 on
the premtses anrl arlverti StnQ
once tn n nPwspctper ol ge nercil
Ct r&lt;:ulatton trl the JrP.J 1n whtch
the property ltes
NOW THEREFOR E. havmq
mode reaso nablr~ eff orts to
locmP. and obta1n a volu ntary
consent from the rn1 neral
owner prt or to en try upon the
property. thP. State of Oh1o
dC IIIlfJ by and th r(.)ugh thB Oh10
Departm en t of Nnt !Jral ResourCP.s OtVISIOn of RP.clarnJtton. 1tS
a11 ents employ8€s . ilnrl con tr ac tor s r;;hall 8 11IP.r on the
property 1rlenllhe(i ubove and
shall rlo rtll thtnQs necRSS&lt;Hy
.1nd 8x pP.du: nt to prot ·~C I the
puhlir: health saletv Jnd gen
era l welf are Sllch rn tiy w1ll

you. Children: Roymond,
Roger, Ro1111mory end Eddie.
Grandchildren

end

ol

Ohoo

Grandchild.

6 Lost

and Fou11d

purse around

3

SWEEPER end sewing machine

repair.

auppliH.

parta.

Pick

up

and

and

delivery, .Davja V1cuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georgea Creek Rd.
614· 446-0294 .

Bit a..ta.,...

...

at-

Call

1----------

ATTENTION HUNTERS :

1----------'

We pay caah for lete modal

44 · -·
: ,"

1.. '·

Kemper Hollow -Rt.
area. Cloaa to H - H.,._
tal. 1 mele and 1 te.... le.
Both have coli. . witlt C.
lumbuo addreaa. CaM 814446-8692 or 4 448-7730.
l '

..
•

Miller, Rt .2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or call 8t 4-992 7780.

1\a~ . r

LOST one WhiteFKeHelfR,. -......
approx 600-600 IN. Oft 0 .
Casto Road. 304-875-82M ....
or 676-2689 .

Yard Seht

...

'.

...... Giiiiij;0iii......... ~.-.
8t Vicinity

)A_CK &amp;

1ILL'S

Buying daily gold. silver
coins, ringa. jewelry.s1erling
ware. old coins. large cur·
rency. Top pricea. Ed. BU'I'·

kott Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, Oh. 814-9923476.

~B-U-Y-::1-:-N-G::-::R-A_W_F_U_R_S-. ~~;j
and Deer Hides, Ginseng and
yellow root. Selling trapping supplie1. Wheat
lights, night lights. George

Buckloy, phon a 814-664 4781,houro12-9PM dailey.
Seturdev. Mondly, T.,.._
day. Acrooa from Sm1111
Buick . Rain 91 ahina .

a...,

clothes, jeans, fwniture,
Iowa. dishea.

pn.

~&amp;.

mi.: . 8 to?

SJ2995
The Stihl electronic ,
FS-50AVE- a light· I
weight, easy-to·
handle weed an•
grass tmnm1er.
lures a lie1ng--rurming,l
gasoline-pOIN&amp;'red
engine. No extension
cord needed!
With a quick·starting
ignitton system.
The ideal ift for

FS·50AVE

tional Building, Fourth St.side, back of Powel'a Su- ~ ~ :
pervalue, Pomeroy . Dec. 8tf\

and 71h. Stano 9:00 both days. Clothing. edull
and children,
Ewing.

toys. Doria

Card of Thanks

The family of Clifford Brumfield wish to extend smcere
thanks to all the lrionds from
the 'Gallipolis Develepment
Center, the VFW &amp; Amtrian 11ciM Post. a special thanks to
Jeff Snedaker, Danny Greene,
Rev. John Buchlli ond llrs. Robert Kuhn, Willis Fultl!l'll Home
and all other frionds illld n~&amp;lt­
JEWELL BRUMFIELD

CARD OF THANKS
{hanks seems like such a
small word to say to the
tltOPit at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. With God's help,
lfr, Jamora and his assistIna doctors have made it
possible for me to be home
l&amp;ain . .Thanks also to the
nurses, ministers, nei&amp;lt·
fors, and friends for theit
SJ)ecial care. God bless you
Ill.
:.
ANN DAVIS
Middleport, Ohio

$166 9 5

•

. CARD OF THANKS

-~ The family of Deryl E.

Blcessor wish to extend
0111' heartfelt tltanks to
l{olzedAedical Center, Dr.
Walker, nurses, nul$8$
iides on 4 East, especialy
ID Connie CarHon. and an~ne that helped in any
W.y durinc his illness and
death on Oct. 27, 1984.
A special thanks to
Rev. Wolfbrandt, Willis
Funeral Home, pallbear·
IllS and orpoist. To all
Who sent flowers, food,
cards and words of com·
fprt that meant so much
lit a time of sorrow. To all
!110 served lunch alter
l!le funeral by our friends
and neialtbors, to Rev. Ernest Baker for his prayers
. 111d words of comfort.

The Stih l charn saw you get this Ch nstmas to cut
the Yule log and keep the woodptle stocked will be
doing the same job next year, and the next, and the
next .. it's the best gift you could get. Or give.

ACCESSORIES AVAILABLE FOR
YOUR GIFT GIVING

CHAIN

•60,563-yoer. Now hiring.
Your area . Call 805-11876000, ext. R-4662 .
Sales Manager needed for
Meigs Co . Memory
Gllrdena. Salary plus commillion .. We train &amp; furnish
lead a. Send resume to P .0 .

•'

''.
i

POMEROY HOME AND AUTO.

PqMEROY,· OR.

•

~

•

,
I
I

l

I

9439 .
Reliable cleaning lady with
references . Faat and effe~

ciont. Call

well eatabliahad CountryRock bond. Cell 614-2459316 or 614-245 -5018 .

only

at

Topo

~;;-:;---;::-::-;-:-----

21

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. racommonds
that you do busine11 with

Part time registered X-Ray
Technician . Call 446-3777

to aend money through the
mail' until you have investigated the offering .

Prestigious firm openl"g
new office ueking 2 representatives with anergy. am·
bition, and intelligence. Ceil·
ing on earnings, incentive.
benefits. Interviewing at
Bltst We Stern . No calla
pleeae. Alk for Mr. VoQier.

Monday 1 :00· 3:00.
Care far elderly people in

their home. 6 days. Call
814-256-8426 .
HABILITATION
SPECIALIST -Bachelor or
higher degree in Habilitation
programming for MR-DD or
related field . One year e•perience working with MA-DD
individuals ability to eecure
certificate. Begin January

2 ,1985. Contact Ohio Job
Sarvica, Pomeroy 614 -992-

6671.
Baby litter in my homo 8:00
5:00. agea 5 and 3. Now
Hovan erea. 304-882-3727.

till

Experienced

or trainable

bookkoopar wantad. Up to
8~60 . week according to
experience. Some computer
experience helpful but not
necessary. Only thoae who
are not •fraid of work and
cen Pill 1 reference teet
need apply. Position open
immediately. Send reaume
and or pertinent employment data to: Bookkeeper,
P.O . Bo• 193, Pt. Pleaaant.

wv 26660.

BEST KEPT SECRET IN
AMERICA--Army National
Guard. Join 1nd you have a
good part -time career- ~ good
benefita - - monthly

poychack .. NO LAYOFFS.
304-875-3950 or 1-800·
842-3819 .

6

Happy Ads

Servicing motels with name
brand , natural fruit juices.
Can make $300 per week or
more. No eeHing required.
No special vehicle needed.

Requlraa 810,000 ceoh and
the quolificatlona to handle
large sums of money. Route
expends automatically with
no further inveatment .
Write, including name, address and telephone to New
American , P.O . Box

SAM and 4PM CST, Mon.Fri.
·
·
International steel building
manufacturer awarding
dealership in available areas
soon . Great profit potential
in an expanding industry.
For application call Wedg·

cor. 303 -769-3200,
2403.

Own your own buaines1. Be
Your Own Boas. Potential
income great. Sales expe ~
rience would be helpful but
not neceanry. Modest in ~

110atment. Call AC 304-B247B28 or 824-3652.
Priced to 1811, stock. license
and equipment, prime loce·
tion, inquire I &amp;. J Carryout.
Tue~pday through Sunday.
noon to 6 p.m. Located 60
ft . south railroad treasel ,
K1n1ug1, Ohio.

22 Money to Loan
HOMe'OWNER$ -Rofinonco
to low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpose. Leader

Mortgage Co ..
3051.

23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co., 4460687. Twentieth vear of
quality aervice. Line Oa ~

niela, 614-742-2961 .

1 - - - ----.,.- -lc-

Deer head• mounted. Q~l ­

ity mounta. Over 2 6 veara
experience. E81t of Rutland

on Rt. 124. Cell 814 -7422178 .

5(

ONLY2
EACH
Cft 6t ,,H,.~ hllg •til J:OO , .••

At T~ Stf/1,.11• Dtll~ '''''"

..

614-692-

tocley 514-992-8720 . Top

Sill 23dOx007

"Fa•hion•forthe Young"
Ave.
Phone 446-4343

ext .

of the Stairs. full service
salon .

USE YOUR IMAGINATIONII

Gallipolis Ferry. 304-6766861 .

New

underground home,

1 . 200 sq ft. 3 a eros.
$26,000 .00 . 304-773 6474 .
Small 3 bedroom house,
2111 Uncoln Ave, will trade

304-676-2749 .
R E for sale or rent. 4
bedroom houSe, Masdn .

614-992-6972 .

32 Mobile Homes

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR. Reduced retaollmitad
time only. Ward"a Keyboard.

304-1176 - 111100 or 675·
3824 .

.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 6t 4-448·
7274.
1971 Torch 12x65 2 bdr ..
unfurnished . Call 446 -

mobile home . Include s
wahaer &amp; dryer and large
window air conditioner, ex·
ce llent condition . Call 446·

4361 or 446-4306 or 446 -

1171 .
1972 t 2X60 Vintage, good
cond .. 2 bdr .. 1 % bath, new
furnace . fireplace with
blower. good carpet. stove.
refrig., washer. drv,er, win dow air cond .• drapes, some
furniture, outside building,
Lot 97 Quail Craeek. Call

446 -6692 or 245-9692 .
1971 2 bdr .. 1-2x65, clean,
good cond..

..

top. 304-875 -3000 .

Renl ~ l s

:11',11 [ Sl.ill'

Three badrooma, contrll air.
vinyl wall paper, c.erpat
throughoU1, wall Insulated.
n~w point. attached garage.
gaa outdoor grill. ewnlnga,

mony axtroo. Call448-2583
ttl 8 :00PM, oftal 8:00PM
coli 614-245-118119 .

1602.

'41

Houses 'for Rent

Houses for Rant

House for rent . Call 304-

'

614-256- 1562 evenings.
Cheahira, 3 bdr. , 2 baths,
FR. stove, ref., OW . EH. CA.

Dap . ll rat. raq , Call 803·
781 -7895 or 6t4 -3 67 7567.
3 bdr. house in town w tth
carport. private locatio n.

$275 mo. Call 446 -8293
aftor 5PM .
3 bdr . house in country.
Near Rio Grande. $225 mo.
plus sec dep, no pets. Call

614-245 -5439 .
Open House Sun. Dec. 2

1 :D0-6:00PM . Purpose-lor

2 bedroom house. tully
carpeted . 8200 per. mo. plus
utititie!l. Deposit &amp; referen ces. North of Cheshire on

Three bedroom . ba t h an d %
on Wehe Terr S200 .00
month and $100 .0 0 de p·

old Rt . 7. 446 -9766
8:30AM to 4 :00PM .

after 6 :00 PM or 614 -9 9 2-

614-448-0175 .
19'70 London 12x66, 3 bdr ..
gas heat. new underpinning,
immediate possession. Call

446-7340 after 4PM .
1982 Happy House. 14x66.
Gas heat. bay window, large
master bedroom, furnished .
Excellant condition Price d
upon inspection. Call 614-

742-2979 after 7:00 or
work 614 - 992 - 3345 .
D . Weber.

Used mobile home. 2 bed·
rooms, all new carpet,
drapes, furnace. hot water

tank. 304-675-3334.
1979 Bayview 14x70. Mobile home. all elec, central
1ir. 2 bedrooms. washer and
dryer. porch, new ref and
roof . 812.000.00 Phone

304-676-4276 .
Mobile l'tome , V2 acre
ground located in leon.

304-468-1517.
Schult 1 2x66 with 12x24
add on, 3 or 4 bedroom . exc
cond, central air and heat·
ing. partially furnished . lo·

cotod in K &amp; K Pork , will
ucrifica for quick sale.
owner moving. sea to appreci•te. financing available,

304-676-1870 .

Farms for Sale

37 ecra

farm

on

Gallia

hOUit, land . bern. out building and l•rge tobacco ba•• ·
•20.000 e11h or can be
bought on land contract .

Call &amp;14-742-2170.
122 1cre farm , Cheater
Townthip, Y2 of minerals
previouely eold. OHara will

be aacepted ot the taw office

f of

I. C•reon Crow.Pome -

roy,Ohio 18141992-6059 .

Mobile Home. 2 bedroom.

f urnoshod . Call 446-1232 .

367 -7454.

osit . Call

12x70 livi ngroom expando.
S200 m o., plus 8100 dep ~
osi t , 314 3rd St, Kanauge .

Call 446-7473.

614-992-58t5

2049 davtimo .

2 bdr . mobile home at Kerr
furn tshed Catt 446-9869 .

Addioon 5260. 5 bdr . homo
in t own $325. 4 bdr . home
in town $350, 3 bdr . homa

on Hadgewood Dr. $275.

APARTMENTS AVAILABLE

2~3 bdr. home on Rt. 776 for

TWIN RIVERS

rent

with option $276 .
deposit and rafer·6 nces required . Call The
Wi seman Real Estate Ag ~ecurity

TOWER

nocy, 446-3643 .

UTILITIES INCLUDED

4 bedroom colontal brick
house tor rent or sale in

Elderly and dosabled w1th an income less than $13,250

Pomeroy. Cell 1-373 -0456 .

year ly can rent tor 30 percent of th eir income.

PHONE 675·6679

Newly remodeled house, 2
bdr. 1 full bath. lg fum
kitchen, located in Middle por-t. Send resume to Deily

Se~tlnel. P.O. Sox 129-V,
Pomeroy. Oh 45 769 .

8

Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction

rent · 3 bedroom home with
many extras . Low utilities,
extras nice . location: 832
Gavin Drive, Rodney Village
II , Gallipolis. Call 6.14 -2865447 for details and private
appointment . $300 per
month &amp; deposit .

2 bedroom duplex house.
downtown Pomeroy. Furn .
or unfurn $225 .00 plus
utilities. Call 814 -992-2381

day or 614 -992-6723 night .

DEC. 9, SUNDAY AFTERNOON-1:00 P.M.

Modern bi-level for sale or

Home for rent on Vine St. in
Racine . 2 bedrooms. 1 bath,
large lot for garden . Call

located in Thaler Ford Buiiding. Jt. 35 &amp; Rt. 160.
Cash Drawtng of $50.00 Up to 1100.00
Th is TS our last Ch nstmas Auct 1on GET IT THIS TIME
AROUND. Now liquidating Chnst mas items of all ktnds for
men. women ." children - something for everyone.
(Get more for your money at Auction)

rent.

3 bdr .. 2 both, lg.

livingroom w -dining area,
Stove. refrig .. finished basement, carpet ing throughout.
2 car attached garage, patio,
deck, 1 acre. 4 mi. out At.
218, $300plusutihties.sec.
dep . 8t ref . Call 446· 7044 or

446-8080.

614-992-2756 "'614-9854231 .
Two bedroom tn Eastern
School District with black
top road. $1 60 .00 per
month plus deposit. Call

6t4-949-2801

8

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

All DAY SALE

LUNCH AVAILABLE- OOOR PRIZES
FREE CABBAGE PATCH DOLL
Auctioneer - Lon Ne al-614-367- 7101

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
FromGallipolis, take Rt. 141. turn left onto Rt . 775. Turn
nght onto the Patnot-Cadmus Road. Watch for stgns.

SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M .

Somethtng for everyone. NEW. USEO &amp; ANTIQUES Weekly.
CHRISTMAS SALE DECEMBER 13. 1984 at 7:00PM
Door Prize - Color T.V.
Watch for listing Door Prizes given every SALE .
Have something you want to sell' Brtng 11 to the Pat11ot
Auction Barn and we'll sell it for you. Con signments ac cepted from 1:00-5:00 P.M. on Saturday.
Available for special sales upon request
Marlin Wedemeyer - Auctwneer
245-5152 - 388-8249

Apprentice: Finis lsaac-388-9370
Not responsible for acidents or loss of property.

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
Saturday. November 24, 1984 at 7:00P.M.

An ti ques: Ch erry sewm g machtne. oa ~ se wtng ma chtne.

good cond rtoons Sm all kett le Many mr sc rtems.
Somethmg lor everyone New. Used &amp; Ant iques Weekly.
Door Prizes Given Every Saturday
Have something you want to sell I Bring 11 to the Pat11ot
Auction Barn and we'll sell it for you . Consignme nts ac cepted from 1:00-5:00 P.M. on Saturday .
Marlin Wedemeyer - Au cl10neer

245-5152 - '38B-8249

60x1 2, new carpet and
exterior door. can be seen K
&amp; K Mobile Homes, In c .

Holly Park washer-dryer, ref .

&amp; dop. Adults only. Call
614 -367-7743 .

3 bdr. home on Rt . 141
$276, 3 bdr. home in

Partiallistmg: New: Tool bo xfor wtde tru ck bed. m1sc.lar m
equ1pment. truckload ol mm hand ise Many m1sc 1tems
Chnstm as toy s
Used: &amp; Collectors Items: DepressiOn glass dTShes. bocy·
cles. gas cook stove. !able relngerator many miSe 1lems.
ITu ckload of merchandiSe

cond., gas heat. will accept
any reasonable oHer. Call

Houses for Rent

Cell 446 -2706 .

1 4x65 2 bdr .. In don. axe.

otove ll refrig . $4,900 . Call
446-8038 .

41

Modern 3 bdr w -2 baths on
Rt. 588. fir ep lace, di s·
hwasher , range Call 614 ·

6 rm. house torrent . 10 min .
from town. Clay School dist .

From Gallipolis. take Rt. 141. tum left onto Rt. 775. turn
right onto the Patriot-Cadmus Road. Watch for stgns.

County Rood 218 . 8 room
Homaa for Sele

Furnished 2 bdr., clean,
quiet , cable, baautiful river
view. Kanauga. Foster Mobile Home Park . Call 448-

new carpet.

33

31

Small building or mobile
home lot, Mldison Town ship, Thurman. Ohio. Ap·
prox 130x60. County water

41

1652 after 5 :30PM .

for Sale

380247. 8iringhom. AL _7 _1_3_
2 _ _ __ __ _ _
35236 or cell toll free, 1
1 -800·52t -4849 botwoon 1973 Gtanvillo12x60 2 bdr.

Unwanted facial or body
hair? Permanent. painless
removal by Europe1n Electronic Depilator. Mary is
certified in thie new computeri~ed digital system. Call

· .n.a list is ondllss 111111 tho plat• ol alu111i•um ara choapl
.

Business
Opportunity

people you know, and NOT

SALES

Priced reduced total alec .
central air. new wood
burner, small alec . bitl, wall
to wall carpet . 3 br, brick,
large garage, wood shed,

yearo old. $75,000 . 304·
675-6366 .

F1na nc i ;il

~Some people make flowers, hammered
:tamp shades and pictures. some farmers
~hlngle buildings. some roof dog house~ or
Tlftllke bird houMa.

i

Awe .•Middlerort.Ohio. Call

614-992-3029 and after
6PM cell 614-992-7876.

2 bdr. trailer for rent. near
Mercerville. Call 614~ 258~

614- 256 ·

House for Jent in Mercerville
area. Call Kenneth Swain

By owner 3 or 4 br ,houae,
Buck stove, large garage, 6

Gellipolia, Oh.

-• What Can You Make From A
:
Sheet of Aluminum?

:

448 - 74~1 .

Experienced bass player for

'

•'

Will do babyaitting in my
home. have e•perience. Live
inlide city limita. Call 446-

box 729, Athena, Oh 45701
or call814 -692-6161 .

Wife Barbara, father and
n\other, children, and
•randchildren.

·1st at Regular Price
2nd at Half Price

FREE
Gill Cenlllctlll
Artllt61f

600 E. MAIN Sl.

Government joba . 816.669~

Coil

Siz room houl8, 2 baths,
vinyl sidlng,ineulated • remodled,double .garage and

3 bedroom house in Middle·
pon. Fully carpe1ed, storm
windows. No pats. Phone

Wanted to Do

446-1409 .

lot for sale In Mercerville. 3
trailer hookups, electric, rural water. septic tank.

f8,ooo.
6818 .

Mobile Homes

for Rent

Acreage

676-7263 675 -5104 or
676 -5386.

newly carpeted . 443 8th

42

Two bdr .. new wall to w•ll
c arpet, gas furn•nce. air
cond.: in Gallipolis. Cell

6384 evenings for Sunday
appt.

814-992-2051.

806 -687 - 8000 ext. R·
7500.

GIVE THE STIIIL
09 SAW
WITH 14" BAI

NOW ONlY

. 18

mediate opportunities. Guaranteed .
Call

Ask Santa
fora
FS,51 AYE

Help Wanted

Govammont iobs: $16,000·
*60,000-yeor pooaiblo . Im-

Middleport
8t Vicinity

bors.

!iT/HI:.

11

Sf; I vI:;(~ ~l

after 6PM .

......F,.omero;;--·--.. - ·

Settled lady to live in and
help ahara expenses. C1ll

LPN care given. Cell 8t 4992-7314 .

Centenary TownhouM ...

tiquos. toys.- baby clothee,

$38,000. Call 614 -843 -

lnrp loyllll'lll

9 :30-4PM

1

Situations
Wanted

Will care for elderly in our
home, men and women .

Salet-Cierieal pan~time . 1 620 houra a week . Applu in
person Monday Dec . 3rd .•

LAFF·A·DAY

YARD SALE : 014 lntorN- -·

Owner moving. Must aell
modfied A frame. 6 acres,
fully carpeted -with fireplace
and wood burner. Corning
top oven and aide by side ref .

pluo depoait . Phone 304675-2749 .

ahip. Call 614-373-0456 .

36 Lo1e &amp;

Houses for Rent

Small 3 bedroom houM,
2111 lincoln Ave. Point
Pleasant, $275 .00 rrnOnth

road . Rio Grando-Galllpollo
oroa. Coli 614-245·8239.

814-268-1296.

446-9422.

Furniture, 161 Second Ave .•

Two Dav Sale Dec.

12

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heatera. Sw1in Furni-

U.ke Jacka~n Fin &amp; Fur. Oak
Hill . Oh . 614-882-7448 .

wood. cupboarda, chaira.
cheats, blakeu. di&amp;hes,
atone jars. antiquu. gold
and silver. Write-M . O .

..

Wanted To Buy

Raw Fur. Top pricea paid.

COMPLETE HOUSEHdLDS
FURNITURE. Boda,

... ?

9

ture, 448·3169, 3rd. &amp;
Olive $t .. Gallipolia, Oh.

·
.. .

mala. Nc&gt; collar. Call 114742-2521 .

7

448-3872

3 large

Priced for quick sale houH,
17'12 acres. off Rt . 7, 2 miles
above Crown City. Call

ll!.:!!:.!.:l.!:=.!::=!::=..::: .:::::.r~=::itl

::-:-~-----'--

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

w~h

or 446 -2206 .

Wanted To Buy

clean uaad cera.

~L-=o-=s::T:-::2~o-ra_n_ge--:&amp;-w-,...
"'!
- • • ~~
Brittany Spenlela In 1M

Found: Medium Blue

leon Flea M1rkat open dai -

9

..m. .. .

Cookie. Reward. Call
4889.

Conalgmonta of now ll uaed 11--.......:
merchendin always wei·
comad. Richerd Reynolda,
Auctioneer. Coil 304-2763059.

304-458-1 572.

LOST: Stroye4 er
from 848 Firat /We. 1 b!Mii""
female green 8yM cot. 3 -

old, · 1nawera to

H1rtford Community
Center. Truckload• of new
rnwchendiae every week .

furniture and eppU.ncea;
1l1o Hll , l•rge Jtema on
conaignment. Stop in or call

Gallipolla, 0~ . Row•,., 8t4-387-7888.
:

Announcements

Auction avery Friday night at
the

Wanted: sm111 •creacre tor
home aJte. Cloae to paved

For aale by owner . Large
bedrooms. 21h cermaic
bathe, farge living.room.
family room. new ldtch,en
cabinets. elr,~gle eer garage
with office area. petio with
1lumlnum roof and gas grill.
Storage area in att+c with
deaending stairway and
baaement area. Located on
large lot In very nica neigh ~
borhopd. ·will consider leal8
with option to buy for m()re
l ntormatiort call 446-2734

ley 9:00 to ~:00 except
Thursday. We buy uoecl

LOST: Smell grey _ _.,. .

acttng hv and thr ouqh thP Ohro Deer heada mounted. qual~
DepJ nment o f Naturill Ae$our- ity and satisfaction guaren·
ces. Otv1S1on o f Aer.lnm .1f 1on ,15 teed . Call Stewan 's Taxiagents employP.f'S ,1n(l con- dermy at 814 -742-3006.
lf&lt;ICior::.. shull r:on trr on the
propetty trlenltfu~n aiJOvl'! r:md No hunting Or trespassing,
sh,lll do all th 1n(fs nP.cnssarv day or night. on Charles E.
.Jnd P.xiJP.drPnt tO prot(]( 1 the Yost Farms .
nr rblic hea lt h s,11 AIV anrl 'l~n eral wr.l frur.&gt; Suc:h Pntrv wtll ABSOLUTELY no hunting or
begm on or J I)OL tt DecPrn ber trespa•aingonJoeWhltright
20 1984 and o.;ho~ll co n1111uP property on Route 2. Violat111111 1 tllr. nrCP&lt;JSci! \1 wo rl&lt; 10 era will be prosecuted.
1 ba !P the rl , mq ~ l 1S compiPIPd 1- - - - - - - - -For luf111f!r ti1IO!mat 1on 1n
Surplus new army original
clud 1na cop1r&gt;s rJI th!'! F1n(il1 rqs field jackets, camouflage, all
req111rfK1 tly T1 t11~ tV ol th !" ai1e1, Sam Somerville'•·
Surfocf! M1n1nfl Con tr ol ~md
New Ere, East of Aavene~
AflciJm;J tiOfl Ar: t at 197 7. 30 wood. Call in orders 304~
US( 1237 P I S•'Q ro n 1,1 CI 676-3334.
1h1• Oh10 DApJ rHnrmt ol M 1n1nq
Resour cPS OI VISton nf Rer:la- No hunting or treupaasing
tnJtlon. 18 55 Foun tatn Sqtt HP. on Colburn and Ray farm.
Southside, WV. Violators
Court. Buildrnfl H-2 Colt11Tl bus
Oh1n 43224 At!PIH tO fl RP.&lt;II . will be prosecuted.
Eslate Coordl n .-'ltm
----------

bf!{1111
on nrdfld
abo111
20 1984.
shallOeo'
con! mber
tt nuc
until the necessJry work to
abate the rl anger JS co mpleted
For fur1her mlormatton 1n
clu rl1n !1 cop1es of the Fml11nos
roQutred by T1 tle IV of the
Surface M111 m11 Control and
RedomahOn ACt of 19 7 7 30
USC 123 7. et seq con tact
the Oh10 Depar tment of Mm•nf!
Resources. 0 1v1S•on of Aecl:l mntton 18 55 Fount&lt;ltn Squ &lt;1 re
Court Butl dmg H-2 Colurn t1us
Oh to 43224. Att ent1on Real

Puppies. edult blocll ..... •
need a good .....,,, 30'r · '
678·1184.
·•• !'

Greet

a.

propertv. The STate

3 Klttenl~ 304-87S-2571.:
""
J ...

Nov. 30 and U.wrenca Menlay, Dec. 8. We love and mla

Whereas th e m1neral owne rs
of the pr oper rv n_lf!ntt fa'!rl above B•lloon• for Get Well. Anni·
where entry mttst be mJde to verurve. Birthdaya, partiea.
abate the adverse elfec1s of Singing Gorrllla. Cell 8olCo. 446-4313.
past coat mtntng acttvlttes. loona
ca nnot be loca ted and
Whereas Sec t1on 407 a t the Addaville PTO ia cancellin'u
Surface Mmtng Conuol ilnd Chriatmaa ·Buaar due to
Reclama110n Act of 1977 30 lack of reaponse .
U SC 12 37 et seq pr ov1 des
for ent•v by th e State of Oh10 tiS Gun ahoot at Recine Gun
agen ts emolovP.es anrl con- Club every Sunday, 1:00
tractor s m d o .:~11 necessa ry p.m. Factory chocked guns
work to nba te thts dongm to the only
publ tc heal th. sa fety, anc1 gP.n- 1- - - - -- - - -f' ral welfare from thP. Jdverse HAVE YOUR LIFE INSUeff ects ot pa st coa t 111illlllQ RANCE POLICIES RE ~
ac ttv1tte$ by pos!lnq notr ce on VIEWED AND UPDATED.
thP pr81111Ses and aclvents1nq Some life insurance policiea
once m a newspuper ol nenercil allow the insurance comcrrc lrlatlon 111 t he orP.a 111 wh1ch pani81 to keep your llvingar
the proper ty Ire!'&gt;
upon death. We offer a wide
NOW THEREFO RE trav1ng variety of insurance. IRA'a
rnade reasonable ntt ort s to and tax sheltered annuity
locate ,1nd ob tarn i1 vol unt,lfy products. Contact Oaby
cons en t fr o rn th e m1n~ral Mertin-614~992-7022 .
own er pr.or to P.lli iV upon lhr.

and

-old.

B puppiea,7
F.- .:
blood colllaa.tri-eolor. nw.•·&gt;&lt;
""''a and 6 ,_.., c.l ·
614-992-6360.

41

200 •ere farm for ule. Will
subdivide. Rutland Town ~

city achools,

brick home

.

_;___--=-----:-:~-,

Farms for Sale

Call 814-245 -

U2.500.
11295.

One 'h Airdale 'h ...... •·'
U.b. ,.,. p - leltl good home . Col ...a-11411. "

33

U-8uUd-lt . 3 bdr. Wlldarneaa
Homo Kit . *6.996. Now
modal open. Coil 1· 614·
888-7311 .

allotment,

...

'~

326 second

•

2

112)21 tc

eo

Ebonbadl

Ramodaled 2 bedroom vi·
nyled )lome, carpeted, 2
ecraa. 1 224 pound tobacco

tsta le Coor d1nator

PU8UC NOTICE
Moigo, County, Ohio, Clortl'a
R -: o-1 Book 2, P"'l"
or o..t Book 1 1 2. 1'1111" 3
1n "'" ot: n. G-t
!Mea Mining or lho Moflin

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

GIRlS
SIZES
0-14

AND

Sentinel - 992-2116
Rtllster - 675-·1333

While supply lasts - to make your
Gift complete we'll give you a Tool Kit

RUSS GIRL, ROSEBUD DUDS, TULIP
TOPS, LEE AND JORDACHE

Middleport Homa. Priced to
aalll And we mean priced to
Sallll Call814-992-6941 .

Tribune - 446-2342

4

Homes for Sale

Not responsible for acCi dent or loss of property

AUCTION

DEC. 8, 1984-10:00 A.M.
From Holzer Hospital take 160 to Kerr, turn
left, go to Bidwell Rodney crossroads , turn
right on Bidwell Rodney Rd .. app. I mile. first
road to left . Watch for signs.
After selling 170 acre farm Jack Ptckens wtll offer
the following at auction:
Sears washer &amp; drye1, 2 liVing 1m . suites, CB base Cobra
w/ accesso•ies w/ 50 ft tower astro beam w!Totor. end Ia ·
bles. coffee tables, 4 bar stools. lamps, diShes, Warm Morn tog stove, 2 motorcycles. two pony saddles. meal sheer.
ste1eo w/speakm, 7 h.p.' 11d1ng lawn mower, misc. lol of
tires. gasoline motors (parts). eleclnc motols, electnc dnll s.
h1gh pressure pump , 3 rolls of snow fenc e, 9sheetsol unde rplnmng lor house tra1ler, 2 old hay fork s. 3 rolottll1!1s. elec·
lric fence post, 16 ·set truck cham s. several boxes mTSc ..
36" Bell !tie
MF 275 ·1100 hr tra ctor , 165 MF lraclor. MF 50 gas tractor
3 pt. disc , 5' bush hog, 8N Fo1d trator. Iron Iend loader, Mas sey Harris rake, grader blade, sprayer, grain drill, post hole
d1gger, 1968 Ford truck with cattle rack. MF Oino-balance
mowe r. #9 MF baler, 2 gravtly beds. 12' Hare ga ter, 5 hay
wagons. 7' NH hay btnder, drag di sc. drag hare, Massey
Harris self propelled 2 row corn picker, 3 bottom 16" Oliver
plows, MF 1560 round baler, 30' hay grain elevator, manure .
spreader. boom pole. 16' transport diSk, 3a&gt;le trailer, 1967
2 to n Single axle dump truck, all brakes, 13' bed.
Other Items Too Numerous to Mention
Not responsible for acc1dents or loss of property.
Lunch Served

AUCTIONEER- LON NEAL- 614-367-7101

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, DEC. 8-10:00 A.M.
Located at 28 Vinton AvenYe, Gallipolis, Ohio.
To settle the estate of 1he late Garland Houck,
Case No. 17877, the following will be sold:
1974 Fo rd Cu. d1n1 ng room sutte wtth 6 ch a~r s (chtna
and buffel), color televTSIOn, 2 co rn er cup·

c a b~ne t

boards , stereo. rocktng cha1 r, 2 n•ce l1v1ng roo mc ha~rs
co uch . c u r~o ca b1net. se veral pteces of c h~n a and collectors dt shes (DepressiO n) . sail d1ps. electr~c range .
Co rntng ware. Hot Po1nt reff!geralor . Hal Pomt chest
type deep free1e au lomatt c washer and dryer. two 3P•ece bedr oom su11e s dtnette set wtlh 4 c ha~r s, set ol
dtshes Silverware. pots. pan s. d1shes. and kdchen
utensils. va cuum bed . chest . cedM wardrobe, cedar
chest. small bookcase coffee tables. lamps, clock. mllro r, small Leonud Tefnge ratoT . meta l shelvmg, ba ttery
cha rger, hand tools, ca rpentet tools, dehum idifier. tool
chest. alumtnum e&lt;tens1on ladde r. Sears rototil ler.
19" lawn mower . vtse. Glenfi eld Model 60 au to matiC
22 r~ f le , and other co llec to r's and mtsce llaneous ttems
Note: This is a ver y clean sal e.
TERMS: Cash
Pluma Shong, Administrator

Lee Johnson. AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohro

Phone 25b-b140
Not Responsib le For Accident s or Loss of Property

ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAY,
DEC. 8, 1984
10:00 A.M .
locatel.l at 50 1 29tt"l Stree t tn Potnf P leasant, WV .
The Berentc e Reyno ld s Bl a1n E s t &lt;~ 1 e wi ll be sold at
Pu bl ic Auc::ti on
HOUSEHOLD . 3 piec e sec t ional t. v 1ng room su i t e,
nice 3 piec e m &lt;~ pl e coffee tabl e J nd end to1bl es set, 2
b rass lamps. ? rock er · r eclin er s, r ecl i ner, swivet
rocker, Str.1 fat oungcr , 2 black and white TV ' s,
stereo, AM· FM-8 track con sole. 30" Frig idaire etec~
tric range , nic e dinette se t-on e w• th swtvel chairs ,
Whi r lpool ch est freeze r , larg e upnght piano,
P1cano1a play er piano ( electric ), 2 full s tz e beds compl ete with bedding , 4 ptece Dun cil n Phyle poster
bedroom suite comp l ete, pols , pan s , linens and
glassware, few toot s, ptctur es , beautiful glassware,
pi us much more.
ANTIIfiUES : Antiqu e oak planta tion drop front
d esk , holel wa sh stand , hi chair, walnut Victorian
lable, Victor i an desk chair, set of 4 htp rest chairs. 2
trunks, 12 t i n pie saf e, very unu sual, stone croc ks ,
dresser, 2 oak sewing machines. 3 pc . wickeiset
couch, rock er , chatr in mint cond., rock er , old books
and more .
IRA BLAIN, Adm tni strat or
RICK PEARSON , Au c t ioneer

773·5430 , Ma son . WV

773·5785

lic ensedinW . Va . &amp;Ohio N6685

TERMS: Cash or check with t.D.
Not Respon sible For Accidents or Loss o f Property,

�December 2, 1984 .

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

54 MIIC. MerchandiH 64 MIIC. Merchandise
Fro1t free gold refrlger•tor·
Doubll wide 3 bdr .. 2 both,

/.mi. North of Holzer. Navar
before rented!
2586 after 4 .

Call 448-

Two bedroom Mobile home
in Syracuse,$170.00 Month
plus utilities and deposit .
Coll814-992-7680.

Trailer in Tuppers Plains ·
.new furnace . $175 .00 plus
depo1it and utilities. Can
114· 687-3484.

. 2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Portlolly fumlshad . 8100.00
• dopooit . $150.00 per
. month. You pay utilities. Sea
at 40588 Kingabury Road.
Pomeroy • •Ohio . Call 614992· 2448 .

JACKSOI\I ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal

367·7148 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Natural gas heat. Racine
area . Coli 614-992 -6868.
1 2x66 mobile home with

tip-out, 2 bedrooms, fur·
ni1hed with washer and
dryer. $200 plua utilities.
- water and garbage fur -

513 Third Avo. two -1 bdr.
apta, Starting $135 to $165

mo. Water included, dep req.
Call446 -4222 between 9 &amp;

5.
Downstairs, 2 rooms &amp;
bath, furnished, clean, no
p8ts. adults only. Dep &amp;: Aef.
furnished modern
mobile home in city .. 1 or 2
adults only. Call 446-0338 .
Nicely

1 bdr apt., 2 bdr apt .,
$150-$250. Call 304-675 ·
7263 675-5104 or 675 6386 .

Furnished apt., next door to
library, one professional
adult only. Call 446-0338 .

1 bdr. completely furnished ,
carpeted. all electric, 458
2nd . Ave., adults, ref . &amp; sec .
dep.. $196 mo . Call 446·
2236 or 446-2681 .

2 bdr. duplex ex . location in
town 8250 mo , with a

45

Furnishad Rooms

Call614-446-0766 .

: electric, 12x28 built on
-. room, wood burner, very
·clean. some furniture. utility

Furn·ts hed apt .. 2 bdr. ,
$235. utilities pd .. 701 4th,

Furnished room , $125 . Utilities. range, ref. Share bath .
Men only. 919 Sec .• Gallipo-

44

Apartment·
for Rent

_______

46 Space for Rent

St .. Cheshire. Call614-245 5818 .

Mobile home lot, $75 water
paid. 4th &amp; Neil. Gallipolis.

) io. Call 446-1 61 5 or 4461243.

2 bedroom apt. in
Adults. no pats.
Call 614 -

Furnished efficiency apt,
private bath and entrance,
auitable for one person . Call
' 446-1232 .

One and two bedrooms.
furnished apartments . Call

-:_o~s

61 4 - 992 - 5434.614 -992 ·
5914 or 304 -882 -2566 .

3

with priavte bath,

hi. f)oor : Coli 44.6· 2'216. ,

lis. 446 -4416 after 8 p.m.

Very nice 2 bdr. duplex apt ..
completely furn ., wate r
paid, no inside pets. Main

'Riverside Apts. Middleport .
Special rates for Senior
: aechelor apt. for rent, large Citizens. $130 . Eqpa l Housing Opportunities . 614 · fireplac~ . ref. req ., $225
·mo. 154 First Ave .. Gattipo- 992-7721.

&amp;. used wood-coal stoves, 6

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

Call 446-3644 after ?PM .

Nice trafler s pace on At . 7,
neat town . Call 614 -3670232 or 446 -4265 .
COUNTRY MO'BILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of

Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
614-992 -7479 .

2nd . floor office space for
rent . COurt St .. Pomeroy.
Call614-373- 0456 .

GOOD USED APPLiANCES

Washers, dryers, refrigera·
tors, ranges. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
61 4 -446-7398.

County Appliance, Inc .
Good used appliances and
TV sets. Open BAM to 6PM .
Mon thru Sat. 446-1699.
627 3rd. Avo . Gallipolis.
DH .

.

'

7 Species to Choose From

.

TREES

$12

suites, ranges . wringer
washers, &amp; shoes . Call614-

LOTS OF GREENERY AT

446-3169 .

SANTA'S FOREST
1718 Jeffll'1on Blvd.
Pt. Plea1ant, W. Va.

CONTRACTING EQUIPMENT
TOOLS FOR SALE

S286 to $746 . Desk ., 10
up to $225. HUtches, $550.

With extendahoe. full cab, healer, torque can• .. 4
bucket1, excellent con d., 17 3.5 hrs.

Bunk bed complete with

mattresses. $276. and up to
$395.

Baby bedo, $110.

*Triaxle TrCJiler .............................. $1695
*Worthington 12 S CFM

Trade Center Kanauga ,
Ohio . Furniture outlet, Why
Pay Morel

full or twin, $58., firm, $68.
and $78. Queen oats. $196.
4 dr. cheots. 842. 5
chests. $64 ." Bad frames.
S20 .and S26 ., 10 gun · Gun
cabinets. $350. Gas

Gen

electric ranges $375. Baby
mattresses. S25 &amp; $36. bed

Air Compressor ......~ .................. s1000
*Assorted Pneumatic Tools
*Concrete Breaker· for Baclchoe .... $1200
*lincoln 22 5 rortable Welder ....... 5600
*lincoln 250 AC/DC Shop Welder ....... 5400

range,

fully

equipped . Call446-9409 .

30" elect . ranQtl! $95, Ken more 30' gas range nice
$125. harvest gold gas
range $96. and other gas
ranges to choose from . GE
washer $96, 4 others to
choose from . Whirlpool
washer &amp; dryer $246, GE
single door refrig. like new
$125, GE frost free refrig .
$125, wringer washer $65,
Kenmore dishwasher $75.
Skaggs Appliances. Upper
River Rd. Gallipolis, 446·

frames S20, 826. &amp; S30.

king frame $50 . .Good
tion of bedroom suites.
rockers, metal cabinets.
headboards $38 &amp; up to
$66 .

U1ad Furniture · · head
boards. and 2 bedroom
suites . 3 miles out Bula\lille
Rd. Open 9am to 5pm, Mon.
thru Sat.

· Victorian 1tyl~, low scope
neckline, long train, excellent condition, t1 00. Also
wedding bouquet and ·2
boutenHro, t1 6. Call 446·
4361 or 448-4305 or 446·
1171 .

WOOD &amp;
COAL
STOVES

Will cut and deliver fireWDC!d - Coli 266-1628.

!56 gal aquarium complete

IN COLOR

llghta. he8&lt;1, over bock mo-

USE FREE 5T ANDING
OR FIREPlACE INSERJ

manta&amp; ttond. $150 ortake
gun in on trade. 19 In aharp

tor. hea*. gravel, all ornecolor TV eM. cond. new atand
875 or trade for pump gun.

Choice of ·s Colors
WHITE I 1 Only)
BlUE

26 In Sylvenioll color TV ox.

11

Only!
MET. BROWN (2 Only)
CHARCOAl 12 Onlv)
PRICE STARTS

Mattresses or box springs.

air

Size 8· 10 weddlnbg dreso.

$6.00

Wood table with six chairs

436 . 7 pc . $189 and up.

*1980 Satoh

16.5 H.P. 4 WD Tractor ........... S4495
With end loader, landscape box, ex c. cond., 2 S3 Hrs.

*Pipe Fittings, Pipe Dies
*OTHER NUMEROUS ITEMS ·*

AT$599

614-446-0322

g,,. As Cnlt

Preemie orglnal, new in box.
Sol sculptured dolls. beauti ·

.KINDLEWOOD
STOVES

fully dresaed, blanket
standa. potatoe bins and
other wood produets. call
446-1924 .

DIRECTIONS:

Free atanding fireplace for

6 Miles Below Gallipolis; Crass Raccoon

trlilor. Call 446·2602 or
61 4-246-6004 after 6PM .

For salefully
Cabbage
Patch S26.
type
dolls,
droOled.
Reedy now. Call446-2847.
Girls 24' 10 •Pd. bike good
cond: 846 , boys20'dirtbike
$26 ~ Call 446-4922 .

Real Estate General

Davis Warner Arms 410
double barrel. Sell or trade
for 1 2 gouge shotgun. Cell
446-9636.

Broker -Auctioneer"···

WE NEED LISTINGS
For Meigs Co. Listings Call: ·cheryf Le~ley 742-3171

SPRING VALLEY HOME is waiting for your.living pleasure
at 503 Oak Drive overlooking hills and valley along Rt. 35.
Full basement, divided; wood stove, natural gas forced air,
city water and sewer, I bath, 3 bedrooms. living room.
convenient kitchen with dining area, fireplace. Nice yard,
landscaped, fenced area and storage building. Assumable
loan. Asking $62,000. Immediate possession .

area
and need action
on this charming 2 story home
locat~d within city. 3 Bedrooms. spacious living
room, formal dining, knotty pine cabinets in
kitchen, family room. Nice carpet . Quiet street. .Reduced to $29,900.
.
#
702

Wiseman Real Estate Agen(y

CENTURY 21 Southern Hills R.E., Inc.

v,

.

446-3643

.

About 600 jpriced to sail)
McArthur.Dhio. Route 1.
Coli 614-598 -4282.

. (I)

:z

:a
-,.,
:c

:I
·Z

::E
.,....
:~
.z
. C)

, (I)

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED - A~rox..
one mile from town. this older home has
had some remodeling. 2 BRs. krrchen. LR.
14 1hxl517. dJning room. bath. part
basemen~ one car garage. level lawn.
PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED' OWNER
SAYS SELL THIS MONTH! - RioCenterpoint Rd. (Cherry Ridge). Approx. 75
acres woodland, lronls on 2 roads, county
water available. $250 per acre.
GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres more or
less located south of Mercerville. Approx.
20 A. lillable. Balance woods. tobacco base
Owner will help linance.

GALUA'S BEST LAND BUY - Price
reduced to $87,500' -Former dairy farm
~ 7 rm. 2 story house, several buildings,
180 acres more or less. located on
Northup-Patriot Rd. near Northup.
YOU'll BE DELIGHTED .. w1th this 3 BR
bi-level located JUst mmutes lrom town
Also features 217 baths. LR. k~c hen .
carpeting, heat pump, city school district.
Call lor more informatin.
INVESTMENT PROPERlY Third
Avenue, two story duplex, 5 room s and
bath 1n each unit $25.000.

BRAND NEW DUPLEX ~ Great INVESTMENT \01 lhe buyer! located on Graham
School Rd Each unrt offers 3 BRs bath
living room, kttchen w1th stove, relrig., OW
and displ., laundry, large carport. central
a1r and storage area .

200 ACRES. Mil. FRONTS ON RACCOON

CREEK ~ Approx. 65 acres tillable and
135 acres woods. Comlortable two story
home offe.rs 4 BRs; bath, kttchen. ltving
room. lamdy room, two fireplaces. barn, 2
large screened porches. l ovely QUiet ·

settm~

BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY - 132 acres,
mostly clean hill paslure, good fences, l 'h
story home, large bam, tobacco base.
lronts on 3 roads near Mudsock. Price
reduced to $56,900.
103 ACRE. MI L. SPRINGFIELD TWP. Approx . 96 A. tillable land, older home has
5 BRs. bath. LR. kitchen, county water.
40x60 pole bid~. 40x60 tobacco bam,
vamus other outbuildinl!£

Now arrange the circled letters to
form lhe surprise answer. as suggested by !tle above cartoon.

!Cool Dolivarad) good lump

hou1e coal 1 to 1 ton. call

Printanswarhero:

Jim Lanier 876-7397 or
304-676-1247.
SURPLUS -DENIM Jockots

$21 .00. camouflag1 ermv
child ren1 1 uits · heavy
jackets. in1ulated coveralls
127.60. Sam Somorvillo's·
EAST Rovonowood -0 N LY
Fri, Sot, Sun 1:00-7 :00 PM .
fother days oftor 5:30 pml.

Exercise builder with 12
plate1, lift arm. 1quat rack .
Uke new $76.
5061.

304-675 -

One compllte aat of kitchen
cabinet• used with built in
stove and o.ven. One fiber ·
gl111 8 ft truck topper. One
set . of Mog whHio for '76
Datoun 280 Z. Phone 304675-2072 .
OPENINGII Second Hond

Store, Ripley. W.Va .. acro11
from City Hell. Good used
clothing, coata. boots. jeans
$2.00 pair, glouworo. etc .
Monday thru Saturday 10 till
6. Sunday 1 2:30 till 5.

leon Flea Market , Pepsi and
Coke productl , 2 liter
$1.00, Ono FREE with
$1 1 .00 purchaoa. 304-468 1572 open 9 :00 to 6:00.

"K XX X XXJ'
(Answers Monday)

Yesterday's

I

JlJmbles: PUPIL EPOCH CORPSE FROLIC
Answer: They migh t be UP CLOSE - " COUPLES "

Now open for business,
Mountain State Block, Rt .
33, New Haven. Complete
masonry suppllea. 4 ", 8" .
12" block. Delivery service .
Phone day 304 -882· 2222.
evening 882 -3239 .

56

Pats for Sale

HILL.C REST KENNELS

Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies :
Stud Service . Call 614 -4467795 .

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
61 4-367 - 72~0 .
Join tiM' Jumble Lc••• Fin Club 1nd r.cehe 1b. e lvtt~ ·wOfd Super Jumble• IYII'Y
monlh . FOJ ''" ump~e write to: Jumblelonr• F1n Club, t:lo 11111 new1p1per,
P.O. Boa SOt , Palmyrl, N.J. 0101!1.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Childs apring horae,

MUST SEll TO SffiLE ESTATE!
FINANCING AVAILABLE - EXCELLENT
TERMS - Cape Cod rome offers 3 BRs 2
baths. kitchen wt1h eye-level oven, dinette,
liVI ng room has beamed celltngs, utility
room, double ·garage, storm windows,
woodburmng stove, city school district
Additional land can be purchased. Call for
an appointment.
LOT FOR SALE - l00x600 lot on Raccoon
includes water tap, electric and septic tank
Call lor more information.

REDUCED TO $44,900 - HILLTOP
SUBDIVISION - 3 BR home lealures
kttchen, living room. dining room. lamily
room. fireplace. gas heal, central air and
carpeting. 9Y&gt;% assumable.
PRICE REDUCED TO $59.500! - 3 BR
ranch on 11 ac res more or less. Pond. full
basement, family room wilh woodburner,
liVIng room. equipped kitchen, dining
rOOilJ, l 'h baths. attached 2 ca r garage
•OWNER MOVING TO FlORIDA AND HAS
DRASTICALLY REDUCED THE PRICE OF
THIS HOME -r Win finance with 25%
down and · 10'!6 interest on the balance.
Victorian style 3 bedroom also offers 1II
baths. kitchen with range, relrig.. OW. and
disp., laundry room, living room, family
room, carport, unattached garage, 16x32
fenced pool, alum. siding. Attached beauty
shop would help make the payments. ·
GREENFIELD TWP. - 74 acxres more or
lesj, tobacro base, 16x20 shed, 34&gt;40
Priced at $29.500.

RE~JCED TO $35.000 -

NEAR HOLZER
- This ranch style home offers 3 BRs
kitchen, 22&gt;24 FR, LR, bath, central atr'
woodburning slave, electric hea~ 16x2B
unattached garage. KC school district.

CADMUS AREA - 26.5 acres~ I ll story
home offers 3 BRs. kitchen. livmg room,
d1mng room, bath, carpeting· and
alum1num s1dmg. Call lor an ·appointment.

!:::
~

z

fJ

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A BRICK HOME?
- Then this may be fhe one. Conveniently
localed on Rt. 35 West, tlus home offers a
large living rom, dming room, 3 bedrooms.
laundry room, 11h baths, equipped kitchen.
carpeting. cenlral air and il 2 car gargage.

100 ACRES. MI L. ST. RT. 141 - Ranch
home leatues 2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen,
living room. family 100m. lull basement,
central ~~~. rountry water and well water.
storm w1ndows, shelter, house. barn and
pond. Call lor an appoinlment

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.
NEW LISTINGS NEEDED - NEW 'LISTINGS NEEDED - NEW '
I

I

NEW USTING - tg moclem
carpeted rome with 2 I~ BR, 1
smaller, 2 full baths. lenced
yard, w011&lt;shop, woodbuming
lireplace in lg. family room

Parakeets and cages, 304675 -5030 altar 5 .00 PM

OffERS IMTED
HOIISIIIC/

H,l, u '' ,, 1a! let.':
J'

M~GKEE
~

AKC registered German
Shepherd pups, $75 .00 .
Call 61 4 -985· 3849.

MMR 557 - NEW LISTING - lo v~ y 2 story home1n Middleport.
N1ce level lot. l1V1ng 1oom. lormal d1mng room, eal-1~ krtchen. 3
bed1ooms. playroom or sew1ng room. look al th1s one today'
Convenierll localion Ask1ng $36,000.
MMR 566 - 3 bedrooms. dm1ng room, gas steam heat Carport
and nice lot with cha~n link lencmg. l a.;:ated in Rutland. Sells for
$42.000.
MMR 554 - Owner w111 nego~ate on th1s one' On Wehe Terracem
Pomeroy. 3 bedrooms. s1tting 100m. 11h baths. GIVe us acall. Owner
will do partial finan cing. W1ll also rent th1s one. Askmg $~.000.
MMR 552 - Country liVIng. N1ct one floor plan home on leadmg
Creek Road. 3 bedrooms, d1ning room. kttchen comlxl. Full
basemen~ garage. Sell1
ng pnce $35,1XXJ.
MMR 537 - lovely 3 bedroom ranch. total ~ectr&lt;, new crpet
throughout Attached ga~age. On mce level ~I 1n Hutchison
Subd !Vis~n. Rutland $36.500

AKC Registered Lhasa
Apso . 11 month old mate .

Good childs pats. $150 .00 .
Call 614 -992-5752 .
Br~arpatch Kennels Professional All· breed grooming .
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa cilities . Engliah Cocker Spa ·
niel puppies. Call 614 -388 -

9790 .

Border Collie pupp ies, call
Rat Te. rier puppies. 304675 -1506.

Real Estate General

Ring and necklace matching

set. 14 ct. white gold with

SOUTHERN HilLS R.E., INC.

diamonds $326 . 73 Dodge
Mo~oco $800. 304 -6757690 .

Put NtJ•nber 1 to work for you:

2 recap snow tires . f . 78-14.
Like new. $25.00 both .
304-676-1 325.

NEW LISTING - L YEAR BUYER PROTECTION - 3
bedroom home situated on 317 acres near Crown City.
Over 1400 sq. ft. mcludes 2 baths, family room,
woodburnCI, wet bar. cenlral air, large barn plus fruit
trees and good garden. Priced al $39.500.
#739

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

Canaday Realty
446-3636cA~
'.

I.

RARE FINO ~ 4 level loislocated w1th1n the c1ty limits
Access to city wafer and sewer One of c1ty's bettCI

areas.
BRICK RANCH IN CllY .:... 3 bedrooms. bath, din ing
room. hv1ng room. kttchen. ut1lity room. Attached 1tar
garage with breezeway. Nice size lawn with·new chain
link fen ce in back. Nicely landscaped. Home 1n
excellent condition.

#730
ASSUMPTION- AttractiVe 3 bedroom brick flame on
over 1 acre. 2 baths. ! ~replace. central a1r 2 Cal garage
#731
SCENI~ &gt;tlTING - Apprownately 40 ac res w11 h mce

bHevcl home surrounded by nature. 3 or 4 bedrooms.
2 baths. k1tchen and lam1ly a~ea plusutillly room.la!ge
separate garage. outbUilding. Tobacco base. appro• 5
acres l1llable Beaulllul woods.
#651

IF YOU REALLY WANT THE BEST ... TAKE A lOOK! BEAUTIFUL
STONE HOME HAS JAPANESE GARDEN. FAMILY RM. WITH
FIREPLACE AND DINING TERRACE, EQUIPPED KITCHEN, FORMAL
DINING. LG. LIVING RM. PlUS GUEST HOUSE. COMPlETE WITH
KITCHEN. CALL SOON FOR AN API'OINTMENT

KERR BETHEl RD. - NICE RURAL SETTING JUST MINUTES
FROM Cll'l 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH DOUBLE WIDE. EQUIPPED
KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING, LARGE LOT HAS FRUIT TREES.
$39,500.

JUST LISTD - WANT .A MODERN DAIRY FARM? this 163 acre farm has all the modern conven1ences.
60 acres cropland. adjacent silos. 6000 bu. corn cri b
and milking parlor. 90 acres tillable, double four
herringbone with glazed ti le. modern manure system.
large mach~nery shed, 3 acre dry cow lol with new
barn 2 story farm home with aluminum sid1ng. needs
remodeled. Ve,ry mce 14'x70' Victorian mobile home.
ALL THIS AND LOTS, LOTS MORE. Call lor dela~ls.
#735

GREAT STARTER HOME - 2 bedroom 1n town with
pat1o and overs1zen lot lots of roomlo add·on. Priced
nghl al $35.000.

lffi94

BEAUliFUt COUNIR'IIIOME WITH ACCESS TO RACCOON CREEK.OVER 3
ACRES. VElV[J lAWN, PRETTY WOODED AREA HOME HAS EVERYTHING.
2 BATHS 3 BEDROOMS DEN EQUIPPED KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING.
COVERED. DECK. 3 CAR GARAGE HAS STORAGE GALORE AND 'I BATH.
THIS IS ASUPER PROPERTY AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE. $59.000.
WOULD YIXI LIKE AN ORCHARD IN YOUR BACK TAR1l1 THISHOM EHAS
OOE' FIVE ACRES ALL FENCED ALLOWS OOMPt.m PRIVACY BEAUTIFUL
4 YR OLD RANCH HOME CUSTOM DESIGNED TO CONSERVE ENERGY 6"
iNSUlfiTION IN WALtS 12'· IN CEiliNG ANDERSON WOOD OOUBLE
GlAZED WINDOWS. HEAT PUMP PlUS WOOOBURNER 3 SPACIOUS
BEDROOMS 2 BATHS. OAK CABIN[JS IN KITCHEN. FORMAl DINING.
PLUSH CARPET ~TH COOOIJINATEO DRAPES. CARPORT. STORAGE
BUILDINGS. WE WOOLD LOVE TO SHOW YOU THIS BEAUTifUL HOME.
CALL FOO AN APPOINT~NT SOON. THE PRICE IS $54.000.

#628

GENERAL FARM . HARRISON TOWN - 175 Acres
Many acres have been 11eated lor exira production
Two spr1n~ developments. One large barn. Tobacco
base. ApproXImately 2.000 Chnstmas l~ees. 41h year
ol growlh. Older home has been moderniZed County
water Owner transfe rred
#710
OWNER HAS DRASTICAllY REDUCED lhe pnr.e on
lhiS 3 bedroom lrarne ranch. 2 balhs. liVIn g room
kllchen. dining area plus a640 square loot add111on to
l1msh as you w1 sh. level l acre lot 1n Green lownsh1p
and only 5 m~nutes hom Rl. 35

#721

#682

URBAN LIVING FOR THE EXECUTIVE - 10 acre
eslate. lake. shrubbery, trees. 3 bed1oom brick home.
bu ilt in 1975 Effi c~ent heati n ~ l ow maintenance. Six
miles lronr13allipolis, 5 miles from hospitaCOne ol Galli a
County's best.

lffi74

FOR THE INVESTOR - 4800 sq. ft. commercial
building.· Office area. sales space. storage space. 3
rental umls. 2 bedroommobite home, 2apartmenls All
presently ~ented. Good 1ncome. E•cellent 1n·town

#712

WHY PAY RENT? - When you can purchase th os
remodeled home 101 $19.500 large hV1ng room. fc, mal
d1nmg or lamily room. 2 bedrooms. bath. u11i1ty vmyl
s1ding Shed Treed lawn
#696
VERY AnRACTIVE 3 bedroom home. I story Wilh
part~al basement. Ove1SIK acres at land New lenc1ng.
new barn. two small po~ds Pnced m the n11d 30s
$95
STARTER HOME OR RENTAL - Excellent opportumty
to own a home with payments under $230 monthly
(mcl udes taxes and msurancel. $5.000 down, 9% APR.
2 bed1oom home, 3 m1les \rom town. Has loreplace,
new root. ~w ut1l1ty b1lls. 2' acre '" Washmgton Elem
d1stnct $27.300

#718
JUST LISTED - WANT SMALL. ACREAGE? - Ideal
lor bu1\d1ng your new home or rust a good place for
getting away from nall. 7.5ac res. moreor less. ol rolling
land. Or~lled well. rural water and sepnc all ready
installed. Call for delails.

#729

MINI FARM - 14 ACRES - Clay lownsh1p C1ty
school d1~ ri cl l1ke new 3 bed1oom modern house.
large comfortable room s 2barns recently constructed.
one eQuipped w1th stables SIX acres fert11e land. lots ol
fertilizer and hme has been used. Tobacco • •se A
bargam at $51 ,500

#715

ESTATE ~ 4 OR 5 BEDROOM
BRICK RANCH. FUtt BASEMENT, BEAUTIFUL LAWN. DECK
ANO PATIO. 16 ACRES WllH
HORSE BARN. A JEWEl ANO
VERY AFFOROABtE.

lB.

G).
·- -

MAKE US AN OFFER - I am and atl~actiVe frame
~anch located nea1 Me~cerv1ile 3 bedrooms. liv1ng
100m. eat·m kllchen. 2 baths. basement. Heal pump.
woodbU! ner Rural wate1 2 car garage.
#705

DON'T DRIVE BY THIS BRICK HOME Without Vlewin~
the ins1de and seeing lhe Quality of the cons1ruct1 on
and style 3 bedrooms. living room w1th fireplace. 1''
baths, den or formal d1n1n&amp; enclosed sunpo1ch. lull
diVided basement. cenlral a1r. gas heal. Large treed
lawn.
HOLLIDAY HILLS RETREAT - 1972 Spartu m 26'
sell-contained camper w1th sheiiCI house and
bartoeque s~ualed on 2 klts Has access to Rarcoon
Creek and nghllo lxlat dock Excellent opportu•Hty lor
$9.900

locat~n .

OWNER WANTS TO MIM lOCITY -EAGERTOSELL' 2BfDROOM BRICX
RANCH NICE OPEN FLOOR PI.AN. BLACKTOP DRIVE $33.000.

HUNTING FOR A SMALL FARM?- Then let us show
you thiS one Nice 2story home w~h 4 bedrooms. bpth.
fuel 011 furnace. 37'11 acres. molf or less, tobacco base,
30x30 barn plus other outbu1ldmg;, tra~ler hookup.
OwnCI would conSider land contract
#736

EVERYTHING YOU'D WANT lor only $34 UOO Owners
. wanl to 561before Chr~strnas and whal a presenllor
you1 family N1cely redecorated 3 bedroom home wllh
steel Siding. new carpet. 24' pool. lovely pe~vacy fence.
woodburner. garage Localed 1n c1ty school diStncl A
musl !o see
11690
WHAT YOU WANT' - Quahly bUill buck I '. story
home. 1'. baths. hv~n g room w1th h ~epla ce. kitchen
w1th d1mng area. lull basement. treed lawn Pnced at
$49.900.

#708

ADDISON - THREE BEDROOM RANCH, VINYL SIDING.
CARPORT, MOBILE HOME HOOK-UP. l'h ACRE. BEAUTIFUL RIVER
VIEW. $32,900.
AHONEY FOR THE MONEY! - NICE 2 BEOOOOM FRAME RANCHIN CITY.
mACHEO GAR~( lARGE BACK YARD. BrnER HURRY! 119.500

UKE NEW - 6 yr. old 7 rm.

ROIOOElED - Near Roell
Springs. 2 BR, bath, city water,
gas furnace, new root cel~r. On
one acre. For $14,1XXJ.

Call 614-256-1467.

·~wf

446-6610

ble. Owner will finance.

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots, 3
bedroom home. bath, gas hea~
near lhe school. 20s.

Pure bred Rat Terrier pups.

7; . 176. 304.-773 -5409.

Near gold

units, wood burner. lg, srop in 2
car garage. Really nice. In
Syracuse.

alter

20 gallon long *o.fedtemp
One female beagle, good

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

course. water· and elec. avaia-

one lloor 3 BR horne. 2 lull
baths. dinin&amp; cool&lt; and bake

registered Cocker Spaniels,
buff in color, $200. Term•
available for good homes .
h.cellent Christmas gift .
Call 614-388-9755
7PM .

10 go Ilona set up. t24.00;
10 g•llono tonk. $7 .99;
medium engel fioh . n . ~9 ;

61 4 - 992 · rabbit dog . 175.00. Pho"'!
304- 675 -4164.

lomolo . Call
2386 .

For sals • Daslgnera hooded
redwood coat. black fur
trim, Perfect condition. Sfle

MODERN - Lg, master and 2
olher nice sized bedrooms. 2\l
bath~ equipped krtchen. lg.
lamily room wtth woodburning
lireplace, dbl. garage and I~ bt

I. 7 ACRES -

AKC Miniature Schnauzer
puppiu . 8 weeks old .
Wormed and shots. One
mala and one female . $175
for male and $200 .00 for

Peta for Sal!l

Model M 14, Boll Sow. oow
mill 40 in blade, 2 yrs old,
$2.000 . 00. 304-675 ·
7768.

LeGRAND BLVD. - JUST LISTED. VERY NICE BRICK AND FRAME
RANCH. EQUIPPED KITCHEN. ATTACHED GARAGE. BEAUTIFUL
LEVEL lAWN. LOW, LOW PRICE! $45,000.

NEW liSTING - Bargain on
th~ 2 BR frame, gas furnace,
carpeting, near shopping 1n
Middleport for only $11,000.

CHRISTMAS Puppioa. AKC

66

Pate for Sale

like

rJl

NEW liSTING - Nice 3 BR
home on lhe edge of town. All
city utililies, gas furnace,
carpeting, &amp; equipped kttchen.
Just $22,000.
NEW liSTING - You can
enjoy this 3 BR home that hasa
lg, woodbuming fireplace, gas
furnace, lull basement with
garage. Extra lot w~h dill.
garage-shop.

Chow puppies . Call 614446 -3844 alter 7 .

56

now. 304-675-5466.

A HONEY FOR THE MONEY- $32.500. 1N TOWN. 2 BEDROOMS.
FULLY CARPETED. EAT-IN KITCHEN. ANDERSON WINDOWS,
VINYL SIDING , WALK TO GROCERY JUST LISTED!

·~

Petl for Sale

304-743-4679 .

and weak ends.

Real Estate General

1-(614}-992- 3326

. C)

OF SOME OF
'THOSE F'ROZ.ENFOOI75
DEF INITELY WEREN'T

Mobile home new parts and
doors. Inside, outside, storm
doors. trailer windows.

Phone

:z

WHA'T 'THE PRICES

toolo. call614-742-2170

218 E. 2nd St.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 62x80 all
sleet construction wnh lireproof insulation,
has overhead crane, office and bath.
Formerly used lor boat sales and repair.
locted across lrom Silver Bndge Plaza w1th
access lo OhiO River. Potential unlimtled.

Il - l

Metal wheel barrel, chain
1aw. sewin"g machine ,
grandfather cJock and other

Real Estate

-~

daytime.

plains, Rl. 7.

TEAFORD

:;!

Co .. lnc . 773 - 5554 .

I KJ

Oak furniture. tables.chair•.
cupboard•. plo 11fo, tolephon••· dealt. al80 antiques
and glauware. Open Sunday•. Conkel's Tuppers·

Coli 304-882 -2466.

krtchen. livmg room, carpetin~
car
garage, heat pump, cent air. well and
county water. large storage bldg. Over one
acre of land Call lor details.

Call 614 -982-7581 .

_
TAREF

Rough Cut Lumber. oak.
poplar. and pine . 2x4·s,
2x8's, 1JC6'a, 1x8's. Assorted l" ngths . Call Hogg
and Zuapan Materials

...

Coli 448-2004.

Trailer tiedowns, over roof
type with screw in anchora.
4 complete set1. $80.00.

FARMERS FARM - One of the area's
better farms 10 1 acres m/ 1. lots of
Symmes Creek bottom land. pond. new
fences, ~rge barn , several other buildings,
large lob. base, mod. 3 BR home, 2 baths,
located on Cadmus Crossroads Call for
m01e inlormat1on.

Unvented gaa heater for
Nla. like new , Model P190 .

I NICGB
I.....___
I
._ _ ,

Oragonwynd Cattery Ken net. CFA HimalaYan. Persian
and Siamese kittens . AKC

---------lc ~

Real Estate General

MAKE US AN OFFER - OWNERS HAVE
: 1 MOVED TO FlORIDA - And would like to
•
have their home sold this month. like new
' Z . spirt level IS located on Debby Drive and
offers appro&gt;. 3.000 SQ ft. of l1ving area
•
plus 2 car garage and one of the area's
: !::: nicesl pools.

275 gollon oil tonk. Good
condition . e200.00. Coli
614 -992-7689 .

Building Materials
Block, brick, aawer pipea,
windows, lintels , at e .
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,

King wood !t coat 1tove.
Valley bumper pool teble.

Steve McGhee
446-1255

BMR 446 - NEW LISTING - In town locabon. mcludes 3 BRs.
liVing room. dimng room. bath &amp; basement. lotsof carpet. Gasheat
Pnced at $29.900. Call lor deta1ls.

For Nlo: Fuel Chief fuel oil

furnace with new motor,

~6 .

0 . Coli 614·246-5121 .

125,000 BTU Lennox furnonce. lor solo $200 . Call
446-0601 .

Call 446-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245-9507

WOOD REALTY

Franklin atove. burns wood,
coal or charcoal, used one

$50 oech. Call 446-2310.

Real Estate General

MODERNIZED LOG CABIN NEAR RIO GRANDE County water, forced air furnace. kitchen, family
room. bath &amp; fireplace. Situated on approKimately
one acre . Drastically reduced $9.500.00.

Gollipolie.

2 Cobbogo Patch dollo and 1

NO MONEY DOWN

90 0¥

cond . b8autiful picture
•226 . All con be sHn at K &amp;
K Mobile Homa1. lot 13,

••••on . Call 446-2968.

Crk. Bridge, Turn Right
on Bear Run Rd. Follow
Sigm.

CALL: MIKE SH'ULER

7398 .

BMR 444 -LOAN ASSUMPTION - Bricklrame ranch ~tuatedon
llat 2.35 acre lot includes 3 BRs. carpetlg. eat-in kttchen, LR with
carpet, lamtly room w1th fireplace. ut111ty room. and balh. Kyger
Creek Scl,ool DIStrict. Call lor deta~ ls on loan assumption.

uprltlo . 130.00. Coli 304·
882·2486 .

66 Building Supplies

t&gt;ylionriArnoldandBobleo

Untcrambte thele tour Jumbte1•
ontlttter to each square. to form
four ordinary words

Top Soil ond fill dirt and
londocoplng. Coli 1114-266·
1427.

&amp; UP

*19 71 lnt. Dump .......~.~?~-~~.~~:...... $44 95
*1975 Case 5801 Backhoe ....... S16,500

pc . dinettes from $109., to

olot

.

FRESH HOMEGROWN

seat. 8275 . Sofas and chairs
priced from $286. to $896 .
Tablao,. S50 and up to f1 26 .
Hlde-o-beds,$390 . and up
tq S650 .. oofa bods $146.
Recliners. 1286 . to $375 ..
Lamps from $28. to S126 .

underpinning.

typo . Approx.eo pco. wilh

PU loed . Lorgor loodo delivered. Cell for prlcoo, 614246-11804.

CHRISTMAS 11EES

WATIRPAN TREE STANDS

54 Misc . Merchandise

Troller

~THATICIWiai.EDWORDGAIIE

~ ~~s

Firewood cut up 1l1b1. $15

pc wood LR suite $399,
bunk bads $199, antron
recliners $99 , used bedroom

LAVIllE'S FURNITURE

Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman . 3 tlblea. (extra heavy).
$686. Sofa. chair and loue-

/

One bedroom apt, in Hand·

8293 alter 5PM .

Gallipolis . Call 446-4416
altar 7pm.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
.62 Olive St ., Gallipolis. New

304-675 -1962 .

fenced backyard . Call 446-

1. ~-_:

Phone 304-773-5430.

Wanted quiet. responsible
working girl or couple, 2
bedroom apartment, excel·
lent condition, good neighborhood, o ff ·street parking,

.

verto, RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISE&amp;, Jackson . Oh 614·
288-11830.

54 Misc. Merchandise

and refrigerators. Compare
our price1. save today.

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 ·
8221 .

· Threo bedroom 1 4x70 all

building, one acre, $200.00
: month. $100.00 deposit.
-Jerry• Run Rood. 304-675 • 2356.

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Uood stoves

$280 .00 Per . month . Utili·
ties paid . Call 304-773·

erson, 304-675 - 1972 after
5 PM .

Pleatic ciaterns 1t1te approved, plastic septic tanks,
pllltic culvert. metal cui·

Antique dres1er 6. library

875-6483 or 676-1460.

Two bedr~ol.i · apartlnent. ·

pots, call 304-675-3788 .

Antiques

table. Coll814-388-9060.

'

Furnished one bedroom apt.
Professional adult only. no

53

Umeetone. Sand, Gravel.
Pick up ot Rlchordo &amp; Son .
Call 4411-7785.

Pickens used furniture . 304·

2811 .

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

: &amp;75 -3000.

Portoble Whirlpool diohwuher. 160.00 . Call 614992-6850 during doy and
614·992·3617 In ov.enlngs.

5423 .

niohed. 304-675-5051 .

Mobile home in Gallipolis.
.. nice fo r senior citizens or
: married couple with one
.,. child, no pets. deposit and
· reference• required. K 8t K
"Mobile Homas. Inc., 304-

Wuher &amp; dryer 1110. electric otove 1100, 1949 Chevy
'260. Coll614-367-7284.

$280 mo . pllJs utilities. Lola
Barcus Richards. 1 · 703·

Housing Opportunity) ha1 451 -2591.
one end two bedroom•. r.e nt
ltlrting at $163 for one
bedroom and •l98 par Nice efficiency apartment,
month for two bedroom. suitable for one or two .
with $200 deposit located people. Call304· 773 -5882,
near Foodland and Spring Betty Mercer .
Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ant . Call 446-2745 or leave In Middleport, new kitchen.
carpeting, wood burner, 3
message.
bedrooms . Call 304-882-

required . Call446·1619 .

2 bedroom mobile home for
rent in ·Racine. Phone 614-

lrHzer. Coll446-6247 .

'large beautiful, 3 bdr .. lots
of extras, Rocky Rut' . Rd.

Knouff Flr-ood Split· 911%
. hordwoodo. SHoo nod or
gr. .n. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vendor. 6142611 · 11245.

25 Inch color conoole TV
with new picture lube. 19
Inch color portable TV. 18
Inch B &amp; W TV. Coli
614-742-2267.

'ft!fiJNlfi}'il

ll!)

The Sunday

EWINGTON - $16.500- Remodeled 2 room alum.
s1ded ranch on Rt ISO. Includes d1ningroom, bath and
shOWer, part basemen~ cit furnace. rural wafer. Large
garden area. Storage butld1ngs.

#711

TRANQUILITY nestled in 108 acres of nature. Approx .
40 acres tillable wrth pasture and woods. Older home "
used fo1 hay storage Rural water available. Farm ~as
been mfamily 100 years. but ready tosell. Call for more
deta1ls

#666

Judy DeWitt. Realtor. 388-8155
J. Merrill Carter. Realtor. 379-2184
Virginia Smith, Realt(lr. 388-8826
()

C

A UTHE BIT OF COUNTRY - Very n1ce. neat brick
ranch on 2 acres, mce landscapmg.low ma~nta~nence.
2 car garage with aulomatic opener. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. storage bwldm&amp; garden area. concrete dnve.
Ongmal owners. Quality buik. City school district.
Rodney area. Priced to sell.

PR fSFRVFil ~ lnVItmg country home w1lh 4
bed1ooms. balh. la~ge cozy k·tchen. dming room. hv1ng
room. !~replace . part1al basement Natural gas lorced
au heal ru~al watCI G1eat locanon Centenary area.
Pnced at $32 .500

#704
r' -:.

Atl UTILITIES are already nlstalled on IhiS '' acre lot
Fooler 101 modular 01 double w1de Wi!hln 6 m1les of
Gall•poi!S

#657

,nCOM E OPPORTUNITY - Owne11 have retued and
are very anx1ous to seH rental property The pnce has
been •educed on thrs bus111es') bUJidmg and 3 mobi le
homes. l ocated on 21ots w1lh all uhht1es Th1S oroperty
1s ma pnme local~n and are all oresenllv rented Call
today 101 all the deta~ls

NEW

LISTING ~

LOOKING FOR . apploXImately I ,

acres w1th 2 bedroom mob1IP horne eqwo ment shed

rural wale! sepiiC lank stale lughwayl YOUVE fOUND
IT' Call today 101 more dela1ls
H716
200 ACR ES ~ PARADI S&lt; LAKE ~ Year around
1elreat. Located on Ha nnan Tr.ce Road 3bed rooms. 2
story charm1ng older home Beauhlul stocked laKe.
Wooded land to hunt deer and w1ldhte. Tobacco base.
Owner wtll sell all or part.

#725
ACREAGE located on Cheatwood·Waggoner Rozd. 5
acres total. I ac re cleared. Hold1ng·tank lor s prm ~ and
rural water available. Owners w1ll sell on land rnnlract.
Mostly wooded.

#643

Margaret Bryant. R~t~tltor. 245-9277
Jim Cochranm Realtor. 446-7881
Becky Lane. Realtor. 445-0458

MOBILE HOME PLUS 411&gt; ACRES ~ lOxSO' 1963
mo ~le home with IO'x26' add1lm 3 bedrooms, bath.
IMng room. krtchen wrth ra nge and refngerator.
Woodburn&lt;~ mcluded. Located V1nton area.

H623

Cathy Pope. Realtor, 379-2748
Elizabeth Long, Realtor. 675-3968

r 21Real f:~tat t'furpMatlon as trusu•1• for t'tw :\AF ® anti '"- trac1t•mark:-. t1ft'rnt ury ~ ~ Rt•al E:-.tate t'11t fM:tliun. l'rin tt•d iul .S.A IAtu al H11u:.in~ t lpflCirtunily 1i)
EACH OFFICEIS INDEPENDENTI.YOWNEO AND OPERATED.

I9Hl entu y

�57

lll\lsical
Instruments

Vameha amplifier for guitar
or plino. Aakfng $326 . Calf
448-4525 .
Kirriball Artist Console. Piano Delua:&amp;, Oak ea rly America n cabinet . $2000 .00
new. Will sell for $1300.00 .

Call614 -992-6465 .

~ ... ,,_R
_o_p_ o
_ s-• •- .- .- i-0-n---K-i _m_b_a_ll

Swinger Organ. like new.
call 304-453-1 153, Dan
Ferl}uson Music . Ceredo. W .

Va .

58

Fruit
&amp; Vt'lg'lltables

;,

A'~plos,

bushel . SS .OO ;

fruits, vegetables . produce,
candy and nuts . Jack 's Fruit
Mar;ket, • Route 35,

Henderson·.·

.r

form
&amp;
61

Sup plie s

Livestock

l=arlh Equipment

19J8·· 13B~·ssie Ferguson

diaiel fartft ' tractor, eJCt.ra
good ahapd, n~w disk. bush.
hog- l!i plow. Priced $5800.
Cafr245-9fos .

5

,

ff~- brush

liog. heavy duty,

Utili. CaH,~~-4 - 286-6522 .

. · : -'H144'-Long&lt;'360 4-WO trac-~ tor't, ..tth ·Mnt end loader.
, Prlc!id to s~..Call614-286~-·
r 8622.
Forfiil fe Faifnaff Cub tractor

~~. cultlvator~lows . disc,

,· w~ighto .- Jl;ll:U 614 -256 -

- 81l4J.I- alter~4PM .

~~ ;Wanted to Buy

..

--'-----71
Autos for Sale

Tr :lnsporliiiiOII

Datoun

station

1979 LTD 2 door. 302
engine, auto., PS, PB, V· top,

AM -FM Stereo Tape. 1976
Malibu Classic . 360 engine.
PS. P8, auto. AC, AM radio .
Call614-367-7750.

7th dey of December, 1984.
at 11 :OOAM . 1979 Chevrolet Camara 2 dr .. Ser. No .
1 S87l9N592962 . Sale of
the security listed above will
be held at the Commercial 8t

1976 Plymouth Volare Station Wagon, 46,000 miles.

$550.00. 1975 GMC '4 ton
8650 .00 1974
Plymouth Fury . $195 .00 .
Call 614-985-4174.

Savings Bank . Silver Bridge
Ftlaza . Gallipo.lis, Ohio .
Terms of Sale: Cash . Seller
reserves the right to bid and
the right to reject any and all
bids . Prior to the date of sale,
arrangements mav be made
to inspect this merchandise

pic~-up .

1970 Chovalle SS 454. 4
speed , new tires . Excellant
condition . Call 614-986·

3949.

coiling 446-0664 behours of 9 o00AM

1975 Voltswagon Beetle.
good condition . No rust.
good tires. $1200.00 or

1981 Chevy Chavette auto.

bast offer. Call 614-9927312 .

Plymouth Vola ire

auto. 1978 Dodge Aspen

auto. 1978 Plymouth Fury
auto $999. John ' s Auto

•

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301 '
good condition . Call after

Sales, Bulaville Rd .• Gallipo-

lis. Oh . Call 446-4782.

5PM . 446-0137

Chevette runs real
good 8425 . 1970 Plymouth
Duster 340. wedge. A-1
cond., $1 ,650 . Call 4462459.

1978 Trans Am . loaded . Call

1976

before 3PM , 61 4· 388 9653 .
1977 Pinto 5700 .00. call
304-675· 1159 after 5:00
PM.

1972 Dodge con\lersion
van, seats8, 318 3spd ., PB,

Call

76 Ford Pinto. Call 675 -6961 .

t':
•
• . Frd'n end 6fl:iader to fit a
Farmall "~'.\"tractor James

Laogdon. phone 304-6754287.

..

J

..

PtAl!D"anief Custom ButcherinG'. open siX days a week.

30&gt;1. 882-3224 .
'

63

Livestock

AQHA 1983 black gelding
G1;soo. AOHA 1984 chest-

nut filly reserve champ .
Prod'n Gallia Co Jr Fair
ToP.: 20 O'llio Futurity
61l00. 8oth colts quality
show prospects . Call 446-

&amp;tll3.

A scenario
for a long shot

TOP CASH paid for '80 trade on tete model Chavette
modal and newer uaed cera. or sail lor $2995.00. Call
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911 304-882-2466 .
Eastern Ave. , Galllpolia. Cal~
1973 Pontiac le Mans.
614-446-2282 .
Automatic. Runt good .
$400 .00 . Call 814 -9921984 Plymouth Reliant 7403 .
3,800 mi. $7.500. Sears
wood &amp; coal stove with new 1976 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan
2 spd . blower. $226 . calf 4 door hardtop. New tires .
448-0499 or 446-7616 af- New battery. New shocks.
Excellent condition .
ter 8PM .
$1500.00 . 1973 Pontiac
1984 VW Rabbit AC. AM - Sport Coupe 2 door herd
FM stereo's, len than top. New battery. Gets good
10,000 mi ., serious caller fuel mileage. Fair condition .
$500 .00 . Call 614 -992 alter 6PM 446-7693 .
6263 or 614-992-2478 .
Notice of Public Sale. The
following described ttem
will be offered for public sale
to the highest bidder on the

()

Q

M~'M;~~
WHY SETTLE FOil TELLING THE WHOLE

Call

WEST

EAST

South rightly interpreted partner's
bid of three spades as a cue-bid. If
North held the spade ace, he would
need very little strength in the heart
suit for the play at six diamonds to be.
quite reasonable. Needleos to say, a
holding of five to the eight-spot was
hardly what he expected. Everything
would still have been all right if West
had made the normal opening lead of
the unbid suit, clubs. But this was not
the day for West to be cooperative.
He Jed the spade nine.
Now declarer was up against it. He
had two natural heart losers and very
little to do about 1t. Sometimes in
such situations a canny declarer can
reap rewards by running a lot of diamonds while discarding hearts from
dummy. A more charitable than intellectual opponent will then let a heart
or two go, to the declarer's advantage . That was not likely to happen
here, since the only club either opponent would have any reason for saving would be the ace. So South had to
look for an actual lie of the cards that
would allow the slam to come home.
He found it. If the hand with the
club ace had only one heart, the contract ~ould be made. Accordingly

+9876
.KJ109

.Q

....

WHI

.

Large

rou~d

bales of hay .

S2b each . Call 446-1052
after 6pm .

(NEWSJ"~PE~

NEW USTING Gallia
County - Addison - Mostl y
remod~ed home leatures a
beautrlul master bed room &amp;
olher bedrooms. I 1? ~ory wrlh
~drng and many new lealures
Ca ll lor yo ur showrng
$37,900.00.

1•

POMEROY Outslanding
hbRil! Bnck,lanch house wrth
3.~rocrillS&lt; 2 balhs. lull
lllfelnent.~- "rOOm. equ1pped
lottl1en,
i\. Lovely home
IXft acre MI . $49,900 00

"'

......

MllfllLEd :.__ Good loca
1•,
ti)Di:2o&gt;_J1fldroom home,
-~&lt; ~- ~ heat. lenced
Jllllll,includi!S washer &amp; dryer.
_fi'*'ite. s~S.90o.oo

~

I'()MEROY - Older remodeled
in 101\'n wrth large ~I
Thfee or four bedrooms
1 pnc~d at $24 900.00.
-

Nrce older
well mamsoffitt
front
prrvate

I'IMEROY !::'"' A 2 stoty ~der

hO!fte in ~d condrtron 4
bedrooms, 111 batn. storm
windows &amp; doors, n.~&gt;l .a. heat.
full basement, good neighbor~

$38,900.

R£AlTORS . . '
Henry E. tfeland, Jr.
• GRf ~92- 6191
Trussell 949 ·2660
· Turner 992-5692

!'!'~'lit
•.

IUlliJI

2•
3•
6t

Reach
lhe
within your grasp as you stand
on this 25 acres
paradise overlooking Pomeroy. The
tights of Pomeroy twinkle and the stars in your wife's eyes
shine as she looks over lh1s fantasy palace. Yes! You will
think you stepped into apalace when you walk through the
double doors and the sparkling lights of the chandelier
fall all around you . Want to take a peep7 Come to our open
house Sunday, Oecember 2. 2:00 to 5:00. Plenty of parking for cars, buses and helicopt~rs. Turn at Pommeroy
Elementary, lollow signs.

Real Estate General

'

''

Expl'lenee In Doing So

FIRST TIME OFFERED FOR SALE - 11 Y1Jao •Ill owneo
sard lo ill excellent beat oontractor. "Build us a2,000 pussq
tt. house on 2 acres off Rt 35 - make rl92' ~ng of quality

ba~ large lr~ng room, oak trim. Now add an OVersiZed 2carl
garage and as the w~e collects all kiflls ol lhings bul~ a
24x~ brick and lrame separate LJilding 10 store all her
'lr'""'"':l ilems" ~llhrs was done and Ihen lire ousy couple
planled lots ol trees. shru~ !lowers, and agarden.lirne has
passel and the couple wanllo m&lt;11e on (proiBbly lo bold a
3rd buildin~. The per!ect ending wMI be when some kJcky
lami~ makes alllhrs "Therrs". Call loda~'
#405

- GET THE JUMP on everyone else. Owners hal&lt;l iusl reduced

#241

#223

FROM EVERY ANGLE - Thrs home IS nawless A very
spacoos fkn ~an won 11 leave yoo cramped lor room. Very
nrce decora~ng wlh new carpet. Outstandrng klcation wrth
excellent neighlxlrlmd and convenience lhat l&lt;lry few hirros
on the market can offer. Extra ~~ fl'&lt;11i&lt;ing pnvacy, garden
and room to j)ay You must rot m1ss thisfine home just west
ol SflJlng Valey. $77,900.

117 A. CLEARED

#112

DOIIT LET HIGH IIITERm RATI:S

STOP YOU FROM BUYING'
low down payment and low monthly ~ments onlhis lo:r1
assumption. 2 story home rn the oountry can be easily yOurs.
HOme has new rurnace, new 'Mring. new bath, alulrinum
•din&amp; nrce deck, 3 BRs. lrvrng room. tar~ _eat·rn klchen.
dinmg room and full basement PriCed at $36.500.

#236
GOOD INVESTMENT - WIU PAY FOR ITSELF - Dou~e
house - 5 rooms and balh ·11'1 eadl side. Both in nee
condroon. One •de • attractNefy furnished. fumrshings ·
1nclude range, refngeratcr, washf!'/dryer, air conditioner. 2
redrooms and hvmg room You can live in one side and Ia the
olher •de make the pay men~ This rs a&amp;OOd opportunity - 4
blocks from city park.
#105

l'h ACRES WITH COUNTRY SffiiNG
N1ce and solid 2 bedroom home located on state hrghway.. Rural
water system plus dnlled and dug w~l. Extra water tap for a mo~le
home hookup Nice restlul area aner a day's work.

#574

lsi AVENUE. JUST UKE NEW - Evefj!~ntt-rool, sidrn&amp;
rnsuobOn, lllors, wal~ rer~ngs. kitchen cabinets. aP!ll ianre~
bathroom. heatint arr condiOOnrng-everytlmg rs brand
~w. Ow~r has spent $35,000 more on this ooe ~n he is
askong Yoo mu~ see I - If's perlect $125,000 buys t
#105

LOOK WHAT SO UTTU WILL BUY
bedrooms. 2 baths. lovely wooded country setM&amp; situated on
slate route. Lots, lots more. Possible Land Contract.
#621

BUILDING LOTS
2 lots in Brdw~l area. Su1table lor mo~le home or lxJ1Id your own
home. Rural water. Buy both for $2,800.

11608
VACATION CAMP BY BLUE LAKE
Owner financin&amp; sundeck, rural water, sep~c system, electric. Buy
rt with camprng traoler or withou' concrete pad. Great fishing! Buy
and move righ!1n.
.

#584
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - OWNER FINANCING
Are you lookrng lor a 2 bedroom horne overlooking the Ohio River
w~h little maiotenance Beginner home or renrement home. We

have rt.

·

#260
6.95 ACRES VACANT AND OFF RT. 35
Rolling land - beside old U. S. highway 35 In an area that ~
developing fast. Rl. 3S.short d1stance west of GallipoliS. Get rt now.

#544

.
8 ACRES
Wrthin 10 minutes drive to downtown Gallipoli&amp; Clly school system.
Has hookup lor mobile home. Galla rural water, electric and
tank Night igilt on pole. 200 fool frootage on Graham School
Timber. Bu~ding sites~Call now.

NEW USTING OF HOME oo rire srte lot wrth 24x~
d '•""" F ltba
ld 'ded lhheal
garage an worl-.;)0...,... u semen lVI w
Jl.lmp
Also wood sf&lt;11e w~h lorced arr ID two roorm LocatEd on
Bula~lle-Addrson Rd. JUst rlllth of Blla.lle. ll!l us sll&gt;w yw
this quality burft home wlh a nrre lawn.
#308

I
I
I TARA ESTATES- 4 IIDROOMS- Solid brick 1.633 sq ~
I ranlivrn~ell fam~y
lhat has everythrng needed for combrtab~. gll!Cilus
room w~h extra nire lrrepl~&lt;:e, oomplete kitchen,
l LR formal drnrng
area, 2
over-9ZEd t!ilrage, ClfJICrele
I lmmedrate
dn~eway. club house and .swrmmrng •
p/lviege&amp;
possessoo. $65,000.
I PRICE REDUCED $10,000- Beautilul cedar ran do perMil
died
bath~

II

I
I
1
I
II

I

pool

on a grassy kooN in Hideaway Acr"i pra.oides 1 Icing's view of
Gr8!n Tw~ Home fealures 3 large OOdrooms, 2lun balh~
iving room wrth fireplace, lamrly room, farJ&gt; eat-11 litchen
with deluxe cabilets. 2 car garage and 2 nire JX"clles. 25
ac:res to ~ a~ng wrth house which ioc~des fJJie studded
lmll, ideal kx:atioo ilr sman OirR Wool las! klng at $19,900.
#203

I
II ·'.

I ·.
I

u., lffe

help
lor any
area full
fenced bac~ yard
alforda!Ae d is.

#204
MOllE TO THE COUNTRY, BUT JUST SACRIFICE A THING _
Very attractiw clean IIJme on 775 just ofi14L Oilers, country
fea_
IUres lilt. 2 ~&lt;:res of fiiOIIrd l:eautilul view and peace and
~ret. bot withJut J!""i up CODV81renres of modem livin~ 3
BR~ loving room with woodburner, dinrng rmm illld equippol
kitchen, and 2 lui baths. 2 car garage. $62,00o.

#3-12

,
3111 AVE- Older oome rn very fti)Odcondtion Well k&gt;cated fD
rownbrn 5Cf'&lt;ds. busiless, churclles, banks and grotefY
slofa Bay wonOOws mIMng and dinilg room All rooms har&lt;
been re&lt;oncitioned " t.Wd taste. Remodeled bath ll1od
hardv«&gt;Jd fklors. PINate baclryard--tenced tr,. shadEd. lei
,. show yw ttis Sjleciallllme if downto.in area.
·
Nll4

KNOCKS -

I
I.
I
I
II
I I•
I
II '•,
I .
I ·-

HUGE PRICE REDUCTION! -

Is fullest 1 rn one ol lhe counly's nml !Xli&gt;Jiar

nerghlxlrhoods Th l5 1 h yearo~homeprovrdes 400drooms
sunken liVInf room with cathedral ce111na and Jl1ving levels·
Siu ted 00 6
1
c '
·
a
acres. roots on har~ars lake, has lxlal dock.
garmn area, burld•g for pony or ~her animal Jusl a lew
mmutes from stllpping area. hospdal, c1ty and a new

efollentai)' school under co n ~rUCiron . Don't JUst rok and
admrre. mike an offeo Owner wan~ to sell immedralel)'! Now
$9S,9(Xl.

11406
113 ACRE FARM wrth stately old seven ooom lpuse rn !llOII
JeP0 ;~twoeoo~ bams~ne lobacco and lrvestock ore lor
1rl&lt;lSI.,....
crele lloor down and hay slorage al:xJve. 20'x64'
machne shed, grarr1 ~orage and garage. 31 acres of
l)!Oductwe crop lilld 65 acres holl pa~ure some woods Coal
.rejXlrted under part of larm, good lot.lcco baSe, aD 1Jr
$74 ·800·00·
#372

I':

l7rriNER SAYS SELL THIS - Nice 3Br home oo North Mainrn
Vinton F~l basemen! w~h coal furnace, city water, spacous
front pordl wrth plenty ol shi&lt;le. SEeing ~ belr&lt;Mng. Asloing

I ;I'

$Jil,OOO.

IN GALLIA COUNTY ·, .
.
Ike Wiseman. Broker 446-3796
WI SEMi~,· A
CALL -EVENING
t!K · ClYde Walker. Assoc. 245-5276
B. J. Haimon, Assoc. 446-4240
HOUSE SO__ WOR~ 446-3643 CALL: g::.EW::_:~:-m:~

&lt;!

Chevy

Von ,

good

cond, 307 V8, auto trans .•

AM-Ffl/f. $750 .00 firm .
304-676-2248 after 4 PM .

I·

S1· r v 11:1'S

Marcum Roofing 8o Spout-

Call 614-388-9857.

H Ia S

SEWING Machine repair s,
sarvice. Authorized Singer

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Salea &amp;. . Service
Scissors
Fabric Sharpen
Sh o p ,
Pomer ov 614· 992-2284 .

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio

or

1163 Sec. A\le., Gallipolis

614-445· 7833 or614-4461833 .

Business
servtces
•

1,~=======::::;

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO.

General Hauling

lennox Heat1n1 &amp; Air Conditionin&amp; All T~pes tnsul1tion ,
Electrical Wiring.

Call 446·8515
or 446-044 I

James Boys Water Serv1ce.
Also pools tilled. Call 614 -

Good- 1 Excavating r basements, footers . driveways.
septic tanks, landscaping .

c

256 - 1141 or 614 -446 1175 or 614 -446 -7911 .

PLASTIC
GAS PIPE

Ken's Water Service Well s,
cisterns. pools tilled Phone

Basements. Footers , Con·
crete work, Backho e ' s,
Dozer &amp;: Oitcl-ler, Dump
trucks. S. water -gas-sewerelectrical lines .

614 -367-0523 or 614 -357 7741 n ight or day

Call anyt ime 614 -446 4537, James L. Davison , Jr.
owner.

1" 160 PSI
.18' ft. - pick up

Dump truck for hire w ill haul
coal , limeston e, etc. 30 4 -

20' ft. - delivered

675 -3190.

86

tland, Oh,614 -742 -2903 ;

Also pipe connections and water pipe.

M . H . Repair

Mobil e Home doo rs, Win dows, underpennmg and
roof paintmg . 304 -675 -

3000 .

S&amp;H PLASTICS

Central (Vienna) . W. Va .
PH_
. 304 -295-8615
L___

Coli collect 1-614-2370488, 9 a.rn . to 6 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Plastering • Plaster repair ,
free eatimetea. can 614 ·

dr, automatic transmission,
short bed. Good condition .

Marquis

Excavating

85

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTEJlY SHOP

&amp; Refrigeration

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references 1
furniahad . Free estimates .

87

Excavating

Brokers. 446-6592.

Plumbing

83

Times-Sentinei-Poge-[)..7

!==========
84
Electrical

JIM ' S PLUMBING 8o HEATING . Rt. 1, Box 365 , Galli polis. Calf 614-367-0576 .

Home
Improvements

Sunday

Dozer Work by Ted Hanna .
Ditches. ponds. roadt . land
clearing, etc. Call Motor Car

&amp; Heating

Phone 614-446 -3888
81 4-446-4477

ing. Now lnatalling rubber
roofa. 30 veaq experience,
speci•lizing In built up roof.

utility bed, 8 eyl. power

256-1182 .

Cell 614,- 949-2222.

D .•nd M . Contractors . Re modeling, vinyl siding, pain ting(indoor and outdoor) ,
replacement windowa. Call

1----'--- - - - - 1982 S 10 Chevy Pick-up.
Tahoe package . V-8 , 5
speed, AM-FM, tilt wheel ,
factory fiber glass topper .
Very good condition

304-773-5131 .
RON'S Television Service.
Special!zing in Zenith and
Motorola. (lunar. and

$4860.00. Call 614-742 3008 or 614-742-2743.

houoe caHs. Call 304-676 2398 or 614-446-2454.
Fetty Tree Trimmlng, stump

removal . Call 304-676 1331 .
RINGLES'S SERVICE, experienced carpenter. elactri·
cian , mason, painter, roofing (including hot ' tar

application) 304-675 -2088
or 676-7388.

Sonseerhay
(Sonny) Garnes
Cathy Clark Burdette
Assoc.
Assoc.
446-2707 Evenings 388-8118 Evenings

lrn. ARM RATE and, wilh 5%down payment 12%fixed rale wrth less
lhan 5% down Now o the time to ruy. Gi'ie us a call'

I .
gas
,
• septiC tank, Gallipolis clly school i i ·
to sell"
.
UPPER RIVER RD. - 3-4 Bedrm. home. wbfp, 2 batn.
f garage, mobilehome hook-up on 1~. lot. Owner rntersted in ltadingf
fior small busrness orwill sell outrrghl Proce: $41.50000
f
f NEW LISTING ·- 3 Bedrm. home out11de crty "'"'ted alongf
piCturesque Willow Dr. formal drn1ng room . 2l'x l5' lamily.
• room. 2 baths. WB FP. len ced rn back yard . Modern kitchen
f w1th many amenities. Priced to sell $58,500
•
PRICE REDUCED on 311&gt; ac res of land. 3 BR, adapted for.
f woodburner. 1.440 SQ. fl Guyan Twp Buy now lor $39,500
BRICK HOME: Localed along Lower River Rd. below Raccoon .
fcreell WB FP. lormal dining rm., rec rm. 13' x36' . Aquality home e
•
f sMted on 2'.? acres Call lor appointment'
e cOMMERCIAL BlllG. 700 block ol 2nd Ave. Purchase or tease. f
f lot 22,620 sq ft.; BUIIdrng 7,560 SQ. fl Excellent c~nd~ron .
f

1

OILY $19.1100.00. $950.00 down payment ~ YTS monlh~ paymtll! ut
$142.01 PPI. 8.75%Int. Rate. Be the first to take a look atlhrs 3bedroom

home in lhe crty

•
•

•

$21.000 WILL PURCHASE thrs 2 bedrm ootlage along 4th Ave f
Owner wrll frnance to qualrlred purchaser $10.000 down. bal. atf
8% rnt.. over 10 yr. perrod Pay $133.47 per month.

~F

•
•

5 ACRES
lAND withrn the crty ol Gallipolis. Owner will sell lor:
$51500 .
.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK 3 BEDROOM HOME with 2\\
7 yrs o1a, •
• tUst off Brdweii-Rodney Rd. Elec heat pump. frreplace, cent •
• vacuu m system $70,000.
•
BEDROOM HOME w1th 17.9 acres. srtuated wrthrn Sec. #13, •
Huntington Twp. pnce $45,000.00.
•

acr~

13
S41,000. $2,250.00 down payment. ~ yrs., 8.75% lnl Rale Monthly
po,ment $336 34 PPI.
GlfEN ACRES - ExceRenl condrtron' Freshly parnled, newly carpeted
throughout. Clean 3 tl!droom, modern kitchen· and d1nmg room mmb
w/sfidrng doors leading to large fenced in yard. lwrng room. balh, laundry
ooom. sin~e car garage Garden space and goape arbor Dly schools Agood
S&lt;Jid oome. Gas heal. /ljr condrlcnrn&amp;

flEW USTING - SECLUDED PRIVATE N_EIGHBO.RIIOOD .,lhrn walking

distance lo rowntown and al) Schoo• Thl5 reautilul brrck _trr-level home
has alormal entry. Irving room wrlh fireplace and abrealhlakrng vrew of lhe
Qhil Valey. Slep-saver klchen wlh borH-rn roodern ap~rance~ den wrth
firl!llla&lt;:e. burH-rn bookcase and hoi balh. Mrddle lev~ liters spaaous
master OOdroom wlh lull balh. 2 large OOdrooms. ceramrc tiled luR bath,
an4 plenly of closets. Lower level wi1h large famrly room, 41h OOdroom,
sturage are~ and launliy/hollby room This home has rerenoy been
re-carfl'!led throoghout. Screened&lt;n back porch wrth wil&lt;n bar-b-que
lfrill. dou!Ae carport wi1h ~rnge are• landsta!led lot to.accenllhe beauty
of lh~ qualrty home. 'Oon'llet lh• ooe pass yoo by Goe us acall today.
1M0 COIITRACT - O..ner needs Ill sellh;, property. Only $16,000 loc
3UO ACRES OF VACANT l'""o\)C£ dian d. Black walnut trees.A
waleffaM. Secklded and prR£
--"'"' ~a" lo buo~ a log cabin.
toc.ted qn a blacktop road . ~cy school&gt;

0

STATtlY HOllE- .65B acre of woodland and 1.6 acres mil can also I&gt;!
purchased. Formal entry, lr~ng room and lormal dining room: modern
lritx:hen family room w/wb fireplace. 3 BRs, 2 blllhs, 2 c.. garage 8%
rfllerest' rate assumable. Shown by aPf)&gt;ntmenl Priced rn 60s.

15 ACRES MORE OR LESS rn Sp11~~reld Townshop. Wooded. Mrneral ngllts
with the property. Only $7.500.
IJII FAIRIIONT MOBILE HOME - 14x52 in excellenl 011~tion On a
IOI1Ied lot in city .:hod drstrod Only $9.800.
IIIWESTMEIIT PROPEIITY- 641 Thrrd Ave. 2 slllJ'I oome or can be used
a 2 rent~l Large modern IUtchen, 3 or 4 OOdrooms. lormo drning and
rr,irog room N~e back pati&gt; ~so a 14x70 mobile rome rn ll1od shap_a A
cOwered carport Priced rn the'40&gt; Shown by apprjntment ""~ $450 00
rtll!lal.

LOCATIO IN COUIITRY - LR, 3 B~ k~chen, balh, utiity room, cedar

1

IVINTON: EXTRA CLEAN: - Clea n cool and convenrent 2 bedrm f
home located alonE Main Stree t Refhg &amp; many other 1tems ol
l1urnrture wrll go with hou se Ideal lor newlyweds an dpnced at only •
f$22,500
•
fiLOT IN RODNEY II S.D. $5,900 .00.

•

l 2 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RO. wrth Raccoon Creek frontage •
f$7,500 each
•
f2 BEDRM . COTTAGE . located along Wh1 te Ave. Buy now lor •

M
CONTRACt - A-frame home on .65 acre lot more or less. 2 or 3
llodroon-., 1~ bllh, ivre rilll'll. krtctlen, utili! room. Third bedroom could
be used lor lamrly room. ~ basemen! unfinishEd. 2 stoves. n!ltigeralor,
..,.,. and dryer induded.

IJallm uicAnDN -

.

I .

,

_,.IG IN 20 ACitS OF WOODWID- r.ntemi!Jfai'J oome_lealulinga

....um w/1101 tub wrapped by an open lormal IMnl and dinrng room

.,..,m ~ ._.~~~me fi,.pace. Amodem compete- and a
..,.., nooti, 210 bitlis, 3 OOdrooms w/masl!f "'~~ sliilni iblrs to a
1f111D no. Lauf!dry ond mud room. Unfinished tasanent 2 car garage
Vlillltllfle prdei1 and dwarf !rut trees. Shown by apporntment

f

ea~ m

4l VICTORIAN BRICK HOME - Lower Rrver Road near Clay School.
41 OulbUJidrngs and 7 acres Buy for $37.500.
1 NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom home along Chestnut St lot wrth
I

•
•

•
servrce alley in rear 2 car garage and nrce garden area Pnce
$38,500.
•

·.APPROX. TWO AND A THIRD ACRES w1thin city lrmrts. Zoned ••
oommerc~al. Along Rt 7. Prrce reduced to $25,000

•

•

··DON1 OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN in Eureka 2 redroom home
• w1th 2 baths and lots ol room lor expansiOn Located lUst off R1. 7

•
•
•

• - Ranch style. lg carport, adapted lor •
. 3 BEDROOM HOME
woodburner, lenced yard and rn-ground sw1mmmg pool Proce
f reduced to $42,000.
•

•

near dam. Proce $22.000.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Twelve dozBfl
6 Resodue
1 1 Proficiency
16 Rent
21 Cowboy
competition

22
23
24
25

Picture: colloq
Taul
Artisl 's stand
Presrdential
nickname

26 Polished
28 Transactions
30 Whee !oath '
32 River in Italy
33 Greek letter
34 Antlered animal
35 Tear
36 Breeze
37 Headgear
38 Goal
40 Smooth the
feathers of
42 Transgression
43 Those in favor
44 European
45 Belore
47 Untidy person
49 Ache
50 Study
51 Renovates
54 Cleanrng
substance

, 55 Time gone by
56 Woods
59 One, no matter
wllrch
60 Stilch
62 Baby cats
64 Stop
65 Symbol tor
tellurium

66 Parent: colloq.
67 Short sleep

69 Wants
70 Bird' s home
71 Electrified particle
72 Possessive
pronoun

74
76
77
18

Young salmon pi
Chrnese p&lt;I!Joda
Dispatched

Latin: in the year of
79 General conduct

82 1ndines
84 Change
85 Century planl
86 Conflagration
88 Let rt stand
89 Thecaama

133 Fruit cakes
135 Shade free
138 Beverage

139 M eadows
140 Edoble seed
141 Insect
142 Faer-oe Island s
whirlwind

143 Agave plan I
144 River ISlands
145 Macaw
14 7 Afri can antelope
149 Tornd

150 Avoid
152 M 1stake

19 Part of flower
20 Run away to be
married
27 Compara1ive
end ing
29 Emerald lSI .:
3 1 Ab stract being
36 Court order
3 7 FrUII o f the p1ne

39 Negale
40 Church bench es
4 1 Cozy corne r
42 Group of seven
43 Fr ee t 1cket
44 Harbor
46 Con cern1ng
48 FrUIHess

49 Shallow vessels

94 Communicali on
instruments

154 Capilal ol Oregon
156 Gel up
158 Surgocallhread
159 Cooks slowly
160 Collecl

98 Name tor Alhena

16 1 Covetous per son

52 Growmg oul ol

90 Showed concern

92 Complain

DOWN
1 Pulpy fruil

55 Fo01 levers

2 Harbinger of spnng

56 Swoft
57 Rock

3 Poem

58 Cho1r vo1ce

4 Compass p01 nt

61 Heal
63 Afternoon par ties

5 Seed
6 Frurf · pi
7 Old Hebrew
monetary
Unit: pl.
8 Bnck-ca rry1ng
device
9 Latm con1unc t1 0n

10 Turf
11 Blemi sh

12 Ashes of seaweed
13 Those holding

124 Native metal

125 Peri9d of tasling
126 Rely on
128 Cover
129 Stockings
131 Twosted
132 Golf mound

51 Swoh
53 Lawmakrng body

99 Countenance

100 Obtained
102 Remunerale
103 River rn Scotland
104 Footlike part
105 Separate
106 Eats
108 Trtle of respecl
109 Sun god
110 Teutonrc derly
111 Simrlar
112 Agree
114 Headgear
116 Edge
117 Rub gently
119 Wan
120 Pee
122 set of games

50 Young horse

14

15
16
17

office
Pl ace of the seal
abbr
Vasl thron g
Conduct
Org an of heanng

18 Equally

64

Ch1ck ~ ns

90 Sleeveless c loaks
91 W1deawake
92 Unusual
93 Vast ages
95 Hero1c event
96 Uncanny
97 Junctures
99 Art lfiCI3!
101 lnd 1an tent
105 Food fish
106 Block head
107 Break suddenly
111 Learning
I 12 Jarg on
113 Allowance for
waste

11 5 Fondles
116 Mature

118 Flower
119 Writes

12 1 Empowers
123 Artif1c'iallanguage
125 Rents
126 Loved one
127 ViSIOns

129 Delests
130 Marlln1mgrechent
13 1 wager

132 Rops

68 In Jesu1t schools.
a d ean
70 lrnt ates

136 Flexible

7 1 Srgnrly
73 E)(tras

139 Hold on properly

134 Play1ng card
137 Measunng device

74 Urge on
75 Shoot at from
cover

77 ScoH
78 In addl!1on
80 Genus ol ol1ves
81 Prel1x three
83 Unit or S1amese
currency

140 Bow of vessel

144 Fuss
145 Ex rsl
146 Kong ol Judah
147 Gu1do's h1gh note
148 Obstruct
149 To wel mscnpt1on

151 Near
153 Football POSitiOn:

84 Deadly pale

ab br

87 Motor
89 Armadillos

155 Forenoon
157 A state abbr

fA CONVENIENT LOCATION alon g Garlield Ave Home can be used •
f1or 3 or 4 bedrooms and wHhrn walkmg distance lrom most all •
_
•
f services. Only $30.000
fNEW LISTING- Comfortable 3-4 redrm. cottage, 500Biock4th.
f Ave. Off -street parkr n&amp; easrly marntained lot. $26.900.
.•
fiNVESTMENT PROPERTY - 5 rooms and bath down and 4 rooms.
and bath upstarrs. Located ~on g 2nd Ave. Buy now lor $17,000. •
• Price reduced!!

Dtnelm~ lui~ carpeted, ;ir conditioned, seve~al apPrilflces, washe~, dryer,

lirJO meUt ootbuildinji. garden, 3.6 acr"" Wil sellor $32,000.- $16,000
..W PAYIIEIIT. $24li.OO rronth~ payment

1
I :[
I .
I

Of 1985 Monte Corio 1450.
304-1176-6421 7o30 a.m. to
!!•00 p.m.

81

446-4206

jcl1ool dimict.

Four Goodyear white side·
w111 redial• whMis, locking
wire wheel covers with lock.

tion. 1450.00. Coli 814992-6660 during dey and
614-992-3617 In evenfngo .

brakao, std. ohilt. Call 4468139 alter 6 •30PM.

Phone 304-

Bonnie L. Stutes
Realtor
446-4206

82

J .A .R .Construction Co R u-

IIIITAL- 2 mobile home lois with wafer. $45.00 per rronth. Kyger C.eel&lt;

•

\:

1972

cao. 304-895-3802 .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Call 614-387-0409 or 614367-7244.

Walking drstance lo city sdros M&lt;xlern 4
bedroom home, 2 !Jmif, rooms, 2 balhs. borRin lritthen.livng room, utility
...,, hobby room. worl.shop, lrllit celar, screened.., fXX'Ch, central a., .9
ICit lot with AJrden. fru~- nl W'4" arbor. Home has been well cared
!or-Enero !lficient
.

·----------------------------------~

1981 K E 100 Kawaaaki .
900 ,milea. Excellent condi ·

71$

Rotary or cable tool drilling
Moat walht completed same
day . Pump ulea and eervi -

1 978 F, 260 Ford '.4 ton with

''
'
•
'
'

'I

1979 Ford F-160 28 ,000
miles. exc . cond .• 84, 900 .
Cell 446-0686 .

86 Yamaha 200-4 wheeler
with snow plow, helmet.
blade . New. moving away.
11995.00. Call 614 -992 ·
6862

1980 KDX 400 Kowuaki.
Good condition . 1600.00.
Call 614-985 -3949 .

83

Home
Improvements

or daytime on weekends.

::

II

OOdrooms, full basement l'h balh large manrcured lawn,
garden and two oulburldongs. low 50s
#215

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

Uood vary lit~a . Call 446·
9364 . Aaking 1800.

81

Motorcycles

Home Improvements
vinyl lr. aluminum siding,
roofing, saamle11 gutters.
atorm windows. overhang .

w~ksoop

FOR THE REST Of 'lOUR LIFE- R~axand watch lhebarges

73

wheeler), like new, dual
tranfer with 4 apeed trans.

$2,000 with slide In 8'
camper, $1750 with out .
Call 614-245-6271 after 6

cook s. 2 fireplace s (Buck stove 111 llv1ng
elbow
on

WE NEED LISTINGS. WE HAVE BUYERS WE CAN'T SATISFY AND ARE EXPECTING THE MARKET TO PICK UP

.

-·

I
I
I
BE COMFORTABLE IN THE COUNTRY - 1748 sq It ranch I
home wrth lull basemen! fealures 3 redrooms. klchen large
2 3
I •
room)
of
room 2 acres. Plusoversized 2 •
cor garage wrth brrezeway and laoge palo Ask,ng $:&gt;4,900 I
#426
WHAT A BARGAIN'! - RANCH HOME IN TOWN - You wrll I
li!od $29,900 proce lag hard lo ll!al on mode rn 3OOdroom
home on Hedgewood Drrve. offers cedar shake srdrng, I
krtchen and dfi!ngroom. full base-nenl. detached garage and
Nalural gas heal. plus a provale prne freed yard.
I
#316
I
I
I
I ;,
I ,,
travel up and down the river from Ills well carffl for and very
attrac~ve Jwo story oome on Roote 7. nnosf1ed rn Toogue and
G-oove Knolfy ~ne and hardwood floors. offers lhree

1974 Chevy pick up with
topper. 304-676-6153 .

13

1 9':8 Dodge 0160. 318

II

Don't wait until spring.
Buy now. Sellers are wanting out before winter. Interest rates are the lowest
they've been for a long
while. Home prices will go
up in the spring. Don' I follow the crowd. Buy now.

1800.00. 304·773-6027 .

Hondo ATC

eng1ne, 4 speed overdrive.
power steering and brekea,

t~ s

NOW IS THE
TIME TO BUY

up

REAL ESTATE

HOME IN MINT CONDITION - Yoor lamrly wrll eJijOy large
~v1ng room with coal and wood ~101Je. also 20x22 patD, hv1ng
room w~h firepla:::e, con~o~ement k1lchen and d1mflg area. 3 Br.
i'h balh~ ~ slrnage space Corner kit wilh I,OOd grass
cover, cha1n link lence 1n rear Ali i hiS w~h1n 2 m1les or c1ty.
#340

enough for or
and plenl)'

'1 983

pick

62,000 oct. miles, $4, 5oo:
Coli 446-2957,

l-

~~ -

Dataun

STUTE
r

ENJOY LIFE JUST ALITTLE BIT MORE when you buy lho
raoch oome wolh 3 acres rn NOithup Walch lall bursl rnlo
magn,1fr.ent cobrs ~ross the countrySide Property 1ncludes
lartl' fenced paslure perlect for several cattle or horses,
24x40 barn. large garden spol and creek fronfage Home
lealures 3 BR. lamiy room wrth fireplace, far~ 2 car garage,
and new in-ground f)OOI. Alllhrs ailllrda b~ prrced al $55,900
and mcludes Buyers Prolect10n Aan.
#
245

'73

74

Motorcycles

Real Estate General

I
I ,.,.
I
I ,
I •
1

H4.25

lij

$2,800. 00.
676-3512.

·I
I
AI $59,500, compare whal I
#230

74

The

W. Vo.

Dodge diesel engine

'80 Fiot X1 9, 33,000 mileo,

.I

din1ng room with hard wood toors and f1replace, SIJOC(IUS

Trucks for Sala

1978 hoovy duty '.4 ton

Am·Fm cassette. 2 seater
conyertable, exc cond,

I
I

lamrly room wrlh anoll-.r brock firt.;lloce illd indoor BBQ.
Screenal rn pah&lt;l Excellenl neighOOihood--walk to lown
Oon'l hestrtale-won'l lasl al lhal prrce.

Mercury

Brouvhom. oxc cond, new
paint. now tiroa. 304-6751564.

I,

LOVE THE COUNTRY!
Nrce modern 3 bedroom home. 21.04 acres moreor less. Barn, tool
shed' and cellar. Located on state highway Prrced to sell. Call now
#616
30 ACRES ML QUALITY HOME &amp; BARN
Top quality 9 room house with 7 rooms carpeted 4 bedrooms, bath
and lull basement plus 3 car garage. Good barn approx. 30'x40'
plus chrcken house approx 12'x30' Approx 10 acres tillable and
20 acres pasture with large pond. Beau~lullocat1on w~h hall mile
frontage on black1op state hrghway.
#598

1973

I
I
I
I
I

CHARMING BRICK RANCH voo get 4 BRs, 2 balhs, large kvrng room. eal-rn IUtchen,

72

1976 Muatang, goqd run, _1989 Chevy 1 ton . 6 cyl.
now tlru. $760.00. 304- automatic with 121oot bed.
67ti- 1518.
Excaffont tires. Heavy . duty
suspension. Low mileage.
Fair condition . U200.00.
1914Chevttte,AC,AM-FM Call 614-992-6263 or 614- '
radio, 4 spood. still under 992 •2478 .
warronty. 304-675 -2663 1--:-:----~----­
altor I PM .
1979 Chevorolat. 4 wheal

ENTERPRISE ASSN.j

L•'l"'
R.etl Etfete Fltm
Csn (Jet You Fintneed

Trucks for Sale

1984 Mazdo ti opd . 1981
Ford Courrior 4 opd. 1980
Chevy luv auto. John"•
Auto Soloo. Bulovilfe Rd .,
Galllpofia, Dh. Coli 4464782 .

1978 Monte Carlo 305,
auto-tic, PS, PB, TW.
AM·fM ceesette recorder.
nawttreo, 45,000 miles. Soli
or trodo. $3200. 304-8754111.

'IN REAL ESTATE
.SALES IN GALLIA CO.

y,.,

72

Ave.

v.a.

Gtlllt Counfg 's OldBif tnd
Orel 43

NADA retail 116,860, asking 114,900 or boot offer
IMullt aall1. Call Ron Saundero or pllono 441-9384 .

oyoterno, I 1.000.00. 304675-3184 or 2017 Madison

19711 Chevy Monza 400.
euto. alum. alots, much
mora. Calf 448 -7340 alter
4PM.

ltlerr prrce and wrll oiler finanang to qualriOd rndrvidual Very
nrce 3 BR randl in &amp;OOd nerghlxlrlrood c~se 1c lown. Home
also fealures coJJlljete kilchen. nrce lrv~g room. garage and
Buyers Ptolecoon Proce down 1o $45,000

608
E . Maiin•oM•

992-2259

1.

South

Wiseman Real Estate Agency
N~-1

1971 Super Beetle, no ruat ,
new 1uchauat · and brake

19711 Dodge Charger clean,
Alfi!M atoreo, EPI speaker,
mat whe81a. tilt. cruise.
window t.int. Coli 614-38896JI .

declarer drew trumps after winning
the spade king, cashed the heart ace,
overtook the spade queen with the
ace, and played the club king from
dummy. When East played the ace,
South discarded - the spade jack.
Now East had nothing left but black
cards and had to play either to
dummy's spade I 0 or to the good
clubs.
.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

#578

POMEROY,O.

East

•9

61 4-286 -·

Grain

North

Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
2 NT Pass
Pass
3+
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead:

duel wheels. Call446 -4149 .

&amp;

.,

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

mi., auto door locka, white
landeu top, derk red metaf Ile. touch elr cond ., wire
wheela, light monitoring
sv8tem. 1 -way power Mltl,
~ear window defogger. AMFM CISMtte radio with
concert apeeker aound sya·
tem, excellent condition,

•PMif.

-

Autos for Sale

1974 Lincoln Mark IV
Phone 304-676-3668 bo:
twoon 4 and 8 PM .

83 Do~ge Omnl 4
4
door, AM-FM coaaetto, doluxe cloth Interior. Call 61 4241-1131 or 114-2469651.

2:00 P.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

--------------------------------,I

For:

Hay

POMEROY,O.

OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY, DEC. 2, 1984

t976
+10842
+A97653
SOUTH
+KQJ
.A75
t A KQJ 10 42

material, bnck, pul 1n 3 te:lrooms. a sunken !ront room. 2

ROWNG lAND
Approx 40 A trllable. 60 A
pasture, t1le block barn. approx .
40'x60' equrpment shed and
lots ol other burldrngs. 4 cherry
trees, 3 apple. grape arbor.
Stream llows througll property
All mrneral rrghts go. 6 room
home, 3 BR. basemen~ storm
doors and Windows bur~·i n
k~chen cab1nets, eookslove
and elec. relrrg., luel 011forced
arr lurnace. ~enty of water, 2
garages. A real good larm only
IV, milesto grbcery and school
Call now.
'
11617

E.Ma,in••

+543

t8

•Willis T. leadrngham. Realtor. Ph . Home 446-?539
•Ed Evans. Reallor. Ph. Home 446-0825

2 ACRES PLUS
NICE COUNTRY HOME
Large 12 room remodeled
home, 6 bedrooms, '2 baths.
wrth modern krtchen. Home
covered w11h carefree alum1·
num s K11n ~ Thermopane wrn·
dows. 2 sundecks. fuel ~I FA
furnace wrth a woodburner
insert 4 car garage and
numerous storage bldgs. 2 093
Rollrng level land Areal
Gentleman Home
Phone now.

71

1914 Buick Rlvor1o 12.000

992-2259

Real Estate General

sale ~ ravely tractor,
eleCt. start, 8 spd ., rotary
motor. cultivator . sulky.

64·

12-1-14

• 53
+KQJ

4 yr. old Quarter hors mare
sorrell pony. Shown m 4 -H:

3 years
6522.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland . Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Joan Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992 -5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

•ssu 2

By Jamea Jacoby

•
I

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I
I
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NORTH
+A 102

COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELl THE
WHOLE WORLD?
Ask Yourself This Question

69' r dapple!!CJrey mare. very
gentle. shown in 4 ~ H . Call
614-286-6522

Ohio-Point Plea5Cinl,

Autos for Sale

Excoffant condition . Will

good cond.. $900.
614-388-9946.

1984

Real Estate Generel

wagon . 5 speed, air, power
brakes, AM -FM, new tire1.

Autos for Sale

1979

2, 1984

•

1980

71

December

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

famrl~.

·.WE HAVE A HOME ANO PERFECT LOCATION lor a
Located.·
almost across from Washington School 3 bed rm horne. 2 baths,
f 2k~chens, mce lot whrch rs wide and deep enough lor garden and f
•
• swimmrng pool. Needs some work.
f
•

2 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME located along Hazel R1dge Rd. 25 f
aCies, more or less, with nice garden area and wooded area. Pnced f

$27,500.
.NEW LISTING -

. .

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2 Bed;m cottage, wrth extra klt. Buy all lor.

.$29.90000

.•

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f

1

RACCOON CREEK PROP!RTY - I to 4 acres. wrlh 3 bedrm. f
home and outbuildings. From $55,000.00

.NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm. home along Smithers St. 15'x20'.
ffamlly rm. Some appliances w1th home. Buy all for $28,000. •

I

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.NEW LISTING - 109 acres located m Lawrence Co. near
eLecta.:_ C_osts less than $300 per acre, Buy now lor $32,000.1
''SELLING YOUR IlEAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS .....CALL AN
EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPUISO"!"

SIS.OOO- TARA ESTATES- &lt;·tp,s.a lar&amp;masler bedr0001,
bflellilastnooil. 2'1i~a£OUC . •nent b, hoFR,ioitc~with

- - 111111 rei.-fnltm.~ ...o nas pool and du

use fi1V eges

@ 1984 Unl18d Feature Syndicate

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

~

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

�ftag1

0.8-lhe Sunday Time1-Sentinel

December 2, 1984

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

Doctors unhappy about GM health care cuts .
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP ) -

Ohio
hospitals and doctors are a nything
!rut happy about a plan to shave 10
percent off General Motors Corp.'s
$2.2 billion annual health care bill.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield groups
in Ohio are cont acting doctors and
hospitals to solicit com petitive bids
for hospit als' serv ices a nd sign up
doctors for a so-called adYanct&gt; p)an ,
In which they agree to acct&gt;pt
Insurance companies' reim bursement as full payment .
The system , established under
GM's new contract with the United
Auto Workers, will end the practice
of sending ~M patients - som e 2
mUllan nationwide - to a ny area
hOspital or doctor, said Bill Winters,
a spokesman tor GM in Detroit .
Dr. Richard Ruppert , president of
the Medical College of Ohio, said

GM 's plan is arbitrary and does not
consider hospitals' own cost-cutting
measures .
"My first response is, 'Will MCO
staff get a 10percent discounton GM
ca rs? " said Ruppert, who said
hospitals that lowered thetr fees 10
percent would h~ve to lay off
employees to keep opera ting.
"They're pitting their union
against my union," he said . He
believes m embers of other unions
will have to pay more to makeup for
the lower payments from GM
workers.
The Medical College Hospital got
about $606,000 last year from cases
involving GM employees arid dependents - less than 1 percent ofthe
hospital's total billings and the
amount the hospital's officials
predict it would lose if it isn't chosen

Roaad • Muqaise • Pear • Oval • Emel'lkl • Hurt

laq~er share of health-care costs to
make up for GM's reduced s hare.
Slmllar plans with other coqx&gt;ra!Ions are used In about 10 places
nationwide, but the GM plan will be
by far the largest, said Dennis
McOung, president of Blue Cross of
Northwest ohCo.

as a GM preferred organization.
Jeffrey Drake, president of Assoelated Planners Inc., a local
health-care consulting firm , said
other local employers also are likely
to seek preferredproviderorganlzalions in light of the General Motors
a rrangement. A prime reason, he
said. would be to avoid paying a

It Is expected to be in effect 1n
Michigan and northwest Ohio by
Aprtl 1~. Most other areas With
GM plants will have the system 1n
place sometime next year on a
phase-In basis .
Technically, GM workers, ret!rces and their dependents still wUJ

reable togo to any doctortheyw!sh.
but If the doctor Isn't part of the
advance plan, the patient must pay
the fees and will be reimbursed tor
up to !I! percent of " reasonable
rates," said Paul Richards, spokesman for Blue Shield of Central 01\lo,
Columbus.

'limes- ...llilitl

COLUMBUS, O)lio (AP ) (:olumbus-based CompuServe will
offer a system that will give
financiers and stock mar ket players
direct access Ia portfolios and a llow
them to buy and sell from the
privacy of their c omputer
terminals.
The videotex cornmunica lion Service on Monday announced an
~ment with Traqe Plus Inc. of
Palo Alto, Calif., to give CompuServe subscribers dtrec t access to
the Trade Plus host computer.
Through Trade Plus, the user can
access stock and option prices, place
orders and review personal port folio
and tax records.
The service will start in Ja nuary.
Subscribers will be able use their
computers to get prices of almost
every stock and stock option listed in

ON ROAD KING/DAYTON REVOLVING CHARGE

*MINIMUM MONTHLY
PAYMENT REQUIRED'

Fiesta

USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN
BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ·

ALL SEASON RADIAL

FREE GIFT with every diamond purchase.

Road King great traction
on front or back wheels in
all kinds of weather. Easyrolling, fuel efficient fi·
berglass radial.

TAWNEY JEWELERS
424 SECOND AYE., GALLIPOLIS

FREE MOUNTING

Radial 1
Steel Belted Radial

'

One great tire by Road King.
Everything you would want
in a durable road-hugging
tire in wet' or dry pavement.
Two strong steel belts with
· polyester cord for smooth
handling

FR-EE MOUNTING

$13,900

SALE
Pl55/80Rl3
Pl65/80Rl3
Pl75/80Rl3
Pl85/80Rl3
P185/75Rl4
Pl95/75Rl4
P205/75Rl4
P215/75Rl4
P225/75Rl4
P205/75Rl5
P215/75R15
P225/75Rl5
P235/75Rl5

SIZE
Pl55/80Rl3
P165/80R13 .
Pl75/80Rl3
Pl85/80Rl3
Pl85/74Rl4
Pl95/75Rl4
P205/75Rl4
P215/75Rl4
P215/75Rl5
P225/75Rl4
P235/75Rl5

REPLACES
M

'

BR78·13
CR78·13
CR78-14
ER78"14
FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-14
FR78-14
GR78-15
HR78-15
LR78-15

REPLACES
M
M
BR78~13

CR78-13
CR78-14
. ER78-14
FR78·14
GR78·14
GR78-15
HR78·15
LR78-15

PRICE
39.00
42.00
44.00
45.00
46.00
48.00
51.00
52.00
56.00
52.00
54.00
57.00
59.00

PRICE
36.00
39.00
41.00
42.00
43.00
45.00
48.00
49.00
51.00
53.00
56.00

(LAST OF THE BIG ONES)

White w/b lue healh er cloth , lilt &amp;telescopic wh eel, cr ui se control , power
divided seat , power w10dows and door lock s and much more Cadillac lux·
ury equipment.

Performance 78
Our best selling bias ply
Road King over the last 10
years. Smooth riding and
easy on your budget. Long
wearing tread, strong polyester cord body.

FREE MOUNTING

$11,900

SIZE
A78-13
878-13
C78-14
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
H78-14
G78-15
H78-15
L78-15

BLACKWALL
27.00
32.00
33.00
35.00
36.00
38.00

WHITEWALL
29.00
31.00
33.00
34.00
35.00
37.00
41.00
38.00
40.00
42.00

TOUGH ALL WHEEL AND TRACTION
TIRES FOR PICKUPS.
VANS &amp; RY'S

WIDETRACK RADIAL BAJA
LR
6
6
6
6
6
8
10

PRICE FET
98.00
.51
99.00
.35
103.00
.74
106.00 2.21
115.00 2.96
102.00. 1.28
109.00 ' 1.53

SIZE
700-15 TL
700·15 n
H71-15 TL
8.00-16.5 TL
8.75·16. 5 TL
9.75-16.5 TL
750-16 n

~J; RAISED OPEN LETTERS

LR Rl 8 M/S
6
48 52
6
,4~
46
6
57 62
8
54 58
8 68 72
8 69 77
8
57 62

By CANDICE HUGHEs
ASsociated Press Writer
DALLAS (AP) - Farm equipment dealers say a merger between
two major suppliers will be good for
the industry but they expect their
ranks to dwindle.
"This Is the greatest thing that
could ha ppen to Internationa l Harvester 's agricultural line," said
John Rykken, a n executive with
International Harveste r. "We can't
go wrong now backed by an $18
billion dollar company."
Tenneco Inc. earlier this week
announced It had acquired the
financially-troubled Harvester. The
sale means a shotgun marriage with
Tenn\'C(l's J.I. Case farm tractor
and cons tructio n equipm ent
company .
. About !llO dealers and marketing
managers gathered a t the Dallas
Convention Center Wednesday for a
briefing by executives of Tenneco,
Harvester and Case.
"We wa nted to bring people from
Case and International Harvester
together to expose them to the
managem ent of both companies ,"
said J oe Macrum. s pokesm a n for
Tenneco.
Thoug h the dea lers view the sale
a s positive. some are forced to be
realistic.
"There's a Jot of these gtiys who
won't be here next year," predicted
B1ian Fuller , · an International
Harvester dealer from Renville ,
Minn ., concerned a bout what will

happen to overlapping dealerships.
Most of the dealers interviewed
outside the special meeting, which
was closed lo the public, said they
were buoyed by the prospects of a
merger that could create a lean,
tough competitor for industry giant
Deere&amp;Co.
"!think it's going to be a shOt in the
arm," said Ed Skeete, from the
da iry-farming town of Cortland,
N.Y.
But Harvester's 1,700 dealers
would triple the size of the Case
network. Some dealers and company oJficials said Tenneco may
need to eliminati!Some franchises.
"There Is .excess capacity In the
market and excess inventory at the
sales level," Mac rum said. "Some
consolidation Is essential. But whatever ~appens, it will be handled
fairly and equitably."
Macrum, who estimated there Is a
12-month inventory of unsold farm
equipment, called the oversupply
"the largest single problem" facing
the industry.
Macrum said no changes ·would
be made until after the 60-day
Justice Department r ev iew
process .
~ugene Arnold has been In the
farm equipment business for 44
years. Across the s!reft from his
Harvester dealership in Litchfield,
Minn., Is a Case dealership.
"He Isn't just going to fold up,"
Arnold said. "And I'm not going lo
buy him out."

NEW USE FOR EQUIPMENT - Outdated te lecommunications
switching oHice equipment, such as that pictured here, is dismantled
and then separated by metal clasllilication at Ohio BeU reclamation

$8900

Light blue, 14,000 miles, cruise control, AMIFM stereo, air
conditioning.

FABULOUS ·SAVINGS ON THESE FINE
AUTOMOBILES AND MORE
AT

•

''

OLDS.CAD.-CHEV.,
Inc.
301 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PHONE: 992·6614
HOUIS: 9 TO 7 MON.-FII.
9 TO 4 SAT.

13.00

19.95
27.95

Installation Available
Not 111 Sizes Clfritd in YIP

Wheel
Allgruaaent

COLUMBUS - Oh io Bell is
turning discanlf&gt;d tPIPCo mmunim tions PqulpmPnt int o a gold m int' b,r('C!a iming valuable metals.
·
B)· doing ".&gt;, &amp;&gt;II is helpin g to

About one-half million dolla rs for
the purchase and installation of
residential insulation fea tures has
been loaned to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. cus tomers in
the first year of the electric utili ty's
1nsuLoan program .
Introduced in Novem ber 1983,
Ins uLoan permit s qua lifying residential C&amp;SOE custom ers to borrow up to $750 at eight perce nt
simple interest (eight perce nt
APR) toward the pu rchase and
installation of certain home wea therization featu res. Cuslomers ca n
take up to three years to repa y the
loans.
During this first yea r C&amp;SOE
received about 1.650 lnsuLoan
applications from across its 2.1county service a rea . Will is C.
Welch, vice president , reported tha t
of those applications , a bout 810
have been approved, the insulati on
ins talled and the loan completed .

Business Briefs: -----.

Regional manager appointed
COLUMBUS - Steve Hatlestad has been named Ohio regional
manager for Americare Corp., which owns and operates 26 nursing
facilities In Obio, West Virginia, Arizona and New Mexico.
Ha4lestad's responsibilities will include supervision of Pomeroy
Health Care Center, in addition to health care centers in Alliance,
Circleville, Lancaster, Marion, New Lexingion and Rittman.
Hatlestad has been in the l!)ng-term care business for nine years,
and has an administrator's license in Ohio a nd Maryland. He is a
graduate of the University of Maryland .

STRUT
CARTRIDGES

$119~~1R

INSTALLED

SUPER
STRUTS

$14~~~~.

INSTALLED

992-2101 "

Short courses offered

$1995

.JOHN
POMEROY, OHIO
FULTZ, OWNER

RIO GRANDE - Contributions from area physicians and local
Foodland stores have been received by the athletic training
department at Rio Grande College and Community ~ollege, said
Kevin Marr, head trainer.
.,
. Physical examinations were administered to college sports teams
recently by Dr. Raymond Jennings, Dr. David MiUer and Jayne
Kiesling, R.N. All are of the Holzer Clinic Sycamore "ranch.
Foodland contributed supplies to the training department, Marr
said.
: · ''

992·2101

COLUMBUS - Two series of short courses on highway
construction management and contracting, sponsored by the Ohio
Department of Transporta tlon, will be presented this Winter by John
E. Foster &amp; Associates Inc., Columbus.
The courses will Improve contracting skills of construction
companies owned by minorities, women or' other disadvantaged
people. The courses will be presented tree of charge and a noon meal
will be provided.
'
·
The first series of seven bilslc, entry-level cOurses will be
presented in Dayton and Akron, starting Dec. 13.
The second series, consisting of.s!x lntennedlate level courses, wm
begin in January. Dates and locations wiD be announced later. ·
Further Information may be obtained by contacting Laura Miller
at 1-IKXl-8'74-0236 or 1-614-~.

m ('('t ip• ca pi tal Ill'PU!oi ami fu 1urc'

grow lh rcq uiremf'nl s in thr

h ig h! ~·

com pr ! iI i\·r t r lrc om m u n i c~t t ions
in clu s l r~·.

T hC' com pany h;1." fou r rl'Clama·

Consumers use loan program

c·enters . Olde r tele&lt;·ornmunications cquipnw nt - includin g relays,
switches, telephont" and powe r cahlt~. ff' rrnin a.l swikhes . PBX
swttchhoar·ds - are hrought lo one of four Ohio lot·a tions fnr rPf·J elin g.

the loans avera ge $6('-,() each.
According to Wel ch the most
popular insulating features under
Jnsul..oa n are attic insula tion and
glass storm windows . T he loa ns ca n
also be used to purc ha se wa ll. floor
and cei ling Insula tion. insulation for
heating pipes and ducts in unconditionPd a rea s a nd storm doo rs.
Welch pointed out that the
low-interest loans are not only
benefi cia l to the individua l insulating a residence. but home wea theriza tion ca n benefit a ll customers
because controllin g ho me energy
consumption helps curtail overall
load growl h. That. in turn . can help
de lay the company 's n&lt;'&lt;'d to
co nstruct new generati on , transmissio n a nd di stribution facilities.
Residential custom ers of C&amp;SOE
ca n obt a in m ore in form ati on a bout
ln sul..oa n by contacting the Marketing &amp; Customer Services Department of their loca l C&amp;SOE office.

of r hl'Jn in

Jla~ 'lli ' P'\p).:tin('-(1 !h.-11 0•wh W\J I'

Co!u mbu ~. l .;t.'-1 ·' ·mr. r h0 Colu m hu."l('d; lma tion C'f'llt&lt;'r. ~1 Jo ng wiltl
tho ...;r in Da~·ton . Tolf'doand SoiCJn. a

m·r1 Wl -.crap dc-;tll' r'- I' rum. 1hf'
L'nit r d St :tll'S ;tnd fcl)"rign {1'1Uilll'if'S

tion .\ ·a n i" -

f)fl f'

( "lr\'(•lan d "ubu rb. h;__,_n d][&gt;(J OH""r El
mill ion H11 1s o f st"rap
d u e·"! -~ -"

~r hic h

pro-

m illion lor Oh io R!'ll.

OlciPr l riC'eommuniC'ution..; rquip·
mrnt - inclu ding rPI : H · ~ . ..,,\.itdll ·s.
tC'Ir{JhonC' ancl poHt' r c~tb lt •, tl•rmr ·
nal swi tc h(''-. PB :'\ o..wilchbn,u ·d ..;
:.~nd l ' \ "('11 ou tclat t'd t'lectroni&lt;' H'lc ··
r·om mu rlica ti fl ll ... swi tching p;tnf+··
- .I)"C' hr11Ugh t H1 th1• luur loc ~t tiiiJlS
f111' di."m~ tntl i n g.

Tll0 scrap i:-: t !lrn '-iOl"lf'd IJ\. nwt: tl
C"l~ l -"S i l icat if 111 .

" Wr pmduC'f' :~o cLI."" f'" nl s('r: q)
ttla t IJJ ·ing ~~ m · whrn•
f r(l m 11 c·Pnl .'-' tn ~~ . hh JX'l' poLJnd nn
thl' scrap rnark r t. " !-&gt;did H. I..
" Doc " P:H nr. Ohio t1f'll commun ·
i t ~ rrl..ll ion" m ;m :tgt' l".
mat Prbl,~o;

CHESIDRE - Three em ployees
of Ohio Valley E lectric Corp.'s
Kyger Creek plant recently 1..,ceived the company 's anniversa ry
award for lJ years in presentation's
by Louis R. F ord Jr., pl ant
m anager.
The employees are George L.
! Leo I Valentine, safety supervisor;
J am es E . Conde,results technician;
and Charles E . Wood, shill operat Ing engineer.
Valentine joined OVEC on Nov.
16, 1954, as a n instrument mecha nic
C in the results depa11ment, after
having been with the OVEC's
construction department in civil
,engineering since Feb. 8, 1954.

.

'

He was promoted to instrument
mechanic B on Aug. 6, 1955. and to
instrument mechanic A on June 9,
1956. He became results technician
on Aug. 12, 1957. On Mar ch 16, 1969,
Valentine was promoted to plant
personnel assistant and became
safety supervisor on Oct. 1, 1977.
Valentine and his wife, Clarice,
live at Patttot Star Route.

Joining OVEC on Nov. 16, 1!¥.'&gt;4 , as
an instrument mec hanic C. Conde
came to that position .after having
been employed in the construct ion .
depa 11ment as a timekeeper.
He wa s promoted to ins trument
mechan ic B on Aug. 6, 1955. and
· became a n instnrment mech anic A
onMay26, 1956. He was promoted to
his present position on March ll,
1974.
Conde and his wile , Juanita ,
reside at 171 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport .
Wood joined OVEC on Nov. 22,
1954 , a s a tractor-diesel opera tor in
the yard de partment. On May 7,
1955, he transferred Ia the operations department as an auxiliary
eq uipment operator. He wa s promoted to equipment opera tor on
F eb. 1,]956 , and to unit supervisor on
May 1, 19'J8.
He became ass.ista nl shift operatIng engineer on J an. 7, 1967, and was
promoted to s hift operating engineer on Oct. 1,-1981.
Wood and his wife , Ma ry, live at
623 Second Ave. , Gallipolis.

IJicl lnr RPII',&lt;.; ."Crap~ .
'"Thrs&lt;' df'al 0r~ hid 1111 th\' coppt• r
anrl IC'ad found in catJif'. stf'f'l
rrtri0\Tod fm m -"\\'itching nfficr•
fr: tmP~-o ~Hlcl thr al uminum fron1
&lt;l i-"r~ t rt.10d

phnnr' I&gt;&lt; I{ !I h:- ... he 'aid.

HN ·J am;.~ti n n r·r tmpani"" p:1~ · for
P;l("h :-.hipnwnt ot m~rr•rb!s bn sn :f

r1 n !hp .·\ mrrir.1 n M C't."Jl !\'Lt rkt •t
prit'!' fij:.'l ll '('S fnr t hr da~ . The. . ltrm~

a !."1' p; , ~ · ;1l l &lt;i hippi ng- c·o.'-1:-. :m d
ill."-il!d !lC'I' on f'ach ... h ipnwnt .
'"( 'r tltllllhu ... ' l"f'(' ]:ll11 ~ll inn C'(·nt Pr.
:dong \\'ith I I10Sf' in f.tlhN Ohin
tnwn.'-. un• an C'~C'f'llrnl ....ourl'l' o t
1"&lt; ' \ "t '!lUf' th;1t prm·idP do l l;u}; whi('h
in turn r; tn h" us('(! TO impn,,·f' an d
upl!r.Hir lllP l(JUipmrnt and ...,PlYic-c•
\\ "P p1 m·irlP ('Ust om lTS... r~~~ ·n t '

&lt;-,tid

Instruction offered
by modeling studio
W. \'a . Sh~ has bet:&gt;n emplo)n l as
profcssiona I mode•! in New York
Pa rk ersburg and Cha rl ~st o n :
W.Va .. a nd ha s taughl modeling in
Parkersburg.
Mrs . H arciu·d ~· said tha t in
addition to moclt'ling and sc•lf-

OVEC honors 3 employees

Department receives contributions

~Blat~ MEIGS TIRE CENTER
'fiRES ·

·s creen and sends verifica tionimmediately if the user L' on line at tbe
time, or through a n electronic
message the next lime he or she
signs back on. '
Investors can keep up to 75
port foli os in the system , getting
up-to-the -minu te transactions each
time he looks at his portfolio.
Reports include the total value of
each portfolio, va lue · of each
S('Curity held. total income by
securi1y and ' by portfolio and
realized and unrealized ca pita l
gains a nd losses by security and by
portfolio.
Subscribers can use Trade Plus to
keep n:cords on tra nsaction not
made through Trade P lus. This
aUows customers to consolidate a ll
their secu rities and tax rPCord8 into
a single system .

Ohio Bell reclaiming unused equipment

SOlE TIRES ARE PlUS FET OF .04 TO .14

MONROE COMPLETE: . SHOCK SPECIALIST
8.95

Com puServc sa id the full ra nge of
Trade Pius services will be availa ·
ble to Its 1:i0.00l subsclibers in the
United States and Canada , but they

must be cllents ofoneofTrade Pius '
affili ated brokers.
The Trade Plus syste m Is linked
directly to affiliated brokers. CompuServc subscribers will have
access to the Trade P IUs services 24
hours a day.
ComJ&gt;UServe is accessible to any
microcomputer. te1minal or communica ting word processor through
a modem, a comput er telephone
hookup. Trade Plu s will be a
premiu m service billed through
CompuServe at its usual on lin~ rat e
of Sl2 .5U dur ing bus iness hours and
$6 in non-prime time hours, plus S8
per hour in prime time or $2.50 per
hour in non-pr ime time.
The computer will " prompt" a
user throug h the order a nd send 1he
order to a user 's broker. The broker
reads the · order on his compu ler

Dealers welcome
Harvester sale

'

VIP
MATIC
RADIAL
MAGNUM

Tbe Wa ll Stm&gt;t Jou rnal, plus
m utual fund prices, m oney fu nd
y ie lds and prices on a li the major
m arket indexes.
The system will offer daily high
a nd low pr ices, change from the
previous close, di vidends, yields,
earnings and price-m rnings ra tios.
The "Stock Watch " and "Option
Watch" fea tu re a llows users to
m onitor price changes of up to 18
pre-selected stocks or opt ions on a
single screen.
CompuServe subscribers a lsocan
order stocks and options listed in
The Wall Stree t J ournal through a
Tra de Plus affiliated broker.

DEALER AWARDED - An award of exceDence Is presented to
ClllToll Norris, right, of CarroU Norris Dodge, iDl Third Ave., GaD!polls,
byD.R. Knunboltz, left,ChryslerCorp.'sCinclmtatlzonemanager. The
award Is given by Chrysler for Otflstandlng sales perfonnance,
dealership management, eustomer saUsfacUon iuld community
service.

r---

SIZE
l78-l5
30-9.501U5
31-IO.SORIS
32·11.50Rl5
33-12.50Rl5
9.50116.5
LT235/85Rl6

enters stock field

*ALL FINANCE CHARGES
'REFUNDED WHEN PAID AS AGREED

CREDIT EST ABUSitED IN MINUTES

LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN

Section ~

Decembe, 2, 1984

SAME AS CASH

WHEN YOU BUY ROAD KING Tl

Beach w/ leather seating, power divided seats, cruise control,
tilt wheel, power trunk refea se, power windows and door
locks. Extremely clean and low mileage.
·

·
· ·
.
•
:
:

impro\·f'ml'nt. Profilf's w ill fca turf"
tC'Chniqurs to dr1·rJop look. IXlisc
and confidrncr. She wi ll teach a ll
mod elin~

st!'ps and tPchnique' fo r

dance. W.:t room . r unway. pho to-

Kay Pabner Hanlway
GALLIPOLIS Profiles. a
modeling a nd self-improve me nt
sludio, has been opened in by the
Business &amp; Professiona l Building at
414 Second Ave, Suite2Q3, according
to Kay P almer Hardway. l he
stud io's director .
Mrs. Ha rdway is a graduate of
Smith Studios, Huntington, W.Va .,
in m odeling , and did further study at
World of Models in Parkersburg,

gra ph)·. sllO\ITDOm a nd mannequin
modeling .
T he school will a lso teach accessory modeling. such as shors . ha ts.
umbi'Cllas and coats.
Cow·ses at P rofiles "ill be div ided
into two basic groups: for children
ag~s6-12, and tC'C'n anct adult cla sses
ages 13 and up. Courses will ~
designed to teach etiquette, public
speaking. makeup a nd skin care.
hair care, ward robe a nd exercise.
The stud io plans to work with and
model at local business. Mrs.
Hardway sa id.
Classes for child ren will last 12
weeks, while teen and adult classes
are schedu!Pd for· 26 weeks. Those
interested in ta king classes should
ca ll Mrs. Hardway at 446-6292 ·
between II a .m. and 5 p.m .,Monday
·
through Saturday.

�Times-Sentinel

Ohio

December 2, 1984

W.Va.

Point

$i n IJp
,, A·
Limit Quantities

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

LUCKY WINNER
WILL BE
REIMBURSEDTHEII
PURCHASE COST

PRICES IN EFFECT THRU SAT., DEC. 8, 1984

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

.

lb.

Chuck Roast ••.••••

$l 29

SIGN UP FOR A
CHANCE TO WIN
ONE OF 20-S2S.OO
G.IFT CERTIFICATES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY
DEC. 24TH.

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steak/Roast ••••••
lb.

I

Good $1111d1g Onlg
CHARMIN

I.

I

99 ( I!

:a:oll

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
1
Offer Good Sundoy, Dec. 2, Only 1

_______________,

1/4

GRADE A WHOLE

Fryers •...••..•••.• ~b

....

49&lt;

I

39

Pork Loin ••••• ~b.$1
'

Ir--------------~
COUPON

I
I
I
I

.Good Mondtg Onlg

I

lOX SUGAR

.

SHURFINE

I 2 Lb.

39C

I Bag

TURKEY

I
limit One Per Customer
I
Good Only At Powell's
I..,. Offer Good Mon., Dtc. 3 Only
I

Drumsticks •••.• ~b···· 39 (
BOB EVANS SMOKED
$199
Sausage .••.•••••• ~b···

_____________ _
,.. ______________ ,..
COUPON

Good Tu11d1g Onlg

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

49C

Slb.
Bag

limit Ont Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Good Tues., Dec. 4 Only

L--------------J

,...-------------1
COUPON
I

I Good Wtdti11d1g Onlg
I PARKAY MARGARINE

!

$

CALIFORNIA NAVEL

39
Oranges ••·••••• !~~!!' 1

BROUGHTON

SHEDD'S SPREAD QUARTERS

SAUERKRAUT, A'PPLESAUCE)

Vegetables •• ;!2!·.
MAXWELL HOUSE

3I $1

.Coffee •.••••••• !~~;:~. $6
SHURFINE

CAMPBEll'S

GRANULATED SUGAR

TOMATO SOUP

SLb.
.Bag

$139

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer bpirn Dec. I, 1914

limit Four Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
OHer Expirn he. I, 1914

I ___ _________ _

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

COUPON

CAKE MIXES

::~5 Oz2

f$1

Limit Two Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Good Thurs., Dtc. 6 Only

L-----~--------J
,---------------COUPON
I

DINNER TREAT

Good Ftldlg 011lg

I

DOVE LIQUID

I

Pot Pies ••••••••••• 5/$1

DISH DETERGENT ~

ORE-IDA

32 Oz.

29 Tater Tots •••• ~~ •••.. 99&lt;

~::;oz4J$1
•'

Margarine .... ~~ ••

3I $1

8 Oz.

All GRINDS

Limit Two Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
'- Offer Good
:.,;. Wtd., Dt&lt;. 5 Only

BETTY CROCKER

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••
(GREEN BEANS, lEnS, WK or CS CORN,

1'
1

Good T6md1g Onlg
Gallon

STOKELY

2/Sl

LB.

'

THRIFT KING

MAC. &amp; CHEESE

;~;.oz.

5/$1

limit Five Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer bplrn Dtc. 1; 1914

••
••

,.--------------1
COUPON
G01d $1trtdtg 011lg

DOG FOOD

CARNAnON

$299

limit One P1r Customer
Good Only At Powell'•
OHer Expirn Dtc. I, 1914

I

.__o.!!!! ~~.!!~::..:'!!':}.!. ~!LJ

HYlAND CHUNK
25 Lb.
Bag

99( !I

limit Ont Per Customer
Good Only At Powell'•

Meigs County agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE
Extellllion Agent

Agriculture, Melp County

which addresses soU erosion only
peripherally, replacing it with a
system that wm support farm prices
while rewarding farmers who set
aside erosion-prone land In a
long-term reserve.
Among the proposals are strong
"sodbuster" rules that would deny
federal farm benefits to those who
plow fragile land, and aconserva ·
tlon reservethatwouldpay totake30
million acres of highly erodibl e
cropland out of production. Both are
under consideration by the R eagan
administration, which opposed
them when they were brought up li1
Congress last year.
The group's president, Douglas P.
Wheeler, said the group also will be
pushing for cuts In price-supporl
loans, the devices by which the
government sets a price floor on
major farm commodities. While
offering income protection ·to ·
fanners, the loans also are blamed 1
formaklngU.S.goods tooexpenslve
to be competitive in world markets.

EVAPORATED MILK

~:~Umit2/
69&lt;
One P1r Cullomer
Good Only At Powell's
Offtr Good Sot., Dtc. I. Only

1--------~-----J

The

W. Va.

Extension notes••.

Third, place your hand on the
bottom of the trunk where the tree
was sawed. A dry tree will have a
dry trunk bottom but a fresh tree
will feel mol:;.t and sticky due to the
sap OOZing out from the cut surface.
Finally, know the species of tree
you are selecting. Spruces tend to
drop their needles $00ner than the
pines. Ask questions if unsure of the
species being selected_
The best way to guarantee the
purchase of a fresh tree 1s to cut one
yourself.
Remember, a fresh tree Is a
'safer, cleaner and more attractive
tree.
Taxes- Farmers Tax Credit are
now available from our office.
Several changes you should · be
aware of are as follows: Real
property (barns. sheds, etc. ) placed
In service after March 15, 1984 must
be depreciated over 18 years. First
year expensing of depreciable
property will stay at $5,rol. Income
averaging will not be as attractive.
Base period has been reduced to
three years plus the taxable Income
must be 140 percent over lhe

personal use must be used more
than 50 percent for business to be
eligible for4nvestm ent credit. TAX
PLANNING SHOULD STARTNOW.

average of the base. Depreciation
recpature on Installment sales
must now be fully In the year of
sales even If no payments re
received. Effective June 6, 1981.
Property used for business and

Meigs property transfers
Marshall R. Roush, Deborah
Roush, Darrell Norris, Jannette
Roush to James E. Diddle, Rtght of
Way, Letart.
Leslie B. Carr, Ruth E. Carr to
Don L. Carter, Ruth L . Carter, Lot

Earl B. Morris, Opal Morris to
Paul D. Cardone, Janice I. Ca r· _
done, Parcel s, Sutton.
Stanley E . Potter, Patricia
Poller to David G. Johnson,
Tammy E. Johnson. Lot 131,

A:

~-303_,_P~ojjjmjjjejjjrojjjyjjjVjjj\jjjllajjjgjjje.iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijjjjMjjjidjjjdjjj!ejjjpoiiiriiitjjjVjjjilljjjagjjjejjj.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-

Homeowners insurance
discounts
from State Farm.

•

For qualified homeowners, State Farm offers
discounts which can make our already low
premium even lower. Call for details.

--.,..--,-------=-::-:-::=:-:-----.,--:-----l
.--------------coUPON-------------,

$1 00

Sunday Times-Sentinei--Page-6-3

CAROLL SNOWDEN

$1 00

417 Second A11e .

Oh.
Phon• 446·4190
Homo 446·4511

Ge~lhpolis,

This coupon worth $100 on any INGROUND POOL KIT or SPA in·
voiced between now and Christmas. Coupon plus $1 00 holds
your SPA or SWIMMING POOL KIT at low 1984 discount prices un·
til Summer.

Change in law may force
area tobaceo f armers t o
•.• 1985
t
d t•
S

POMEROY - Pre-Conditioned
Feeder Calf Sale- Monday, Dec. 3,
Union Stockyards at Hlllsboro.
Vegetable School - Thesday ,
Dec. 4, at the Meigs Inn In
Pomeroy.
Selection of a Christmas Tree from Steve Bratkovlch, our exten ·
slon forester_
When selecting a natural tree, be
sure to buy a tree that Is fresh. This
Is Important for safety reasons as
well as the appearance of the tree.
A fresh treethatls properly cared
for wUI hold Its needles throughout
the Holiday Season. If a tree Is
selected from a retail lot, a couple of
checks should be made before
buying the tree.
First, grab the tree by the tnaln
trunk and bounce It briskly on the
ground. A fresh tree wiD not shed Its
green needles when this is done.
Second, gently bend a couple
needles between your fingers. A
fresh tree's needles will bend
without breaking.

Pleasant,

FREE GIFT

Agriculture and our community

I
I
1

.TOILET TISSUE

Farm resource group
calls for conservation,
lower price supports

The trust proposed scrapping
most of the current subsidy system,

r--------------~

COUPON

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

By JIM DRINKARD
Associall.'d Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
excessive cost of farm programs in
recent years can be laid in part to
policies t~&gt;at encourage Ianners ti&gt;
plant every available acre, then pay
them to Idle the same land, says a
leading conservation group.
The American Farmland Trust
entered the fray over the 1985 farm
bill Thursday with a report that
found Ctll"n'nt agriculture policy
seriously out of step and proposed
some remedies that are bound to be
bitter pills to fanners.
"Th~ shortcomings of current
agricultural policies are serious and
fundamental, and are unlikely to
vanish In the near future even as the
world recovers from the slow
growth of the early 1980s," con·
eluded a report prepared for the
nonprofit resource group.

Osilg
fJ1oce1g
Gireswsg

We Reserve The

December 2, 1984

CALL

HOLIDAy POOLS, INC.

$

$1 00

5ta te Farm F1re and Casualty Company Home Otl1ce Bloom 1ngton. l llinOts

:~:s!~~AR:~ IO~D~~U
~
D
~l
~
~~~~~
.. ~-~-~~~~0~-~-~~~~~~~2~~:_~47-~aa-~-~--~-~-~Hu~:i~:~:"~~w~.:_~v·~~-~-~-~-~-~.~-~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;.
~

Extenslon Agent
GaWa County
GALLIPOLIS - The change in
the law this year concerning leasing
of tobacco quotas means that
underproduci ng tobacco farmers
will not be able to lease their quota
during the market season. It will
s impl ~ go unusro. The res u!l
app;&gt;ars to have been that producers plantro enough tobacco to be
certain they reachro tooir quota.
and wi th a bett er growing season
this summer than in 19&amp;1, many
wound up with more tobacco than
they can )pgally bring to thP auction
floor.
The resu!l will be that many
producPrs will have to stan' thPir
own production until the 1985
marketing season.
Storage willr&lt;'Sult tn some loss of
quality. Here are some recommda·
lions for rroucing the loss
The fils! thing to ljo is deteimine
which leaves will be sold this year
and which will be storro until npxt
yea r.
SomP farmer s will haw portio ns
of their crop that care clearly of
better quality than the best of the
crop. Obviously too better tobacco
should be sold this year . but. for
those producers whose c1·op is
generally uniform in qualit~· . slrip
the top Jeavps ·for I his ymr's
markP1, a nd

stan~

Ill£' lower Jpavf'S

10

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Get 33% off our M1cro Execut1ve Workstat1on •• I Com es ready to use
w1th word processtng . address;te lephone d1recJory, appotntment
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batlenes o r op11onal AC adapJer for use anytime. anywhere . Typewnterstyle keyboard . #26-3801
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24K Model100 #26-3802 Reg $799 Sale $599
Bat1enes tor each ex tra

for nPxt yea r
LowPr stalk )Paves tend to lose
less w&lt;'ight over tbe ~'&lt;&gt;a r than do
upp;&gt;r stalk Jeavt's. But even they
wiJI los&lt;' from six to 10 percent of
their weight.
Tobacco ca n be left hanging
through the wint er. but should be
sll"lpped by laf(' spiing and balro
for storage during th&lt;' summer
Take the tobacco out of th&lt;' bam
and store it in a high, drv plac&lt;' so
moisture will not acc umulate and
ca use a reduction in quality.
Th&lt;' tobacco should not be
wrapped in plastic beca use moistur(' can acc umulat&lt;' inside the
plastic and reduce the quali ty of the
tobaC&lt;"o.
For more mformation about
storing tobacco. contact the Ga llia
County Extension officP, 614-446·
7007. 1500 Eastern Avenue, GaJllpo.
lis, Ohio. We have mformation in
more detail dbout storing car·
I"VOVE'r burlE-y tobacco. Cost of
photocopying Ihe leaflet is 40 cents.
You can't look at a fif"ld and tPII
whether or not it has been limro ur
needs to be limed again . Presence
or absence of broomsf'dg(' is not
always a good indicator.
Th&lt;' small amount of soil submit ·
led for a soil sampl&lt;' mayw('igh Jess
than one pound. but it may
represent S&lt;'veral million pounds of
soil in a field, If a plow layer of soil
weighs two milliOn pounds per acre,
and the sample represenls 10 acres.
It represent s 20 million pounds of
soiL This points out the Importance
of proper soil sa mpling since the
sa mple sent to the laboratmY'i
supposed to be representative of
your field. and the recommenda lion Is no bf'tler than the sample you
submit.
There are many who say, "It
won'l work, " '"It just can' t bf'
done"; but there are othl'r farm!"rs
Improving their land every year as
a result of using recom!l1E'ndro
amounts of Ume and fertilizer and
other good management practices.
The great productivity of the
tar!l1E'r Is proof of the results of
proper management of fhe soil and •
lhe crops produced on this soi L

'"

1o-Number Dialer-Fone
ET·f 30 by Rad10 Shack

95

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·

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29.95

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number manually ca lled, and a mute button for privacy
without hav1ng to cover the mouthpiece Wh1te,
#43-507. Brown, #43-508

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w1th built-in AFC. Includes AC cord DC adapte r
optional . W1th sun shade #16-100

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34.95

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disp lays your object1ve . destroy enemy missi les
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The per1ect gift for his shop - use it lo trouble ·
shoal iaulty wtring in the hous e or car. Measures
AC and DC voltage. DC amps, resistance , decibels. Has color-coded m 1rrored 4" scale Wit h test
leads. #22·203

�Page-· E-4- The Sunday limn-Sentinel

DKember 2, 1984

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

December

Open Daily ·9-10; Sun. 11-8

SUN. THRU
TUES ..

l, 1984

'•

L-Shaped Davis Hall contains 44 double, 14 single rooms
By JAMES SANDS
proceeded with the building of what
GALLIPOLIS - Davis Hall on · then was called the S.tudent Center .
Dedication for both buildings was
the campus of Rio Grande College
was completed In February o! 1957
beld on May 19, 1!157,1n Community
as a girls' dormitory: The L -shaped
Hall. The program consisted of
brick struc t ure ,._
vocal numbers by the Rio Grande
CoUege Choir - "Battle Hymn of
holds 44 double
rooms and 14 sin' the Republic," "Bless na.t.s House"
·
gle rooms and
and the " Alma Mater." The
was named for
' - __, , ,'
lnv,catlon and benediction were
prayed by the Rev. Paul J.
the Davis family •
. ' -of Oak HilL
ChrlsteJL'Ien, pastor of First Baptist
·
The four brothChurch In Ironton. The prayer of
ers and sisters, D, D. Davis, Anna
dedication was given by the Rev. J.
Arthur Hanna of Oak IUD PresbyM. Davis. E . J . Davis, and
terian. Dr. .1. Boyd Davis, as
Margaret ,J_ Da,os, had owned
Davis Firebr ick Company and had . chairman of the Board of Tru§!ees,
a large share of the Oak Hlll
made re!llarks and Clara Poston
SaVings Bank.. One or more of the
read a poem.
four also donated the Davis Home
That same afternoon open house
. of the A!:ed, the Margaret Ann pool,
was held at both Davis Hall and the
Student Center. M iss M argaret J .
thP Oak Hill Publlc Library and
Davis represented the donors of
much of the Oak H!ll Community
Davis HalL
Medical Hospital (all in Oak Hill).
LE SS THAN A month after the
DEVELOPMENT OF Davis Hall
dedication ceremonies of the t wo
originated in August of 1955 when
new buildings, a record number of
four men were appointed to develop
degrees was granted at commencenew buildings for Rio Grande
College. They were Dr. J . Boyd · ment - 12 secondary education
degr ees were given as well as 31
Davis of Columbus,· Frank C.
elementary
education degrees, 28
M orrow of Wellston, Stanley L .
two-year cadet degrees , and a
Evans of Ga llipolis, a.nd Sam Oury
sin gle one year commerce degree
of Wellston. These four successfu l
for a total of 72 for the re&lt;:ord up to
businessmen· were given the task of
1957.
adding to the college's physical
plant.
Incl uded among the graduates in
all ca tegor ies from Gallia County
Morrow was the owner of the
were: Mary Edwa rds of Bid well,
Buckeye Furnace Mini ng Com _ pany; Evans ran the Evans
James Shaw of Rio Grande, Marlin
Grocerv Company· Ou ry headed
Thevenin of Gallipoli s. Merr ill
Oury s;,pply Comp~nv of Wellst on
Grube of Patriot , Gerald Hull of
and Dr. Davis, the 'son of John
Bidwell. Carrie Lemley of Kyger,
Merrill Davis (president of Rio
Fred Sisson of Cheshire. Roger
Grande College from 1887 to 1911 l .
W!lliam s of Ccntetv illc, Bert Cro t hwas the general agent for Penn
ers of Rio Grande. Angeline Dixon
Mutual Life.
of Kyger. Arleta Hill of Patriot,
THIS COMMITTEE worked with
Pa tr icia Jeffers of Bladen, Cynthia
Drummond
of Addison. and from
the Davis family on the Davis Hall
Gallipolis:
Varney
Clendenin, Carl
project and at the same time

t:)

13.88

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3. 5 7 String of 35 lights in
Less Factory Rebate •1.00 multicolor; single
Vour Net Cost
color or clear.
Rebate llmlled to mfr.'s sllpulollon
Aller Rebate
K mort''' Sole Price

DAVIS HALL, donn!tory at Rio Grande CoUege, was oompleted In
1957. 1t was named ·ror tbe DaviS famUy of Oak HID, benelacton of the
college, Including four siblings: D. D. Davis, E. J . Davis, Anna M.
DaviS, and Margaret J. Davis. One or the others of tbe larnBy also
donated several pubUc facUlties In Oak Hili. Davis hall was built to
holl8e IOif women.

§]

17001

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Dwry:

· Save ss
Our Reg. 19.88

G.E. AM/FM Digital Clock Radio
Wake to music or aTarm, lighted nvmbers, walnut grain
finish.

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18.88

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•Journalism .tarted here on a
pennanent basis In November 1818
with the Gauta GaieUe under the
· .editorship of J..,bua CIL'IIilng; Its
locatkon was Court Street on lbe
middle of that part of tbe block
which laces the l'ubHc Square, a
white brick house known as the
Franldln Carel borne. ,Joshua CushIng homemade it. (Peeps Is especlaDy fond of the name ,Joshua,
because lils most recent grandchild
Is named Joshua.)
·The Gallia Gazette ran from 1818
to 1825, and then Joseph Tingley
and J ame&amp; Harper. Sr .. established
the Gallia Free Press. The Free
Press ran from 1825 to 1&amp;31, and
th&lt;&gt;n, for a year, J. J. Coombs ran
the Ga llia Phoenix 1831-2.

\

Our Reg. 2.77-2.97

Thumbnail sketch traces
Gallipolis journalism history
By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Here's a brief
history of Gallipolis journalism
which produced 0. 0. Mcintyre and
William Giddings Sibley. both
nationally circulated scriveners,
Mcintyre a columnist and Sibley an
ed itorialist.

j

SpoHiter••
Rechargeable.
Regular or
burst of power.

Longest-Uved newspaper of them
all came Into being In 11132 - the
Gallipolis Journal - which kepi
going nnW 1918 under Coombs, H.
Maxon, and Alexander Vance,
WUUam Nash, James Harper, Jr.,
and R. L. Stewart. 01' Peeps can't
attach a person to the Buckeye and
Journal, which had only a year of

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- E-5

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipoli5, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

operation 1831-5. The GallipoUs
Buckeye and Journal had \Wllam
Casey Jones as Its editor.
Ed'f
th G ll' r M!
1 mg e a tpo IS
rror was ,
C. W. Hoy. The name of his paper
would makeyou think that he was,a
reflective kmd of guy, but that s
mere P~ps speculation. The Gallipolls Mu~or had only one year
1&amp;15 6. T e Gall!a Courier was
distributed in the Old French City
l&amp;'i0-18.'&gt;! ·under Alexander Vance.
J. Q. Gtbson, and A. V. and E. T.
Shepard.

Mason (com mencement speaker
from M ead Corporation); the Rev.
Gecrge s. Holcom b (student pastor) ; and Dr. J _ Boyd Davis who ·
gave special cit ations and honorary
degrees to Frank M orrow and to the ·
Rev. Mr. Gordon.
It would seem that 1957 was one of
those watershed years for the
college that Initiated a whole se ries
of changes in the college's m ake-up
that accelerated in the 1960s and
1970s.

Craft, Cecile Thompson and Sylvia
R,obinson.
TAKING PART In the gradua·
tlon exercises that year were Evan
Howard Evans, the principal of
Washington School, the Rev. Edwin
C. Gordon (a former professor of
religion at Rio Grande College);
Merrlll Wiseman (Alumn i Association l ; Dick Myers 1senior class
president); Dr. H. W. K ennedy
(dean of the college) ; Paul Lyne
(president of the college): Or ley

r-----------------------

REWARD
Unclaimed Sch.ool ·Orders

LIQUIDATION

Neuhi's (ducotion Department ploud orders in anticipation of previous year
sales. Due to budget lufs these soles are unclaimed. TAese mo'hines must be
sold! All machines offered are new and the most modern mo,hines in' the
Neuhi line ..These machines are MADE OF METAL and sew on all fabriu,lewi 's,
&lt;onvos, upholstery, nylon, stretch vinyl, silk, EVEN lEW ON LEATHER! Jhese
ma&lt;hiner are new witll o 25-YEAR WARRANTY. With new 1985 NECCHI, you
just set thf lOior coded dial and See magic happen: straight sewing, zig-zag,
bu1tonhotes (any size), invisible blind hem, monog·ram; sGtin stitch, embroidery, applique, sew on· b~ttons and snaps, fopsfifch, elastic stitch, professional
seraina stitch, sfraiQht sfrefth stitch. oil of th is and more witho~t 1he need of
old-fashioned cams O! programmers. Your/rice with this ad $188: witho.ut
this od·$529. MasterCard and Visa ample , your &lt;hocks ore wel1ome. Showing in &lt;onjunction with Necchi Distribution Co .. Mansfield Square Mall, 1200
Park Avo. West, Mansfield, Ohio. Toll free 1-8D0,221 -4652 Ohio 1-800221-4645.
NATIONWIDE SERVICE POLICY INCLUDED

YOUR PRICE
AS
0 WITH THIS AD $1TRADE-INS
wmoME
1 A.M. to 7 P.M. ' ACCEPTED

LAYAWAYS

3 DAYS ONLY

MON ., DEC. 3rd
TUES., DEC. 4th
WED., DEC. Sth

AT All 3 LOCATIONS

HOLIDAY INN
450 Pike $1.
Rt. 7 &amp; U. S. 3 5
GAlliPOliS OH.

For II years, from 1857 to 1868,
the Gallipolis Dispatch went out to
Its readers through the rigors of the
Civil \~ar and perhaps other thlnp
to retard it. Names connected with
the Dispatch were Benjamin R.
Harrison, J . L . WaDer, G. D.
Hebard, H. M. Onderdonk, Alexander Vance, and WUIIam H.
Morehead. (Morehead's death
ended tbe Dispatch).

HOLIDAY INN

HOLIDAY INN

Rt. 50 - 1-77
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

701 Pike St.
1-77 &amp; Rl. 7
MARIETTA OH.

The Saving Place '"
'

The Ga llipolis Bulletin, a Dem ocratic Party newspaper. had John
L. Vance as Us editor. The Gallia
Republican was printed at Vinton
by Anselm G. Holcomb. For
another year, 1871-1872. Gecrge D.
Hebard published the L ocomotive.

16.97
7 Pc. Silverstone

Cookware ·
Set

Scribes of another year called
Hebard the grandfather of the
Gallipolis Tribune.

SAVE! '

$2

Save

30%

3.97

Ou r Reg.
5.97

17061
Std. Size

Dreamland Pillow

Our Reg . 32.88

22 88
•

100% Kodofill polyester soft and comfortable, 20x26". Standard size only.

Truck Seat Covers

$10' EJ

5 P.M. To 8 P.M.

A Zoo Of Cuddly Stuffed Animals
Melange of 15" plush and cuddly animal favorites or lovable 16" Tubby
Bear. Great far children of all ages.

Your Choice

9.96

8 Rolls Christmas Wrap
30-in. rolls; 100-sq. ft.

. EJ
1 97

hfunay YOry

·

g
w

0 ur R_eg 2.97

•

Ea.

30" RoH Wrapping Paper
Holiday prints; 60-sq. ft.

Playtime lables
9W' Baby Crawl
Away; 10" Walk
Away, Fuss A Lot.

§]

eae

Sale Price

Our Reg. 1.14 Pkg.

1.27

Pkg. Of 18 Candy Canes
For Treats, Decorations

Pkg. of 2 heovv-duty
"C"· or "D" -size batteries. Save today.

Mh may very
"Net wt .

our Reg. 39.97

vourNetcosr
AHer Rebate

29.97
Brew Starter II

Our Reg. Low Prices

10 ,cup drip coffeemaker, automatic timer makes coffee while
you sleep.

ON ALL
GLASSWARE

15.88
•3 QO
•

12 ·sa
•

Pollenex"' Faucet type
Water Purifier/Filter

\

4 -stage water fitter for
cleaner. clearer water.
Replacement Filter For
Poltenex8 WI'IOO Or T....

ctyM® tnllapure®, Ia. :a.:a7
Rebate limited to mlt.'t ~

DRAWING EVEI!V 15 MINUTES
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN'

Sold In Home ln\pfovemenr Dept

EJ

Less
Factory Rebate

WIN A $25 GIFT
CERTIFICATE

25%0FF

And Ai Ct1«:kou!s

8

All Perfumes
and Colognes
Men's and ladies'

Many unadvertised specia ls! In addition to
the specials listed . we'l l hove " Blue l ighr'
specials for everyo ne o n Sqnta·s GiN list.
Specia l selected items I rom every deportment. Come on in and li ne yo ur pockets
with savings dur ing this 3- Ho ur Savings
Event- Sun., Dec . 2nd fr om 5 to 8 P.M. only!

Our 2 .18, 2, 9·V ••. • 1.17

Our 1.n, 4 "AA," .. 1.17

Mfr. may YOry

DCM 18

~

$5

Ou r. 6 90

Men's Slippers
Ribb ed cordur oy slip pers lined with terry.

Long·lalflng EvereadY"' ·
· Household laHerles
:

Colorful candy canes
for holiday sweet treats
or hanging on the tree.
Goad stocking stuffers.
too. 8 -az. • pkg. Save

K martru
Sale
Price

Our. Reg. Prite

DECEMBER 2nd

Your Choice

Deluxe plaid cover
bucket or bench • .,,~,..
Assorted colors. =-v...

3:-saa

20°/o OFF

SUNDAY

r::::1
~

Our Reg. 12 .96-18.96

Our Reg. 13.97 ,

$12

10.97

Ladies' &amp; Men's

Triangular

I

Sweaters

Roller
Skates

•

Save20%

237
Winter L'eggs '"
Our 2.97. Misses' A, ·
B, C, D : queen size.

WIN A $25 GIFT CERTIFICATE
DEPOSIT THIS
COUPON FOR.
DRAWING
A $25 GIFT
CERTIFICATE TO
BE GIVEN AWAY
EVERY 15 MINUTES .

OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
Name ____________________________
Address,_____________________________

City_ _ _ __ _ _ State _ _ _ __ _
Phone
On ly O n e Entry Pe r Person Allo w eo

IL . Drawing _Every 15 Minutes

• Need Not le Present To Win

----------------------------SPECIAL "AFTER HOURS" SALE AT YOUR K MART STORE!

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Poinl Pleasant,

•

w. va'.

December 2, 1984
Pomeroy-MiddlePort-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

.

LOCUST AND PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Sunday Tines-Sentinei..:..Poge-E-7

.

..

TELEPHONE 812-3471

NEW STORE HOURS:

8 A.M. to 10 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS :

REPEAT OF A SELLOUT
VAUGHAN'S BRINGS YOU·ANOTHE GIGANTIC

ITEM .
Silver
Fleece .

SAUER·
KRAUT

24 ;:~,"~

Franco
American

SPAGHETTIOS 24 -;!~:oz

3 for

FULL

HALF

CASE .

CASE

$119 sgs2

ITEM

FULL

HALF

CASE

CASl

ITEM

INDIVIDUAL
· SIZE · PIIICE

*478

PINTO
BEANS

•nbushel
onlv

14-15

oz.

cans

24-1 lb.

boXes

48-5 oz.

59C $1416 $708
2 lor

cans

ITEM

ITEM
Thorofare

BUTTER
BEANS

MIXED
VEGETABLES 24 ;!~s"

·Del Monte

Thorofare

PINEAPPLE 14 -;~;;"

65C s1560 s780
'

GREEN LIMA
BEANS

CASE

ITEM.

FULL .

HALF

CASE

CASE
Thoro!are

Seaside

Crushed, Chunked.
Sliced or Tidbits

HALF

;!~s0 '

BEAN &amp; BACON
SOUP

2 for

$2376 $1188

CHICKEN
BROTH
Thorofare

TOMATO JUICE

2 for

24-1311, oz
car~ s

11-45 oz
cans

.

$53~

89~

$1068
s1Q68

$ 59
2

S259

S259

89~

· 3 lor
24-llV&amp; 02 .
cans

$100 '

age $1068 s534
2 for

14

Vz bushel
only

age $1088 *534

SALTINES
FULL
CASE

$399

2 for

Thorofare

HALF
· CASE

Vz bushel
only

CASE

· Bushes Navy,
Great Northern or

College Inn

FULL
CASE

HALF

Bushes Showboat

·.PORK &amp;
BEANS

INDIVIDUAL
SIZE PRICE

FULL
CASE

$1oo

•12oo •soo .

Thorofare

APPLESAUCE
Pillsbury

Bushes

BROWNIE
MIX

Light Red

KIDNEY
BEANS

White

11-~~,"

ggc $1188 $594 ·

POTATOES

1

'~;~,oz
1

~a~

=±------+---=~

Armour

CHILl with
BEANS
Pennsylvania
Dutch

$1oo •12oo •soo

2 for

~oyalty

TOMATOES

79 C $1898 sg48

2 for

Pieces &amp; Stems

-

14-;;~ oz.

age $1068 $534

24
;::,"

Tha~k

You

Cherrt

PIE FILLING

Chef Boy Ar Dee

12

~~~,oz

Chef Boy Ar Dee

11

~:,oz

BEEFARONI

MINI RAVIOLI

Chef Boy Ar Dee

SPAGHETTI
&amp;MEAT·
BALLS
Aunt Nellie
Sliced

'

PICKLED
. BEETS

24i!~.az

79C '1816 sg41

$

179 *2148 $1074
$
179 82148 '1074

-

12~!~,oz

$179 $2148 '107

All ·Purpose White

$.

potatoes ................. 50 ~:u
~low qooking

onions ..................... 25 ~:g

$

89

�December 2, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio--Point Plea~ant, W. Va.

Page-E-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.Several changes follow '79 · Riverfront Coliseum tragedy
CINCINNATI (AP) - Author!ties may never fully reveal how 11
people died five years ago Monday
ln a crush of people pressing to get
into Riverfront Coliseum for a
performance by The Who, a British
rock group.
That incident on Dec. 3, 1979,
rocked the rock concert world.
forcing promotors to abandon the .
"festiva l" atmosphere that had
reigned since Woodstock.
In Ohio and other states, but
especially in Cincinnati, new laws
banned gener al admission seating
to keep rock fans from fighting for
seats . It ulso brought stricter
enforef'ment of laws goverrting
drugs and alcohol abuse, and
smoking in public arenas.

All the facts rel~tlng to the splitting an estimated $2.1 mllllon.
CIQclnnatl concert deathS never
PollceCapt.DaleMenkhaus.who
came out 1n litigation because all32
was ln charge of crowd control that
Jaw suits were settled out of court
night, r ecalled that the crowd was
with the victims and their families unruly but police were llmlted in
pledged to silence.
what they could do since the
" We wanted it all to come out,"
Coliseum was prlvat.ely owned.
say Richard and M ary Bowes ,
Concertgoers had been lined up
whose son. Peter, 18, was among . for hours in chilly weather, and
those who died on the plaza outside when the crowd heard music inside
Rlveriront Coliseum. " Butwedidn',t
the Coliseum, it surged toward the
have the resources _ financial or
still-locked doors, police said.
mental - to continue. So we
The musicians were only practic·
settled ."
lng, but the crowd apparently
All 11 dea ths were attributed to thought the concert was underway.
asphyxiation in the crowd crush, in
People up front were pushed
which another 2J people were
through glass doors; others fell and
injured. Lawsuitsformorethan$100
were smothered as the crowd
million wer e ftled, -but 32caseswere
surged over them, said police, who
settled out of court with recipients
trled to fight thelrwaytothevictims.

•b ·cy appeaIs to
CeII a

GRANTS PAS..&lt;;, Ore. tAP ) Som etim es the idea of a celibate
Protestant clergy appeals to the
Rev. Donna Lowman-Pritchard,
pastor of United Methodist churches
in Cave Junction and Wilderville.
" You wouldn ·t spread yourself too
thin with a commitment to another
person," she says. "But I can tell
you, thank God for Martin L uther. ' '
With that she laugh~ and slaps the
knee of her hu sband, the Rev. Joe
Lowman-Pritchard, wtio is asso·
· ela te m inister at the Newman
United Methodist Church in this
southern Oregon city.
Lut hf'r set The precedent of a
married clergy during the 16th·
cent ury Protestant Refmmation
that split off from the Roman
l'a tholic Church. in which celibacy
still is a requirement .for the
pries! hood.
The Lowman-Pritchards are one
of 10 clergy couples in the Oregon·
Idaho Annual Conference of the
United Methodist Church, which

includes several hundred such
couples across themuntry.
"The United M ethodist Church
has recognized the Increasing
importance of women in the
ministry, " said Mrs. Lowman·
Pritchard. "They are trying to
realize that two-career clergy can
be a way of speaking to the
communit y about two-career
couples."
Like m any married couples, the
Lowman-Prltchards met in school,
in their case at the Iliff School of
Theology in Denver.
After being ordained about a year
ago, she was posted at Cave
Junction and he was assigned to
churches in Grecnville and Taylors·
,;ue, Ca lif.
Continuing their courtship long
distance, they were married last
May. L owman-Pritchard trans·
ferred to the church in Grants Pass
and moved into the Cave Junction
parsonage with his wife.

• •

IDIDISter
.
"!looked long and hard at It when
we were apart. " LowmanPritchard said. "!am much happier
this year. First of all, I am married
to Donna. Whet.her we are in the
ministry or do other things. I think
that Is whatther el ationshipwill be."
Other clergy couples warned
them to be careful about bringing
the job home.
" There can be some tension
because a congregation starts
r elating to the male as the pastor
and the female as the associate.
That ca n be difficult in a marriage."
Lowman-Pritchard said.
Mrs. Lowman-Pritchard is glad
they serve different churches.
"The people who know me knew
me before Joe and I were married,"
she says. "It's very nice for me to
come to activltles at his church and
not be the pastor. I don' t feel the
pressures to be the pastor's wife that
I might get if I were in another
·profession."

"I think the pollee took a lot of
criticism they didn' t deserve," said
Menkhaus, now a district com·
mander who has been placed ln
charge of handling all large crowds
in Cincinnati and has been a
consultant to other cities.
Menkhaus, who viewed crowd
control in Cleveland, Pittsburgh,
L&lt;.uisvllle and Baltimore before The
Who concert, said the same thing
that happened tn Cincinnati could .
have happened anywhere.
"Cincinnati was just unluckY." he
said. "The crowds acted the same
way in other cities. They just didn't
have people killed."
Menkhaus said promoters, rock
groups and the crowds must share
the blame when things get out of
ha.','d. · .
lbehevethepromotersmustbe
prepared tospendenoughtoprovide
crowd safety" through extra pollee,

ticket sellers and ushers, Menkhaus
said. But he believes some rock
groups charge such high appear·
ance fees thai 'pmmotors try to cut
corners elsewhere, and some prom·
oters simply take cnances hoping to
save money.
·
"Then there Is the drinking and
drugs, the adrenalin pumping in the
crowd," he said - all factors that
can lead to tragedy.
"Certainly, the atmosphere
changed after that," said John
Tafaro, who recently resigned as
president of the Collseu!ll to run a
Cincinnati optical firm .
"11 became very expensive to run
concerts after that, but wesued 'the
city and won.Theywerechargingus
the overtime rate for the pollee and
firemen, not the regular rate they
chargedeverybodyelse"
Atthesarnetime, the~kconcert
business began to fall off, Tafaro

recalled.
"The record buSiness was down
and the recession was on. There
were a lot of factors. but the strong
acts like Nell Diamond and the
Spinners always did well. And, too.
the cost oftouringkept golngup," he
said.
Tafaro'smalngripeWas "thatthe
new Jaws were enforced against us
but not against other places. It was
never enforced fairly. Look at (the
amusement park) Old Coney! They
are lOOfeetoutsldetheclty Umits, so
they can have concerts with festival
seating."
Many c)mnges have occurred in
Cincinnati in the past five years.
Electrlc Factory Concerts, the
promotor, has left the city. Tafaro
has left the Coliseum. Attorney
BrlanHeekln, tbeoriglnaiCollseum
president, has been disbarred and
placed on probatlon

rp~~~~···;jj~!ii!!!;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;~~fi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Save

BIG
During
A guide·to local
.Television prQgramming
Dec. 2 thru Dec. 8

Includes complete

c&lt;e~\~

Affenfion Bsttsin Shoppet1!

~

THESE REMAINING BRAND NEW 1984 MODELS WILL
BE SOLD AT ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE

~l"':~~··

·'

s-

1984

Pontiac 1000's
4T FACTORY INVOICE

AS
LOW

AS

$536555

,,

RCA 19" diagonal

RCA 2 5" diagonal
ColorTak
Monitor-Reteiver

XL-1 00

Roommate TM
Color TV
with Eledronit
Tuning

DURING OUR

lnvenfol Reduction Sale

ROll·

'.

with Remote Control

Here's the key compenent for
your home video system-an
RCA ColorTrak" Monitor·Re·
ceiver. It provides the simplified
hook-up and operating control

Brilliant color perfo rm ance
of single-knob electronic
tun ing.
•IS-position tuning system permits selection of all
12 VHF and up to si~ UHF channels with one conve·
nient control. Illuminated channel numbers.
•Automatic color control and fleshtone co.rreclion.
•Automatic contrast/color tracking.
•Super AccuFilter black matri~ picture tube
•Unitized Xtendedlife chasis.
•Automatic Fine Tuning (AFT) .
•Contemporary-styled durable plastic cabtnet with
walnut finish.

REG. S429

SALE

$359

listings

you need , plus the chairside

convenience ol remote control.

Filmeter
Page4

•Rear connector panel for direct hook-up of up to two standard
NTSC a':tdio-video sources:-;- home computer, VCR. etc.

•22-tunctlon Channelock Dtg1tal Remote Control provtdes multi·
band tuning of up to 127 broadcast and cable hannets. *Offm
t~ree modes of channel selection : direct access; memory scan·
mng: and previOus channel recall. AlsO turn s set on and off ad·
justs or mutes vOlume, and switches to auxiliary video inPuts .
On-sreen chahnel number and time display.
•Quartl crystal tuning system features pinpoint accuracy on all
channels-no hne tuning necessary.
•Super Accufilter black matri:c. piture tube.
•Auto matic color control and lleshtone correction
•Automatic contrast/color tracking. •Automatic light sensor.

REG. S950

SALE

"Chnnnel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

$799

Station listings

RCA 25" diagonal
Color TV with
Channelock
Digital
Remote 'antrol

RCA 25" diagonal
Color TV
with Eledronit
Tuning

Br[lliant color performance tea·

ence of remote control and mul·

ti·ba nd cable tuning.

•6-fun ction Channelock Digital Remote Control provide' multi·
band tuning of up to 127 broadcast andcable channels • Scans
in forwad or reverse, stopping only at channels programmed
into set's memory. Also turns s~t on "and off, and adjusts or
mutes volume.
•Quartz cry stal tuning system ieatures pinpoint accuray on all
channels-no fine tunmg necessa ry:
•Automatic color control and fleS.htone conection.
oAutom~tic contrast/color tracking.
•Super AccuFilter black matrix picture tube.
•Uniti zed Xtended Life chassis.

REG. 5719

$639

SALE

•IS-position tuning system permits selection of all l2 VHF
and up to si• UHF channels with one convenient control.
lllummated channel numbers.
•Automatic colo r control and fleshtone correction . .
•AutomatiC contrast/ color tracking
•Super Accufilter black matri• picture tube.
•Unthzed Xtendedlife chassis.
•Automatic Fine Tuning (AFT).

REG. S639

SALE

$499

RCA 13" diagonal Xl-1 00

RCA 25" diagonal
XL-100

WHY
PAY
MORE?

......_
.... __ _

R

Color TV with
Channellotk
Digital
Keyboard Tuning
Brilliant color performance lea·

turing the convenience of etec·
tronic keyboard control and
multi-band cable tuning.

oChannelock Digital Keyboard Control provides multi·_
band tun·•
ing ot up to 127 broadcast and cable channels. I Bnght U .D.
hanntl number display.
•Quartz crystal tuning system features pinpoint accuracy on all
channels-no fine tuning necessa ry.
•Automaic color controlalld fleshtone correction.
•Automatic contrast/co~r tracking.
•Su!"'r AccuFilter black matrix pic)ure tube.
oUnttized Xtendedlile chassis.

REG. S719
I

•Signal Seek
Electrnic Tuner
•Super Accufilter
Coty Picture Tube
•Auto. color

REGULAR S349

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

$619

SALE
'

EXPERT SERVICE
AFTER THE SALE
,

'

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
MECHA•c ST., POMIOY

992·3671

Huntington. WV
Home Box Office

MAX

Cinemu

Christian Netwrtc
Sports Network
Atlanta, GA
ColumbU11, OH
WTAP Parkersburg . WV
WCHS Charleston, WV
. WPBY
Huntington, WV
WBNS Columbus. OH
· WOUB Athens, OH
WOWK Huntington, WV
WVAH Hurricane. 'NV
CBN
ESPN
WTBS
WTVN

BriUiant color perlormance
turing the conventence of
gle-knob electronic tuning,
lu•e fetures include:

turmg the ct1airs1de conveni·

WSAZ
HBO

'

GRABS YOUR ATTENTION- Actre!lll Faye Dunaway has a way of punctuating ascet1e and
grabbing an audlenoo. She clld It In "Bonnie and Clyde," and she's doing It now as the vmalnous

om
CD
CD

I])

rn
rn

rn

ClJ
O CIJ
(I)

ID
(jj)
~~~ ~

81

Video Beat
Page6

IIOI'Cel'eMin "SupercJrl." (AP Laserphoto).

·- ~================:!=======f

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

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