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                  <text>Page '10- The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Foreclosure action filed in .common/pleas court
Mountain stab! Bank, Parkers·
burg, w .va .. lias!Uedsult tnMelgs
County Common Pleas Court
against Gene Metz i: Son!&lt; Inc.,
Mlne'al WeUs, W.Va., requesting a
judgmentof$92,817.13.
The plaintiff atso requests mortgage foreclosureandsaleotseveral

parcels ot real estaiA! within
Pomeroy vmaae. with proceeds
trcm the aale to be applied to the
Judgment.
TheRaclneHomeNatlona!Bank
hasllledsultagalnstBarbaraR.and
Daniel P. Talbott, Portland, et. a!.,
requestlnga .judgmentot$18,329.01.

'llle bank fllrther requests the
forecbw'e of a IIIOI't&amp;llie toe
property In Lebanon Township, ~
that the piopo!lty be IOid aDd the
proceeds apPlied to the judgment.
Ronald R. Epling, Reedsville,
requests a $3,677 j\ICigmellt In a sult
tiled against Jimmie w. Jolmson,

Racine. Epling demands the Judernentlnpaymentfor.damaglestolds
vehicle aDdotberresultllla'~
stemmlngtrcmanaa:klentonAprll
22 of thls year,ln Sutloi!Townlhlp.
Epllngalleges thatJohniilecaused
the accident and wa. ~ In
operl!tlnghlsownvelllcle. · .

Looking back
onl984

Regulatory issues delay Ohio pay phone sales
By 'llle AII!IOOtated PreM
Morethanhaltadozencompanles
have expressed Interest tn selling

Citation issued
Meigs Sheriff James J . Protfltt
reports th;lt a citation charging
criminal rnlSchler has been Issued
agalnat Thomas R. Everett, 'llle
Plains, afiA!r he allegedly ran hls
yeh.lcle over the lawn of Ralph
. Wigal, Reedsville, about 5 a.m.
Satuniay.
.
Everett wUl face the charge In
Meigs CountY Court on Jan. 2.
· Proffitt reports also that the
·Bureau of Crlmtnal Investigation
-has been called In to assist In an
Investigation of a breaking and
enteiing at the Harley Hendricks
· r.esldence In C~ter Township.

Senice planned
A New Year's E ve Service wiD be
held at Middleport Independant
Holiness Church, Pearl Street,
beginning at 7: .llp.m. ·
Guest speakers wW be the Rev.
J van Myers and the Rev. Glen
Easte rling. Local singing talent will
also be featured . Pasior O'Dell
Manley extends a welcome to
everyone.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Raymond MUJer,
Reed5VWe.
Discharges- Terry Watson.

Two arrested

number ot f!!ltulatory concerns

pay IA!Iephones tn Ohio, but the
Public UtUitles Commission of Ohio
Woll't give Its permission untU a

resolved.

are

1

'llle PUCO wiD consider the

EMS units answer 6 calls

Six calls were ansWered ThW'S·
day by units of the Meigs Coonty
Emergency Medical Servlee.
At 2:41 a.m., Syracuse went to
Water Street for Jane Teaford, to
Holzer Medical Center.. At ll: 50
a ,m ., the Syracuse ftre station was
called to the Eber Pickens residence .
for a boat !Ire. Middleport was
called to 242 Beech St. at 4:55p.m.
and transported Helen Kennedy to
Veterans Memorlal. Middleport
was calledto~S. Thlrd·Ave.at5:15
p.m . and transported Phyllis Cadle

IArea deaths I
Robert P. Dudding

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
POMEIOY, OH.

Robert P. D!ldding. 67, Mason,
W.Va., was dead on an1val Thurs·
day at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Aug. 19, 1917, at Mason, he
was the son of the late RobertL. and
Minnie F. Plunkett Dudding.
He was an employee of the West
Virginia Department of Highways,
retiring five years ago, and Cements Tree Nursery at Lakin.
Surviving are several nieces and

,,.!. .,;, ..

He was preceded In death by four
sisters, Pearl Roush, Mary Dud·
ding, Alma Dudding and Margaret
Goodnlte; · and ·by three brothers,
Dennis, Everett and· David

i~U!\~

sauA $2 oo
~ y \.f

Tonight, partly cloudy; low 55 to

rain ls 20 percent tonight and 40
percent Saturday.
Ohio extended fore&lt;;ast
A chance of rain Sunday. Scat·
tered snow fiun1es In the northeast
Monday, otherwise fair Monday and
New Year's Day. Highs In the
mJJ40stomld-50sSunday andlnthe
30s Monday and New Year's. Lows
In the lls Sunday and In the 20s
Monday and New Years.

rLUS FREE 1985
Purina Dog Calendar

LITTON MICROWAVE
cl~~~~TY $299°0

with your purchase!

AOC 19" COLOR TV .

DEC. 28, 29
&amp; 30
1

WITH REMOTE
' CONTROL

1:00 hi Otisi

POMEIOY, ON.
The Stor, With "All Kinds of Stuff"
Far Petl, Stable, Large &amp; Small Animals
992-2164

I

. .,

LlnONAIRE MICROWAVE OVEN
OVER THE .
$4 99°0·$~:; .
· RANGE MODEL

Lawns alld Gardeni

.. ..

.; '

:

' •4 .

'·

u, T•

--···~· CHRIRIMS·@t· ~·--

LEF10't'ERS .· SALE
SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE 'STORE
ON QUALITY NAME BRAND .
CLOTHING
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
.. .

Becky Thatcher returns home
MARIEITA, Ohio (AP) -SPort·
tng a refinished hull, the showboat
Becky Thatcher returned home to
Marietta Friday morning.
But Jack Ottenheimer, president
of Ohio Showboat Drama, said the

ANCHORS AWEIGH - 'llle l!bowboU Becky 'lba&amp;cher moves

thrwlh ~'&gt;railroad 'bridge near where II Is I1IOOftd ID the MUIIdJIIum
Rl\ler, a few hundred feet from the Oblo River. The 11oM w• relumed 1o
1111 moonns Friday momtns for the lint time t1111ce It ••et•kH!d water
damage after siDldng ID Mardi. (AP Luerpholo).

job In 1984 and I hope we'll do betiA!r
get the courthouse completed. We commisslonwiDdoaDltcantotryto
made three year's worth of pay· lure industry toGallla Coonty. "We
In 1985."
'llle first-term commissioner said
GALLIPOLIS - Gailla County mentsonthecourthouseandwestW ate constantly looking ~or new
the board would also like tore-locate
ftnlshed with a sizeable ~arryover . people to Corne In and create jobs.
was able to stay llflthln Its budget,
·eridlne tile year with a "sizeable" and I still don't feelllke we cut our That's my number one priority,'' he thecountydogpOO.nd,oncejudgedto
beoneottheworst In the country.
·carryover and wiD be loOking to · seivtces to the county's reslden~." said.
At thls . time, though, the most
he
estlmaiA!d
the
"We
are
constantly
trying
to
Swain
Said
Improve the job sltuaUon for county
carryover
to
be
approximately
improve
roads,"
Swain
added.
He
pressing
problem comes rro,n the
residents In 19111, according to
$400,1m.
,
said
the
county
renovaiA!d
over
100
of the courthouSe, to
completion
' Commissionef Verlln Swain.
Thecourthousecouidhopetullybe bridges with a $100,1m grant the
replace the 100-year-old structure
1!11N saw county o1t1ces move l,nto
a new $2.5 courthouse and 1985 paid off In the near future, Swain . county received. "We did a decent
' should see the completion or the said, 11 the Ohio Department of
----------bulldlng'stlnlshlngtouchea.
· Taxation decides to refund the
amount ot revenues to the county
19111wW
two new commission·
On top of everyane's lilt Is malllnl a llviDg and Canunllldcmer
that were paid by the James M.
era, Republlcan Kall Burleson and
Verla Swain lllld Che corrunl.!l!lGD wiD do all it can to try to lure
Democrat •Dick Cremeens. They · Gavin Power Plant to other counties
will join Swain, a Republlcan, on the In property taxes In 1981, 19l2 and
lnd!Mry to ,Gallla County. "We are C"D't•""y looking for new
1983.
"Then
we
would
bedebt·free,"
board that has been recently
people to come In and ere ate jobs. Tllat's my number- priority,"
Swain said.
dominated by Republicans .
On tqlof eve.ryone'sUst Is making he said.
.' · "We were pleased to stay wlthlng
·
living and Swain said the.
a
·our l.9IN budget," Swain said, "and

·.

Tlmai s

...

•
. .,.

y,,,
Eve
LaSALLE REST AU RANT

Celeb'''' New
.

AT THE

says Jones

'
ByBOBBOEFLICH
have been trying to hire such a
'11meaS Ak'ISildf
personbutthateachyear,thereare
POMEROY - DespiiA! Inflation, inadequate funds to employ a tuJl
rising costs on every side and time director.
llmiiA!d Income, Meigs County Is
"This year we are going to make
ftnlshlng l!lN "In the black" Meigs every effort to have this person;• '
Coonty Coirunissioner Richard Jones said.
Jones reports In an end of the year
"This will be a quaHfled, experienced person who will be working
lnle!vlew.
Although Jones was unable to for Meigs County and its citizens
come up with an · exact amount 365-days a year, keeping a finger on
which wiD show up In the county everything that's happening In
balances at the end of l.!lN, he is Columrus and Washington, and
pleased that the ftnancial picture at • advising our board of tlllSe happen·
least doeS not reflect deficits.
tngs and guiding us on ways to
"We aatlclpated we w~d break proceed on general projects,"
even. That's what we strtved for au · Jones, lloM!Iier, stresses that the
- Melp ea.tJ c.••• 'n' ...
year long," he conunented. 1
employment of a development . Rkla J - llCIIIIIMIII8 011 Melp
The new· year doe! not hold any director Is conttnaent on next week CowayMU'a.
relief .as ' !~¥' as fi!lan&lt;:e$ are when the commissioners get into the
con~
·
. •.lol)lla.reptU.n!¥t.l111 :pi~, ~ ~ bl!w to..J!TI!!Ch
, ,.,1h'L, "I woold lmaglrie that the Gavin
llb1 pn ~I!'SIIJIDgtO COUII!y'a.P¥101!Y,
f lant alone produces as much ·
be
her tight year but says 1985
"We are going to make every revenue for the general fund as we
''will be our worst year., because effort to have the money to put Into have In total," he comments.
thereare&amp;Oil\anymorethlngs that action this type of project. We ·wlll
"Sowhatwehavetodo is to try to
proceed with drawing up a job rilalntaln our expenses within the
we need."
Speaking on the upcoming year, descrtptlon, advertising the job and amount of money that we have
Jones reports that the county hiring tlle person who Is best corning In and rtght now we pretty
canmlsslonerswant todomoreln qualified to seiVe Meigs County,"
wellknowwhatthatwWbe.
the way.o f industrtal dPYelopment.
says Jones.
Speaking on J.!lN, Jones says the
~ ·wehopetocomeupwlthenoug)l
Hitting upon Meigs County's start of the senior citizens 46-unlt
money to hire a full-time planning financial picture compared to housing complex on Mulberry ·
andlndustrtaldevelopmentdlrector surrounding counties, Jones points Heights was one of the biggest
who wW assist the county and the out that the local budget Is a lot accompllshments of the year.
!liUnlcipaHties within the county . smaller than most counties due to
However, Jones Is quick to add
along these Jines,'' he states.
the local tax base. Also there is not that the housing project really Is ilot
Jones reports that the for pasr theamountoflndustrywhichcanbe acountycommlsslonerproject.The
several years, the commissioners foundinGalllaandAthensCounties.
(Continued on page A3)

By JOHN FRIEDMAN

.

•.

RED'S CLUB

.

The outlook for January says
there also Is a 00 percent chance that
Ohio wW be warmer than normal. .
The warm trend could set records
for the month In some parts of the
state. 'llle weather service said the
•warmestDecemberonrecordcame
In 1889 when Benjamin Harrison
w~ president and temperatures
averaged 42 degrees.
The waimest day that month was
Dec. 29 when a number of record
highs were estabUshed statewide.
December 1982 was the thlm·
warmest on record with an average
temperature of 40.5 degrees. The
77-degree reading on Dec. 3 that
year remains the warmest Decenber temperature ever recorded
· In Ohio.

blac~'

stemwheeler still needs about
$375,00J worth of repairs to correct
damage caused when the Becky
Thatcher sank In the Muskingum
River last March.

Ottermelmer 511id an extenSive
fund-raising campaign wiD begin to
raise money to finish repairs, which
he hopes wW be completed In time
for the showboat season next
summer.

.Swain stresses industry, jobs for county in 1985

. . 1f

'7artr

MidniGht Toad &amp;
2:00 A.M. 'lrHitfatt
No (ow~r-Niw Mao.., WtlcoOM

lilt WHI WI'H

$34900

MODERN SUPPL

399 '!f. MAIN

'in ihe

the Jow'i(ls.
By 10 a.m.. the previous high
ternperatilre for GaDipolla had been
broken as the the city llegisiA!red 01
- twO degltes higher than the
previous high of 65 for December 29
set In 1.946.

'

Holzer Olnlc Lid. wiD be closed
Tuesday, Jan.l, lnobservanceofthe
·
New Year's holiday.
Urgent care services wiD be
provided from 1-9p.m. onthatday at
the main cllnlc on U.S. 35 near
Galll(l(iiis.
Physicians· from the family
practice and pedtatrtcs depart·
ments wlli be avaUable for treat·
ment of urgent illnesses and
lnjurtes. Enter the cllnlc at the
emergency room at Holzer Medical
Center. Pediatric patients should ·
call 446-5287 for a time to be seen.

NEW YEAR'S EVE .

'

-~~~fr~~~~

ori New Year's Day

·

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 768.
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 0'755.

·

Holzer Clinic cl08ed

Taped Music I Dancing
9:00 to Claling

Number, Pick 4
drawin~ listed

UN;·,

The matter will now be turned over to PooleroY
Vtllage ·Council along with llle bids with counct1 to
come up with the solution to the problem.1be vllla&amp;'e
wUl have tocomeupwlth more money, have the plana
revised or perhaps, readvertlse with the II&lt;¥ Ul(t
some finn wUl come up with a bid which w.W taB
within the village price range.
•

Meigs County finishing 1984::

It may be winter on the calendar,
but the earty weekend recoro-high
temperatur.es had many In the
·Gallta·Me~ area thinking more
about spring.
Most cities arountl the state saw
their previous record highs shat·
tered with temperatures In the 60s:.:) to 4Q degrees warmer than the
average for thls tlme of year,
aCcording to the National Weather
Service.
GalllpoUssetarecordhighof73on
Friday, according to 1 the East
GaliJpolls weather station. 'llle
city's previous high for December28
bad been set In 19l2, when a
temperatUre of 72 was recorded.
The balmy weather was conttnuln&amp; Sa~ afterllooo• With nlQ&amp;t .
cil81t1D re)l.lll'tllil ~MID'HIII ·

!&gt;I.

WHIRLPOOL WASHER
i /,) •l 0 ii) MW $ 2990 Q
,.

1

on specially marked 50 lb. bags
ofPurWHI•PM

Sheets

00. On Saturday, partly cloudy with
a chance of showers or thunderstorms; high 'near 70. The chance of

•

Pipe of Racine, ~.919.
Engineering Associates of Wooster did the plan to
.b e used In the addition to ihesewagedlsposalsystem.

By'l11e 'l'ln-.&amp;ntlnel 8I8ft

$29900 ·

DP3800XlD

' '.

9 Section•. 1111 PlliH 110 cea.
A Multlmlclll Inc. - -

S"'nday, December 30, 1 984

Bidders Included Logston, Belpre, $214,814;
PenningtOJi ot Waverly, $101,638; Young of Mlllf1e ld.
$199,840; Weber of ReedsvJJJe, $157,689, and Hemlock

Balmy weather
.sets records

WHIRLPOOL DISHWASHER

=~:::a/s~~~~

Weather

$4 7 qoo

of lnstaiUng the$ystern on West Main St., were opened
by the Meigs County Commissioners and all exceeded
the funds Pomeroy has been gi'l(en to build the facUlty.
The village has approximately $l.OO,Im In HUD and
Conununlty Block Grant money. The lowest bid was
some
$50,1m over that ftgure.
'

I

RCA CONSOI r COLOR nt

nephews.

-PageA-3-

entin.e

Middleport P'v11-.oy Gallipolis Point Plea..t

POMEROY- Apparently it's back to the drawing
board · for Pomeroy VIllage and Its problem of
providing sewage dis~ Jines for Pomeroy's West
Main st.. particularly needed to serve the new Pizza
Hut whlcllls ready to~ for buslnes&amp; but cannot due
to the lack of sewaae disposal tacWtles.
Friday a!IA!moon, bids of five firms seeking the job

$2 7900 OYE~STOCI

Diagonal Measure

SpGrtl ..... . . ... .......... ........ C..l-4

Pomeroy project: back to the drawing board,.

RCA .19" ·coLOR TV

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

Free pickup of Christmas trees
will be held In Middleport on
Wednesday, Jan. 2.
Residents are asked to place their
trees near the curb in front of their
homes. The trees wW be picked up
by the street department, free of
charge.

c.,...... ,...

.

Coupl11

~ . . ................ .. ..... A·2

'voL ,, No. 47

caiUng:
104-US-3950 or
304-6.75-1393.
(

(Continued from Page 1)
drugs, radios, knives, clgarets, Dudding.
Funeral services wiD be held at 1
lighters, In addition to money. .
The two are being charged with
p.m. Saturday In Foglesong Fun·
breaking and entering and theft of eral Home, Mason, with the Rev. 1;
drugs, officials said. The pair's Berulle Stevens otflclatlng. Burial
Initial hearing wUI be before Meigs will be at Graham Cemetery.
County Court Judge Patrtck
the funeral
O'Brien. Wol!e said.
Shuford Is being held In the
Middleport Jan, whne Herman Is
confined to the county jan.
(Continued from Page 1)
The two allegedly entered the
structure by tearing out space In a according to the report. However.
wall between the Empire Furlllture her campaign . brought forward
Store buUdlng, next to the phar- $10,721.11 from the post-primary
macy. The wall was weakened by report.
One of the larger contrtbutors to
age and the fire which struck the
· Boster'scampalgnwastheNatlonal
furniture store earlier this year.
.RUJe Association, whose political
Free tree pickup
fuild supplied S!iOO..

.

tmts

Ti&lt;k•h may bo
punhaud al Fruth
Pharmacy, 1r by

NOW THRU lAN. 5, 1914

~abe Blver ............... B-1-8
. . .... ............ ............. 1).2

Take-()ae . . .. . ....... . ..... ... IDiert

•

I.Y.0:1.

bdl!ding Glll!l &amp; Ammunition

Ohio w~ther:
Wannspell
ending

De t ............................. A-4

IN~ENTOR~

s 15 p., Coupt.

EYEIYTHING

Inside:

federal pay- Page A·2

All floor samples, unclaimed Christmas
layaways and many one of' a kind items
must go. No reasonable offer refu~ed.

New Year's he
Dance 9 p.m. ta
1 a.m. National
Guard Armary

10°/o-50°/o OFF

Bob Hoeflich explains an wq»leaaanl experience
that tUrned out well- Page 8.6 ·
James J •. Kilpalrick di8CU88e8 the probleltl8 of

to Pleasant Valley.
Ofl!i' co(npany, however, already
At 5:32p.m., Pomeroy went io324
Condor St. for Zachary TWis, to ' has distributed some pay phones ln.
VeteransMemoriai.At8p.m., Tlll1s' Ohio and has sued the PUCO and
Ohio Bell for keeping a rein on tlH!
was taken by Lifetllght toChlldren's
market.
Hospital, Coliunbus. And at 7: 10
p.m ., Rutland went to Dexter for
MiSsy Barrett to Pleasant Valley.

. WHITE ELEPHANT SALE

Page D-1 .

-PageB-1

matter Jan. 15, aDd It may be a
monthortwolaiA!rbetorepaypoone
competition begins In the state, said
commlsslqn · spokesman Todd
Ambs;

PRE-INVENTORY

'84's top ten stories

.

:

'1

'Limited Qusntitie1/
Sollg, no 11ln~h•ck1 D.'
flgiWigl If 16111 p11CBI.

BUFFET DINNER· 7 TO 9 .

Steek Rollups or Chicken Bruit Ia Dreselng, Twice
Beked Potetoea. Rice Pilot. Green Beena. Callerole. Selection of Salads. Desserta, Hot Rolla,
· r
Coffee or Tea .

MUSIC IY ARMA"D 9 P.M. To 1 A.M.
AT MIDNIGHT

CampHmantary Hat, Hama, Party Favora, Champagne Taaat end 1 COntinental Br11kf11t.

·FOR 'RESERVATIONS CALL 982-8838"
SUM S!Ntll

'

,

S25.00 COW'll
lncludea ,Everything Except Cocktlll.1

•

l.,.~.·,

..luel staff

run

see

•10

that was destroyed by tire In
January 1981.
Swains saki parking around the
COUrthouse llel!ded to be Improved
In the upcoming year, to make It
more accessible to county residents .
"We need to get the modulars and
the brown house that used to house
the sherltfs department down,"
Swain added. "Then wecan pave the
Jot to the northsldeofthecourlhouse
and where the modu1ars are now.''
Also needing to be completed,
Swain added, is landsCaping around
the new building and new steps.
'llle future Is an unlmown factor,
Swain said. But he added he saw no
. major problems for the county on
the horlzlOn. "We certainty have
oodles ot problems," he said, " but
nothing major."

Gallla Cammilllener
VedlnSwaln

President preparing for U.S.-Soviet arms talks
LOS ANGELES (AP) - President Reagan Is spending part of hls
New Year's vaca11011 preparing the
barplnlng stratei!Y for next
month's US.Sovlet anns talks In

614 Silver lrld.ge Plaia or at the
Corner of Third &amp;·Pine

Geneva, his &amp;pokeaman says.
ARMS TALKS -A relll'ioaa
walllaai--ll ..... te-lo
-••!leerelarraiRWe
G-.. P. 8ball1l 111111 dDn

446·8051 or 446-3733
FPR YOUR SAFETY, THERE WILL IE SPECIAL RATES:
t7.50-SINGLE, '10.00-DOUILE. Tht LaSalle will
al.. offer a FrH ·Ride Home, and compllmtntary
(off• &amp; Da11ish at Clolin•

- t i l e llwl I I I &amp;able from
1 In Allllrel
A. GrworJtD lo - If t11eJ caa
lad a ...., lD ewllllle _,. r r

sm. J'orelp n

Arms Talks

- IIIIoUll
Jllli . . II from
.....
outer
..,_, (AI'. .
I

ir,h 11),

Deputy WldiA! House presiiii!Cre- aroup, Speakes said.
Speakes said It was possible
tary Larry Speekes IIBill Reagan
·
Re1111an
would take time out from
would review wrttten recomrnenda·
dons on what poature the United hls six-daY holiday to meet with
states Blllu!d adopt fur the Jan. 7-i Sllultz. McFarlane and Detente
Secretary Cupar Welnller&amp;'er.
sessionl In Geneva, Swl121t!rland.
Shultz and Weinbet aet are Jolnin&amp;
Speakel tried to play down
reports that Reapn'l trey forel&amp;ll the ptEilldl!llt Ill Palm Sp1np to
attend an lllflll&amp;l New Year's Eve
policy advlaerl havedlffeuiut viewB
on ~ to approach the talb ~ at the estate d. millionaire
between Secretary d. Stab! Cleor&amp;e publlahel' Walter
HOWI!Yer, Speelreo Ilk! no meet·
P . Shultz and Soviet ForeiiJI'
Minister Andre( Qromyko.
In&amp; cun-ently lncheduled.
.
NllllonalleCIIIity adviser Robert
Speela!ll dec1ari!d the~­
C. McFII'Wie, who was to an1ve tlon baa "IIJ&amp;II hopes" but no
IDclay In Cellturnla, WGIId be . p!'l!t'CIIICelv eJqJeCtatlons for the
CUTYinitheltratea:Yrecommenda- ~a ll!!llion.
Reagan, In an Interview with a
dons develoPed by an interiaencY

Annenbeli.

J

•

Japillle&amp;e newspaper, said he hoped
the Soviets were approaching the
session with !he same "constructive
spirit" as U .S. negotiators.
"A two-day rneet1na cannot solve
the cornpllcatl!d Issues before us; •
said the pt"eeidellt. "We hope it wW
be a comtruct1ve begtllntng for
further detailed negotiations.''
Reapn said Shultz would be
lftlllled to otrer "COIICtete
lions 011 a full111181! d. anns control
lssuel. We hope the Soviets wWshow
a lllmilar COIIItrucUve spirit."
Speelll!s Nld the recornmenda·
1
tiona McFarlane was c:erryiagwen!
the l'I!IUit or meetlnp by an
lnterqency taakforcelhathasbeen

suaes·

.

preparing Geneva strategy.

He saldReagancould either make

decisiOnS based on the written
material, or seek fllrther dl8culslot)S

with

foreign

his

policy

advlllenl.

In any event, SpeUes Ilk!
Reagan and Shultz wiD meet. Ill
Washingt011 late next W1!1!k lk'l'ore
Shultz departs for Geneva on Ja 5.
Weinberger, reflecUng the JW.
tagun's deep suspicions ol tile
Soviets, IXefets a limited 41* II
that would restrict Sll1llta ta
ICallldlni out Gromylto oa rtzc? s
the Soviets are reedy to r• g 11

nuclear anna neaotlaliDrll _.
attempt to let a schedule.

•

�.

and 'perspective

:,Comment

The Sunday llmtt Sa ,.....
Paga A-2

Deolmber 30. 1984

. ..::Decet;::=;m::;bar~=30~,~1984§~·==~=======:;;;;~P~OI~IIIII~;;ro~y~M~Idd~leport~;;-~G~a~ll~ipo~l~ii~.~O~hlo~;;;Pa~oll:;n~t~PI~II~-~~nt~.;;;W:;·~V~a;.:::;:==~The~S~u~nda~y~Ti~tme~
. ~s-~Sen~tl~.nei~.~P~aa~ge~~A~-3
r----

weather:-------Jer~ey' rlfin .sent unauthorized.chemicals
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -

A New

Jeney Ibm 111!11t tine unauthorized

Feder~paY----~----~-----~~
___l_K~u~__tm_k
A Dlvlllon of

~~
~v

I'"'T"'-'._...,.., .........;o:::l.o=o

1•

.

ll1 Coll1t S&amp;;, Pomeroy, Oldo
( 814) 1111!-Zl$6
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor
-

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A IIDQIEBCCTIIe "--aled Prfto, l.oludDoiiJ p,.. - -.......
Newop- PubU.bero"-&lt;:lalloa.

u:rrEll8 OF OPINION an welco-, Iller- b e - lllu . . • -

..... A l l - ......bled l&lt;oedlll..... """" ........ ylllo ....... 114dr- ...

' pod-· addr...mc .........
liole~

1111111bero. No .......,.,. lellen wW be pab-ed. IAiten aoi-.UII!JO.

bela

·:.· .Nation's
. economic
outlook takes on
holiday luster
• · ·After having turned gray with the fall skies, the economic outlook sei!lriS
to have taken on a holiday luster.
·
The expectations of recession have been postponed trom spring to fall
and maybe later, and that iS distant enough for people to enjoy prosperity
• , rjlther than fear for their JlveHhoods.
· • The earlier fears apparently emanated from economic statistics
• reported during the third quarter. That is, economists !ell into that old and .
· foolish habit of foresaklng reason and projecting the present Into the future.
The third-quarter was Indeed weak - the weakest of both 1983 and 1984,
with the growth rate first announced at 1.9 percent and then revised even
lower to 1.6 percent. That set ott the fears.
The contrast made it look even worse, since the first-quarter growth rate
of 10.1 percent and the second-quarter rate of 7.1 percent were
extraordinary. To many forecasters nothing could be better; therefore,
things were gqlng bad.
Perhaps so, but not so terribly bad that people couldn't continue to hope.
• And that hope was·nourlsbed this month when the Canmerce Department
announCed its "flash" estimate or 2.8 percent growth for the third quarter.
At about the same time the employment statistics were allnounced and
they were among the most encouraging, and unexpected, of the entire
expansion that began back in December 1982. Ctvlllan employment
jumped to a record-high of 1!li.9 million workers, and the jobless rate fell to
7.2 percent.
RetaU sales joined In the spirit, rising 1.8 percent In November, the
sharpest Increase since \89t AprU. The Federal Reserve Board lowered the
discount rate, and the prime lending rate to quapty customers continued
falling.

WASHINGTON - Have you facton, and wetglited facton cause
made a stud)! of federal pay scales asthma.
latelyh? No? Then you have missed
The federal government employs
one of the most enduring or all · roughly million men and WOflll!ll
pastime~~ here In the capital. The
under Its General Schedule (GS) In
Chamber or Commerce studies Grades 1 throulh 15. (Another 200
fl!deral Jl$Y. 1'be labor unions study eM! servants are. in Gradel 16
federal pay. A hundred task forces, through 18; about 7,00J top.tanking
conaressional conunitiees and pro- e:~~ecutives an! In ·the Senior
fellors or political science have had Executive Service; and 611!.000
a ill at federal pay. Ten days aao persons are tn blue-collar Jdbs that
the.' Office of Personnel Manaae- are paid bY the hour. Let us wish
ment gave the problem one more themaHappyNewYear,andmove
whack. Let us pray.
on.) Each of the 15 basic grades has
One problem, stated too simply, 10 levels. Thus the theory or
is that the government's pay comparabillty involves matching
schedule is unfair. A second salaries in the federal goveiiunent
problem is that the machinery for and In the private sector under t:iO
adjusting federal salaries doesn't combinations of skill, experience
work. The goal, established by and demand.
·
0&lt;1e more tlilng you ~uld knOw
· Congress more t1u1n 20 years ago, is
tor federal pay scales to be fixed at Is that the government's GS salary
levels that are generaliy rompara- scales operate unllonnly, nation·
ble with private pay scales. Toward ·wide, wherever a federal worker is
that end, a marvelously complex employed.
procedure has been devised. I wUl
You will now understand why the
not tell you about this system, goal of "comparabUity'' is the
because toward the end of the merest wUl-o' -the-wisp. This is
process we get Into weighted

'

.

1
I

~

\

~

i

I

~

1}

••

-·

~

because, as the most recent pay in IUCh poaltlonl probably would be
the b8t i1 all comparlsolls. Neltllel'
'Study oblerves, u1arlel in. ' the
private seciDr are not' IIDitorm and can the 18J11pie IDCinde non-profit
they do not stay !ixl!d nationwide. A outfits IIUCh as philanthropic bill·
datlons. In practice, the IUI'Vey
~In the federal service wlll
averqe$l5,941 a • . A~ · lookl almOit entirely at compeniel
with similar qtlllllflcatlons · aad with a minimum payroll or 250
'
responsibilities will earn $14,625 In persolll!.
After all these data have been
San Antonio and $18,249 In San
compiled, the · · ligures are run
Francllco.,
Which secretary Is being paid through a blender that Is tiel tor the
"falrty?" Who knows? SaJai1es In cycle that turns out puree. The data
San Antonio and San Francllco are are III!UOned for taste and one
sluiped by the Invisible hand at the figure at tast is drawn forth. In 1983
that figure was 21.5 percent. In 1984
marketplace. Salaries In fl!deral
It was 18.28 percent. These are the
,ol!lces are shaped in some small
part bY an annual survey that has to figures bY ,whlcll evexy GS salary,
at every ·level or evexy grade, In
be blamed em the Bureau of La~
Statistics. I state the matter in thllt every part of the nation, theoreti·
cally should be increased in order to
fashion because the bls is not
achieve "comparabUity." The !lg.
responslble tor the rules that skew
Its fllldlnp.
.
ui'!!S ·are hogwash.
·
.
E\'ery year the BLS conducts a / ·And so they historically have
been rcearded Under the law a
survey or pay scales in about 113
president may Ignore the flndlnp
levels or wotk in 25 occupations o1.
of
t)le BLS survey. Every year Iince
varying deiPt!!S of dl1ftculty. By
1971
the president has Ignored them
law the IIUI'Yey cannot sample
abaolutely.
The sell-evident tact,
employeea of ·state and local
which
requires
no surveys or ·
penlmeata, tlxJu&amp;b ~~~
samples, Is that GS pay scales are
too low at the bottom, too low at the
top, and generally too high in
between. When consideration Is
given to federal fringe bene!!Is .annual leave, genetous retirement
and a high level of job security -It
is small wonder that the government's "quit rate" is only on~tenth
to one-third the qult rate of private
Industry. Why is this so? It is
because federal compensation,
overall, Is "too high."
This latest report on payroll
refOnTI recommends that qult rates
"l$&gt;.
become a key element in future
adjustments. At the very least, the
BLS 8111'Vey should be given a much
wider base in order to sample pay
rates in state govermnent and In
small companies. Meanwhile, 'the
~
Office of Personnel Management is
recommending pay cuts that would
trim $~ bUilon from the federal
..,_ deficit over the next three years.
WUI any of these reforms or cuts
materialize? Don't hold your
breath.

c.~

'

'Quiet',nplomacy-.'______Jac_k_A_nde_r_son

· The stock market got Into step, if only for a day, spurting'on news of a
continued drop In Interest rates. But that one day, In which the Dow Jones
Industrial average rose more than :II points, suggested to investors that
' WASHINGTON ~ President ·
'maybe they had overrated the recession fears and underestimated the
Reagan's recent public statement
value of stocks.
criticizing the white suprema~ist
The rerovery of confidence hasn't been total bY any means.
South African regime, and his
The .Conference Board, a nonprofit group that often polls Its business wel~me to a leading crttlc.of that
members, declared on Christmas eVe. that- business confidence In the
regime, Bishop Desmond Tutu,
economy continued to ebb. But that ebbing demands· explanation.
dreW grudging praise from liberal
In effect, what business leliders Said was that the expansion was now crttics of his "quiet diplomacy" on
weU established, and that people could ·not expect matlers to keep
human. rights in undemocratic
improving at the old rates. But they didn't indicate that the economy was countries.
·
gsaid the blast damaged 40 buildings In the area, according to IRNA. The
But the critics wonder why the
bomb detonated as several people were boarding an empty bus at a station White House and the State Depart:'II lew yards away.
.
ment have been so shy in express·
· The news agency charged that "agents of the United States" had packed lng disfavor toward the oppressive
the car with 20 to 25 pounds of explosives and parked it near the hotel.
regime or President Augilsto PlffiNA said the car-boolblng appeared to be in retaliation for the nochet in ChUe. Reagan's elohijacking of a Kuwaiti airliner to Tehran earlier this month.
quence has not been turned 1oose on
The tour Arable-speaking hiJackers of the Kuwaiti airliner killed two · the state of siege Plnochet declared
American J)8SIII!IIgers aboard the ptane and threatened two kill two other in early November. No Chnean
Americans and several Kuwaiti hostages unless 17 convicted terrortsts opposition leaders have been given
were released from Kuwaiti prisons . .
the red carpet treaiment at the
Iranian security men disguised as a ooctor and two janitors boarded the White House. (In fact, when the
plane in tl)e sixth day ofthe hijacking, overpowered the sky pirates and widow of the last democratically
released the remaining hostages.
elected president of Chile tried to
ffiNA claimed the United States had warned It would "take revenge" visit the United states in 1983, she
against Iran for the hijacking.
was denlfd a visa.)
President Reagan and other White House officials suggested Iran had
Yet under the state of siege
not done all it could to end the hijacking and demanded Iran either put the
hijackers on trial or extradite them to Kuwait or the United States lor trial.

Pinochet declared to save his
unpopular dictatorship, tbe .church,
press, labor unions and other
''dissidents'.' have been subjected to
narassmen!_, intimidation and ar·
rest by government good squads. In ·
the first week of the emergency,
according to the CouncU on Hemlsphertc Affairs, at teast 150 persons
were jaUed without charges. News·
papers and magazines were forbid·
den to report the widespread
popular demonstrations on their
front pages,
Why has the administration been
so reluctant to condemn Pinochet?
Unlike many close observers of the.
Chilean drift toward chaos, Reagan
and the State Department apparentiy don't feel that the little
general's days are numbered.
That's the
they've been
getting from the embassy In
Santiago, as a recent Internal
report seen by my associate Donald
Goldberg makes clear.
"Current events In ChUe reflect a

worn

stalemate between the opposition·
and the government," the embassy
report explains. "The protests have
put the gOvernment on the defensive (but) have not been able to
extract any concessions from the
government.
"The opposition is currently
weaker than It was a year ago, and
there Is no possibUity that the
government wiU be overthrown in
the near future. The state of siege
will continue and the government
will severely repress any protests
or demonstrations."
Although the outlook for improved hW11311 rtghts conditions in
Chile ret1)llins bleak, there is no
indication that the embassy thinks
the White House or State Departmeni should lntervent.
"For the past year,'' the embassy
report states, "U.S. policy toward'
Chne has been that the United
States supports a democratic tradition; but that the form and the pace
of that transition 1~ up to the

ChUeans. The United States also
supports a dialogue and abhors
violence." Unfortunately, the only ·
"dialogue" that has occurred between the Pinchet regime and its
democratic opposition lately bas
been In the government's interrogation cells.
·
The report does acknowledge
that whne the current policy ts
betng revised and haS not yet "fully
crystallized," the United Slates "is
critical or the Plnochet government
because it has not been moving
rapidly enough toward a democratic transition and because of the
human rights violations inc~."
For now, though, the embusy
will keep a !oil! pro!Ue, according to
the report. "The U.S. Embassy in
Santiago has and will continue to
practice sweet diplomacy, and the
Ambassador ' will quietly discuss
with officials of the ChUean government the Importance of political
liberalization,'' the report states,

No more Soviet R&amp;D_____A_rt~Buc_h_wa_ld

_Bishops' go to the
· public for reaction
to pastoral letter
Ofllctals at the catbollc ArchclloceBe of Cincinnati are expecting. ample
reaction when they go ID the public In January to gather comments on the
U.S. bishops' pastoral letter oniOCial teaching and the economy.
But predlctlng what type or comments the public wiU have is a difficult
lJuslnelt. sa)'s Archie Bnlun, director or the archdiocese's Office of Social

•

...
'

.·
(.

·Action and World Peace.
"That's hard to forecast. I hope It's good,'\ Bruun saki. "We presume
there wUl be a lot of reaction. We. hope so."
Archdiocesan officials plan ID conduct public hearings Jan. 19 ln.
Cincinnati and Oayton to gather oral and written commenta from the
public. The three-hour hearings will be at st. Peter 1n Chains cathedral,
Cincinnati, and Knights or Columbul Hall, Dayton.
Archbishop Daniel E. Pllarciyk and Auxiliary BlshcpJames H. Garland
of Cincinnati are to preside at the hearlnp, wldcll will feature two houn of
oral tl!lltlmoay and then question-and--• nas between the bllhop8
and the audiences. The ~ are open 1D the general public, not Just
Catllollca.
. The U.S. bishops prompted bothpralleandsharpcrltlel8mNov.ll when
t11ey relealed the lint draft of their put«aJ letll!r. Crltlcl uld the bllhopl
werelllllklnC a polltlcalltatement In the !10,000-wmllettA!I'. clelcrlbed bY
IIOIDI! as a biD of rllbts for the poor and job'm. ·
111e bllhopl cha~Jeo&amp;M the United StateiiD'adopt the poaltlon ihat all
people have economic rllbtl and that IOCiety II morally obiJ&amp;Pd ID "ellllll'e
that
011e 81110111 • 11 hungry, bon
u.np~oya~ ar otherwlle
deak!d what Is nee e •xy IDI!vewtth dllnll)'." Some~ uld the bllhop8
were advwatlne ~tlon r1 a welfare stale.
Beeaueoai:Y two llounoltlmewDI be aveM•bJefororal commelltatthe
· J11111181Y belrlDp, aJct.dlicren omcta11 ue apectlng that mo.t of the
ClCI7IIIMIII will be obtained In WJ1t1n1. 'l1le ardldloa!le II cllltrlbuttni
~ torma to tbe public to 11111re ea11er the mau1ve Job or.
cdlectllll aD the ~leriiJ b' relay 1D the Na~ Conference of Catholic
J3lllqB' ofllce 1n Wl!lflln&amp;tOn.

.,......
..

no

er•.

.,

At the end or the year I always
have a three-vodka-martini lunch
with my mole from the Soviet
embassy in Washington. His code
name Is "Nutcracker." .
"So tell
what's .new In the
Krekniin?" I asked him.
"We are cutting defense research
bY 75 percent," he said.
"Come on, Nutcracker, planting
KGB disinfonnation with me will
get you nowhere."
"Is true. Politburo made decision
early this year to stop developing
new weapons because they were
getting too expensive,"
"So how do they expect to keep up
the arms race if they don't spend
trillions of rubles lor research and
.development?"
"Is simple. We plan to let
Americans spend money to do
scientific
work and then we
buy It from you."
"You doo't tlitnit the United
, States is going to seu the Soviet
Union our military weapon
aecrets?''
"Not, directly from manufac·
turer, but weCIIIIalwaysaolhrouah
the mlddlenuln."
.
"Wbat mlddlenian?"
I
"Somebody who workl for . .
tense contractor aild wants to make
little eictra money ID ac~
American dream. ••
"Wbat exactly do you mean bY
that?" .
.
''Take Stealth bomber. You
people spent bllUons or dollars to
develop airplane that could escape
Soviet radar. We., had choice or

me,

dirtY

spending twice as much to find
answer, or buy plans from one of
your people In California. We found
engineer whO delivered bluepnnts
to us lor $25,000. Was alotolmoney,
but stlli cheaper than starting from
scrarch and buUdlng Stealth born·
ber of our own."
"That's dirty pool,".l said. "In an
arms r.~ each side is expected to
pay top dollar for developing its
own weapons. It's \1(11 fair of the
Soviets to make us do all the work
and then go out to Callfonita and
buy the system lor a song." ·
"Sue us for patent infringement,"
Nutcracker said. "Comrade, I will
tell you · dark secret. ~saian
computers 'lousy, and ,if we had to
depend on them for .new weapons,
we would have d10pped out or anna
race long ago. The only thin&amp; keep ,...
Russian war machine going is
American' know-bow."
"How do you find these mlddlerflen who sell our secreta?"
"Is easy, We plug into credit
rating l)'ltern on cheap Apple
computer, and find CaiJ1orDia
defenle worker who Clll't make
payment~ on
TheD we &amp;o to
him and pay inOrtgqe in I!'JlChanae
tor 111111 to guidance system lor MX
mlsalle."
·
"Why have you concentrated on
California?"
"Because . nobody can pay his
mortgage In California...
"You would think the Soviets
would have too much national pride
to reproduce a weapolil l)'lltem
Americans have workect on for

houae:

years."
"Is not question of · pride. Is
question of cost. Soviet taxpayers
gelling tlred of .paying so much
money for defense. U Moscow can
deliver bigger rumble for a ruble,
Soviet peoples don't care who came
up with Idea first."
"Is $25,000 the highest price the

Doonesbury

Kremlin wilf pay for an American ·
weapons system?"
"That's all Moscow has allotted
in R&amp;D milltary budget lor 191!5.
But if someone wants to sell us
'secrets of 'Star Wars' we would go
to $50,00), even if we had to take
money out or sOviet school lunch
program."

BY GARAY TRUDEAU

.; , •

""f(j/

FRONTS :

Warm- Cold..-.
C::ta,tonr.. rv ~

Rain Flurries Snow

W,.,.....

WEATHER FOKECMI'I\ - 'l1le Nllllq•ll WeMher Set dee
f01'eC811111 __. In _..,.. of Orepn, Idaho,
MriJJel D
Nevada ai!d Utah. F1untes are predkted f!W Nevada, Utah,
Colorado and ~ of WyoiiUc llld Nellr 1111 Sllowen are ·
forecut from cen&amp;ral Texu to
and ea11t to the New
region- Saowls al8o forecut fGr -ofOhloandw.temNewYork
·and PI!DIIillylvanla. AP Luerpboto ),
•

Jl-·•,

.....,.Del

Extended Ohio foreoost
MONDAY TIIROUGH WEDNESDAY: fair weather in the
southern
or the state, and a chance of f!UlTies In the north
Monday. It will be mostly fair New Year's Day and Wednesday.
lllghs will be in the :lis and low 40s Sunday and mostly In the :lis New
Year's Day and Wednesday. Lows wUl .be In the mid 2Ds to low :llts
Monday morning and l5 to 25 TUesday and Wednesday.

Part

Colder weather Sunday . ·
Unseasonably warm air was forecast to continue to bring
near-record high temperatures over Ohio Saturday. .
Afternoon high$ ranged from the mid-60s to low 'Ills under cloudy
,
skies.
There could be showers throughout the state with thur.derstorms
possible in the north hall.
.
Saturday was expected to be the last day of the warm spell. A cold
front moving across Ohio wUl bring a change to colder weather
Sunday. By New Year's Eve, temperatures wUl return to near
normal for the season.
The front wUl continue to sink slowly south Sunday night and
Monday. Weak ]Ow pressure centers moving northeast aionc the
front will cause clearing to be slow over Ohio Sunday night and
Monday.

and ~ cbemlcall tQ the
clty'aRecycJeEneqySystempiant
shortly before It l!!'ploiled lUt week,
but Mayor Tcm Sawyer has
withheld blame for the accident.
Sawyer said In a III!WS . briefing
Thunday, one week after the fatal
expiOilon Dec. 21!, that the' New
Jeney waste-dllposal company,
S&amp;W Waste Inc., .~ated that~
chemicals were mixed in error
with an 8pliroved· shipment of
oU-!IOilked sawdust. . •
.
The chemicals- xylene, toluene
and methyl ethyl; ketone - are
"specifically unauthorized for use"
at the plant, Sa~r said.
' The Ohio EnVIronmental Protec:
tion Agency says the three cheml-

commissioners participated bY
leasing the ground and the children's home building, but the loan to
build the project was made possible
through thl! Meigs County Council
on Aging and the Meigs County
Elderly Housing Board, Jones
points out.
Referring to the Tuppers Plains
sanitary sewage system, Jones said
that the project is progressing.
"W~aretothi!polntnowwherewe

have wrltlen our engineering firm
andwewanttosetupameettngrlght
after the first of the year with the
citizens of Tuppers Plains. It is our
understanding the plans are now
complete." he said.
Jones says there are a lew legal
details to Iron out on the Tuppers
Plains project The public meeting
will explain In detail the project and
it is hoped to be ready to proceed
with the sewage facUlty In the
spring. From 75 to 85 percent of the
· cO!Its involved will come from the
state.
Questioned on the significance of
the gift of the Jaymar Golf Course
recently to the county bY Jay Hall,

Warm weather

NORTIIW1!m', WDIT CENTRAL
Saturday night, showers likely. Low 40 to 45. Sunday, cloody with a
chance of showers and turning colder. Temperatures falling Into the
305. Outlook for New Year's Day, partly sunny. High in thelower30s.
Chance of rain, 70 percent Saturday night and 40 percent Sunday.
CENl'RAL LAKESHORE, EAST LAKESHORE
NOR'11U;!\ST lNIAND, CEN'fttAL MGIDANDS
Saturday night, shOwers likely. Low 45 to 50. Sunday, showers
likely and turning cooler. Ten)peratures falling to around 40 by
evening. Outlook for NeW Year's Day, partly sunny. High in the
mid.JOs. The chance of precipitation is 70 percent Saturday night and
60 percent Sunday.

concerns

wheat farmers

Saturday night, showers or thunderstorms likely. Low In the lower
50s. Sunday, cloudy and turning cooler with a chance of showers.
Temperatures falling into the 40s. Outlook for New Year's Day,
partly sunny. High 35 to 40. Chance of rain Is 70 pe1cent Saturday
night and 50 percent Sunday.

'
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -:
Record -breaking, springlike
temperatures In Ohio may pose
problems -tor winter-wheat
farmers.
Warm weather at this tlmeofyear
can cause the wheat to start growing
too early, mllklng It vulnerable to
late-winter snow and freezing cold.
A freeze-and-thaw also can heave
the roots out of the ground,
espeCially In the wet ~lay sons of
northwestern Ohio, extension
agents said.
Winter wheat is sown in late fall
and is designed to suiVlvethewlnter
before corning to life in early spring
lor a midsumme~ harvest. Although
mt a profitable crop fol' many
farmers, it does provide needed
cash between com 811d soybean
planting In the spring and the fall
harvest.
The National WeatherServlce has
predicted above-normal tempera·
tures
Jail. 6.

Saturday night, mostly cloudy with a chance of showers or
thunderstonns. Low In the mld-50!1, Sunday, showers likely and
turning .cooler. High in the lower 60s. Outlook for New Year's Day,
partly sunny. lllgh 35 to 40. Chance of rain is 40 pe1 cent Saturday
night and 60 percent Sunday.
·

SEMI-ANNUAl
ClEARANCE $AlE

-

MIAMI VALLEY CENTRAL

Saturday night, showers or thunderstonns likely. Low near 50.
Sunday, showers likely and turning cooler. Temperatures laWng to
the Iower40s by evening. Outlook for New Year's Day, partly sunny.
Jngh in the mld-lls. Chance of rain is 70 pert&lt;·ent Saturday nlgbt and
60 percent Sunday.
.
'
EAST CENTRAL
Saturday night, showers or thunderstonns likely. Low near 50.
Sunday, showers likely and turning &lt;.Wier. Temperatures falling Into
the 40s. Outlook for New Year's Day, partly sunny. High in the
mld-30&lt;!. Chance of rain Is 00 percent Saturday night and 70 percent
Sunday.

SOU'l'llWI!sr

soumCENm.u.

SELECT

The nation's weather
By The AMoclaled Preas
A rush of warm Gulf air shattered high temperature records
across the Midwest and East Saturday but below-zero readings
chiDed the northern Plains and snow spread across the norlhem
United States.
An early-morning reading of 60 degrees In Buffalo, N.Y., broke a
l()l).year-old record of 55. Record temperatures In the 50s to 60s were
scattered across Iowa, Michigan, .illinois, Indiana, Mbaourl and
Kansas.
Cold air pushing south across the central Plains quickly dropped
the temperature. At Concordia, Kan,, the temperature leU from 60
degrees to 36 degrees between midnight.and 1 a.m.
In the northern Plains, temperatures were below zero and·
wind-chill factors were prediCted to be as low as 45 below zero.

numben: 643, 8237
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Friday
ntght in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, ''The Number,'' was 6l1.

In the "Pick 4!' game, the winning
numberwas8237.

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

PINE

ment

alSo

contlrmed that ioluene

a/Ill xylene were 1n samples Wten

Moscatello said, adding, "S&amp;W's
is to openly and fuliy
participate in the ongoing inquiry to
detennine. which or the waste
shipments may have contributed to
the !Ire,"
Three inen died and another
seven were Injured during the
.explosions.· Two of the Injured
remained hOSpltallzed with burns at
Children's HilSpltal-Medkal Center
of Akron. They are EmU George
Katona, 34, Usted In fair condition,
and Kermeth Bell, 49, in seriOus
condition.
Akron arson investigators
learned or the chemicals Monday
while ylsittng S&amp;w: The _prellml·
nary results of (ndependent tests
made ,bv the Akron Fire Depart-

from the plant, the mayor
Sawyer has asked law director
Harold Stubbs to discuss posSible
legalactlonwiththeSummltCoonty
prosecutor and state attorney
general's ol!lce.
The results ot further laboratory
reports and the continuing inliestigation will determine w~t legal
steps may be taken, Sawyer said.
AFindlay, Ohio rompany meanwhile, was su~ to' ~
assessing the cleanup effort . on
Frtday, Sawyer said.
The company o H Materials
was hired by the ctty:
Ci~
Bank or Toledo the
~ the
holders ofUsmUuoninconsn-:;~tion
bonds; and the Ohio WaterDevelo!}·
ment Authority, which Issued 1:be

(Continued from page AI)

bonds and financiaUy supported:the
project.
.
Sawyer.saidhewasuncertainl)ow
much the effort woold cost and who
would pay for it. 'The waste will be
· disposed of at ari un,determl~ .slte
approved bY the Ohio EPA. •

policy

Jr., Jones says thatrommlsstoners County Planning CommissiOn and
are hoping that the gift will turn out certain Individuals have brought the
to be extremely· beneficial to the · matter the attention of the right
county, givlngthe county a base on people !n Columbus. I think that
which to file for grants , for the something Important has happened
deveklJment of a complete recrea- that will bring results ·down the
tionalfacmty.
road," he states.
"Thecounty,iisell-lt'snoM!Cret
Jones Indicates that he is not
-hasnomoneytoputlntothegoll surprised that Meigs County has
course so it must be sell supporting. been given a Utter control graJ1t of
We do, however, think that If some$25,!rofor 198'i.
someone gives you a gUt or that
"I thought we deserved it last
value, especlaUy in Meigs County year. I'm grateful that we got it. I
where a recreatiOnal facUlty 1s thlnklisagrantwhichbasstartedus
badly needed, then It Is .certainly otf in the right direction and I am
something which any board of hopeful thatit will lead to a lot more
county commiSsioners would have money and a lot better program. 1
to look as real hard, and that'swh!lt think It should beanongoingthing,"
we're doing," Jones said.
·
.
Jones concluded.

to

said,

Ohio

trustee

r;::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::=;
DRIVER'S
EDUCATION
CLASSES STARJ
JANUARY 7fti
GAlliPOLIS _&amp; POMEROY
·.

AfX!\

'(till

PH. 614~446-0699

Jones points out that recreational _ _ _ _:....:__ _ _ _ _ __1~========:::=~
development grants are avallable reven ihough it does take scme time
to work them through. A drawback
to most such grants is that they
require matching funds, the commissioner reports,
"But what we're hoping and
we've already started the ball
rolling is that the land can serve as
the matching funds," Jones says.
The course Includes 60 acres of
'· .
!and and five structures .
Asked about other goals lor 198'i,
''
Jones reports that it Is hoped with
the cooperation of County Engineer
Phil Roberts, the commissioners·
can Improve more of the county's
highways.
Jones also has comments about
the access road to the Ravenswood
Brit\ge:
.
"\fie have done about everything
New York Strip Steak
we can. The ball is In the Columbus
or
coUri now. I think the .chambers of
Larxe
LobJte
r Tail
commerce In the area, the Meigs
Surffed Potat o
Broccoli Polonai.re
Salad Bar
Rolls and Butter
Sherbet and Cookie
PRESENTS:
Sixteen Nin ety-Fi ve
MARDI GRAS - Ftb.16-21, 1915 New Orleans, LA ....- ................ 1345

.

G&amp;L TOURS

CHERIY BlOSSOM FESnVAL- Apri114, 1915, Wasnit•laf'• D.C. .........I19S
IRinSH ISlES - Juno 12-21, 1915
Includes England, Walts, lrtlcmtl and
Scaliand................ _ ............... 12,200
ALASKA EXCURSION - July 1-Aiogult
1, 1915 Includes e-olian
Rockies, Mauttt luthmare, Calgary
Radea, Juneau, Fai,.anb and Ali·

chorage. Much martl. ............ l2,110
Prices iMiudt all admissions, transpartatiltll, motel accommodalioM
and lloggagtt hndling.
For lurtflor inform.tion, Jilt- ,...
tact:
Clifford King
614/245-9%69

G&amp;L
TOURS
304/744-5911

OFF ·

Browa

Cerner of s.c.tl &amp; Court

AL HARPER

for your entertainment
and dancing pleasure.

PARTY FAVORS

~

'\{~,in~
~lW'

Reservations: 446-0090, Extension 306

Dinner: 6 P.M. to Midnight
Bar S.rvite: To 1:30 A.M.

GALLIPOLIS

ANNOUNCING:
HOLZER CLINIC
CARDIAC REHABILITATION CENTER

For •••.••••••••••••••••• Patients who howe had heart attacks (acute myocardial
infarctions), heart pain (angina), or cardiac by-pass surgery.
restore patients to the highest level of activity possiTo··~···················· Help
ble and htlp rllluce the risk of future heart attacks.
Providing ........,.. Education ancl closely monitored exmise.

By •••••••·•••••••••••••••• Suzanne Mizt, M. D. Cardiologist and Center Director.

GAUIPOUS, OHIO

lloger Gilders, M. S,. Exercise Physiologist and Supervisor.

· SALES &amp; IENTALS

and Nwsint staff tr.lntd in cardiac cart.

At.......................

The lottery reported earnings of

$861,319 hun wagering on "The
Number." 'l1le earnings came

or

"It appears that the paint bottoms

were shipped with the oil sludge ''

10°/o-30°/o

BOWMANS HOMECARE
MEDICAL
SUPPLY
I

COINEI lliiD

cats are common industrial
solventl.
. .. ·
"We're seeing the beginning of a
series
fact pattenll which
ultimately, I believe, will lead to
gt!tting to the core of the events of
lalt 'Ilwnday,'' SaW)Iel' said.
Harry Moacatello, director of
envlronmelltal atralrl for S&amp;W,
based In Kearny, N.J., said his
company sent two shipments at
dlttercnt times Dec. 20 to the Akron
plant.
.
Although both shipments had
sawdust mixed with on sludge, an
approved waste tor the pJant, one
may have also contained residues
from paint pigment tank bottoms,
MOIICatdio said.
Thole residues weri!su~ to
be shipped to a federally approved
haZardous-wutelandfUi,hesald.

• "
MeigS
.. L-------~-------r----'----

State zone forecasts

Lottery winning

'

.

on

Holzer Clinic Sycamore Branch facility in Gallipolis .

saleS of $1,482,o.11, while holden or

Beginning.,,,_,,, February 1915

$620,716.

Consisting of ;,.,, ThrH 1-hour exercise periods a wHk for 12 ·11 weeks,

winning tickets are entitled to shai'e

'

In the parimutuel "Pick4" game
'
sales totaled
Sl86,m. Holden ot
Winning tlcket8 are enUtled to 45
percent, or ·IIM,1rr7. A w1nn1nc S1
stral8ht ticket earns S3,7U, A
winning 11 boxed ticket earns $156.

. pi• education and EIIG t111ing.

'

The Munber: slx:four·three.
PICk 4: ellht-two-three-RYcn.

Insurance ctYII'agt by Mlllicare, Blue Shiald, Aetna and mest poup plaM
LOCALLY OWNED. OPERATED BY:
RICHARDI .• MARY ANN BOWMAN

To learn mort or regittll' for this new pragrilil, consult your doctor and/ or call
Ho~zar (lillie's c.••I•IY Dljl&amp;tiiMilf at 446-5341•
.- ---

,. '"

..

�'
P8gB A-4-The Sunday T..,._Sentinel

OPEN
NEW YEAR'S DAY

Area deaths
F.cill Blevins

Cheri Hutchlnlm r:4 Huntington,

:!e~~:J='
Walker and Todd Kincaid, all at

GALLIPOLIS - Estlll Blevins,
66, Thurman, died Friday In
University Hospital, Coluinbus.
Born Feb. l3, 1918; at Webbville,
1&lt;¥-. son of the late James Monroe
81)11 Ella Graham Blevins, he was a
bricklayer and World WariiAnny
veteran.
He married Arlene Ratllft, who
. sw:vtves, 01) July 5,1946, at Ironton.
Also surviving areftvedaughters,
Mrs. Joan Harris, Mrs. Sheila Jones
and Chastity Blevins, aU or Thurman, Mrs. MardeDa Erskine of
Manon, and Mrs. Greta K1ng of
Jackson; two sons, Galen of Oak ·
Hill, and Jeffrey of Thurman; three
brothers, Claude of .Uhland, Ky.,
and Emmett and Charles, both. of
Grayson, Ky.; two sisters. Hazel
Wfl8ht and Els_le Keeney, both of
Sandy Hook, Ky.; and 13
giandchlldren.
'
HewasprecededlndeathbYason,
three brothers aJtd two sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday In WUlls Funeral
HQme, · with the ReV. James A.
Hanna otflclatlng. Burial wtU be In
Hlii Cemetery, near Thurman.
Fnends may call at the funeral
home from 4-9 p .m. Tuesday.

home; and a maternal grandmother, Mrs. Walter A. Lusk of
Huntington.
Funeral seiV!ces wtU be held at 1
p.m. Monday In WWJs Funeral
Horne, with the ReV. James L. Bunn
omclatlng. Burial wtU bi! In Ohlo
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m . today.

Dr. Serge Kokinas ·
MASON , W.Va. - Dr. Serge N.
Koklnas, 85, New Haven. W.Va.,
died Friday In Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Dec. 10, 1899, IIi Troplzund,
Turkey, son ot the late Nicholas and
lonna Koidnas, he wall a doctor at
Lakin State Hospital tor12years.
· Swvlvlng Is his wife, Seraphine I .
Koklnas.
FuneralseiVIces wiD be held al2
p.m. today In Foglesong Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Anthony
Splrtas otflclatlng. Burial will be In
Graham Cemetery.

Mabel Sayre

Helen Filzftandolph

POINT PLEASANT - Mabel
Leone Sayre, 69, Leon, W.Va., died
POINT PLEASANT - Helen E .
. Friday at her residence following a
· FllzRandolph, 81, Rt. 1, Point
brief lllness.
Pleasant, died Friday night at her
She was a . member of Creston
residence.
United Methodist Church.
Born Oct. 18, 1903, a! Lansfteld,
Swvlvlng are her husband, LusMass., daughter of the late Harry
ter E. Sayre; three sons, Everett ot
and Winifred Stearns Fisher, she
Johnstown, Delbert of Cottageville,
was a member of Main Street
W.Va.,andJamesofEvans,W.Va .;
Baptist Church.
two daughters, Sheila Parsons of
Surviving are her husband, O.L.
Leon, and Sandra Legue of Mount
"Tubby" FltzRandolph; three
daughters,
JosleHenry
Andrist
of Galesb\ll'g, Ill., Kay
of Anniston,
Ala., and Marjorie Holt of Charleston, W.Va. ; a son, Douglas B. of
Virginia Beach, Va. ; aslster,Ednah
Crislip of Portland, Ore.; and l3
grandchildren and five great·
grandchildren.
The body will be cremated and
there wtU be no visitation. Memorial
set;vlces are set for Jan. 61n Main
Street Baptist Church, with the Rev.
R. Lane Andrist and the Rev. James
Stlnesprlng officiating.
Arrangements were by CrowRussell Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant.

'

Price• good

..-ve The Right

GALLIPOLIS- Edgar ''Dutch"
Rutherford, n, 434 Jackson Pike,
Galllpolls, died at 4: 45 p.m . Friday
In Holzer Medical Center, having
been In falling health for the past

year.
Born Nov. 8, 1913, at Galllpolls,son

LB.

of the late Thomas and Ida Sowards
Rutherford, he was a stationary
englntier at Galllpolls State institute
when he retired In 1979.
A ham radio operator, he had an
advanced license and recently
qualltled as ait examiner.
He married VIola Morrow, who
survives, on Oct. 17, 1934, at
Catlettsburg, Ky.
Also surviving are a son, John of
Garden Grove, Cant.; two grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Edith
Zimmerman otBaltlmore, Md.
He was preceded In death by four
brothers.
Funeral services will be held at i
p.m . Monday In Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home, with the ReV.
Denny Coburn officiating. Burial
wtU be In Pine Street Cemetery.
Friends ' may call at the funeral
home from &amp;-9 tonight.
Pallbearers will be Joe Melton,
Jerry Mallette, Clarence Anderson,
Tom Crossen, Frank Burke and Jeb
Webster.
Honorary pallbearers will be Joe
McCormick, Charles GUntlllen, Jim
Erwin and John Paxton.

$199

II.

.'•

••

.· ll.

lL$1.19

$259 ~-

12

FRANKIES

II.

$269

oz.

99(

Mi:Nb 8WOBN IN- IIOIII'II'd Fraitk, left, WIIIM8 . . aadl of
oflloeJ\" 0 DNI .... b)'MelpColdyeom..-l'leMJudpCii..-lel
KDIJII*.J'rlllk wllleplly IIMidile 1M dldles II Melp Couil&amp;y'sllierltl .
011 tile 1mt ~ In .JIIIIUIII'Y - mldul&amp;ht 011 .Ju. 8. Vraak. a
RepeM•, 1111 bid lor olllce Iii Nov~, deh n llf .James J.
l'n.at, two tum DllnoeniUc lllierUI In Melp Couaty.

PORK

SHOULDER
STEAK .

t·/ .

$1 39 ,
LB.

'

BONELESS TOP
'

BACON

$1.29

II.

$189

PRE-SLICED

BOLOGNA

Steveo Halley, :rl, Cheshire, was

soulhboundon0hlo7,whentroopers
said a car driven bY Robert White,
· 70, Marton. attempted to merge

.•.- 99&lt;

frOm the exit r-amp of the Sllver
Memorial Bridge onto 7 and struck
Halley's car In the lett side.
No InJuri\!!! were reported In the 4
p.m. accident, which caused moderate damage to White's car and light
darriagetoHalley's. Whltewasclll!!l
bY troopers for failure to yield:
No InJuries were reported follow·
lnga4p.m. accldeotattheentrance
ramp to the brttige.
Rebecca-Haer, 24, PolntPieasant,

lAR-S

. CHOPPED
HAM

BOB EVANS

SAU-SAGE

$189'

LONGHORN $199
CHEESE
II.
SUPERIOR

$1.69

PEPPER
'LOAF

II.

$249 }

DOG
FOOD

2s11.

TREND

1470Z.$3 59

8 PACK
CTN.

PEAK

16 Oz.
1'-.:- = - - = - --

'

75

Bottles

$1.4
. lllus

(

STOKELY ASSORTED

CORN, GREEN 'BEANS
BEETS &amp; KRlttT

- Multimedia; Inc. Se·
at GallipoHs,
45631 . Entered at second class
' 11"!'""'~~~--m atter at Pomeroy, Ohio ,

· ll·~~~a class postage paid

1 I 3 Off

A.D.C •• ELECTRIC
PIIX, DRIP,
REGULAR

POMEROY - Ruth Ryan, Ma·
son, w. Va., wasawardedaCabbage
Patch doll lliVen as a part of the
holld8y promotional program of the
Pomeroy Flower Sllop• .

$649
. 3 LB. CAN

Medical Serv1ces repOrts.
At 8: «1 a.m., Synicuse took Holly
Roblolan from Frotl Boulevard to
IJober Medical Center; ~ppers
PlaiDs at 12: 42 p.m. took Nathan
~

to CamdeD-a.rk Hoepltal In
Plrlterlblarl. W.Va.; Syracuse at
8:118 p.m. took • An1Y Yates to
Vele'alil MemCll'JII Rolpltal, and
the Parneroy.U111t •• lO: p.m. took
Ellen .Glbbl from the Punetoy
Healtb Cu-. Ceoter to Vek!raDI

.

r

1

t

All PIIIPOSE. LONG WOOL
AND WOOL PANT ·

.

25°/o Off

Coats

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE
. ...

..

'1800

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WHEN ·
YOU NEED IT.
If you are like most people with hearin1loss you hear well
in some situ1tions 1nd h1ve diHicultY in others. A new
he1rin1 aid has been developed thlt can·live you the help
you need, when you need it. The Ar1osy CCA Cl111l hearin1
1id is so tiny it Cln be inserted in a 1111Her of seconds. It
fits comfortably within the ear Clnal and Is barely visible.
Help is finally here to those "part time" hearin1 problems.

New Year's Day
1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

300 Second Avenue
'Lafayette ·Mall
Gallipoli1

.

•
·'

DILES
liNG AID
CENTER

"

l·

••

Ad!lllttlld - lfrt Ill PatleriOII,

Hartbd. W.Va.; WDiielmiDI 'Jbo.
11181, Lose Buttmll Jaclde !lmltll,
,...,.. • t: EUaa Glllbl. PuDeloy.

a.cbarled -

.

Dally Sayre,
Katllerllle Klein. Catbslne ~•
VlriD Pratt, Helen Burldlart, Pear·
lie J~ A~ Swett. Ellen

Glbbl.

'

'

' '1

''

•CIRCULAR SPECIALS.
• 112 PRICE CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE
·•CLEARANCE IN MOST DEPARTMENTS
•MANY TOYS ._ RfDUCED PRICES

.'

y,,,

WOILD-WIDE TRAVEL TOURS
FEBRUARY

9th
16th-17th
22nd-ler. 4th
17th
25th-29th

APRIL

APRIL

· Mystery
Norfolk/Williemsburc
Myrtle Bnc:h/Chlrleston

C.Rida 811 &amp; Treln
Spirit of Wuhlncton DC.
Mystery
Atlentle City
Glenn HouH Resort &amp; 1.000 lsl1nds
New York City
G11nd Ole Opry
Gospel Sin&amp; in thl S1110kits
JULY

S/S Norway/WADC Radio
London Tht1t11

13th

16ih-20th
27th-lly 3rd
lltfl·l7th
23rd-2611T
25th-26tfl
9th-15th
13th-16th
14th·1.5th
17th-21st
23nl-30th
26th-Jul. lst
27th-30th
28th-Jul. 1st

.•

P/1/H
Upper Mithipn/lllnukn/Gittllbly
6th-13th
G11nd Ole Opry
lith-14th
Pollr Bllr E~q~rtsa
14th·22nd
New Eqlend/Nova Scoti1
20th-Auc. 5th
Chltllnoop/GIIIItl Olt Opry
24th-21th
AU OUST

South Wnt ClnJIInllnds
Grand Olt Opry
N• Encland •
G11nd Olt Opry
Dtlewn Dtlllflt
To11111to, CIMIII

l2th-23rd
15th· lith
lSth-25111
2ZIId·25..
29111-Sipt. 2nd
29th-Sept. 2nd

. SEPTEMBER

7th-13th
. . 14th
13tll-27tll
1&amp;111·20&amp;11

21tl1·29111

Srlellltl Craft festlwl
· foli111 h! II• fllllld

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

.•

Clart l01lltllrls
Floltdl

DECEMBER

lllthltlltll, ....,.......
WIUiallliMJit CllrtltiiU

,

.,

4 days Honolulu plus HIWiii Cruise
10th-20th ,
I Wetk llawlii hnllsy
3rd·llth ' •
AlntnJk C111ny Blossom to W.shirtton. D.C. 1 IOtll-14111
4-!SIInd Hmii
20th-ley 4th ·,
JUNE

Holy lind Tour
Honolulu/Lis Vtps Option
. 4-liland Hl.. ii
. Brillnnil-lritish Isles

10th-20th .,
l2th·22nd · •
15th-29th
19th-July 2nd '

JULY

Sin Freneisco/Haweii/l.ls Veps
4-lsllnd HIWill
Sctt1ic Se111dinavil
Inside PuSip/Aiaska Cruise

6th-19th •
13th-27th •
13th-27th
20th-30th

AUGUST

Cimini "Holiday" Cruise
Ainu Tour/Princess Cruise

10th-17th
20th-30th . '

SEPTEMBER

lbtriln DisccMTw l'ortlwJI/$plin/ llorocco
Delue 4-lsland Hawaii
Ro111ntic Germllfty

9th-25th •
14111·28th · '
17th-29th

OCTOBER

Amtnk Follqe Tour to Chlrlottmille
lllh-13tb :
Honoltlu/l.li Veps Option
9th-19th •.
12th-25th
Sill Fran/Ha.ii/l.ls Veaas
Aslin hptritnet Tour
l2th· Nov. 3rd ..
NOVEMBER

Dlltlt 4-lsllnd Hawaii

7th-21st

DECEMBER

Honoltlu/Lis Veps Option

4th-14th '.'

- - . : L I P COU!'()N AND MAIL T O - -

.
OITAOUI

~-

GAWPOLIS
~1\MiJ Agei!CJ :·

Ph. 446-0699

ave! , i' •

. HO Second
' Glllipolis, Ohio 45131
Plene send mt inforNtion on the
followinc tours ...

-------~---- "

.......... ., ,
.. OVEMIER

16th-23rd , ·
25th-Apr. lsi :·

'

4111-7th
14tll-19111

------------------------·

·- ---------~----IPbO~Ie ___~

AddrtiS -~- ------~--

126W. .U..SIIwt

.,

"Two lsllnd EsCipe" Honolulu &amp; llaui
13tll-21st · '
Aupulco
23rd·Mar. 2nd : ·
:zR~~
26th-llr. 7th ,

OCTOBER

'

69&lt;
..

~

Ice CeptdtS
Mystery ·
florida

IIJstiiJ

I

89&lt; '

.'

FEBRUARY

El&amp;ln H- llnort/IUUoti Llkts
Cijlt ..,(lllllttlc Clly/WIIIOWIIIaot
Elatn CIMdl
'
Pemsylnlil Dutc. C0111try

Manol1aL

YELLOW
RED OR YEllOW .
CALIFORNIA
IDAHO
DEUCIOUS
.
COOKING
'APPLES .. ORANGES . ONIONS
.POTATOES
lUI.
Ill.
ILl.
lAG $179 ·, llG
~:GLI·$1 · 79 ... lAG
.

'I

OPEN

MOTORCOACH TOUIS

m.

I

'.

In Stgle ... TRAVEL

Emergency runs

81NGLBCOPY
PRICE
MC..nto

.......... .. ...... .. .. ......... $31.20
...... .. .... ..... .... .... ...... IIUJ

IlEAl

.1

WILL BE

MARCH

Doll winner

One Month .................... ... ... .. ... $4.80

llalel~doOIIIo

... 446-0955

"

MURPHYS MART

JUNE

By Curter or Motor Rou•e
One Week ...... ....... .......... ..... , ... $1.10

Weeki ..... ............. .. ........... SM.80

(614)

CONVENIENCE

Cslsh,ste ths ·Nsw

NOW

SUIIIICRIPTION RATES

Weeki .... .... ....................... SM.U
26 Weeki ........................ ..... .. $:19.12
1~ Weeks ...... ........ ........ .. ....... S14.56

6 A.M. to 6:30 P.M.
41 D Jacluen Pike, Gallipolis

St. Patrick's DIY
Amish Country &amp; l.lncuter Outlets

POMEROY - Four calls were
answei1!d by local units on Frtday,
the Melp County Emergmcy

~2

THE

Van damaged

COFFEE

25°/o Off

MAIL 8VUCRIPTION8
IMIHOIIIO

conhle.'s
got 1tl

'

.MAXWELL HOUSE

PETIH "''rl RH;U! /\I&lt;

l:~~~.~~t~::t~~ach
Sunday,
Third
the- Ohio
Vallf"Y825
PUblish-

o.n,aods-My

'j:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::;:;::;::~
II

Miss Paula's
Day Care Center

Sprlnc in the Cetskllls
Grend Ole Opry
Indy 500

SWEATERS, BLOUSES, SLACKS
and SKIRTS in Petite &amp; Regular

MAIL 8VUCRiri'ION8
,
londayOnly
year ... .. ................ .'.. ....... S26.80
months .......... ................ .. S13.00

SOON/

GALLIPOLIS - A Rt. 2, VInton
manwaslodgedlntheGaillaCounty
JaUfollowlnghlsarrestSaturdayon
a charge of drtvlng while under
financial responslbillty suspension.
Gleo E. Polley, 29, was arrested
bY the Gallla County Sheriffs
Department.

DeP.,ait

Starting Friday at 9:30 A.M.

t\ M•llimedla.New8paper

The Sunday TlmH-St:&gt;ntlnel will not
l)e respontlble for advance payments
tnade by carriers.

was . northbound on 7 and was two-tenths of a mile north of Ohio
apparently attempting a left turn 124, when !he Gallla-Melgs post of
onto the brtdge when her vehicle' the State Highway Patrol said she
was struck by a car driven bY apparently went ott the rtght side of
Cynthia Myers, 29, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
the road and Into a ditch. Vanmeter
which was southbound on 7.
was not Injured In the 4: ll p.m.
· Myers' car SUBtalned heavy accident.
damage In the collision and Haer's
A Dexter woman escaped Injury
light damage. Haer was cited by · when her car went ott the right side
troopers for failure to Yield when of Ohio 692 and struck a guardrail fP;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;:~
turning left.
Thursday evening.
.
A car driven bY a 19-year-old
Naomi Sims, 31, was westbound
on 002, approximately three-tenths
Langsvllle wOman sustained mod·
erate dan'lage In a one-car accident
of a mile east of Ohio 143, when
on Meigs County Road 15 Thursday
troopers !!Bid she apparently lost
afteernoon.
control of her car. The 6: 15 p.m.
Raclnda K. Vanmeter was south- Incident caused .light damage to
Sims' vehicle, troopers said.
bound on 15, approximately one and

FOR YOUR
SHOPPING

MAY

Dresses

avalht.ble.

deadly chemical In two ll).foot-long
containers was secured at Norfoik
International Tennlnals a! 6: ll
a.m., said Coast Guard Lt. J.g. Ron
Terry.
.
An Initial Inspection bY two Coast
Guard safety olftcers showed "nothing out of compliance" With' the
ship or Its cargo, Terry said.
He said the ship would be
unloaded after 8 a.m.
·
The chemical known as MIC has
been shipped througlt the port about
four limes a mooth for the past 10
years with no problems,

Vinlon man jailed

Sf$200

USP 125·818

•

month.
The 644-foot American Rigel,
Ioadedwlth$155-Rallondrumsofthe

GALLIPOLIS -Three Galllpolls
cited by city pollee
Friday.
Anthony D. Burnhelmer, 26, :JIY.,
Court St.; was cited for DWI.
Douglas A. Boles, 21, 1m Third
Ave., was charlled with nienacblg,
and David M. Wandling, 22, 1739
Chatham Ave., :was cited for ·
squealing tires.

PEPSI
MT. DEW &amp; DIET RITE

2%
MILK

iJ•fth•J 'fi111N • atfttiMI

subscrlptloru by mall pt&gt;rmltled
towns where motor carr!er service

wasrejectedbYBrazlllnlhi!wakeof
the deadly chemical leak that killed
more than 2,000 people earlier this

men were

DEfERENT

nat!

'*'-·

November'uh
batb Koblea&amp;uod . J - were 11100 1 MID 111e1r
'*IJPIIplll lor re rh ~ and wiD ...,....... 111e1r c1ut1ea 11 eleded
olllelals be1l1•41i1 Ju. 2 and Jan. a, lcapedlvely,

Cita~s iMued
'

. SUNSHINE

PINTO
BEANS
GALA
TOWELS II. lOll

NORFOLK, Va. (AP)- A ship
carrying 15 tons of methyl lsocyanate .docked here Saturday after It

vehl~accldent ~Y afternoon.

SUPI.OI'S

CALL (614) 992-2104
-1244

chemical-laden ship docks at U.S. port

GAU.IPOLIS A Marlon
. C0UDty man was cited bY the
GaDia·Mef&amp;l post r:4 the State
Highway Patrol tollowing a two-

.HOMEMADE

CHICKEN
SALAD

Carbi~e

TAKING OATH- Melp Couaty CcJIIDI I I •ltft O.WI JWoJe;...
left, IUid IUduird "-were IIWOI'IIlD FltdiQ&lt; na'*'a by Charte8
Klllaht, Melp Cclaiity UIIIUJ- pleu' Judie. "- lnaunbeolli In

Two cited in separate accidents

ROUND
STEAK

PRE-SLICED

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERA~ ALLERGIST

'

.SIRLOIN ·
STEAK
SUPERIOR

J$12==cw~ll~.:e~nd~~~on~one:y:e~r~:t~-~Ronde::U~R~-;Po:tts~,18:,~W.:e:Ustoil:~~_.:,
JOHN A. WADE, M.D-~. -Inc. ·:,
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

$199 :

BONELESS

SHOULDER ROAST

VALLEY BELL

; ClNCINNATI (AP) - TheCincln·
school board and teachers say
they wtU extend contract talkS
beyond the Monday expiration date
(or the teachers' current contract.
The two sides remained far apart
Frtday on wages and other Issues,
Including class size.
· "The talks are progressing
slowly, If at aD," said James
Lawrence, school hoard attorney.
':There are scores of Issues stlll
unresolved. and on many of them,
We're In total disagreement. There
Is absolutely no chance of resolving
t1iis bY Monday."

l

SMIAL'IIMIS
DAILY.

PORK

LB.

mood, 32, Toledo, $39; MalrolmB.
lloelllellllpendedforQldaysonthe Ward, II&amp;, Rt.l,BidweU,$39; Den!k"
ciJarle. Hll ftne and costs on a s . King, 27, New Haven, W.Va.,$43; •
Merrill 0. Ritchie, 40, Addlsoo. $f0:· ·
III*"'IJC dtar1le were suspended.
Senli!nced to ~ days In the . Cheryl L. Kittle, 23, Point Ph$··
county jaU tor no driver's license sant. $41; Robert L. Rollins, %1,
· wu Brian W. CulPePper, 21, Marshville, N.C., $4.1; Linda L':•
Dayton. CuJpeiJper was also tined MacGregor, 66, Man, W.Va .. ~(

-

RUMP
ROAST

Thank you,
John Ellingson, Principal
Gallia Academy High School

'

II.

LEAN JUICY

.o.......

ChUIIcothe, $'!9; Kenneth RJCtl.;

pea)Je,wualloplaced&lt;in18mooths

'•

99(

Contributions should be sent to:.{

Talks extended
past expiration
of contract

ECKRICH
All MEAT

CUBE
STEAK

Forfellln&amp;bondforspeelllncwere

probatloll and had his driver's

•
•

BEEF ·

IIDIId $.11) In ('.alllpnlll Muolclpal

~.

OlurtFrldayooaDWiciJarle.
· Latonya R. Kine~ :.1, Point
Cbm1es L . Bandy, 63, o.e.a- Pleuant, $:Jf. Phyllis McGuire, 62;'

Limit

BOLOGNA

'j

da)'IID the GaWa Couoty JaU and

In otber traftlc

Lawsaxe

Counl)o111111wu~ to~

•

·GROUND

A.

Mark E. j
~. J8, Rt. 2, ('.alllpnl", b'fl!lted4
140 band for an expired l"l'lll8tratlbn:•

GALLIPOLIS -

Monday. Jan. 5, 1985

R.

In response to numerous inquiries
regarding contributions to the
Hubert Harder Memorial
·Scholarship Fund for ·
Gallia Academy High School

GALLIPOLIS - Barbara J.
Kincaid, 36, Patriot Star Route, died
early Saturday at her residence.
Born May 18, 1948, at Huntington,
W.Va., she was the daughter of the
late James W. Dallas and Patsy B.
Dallas of Huntington.
Also sutvlvlng are her husband,
Glenn Kincaid; two daughters,

'

MONDAY 9-10
WED. THIU S.T. 9-10

Edgar Rulherford

Hubert Harder
Memorial Scholarship .Fund
&lt;;ommercial and Savings Bank
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

2II 30. 1184

10 111 10

Alto, W.Va.; a brother, Joe Fox of
Evans; and seven grandchildren
and a great.graridchlld.
Funeral SI!1"VIces will be held at 2
p.m. today In Casto Fuueral Home,
With the ReV. Gerald Sayreomctatlng. Burial wtU be In Otterbein.
Cemetery, E;vans.

r.:==============:::::::::;-1

Barbara j_ Kincaid

0.0.:

December 30. 1984

Ohio- Point Pleeunt. W. VB.

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�Ohio Pu,nt

•

Commission
OKsbidding

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.r1.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Commlssloners, meeting lor lhetr
l!nal session of the year Friday,
agreed to advertise for bids ana new
graderforthehlghwaydepartment.
: Ted Wamet' 8lld Phil Roberts of
t)le county highway departrnimt
were named to talk to sa1lsbury
Township Trustees about malnteriance of a dralnage pipe which
apparently Is Overflowing on Shot.
gun Hollow Road.
w~ reported to commiSSIOn·
e.rs that mud on county roads Is not a
Jli'Oblem, but potholes have
developed.
In other business ,
commissioners:
-Approved Interdepartmental
transfers and established maxi·
mwn standards for 1985 as outllned
by the state for general relief and
housing allowances.
: - Tabled for further study a
rontract to establlsh paternity, chlld
support and slm11ar matters.
-Approved an Increase In pay·
ments for foster chlld carefrom$116
. a month to $lll). Some foster
chlldren are eligible for statemoney
whlle some must be paid for by the
county.
.
-Named Commissioner David
Kriblentz to attend a meeting on the
Conununlty Action Agency Program In Point Pleasant on Jan. 25.
-Approved year-end transfers to
balance the auditor's budget.
-Signed grant agreements for a
new litter control program.
. -Approved payment of bWs
wlltch have come In since the cutoff
date. Thlswlllreducetheamountot
carry over money In 1~ but the
payments will not come out of the
1985 appropriations.
-Agrt!ed to help Scipio Township
Trustees In any way possible In
securing pipe water from the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dis·
1J1ct to Pagetown. Appointments to
various boards were discussed but
tio action was taken.

By LEE ANN WELCH

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-= !I a.
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, - 'l'lmel S lilciel SWf
~LIS ~ As 1984
cernes to a clole and we prepare
• tousber lnl!e, thole who make
Gaillpolls and~ Couqty !1d&lt;
took the tlnie to view their past
.and develop pia for the future.
' In .t he . J1llll week, city and
county otflclals, along with otber
community iervlce providerS,
took the opportunity to look back
on 'the goals set In 1984 and what
was, or wasn't accomplished.
They also gave consideratiOn to
the . future of GalllpoUs and "
Gallla' County, and where the
area may be heading.

Josepn carler, supertntelldenU
ot Gallipolis City Schools, said
hi$ overall concert for 1983 Is the
"continued success of (Gallipolis 9Jty Schools), as evidenced In
· the past year by our staff ll!ld our
teachers.
"I've been extremely pleased
becalise we got back test sea~
on our stud!!lltS, and they
perfonned above the state and
natlon81 level. It's an bnprovement over last year, It's an
· Indication of a good currlculwn
8114 I think we're getting support
·from parents, staff and
students."
.'
Carter said he's looking far·

lr--"!"""--.

ward to 1985 with the schools,
hoping to contln~,~e high aca·
dem1c achievement from stu·
dents and have sound fiscal
. management. He said he wants
to address the bu1ldlng needs,
preventive maintenance and
relieving .the crowding or sev·
· enth and e!ghth grade students ·
at Gallla Academy.
"It'• one thing the board and
staff are going to have to make.a
deCision on this year," Carter
said.

serve the I.'OI'IIIriilntty. such as
LIFELINE, the llelllor's health
rnalDtance proerams, slbllni
and grlllldpar8lts vlsltatiGil, the
doll "btrlh C!!rtl11cates," and
KISS (Kids In · Safe Seats) for

'Infants.

••tt was a~ year," accordRay Bush, acting chief ot

Ing to

the GalllpoUs Volunteer Fire
. Department. "
In 1984, Bush said there were
no. major fires In the approxl·
mately 250 alarms made to the
Another service touching
department.
most of the county · Is Holzer ·
"We hope, · In 1~. to have
Medical Center. Charles I. Ad·
better self consciousness of fire
k1ns Jr., HMC's chief executive
(hazards). To do this, Bush said
officer, said much was acwmpthe department wDI try to better
llshed In 1984, and he's looking
educate the public on the hazard
forward to 1~.
Itself, and preventative mea·
Topping the list for next year, ' sures Gall!a Countlans can take,
Adkins said plans are tit the
· like smoke ·~tectors In their
works for developing a radiohomes.
therapy department and getting
a linear accelerator and sbnula·
There was a maj&lt;)r change
tor for the treatment of cancer.
within the Gall!polls City Pollee
Also on his list for the coming
Department during 1984, when
year Is "providing the best
Chief Garland Nlberl retired,
possible medical care without
and Sgt. Joe Owen wasnamedto
the need for anyone to leave the
that spot In the Interim.
community.!'
Owen said he's adjusting wen
But how did Holzer Medical
to the new responsibility of
Center do In 1984? Very well,
leading the department, and has
Adkins said. A number of
set some goals tor l!Mfi.
Pl'OIII'ams were established to
"I want to see us strive to

effectiveness ot the pollee cJe.
partment," be said. 'I,'IIe pollee
will ~ active In the Kid
Print program tor the schools
and pn!-!K;hools, and Owen said
he hope to add ailother phase to
their public service next year.
"We want to try to start a drug
awlll'(!l1ess Progrljl111n the city,"
Owen said. 'Ibe department
already has material gathered,
and Is prepared toglveaemlnars
to thole groop; w!ahlng one.
Most ot all, Owen said, he
wants to sees the pollee dePart·
ment "Do the best job we can for
GaDipolls."

'

Dow 8''Tdrm~ db' WIIUI. .
llioaer, bellevea 1985 wUI be
criUcalllllanclaDy for GaDipnlls

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

Jpdge rules in
couple's favor .

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iii •

·By NANCY YOACHAM
Tl111111 Sallluel staff
POMEROY - What are your
hopes tor Meigs County In 1985?

.

Cllrll Morrtl, dty Jlllllllll'!l',
aaya cooperallim bet11een city
and counly Is a 1111 gOal.

I
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of recreation becomes
avaUable for the kids so they'll
be ott the streets and doing
something coMtructlve. I also
·1'hJs
the question asked of hOpe tor lots cit peace and good·
several Meigs County residents will toward fellow man ."
this past week. Here are their
Shirley Cagar: "lid like to see
answers:
our county ·prosper. I'd like to
D. Michael Mullen: "I would see more jobs come to the area
like to see the economic picture
so our kids and husbands can
In this county brlghten consider·
find work at home. And I'd Uke
ably. I would also like to see to see some kind of recreation
more Involvement by the res!· centers for our young. We need
dents ot this county In the to keep lbem occupied and out of
.
various civic and charitable trouble.
·"For my family and friends, I
organlzatloM located here. Af.
ter all, It Is Our county and we are · hope for prosperity and good
an 1n the same boat, so to health,
.
"For the world, I hope for
speak."
Shari BlackweU: "My hopes peace and I hope tor a solution
In 19lrS are that there will be for feeding all the hungry people.
more jobs open up for the people
"I also hope to see new girl
of Meigs county and that some scout troops formed for ldndger·
kind

was

~

. . .!IIIII
l!flbtlr,
dty clnWe
- · · ·or
sloDer,
a pal or.
wblch people can he proud.

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garten girls and for the girls at
Carleton School. I hope that
more parents will get Involved
with their children, not only In
scouting, but' In all projects and
programs for children In Meigs
County;"
Jbn Carnahan: "Being close
to the land, perhaps the best we
farmers can hope for In 1~ Is a
normal l!l'Ow1tig season and
lower Interest rates.
"Fanners, with the help of
~ tec!Uiolojry, can handle
11}081 of the problems that arise
In regard to crops, livestock and
manageinent In general. How·
ever, the cost ot such technology
has made fanning very expen·
slve, therefore a larie percen·
tage ot the operating money
used In tanning Ia borrowed.
"The fanner In this country

Suitfded
· •POMEROY- Diamond Savings
,.;Loan Co., Athens, has flied a suit
tor S156,533.65 against Jolm and
. ~ Wandling, Athens, In Melp
Coilnty Cclmmon Pleaa Court.
;p!amond Savlngll" Loan alleges
Iri the suit the couple defaulted on a
ptom1siOI'y note on pt'Opt.'lty In
~ Township. The suit aaks that
thfl mortgage be foreclosed and the
Jllope!'ty
sold.
.

the logical answer," Epllngsald.
This, coupled with ~tlon ·
and the malntaDce of city status,
can,help build a climate of which
people In Gallipolis can be ·
proud.
"We must ~· We can't
stand stDI." .
Conunlss!oner Dow Saunders,

just completing his first year In
otfkle, agreed with Epling that
growth of GaJllpolls Is esSential
to Its future.
"This (1985) Is going to he a
year of challenge for the city ·
ftnanctally," he said, noting the
problems created by the water
treaiment taclllty, Its construe·
tlon loan and the decreasing
population In the area.
"We must be able to attract
new Industry - create jobs,"
Saunders said. He added that
Industries BUCh as Chris Craft
need an atmospllere which wll1
be conducive to reopening
production.
Other goals Saunders said he ·
hopes the city commission work
toward Include a solution to the
traffic light-pedestrian problem

within the city and cooperating
with the county commission,
possibly meeting on a regular
basis.. He a.lso agreed that
recreatiOn should be a big
coocem for the coining year.
City Manager Chris Morris
agreed with both commissioners
Epling and Saunders, but added
a few more In hoth the ''accanpllsheil" and the "unaccomp'
llshed" categot
les. .
_..
On the plus side ot the ledger,
Morris sa1d the slip on Eastern
Avenue has been remedied and
the sewer ·s tudy on Infiltration

care .

Into the system Is completed.
However, on the nega tive side,
.there are other paving and road :
slips unanswered , there Is no
city swimming pool and there
are problems with wa ter rates
and ()l!ylng off the loan on the
water treatment piant construe·
tlon. There Is also a decreasing
populatiOn and .annexation Is ,
needed to maintain the growth of .
.
the city.
The next year, Morris said, •·
could essentially make or break '
the city of Gallipolis financially,
depending on the outcome of a ·
city referendum on the water :
rate Increase sought by the '
commission and the changing ; '
tax structure, which could lose ~·
money for the city.
He also said he'c! like to see old
Holzer Hospital turned Into a
senior citizen housing complex, ~
a project which was discussed
over a year ago by the Area .;
Agency on Aging.
•..
Cooperation Is single greatest
goal, Morris said. Development
of a cooperative attitude between the · city and county
commlsslons and the townships. .
"We' re atlln thls together."
Gallipolis Is a part of the ·
county, and the two should get
together for the common goal of
serving the area and growing.

"This (1985) is going to be a year of challenge for :
the city financUdly."

-Dow Saunders, Gallipolis City Commissioner

has a hisl91'Y ot providing a very
bountiful food basket tor the
people and will continue to do so
If given a fighting chance. As the
slogan says: 'American farmers
- we feed the world."
Rev. W.H. Pen1n: '"I hope
that In 1~. all our Meigs County
people will receive· a wondrous
measure of our Lord's spiritual
blessings, and that there will be,
In 1!1fi, a dawning ot the day ot
Industrial rt!lllll'g8ICe here In the
Ohlo Valley."
NaOOII Loncl1in and Eva Robson: "Speaking on behaU of
many senior cltlzena In Meigs
County, we hope tor he~ roads
In the rural areas and In the
villages. We hope tor good rental
units for middle Income people
and we hope tor more and bl!tter
police protection. We hope for
more ~ and lndu8trles
to help the employment situation
In Meigs County. We a1so hope
lor activities tor )'OUllg peqie
and for parks and a recreation
center {Jr community building
. for everyone In the county to
enJoy. And we hope tor more
coopetatlon betweenelectedotfl·
clals and the people, and tor
more jobs and better IUpeiVi·
lkiD tor aeuaal relief wtt Iuers.
''We bl!lll!w that· all Meigs
Countlanl lhuuld 1111! God Ill
their pilot and. aulde ID their
everyday llvel .and In ewcyt.ldng
that they do." .

Be¥. W.B. Pentl, ...... qf
Pwawsoy'• 'MdtJ Ollrda, 1181

....

.....,......__..,
,, .....
..s 111M.._., ..... or
~lallfelpU,_He

'*.......

,

111e

•rd like eo tee more
job. come ro rite area
to our kidl an.d hWJbandl can fiNJ t.uork at

.

..

Hottpilalized
· POMEROY - WU!oughby Hill, a
Conner employee of Meigs County
Probate and Juvenile Court, Ia a
patient at St. Joseph's Hospital In
Parkersllllre. W.Va. The room ·

WUeedaplacewhl!reyoung

provide .I!Jtal heallh

Economics, civic involvement top ·lists
~Ns•, _

POMEROY - Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Cha·
rles Knight has ruled In favor of
Cyril E. and Shirley Coleman,
Rutland, In their court action

•

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peopk! can congregate with lhetr
peers, and a ·swtmmlng pool Is

ne!

nuinber 1.1426. "'

maintain professionalism 8lld

future

11---..;;-...;.;.,.

· Charles I. AiiiiiBI lr., eltlel
execullve oftloer at Holzer Medl-' '
cal Cenlfto hopei! lhe facUlty wll

plac;ed upoa .....

How has the city Itself fared?
Many goals were not reached,
•according to two city oommls·
sloners and the city lll8llllger,
adding they should keep trying
to attain them, plus a few more
In ·l lei.
Miles Epling, who has been a
ammlsaloner for seven years,
, said two big goals not reached
were In recreation and annexa·
tlbn. Epling said It Is very
lrllportailt to attain those In the

In Gallla County, Gallipolis City II'
Schools, after deductions for em·
ployee and teacher retirement,
reeelved $250,ffi2.45, and Gallla
County Local Schools had a net
payment of $118,403.&lt;M. The County
Board ot Education received a
direct allotment ot $24,522:00 for a ·
payment of$369,005.49.

:.~~:s~=~~~:=

loe 'O..., .a., poiOe dtW,
lladJ nctot11en4 .....,

'J

$26,00!.50.

MiddlepOrt.
The suit revolved around alleged
fallure to the defendants to develop
and produce In a reasonable and
prUdent manner an oU and gas well
on'the plaintiffs' p10petty.
· Kn1ght ruled that the lease
between the parties be abandoned
and the related equipment become
the property of the Colemans. He
cancelled leases between the two
parties allowtng Uvlngston to
remove the aU accumulated at the
site In tanks and sell It, accounting
and paying the Colemans for their
l~ase Interest.
·
' Costs of the court action must be
pa!d by Livingston with a counter·
claim flied by Uvlngston being
dismissed by Knight.

30. 1114

Striving to. work together, ·better
th~ community - goals. fo.r 1985

State subsidies
given in Gallia,
Meigs counties
· POMEROY - Meigs County's
three local school districts received
$476,!112.49 . as their share of
$136,959,469.90 paid as the De. cember State School Foundation
subsidy payment to 614 Ohlo city,
exempted village and local school
districts and to 87 county boards ot
educatiOn.
Amounts received by each dis·
trlctafterdeductionsforretirement
Include: Eastern Local,$110;949.70;
Meigs Local, $258,838.0!, and Southem. $107,194.71. In addition, the
Meigs County Board of Education
received a direct allotment of

Secti0nrn3
o-m.

N....,,

l•llrwm,J.a,-..BvaB 'n

,lid's z •·-

llllllw•qiiiMia•adiBdllatitdwir"''..,..IIII ..... C
· ....,.. an '• P'GPML
·

.,..

home," .IOYI Shirley
. Cogar.

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

..., /1 ...
.. .
I 2 I ~u. __, waaw
....,,a.t! I ISQ PP
.-

........... Jilt.

..... Camaluul, Racine, -

1o11c been a Melpdalry fanner.

Adlve Ia COiliRJidty .rr.n,
111111 M!ll aware
the p11pt
Iannen aD the en ~ ry•

or

or ·

�B-2-The

30,1984

Tma1 Sentinel

~Middlaport-O.Uipolia, Ohio-Point Pluunt, W. Vt.

Deoember 30, 1884

.Meigs menu
scheduled

-..-~-- Swindell

- Bolin-.- -

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. E .

Ctt:i2Bis Center In the Metis
Multi-Purpciee bulldlni on ·M'-'·

Ned Sw1J¥1e11, Sbllde, 81U10Unce the

eapaernent and torthcool1ng mar-

POMEROY- Menuafor' ac:hooM
tn the Melp ·Local Scbool District '
wlllcll wm renme e.._ 011
Wetn""dlly are u fllllowa:
W"""""'ay: lfalnllurllel' 011 bun,
frelleb trlel, peii!M, and milk.
~ . Chill and cradu!rs,
peanut butter aandwtcb, eheeee
' wedge, pell'l, and m1Jk.
Fl1day: Cooks' Choice.

rla&amp;e o1 t11e1r dlllllhter.

c~

SUiette, 10 Brent Alan Bolin, son of
Mr. andMn.JoeM.Bolln,Rulland.

1be open-church weddlnil wUl
take place on Jan.19 at6:llp.m. at
the First United Pentecostal
·Church, MJddleport, with the Rev.
Clark Baker o1!1clatlng. An open
reception will be held at the Senior

.

Catherine Meadows, Thomas ·Stokes wed Oct. 20

beny Heights, Pomeroy.
·
Miss Swindell wtU lll'aduate froJn
Ohio Unlveralty bl March u
marketing major with a bachelor of
business admlnlstratlon degi ee,
:
Bonn 1s a grad\lllte of
College with a bachelor of science 111. ·
petroleum engineering. He Ill cur- •
rently employed by Kramer EJCPio;
ratiOn Co., Rutland,

a

MIDDLEPORT Catllnlt.
Marll Mnt•a, dan.,... c:l lila

..

'•

sonville has been awarded the
Meritorious Service Medal.

A member of the active anny,
· Pennington Is presently 888lgned to
Headquarters Cc:mpany 212th Slg·
nal Battalion! at North LIUJe Rock, ,........,....-~--'----..;--!
Arkanaas Army National Guard.
His duty aulgnrnent Is unit clerk.
Pennington Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Pennington of Gallipolis.

~;; :

•

'•

APP HOLIDAYS

Mr. and Mrs. William David Powers

'""'

:[sherry].
Scott becomes bride
r,. .
·;·'·of William D.
Powers Nov. 17
.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gordon Stokes

:I

'i;

Guests were registered by Pam
Scott, sister-In-law of the bride.
Flower girl was Amanda Brum!leld, wlto wore a Ooor-length pink
gown. Rlnghearer was Ryan Pow· ·
ers, nephew of the grom, w!lo wore
a burgundY tuxedo.
A reception was held at the
church following the wedding, and
a dinner was held in thehomeofthe
brlde'·S mother.
The couple resides In Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

Women are longer
Jived than men

D a i 1y

GALLIPOLIS
'

.SAVllN&lt;GS

Throughout t.,. Holiday Season.

Alao Featuring:

expectancy
Is 55fact
more
years,
says
thecouncU. The
is that
women
live longer than men - 7 years
longer currently, and the range Is
widening,
.

HICKORY SMOKm RIIS
Rack....S8.88
'It Rack....S4.44

CHICKEN
WHOLE CHICKEN

441 2nd Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio .5631
(614) 446-3382

S4.44

OFFII GOOD D£(. 26 THRU 'AN. I

•--------------------.1·
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

OPEN Sue. thrv lhwa. 11-1 0; Fri. &amp; Sat. II- II

{Jii.)

,1

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "

GALLIPOLIS - Cub Pack 204
, will he collecting cans for recycling
: to benefit the pack, beginning now

.........

AN API'ON I Mf N'f

446·9510
A NEW DIRECTIO'N IN HAIR DESIGN"

.

WORSBJP,E88ENTIALT08ALVATION

··

William B. Kvglln
TneW..wp

SALE

~

(Jno. 4:23,24)
• ')'here are three essentials. to true, spiritual worshijl: (1) The right
Abject (God)i (21 The right attitude (in spirit); and (8) The right aet (in
-iruth).
.
:- (H God, the obje« of our worship, Ia a "Spirit," llld the true
worshipper· makes obeiSance or abowa reverence (d"p reaped, love,
and esteem) toward the Saered One. Our worship Is not just an
outward fieshly conformity 10 the.law that eould only·be eatlsfled b7
meeting the demands laid down bJ M_,, nor the worshipping of Idola,
-images, or statues made bJIIWI (Aetl17:26,29).
'~- (2) The true worshipper, having the rltrht attitude, woreblpa "in
~pirit." His worship Ia from the heart. Withlda·heart (aoul and mind),
'be is eoneentrating or centerinJr his thoughta upon the ob~of
'worship. He is not just present in DodJ, obMrving others won
,
·but is actively engaging bJ showing his deep ~ aad love to
•
When he singa, praJa, communea, glvea, arid ltli4IM, be 11.- 10 wltb
his heart (the opU'it, the inner man) lnd undentandfal.
· (3) The true worahiJiper wonblpa aecordln«to the "truth." God hu
:designed the pattern of divine worwbip
. m,, rweillng it to ua In the New
:'restament, the truth. This divine pattern autluirilei five tbinp the
-Lrue worshipper, in the Chriatian dlspeJlll~, muat do: a-Prueb the
:'Word (Acts 20:7); b-Sing (1 Cor. 14:16; Eph. 6:19; Col. 8:18); e-ObMrve
lhe Lord'• supper (Acta 20:7; 1 Cor. 11:28-llt); d-Pray {Acta 2:'2; 1
.Cor. 14:15; 1 Thess. 5:17); and e-Give of our ID8IIll (1 Cor. 18:1,2; 2
·cor. 9:7) .
.:
W....... Dell 1i
•• Worship eomes from the Greek word ~kvtMo (from , . ,
M..ard, and kut~eo, to klsa), to make obelsanee, do NVel'8111!8 to. ·
~"ObeiiiJIICe" algnifiea "a psture ol. reepeet or reverenee." while
, "reverence" denotes ''deep reaped, love, awe, and eateem, u far
joomething sacred." God, our heavenl1 Father, dealrel to be loved by
'&lt;~~•· In our worship, we direct our "klsa" of love, rwpeet, and eat 11m to
)lim. J ua u we kiaa our eanbl)' pareaw. IXP!III1DI' our love and
.respect for them, 10 it ia we IIlia our heavenlY Father b)' the IICta fll
:.devotion (teaching, slagln_g, eating the Lord'i IUJIPW, praJiq, and
~lving) in our worship. To refu.e to wonhlp GCMI II -to .~
• embrace (kiss) and love Him Ia there momenta. .

"
•

W...._IIE1r dd

·

PRICE

Chlnet ll'aper
Plate•

Choice of 50 Ct. 8¥.'' ,

or 45 Ct. 9W' Com-

Jlv" fll aood and ~
C

_

....
: ~.--

·lOO'S

'

IEMCO POSYUIE SEIIES

· MAnRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS
SAVE

6QOfoOFF
OVER 20

SLEEP SOFAS
SAVE UP TO

OFF

Empire Furniture, Gallipolis, Ohio will be
open 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Wednesday, Dec.
26th, Thursday, Dec. 27th, Friday, Dec.
28th and Saturday, Dec. 29th; Sunday,
Dec. 30th 1to 5 and Monday, Dec. 31st 8
to 5 because of being overstocked due to
not being able to open our Middleport
store yet. Over 200.000 dollars worth of
name brand·merchandise has to be sold by
December 31st. look for the items marked
with the big Mfor Middleport overstock.
Talk to our sales people, if they can't deal
get Casby Jr., Skip or Lynn and they'll~ to
make J!lUr day. IAII dining room. iivutg
room bedroom, recliners. sectionals. end
tables. cocktail tables, mirrors. pictures,
open stock ·bedroom and dining room,
sleep sofas. mattresses and box springs,
wall units. desks, curios, dinettes by Flexsteel. Stoneville, Kincaid, Benchcraft. Riverside, Bassett, Singer, Pulaski, Chatham
County, Charisma, Elite. ~line. Ort.
Bemco, Blacksmith Shop, Carolnll.
'

0

Our Rea. 5.17

. Extra-lon1 Tube Socks. Striped or White .

1-oz. • lox 01 Crunch 'N Munch•

. Kodacdor" Or Focd
Color Print Fh

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

Uplo:UEXpl.

of Chrilt

1.74
2.47
3.77
4.87

==-=..._

3.97

1.87...

1.37~

OV£125

lUG ROOM SliTES
SlAtTING AT .

$988 88

IUDIBDMOVIIPIDCIIIM

Ourhg.
5.97

$8888

r-.

---·-M:III

Up lo 36 Expa.

STAifiNG AT

• Ycur lumitura II carelully moved and ratumed to
ita original tocallon.
\ • Specialllltanllon 10 difficun spots and high
traffic arau.
,.
• Only the cleaning wand and hole enter your home.
• Our exctuiiMi clelintng agenla combined with
atetlm produce the 11)081 powerlut, eflec:ti\111
cleaning method ll'llilable.
'
comnwcial
c/Mnlng.

DEVELOP AND PIINr
Up lo 12 Expa.
Up lo 15 Expa.

RECLINERS

• Train«!, ~ c:nowa will analyze )OOf
carpel end upholalery.

.

'

I

1/2 OFF

~1.'"9~

.

9

OVER 500

BEDROOM SUITES
STARnNG AT

$222 22

'.'•

Pkg.

~~

..''' •

::1

· ~1

$17,95 CARNTCLUNINGIFICIAL I'
PtrRoem ·NO:O:.':u 446-80591
---------------

20°/o
70°/o
TO

RELY ON STAILEY
FOR QUAUT~ SERVICE &amp; VAWE.

~

II OL Cashew W•••
Nutritious Sltlckilll. ·

UPTO

SAVE

OYER 150 .

Our 3.77

6-Pr. Padl• Tube Socks

DINETTES

SELECT GROUP FABRICS
. AND AU SEWING MACHINES

........

2.97

1/2 OFF

WOOL

Prevents moldil.
mildew: fights
germs, odors.

FIIDAY 9-1

3.99

PICTURES &amp;
MIRRORS

S400

OPEN 9·5 MON.-SAT.

'

· ~··­

SAVE

and continuing through the end of
January. For Information, call
44INII!Il, 446-2106, 446-9'.Sl or 446-

25°/o

&amp;ova· 9-11

.

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

SECTIONALS

·SALE···· SALE

·

Gallipolis, 0.

THEw. 2ndFABRIC SHOP
,_.,

1 11

...._

Dlllnfecfant

I

115

J181111!1lw mh Pill' 1111

Cliap•l Hill Church

• ••

ca1.e :r~~:~~:~:~.-

20°/o OFF

·

w, Wrltoe...

SALE

19-oz. • IDraY

"Netwt.

Jnt\e
ln!IPirft.li!,d.ln
t~.~~~!-~::~~f!God
. 111t11t
1101c~
,i'ouJlcUM
,..,..,, truth, if. • pert
BIII.C::.ti. . . ._

,,

partment

anil vital antll the Spirit WIW.~-ua "Not
a110mblioog of ••,.,.,.,., ~... "(Bib. lO:llll). Wblle
u;rs. "1101 forn*' eM ua_b,.,1" ~ tacben
6 1:
ulftdal to u-we. •
a tM --~-""'!~
Is IIICitber attempt fll 8a&amp;an to ..._ - ·

s-

PrieS

2Pcw3

TOUGh Pin• loP
Liquid Cleaner
Cleans, disinfects, deodor- ·
lzes. 28-oz. •

Dlspoable:

is oo important

"u """'

SOle

.S2:.i.

Securlly, whlle37percentfelt
otherwise.

15 PinS &amp;

DENVER (AP) - Americans outtaklngflnalaction.
. i:ontlnuetoenjoytheworld'shighest
The legislation is designed to
:. quality drinking water, thanks In ensure that communities prov!IJean
:: part to passage of_the Safe Drinking adequate supply of pure drinking
. · Water Act In December 19'74, water to meet the nation's needs,
; ~ reports the Anierican Water Works -nOw and Into the 21st century.
:, Association.
AWWA calls It one of the m08t
: : Thlsyear,onlts10thannlversary, lmporiant means of protecting
· ~ tongress attempted to modify the public health and the nation's water
· • law with additional safeguards and suppUes.
requirements, but adjourned with-

WAI.I( lh ()fl (.AU f()A

A Meuage hom 7\e Bible ...

The councU says its latest
ti
Ide
,
dl
han
na onw suryey .oun
t, a

: : -·--~· Drinking water safer - - - , - -

The Saving Place®

10-50°/o
Off

S.XIal
·r-~Coun~~c;U~of~L~Ife~~Insu~ran~ce~.~!~Jpe~rce~n~to~f:th:e:pil~b:Uc:co:nfi:den:t:abou:t1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~
ess

slaw,
peaches,
cornbread, butter.
Monday
_Beans
Tuesday
_ Closed.and ham, cole
Wednesday - Salmon loaf with
cheese sauce, butteri!d rice, turnip
greens, chocolate pudding, whole
wheat bread, butter.
Thursday - Swiss steak, peas,
noodles, -jello with fruit, bread,
butter.
Friday - Fried chicken, dress·
tng, green beans, cranberry sauce,
cherry pie.
Choice of beverage served with
each meat
Meals subject to change without
notice.

4217.

In 1975, a councU survey found63

-

FRYE BOOTS

thlrdofthepubllccontldentabout
the system - 9 percent very

lng to findings of the American

La··--•"·.

ALL MEN'S &amp; LADIES'

=:in:~~~S:de,da= ~~=-and2Jpercentsomewhat

Recycling project set by scouts

1-------'-,...---------_;____.______;L,_-_ __;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
NEW YEAR'S 10·6
MONDAY 10-6
SUNDAYS 12·6

Monday thru Friday
9AMto9PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

GALLIPOLIS - Actlvltles tor
.the week of Dec. 31-Jan. 4 at the
Senior Citizens Center located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, Dec. 31 - Chorus, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, Jan. 1 - Closed.
Wednesday, Jan. 2 - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Crown City
MobUe Unit, 1 p.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Jan . 3..:. Bible Study,
11 a.m.-noon.
Friday, Jan. 4 - Staff Meeting,
8:15-8:45 a.m.; Art Class, 1-3 p.m.;
Craft Mini-Course. 1·3 p.m.
- The Senior Nutrition ' Bi-ogram
will serve the following menus:

We at Taco Gr11ndell want to thank you for a good year and
wlah all our cuatomera a Happy and Proaperoua New Year.
So In kMping with the Holiday Spirit we will be offering ... ,

LIMIT 10 - NO COUPON NEEDED

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
average 25-year-old American man
can expect to live another 48 years,
according to the American Councu
of Life Insurance.
But If you are an average 25-year
old American wqman, your llfe

WASHINGTON (AP)- Conti·
dence tn the future of the Social

,,

39¢ TACO'S

The weddlna 1111111c wu per-

Tbeii'OQm.ailoasn+"tlolu; ;
UnlverlliycfGacqla.lumllloYit:
wlthtbeL.H.Gum!Co.atAaiat&amp;. 5The couple realdea I!C

-·• byGary Collins.~
fonnedOIIa-tar
...
'"'"'"'"'""'
Decatur, Ga. A aelectlon of tradl·
Out-of-town guests attfnd!ng • .
tlonaJ bluep-au ballads and love- c~ Ms. Ina Meadows, !It
· IQIIIII, IJidlldlng 'The Water Is Petersburg,Fia.; Mr. andMrs.DIQI..;
Wide," were played. Miss Kim MeadoWs, Middleport; Mr. lllllf.:
· Ramonallls c:l Lawrencevtlle, Ga. Mrs. Mitchell Meadows, Brandl and:
kept the lx'lde's book.
Zac; Corp. David l. Meadawa;" :
The bride, formerly of Middle- CampPelldletDn, Callf; MlsiJ~ :
port, Is a graduate of Meigs Hlgll Meadows, Columbwl; Mr.andMrL •
School and the University of DavldGarland,SarahandMJcbeet: ;
Georgia. She Is currently employed Gray, Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Pave,- ;
with the SneUvUie Recreation and Garland, Gray, Tenn.; Miss EllA :
Parks Department as a program Fudge,SegolnesviDe,Tenn.; Orville;:
coordinator. She is the granddaugh· Stokes, Tampa, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs~ tel' of Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Morgan,
Dan Sasseman, cblumbus, Ga.; and':
Deltona, Fla. and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin CrandeU; ;
Luther Meadows, Mnton, W.Va.
Lynchburg, Va.
::'
,___........;_..,..._ _ _ _ _'"""'_ _ _ _'--_ _ _ _ _ _...;.
~ ~
'

.....__ Confidence in Social Security - -

Gallia senior citi~ns ·
P.Ian weekly activities

'

:: :GALLIPOLIS - Sherry Jane
~ott and WOllam Da.vld Powers
, ;were united In maniage at EUza·
: 'l;)eth Chapel Church In Gallipolis,
jllov. 17.
:The bride Is the daughter of
Donald E . Scott, MI. Sterling, and
lVfrs. Mary Jane Brumfield, Gallipolls. Tile groom Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. William J . Powers, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
The double-ring ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Alfred .
Holley, following a program of
music by Karen Knotts.
The bride was given In maniage
by her parents and escorted to the
altar by her father. She wore an
Ivory floor-length gown with a
chapel train, and sheer lace veil.
' Matron of honor was Debra Scott,
sister of · the bride, who wore a
OQOr-Iength gown of pale rose.
Joseph Lane, brother of the
groom, Norfolk, Va., was best man,
arid ushers were Larry Scott, Mt.
Sterling, and Jason Brumfield,
Gautpolls, brothers of the brtde,

CMMIIOIV.

IOIIc:lMr. andMn. PhDlpA.Stokl!l, . flowers B1TIIIIged in a bandmade
Atlanta, Ga. 011 Oct. 20.
white oak spUt baalu!t. . '
The candlellte ceremon,y was
Thegroom'sfalher,PhlllpStokes,
' performed by the Rev. Mark was the best man, and both he and
Westrnllreland at the historic Law- the~ wore black tuxedn!l with
I'I!IICeYIIIe Female Seminary In Ivory shirts.
J;.aWI'I!IICI!'YI11, Ga. The blide was ' 1be bride's mother wore a tea
111vm In marriage by her brother, lengthdressoflll'aycrepehlghllgh.
USMC Corporal David Meadows.
ted\Yithlvoryandblackstrtpes.The
Th@brldewuatUredlnagownof ~·smOther wore a tea length
antkjue lace over Ivory satin with a dress of lll'ay and pink, and both
chapel train. The lace overdress mothers had corsages of orchids
was fashioned with a V neckllne, and baby's breath.
gathered at the waist and with full
The flower girl and ring bearer
1engt11 sleeves. The gown was were Brandl and Zac Meadows,
CQmpllmentec! with a satin children of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
cwnberbund. ~
Meadows of Middleport. B~
The bridal boUquet was an wore a tuJJ length A·Une dress In a
arrangement of assorted daisies, burgundy floral print Zac wore an
Javmdar, bachelor's buttons,llllles, outfit of burgundy velvet pants and
iris, and baby's breath. Her matching vesl with a white shirt.
headpiece was of stephanosls and
The chapel, buUt In l&amp;'i4, was
baby'sbreath,andsheworeapearl decorated with, grEenery ~ludlng
necklaee and earrings, gifts of the magnolia leaves, .fern, and pine,
Each window had five candles and·
gnxm.
Jenny Meadows, sister or !he greenery, and the lwo fireplace
mantles were decorated with can-

Marl!tta:

of Jack-

~!ddt, Coliunbua, wu makl ot dill .1114 p.-ry u well. A
IIODDr. Her ~. mldt lly Mrl. 1801Pt10Dattlladlapalfollowllllthe

UW""'',a~l'll.,and Karen Maadowl WU an A·llne
DII1Mn',.....Mldllllpcrt,bleame dellplol.bur1Undyandlvoryaat1n.
_
,......., __ .,._,__ . She--'
.... a"'"'-""ol.__h_,
__.
....
....,brldeoiTbc!lll&amp;lh""""''.,.._,
,...,....,
--.-· .._ uUACU

Pennington decorated
s.~. Carl Pennlngtoa

The Sundly Tim11 Sentinel-Pill 8-3 ·

J

.· STiii.Bf ftBBIIBB. II

KINCAID OPEN STOCK
DltiiO ROOM &amp; I8IIIOOM
OAI 30-fa Off

c_, so-t. "'
IWU •o-.ofP
n1tu1 PIKES

25 FlEXSTIEL

SOFAS
SAVE UP 10

$700°0

�. . . ~-

~

.

...

··---·- -·--'

,.

. . . ._# -.,.__ _. _,. . . . .. . . . .,. . . ... .,:. , ., ._

....

..

oj,

.. ..

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

.

••

•

~

..-.
~

December 30. 1914
'

•

:r..:

-·

.

.I

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE
WILL CLOSE MONDAY
.
DECEMBER 31st. AT 9:00pm

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....

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U.S. GQV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

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...

U.S. GDV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN •
FED BEEF ·
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Rib _Eye Steaks.:.................

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Maxers ................... .

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lb.

Kroger
White Bread_

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ad. II we do ru n out ol l!'ltctveftiled ~ .
we will offer yoy your ctloictl of 1
comN•ItM item, -wtlen ~. ~
the same MYingt PI' a r1inckKk W'hictl ,...
entitle vou to purc haw I~ ~~ ;.-,
at t"- .CVeniMd pti(:e wttflir'I.JO lMVt Orllll

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one Vllndor t OIIPOf'l will t&gt;e tcct'I)W(I Plf

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item JM r.kiHd

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Boston Butt
Pork ·Roast ..........

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0

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SLICED
FREE '

19

SLICED LB .. . 81

·-.•..
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' AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH
DELl-BAKERIES
HOT FOODS AVAILABLE 11am TIL 7pm DAILY '

Kroge.r 2%
$·
Lowfat
Milk Gal.
•

99

lb .

•

FROZEN CHICKEN OR CHEESE

Banquet
$
''H 0t B.t
I es•• ......... 12-oz.

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.
..
95 --·
":

Pick up your order the day of the party--just enough in
advance so it will be fre~h &amp; delicious for serving.

::~i~ Tray .........
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White
Cabbage.

Hamburger Buns

•••

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Avondale
Orange Juice·
.

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12-oz.

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Offor Good Through January 1. 1&amp;

Guaranteed Quality Film IHt\feiC~DII'IIa

' PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLE
SPRITE, TAB,
'

Diet Coke .
or Coca Cola .

SX70 TlME ZERO OR f,lOO HIGH
SPEED SINGLES

Polaroid
$
Film ......................... Pack
"SILVER PLATTER" 14-17-LB. AVG.

Whole
,
Fresh Hams lb.

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·II ·Pork

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1,•

1 Sausage ......

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·29

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WHOLE OR HALF STICK
SPRINGDALE FARMS

All Beef
I
WITH COUPON
·~amitvl
I
Sausage
..............
·
.
.
..___________ ______ __ _

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-

$

BALLARD FARMS HOT, MILD, SAGE
OR SPICY

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Variety
Cheese Balls.......
.

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8-Pak

Grade A
Large Eggs .. Doz.

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12
OF

1

1-lb.

one coupon""'

I.IIIT 4-IIDW WITH COUPOI

CGUI'IIII . . . .. DK . . . .,_ JM. I, 1•

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IUIJICT YD -..cAlli ITA11
• UICAl TWI

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SUPER HEAVY DUTY 4-PACK " AA" SIZE ... $1 .49

Sandwich
$
Steak-Umm's...... 24-oz.

'

KROGER

Eveready
Batteries .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Pak

29

,

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' ·"

~

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SUPER HEAVY DUTY 2-PACK "C" OR "D" SIZE
OR 1-PACK "9-VDLT"

FROZEN

. ,.

Visit Your .Kroger
· Photo Center

59

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Mixed
Fryer Parts.......... lb.
Hormel
$
Little Sizzlers ..... 12-oz.

'~ I

FROZEN.

-•
•

Country Oven $
Potato Chips ....... 1s-oz.

Armour Star
Hot Dogs ...... 1-lb.

.

Pound

2

49
.-.
.
-..
~

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49

Bunches

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Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

Poun.d

8-Ct.

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.

. U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

KROGER

Hot Dog or

95 . '-..~

Connoisseur's
· ·
$
Choice .......................................... M~~~~m

$.
0

.

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GREEN ONIONS OR

Red .
19 Radishes .........

Jeno's
Pizza Rolls ........... s-oz.

...

SERVES 12-16 PEOPLE

C

Crisp
Celery .....................stalk

·

FROZEN

.'•1

Tray

C.

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Large

69

. Kroger
$·
Sherbet ................. ~-Gal

. 1'

$

lb .

FRESH

~----------~------__.

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$ 99

Blackeye
Peas ........................ n -oz .

lb .

Boneless Whole $
Pork Loin.............. lb.
Smoked
$
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69

FRESH

"SILVER PLATTER"

'"

Whole
Cashew Nuts ... ..

lb.

"SILVER PLATTER" FRESH WHOLE
SLICED INTO PORK STEAKS
.

..

SALTED ROASTED

$ 39

Boneless
Boston Roll.

'

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SERVES 12-16 PEOPLE

IN THE PRODUCE DEPT.
DONALD DUCK GRAPEFRUIT OR

Oran.ge
- ~-Gal$
Juice ............... G~~~

U.S, GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF .

~,

·~

Place your order 24 .hours in advance, so we can do our
very best for you.

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GIUJPOI.5 00 I'OIIIIUI' STGla

B.

20-oz.

.....

WE RESERVE TH£ RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO OEALERS.

Call or visit the Kroger Deli, Bakery, Cheese Shoppe-We'll be happy to help you make your selection &amp;
decide on quantities.

$ 49

,.-.

or:nPVRIGHT 1984 · l'H£
KROGER CO . ITEMS AND .
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, DEC:
30. THROUGH TUESDA '1 . JAN.
1, 1985. IN

A.

·

Blue Bonnet
Margarine ............ 1-lb.

i.

-

~PKif!Cally- noMd in ltlil

1-Ltr.

QUARTERS

• " &gt;'

MVEJINIIIIfiM ,.C'f

E~tth ol theN ld\olrtiled i!tmt IS requtred 10
be retdilv lfMble fot .... in eldl

Store . e~ctgt •

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· Re-Open Wednesday Jan. 2nd At 7:00am
And Resume Normal Hours ·

*-Gal .

..
1"'

10:00am Til 7:00pm

9
·Kroger 6% ·
$
$ 9 Egg N~g ..............

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# 0

•

OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY
TUESDAY, JAN. 1st

$

49 G~lden Crown

Boneless Bottom $·
Round Roast .... :.. lb..

".

$ 49
•

$ 79
lb . .

$
lb.

BY THE PIECE ... LB . 82.99

•

FROZEN

Fox De Luxe
Pizzas ............. 10-oz.

C

�December

· Calendar

Beat of the bend

SUNDAY

Good things
do happen

WELLS'roN -

lng Sunday, 7::JJ p.m. Publlc
.•

inVited.

Wt Reserve Thi Richt To
lill!it QUintities

"nel 8&amp;afl

MONDAY

GAlLIPOLIS :... Therewtll be
a watch service, Monday . 9
p.m.. at Clark Olapel
Special stnalng, public Invited.

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

Emma Adams durll!g the busy

holiday season had Olle of thole
upsetting experi.ences - which
turned out weU,
however.

chru'clt.

~to

check of the car and other locations
proved fUtile. Th!swason a Sunday.
On Thursday. she was notified that
her pocketbook had been found ln a

p.m.

attend•

GALLJPOi:iS='There will be
a watch service Monday, 7:al
p.m. at Mt. Pleesal1t Baptist
Church. Speakers will be Rev.
Ronnle Nicholas and Rev. Roy
Rhodes, and there will be special
Public Invited.

Speaken will be Rev. Ronnie
I Lemley 81111 RMY. Bill Hayman.
Special s!ug!ng and the public
invited.
.

GALLIPOLIS- There wt11 be
New Year' a Eve IIE!IVIces Monday, 8 p.m., at Faith VaUey
Church of ChriSt in Christian
Union, located &lt;&amp; miles out
Bulavllle Road. The service will
combine wtth Ewlngloo Church
of ChriSt ln Christian Union.
Spwm will be Rev. Don Bock.
and alnlllna by Dennl• 81111 .

Valley Choir.
GAU.IPOLIS - 'lil!!l't! will be
a watch service Monday, 9 p.m.
at Good New Baptist Church on
Georges Creek Road. Message
by Rev. Bill Newman. There will
be prayertlme, a film and
fellowship. Public inVIted.

PATRIOT -There will be a
· watch services Monday, 8 p.m.
at Patriot United Methodist
Church, wtth the Rev. Pearl
Casto. Publlc invited.

CHESHIJU: - There will be a
watch service Monday, 7: :JJ
p.m. at Silver Run Baptist
Church. Public invited.
CROWN CITY - There will
be a watdl service MOIIdaY, 8

RACINE - A New Yeaf's
Eve dance will be held Monday
evening, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., at the
Racine American Legion Hall.
Music will be provided by the
C!rcle "D" Wranglers. Admission will be $10 per couple and S6
single. Refreshments wtll be
served.

Ground. Beef •• ~L$1 09:.:
.

Gi-ound ChUck ~': $11 9::
BONELESS

It was a great reunion for the

family of Mr. and Mrs. JackLewts,
Flatwoods Road, even though it had
to be held on .Saturday before
Christmas.
.
On hand were the LewtschUdren,
Or. Sandra Kay Lewts of St. Louts,
Mo.; Mrs. Charles (Jackie) Britton
. pf Louisa, Ky.; sOn JeHrey and his
wife, Diane, of.the Flatwoods
Road '
and Mrs. Lewts' parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Burns who reside in
Middleport. Jackie had to leave on
Sunday to return to Kentucky and
Or. Lewis stayed over untO Wed·
nesday before heading back to St.
Louts.
'

The program of the Meigs County
M!ntsteria! AsSociation, headed by
the Rev. Lee Miller, was quite
successful in provld!ng warm
coats, hats, scarves, gloves and
blankets not only for kids but for
adults.
The association dtsirlbuted 2.'ll
coats plus hundreds of sweaters,
gloves, hats, etc, There were ~
blankets given for distribution to
the underprivileged.
,
When the d!stt1butlon was finally
completed, the little that was left
over was given to the Gallla-Me!gs
Community AcUon Program and
will be put to good use.
· Rev. Miller extendS thanks to
everyone who helped with the
tremendously successful program
- a first for the association. Good
job! .

Fryers •••••••••• ~.!~. 49~

.GUN CABINETS

BEDROOM SUITES

SAVE UP TO

SAVE AS MUCH AS

•2oooo
ON REMAINING STOCK!

•,

6, 8, 10 &amp; 12
GUN MODELS

. '700 .

LIVING ROOM
SUITES!

COMPLETELY OVERSTOCKED AND
NO WHERE TO PUT INCOMING SUITES.

Urto50%

Bacon..............

ON BASSETT BEDROOM SUITE.
BASSETT SOLID PINE SUITE
REG. 11695
NOW $995
NO VENEERS
NO PLASTIC . NO PRESSWOOD!

ALL WOOD!!
OIF

. · OTHER SUITES FROM

*499

a .•3 PIECE SUITES AS LOW AS

:1

~l.rt.

~~Ol '

'39900

"~, Buys! Ma~e ~\\

1985 '
WOOD Dl NETTES
SAVE AT LEAST ·

.
es
·
·
$199.
:
Potato ..........
:
BROUGHT.ON'S
2°'o Ml.lk ......... 14~9 ~.
20LB

.

s·

.·

GA.LLON

~

TROPICANA GRAPEF~UIT or.

·s

.:

:·

~:

30%

ON ALL
7 PIECE SETS IN STOCK!
CHOOSE SOLID OAK,
PINE &amp; MAPLE.
TRESTLE TABLE &amp; FOUR CHAIRS.

'179 00

RECLINERS
ALL LA-Z-BOY,
BERKLINE
AND ORT RECLINERS
REDUCED UP TO

s2oooo
OFF LIST PRICE!

25" ZENITH
CONSOLE COLOR TV
ONLY

$54900

SPECIAL DISTRIBUTOR PURCHASE!
ONE TIME DEAL!
NEVER PRICED
THIS LOW BEFORE!
(Limited •Supply)

Combination Heater &amp; Vibrator
Recliners Just Arrived!!

Orange Ju1ce ::o 139,,
BANQUET

ZESTA

.
4
/$1
.
Pot Pies.·••• :~!·.
Crackers ••••••••••'!• .79&lt; MR.
P FROZEN . · .
. · . ·.

6
9'
(
Towels ••••••••••••••
BOUNTY

• .

Jumbo Roll

·p·lzza . . . oz. .69&lt;;
. :.
•••••••••••••••••
9.5

•

•

•

Kellle Renee

Powell and Michael David CUn·
um,twn were married on ·ChriSt·

· maa Eve and are now resldiDg ln.
01ar1otte. N.c.
. The bride 1.1 the daugbter of
ftsljdiQ Powell. Belpre, 8nd tJJe latE
S8lldra PaweD. The groom lithe lOll
of David and Uncia Cunnlniham.
RaveDIW'OIId, W.Va.
Sbe ... p-aduateofEuternHJgb
School and 1111 been employed by
lheRJpley~Factory. .
He attended RaW!IIIWOOd HJgb
!lellom 811111em!d nthe u.s. AnnY.

.

2 &amp; 3 PIECE SUiTES

.

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·:

Pork. Loin •••LL$149
QUALITY PLUS
LL$ 49
1/4

.

Couple wed

. .

GRADE A WHOLE

Lights tor the Christmas tree in
tront of Pomeroy V!Uage Hall were
donated by a resident who did not
want his name disclosed but wanted
to see the tree lighted. He got his
wtsh and the lighted tree was a
definite asset at the location.
Perhaps, next year, even the
community tree on the upper
parking lot wtU have lights.
In case you hadn't noticed, weare
having ·some crazy, mixed up
weather. Middleport's Bill Slater
says spring can't be too far out since
he ~ tulip&amp; up about an Inch. I'd
like to think that be's right. bill can't
help feeling that the worst IS yet to
come. At any rate I hope 1f8i IS a
great-year for you, you anclyoursand that you'll have plenty of
reams to keep smiling....

. .

Rump Roast •••'!· $189·

Tracy Cleland of Chrisney, Ind.,
placed 67th · in the U.S. Junior
Olympics Cross Country Grant
National Meet held on Dec. 15 at
San Antonio, Tex.
Tracy ts a 16-year-Qid junior at
Heritage Hills High School in
Lincoln City, lnd., and ts the son of
Earl and Jean Clelanll, formerly or
Meigs County.

/

. MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Independant Holiness
Church, Pearl Street. wtll bold a
New Year's EVe service beginning at 7::Jl
Monday
evening. Guest speakers will be
Rev. Ivan Myers and Rev. Glen

Monday, 7: :JJ
p.m. at Faith Temple Churc:h.

.

The Pullins FamUy - Dean,
,Vicky and Kayla . - are most
:appreciative to everyone who
extended so much kindness and·
caring when they lost their home
just two days before Chrlsbnas.
Thanks to aU of you.

.r

buiJdlna in Kyger. ,

p.m. at King's Chapel Church.
Publlc InVIted.

WU.&amp;..a"JL.Il! -

a watch service

PRICES IN EFFECT. TH~U SAT., JAN. 5, -1985

cart at Kroger's. The contents
Including about $50 had been
Ulldlsturbed. Emma says it was the
best Chrlsbnas present ever.
To know that there are honest
people aroul!d should be an en&amp;ru.
raging factor as we start a brand
new year.
By the way, Dorothy Johnston
Meigs Board of Elections.employe:
lost her keys - both to the car and
her apartment and these were
found by the meter 'maid and
returned to her. Now that was a
relief for Dorothy who was
grounded untU thecarkeyscou!d be
located.

POMEROY -

KYGER - ~trustees
wtll meet In special session
Monday,!~ p.m. at the Township

Rutland
Church of God. will have a
special watch night service
Monday evening beginning at 9
p.m. Guest speaker will be
Albert Newacrne of CdiiiTIWs.
There wtll also be apeclal 111ng1ng
and conununlon. ~ John
Evans Invites .everyone to

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

shopping at Kroger's she discovered her purse was missing. A

.

12th Street

FreewJll Baptist Church will
have Rev. Euaene Bare speak·

By BOB HOEnlCH

'nmee s

watdlllei'VIce, Monday, 8 p.m.,
at Lecta Church of ChriSt In
Christian
Spe:ctal U•'"""~ Monday, 8 p.m.
singing, publlc invited.

CAMP.LL'S

TOMATO SOUP
101f•

oz.

4 fSl

liMit ,.., ,., , ..._

lwll Gilly At Pewel's
Offw....,..
... ,,,

SHURFINE SUGAR
5-LI. BAG

$149

Unllr OM Ptr c...-r

CIM4 Ollly At Peweil's
OHtr ..,._ ,_ S, 1tiS

CLOROX BLEACH
GALLON

79(
o. ,., c.,.._

11n11t
lwll Clftly At ......,
OHw ..,.,.,.
S, 1914

. *

: . CHEER DETERGENT

......· 11\oz.$429
Umit 0111 ,., Customer
CIM4 G,.y AI Powoll'•
OHtr bpirtl Jan. S, 1915

SAVE 20% ·- 30% . • 40% ·50% AND MOREl

�Pomeroy M'lh''spol1 Gsltl;:lls. Ohio POint P1~ant,

•as I 8 The Stnilly Tlmu Saelil..e

11J CJUBIJI:NE BOEFUCB
'l'mn 8 , llllall
We all want. to be
(1Vf!'f from time to
time, to clole tbe

=:

~::
8J!d move 011 to a

~ ~~

:=:

'~
•w..o-.
Va., Mr,
......3 Air -Force "'·"",
.......

and Mrs. Jolin Waller Dean, Mr.
and Mn. JolmDellll. Mr. and Mrs.
'BDI Spaun, Shannop and Julia,
Pomeroy; Mr. and

Mrs. Rob.ert

RJed, David Rled, all or Pa•aalrla.
Sben1e and Jack KaJ1e and
time.
daughters, EmlJy and Heather,
AJid the New
Cbarleston, w. va. spentChrlatmas
. for )list that.
with her parents, Harold and Helen
How nlce It Is to throw. away the Blackston, Rllck S!!riJIP· 1beY
· old calendar, pick up a clean one were joined b' the holiday by Bob
and start off newr
and Brenda Blackston, Mr .. af1d
lt'a I'I!8SSII11I!g to believe that the Mrs. . William . Gneer, . F.E.
rnlstakesofthepastwillbeavolded Sbaeffer, Jessie 8allllders, and
the lleCOIId time around; that Bruce and Amber Blackston.
' beldnd tis lie the successes and
Having Qu1stmaa dlJmer at the
failures of the past for whatever home of ·Mr. and Mrs. WU1Iam
. .._.,are
...._."
andbeforeusUetbe Kmg, Brad"'·~
.,.,__.and
~
~u~
~ 3 ,w~~~..
promlae and the challenge of a
RJck Mechstroth and children,
whole new world.
Nicole and Aaron. Huntington;
Janus, the ~god for whom . Kevin and Cathy King, Columb\18;
the first roonth of the year was Steve, Debbie, Heather and Malt
named, Is a two faced deity- he Ftnlaw, Chester, and Hank and
looks ba~kward to the past with one Kaiby Johnson and chllclrel), Jes·
tare, and forward to the future with sica and Derek. Tile Jonnsons
theother.LegendteUsusthathels entertained with a Christmas
the watchmen (foler beginnings and breakfast for the tamlly. Among
endings, and It's the "beginnings"
the vlsltors at the King hOme on
tluit need to be emphasized as we ChrlstmasEvewereRaymondand
lEW

and better

::~~gate of

POMEROY- Tile Melp&lt;;ouniy 11:Cia.m.; NewYear'sEvePany,
.Bp.m.·mldnl&amp;ht, roundandiQuare
SelllOl' Ollzeal Center, Mulbm'y . danclll&amp;. !!Q(ll•ll••tloa, greet lSIIi,

Helgltta, PauaO), liaa tile ~lni
1Cbec1u1ei1
for the
_.......actMUe1
,.. Dec :n-Ju
•
...,.,.. ...

•

Mmday -

\
··

....

·

I'

.,.,._,al Fitness

co..,.....,..

Lind tram/eri ·

Columbia Gas of Ohio, ·Inc.,
Columbia Gas '~'ran!~. Corp. to Ivan
Wood. Ajp'ee. and Eue., Cbester.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
Columbia Gas Trans. Corp. to
Gilbert Keith Smith, Agree. and
~-· Salisbury.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to Oblo
Power Vo., Parcelli, Sutton.
Adtlan L. McCoy, Unda E.
McCoy to Earl Bernard Plumley;
VIvian M.. ,Plumley, Tracts, ,
Leballon.
Penn Central Corp. to.,_,
.L.
·~•3

Seldenabel, Parcel, 8aUsbury.
Letha J. Morris, deceued, to
Carla J. Shuler, Ceii. of Trans.,
Sutton.
Arcble Stegall, t;upe Stegall to

Fred George, J..ols A. vanelie
George, 1 acre, Bedford.
Fred Georae. Lois Avanelle
George to Todd Harder, Carla
harder, 1 acre, Bedford.
JohnChapman,CarolynF.Chap.

Tliaday-Cioud.
. Wedaelday - Meatballa,
nwbld polatoel, Harvard beetl,
peachel.
Thunclay - Fried lllh, oven

brlq llllndwlcbea, cooldel, chips,
eto.. for a retreshment break
durlng the evening. .
' browned polakJIII, Wiled aalad,
'1\-say- CenterclOied for New cherry che 1!11 B~·ke,
Yelir's Day.
.
Friday - Beef atao, pl-pple
Wednl!lday - Socta1 Security and cottaae ebuU, cornbread,

Representative, 10 a.m.-noon; • chocolate nO-bake coolde. ·
BJnao, 1-2 p.m.; Bowllng; 1:30 p.m.
Choice of m111t, coftee or tea
Thursday - Physl&lt;:al Fitness, ayallable with meals. Tile meals
11: «&lt; a.m.; Ceramlca, 10 a.m.·2 are aubject to cbanae tor the next
l'.m.
several weeki due' ,to ~ther
fl:lday - Physical Fltpess, 11145 conditions and advlaablllty of ttoavel
a.m. .
condltlolll.
. Tile Senior Nutrition Program
Wbenever rolld collilltiDQ · may
menu tor the week ts:
poae a hazard for atatr and
Mmday - Macaroni and cb eese, volunteen WilD deliver lllliala to
broccoli, stewed tomatoes, homeboWid eldtlly, the borne
piJ!clc!lftl
dellvend meal route will be

.--------------cOUJ'()N--------:-------.,
1
$100
$1 00
·
.

1

1
I
1

.f

REE Gin

.

·

..

1 Thll COlli*! worth $100 .on any ..GitOIIIe POOL KIT or SPAin·
,1 · wokld lietwun HW allll Chrlmnas.
plus $100 ,H hll
.....,...••11114
1
I ,our SPAor
~Ol KIT at law 11tl4 KIUIJ' ptictl Ul•
1 til Summer.
'
I
CALL
1
1

c-

s.-..G

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC • .

cancelled.
Llatell to WMPO tor ~ :
ment tt meal delivery caaceuatlon, :
and allo bul route cancellation. .

r----------

.
.•
l

;

NOW IN PIOGIISS

==·s1·1·, ,

'

IOU. FOI
ANDGR

!F ' FREE

'

GREENFIElD- Brett Ba!tlc's
tour-point play with 1: 26 lett In
OVertime, follOwed by two charity
sMta by .Kev Carty with . three
III!COnda remaining, gave Gallla
Academy High School's Blue Devils
a ~ non-eonference basketball
victory over Greenfield Friday
night. '

t.DOO lOW TO sma naM
---,
PAm•
,.,•• ¥AU. NEW liST
SIIICTIOII

.704GIW·
-

Gallipolis inflicts first
defeat on Greenfield
.
.

SALI

PA?IIISIUIG

763 3rd AVENUE

HUNtiNGTON. WV.
MOll. thru Fri. 9 A.M.•9 P.M.

9~-SP.M.
~ :;:t~~a~S::~~ec. Coop l_~~0-0.. ~~~~2~·~~·-----~~~=-':~-~~~~- .
take
with
us ooly
which
Is good
the old
year,
we'that
should
resolve
to rr====================::::=======:;:::==========================~
and true and to discard everything

m:e:!

port

Meigs ·senior citizens plan ~weekly aqivities

Community comer

·New year opens chapter

w. v•.

Fane Colli and daughter, Rayanne.

that Is ta1se and desceptive and then
moVe forward, onward and upward
to a better life.
Hajlpy New Year!

last shot In regulation, but didn't run
our t1na1 play right. We had a man
wtde open under the bucket, but
didn't see blm. .Instead, we shot It
from the ootslde, 81\(1 missed."
·In closing, VanMatre sald, "I
·can't say enougl! about the Galli~
.lis program. It'sgoodforour kids as
we prepare for future ,league play."

Blnedasa "gameofcoachlngwlts
Capaclly Crowd
and battling defe!U!I!S," It was Just
,The contest was played before a
thatasCoachJimOsbome'squtntet capacity crowd of 2,:m, Including
rack4!d up Its eighth straight. members of Greenfield's 19M
trlwnpil.
Sou\)1-Central League champion. Coach Rick. ~anMatre's cagers ship basketball squad wblch posted
suffered their first setbaCk In 1Q a 19-1 regular season record. The
games.
'I,'Igers' only loss30yell1'Sagowas to
Jim Thomas and cmpany of
WeB-PiaJed Qame
"Everybody got their rooney's GalllpoUs.
worth tonight," remarked Osborne.
In four years at Greenfield,
"It waa a well-played game. It's VanMatre's teams have compiled a
hard to point out any Individual 61-16 won-loss mark. At home, the
performances illthough Ba!tlc's Tigers have only lost three times In
driving layup and two foul shots did four years-Including Frldaynlgl!t.
put us hack on top In the overtime.''
"We got some tough games
· VanMatre said, "I'm upset, but coming," remarked Osborne. "It's
It's no disgrace to lose to a team of ·competition like this you hope will
better prepare you for future
Gallipolis' caliber." '
· The former Meigs ace and GAHS challenges."
· ·~'@Serve coaCh (four yel\fS under
Osborne concluded, "rt was a
In bls fourth year as clean hard-!oughtgame.lt'snlcewe
Osborne),
head coach at Greenfield, added, came out a winner In this situation."
''We had several opportunities to
How It Went
win It In the t1na1 three minutes ot
GAHS held 5-0, 9-4 and 14-8 leads In
regulation, but missed some four or the llrst period behind Dan Dressel
five footers. Those are shots you've and Gary Harrison before Greenpll to make In a game like tills."
field wam!ed up to take a 1£.14
VanMatrec:ontlnued, ''Webadthe advantage after the tint break.

now

For many the happiness of the
holidays Is being home.
It was certainly that way !or
Captain David Swisher, stationed In
Korea, who got the first gUmpse of
bls Infant son. What a Christmas
present!
David has been In Korea for the
past six months, and w1J1 be
returning In early January for
another six months before getting a,_
state-side asslgnmellt.
.

sam Page hit three long Jumpers
from clowntowJidurlng the tlna11: l8
of the stanza. The last gave GHS Ita
llrst lead with six seconds left In the
quarter.
It was tied 16 and l8 all IJ) the
second before Charles Swift's goal
at the 3:53 mark gave Greenfield Its
biggest lead, 24-19.
After a GAHS timeout, the Devils,
beblndJetfAtldnsonandKevCarty,
knotted the count at !!!).all {1: 25).
Todd Slone's short JumPer (O:Ifi)
put GAHS on top, 28-27, before the
halftime Intermission. .
DcMis Vp By 12
"Turning point was probably In ·
the third periOd," said Vanmatre.
"We let It getaway from us. but we
never ~ve up. We came back, but
that hurt when we got down by 12,
{40-28). That came with 4:58left In
the quarter.
Tile Tigers began chipping away
at that deficit. Swift' sfour-polntplay
{1:46) cut It to four, 42-38. GAHS led
4«2 after three.
Carty's layup opened fourth
period scoring. Jeff Colenuin added
two charity tosses {6:59) and Carty
had another Iayup (5:!14) with 5:!14
lett In regulation.
Coleman's long !tomb (5: 29)
made It 4846. David Mlschal, one of
Greenfield's top scorers, gotblsonly
goal- but an Important one-with
5: 02 left to knot the count at 48-all.

~stall

PATRIOT- Deke Barnes and
Phll Bailey combined lor 43 points
whlle.~ Trace took control in
the second and third quarters and
withstood a Soutlnw!stem rally to
defeat tile Highlanders 64-52 to
capture the champlonsblp of the
fourth annual Gallla County H(l(lday
Tournament here Friday.
"The only way we could beat
them," Southwestern cOach Uoyd
Myers said, "was to match them
basket for basket." The HJghlanders did that fer the game's first five
minutes.
But rieke Barnes took over and
scored 10 of bls game-high 27 points
aa the Wildcats, now 6-1, outscored
&amp;luthwestern, 16-5, to take a 24-13
lead with 5:58 lett In the first halt.
The teams traded baskets the
remainder of the halt, and the
Wildcats took a J5.2&lt;1lead Into the

'
.&lt;

'

.

)

tnGuam . .

He accompanied his mother, Pat,

locker room.

and daughter, VIcky of Manstteld,
and another Son, Scott, Toledo, to
Rutland lor the reulilon. They were
JW!ed lor the day by Mary and Jim
Hobstettel' and daughters, Beth and
Cathy.

I
Reason#l
Could Be The Tax Break.

--Kim Qulrm, daugllter ot Rich and

When you open an Individual
Retirement Accounl at Ohio Valley
Bank. and whether you Itemize your
deductions or not your allowable
IRA contribution is deductible in
full, The amount of tax reduction in
your actual return depends on your
tax bracket your filing status and
how much you invest

Donna J~. Paneroy, didn't
make It heme lor Christmas tbls

year, butdldarrtveon'lbursdayfor
a several days' visit to complete her
parents' holiday happiness. Kim, .
who teaches music In the.schools of
a Pittsburgh auburb, and her
hUBband, Kevin, spent Christmas In
Rochester, N.Y. with bls famlly.

'

Tradltlonally at Chrlstrnastlme,
: Gene Grate has entertained b1s
' family with a holiday dinner party.
: 'lbll year was no exception despite
tbe fi!Ct that he undel went heart
l!ll'&amp;lf!IY not too long ago. His guests
! ~ Mary and Leland Brown,
Mlddleport, their aon, Leland and
"IU wife, Brenda of Woodbddge,
• va., Edward and Ruth Tewksbary,
• Wellllon. and Tcim and Joanne
1'ewlllbacy. Trlaha ' and Tim,

:

~I

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~

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8)' KDI'IIWIIECUP
TlnB 8 II :' SUft
ATHENS- Although oot scoring

..

Convenient
Locations

:'p

...--,.. 91'1auy.
• Cll1llmU villtln at the home ot
':Mr. an4 MrLKeilaethMaltdh w~

-:' Mr. and M'l'l. Junllr Hobart
• !lmalley, Wlertoa, W.Va.; Walter
~ Tl!rrell. Edward Ban1Jip!r, l'atal~ tala, Juanita Terrell, Athenl, Mr.

'

•••

a field goal In• the final minules,
Meigs posted Its fourth straight win
wtth a 5149 decisiOn over Athens

here Friday.
At the four minute mark, the
Marauders nursed a !16-41 lead only

to see the Bullllogll rally with six
straight points In the next two
minutes for a 4746lead, their only
lead of the game.
MBSC...BIIdt
A patr of tree tl!rolvS by Mike
Chancey at the 1:39 mark gave
Melgstheleadforgoodat484'7.Rlck
Wlseaddedbothendsofaone-plusat
the 1: 13 mark and Chris Kennedy
ended Meigs' SCQrlng with a tree
throwwith!RS seconds togo. That put
Meigs up 51-47.
The Bulldogs arored at the «l
8I!COI1il mark and regained the bull
after a Melp turmve1' with :JJ
seconds left, but m1s8ed a 15 foot
Jumperwlth13secondstoao.Metgs'
Jay Carpenter grabbed the

'

..

.

MIAMI (AP) - Dan Marino,
continuing bla record-breaking regular RaiiOII pace, threw three
touchdilWD pasaes and Miami's
restiiTI!CtEd "KWer B" detenae
stymied all but one Seattle foray aa
the Dolphins beat the Seahawkl
:n-10 8alllrday and moved to Within
agameflthelrfltthSuper.Bowl.

rebCJW1d.
'l1li! Maraudera tailed to convert
on two one-plllleS In the last nine
~~~~~. but Athens couldri't take
advantaae. With two II!COIIds lett,
carpenter alloWed IIOIDt! hl!ads-up
play, forcln&amp; an Athi!Ds turnover
with a cleGectl!d pasa.
0
~a..IIA'W+

MarinO, who threw 48 touchdown

passes In 16'reauJar-season games.

maintained bla tl!n!e-a-pme average u hi! completed 21 fl:M for 2£1
yardllll Miami'• first playolf game
thla.uon.

CIIDI:f!)' led Melp wtth 13 poiDII
and 14l'fllouDdl Dave Flsberadded
Dille points and Wile el&amp;flt.
AU..' BID Flalart)' was the
pnllt'l tiDp ICDI'ei' wltb 14. Tile

He threw a 31-yard TD pass to
JimmY Celalo In the til'lt quarter to
atve MJMnla 7-0 lead. BUt be r9lly
too!loilerln thethlrdquarter,aoJnlll
tot 9 tor 92 yardl and hlttlq a
3-yan:ler to Bnlce Hardy and a
38-yan:ler to Mark Clayton two
mlaute. apart late ,In the pl!lbl..
. 1'IIDie ICQI'a loci u I!~ Mlaml'•
lad from a Mnle tour polata to a
~-10.

.

'

SeahciWks

-'

Four

Mlu! Davll (81), Pill Bodley {II) .... Delle Barnell
(Ill). Soatbweltenl'• Jlllty ~ (40) allll Steve
Pelfrey (24) are Ill &amp;be backp'OUnd. {~
photO by Kevin Kelly).

Dolphins
roll .over

Open an Ohio Valley Bank IRA Then cash tn.rtght away on your tax break for
1984, in addition to getting your tax-deterred inlerest started right now.. Come in and
see us'~omorrow .
~
.
.
·
.
,

many other

Barnes IICOl'ed 13 first halt points,
to tead the Wildcats, while Bailey,
the tournament's Most Valuable
Player, added 10.
The Highlanders trailed by 43-32
with 4: 531ertln thethlrdqqarter, but
the Wildcats ootscored the High·

landers 11-2andled ~34at the end of caroms.
The Wildcats connected on 22of46
the quarter. During that stretch,
field
goal attempts and ~ of 25
Southwestern missed nine consecucharity
tosses. Southwestern made
· tive field goal attempts, while
21
of
56
attempts and 10 of 18 free
Hannan Trace hit on three of six
throws.
Both teams grabbed 2&lt;1
attempts.
rebounds.
Southwestern committed
Southwestern broke quickly In the
11
turnovers,
while the Wildcats
fourth quarter, outscoring the
Wildcats 6-1, to cut the lead to :x.40 turned the ball (foll't l'lght times.
Box score:
with 6: 12 lett. But the Wildcats held
theHighlandersotffromthefoulUne
IL\NNAN 'I'RACE (AI • Billy Swa-. l-1-7. Oetu:o
and Southwestern could get no
Bame~~7-tJ.27. Phil BaiJeY7-2-16. SIPVP Stitt l - 1 ~1. Mllu!o
anan PonerO.l-3.1'01.\IB a.aa
closer untll Jim Jetters'hlt two free OaVllt-68.
IIOV'IIMEBii!ltN ~~~~ • Mike Bailey 8-J -17, Jot
throws with seven seconds lett for BMI."'' u.n. Sean Colley J..l.s, Slew' Pelfrey 6-2-14.
Juaty Burlfsm s.-3-10, Jim Jeffen 0.2-2. Juon Hilli-G-2.
the the final mal'gln.
TOI'AL611·11&amp;
Hannan Trace coMected on
~byquartm;
H.ulnalll'l'acfo ... ... .. ..... ....... . lf! 19 1!1 J()....4jfj
seven of ten charity tosses In the
SWthM!IIem ......
. ... 11 ll 10 ~
fourth quarter to maintain Its lead.
"We did a nice Job," Wildcat
Bobeats Take 'l1llnl
.. :
Coach Mike Jenkins said. "We stuck
· PATRIOT - Kyger Creek shU,with our game plan and wanted to toutNorthGalllalnthethirdquarter
hold tliem under 50. Even though we andoutscoredthePirates41-121nthe
didn't quite make It, we had a real second halt In route to an easy m4:J
good effort.
· victory In the consolation game r1.
"We were looking for each other the Cauta County Holiday Tournaand we hustled and helped out on ment here Friday.
defense," Jenkins said.
North Gallla, 2-6, led 31-29 at .
While Barnes and Bailey were halftime, but was().lSfrom thefkxt
providing tbe srorlg punch for the In the quarter, as the Bobcats, now
Wildcats, BUiy Swain grabbed 11 2-4, scored 21 unanswered polnts.IR
rebounds and scored seven points. . the fourth quarter, K.C made elglit
Mike Davis chipped In with eight of ten shots from the floor, while tht
points and tour rebounds.
Pirates connected on only five of~·
Mike Bailey led the Hlgblanders attempts.
•
with 17 points. Steve Pelfrey added
Kyger Creek broke quickly be14 and Justy Burleson chipped In bind two baskets by Steve Waugh,
with 10 lor &amp;luthwestem, now 1-ll. the game's leading ,ICQrer with 18,
Sean Colley · was the leading and raced to an 8-21ead with 4: 57 left
rebounder for Southwestern, with 8
Continued on C-4

Marauders edge Athens Bulldogs, 5l-49

Simply because we service more
lRAs than any other financial insuch a strong growth investment
stitutlontn theareQ, So we have the
You Cion'! pay a penpy in taxes on
experience. and offermore options.
the interest unlilyou start takingt)1e
such as a variety of fixed and
money out And by then. you~re
probably going to be retired and · variable rate investments. And, at
Ohio Valley Bank. you can invest
in a lower tqx bracket. So your
· whatever ~ount best 5\lits your
taxes are substantially less.
budget. sldfltng wtth as little as SI 0
per week, You may even preler to
lund your IRA'Irorri your CapitalLine account. All accounls are
Insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance COiporatlon.

Looking
Por Some Other t.a.ona?
.

Jdnbla Veda Davis of Pomeroy

\

II·Tbe Tax-c1efened Interest.
This is the point for an IRA being

'

tot tilt bol!day ~Mr. and Mn.

'1/

Reason#3
II Obio Valley 'Bank

At. least for the present But when you telire.ll wtll be tM first reqson. ThQI'swhen .
most people discover their pension or retirement' funds just won't do the job. And
lhat's when an IRA reallY helps.
·

• hDIIdiY ptberlnp.... .

' JobD LeiWW ~ C'.aillpnll.l, Mr. and
"Mn. Ted Lehew and Ian, Cbllll'• cDiie, Sadie 'lbuener, Syracuse, ·
;; C111i71 LeiiiW, Galllpolla, and BW
&gt; and .. ___ Lebew and BillY.

Reason#2

'

Tbe Last Reason Ia Retirement.

;1.anelvtDe.

~

JILOI1DI!D- ~·· Wllllalsloploolallor
help ftlle a wilD of Human Trace defenden
... , ..... 1*11 Ill Galla Coua&amp;y Hallda.Y Tounlament
ac11on. Jfl' piiQen aeen above are BID, Swain {41),

•

H1me for Christmas with her
parents, Manning and Becky
Mohler, this year were Dod! and
Michael Hensley and their children,
Crystal and Tabitha, of Warner·
Robbins, Ga.

~

lWiih arms In air); the Tiger!!' David MJochal, (!2), •
Umlted to Just one bucket by GAllS defenders, ud &amp;be
pesky Jeff Coleman (12) who tailed 18 marken 8Dd
played an ..,tetondlng defensive game forGreenflekl

Galla's Daa

By JOHN nuEDMAN

Making a surprise vlslt to bls
gnuldmother, Mae Crouser, on
' Christmas Day was Larry Welty,
who Is stationed with the Air Force

Alld there

r;ot 14 of his points In the lll'l!t period; Todd Beo gdGII ·

DREMEI, ROf -

Hannan Trace retains Gallia
County holiday cage crown

AJso horne for the holidays were
SSgt. Richard Pean and chlldren,
Kenneth and Michelle, of Langley
Air Force Base, Va. They are with
bls parents,Mr, and Mrs. John
Dean and visiting many relatives
!Deluding Mr. and Mrs. John w.
Dean, Jeremy, James and Sarah,
the Garold Gilkey of Athens, Mr.
and Mrs. Rowland Dais, and his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Marldns, and Mrs. ,Ahna
Woods. Racine.
Others visiting at the Dean home
dul'll1g the holldays were Mr. and
Mrs. GiEIIn Young, Michelle and Glenn Jr., Cbesblre; Nathan Ar·
nold; Chester; Walter Terrell and
Edward Barringer, Pataskala,
Mrs. Charles King, Kingsbury, Mr.
and Mrs. PaUl Paynter, Albany,
and Juanita Terrell, AOiens.

..

{12)

acored four qulcll palids In &amp;he fin&amp; period aplM hcJIA
Gremfleld Friday nJch&amp;. He llnllhed the nlpt wl&amp;b 13
IJIIII'Ioen d ;lie an all-out defensive ellori by the
'l1gen Ill aiiUi him down. Otben In II* 'l'lnte&amp;Seullue' phoeli are G.-field's Sam Pace (!14) who

81""'9' 6-TCI!IIterCbrlaGerlabad
Dille reboundl while addln&amp; seven
pollltB.
Aa the IIIIDotlni WQUld Indicate,
nelthe!' coadl thWght bla team
~verywen.

.

"We came out fiat. We hustled,

•

Continued on C-2

�December 30•.1114

Pomeroy Middhport-Galipllll, Ohio-Point Plnn Ill. W. V•.

December 30. 1984

Eagles lose tough- ~atch to
~~:federal
Hocking
five,
63-57
wor.n:
=. . . . ... · •. . .... ·; : =

TVC
...._

........ ................. ..• 2 a

e

!07

2 g

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. !! : J:!"'!r.! :::::::::::::: :::~ ~
v.. a..y ..................... .3 1
w.... 1Acal ......................2 1

:

131

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5ll BJ
llll 111111
.. .............................. .! 8 t.12 :;:

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w L P or

=:;..:7..:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 1 l: :
llll&amp;n ................................5 2 t6'l w

~ ...................... ........5 2 172 158

~Yen ................ ... 5 ' 2 515 ...,
Coullly .. .. ... . ...... ........ 3 • CG OJ

-

-..lloddna .................. 3 c ca m

Woma l..oooJ .............. ........2 5 IJ6 529
.. ...... ................. ........1 6 3110· t51

·w-..............................o 1 CB
an._...W'M)
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1-c·
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lml ·

•
W L P liP
Belpre .......... ....... .. ....... ......1 o 116
w.,. LocaJ ......... .-..... ,.....6 I 391 :m

.,._.

m

.......... ...................... .. ...5 2 351 3U

Melli ........... ...................... c 3 383 383
VlatooC.Unty ...................... f 3 3.1l 328

~

........ ......................3 • 298 328

Fe&lt;leni·IIDclcl.,. .. ................ 2
Nellc!oMDe-YCI'k ......... ... ...... 2
........ .. ....... ....... ....... ..2
Wellalllll .... .... .. .........•...........0
-

Dee. Zl reoult:
J..-UI2Wellatou57

-·- .
-·-.

35

5 ICC 262 .
5 1m m
7 251 389
3218 3218

Jlj

MelpiiiAtllenstll
-~ 'Ill 'l'rtmllle 5I

~88MIUerf7

Federll·Hoc:ldJw 63 Eastern 57

JIAIUUSON GLIDI!ll THROUGH GIIS DEFENSE - Gllllla'a

LOGAN - Thl' absence of two
starters failed to slow the Logan
Chieftains Friday night as they
walloped VIsiting Trimble 75-541n a
· non-teague contest.
Troy Wright was sldeUned with an
ankle Injury and Keith Myers
played sparingly with an ouchy
ankle, but the Chiefs turned to Jim
. Wald, whorespont;ledwlth24polnts
and 13ofl..ogan's40rebounds.
After spotting the Tomcats a 14-13
first quarter lead, the Chiefs moved
to 33-28 halftlm b\11
a
e ge, and t hen
outscored the ·visitors 22·8 In the
third quarter.
. Joining Wald In double digit
• scoring was Jack Mlller with 18and
Kerty York with 15 points.
·,
Donovan Lent's18potnts and nve '
rebounds topped the Tomacts, now
5-3 on the season.

Kevin 11u11er a110 111t double
A Jona Jumper by liopllornaft
'Dna I 12 'IIWf
tl&amp;lll'eS with ll piDUfj
.
Eddie QIIIIM, J baleiJJ)eclriWfron)
STEWART - Outlcorlna Eaat· · 'lbe nm period of play was .Brent Blllell, and a IIIJI pollit llll'P
ern 21·14 In the aecolld Qll&amp;l'tel', the nip-and-tuck aa Eaatern clawed from F'reshm&amp;ll point IIWcl Jell
Lancen came Into COIItelltloa early with an Caldwell ljpiJted an Eaatem nlly
m
•tbenrepelledasedous aare-tve transltloa pme aDd that elided the trllllll! at 11·11.
Eastern threat late In the fourth overJ]I bUitle, whUe Federal- Eastern' a tavor. FHHS led 37-31 at
Quarter to c1atm a &amp;1-57 non-~ flncklaa quietly placed Its double- halittme.
triumph over the Eagles here edged lwonlin plaCe for Its aecolld
E•ll- a.e Gtlp
~Yevenlna.
perlodalaylna. Tledtwtceat2-2and
Eaatemcloaedthegaprlilltafter
. Federal-Hocking . boosted Its 4-4, Federal-Hocking took an 8-4 halttlme, but soon alld that drive
overall record to 54. Eastern . lead 011 buckets by Jay Ethe"'"- fall by the wayside aa Matlack and
chopped to 2-4. _
· and Raudy Matlack.
.....,~
'"'--"-ued on C •
UIIIWI
...
Senior forward Keith Barnhart
wasring
toUgh Inside for the Lancers, r-r~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~
sco
a game-high 27 points.
~Matlack
C8lllled 18.
............ F-- ....._...
. , IKlG'I'I'

!,eder=lclag

.,.._.

SXL Chain Saw

_.......,..

.

'two fresbmen paced the Eastern
attack ·'"''-h ~as led by Brent
"''""
~·
~11 with 19 points and Jeff
.Caldwell with· 14. Junior forward

.

-

SVAC

Wellllllll II Metal
Aloxandor at Belpre
Federal·llocldnl! at NellonvUJe.York
Miller at Vlnlllll County

cage standings
HOMELITE SUPER XL ·

p . OP
C17 31111
4(11

315

"111':·24" Gl!lde Bere available

3112

m

•Automatic end manuel phaln oiling
•DI~Iacement 3.66 cu. in . (67.4 cc)
•Chromed chain
•Full radlu• handle bar
•Heavy duty

:151 f.ll
5117llll!i
395 CC6

ONlY

S2999$

Wllm!ll Local at Trtmb!P

Kev caner (30).

Gallipolis inflicts...
Continued from C-1
Neither team score&lt;~ the remainder
of the game.
'l1prl Score Flnt

'

Greenfield scored first In the
overtime when Sam Page tapped In
a loose ball (1: 50) . Then came
Holltlc's four-point play, and Carty's
: lrisurance markers.
• : Three Devils finished In double
:tti!ures. ted by Garty's 18. Dressel
:and Harrison had 13 each. Coleman
• had 18, most ot them In the second
; half. Page also had 18, an but two In
: the Orst half, 141n the first period
: • GAHS hit 22 of 48trom the field for
percent. The Devils were 1Q of 13
&gt;for 76 percent. GAHS had 27

::as

.

rebounds, 10 by Carty and tlve by
BQstlc. The Gallians had seven
turnovers.
Greenfield hit 45 percent of Its
shots (18of40) andwas73percentat
the line (14of19). The Tigers had21
rebounds, nine by Page, and eight
turnovers.
Greenfield will host Washington
CH In a South-Central Ohio League
game Friday. , GAHS wW hast
~an.
.
Box !ICOI'e:

,,

JACKSON - Three players
scored In double figures Friday
• night as the Jackson Ironmen
downed Miami Trace, 70-46.
•
VInce Wolford taBled 17, Pat ·
Stevens 16, and Brad Poe 13 as the
• lronmen raised their record to 6-1
whUe the Panthers remain winless
In seven outings. It's Jackson's best
start on the hardwood In· several
years.
Mark MattheWs scored 22 points ·
for the losers, who were charged
• with 19 turnovers and whistled roral
• ' personal fouls.
• Jackson hit 26 of 00 shots from the
• field, made 18 of 28 at the line, and
: claimed 38 rebounds, 10 by Sean
~ Poe.

'Die box score:
MIAMI '!RACE f·J -Trry Ht.•hdnJill'I"!).O.IO; Mark
\ Manhl:!ws 10-2-27; Oak&gt; MeFadLn 2-04: Shawn Jolftl
~ J.0-2; Ryan H. . . s 3-M; MaM Mow-nlng J-0-2.

; 'roi'AL8S..._
'
• J ACKSON 1..) - Pat SlevensS-0-16: Vmtt Wttltord
~ ~7- 17;

• P:x? l -0-2:

Brian ~'2-G-4 ; Ertc

" Mlarni 'T'rl'f' .................... ............... 10 10 12 M--46

ATHENS -

Frlday.

BoxiiCOI"e:
Stott Ga ldlf&gt;l !i-1-11: Ridl

-~~~ .....,........,,..10;CIIuci&lt; Do"''~''

~1-T; Mark c~ 2-&lt;1&lt;: Clwlle

·'"'"""1~~ """"ont.nt~1UM.ua ......
LOGAN (-.) - Jd Miller M-18: Saltt Farrar
2-&lt;1&lt;: o.J. c,....,u~: M..,,_ , _)·&gt;: JtmWald

::=~-~r~~~i.
"""'"'""'"""'

_,.

SMftl-3-7. TOTAJAU-14-SI.

· By CM~rtm :

CaUipolls ..................... ............ lt 1&amp; lti 4 &amp;-M

'
.8113-lllien ' -

2-{J(J

Dee. 211, ltl4 .
lllallllnp

• Team
W i.
• Foodland .... ................ ....... .. .. . ........ l!l 39
Mink's Cbev. &amp; Olcls ..... ........ .. ....... .. 'ffi 41
: Cttlte's Drug ................ ........ :.......... 72 48

71
Y"k • ·1&gt;: KeltY

Ml!IG8 (88) - Pill! Kine 1-().2: llonnte
Boeker 1-4-11; Huey E11110n 3-1-7; J eue
Howar&lt;l c-2-10; Steve Muss&lt;r :w-4; Ed
Kitchen 3-H ; Scott PoweU 1&lt;&gt;2; Mart y Hart
~ Jell Nelson ~- Tl1l'A1Jl JU-18.
A'niENII (A) - P. J. Lylllll l0-3-23: Cb uck
Coe 0-1-1: Krls Kooltval l+lO; Jtm Finley
5-1-ll; Tony Coles ~: Tom NIIZIIm 0-2-2.
Tl1l'A1Jl ti-11-U.

Trtmlllo... .............. .......... ........... " " 8 ·1 8-51
~...oRen .......................................... 13 21 Z2: 21- 76
- . . . _, Loconlli. '~'""'"'. .'·

• Circle's Catering ... ....... ................... fJi
• Pasquale Eloo ........................... ... :.. 66
: &lt;.:e;ntral 'ITUst .. ,..... .... ............ .... ...... 66
Central Supply ......... .............. ... ... ... 111
. Gtno·• .. ·-----·--- --............ ........ , .... ..... 62
McDonald's ... ........ ,.......... .. ...... ...... 62
Robbins &amp; Myers ............................ 62
vtuage Jns .. ... ............................ ..... oo
Sporn No.8 .... ................................ 56
The Elks ............ :........................... 48
Jeffers EKC.............., .. .................... 41

Ironton now 4-5, was led by ~yan
Ainsworth's 15 points and 14 by
WUlls, whlle Brian Skaggs canned 18
for the Kentuckians, now S-3 on the
year.
• Box tiCOre:

IRONTON t.-.1 - Ryan Ainsworth H -l!i; Oovld
Todd Warner 4-0-8; Sieve W1Ws7-6-H:
Janlt'! U!wls 1-0-2; Ooog Gambill '2-&amp;4 ; Bobby Lutz
0.2-2. 1'01'.-\U D-1-a. '

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

n H Xl l3 a-st
lnlnloo .... ..................................B L1 16 11 ~53
Raet'\le 101n: tn:n:M Ill, Lawrence Co. :n IOfl .

La~ Co............................

I

J. Stolnbeck .
Mink's Chev. and Olds won '' elght points
from Michael &amp; Friends. High bowler foc
Mink's was J. Clatwortby wlt.h 591. High

Circle's Catering won six jXJints from
Central Trull. High b:&gt;wler for Circt(''ll
Caterlnc wao C. Cpnley with 52C. Hlch bowler
for C()fltral Trust was J . Ekllch with 565.
Rol&gt;btns and Myers and GUile's won four
poln1s each. High bowler fer ~tno and
Myers was G. Flllhorwtth5117. Hlghbowler!or
Gillie's was G. Elliott with 516.

nowanemharrualng66.

:
· u

r-;===================it:..

25-yard touchdoWn with 1: ot left to
play.
But In the tlnal analysiJ, It was
OSU's defenile, nlhth stingiest In the
nation, which played a key role by
holding the Gamecocks to 2!18 total
yards, til below their III!Venth·
ranked season average. And 148
yards came on two sudden touch·
down thrusts In a five-minutes pan of
the third period that wiped out the
Cowboys' 1J..O halft1me lead. .
"We used a dltferent (defensive)
front, scrnethlngweused todoqulte
a bit but hadn't shown since the
. Missouri game last year," explained ~ones, who has taught
defense since he began hJs coaching
cru:eer In 19m, except for a one-year
stint In 1982 as OSU's offensive
coordlnatoc.
" It was a five-man front that
overshl1ted toward thetlghtelldalde
and freed up (outside Unebllcker
Rodney) Harding more (Harding
recovered two South CaroUna
tumbles) . Normally, we overshltt to
the spUt end side and stack the
linebackers. We felt Uke It woukl be
more effective against their Spllt·
Back Veer."
Both teams !lnlshed with 10-2
marks and record-setting seasons
as two of college football's Cinder·
ella teams. Oklahoma State won 10
games for the first time In Its history
- the 1M5 and 1976 Cowboys won
nine- while no South Carolina club
had ever won more than eight
games or cracked The Associated
Press Top Ten, However, the

atiiW

I CIIIIT- AYIUIU - M.a.YM 0W11 C?llftl : •.

'I'OIJI

Chao••
rite Lorv•t Selections In
CentnJI "'"' huthHitem Ohio
r----COUPON-•--- - ,

1

I

Loctn Monument Company
Pom""'· Oh~ - v:ntoo. Ohoo
DPI"te..Mt,....fr"boolo. ~••howing

I m.mortolt~ fwllto(Of'wlth ti•n ond
I Ort,u.
....''""·
-.dmroll iniOf'"'lon about
I cr....-.otiorl
1 0 Killdly ~ CW! cMholi1M L~
1 lll'ootl'" ''ent C:O. r.,.-rMfllo!i..r coli ot "'"
'-•.. --.d mr 6.toil1ebout Mou~·
J O,lecl
'

..l.umt
_ wi thout ~tgotlon.

'

.

dial
DISHES

'

ltsh

Aluminum
1ft. to 20 ~L

(1

____

T~/CINIII

50 Cal.
Perc.
..,.._

'17995
HAWKEN HUNTING RIFlE
KITS

81LfiiiiiiiRD
MI'IIUII!
81811W

Greentleki'B'._............................... lO 7 7

DISHES ON DISPLAY.
ON IT. 7
TUPPEIS PUliS, OliO
"

IY 'Ill POSJ Offl(l

IIOift ......rl. 1·6

s.t.

$)3995

L'=-----------J

SONY dealer

FOR

DOOK~ETS SHOWING

:.~~!~~~R,•raFs'i-':T~LOR

WITH

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Meigo County
Oiaplay Yard Neer
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Leo L. Vaughen,Mgr.
Phone 992·21188

Vinton, Ohio
Galli• County
o 11
· I1 Y d
P 0Y. Buoh
ar
Jemes
Manager
Phone 388-8603

PRE-INYENTOIY

WHITE ELEPHANT SALE

10°/o-50°/o OFF
EVERYTHING

bdulling GuM I Alllmunillon

NOW THRU JAN. 5, 1984

EIERSBACH
HARDWARE
ro.IOY, OH.

24. 88

W'th e&gt;Change . l om, ted 40
mon th warrantv 90 d ays fr ee replacement perioCI delivers
up to 315 _cold crar~k i n g am p s Rec ommended
for veh icles Wnh lim ited power oprions Maln te
nanee t ree· at an economy pr ice

37 •88

Wit h e;c henge Um ited 50 .
month warrani y t80 day free replacement penod
delivers up l o, 380 co ld crJnki ng amps Recom
rnended for 'leh lcies w i th moderate amo unt o l
POW!Jr o pti ons.

quarl .

Valvoline or
Quaker State 10W30
Motor Oil
Helps keep your c ar ru nning smooth and
your engine in gcxxt cond ition

Reg. ag· &amp; 94 '

Lim•t 12

E...-"'~~2 Catiber ·Finished lifit
CYA SQUIRREl .IIFLE

~.~'·

.$17995

CYA HAWUN RIFLE liT

1.88

3.49

50 Cal.

' =·;•,'"'.. ·!

. . ..
--

c~

! ...

Rain-X
Window
Treatment
CoYers

windshields.
lights. etc. With an invisib te
snletd lhat tli!lperses rain.

sleet and snow on con tact.
It also seals aga1n sl bugs.
salt. sand and sun.
fRX711 Reg. 3.99

CVA All Callier P•cussl111

Round
Sealed Beam •
Head lamps
•4000. #4001 . #6014
Reg 2 99

4.88

Rectangular
Head lamps

•4652. ~ 4 651 . -6052

~-' Reg 5 49 &amp; 6.88

SHOORRS KITS

Sll995

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

A((ESSO~Y

PA(K

$1995

3.95 ..

Iller mig 's reb8t e

Halogen
Headlamps
le . •5001 ... . IItie
Reg. 7.95

c. qr.
-

. J gtr.01

.......... ...,.1$100

378-6158

WRITE

~37

LIM TV

lnatelled

APPOINTMENT

l s•tm pt y Matl. U• The Coupon For Further lnfDI'lnatlon

J StrHtfHRovtr _ _;_·--~ I
' "' •. ··I

I• ••

Sy1tem1 from S-1695

OPEN EVENINGS AND
SUNDAYS BY

I
1

..-----------------l

c

\

IRAND OPENINS ........,
OUR SNOWRDOM

10~ DepoAit and Balance
ia Convenient Low Moatbly Paymeati.

By quaners:

.. ' .

SO Cal. Perc.

SONY .....

.,.
• •..

1'01'.4.1.811-1.5--JJ.

$2995

•ANNOUNCIN'*' c..-"' ... ••at•

. . ....

GU:EN'ftii.D Rai!IIVD (J'l~ - Moon O.l-3:
Cam~ 2-3-7; Slmnnlt 0-H; Gillenwater 5-'2·12:
Stovt'r 0.1·1: M~tart J.t -1: Kina l.J..!i: M ym~ G-1·1.

Perc.

~EJVAU

·a .ct.y, 7 days a WHk. Brough~ to YoU by: '

I

•••

Flnley 0-1-l; Splete- 000. TOI'AUIN-tl.

'17995

aAC" POWDII 04.IH5o

n.:oVW!'6'-A.
n

AnewcommunltyHI'Yiceavallable24houra

llfASid.
.
I I

'

f'OWOtl Gtll-6

11

446-BANK .

flberll••

Ill •- -ft.~.. I

::
:•
..... .

GAI.IJPOLII Bl!BI!BVIS (.) - MllkT 1-2-4:
C.-..dy l -2-4; C. Howard24-4: Jackloo »-1: Spencer
2-0-4: Holt ().().(t: A. Howard 1·0-2: Wldlllne ().0.(),

--

•

.

I1
1
I
I

'I

With e•change ''mlted 60
month warranty 365 day !tee replace ment penod del1ve1s
up to 5410 col d CJ anki ng amps E•ceeds ne w
&gt;~e h ic l e man uta c t u re speciticali o n Ma1n1enan c·e
tree ·
1 Never needs wat er under normal condi tt ons

-

For the current
· Tim&amp;Weather-Temperature

M=l

I - · · ..... -- - r

:·

.....,tl...•• ...

1tte~Mt~()tt/( ...

.

•.

Tbedefenlelrl!pt~inthegame big happen,
aDd the otren.e, which unleashed Hilger. who cxmpleled 11x
li'nprelalve,clock-ronsurntnatouch· · puaes dtlrlng
downdrlves oflllalld74yardslnthe 75 yardli Including a ~~~~
tJnt haU, Cllllll! through with an HanJie 0~ fourth·and-tlx
88-yard march aa time was running South CaroHna 49
.

44 •88 .

THOMPSON
CENTER

• 41

t
00 .
"lwaan't

GsUipolls' B' .................................. ~ 2 10 12-28

McDonald's won l!dx points trorrt BobEvam · ·
Farm. Ht,b bowll!r fer McDonald's was S.
Ulty wtth 5111i. Hlgb bowler for Bob"Evans was

m.

the Gator
Bowl
when
tight pus
end
Barry
Hanna
turned
a short
from Rusty Hllgl!r Into a dramatic

Gamecocks' .............,
record Is
~--·

more, added seven, as did 5-8
sophomore Jeff Campbell.
Kirk Jackspn led Gallla's attack
with nine points.
Box score:

,Phi~ 4-(HI;

J .. Bush with 513.
·
Sporn No. 8 won s1x points rrom Gino's.
High bowler for Sporn No. 8was J . Davlswtth
:&gt;:11. High bowler for Gtno·s was L. Bush wtth

•

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) On
. a nlllrt when Pat Jones
complell!d a reall'd·bne~DI - ·
SOl! as Oldaboma State 1 roolde
~ad coach, Ills bacqround u a
defenslvesPI;!Ciallotcameinhalldy.
The headllnell will I OOw that the
ninth-ranked Cowboy~ rallied to
defeat No. 7 South caroJina 21.-lt In

markers. ~gMwrt&amp;U, 6-5sophr r----------------------_j~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

IAWIIENCE (IIJ - Jotm F'\eldti 2..o.f: Bri an
SkagpS&amp;-1.8; Martul Frf:oeman i-2·10: Eddlt' Vlmon
. S.2-12; 8Nn Ratllf( 2-J.7. TOI'AUIII-IJ.II.

~

·Central Supply won elghl J)otnts lrom
Villa ge Ins. High OOwler for Cen tral Supply
was M. Shaw wtth547 . HlghbOwterforVUJage
lns. was B. Watson with 545.
Pasquale Elec, won etght points from The
Elks . Hlgll bowler for Pasquale Elec. wasT.
Waugh. with B . High OOw ler ror ThE&gt; Elks was

GREENFIELD -:- After taking
an early 4-0 lead In Friday's
. prellmlnary game, GaWpolls gav,e
up 13 straight points to host
Greenfield, then Coach '11m Cos·
sett's rangy Cubs posted a 37-28
non-conference Victory over the
visiting Blue Imps.
The loss dropped GAHS to 6-2 on
the year. Greenfield upped Its mark
to 7·3.
The Cubs led 10-4,17-&amp;and 24-16at
the quartermarks. The Imps pulled
within seven, 22·15, with 1:02left In
the third period.
GHS Iced the
. Victory by forging
ahead ~·22 with 2: 22left to play.
DaveGWenwater, 5-4 sophomore,
led the Winners' attack with 12

buzzer.

High bowler for Jeffers Exc. was C. Wltewlth
!'i85. High OOwiL'I"' for Fpodland wu Bmlard
.JII!lley wtth 552.

MJchael &amp; F'r1ends ................ ........... 42 78.
BobEvaniFarm ................ ............ 32 88

Imps lose tilt to
Greenfield's Cubs

IRONTON- A 25-foot jump silo!
by Steve WUlls titled the Ironton
Tigers to a 53-51 overtime Victory
over Lawrence County, Ky. Friday
night.
'
The rivals played to a 48-48
deadlock In regulation time and then
tallled three points each during the
first 2: 50 of the overtime.
• Wlththescotetledat51·51andjust
12 secollds left, DaVId PhUllps'
missed shot was rebo\lnded by Todd
Warner, who dished out to Wlllls for
the successful shot at the final

54
54
54
511
511
511
60
64
72
76

a,. ljWitlen:

· Meigs ....... ............ ..............8 9 9 12-38
Athens .. .... ..... .. ..... .......... ...II 1.1 14 15-53

'l1p!n Win Apln

b:&gt;wler COr Michael A Frtends was J . Woodall
wtth 492.
Jelfen Exc. won stx potntslrom Foodllll1d.

.

Thl' Bullpupa had a 24-17 halftime
lead melt to :zt-26 early In the third
quarter; but Athens went on Its 19-4
run for a 48-30 lead midway Into the
final period. ,
P. J . Lyons led Athens, now3-6on
!lie year, with 23 points and Jim
Finley added 11. Jesse Howard
topped the Little Marauders with 10
whlle Huey Eason and Ed Kitchen
added seven ea.ch.
Coach Mlck Chllds' reserve crew
fells to 54 on the year and remained
at 4·3 In the TVC.

percent, hit just twoofll at the line,
and had 21 reiXlunds.
Logan upped Its mark to 8-1
J1!COrd. UIS forced Trimble Into 25
turnovers.

'l'ltDiaLI!: (II) -

Atheni' reeerves

six-minute stretch In t~ secolld
went on to a 53-38wln here

half and

trips South Carolbp

.

.

out.cored ~ 19-4 during a

rebollndsTrlmble made 26 of 53 for :10

.·L9cal b~ling

GIIEENFtEWI•)-Colenwl~~ Pa,...OOO.
Mbd\all-0-'2: JlllldtJoDG-3-3: PaceB-2-18; Pa:;tUtl.O.~ ;

6

Brad f'ol&gt;~l- LJ:

: Jllllrkscwl ....... .'............................... .l5 16 ~ I!J-10
lteMn'tiCOre: Jadt9on.ll. Mlaml TraCE'37.

oALIJI'OiJo til&gt; - _ , 1~~ - " ~2&lt;:

~

Brad McCorkle 1+6; Rod Mllll'l' 3-1-7: Shawn

• Ri&lt;'hard s l-2-4; Jim Dldu.•I'SQ'I ll-1 -l'IOT.US •l8--a.
"' Sforto byqua nen:

C.rty &amp;.&amp;-18: Drellel6Hl; Harrlnl 6.1·13; Fellure
()..()..():Slone 1-0-2; Alklnlon~- TOTAUSa6t.

Greenfield ............................ ,.. 16 U

beaten, 53-38

The Chiefs hlt 52percenttrom the
floor, (36 of 69) converted four of
eight free throws, and shared 40

.w.. s.,...

Oklahom~ . State

Meig&amp; l'elen'es

Jackson, Ironton cop holiday
: wins on court Friday evening

5 1811 M2

-~~­
· - ill Aloxandor 00

GU"y llantlloll (10) .Upped lllllde tor two o1 ~ U polniiiiCIIIIIM 11011&amp;
Greenfield 011U. pi"' at G.-lleJd Frtclay nlpl. Tbe Blue Devils woo,
IIUO, Ia overtime. On left Is 'Dgen' Tony ~- On rlllht Ill Gllllla'a

Logan rips Trbrible in
non-conference battle

·

The Sunday Tlll18S-Sentinei- PIIge-C~3

Pomeroy Middleport- GaHipolia, Ohio- Point Ph nant, W. V•.

•

5.15

S~lt e~t

'l 00 Mia s Ae b~tl ~
YO U! CO! I

ea. ill h ! f re t:Hih!!

1.49

Purolator XSV
011 Filters

2.49·

Purolator XSV
Air Filters

YlCIO&lt; TOfquo lit
IOrewelrt,.r S11
Rea. 3.19 ........ .

••

•
•.

••

tar a . 111n1 ~ 1. 111!1

304-675-2911
...

Cloling Ntw , .... Ewe 5100 PJA.-0,. New Year's Day lli•-Houn
011111 Mon. thru Sit. 9:30 a.m. • 7:00 p.11.;
Stm., 12 10011 to 5:00 p.11.

w

· Pel• PieuMt A ·-..Ilk. RL M Nea11e

1.H

.

:z==-IIJIII.J

209 UPPD IMIIOAD
446-3107
OPEN 7 DAYS AWUI

Plews Oil Fllt01 Woench
lltll811ag. 2.17 . •..

�December 30. 1984 .

O...nbet 30, 1984

every vlllage in Gallia

Eagles lose.. ··- - - - : - : -.--l:on-tln_ued_rrom_c_Barnhart canned tlve straight field
goals to put Federal on top 47-34
with 4: 30 left In the third frame, Its
biggest lead the night at 13. By

of

the 3: ol5 mark, Immediately followtng an EHS Umeout. Kevin Barber
notched a l5 foot jumper, then sank

; AJ.VroURNAMENT TEAM - Memben of lloe
~ lelnn M-mced It lbe end of the
~Ilia County Holiday Tourumelllllt 8autbwelltern

Friday were, 1rom left, Mille KemperofNGrtb GaDia,

eree.._ Southw~Bem's Steve
Pelfrey 111111. Mille Bailey, and ID Swain, Deke
llanleillllld Phi Bailey of Hannan Tnce. Bailey was
named the toanuunmt's 111011t valuable pll!.yer.

Rod MOI'pll of Jlner

Hannan Trace ... _____Co=ntln:::::ued=fro~m::.;:C::.::,·1_ _ _ _ __
tn:!hequarter. AfterUtePil'atescut
the lead to 12-8 with 2:35 lefl, ·the
• IJOI?cats scored six straight points
• !Dr an J8.81ed.
: : After shooting 9-12 In the first
: ljilarter, the Bobcats were held to
: 4;11 troni the fioor In the second
Jjuarter, whlle North GaWa, 5-181n
1J1e opening quarter were 6-13 from
. the Door In the second and took a
· two-point halftlme lead, 31·29.
: :; Steve Thaxton led the Pirate
.: sfcondquarterchargew!thsevenof
·J I)s nine points ..Two free throws by
Mike Kemper with 1:M left In the
·_half put the Pirates on top for the
first time In the game, :~;S.27. After a
basket by the Bobcats' Chuck Vogel
•!Jut K-C back on top, Wayne Diddle
: lilt a free throw and Kemper a
: }y.mper for the halftime margin.
• · • Vogel scored eight points In the
· third quarter and Anthony Kitchen
8dded seven of his 17 points as the
• Bobcats raced to a 5Q.3llead at the
• end of the third quarter. North
GaWa miSsed l5 field goal atlempts
. ~ turned the baU over four times
.durtngthequarter.
::: •.. 'fllaxton ~roke the Pll'ate cold

.

spell WIIJt ,a

bUcket In the first five
seconds of Ute fourth quarter. But
after ThaxtDn's basket, KC scored
nine unanswered points, for a $.33
lead with 3: 43 left In the game. The .
Bobcats'. largest lead came with
seven seconds left, when Barry
Matthews hit a foul shOt, for a 7(H1
lead. John Diddle hit a last second
jumper for the Pll'ates for the final
margin.

Bobcat Coach Keith Carter said
hewaspleasedwithhlsteam'seffort
after Its loss to HanJiliii Trace
Thursday. "ltoldthekldsnottorun
with Hartnan Trace and they
probably slowed It down too much.
· Tonight, we tried to speed Ute tempo

the foul line. North GaUia was 1IHl6
from the floor and 11-16 from the

charity stripe. The Bobcats out
rebounded North Gallla, 38-2ll. The
BobcatS committed 17 turnovers,
whlle the Pll'ates turned the ball
over 14 times.
Box score:
NOR'IH G.\UM (43) ·Mike Kemper 4-2·10. Todd
[)eeol J.Hl, Wa~ DlddJt' H -5, Paul l...e(- 2-1-5, Steve
Thaxton f-1·9, Brian H11wk! 1-2-t, John Dlddlt' J-(}.2.

TOT.us t•n-o.
KVGER CJIIEEK (11) • Otock Vogt!1 7-H5. Slt'Vt'
Waugt\&amp;.2·18. An1 hl:lt\Y Kllchen 8-1-17. Brian Warn~k&gt;y
~

up."

Vogel added l5 points for the
Bobcats and Rodney Morgan
chipped In with 11 points and seven
rebounds. Waugh also led all
rebQunders with 12, whlle Kitchen
added eight.
Kemper was the only Pirate to
score In double Oglires wiiJt 10. Todd
DeeI added eight for the Pll'ates.
· For the game, Kyger Creek was
Il-48 from the Door and 10-19 from

.

;9hio State captures Red Lobster meet
•

; • ORLANDO, F1a. (AP) - Brad
: ~ll!rs pumped In 19 points, snared
• )Oreboundsandblockedflveshotsto
.• JIPIU'kOhloStateton67victoryover
~ ~n In the championship game
the Red Lobster Classic.
•:
·
Sellers'
teammate Troy Taylor,
w
• )'o'ho was named the tournament's
; most valuable player, scored nine of
;~ h:ls 17 points In the closing eight

..

: ill

Rodrley Morgan 4-3:11, fUchle Gilmore 0.2-2,

Barry Man hEws 0-1·1. TOI'ALS JI}Jt-,

minutes Friday night to help the
Buckeyes hold off a late Hatters
raUy. Taylor's effort also Included
seVen assists and six rebounds.
1n the consolation game, Gerald
WUklns and Eugene Deal scored 2ll
points each as TennesseeChattanooga pounded Flortda A&amp;M
7f&gt;.60•.

... ..
~·Marshall drops 63-62 ~ battle
::,; HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) then threw ·the baU out of bounds,
~ YIJ!re Giles sank a pair of foul shots
giving MarshaU a chance to win.
. ~ '\lith 37 seconds remaining Friday ·However, Jeff Battle's off-balance
.: ~t as Eastern Michigan nipped toss with four seconds remaining
• )'darshaU 6.}.62 In a coUege basket- roUed off Ute rim and the Thunder'· baD game.
lng Herd's hopes went with lt.
• : Giles' tree throws gave the
GUes, a 6-foot-9 senior, led au
~ ·fluron5 a 63-00 lead but MarshaU's
scorers with 17 points. He got help
~ Pon Turney carne down the tloor
from Percy Cooper, Fred Cofield
sank a 15-footer to cut the
and Mike McCaskW with 16, 14and
; ~ to one point. The Hurons
11 points, respectively.
.,

Rio defeats
Bluefield in
fll'8t round
of tourney
BLUEFIELD, W.Va. - Greg
Verhoff scored 22 points here Friday
night to help reverse a40-35haHtlme
lead .bY host Bluefield State College
and post an 84-75 win.
The win was accomplished In the
opening round of the Bluefield
Tournament. The Redmen were to
play again Satw:rlay iugbt.
DanCurryscoredl8polntsforRlo
Grande, with Kent Wolfe supplYing
another lUrlarkers. Jerry Mowery
had 12 points and and Joe Verhoff
chipped In with 11.
Bluefield's high point man was
Sam Jones with 16. Rick WUsonhad
14 points and Roy Benjamin added
10.
Box score:
RIO GRANDI! (lit) Wolle 5+14·
Mowery 5-2-12; CUny H -JB: Fritz !l.1-1:
Smith 2.().4; Rlttlneer 1.0.2; J. Verl&gt;l!l u 11 :
G . Verllo~ 1&gt;10.22. To1a1o · '
IILUI!FII!LD ('II) - Saunders ~·

Bolden ~; Jones 1&gt;4-16; Whitworth H-5:

Wilson 7.0.14; Bolen 4.().8; Benjamin *'HO:
Klnden 2.o.4; Ray U 6. Tolalo as.a
.
llolftlme ....., - Bluefield «1 Rio Gra nde
:fi.

anensulng free throw. BrentBlsaell
canned another short jumper
within the lane and Eastern was
back In contention at 47-40.
Througl\9ut the third stanza
Eastern could get no closer. The
pertod ended at .5142.
By the 6: 20 mark of the last
.round, Eastern had initiated Its
comeback drive on a goal by.
Barber, making It 51-48. EHS had a
chance to cut the ·lead to. one, bUt
miSsed lis chance ana Matlack
drove the lane tor a 53-48 score.
Score 11ed at 5I ·
Jefl CaldweU provided extra
spark off the fast break, scoring on
a short jumper and tiJrnlng In for a
IJtree point play, making It 53-51. On

By DENNIS SHUMATE
~·Sentinel

Staff

RIPLEY - A pair of dry spells,

one at Ute end of each half, proved
costly to the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks as they dropped a 64-54
decls(on to the Ravenswood Red
DevUs In the consolatlon game of
the Ripley Christmas Tournament
Friday night at Ripley High School.
The first dry spell came .late In
the first quarter with the Big Blacks
leading 29-28. Following a 15-foot
jump shot by Kelly RHfie that gave
Point Pleasant Its lead, ·the Big
Blacks went scoreless the remainder of the quarter as Ravenswood scored 10 unanswered points
to take a 38-29lead Into the haHtlme
lockerroom.
The Big Blacks battled back to
cut . the deficit to one on several
occasions In the second half, but
again a three-minute dry speD at
the end of the game proved costly
for Point Pleasant's chances of a
victory.
FollOWing an eight-foot baseline
jumper by Guy Morrow that pitlled
the Big Blacks to within 55-54 with
.3: 15 1eft In the game. Point Pleasant
went the final 3: 15 without scoring
as the Red Devils puUed away with
nine unanswered points.
J . D. Dean led the Red DevU
attack with 19 polhts followed by
Paul Fletzher with 18 and Kip
Martin with 16.
The Big , Blacks were led by
Darrell Nibert with 2llpolnts. Shaun
Mitchell and Morrow added 12
apiece, and Riffle taWed 10.
The Red Devils connected on
· 2242 shots from the field (52
percent) and 22·34 from the foulllne
(65 percent) whUe P9(nt Pleasant
hot In 21-62 from the field (32
percent) and 12-15from the charity
strtpe ( ~percent).
Ravenswood won the rebounding

·.'I&gt;.
'

•'·•

By TOM BELVILLE

Special Con'e8pndent
; GALLIPOLIS - In the weeks
• this outdOOr column has appeared, I

: ~ It has given you some
:: ;tnterestlng and lnformatlve read-: :-tng: 1n order to make It even more
joyable In the coming new year'
~· ''d Uke to encourage area sports.: men to contact me H they have an
: • iuiusuaUy successful hunting or
;: ilshtng trip.
.
-: •. For example, If you happen to
~.take a moose In Alaska, a black
f• :bear In Canada, an elk In Colorado,
• •)n antelope or a mule deer In
'•
',Wyoming,
or evl!ll a 30 pound
~ ~catfish In the Ohio River, let me
:·1mow aboUt It and maybe we can
story here.
•: • Most ouldoorsmen like to hear of
.
, . ach successes.
It kind of stirs the

.a

.

::,en·your

,..
'

..

'

blood a little to try It yourseH. I am
sure you know the feeling.
Another thing we would Uke to do
here Is to announce hunting. fishing,
gun or archery club events, and
results of such events. Also ootdoor
group meetings could be
announced.
Any outdoor contests and winners
of such contests could also be
Included.
It you have Information that fits
the above crtterta phone me or drop
me a line. It Is Important that I
receive the Information no later
than the Wednesday. before the
S1i11day you wish your lnformatlon
to appear.
Send letters to Tom BelvUle, Rt.
1, Box li&amp;, Prclctorv!Ue, Ohio 45669
or phone me at (614) 886-~. 1
Happy Hunting New Year!

$359°

E="'-·~~...... .... ... 17 14 1115-57

SC tOO

SYOP II AID SEE FlA.

Excwllollllle end lhe puiJic __...
aDy CM lnd.., more heldlhd.,t
In the tU&amp;e to lpend a day wloapr
thM Lairewood Perk."

The following year Lakewood
Park added a one:-fourth mUe track
for bicyclists and the GaWpolls
League of Al!lerlean Wheelmen
hosted bicycle teams from other
towns for competition that In the

.

OPEN 7 DAYS
MON.

That's ·
State Farm

WI Will • CLOSID NEW YEAI'S

Byquarten:

IS

SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.
Go Ill poll•, Oh.

Pllont44H290
HomH4H511

ON

Like a gpod ne1'ghJ!Jor

State Farm is there ..

DE(. 28, 29 &amp; 30
Taped Music &amp; Dancing
9:00 to Closing

STAU FA.RM

NEW YEAR'S EVE .

1:00 to Closing
Midnlilht Toatt &amp; Party
2106 A.M. lrtakfast
No CDYer-Ntw MIW.ers Wtkl"A Whl Wt'H 7t

INSURANCE
®

u,

State Farm Insurance Comoamfts
Home Offices: Bloom•ngton. llhno•s

RED'S CLUB

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

.78
•

ll"'SVRED Jllur!ICIPA.LS
IJ'IICOJIIE TRUST

'This -entsthe net annual I - t IncoMe liter annual expenses, divided by tho
pu"lc otteriq JNtcoas of 12-21-M Serieslll.lt Vlrin wllh chlnps'in either amoont
end wltlt tht plrtlcolw pey-t opllott. Tho !11M of tho lnsorenco polic, ero mort fully
dncrlllld hi the prosiiiCios: ltCI llprtMtllltlottlsllldusto tho lnsurer'sebllity to meet
lts-llilllotll. Tho AM l'lllqls dvo tOIIIftiUIIIICO pollc, lssl!H by Attlerlun MuniC·
Ipal Bolld AIIIIIIICI CorpontiOI (AIIIACiaiHirelllls ontw to the onl(s.of the trust snd
not to 1111•rltt ¥1111 olltte units. Portions of this rotor• .., bo subjtct to state or loCIIIIIfl. Dtrt to flllro dtiVOIJ of 1 portion of tho portfolio, one deposit dlle. tho
. ICiual first,.., return will be (9.71) 1 - thin tho oorltlllannual cunent rllurn. Tltis
dlffltiiiCI will sttlllll paid to lite onlt llold•r the tlrst but will bt called a principal distrlbllllllllllllllr tllniJHIHI!lllnt-t.
i!lpOIIIOfl \WI Kampen Merritt Inc.

We ce11 lftlely 11y up Into ou&amp;er
apece,
· llllt we're not lftle oa earth In any
piece•

Whe&amp;'ll WI'OII(!
'l1ley hijack our alreraft In the air
And force tllem to land IIIOIIt

~·
Whe&amp;'ll WI'OIIl!!

'llolephoroe
'l'hllll......._ .. Diu • lid nor •IOIIdtMionofan offer 10 buf • ny of thu r: MC:.ul'ltks. The * rtnu
ll ...... anftllrthl PfOIPIC&amp;I&amp;COJ*tol .. p1 F b••rM'fbeobWnl!d ln afl)' st.te In .._.,k:h lhls
MIOWICUC&amp;fl llclfaiiMid onl)'fram IUth~«bfolle" • may _..lyollierthtM! .M&lt;:urtUu

prlnled

divorce~~

alannlngly

hiP;

Bi'oken bomee: lean, chlidren cry.
Whe&amp;'ll WI'OII(!
No Jonpr c1o we llllow whOm to

1ru1t or beleve.
ClllillrM It llelioween tear for
C&amp;lldy receive. •
Whe&amp;'• WfOOJ.!

-

I005T

SAVE
1D11

IleA here a neelly,
rnarldn&amp; the

99

reUrenient of Col. c81dwe11 on Dec.
20, 18M - l&amp;ll&amp;arlll aft with the neme
of the honGr.ee, Col. Jimmie D.
CaldweD. Jlmmle 18 correct -

liMIT
16
QUAIITS

PlWE

James, but .Jbnmle!
.Then are listed the presiding
officers, Major·Gen. Robert E.
Sadler, USAF, and retlred Col. Earl
A. Pontius. The program says that
the narrator was · First Lieut.
Gregory J . Vansuch; alre Airman First Class Paul K. Ridder;
music by the FTD SOurkraut band.

gg:,:

People tltood up for the anival of
the partldpanla, the Air Fon:e
_ ,, ud, of coune, lhe National
Anthem. Beolcles the aetual presenlallon of the award, there were
readlnl! of the rellrement order;

Room.

Nllillberll of

30

tO AMP/
50 AMP

prcliP'ftlll

enter.

Col. Jimmie D. Caldwell's decorations and awards are the Legion
of Merit, Distinguished Flying
Cross, Merttorious Service Medal,
Air Medal (with nine oak leaf
clusters), Joint Service Commendation Medal, Presidential Unit
Cltatlon. Combat Readiness Medal,
National Defense Service ·Medal,
and Vietnam Service Medal

10"111191011

REAl
VIEW

....

..-ow

51MUI.ATID
SHHI'51CIN

mRING

awa

Now we It lhe port-'M Cllrlltrnall

.
Stop to thklk ... to think 111111
Whe&amp;'s WI'GIII1

re-.

Let .. .atve to ftnd some sweel
releBy lnlllnl comjlletely the Prince
ofP-..

3789
4989

IIIGiiiiAIIMl-

.

To rl&amp;ht lhe _ ,.

PICK-UP TRUCK

CUSTOM
GIILLES

DQUIUUIIMl-

Good d

a~·~~~--~;---~~--------~-----Stalie _______'--- - ------.--:-----Zip ___________

....
01' Peepa

Cldldren IU'e not safe In a day-care
ceater;
In meay sebools drul! peddlers

Whe&amp;'• Wl'OIII!

lOW

Jewell Caldwell are the parents ol
Col. Jimmie D. CaldweU.

pretle!ltatloll of the retirement
ceriUlcllte, presentelill!l of the
cerilllcele of appreclellon to Mrs.
Jane Caldwell, congratulelionll,
and the receplloa In tile Daedallan

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-212!1

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

to--

David Jenkins ·looks back
on Christmas of old year

The llnl Olntli1!M m-•P of

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

lAnEIIlS

.

P.O. Dox-528

lnrerated? MlreorceiiiDday ~~a prospectus containing more comple te
.litformallon. Including ell chlrlJ9and e&gt;~penoes. Read II carefuliy be fo re
,ou lm.uL Send no money """'

TeateciT.....

PEEPS, a. Gallipolis Diary

By .J ..SAMtJEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - The Welsh, as
you well know from years of
acquaintance with them, are people
of many talents - talented poets,
singers, Instrumental musicians,
artistS, orators. A former Gaula
County, David Jenkins, Is such a
Welshman, now a resident. of
ChWicothe.
I
"Entitled simply "Christmas
198f." these couplets by David
Jenkins have poignant reference to
the great event commemorated
last Tuesday:

D~t

HAVEl HAPPY IIOI.ID&amp;YI

CAROLL

Ravenswood ..... ................. l 9 19 lJ l.'3-6C
Pt. P leasant .. ....... .. .. ......... 11 12 !9 1&gt;-54

-

''m're out to earn:
~
,,,
your

insliranee."
ft't'1 '

l'&lt;llall'looloal (114) -Nibert 7.&amp;.:11: Rltf!e
3+10; Mttcltell 5-2-12; Morrow S.O.l2. Tolalo
t l-IUf.

-

ttvu Fll. a to a

SATURDAY I to 6
SUNDAY 9 to S

good price-

411 SecoOd Avenue

V-8 qne, auto. trans., air cond., PS &amp;PB, cruise control, tilt wheel,
rear~. alum. wheels w/goood rubber, AM/FM 8 track, qua·
dri-trac dnve. Green w/MlOII grain.

lelftil&amp;larme

"Good service,
good coverage.

R&amp;v.......r (It) -IU!esllol-4: Dean7-~lll: ·
Martin 8.().16: Fletciler 4-l!l.IS; Ekstrom
8-:J.3; Thompson 2.0.2. Tolalo %1-IIHI.

STAlliNG AT

0

llfl_..._._.,

pen of tile- :Nr ftiTiollpll rt

Fed. Hocking ......................16 21 14 12-&lt;l.'l

• 'lllx·free- no Federal income tax.
• Guaranteed-Insured against default to guarantee
principal and Interest payments when due:
• Dlvel"!!llled -a portfolio strongly dlw:rslfled by type.
. location and purpose.
• Affordable- units aval~able In multiples of $1,000.
• l'lexlble - monthly. quarterly or semi·annuallncome
distributions, or automatic reinvestment
• Convenient- no call notices or clipping coupons.
• Marketability-units may be liquidated at any tim e at
the current market value.

19" PORTABLE TY'S·
SYLVANIA
.coLOR

18-US.

battle 33-28 with Dean, Martin and
Fletcher pulltitg down eight apiece.
Nibert and MltcheU led Point
Pleasant with s1x apiece.
Point Pleasant dropped to 1-3 on
thl! year.
SlssonvUle won the championship
game of the Ripley Chrtstmas
Tournament with a 61·52 victory
over Rlp)ey.
Boll8eOI'e:

I

YEAR END CLEARANCE

Flllr are beait •" w:ih'e 111111 len4
poeM
I ' w• .. D18ldit&amp; liP. tile
s* 1m I I b lI of tile Jllll'll. All

-

!HJ.IS; Stacey Tate 1·2-4; Terry o..,ter 142:
Jay Etlu1die :HH&gt;; Keltb Barnhart 1H&gt;Z7;
Tony Tad&lt;aciJ2.().4; Jet! Howell1.0.2. Tolals

Insured Municipals Income ll'ust
An Insured portfolio of municipal bonds

4 cyl. engine, auto. trans., a1r cond., AM radio.
"Black".

wa r1v1111111 ew, of !Ill w.v.

Box IICOI'e:
w:.vn:RN (17) - ·Kevin Barber H 11;
14
Greg Leachman 2-CH; Jett Caldwell :J.il- ;
Eddie Collll\'l2.Q.4; Jim Caldweli!HHJ; Mark
Shriven OM; Brent Bissell 7·5-!9: Paul
Collins 2-1·~: Royce BISiell ()0.() To1a1o
11-IWl.
llooldns (8.1) - Randy MaUack

INSURED TAX-FREE INCOME*
AM RATED UNITS*.

I

Wildlife notes...

•

Ioven of IW t..t t!tc meal The In nu 1alte lor bl a 1
llld llle ..,..... 111t ele a1r1c r--

learns

·Both
had 27 rebounds
apiece. GJ'ei Leachman led the
Eagles with a good Inside game of
nine rebounds and Bissell had eight.
Matlack grabbed nine fo~ . the
Lanceni whlle Barnhart' PuJied
down etghi caroms.
Eastern led every Inch of the way
In the reserve tilt, except for the last
eight seconds then Brian Tabler
snatched a key steal arid drove In
for the score 41-40. For the winners
Tabler had 12, Ed HOuseholder 10
and Doug Kincade nine. . Bryan
Durst led au scorers with 25 points,
while John Rice and Steve Horner
each sank six. EHS led 21-14 at the
half.
Eastern played Saturday night In
the Waharna New Year's classic.

.. dro
. . pS 64-54
·.
PPHS
tournament contest

·:and

•.••

2
---nine asslsts, and 22 personal foulS.

the eruulng Inbound&amp; play, Blsaell
came throllgh with hi1111econd steal
and tied the IICOre at !13-53.
Feder'al mentor nm .Smpsoll
signaled for a lime to regroup.
Barnhart then ran the same cut
throuilll the lane for an Inside score
and moments later, at3:47, put his
club on top 59-53 on two suca!SSful
tree thrOws. A couple of hasty
Eagle shots were ott the mark.
Two goals by Kevin Barber·put
Eastern back Into contention with
1: 451eft, making It 58-57. That'$ as
closeastheyoungEaglescouldget.
Tate Iced the 'win with two tree
. throws with 27 seconds rer!)alnlng.
·
Laooen Hit 51 Percll!llt
Eastern hit 21 of Ml from the tleld,
whlle Federal shot a very warm 51
percent, canning 28 of 56. Federal
hit only seven of 16 from the line,
had six steals, three by Bissell, 16
turnovers, six assists, and
. 2ll fouls.
Eastern hit l5 of 24 from the Une,
had four steals, eight . turnovers,

W. Va.

Point

.I':

pe-•eenb.
.. II neeilecllMIW u
IJ1IK'JI • tlleq.
To .......... WI'OIII·

: 'Ne II lile fitlul • wlllch we Jlllil
lrult . . . . . '
IDd c1aledmeut to rlpt

Far,._

~~~e....;.

Oled, a

r"' .. .,....

ud wile

• illllllffll4.
.
' Now .... lor .... of .. reUved

..........

To .......... 11'1'0111!

Elmer E. (Country) caldwell,
tot llliii GaDii,JOIII postmaster, alld

YOU REMEMBER that picture
we had with the Dec. i61ssue of the
Peeps column? lt was a 1fave
marker In Waugbprtvatecemetery
off State Route 2181n Hlll'l'llon '1\vp.
Now cometh Keith Alltley of the
Melp .County aene.IoiY Society,
WhO !laid tliat the letterlna at the top
of the shield and just below the
one·wlnaed eaale stands ror
"Knights of the Goldl!n Eagle," a
fraternal order In the area In eerller
timeS. AJitley A)'S that Jarrtel.
Sandli)Jad an article on It IR one ~
hll columns.

OPIJI7NYS
1101. ... fiL t te I
SAMDAY IN 6

-AYtN5

lOAD
IllS

Silver Bridge P·laza_;Phone 446-9335
"WE MAKE

IT RIGHT"

29~

�·Page C-6-The Sunday Tlmaa Santillel

o.a.•

Pomerov Middleport Gallpolia. Ohio Point Plea•nt. W. Ve.

30. 1884

ioftal

OPEN NEW YUI'S EYE
Yl10 P.M. .
EW YEAI'S DAY 10-10
GAWI'OUS STQIIS
MBD 10.7

.,

fiESH .FIOZEN ·

Ll.

Tan Drumsticks
.

I

/

/

,v

29~

· DEPAaTING - A II'OiiP ol
V.I. Maltllel w1111 "eddpedw

~

... JII.Jirtlla ....... ._.,.,...
J enfllli A Jldrllt IJelldl
1M&amp;
IIOi the Mar'
wH! 5 tW from the la . I!
capb!lo ll7llfll olftlle cout. (AP

I•

I

FALTER'S .

COLlY
LONGHORN

• fAlTII'S

CHEESE

Pork Uver

~79C

WIENERS
,. 631.

lOX

$J99

OLD FASIIONED
FALTER'S .

. . Slalt ....

·•::.. $869

u. $139

Breakfast lox

FALIII'S
. .

IUDGOIOX
.

·/~, ~,,t;Jni 2~.-~ II Sa~

Pe.anut Butter

PO.
NECIIONES

:.~· $599

59&lt;

JOODLAND

;:!...)• .

Reagan landslide, Bhopal disaster
top list of year's - ~iggest stories ·
· African drought and tamlne, which had laken some
By 1be A!IIIOCiat.ed 1'..- .
Roilald Rellgan's· landslide victory, while no :m,cm llves ln Ethlopla alone, were the fifth and sixth
surprise, w~ the top ni!WJI story of 1984 In a poll of choices.
All six received top-heavy scores In the balloting.
Associated Press member editors and broadcasters.
Another polltlcal story came ln third: the There was less unanlmlty In the voting tor the other
119mlnation of Geraldine Ferraro for vice president, four, all ot which were on domestic topics.
· The U.s. ·economy, the top story ln the 1!182 poll and
!he tlrst wcman so selected by a major party. .
Other sforles ln the: top ten dealt with death and ranked fourth In 1983,,dropped to ninth thJs year, with
disaster. Tile 'porson gas leak from a Unlon Carbide Inflation quiescent, a marke(! recovery, but deficits a
plant ln Bhopal, India, which ldlled more than 2,CXX&gt; continuing concern.
' The llst:
people; placed second.
L The Reagan landslide.
· In fourth place was the assassination of Indira
2. The Bhopal disaster.
Gandhi, the .Indlail prime mlnlster. The bombing of
3. Ferraro's challe(Jge.
the AlneJil:an l!lftb!l:ls.y . IJIIIII!ll ln Belj'llt and the
·~
I
4. Indli-a Gandhi's assassination.
5. 'The bornbl!lg or the u.s. e!llbassy ~ In
Beirut '
·
6. The Ethiopian tarnlne.
7. The Summer Olympics.
8. Implants ot a baboon heart and an artlticlal
heart.
9. The economy.
_
. 10. The slaying ot 21 at the McDonald's ln San
Ysidro, eaur.
The second 10, ln order:
Death of Soviet leader Yurt Andropov; Jesse
Jackson's presldentia! q1JeSt; Miss America scandal '
over nude photos; Mexico City's gas explosion that
killed hundreds; space shuttle retrteval of sateWtes;
spread ot child abuse cases; tornado-caused damage
ilnd · casualties In the Carolinas; furor over CIA
pamphlet tor Nicaraguan rebels and U.S. pressure on
Sandlnlstas; government ballout ot faltering Conlin·
enta!DUnolsbanklnChlcago,andDuarte'sereClklnln
San Salvador.
The Top Ten:
1: It Americans believed the polls that came out
with numbing regularity ln 1984, they could not have
doubted, from July to November, which presidential
candidate would prevaU. President Reagan was
running tar ahead ot the Democratic nominee, Walter
F. Mondale.
Reagan carried 49 states tor a total ot 525 electoral
votes. Former vice 'president Mondale carried only
CELEBRA'ftON- P1 PtleM Renald Reapn his home slate ot MlnnetiOta and the District of
give&amp; the ''t!niJDIIe.up" ll7p as be ee!ellratell . . Co!umbla.
re ele:IIOD victor, Nov. 6 at Lc!8 Angeles' Cenlury 2. As residents ot the Indian city of Bhopal slept on
P5ala llotel. (AP •·sei!'Photo).
Monday nl~t. Dec. 3, a poisonous cloud of methyl
'

#

Isocyanate gas began Peaking from a pesticide plant
on the oui.Bidrts.
~deadlY Ieak et the Union Carbide plant became
the greatest lndustrlaJ acclde!lt In history, ldlllng
more than 2,1Dl and sending tmusands to hospitals:
3. U.S. Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, a three-term New
York congresswooum from Queens and tonner
school teacher and prosecutor, secured a place In
history as the first woman vice presldelltlalcandldate
on a major party llcket.
·
4. It was a brlgi!t autwnD morning, the last day ot
October, when India.' il Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
wal)(ed . trcm her !Junia1ow In her New Delhi
C&lt;:lllpound to meet !l'lth theactorPeterUstlnovforan
ln~. Two ' members ot her security guard,
ldent11led as Sikhs, cut her dawn ln a hall ot bullets.
Within hours of 8111101111cement of her death, India

e~ Its worst violence since partition ln 19&amp;7.

Mrs, Gandhi's

9111,

Rajlv Gendhl, was named to

succeed her.

5. American MarlnE!5 wen! pulled out ot Beirut, the
Lebanese caplllil, In Febnlary, live months after an
explosive-laden truck b!ewuptheMarlnectmpound,
killing 241 u.s. seiVlcemen.
But even,..the llmJted U.S..presence lha! remained
was lalgeled by terrorists. Just before noon on a
sunny Sept. 22, a station wagon driven by anolber
suicide fanatic ran a gauntlet of guards and co11crete
blocks, slammed Into a parked car and blew up:
Fourteen people w'ere Jdlled, two ot them Amertcans,
ln the U.s. embaSsy annex In East Beirut.
6. Drought ilnd famine continued to stalk Pargt!
parts of AfriCa, and vivid photographs and television
flims brought the tragedy to the awareness ot
Americans. Tile numberofvlctlmslsgueswork, but
the toll was high.
Some:rxi,OOiwerebelleved!OhavedledlnEthlopla. ·
MUllons more there and elsewhere were starving.
7. The Olympic Games at Los Angeles turned out to
beastudylngoldtorU.S.athletesandthel.osAngeles
Olympic Organlzlng Committee.
" .
The LAOOC turned to the private sector tor
sponsorshjp and the games realized a swplus of at
•
least $215 mlWon.
1...-.;.,;
U.S. athletes won 83 gold medals and 174 total
MbBGUE-IPod!eslq!JiamekepNftnuaae!JI
medals In 16 days ot competition.
Bhopal, 11111a, .,... ,..,..._ pa leaked from a
8. In a pair of dramatic attl!mptSID prolong the llves Ua!on Cu1J!de piMt 711 December !d!Bn« at leMt l,M
(Continued on page D-8~
people. (AP Jam pi!Oiu).

UPTON

MEDIUM

Sweet Onions

TEA BAGS

4 PIS.Sl

:"$269

•Noi Reaponslble For TYIIOireplllcel Errors

ACROSS

rNTo SVDAN -

A

II'OUP ., "'t' ,.... . . . . .
. . ., . . . . . . . . ' LE

I

••

CNII

l7ae ......... 111111111 711 N.-

wmber•IIM!Irwar•·
rehaee camp. (AP

. . !qt lo).

---

.

'
$
129
ta.

$199

FALTER'S

p

F....,.

W!IOLE

OlD FASIIOrD HAM

'

1

�..
The

Tme1 Sentinel
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

KCworkers
getaw&amp;J;11s

Business Briefs:
Robbins &amp; Myers sells fan unit
DAYTON - The COO\fort Coodltioning Dlvllloo of Rol)blns &amp;
·•" Myers Inc. has been sold to a group of Investors and the Chlcagoftrrn
•' '.of Peter W. Smith &amp; Co.
·
·
~ ; The division manufactured Hunter ceiling fans, according to a
: ~pany spokesrrian. Someotthe lnvestorspurcllaslngthedtvislon
·are members ol the Hunter management. .
·
1
Fred G. Wall, Robbins &amp; Myers' president and cblef executive
·
., 'officer, said the sale was made at book value llr $14 mllllon.
:"' Wall said that "earnings tor fiscal 1985 wW DOW lack any
..contribution from Hunter. Wblle the sales and ean)lngs of our
. ;lndustrtal businesses are rtslng, It Is likely that we will experience an
, :; overall earnings decUne compared to last year." ·
·
..•• The.Hunter fan operation bad returned topfofltabillty lntlscall984
· ··following two years of wrtte-downs and operating losses. Wall said
·• the Investors who acquired Hunter Intend to operate the unit on a
:. 'continuing basis.
• ' The sale will allow Robbins &amp; Myers to concentrate on Its core
:- ,:lndustrtal divisions Including fluids handling products, electric
' ,motors .and control systems.

....
..

:

1:

'!-'Kaiser sells extrusion plant
'

'

· • OAKLAND, Cant. - The sale of jts extrusion plant at Dolton,lU.,
~, ·to Dolton Extrusion Co. has been completed by Kaiser Aluminum &amp;
· :Chemical Corp. for an undisclosed sum.
·
..,.. . In September, Kaiser announced a loss provision of $65 miWon bt
"'" anticipation at the sale of the Dolton plant and two diversUied
• businesses.
'
Dolton Extrusion was recently organized and Is headed by Bruce
· -L. Milligan and Daniel R. Mlillgan. Daniel MIWgan preViously bad
·. 'been general manager of Kaiser's extrusion division, wblch btcluded
·- ~the Dolton operation.
-.. The Dolton plant Is a soft alloy aluminum extrusion facUlty wblch
. · prtmarlly serves Midwest markets. It bad been operated by Kaiser
··since 1956.

'·

Perry Drug buys Coroairs stores .
PONTIAC, Mich. - Acquisition of 47 stores operated by the
Columbus-based Corvalrs Inc. has been made by Perry Drug Stores ·

i . . Inc.
:

Cmvalrs operates stores In Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana and Wesyt
VIrginia and has sales totalling approximately $23.5 mlUlon
annually.
.The sale will extend Perry Drug Into a new state, West VIrginia.
Perry operates 146 drugstores, 158 discount auto parts stores, a
c Unlcallaboratory and a medical and SUJ"glcal supply company In
~lght states.

Local men attend awards program
GALLIPOLIS -Alden Wedemeyer of Northup and Frank "Buzz"
Mills IU of Crown City, repl'l!sentlng the Gauta !loU &amp; Water
Conservation Dlstrtct, were sel~ted to attend the recent 37th annual ,
Goodyear Conservation Awards Program at Litchfield Park, Artz.
Gauta was among 53 first-place dtstrtcts In competitions sponsored
by Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. In cooperation with the· National
Association of Conservation Dlstrtcts,
Scheduled events on the program Included tours of the l2,3ffi.acre
Goodyear Farms, an address byGoodyearexecutlvevice president
· James A. Bailey, and visits to points at Interest In the Phoenix area.

. .Chessie plans terminal -expansion
.J,.:

'• ' CLEVELAND~- A Thru-Bulk Service (Tils) terminal for South
· ~harleston, W.Va., Is planned by an affUlate of Chessie System
Railroads.
John S. Lana)tan, Chessle's senior vice president for commercial
services, said two 125-ton snos and support and transfer equipment
for the handting and storage of cement have been Installed at South
Charleston primarily to seiVlce one shipper's delivery system.
TBS Is part of a low-cost, full-service bulk transloadlng faclllty
located on the Chessle and Seaboard System Railroads, major units
. of CSX Corp.
• The South Charleston Is one of three new or expanded TBS
facllltles, with the other two at WiXom, Mich., and Baltimore, Md.
Relocation of TBS units at Cincinnati and Chester, Pa., have been
Completed, Lanahan said.

••••

~!Weirton Steel paying
~~ity for gas usage
,. .
••

:; 'WErRTON, W.Va. (AP)- WeJr:
•iton Steel Corp. has agreed to pay
't~$),333 to the city In lieu of a
tnuniclpal utility tax the company
~voided by buying out-of-state
·naturalgas.
·
:: As part of the agreement an:nounced Wednesday, city officials
•Said they are droppbtg a plan to
:rmpose a moreexpenslvelevyonthe
:steel maker.
: The company stopped paying the
·jocal tax when It slgnl!d an
:a~ent to buy fuel from Loulsl:ima and Pittsburgh utllltles Instead
:orwestVIrglnlaproducers. Thatput
·lhe city In a financial bbtd and
:lhreatended to force massive ser:~ce cutbacks.
• Cltyofflclalsconslderedlmposlng
;&amp;nl!w buslnessandoccupatlon tax to
:make up tor the lost revenue but
:Instead signed an agreement under
·lvblch Weirton Steel \VIII pay
:191,666.66 a month tor eight months.
:fhe proposed B&amp;O tax would have
~t the company more.
• ' The agreement, wblch took sev·
•
:rr~ months to reach, was unanlril·
:jiUsly approved by city council
·Wednesday.
:! Weirton Steel spokesman Chack
;C::ronln said the payment plan wW be
re-evaluated when It expires next
June.
:1 The steelmaker, which uses 11
:5:
on' cubic feet ot natural gas a
: ear, signed a contract lor 3.6
•
cublcfeetolgaslnJunewlth
:pas Systana Network Inc. ct
•J,oulalana, said Cronin. The rest ol
Steel's au 11 bwilrt
l.tlitPuch Equitable ~ Of Pitts-

!

'

:weirton

burgh, he said.
Welrtonusedtobuymostofltsgas
from the Columbia Gas System but
stands to save "several miWon
dollars" by dealing wtth the
Louisiana company, Cronin said.
The city lost more than $1 miWon
In local utlllty tax revenues because
of the out-of-state gas purchase and
was expected to lay oft :II percent ol .
its employees by the end of the
month.
"We decided to Share the sav!J!p
that we realized with the city so the
city could maintain PSSential servl·

Ces:'

Cronin sald. ··we

'toss-up' ·charice ·

CHESHIRE- Sax~ Of
Oldo Valley EJeetrr CG'p. 'a KYler
Creek plant lWJently ~ the
company'a .»year anaM!naey
award tnmLoulaR.Fonl Jr., plant

CINCINNATI (AP)- Doctcrs at

They are Allee M. Icard, plalli
peiiOIU.ei auJatant; Ga111e• G.
''Gcrdoa'' Fllber. malntenaace .
mechanic A; Slllrley R. "Bob"
Mllla, yard supervlaor; Lewis E. ·
"Duke" Kennedy, crane opera!of; ·

Edwin G. Ash. maintenance superVisor; and Raymond A. "Cap"

Stewart, crane operator.

.

Icard j9ined OVEC on Dec. ~
.19M. as a clerk-typist bt the
operatlon.s depar!Jnent. On Oct. 1,
lllrl5, she wu promoted to plant
clerk, · and on March 24, 1962, to
senior plant clerk. On June Jli, 196t,
she transferred to the personnel
department as a Personnel cler11:
and promoted .to secretarial·
steuoerapher on June 6, 1966.
0n0ct..l, 1971, sheW&amp;$ promOted .
to her CUITent posljlon. She resides ·
at .~ Jefferson Blvd., Point
Pleasant.
Fisher was employed by Kyger
Creek on Dec. :.11,1!154, asaguardbt
the personnel department. On JWJe
'11, 19M, he transferred to the
maintenance department as a
maintenance helper, · where he
adVanced through the various
maintenance mechanic positions to
his present Job on July :ll,l!lll5.
Fisher and his wife, Evelyn, live
on Upper River Road, GaUlpolls.
Mills went toworkattheplanton
Dec. '11, 1~. as a guard in the
personnel department. On May '11,
1955, he transferred to the yard
department as a coal handier. He
worked In varlrus positions bt that
department untn being promoted to
yard supervisor on Oct. 1, 1981. He
and his wife, Joyce, reside at Rt. 3,
Pomeroy .

Kennedy joined OVECon.Dec. '11,
1954, as a coal handier bt the yard

department. He advanCed through
various positions In that department
untn March 25, 1978; when he
became a crane operator. Kennedy
and his wife, Allee, Uve bt Rutland.
Ash became a mab\!eru!nce
helper In Kyger Creek's maintenance deplll1lilenton Dec. '11, 1954.
He advanced through vartous
maintenance mechanic jobs ·untn
becoming maintenance supervisor
on Sept. 16, 1975. He and his wife,
Martha, live bt Racbte.
Stewart joined OVEC on Dec. 28,
1954, as a bargeattendantlntheyard
department. ~e worked In vartous
positions In that department untn
being promoted tocraneoperatoron
Aprll22, 1912. Stewart and hlswUe,
· Donna, Uve at 243 Pearl St.,
Middleport.

Construction
being sold
Oblo (AP) - The
Lathrop Co., one of the area's oldest
and largest construction compan·
les, Is to be sold to a Washington
construction engineertng holding
company. according to a letter sent
by Lathrop's president to the firm's
customers.
Executives of Lathrop and the
Saxa Corp. have reached agreement that Saxa will acquire
Lathrop's stock, accordlrigtoaNov.
· 28 letter wrttten by Lathrop President David Morgan.
Morgan refu!ed Tuesday to
comment on the sale, saying reports
of It werespeculatlveuntn thedealls
closed. He said the letter was sent to
Lathrop Cll!ltomers to explain the
sale.
TOlEDO,

SAFE MEMBEBSlllP -

'
~ or 'l'hunnan, IDS senior; lldrd row,
from
left, · Denny Comp&amp;oa of Clrcle\1lle, bo ' ea
lll8ftiiCI'I1le junior; GJ'el Verholl ol ~
b.• ,.. ~ .mor; Adam'McNJcholl of
ClrcleviJJe, mlll'lleUas eenJoro: Rick FJtt&amp; "'1ro11toa,
BM-Oilw*r; Rllll Fumier of PorWnautll, bo:•:::
elh'C'Itloojunlor; l.eaaJPaJneofAbel&lt;'ern,bo .I
~ aophornore; and Brian Blake. Not JN 1 ,.
Were Ted Com.. of ChagrtD Falls, ~ Jallior
and dlalnnan ol the SAFE team; Jbn Wellman of
Cleveland, 1M I 1!8'1 ~ent Mlllor; Cnlc
Colopy ol MOUJII .Vemon, 1'e11taunu1t IJUIII8CI!IIII!
senior: Suzanll!l Lanham of Rio Grrnde, ~
educallon senior; Cindy Demdll of l.clpn,
m
edlieldloo
and Toaya Adkins of JUo Grallde,
.
ENG freshman.

Memben of tile 111111-811

SAn (Siudellt AmiiiiMadon for Free Eu&amp;erpnee)

orpFI"tloo at Wo Gl'IIDfle Co1Jeae and CommlildtJ

CGDece rre w.arlda&amp; oa pnJIIJUIIDa ecoaomlc

•" l•'"'lnsln Cbe C01111111111Hy. ua memben are,
lin&amp; row, from left, Nit! DIIIJey; MMreCta Lrwhom
ulSilvi!I'Spmp,Md.,b."'• e11manaaen ._....
Jeu Rortoa, TaaJa Tracey of StGckpori, J1U1r11eaDs
~ Amy Heaberlin ef lroa&amp;oa, 10001!!0!1
IIOIIbonloN; 1Wr Y 011111 of Beedlvllle, IICCOIIIOIS
juJ11or; Valerie McElrOy ul Orwell, ~
rnaaaaemeat jualor; Beveliy WIUdDI, adVIIor;
IMICOIId row, from kilt, ADan Azar; Jay 11111te1oa of
Tltunnaa, bullnes8 RlliiUigentent 8elllor; Mike
steven!!; Ed M~ of Cbesldre, SS Junior; Raudy

I:M•

_.or;

·

Youngstown gets business incubator

YOUNGSTOWN, Oblo (AP) The head of a project designed to
help struggling new businesses says
small employers should be sought
rather than large plants employing
thousands.
Charles R. Johnson Jr., 33, Is
directing ari btcubator ·project to
turn a former lamp plant Into a
breeding ground for · new
businesses.
"lt Is time to concentrate on
developing the small employers
who will employ' only a few
workmen and.to quit &lt;;oncentrating
on the search for plants, e!lch
employing thousands," Johnson
said. "Those days are gone
forever."
Whenltopensunderthecorporate
· name General Enterprtses, the
Incubator will be one of seven or
eight around the state designed to
help businesses survive their first
two or t!lree years, generally the
shakiest time tor new enterprises.

"Expertencebasshownthatthose
new companies set up by the
entrepreneurs have a high mortality rate," Johnson said. "It's not
necessartty because they're not
based on good Ideas, but because
they're too often oveiWhelmed by
too many burdens at a new
company."
The Incubator Is the first In
Youngstown. Others are In Akron,
l\.thens, Columbus, Dayton and
ToledO, apd one Is being developed
In Sprtngfleld, according to the state
Development Depm'tment.
About 60 such Incubators have
sprung JJP around the nation, said
Candace Campbell, who studied the
phenomenon for Humpluey Instl·
tute ot the University of Minnesota.
TheYoungstown btcubatorwlll be
In the 18,1lXJ.square-foot Hughes
Street Lamp Plant, which· General
Enterprtses bought from General
Electrtc Co. several months ago.
General Enterprtses will take
POSSffi•lon of the plant March 29.

Johnson said he Is Interested
mainly in attracting companies
which need space for manufacturIng or assembly operations, not In
leasing space tor warehousing.
Newcomers to assembly or manutacturtng operations need about
3,&lt;XXI to5,&lt;XXI square feet of space,
Johnson said, but they also lack the
financing to study the market and
plan tor future growth. The new
company usuaUy has little need or
money fm: full·tlme secretartal
service.
' provi~ the
.
The lncul!ator wou14
rtght amount of space, and secretarIal and bookkeeping services.
Businesses also can receive help
from an advisory panel, the
Youngstown State University's ·
Cushwa Center of Industrial Development, he said.
Johnson, the son of a local
architect and condominium builder,
recently joined bls father's business
after.working as a rommerclal and
prtvate pilot.

Best Products' _earnings
on rise
.

RICHMOND, Va. - Best Pro·
ducts, a diversified retalleroperat·
lng the nation's largest chain of
catalog s~ms. recently announced sah and earnings for the
tblrd quarter of nscall984.
Net sales for the 13 weeks ended
Oct. 'l1 were $481.5 million, an
Increase of 1.2 percent above the
sales of $474.8 million reported for
the same pertod last year. Sales for
the pertod increased 2.8 percent
when eliminating from last year the
. sales of Creative Merchandising
and Publishing Inc., which the
company sold In October 1985.
The after tax loss for the tblrd
quarter was $5.3 million, or :!l cents
loss per share, compared to a net
Income of $2.8 million, or 10 ce11ts
per share.
.
I·
For the nine months, net sales
were $1,336.8 million, an Increase of
8.1 percent above the sales of
$1,236.4 million reported for the

same period last year.
For theyeartodate, the company
reported a loss of $8.7 million, or 32
cents per share, compared to a net
Income of $1.7 million, or seven
cents per share. ,
"Sales and earnings were disappointing In the third q11arter," said
Robert E. R. Huntley, president of
Best, "but .durtng this period we
completed the changes and additions In our executive management
and made progress In implement·
lng the merchandising and operating policies necessary to resto~e
Best to a proper · level of
profltabutty.
"Gross neglect In the third
quarter and t)\e nine months
declined slightly, due to a slight
shift In merchandise mix from high
to low items, as well as a more
aggressive markdown policy," he
said. "The company also was
unable to take advantage of a LIFO
I

credit during the quarter and the
nine months, while reporting a
$1,100,(00 and $3,&lt;XXI,&lt;XXI credit for
the same pertods last year."
On Nov. 15, Huntley announCed
that the company antlclapted It
would report substantially lower
earnings tor the curr.ent fiscal year,
probably less than halt the fiscal
1983 earnings leveL
Best, with 21M showrooms In 28
states, Is the nation's largest
catalog showroom retailer, offering
jewelry and brand name merchandise at low prices. The company
operates showrooms under the
names Best, Dolgin's, Great West·
ern, Jafco, LaBelle's, Miller Sales
and Rogers. Best also operates 11
Best Jewelry stores, wblch sell
jewelry and glftware, and 29
Ashby's stores, offering women's
designer and 'brand name apparel
at prtces below full retail.

Murphy's net income decreases

weren't

,.

. .
The settlement does not recoopan
the tax money the city lost, but It

provides enough to maintain city
services, otfldals said.
Mayor Donald Ment2er said the
city was not enthullastlc about .
havlna to enact a 81&amp;0 tax.
.. Additional taxes On bultne.ea
andiDdlvllilalstomakeupthectty'a
revenueahortfallwooldbaven..at
NEW OPBBA'I'GIIt- Pn!We
further tlnandal bunlell on Weirton
Steel u well u Impede efforts to
!JIIri ..
create a .better bullnell l!ll\'lrm.
. . • - Qlllnt.,
Jlel;al;)
n:
fwmly
ment bt ~ ctty,'' be said.
wwl I lar 'fte Ileal al Y•
Stiii.CouncllmanEdWlnBowman
said the aettlement provides only
lhort·terlll relief,
.
ball! ber - ·
· II
..S
'ndul'ellr-JnJ
..s
"I'm utlaaed 19 theexlientwe're
~ ......... c.- ....
ableto101vead1111cultlltuatlonwlth
the t!!II!!C'!II Plobleml of the clty,''
Bown111111ald. "Butldon'tthlnktbla. 111rWa • olaL I_. w11 tr11e
; ; I I I ....... T' h)'
II adJw to be a Jona·tenn Ditton.
_.SJia-.,ew
I p,-.ml.
We need add!donal tax revenlll!l."

, ..

:==,,~·~·:::"'p,.

_... ....... --. ....
• t" ....
.,..., ........... ,

.....

b

1

McKEESPORT, Pa. - G. C. percent Sinking Fund Debentures. $210,286,&lt;XXI, an Increase of 4. 7
Murphy Co. reported net income of The 1984 results Include a nontaxapercent over the ·third quarter of
$4,339,&lt;XXI, or $1.16 per share, for the ble extraordinary gain of $6&amp;1,&lt;XXI, fiscal 1983. For the 39 weeks ended
third quarter period of l3 weeks or 16 cents per share resulting from
October 25, 1984 sales were
ended Oct. 25, compared with the exchange of 68,973 shares of $624,655,&lt;XXI, up 5.4 percent over 1983
$4,788,&lt;XXI or $1.18 per share, for the common stock for $3,&lt;XXI,&lt;XXI prtncl- sales of $582,900,&lt;XXI.tor the comparcomparable pertod at 1983.
pal amount of debentures.
able pertod. As of the end of the
For the first 39 weeks of fiscal
The 1983 results include reporting period the company was
198t, net Income was $U,289,00J or $1,381,&lt;XXI, or 34 cents per share operating 386 stores, 20 fewer than
$2.76 per share, compllred with . from the exchange of 102,742 at the s~;~me time last year.
$11,165,(XX) or $2.1!1 per share for the common shares tor $4, 700,1XXl In
Murphy President and Chief
first 39 weeks of 1983.
.
debentures. Income for 1984, before EHecuUve Officer Charles H. LyUe
. Net income tor the J9.week pertod the extraordinary gain, w.as saki that the decrease In third
of bOth 1984 and l98.'i was Increased
$l0,625,1XXl, or $2.00 per share, quarter Income was attrtbutable to
by a nontaxable extraordinary gain
compared to $9,784,&lt;XXI or $2,44 per lower merchandise margins, reresultbtg from the exchange of share tor 1983.
. sulilng from increased clearance
common stock for outstanding 7'!{,
sales for the third quarter ~ere mar11downs ,

Outfit links finns with post office
B)' DIANE M. BALK
DAYTON, Ohio (AJ') - Early
Expreu, owned and largely Dper·
ated by women,. has made a
bualneu out of linking bualnesses
and the post o1flce.
.
Owner and president Karen
Sensei started . the firm In her
basement eight years ago, as a
plck·up and delivery III!IVIce from
post offtce boxes. 1be bualnesawas
baaed &lt;II the prlnctple that 80ille
customen wanted their man tuter
than thepostaiiii!IVIce waagetttnglt
to them, and tboae bullnessesmll(ht

prefer to hire scmeone to pick up
thljlr maD rather than use their own
en\ployees to do it.
From one employee, one custo1111!1" and one service, Early Express
has 8fOWll to a total of42 employees
In Dayton and Clncbtnatl. Most of
those employees work part time.
SefV\CeS now offered Include
sortbtg man to oblaln a lower
postage rate, ~ mall, and
stutnna enVelopes. Molt ot. ihoee
8ei'VIcel aroee becauae customers
wanted them, Mrs. Senaelllald.
The most recent count showed

.

'

about 70customersuslngthe pickup
and delivery service, «&lt; customers
getting their mall pre-sorted, and
about 25 customers using the linn
for bulk mailing. Mrs. Sensei
expects the pre-sort business to pick
up as postal rates rtse,
Although she says "many of the ·
tblngs we do could be done by ·
machine," the Kettertng resident
prefers to UBe part time employees
rather than machines to soi1 maU.
"I do not like machines. They break,
and I cannot give people service,"
Mrs. Sensei said.
't

· today on Paul Edward Jewell, an
11·yeljl"-old Orlando, Fla., - boy
severely burned In the Christmas
Day explosion of a homemade
bomb.
HoWever, doctors said Frtday
that the boy .has only a 50-50 chance
of surv1ving the severe burns and
other injuries that might require
amputation of his rtght leg. '
"He's quite Ul," said Dr. Edward
Law, assistant chief of staff at the
Institute.
Jewell suffered second-and thirddegree burns over 00 percent at his '
body when· a homemade bomb
attached to an air hose exploded as
the boy trted to 1111 a bicycle ttre. He
also lost parts of the rtght leg in the
blast, and sustained lnjurtes to bls
left leg and a hand.
~
F1ortda authorities trted to piece
the bomb fraiiJlents together Friday lnhopesoffbtdlngcluesabout Its
maker. Pollee said there were no
Immediate suspects.
'the boy was flown to the Institute
Thursday night because of ·the
seventy of his burns. Law said the
doctors' Immediate coneern Is
preventing Infection In the burned
areas. He said the boywlllremalnat
rtsk for months as tlie skin slowly
heals.
"First ot aU, he bas to survive the
Injury," Law said: "He will get
sicker before he gets better. Tllese
(burn) patients can get worse In a
hurry, but they get better very
slowly."

!

a Jot of operatlona to replace the
dead skin, doct!n uld. They hope to
beeln eratttna cadaver lkln from
the institute's akin bank as a

begin skin graft surgery as early as

temporary measure wttbln the next
couple ol. days.
The boy Is bebtg treated with
antibiotics and blood transfu8lonl
and Is betn3' fed IntraVf!lllll!lly and
through tooc1 tubes. Doctors said lie
Is alert, but !ileeps 1n011t of the day
and probably ts tnpalnonlywhenhls
dressings are changed.
"I S\ISpect that nialnly he just
wants . to be lett alone," La'\'1 said.
..And that's not'lhal."

'

Law said the hospital's surviVal
rate for cblfdren with bums over 81
percent at their . body Is .about 50
percent. Jewell has less burned skbt,
but the other lnjurtes reduce his
survival chances, doctors said.
Investigators 11\. Florida · are
piecing together thousands of tiny
fragments, trying to rebuild the
mysterious bolnb, wblch witnesses
saki resembled a package wrapped
for mailing.
The bomb scattered "thousands
of pieces of nalls, paper and metal
slrtps, ranging In slzefromspecksto
a quarter-Inch, aCI'OIIS the sb'e
parking lot," said Orange County
Shertff's Capt. John Guemple.
After technicians rebuild the
device as well as they can, It will be
flown to the FBI lab in Washington,
D.C.
. Tests on the bomb could help
detennlne where some at the
device's pm;ts were bOUght and
whether the bomber had professional experience, Guernple said.

McCarty faces
2nd DWI charge

B)' RO'i'P:rE. MD l,nt
Aaa ,..,.... Pro. Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
officials conflrm that a former
Inmate became pregnant while In

Ohio's prison system but maintain
that the state Is not liable 1or the
unprecedented Incident.
Tessa UnWin, communications
o!flcer for the state Corrections
Division, said Frtday that !he
woman lninatereportedNov. 28that
· ·she was pregnant as a result of a
secret, voluntary rendezvous with
two male Inmates at the Orient
Pre-R.elease Center south of
Columbus.
She said the woman wasreteased,
as had been planned, shortly after
reporting her pregnancy. The two
men, assigned to Orient as part of a
DIAMOND WINNER- Uoyd Dupn, rtpt, ul IL.t!•nd, dropped.so-called work cadre, were fourid
lldlet in lhe box at Pomeroy's K A C Jewelry Store durlns the ~!~ani's
guilty of violating prtson rules at a
recEIIl Cllrllana&amp;
At tile time he lll*t't even kDow what was
hearing of the center's rules
belnJ pveil away but be thought ashe dropped the ticket In, "Wooldn't It
Infraction board. They are awaltmg
be 110111ethlng II I won?" Well he did win and II; was IOinethlng - a
' disciplinary transfers.
half-karat diamond cN8ter ring valued at $liCit. Kim Y 011111• left, .an
Ms. UnWin said It was the first
employe!l at K A c, made lbe p..,.......•llotl Friday aflemoon,
hlrnate pregnancy ever recorded In
the prtson system, although there
have been births at the Ohio
Reformatory for Women at Marsyvllle among Inmates who entered
already pregnant.
Ms. Unwin caUed the keeping of
men and women In the same prison
complex "a new con~-ept" which Is
AKRON, Ohto (API -Medical ' Dan Hawke said processing all the being trted for the first time at
care providers In Summit County bills just couldn't be done by year's Ortent. Other states also are testing
say It could be tougher for welfare end.
stmUar programs, she said.
clients to get services If the county
keeps falling behind · In paying its

.,I'OIII(Itlon.

Summit lags in
wel(are payments

For the second year In a row the
bills.
county will carry unpaid welfare
department bills Into a new year.
W11llam Hartung, the county auditor's finance director, estimated
about $1.5 m11llon In bills still must
be paid this year.
Walter Rltzman, a Barberton
pharmacist speaking for 28 druggists owed a total of $389,&lt;XXI, finally
got the county auditor to send their
checks.
"I know of no one who actually did
drop welfare clients,'' he said. "The
tltlngofltls, thenexttlme,ltwehave
to go two, three or four months
without getting paid, they wtU drop
these people quicker."
The long walt coukl add to_welfare
costs as well, he said. Phaimaclsts
must pay suppUers by the lOth or
15th of the next month. I( they have
to walt to get paid, they will charge
more In compensation.
.Some vendors have bad towaltas
long as siX months for payment.

Since then, Worthington pollee
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Rl·
have
been reading all drunken·
chard N. McCarty, who took his
drtvlng
suspects their rtghts,
drunken-driving case au the way to
Murphy
said.
the U.S. Supreme (:ourt and won a
It was not untU McCarty told
mandate for reading misdemeanor
pollee who hewas that they realized
suspects t!lelr rtghts, will be back In
he was the reason theywerereadtng
local courts to face a second
him his rtghts; Murphy said.
drunken-drtvlng charge.
McCarty gave non-lncrtmlnatlng
McCarty, 32, of Whitehall, was
answers to an officer's ·questions,
arrested Thursday by pollee In
the sergeant said. McCarty denied
suburban Worthington on drunkenhe was drtvbtg, drtnklng or under
driving and other traffic charges,
the Influence of alcohol and refused
and pollee made sure they read him
to t8.ke a breath test, Murphy said.
.his rtghts, said Sgt. Dan Murphy.
McCarty bas· an unlisted teleIt was the failure of a State
phone
· number and could not be
Highway Patrol trooper In 1981 to
reached
for his comment. He was
read McCarty bls rtghts that lead to
Dr. Allen Oster, president' of
rele8Sl'd
from
jaU
Friday
on
his
awn
the battle that went aU thewaytothe
Convenient Dental Centers. went to
recognizance.
.
Supreme Court.
the auditor when his accounts .
He Is to appear Jan. 8 In receivable reached $44,&lt;XXI. He has
The so-called Miranda rtghts,
Worthington Mayor's Court on suggested that a committee of
telling a suspect of his rtght to a
charges of drunken drtvlng, speed· providers, Including dentists, doclawyer and that statements he
lng and drtvlng wblle bls Ucensewas, tors, druggists and podtatrtsts, be
makes can be used against him,
suspended.
previously had been read only to
established to work with lite county.
Defense attorney R. William
suspects charged with felonies, not
Summit County had been cited by
Meeks, whorepresentedMcCartyln thestateaudltor'sofflceforfaUlngto
with misdemeanors like drunken
the ortglnal case, said he was upset pay untU Ibis year some $1.3 million
drtvlng.
at
the news at the arrest, but dtd not worth of medical bills run up by
At the time of his first arrest on
know
if he will represent McCarty In Department of Human Services
March 31, 1981, McCI!fly told the
this
case.
trooper he had had two beers and
(welfare) clients last year.
McCarty pleaded no contest to the
some martjuana and was "barely"
1981 drunken-driving charge when
under the Influence of alcohoL That
"It's a real, gooly, complicated
his case was returned to Franklin mess," said Human Services Direc·
led to his· conviction on drunkenCounty Municipal Court last month. tor Edward P. Farage. He refused to
driving charges.
He was fined~ and almost $150 In comment further, other than to say:
TheSupremeCourtruledtblspast court costs.
"God bless the auditor."
summer that misdemeanor susJudge Sl&lt;tney Golden said
The welfare department and the
pects are entitled to the same McCarty had satlslfled a pnivlously auditor's office blameeachotherfor
Miranda warnings and sent the case m'(jered 10-day jan sentence by the situation, wblch bas been
back to the local courts for a new completing an alcohol awareness buUdlngslnceJulywhentheHuman
trtal.
program.
Services departnient ran out of
funds for medical assistance payments and more than 1,700 bills
began stacking up.
five years and will be updated
Hartung says county officials
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) annually with validation stickers.
underestimated their expenditures
Ohioans who finally have managed
"We won't Issue new plates again when preparing this year's budget.
to memorize their license plate
untn 1990," said Frank Ryan, County Executive John R. Morgan
numbers soon wlU liave to start the
spokesman for _the Ohio Bureau at blames blgber costs on an lncreasprocess again.
Motor Vehicles.
lng number of welfare recipients.
The cUJTent blue-on·wblte Oblo
Ryan said the state \VIII Issue
tags featurtng three letters loUowed
Farage, according to Hartung,
by three numbers are being
about 10m1Wonsetsofllcenseplates trted to get theauditormovlngon the
replaced by green-on-wblte 19115
In 1985 for all vehicles.
overdue bills when he received
Ryan said the order of numbers wrttten notice from state welfare
tags, which wUlshowthreenumbers
followed by three letters. The new
and letters 1s bebtg reverSed officials that reimbursement rnatags go on sale next week for people
because of the state's staggered ney was coming.
whose last names begin with A or B.
registration pertod, wblch extends
The auditor's office refused to
'the new tags are deslgnep to last
throughout the year.
process bills, however, untn the $3.1
·
m11llon actually arrtved and the

Li~ense tags changing in '85

Nominating committee named :=:o ~U:U~~t:;

GALLIPOLIS - A ncmlnating
committee to select candidates for
the Gaillpolls Area Chamber of
Commerce has been named by
Chamber President Paul J . Knotts.
Nominating committee members
are Charles Adkins, Jerry Brock. way, Lonnie Leonard, Lester Plymale, Paul Knotts, Jack Roderus,
Emetyn Scarberry, Jeffrey Smith,
Wenden Thomas and Ron Toler.
. Under chamber by-lawa, the
general membership now bas the
right of nomination by petition. The ·
by-laws dictate that "In addition to
those candidates selected by the
- nominating committee, any 10
members of the chamber bt 8ood
standing may nomlnateoneormore
members of the chamber by IIUni
with the chamber executive, a
petition nomlnatln&amp;' 111Ch ptopoeed
dliecluia and otp•turea of 8IIV 10

lllfPihers."

fltlng with the chamber execu, . adj~trnents. .
tlv
1 be clOne no later than Ja.n. ' Thilt took untn this month, the

11•emus

......

State not liable
for pregnancies

If he SUrvives, the boy Will reqllft

the Shrlners Burns Institute could

manaaer.

forced (to sign the agreement), but
we realized that thecltywouldhave
to make up this significant &amp;MttfaU

scrnellO\V.''

Bomb victim h~

0~3

bUSiest ~ of the year. Auditor

The· It/lowing S•lll,ollt

Fln•n~ •I

l1ttltttlo1l will ~''" 1t 3 '·"'·
Mo1d1g, Du. 31.
BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN
C &amp; S BANK
CENTRAL TRUST
GALLIPOUS SAVINGS
OHIO VALLEY lANK ·

This inclu. ..Main Offices, Alllranchn and
Drive-In Fadlitill.

1

•

'

None "or the parties bt the receat
case was Identified becaule acli
acted as a consenting adult and 1111
laws were broken, Ms. Unwin aid·
The female Inmate had been rt
Ortent on a work assignment llnoe
last May, but was In the flllaldaya ct
a pre-release program when testa ,
confirmed she was In the early ,
weeks at pregnancy'
:.
Orten! Is a facUlty where depart; '
Ing Inmates from throughout the
prtson system areseritfor six weeks
of pre-release Instruction and ,
orientation.
:
Ms. UnWin said men and womat;
are kept In separate quarters but a! •
times are brought together for work :
details. She said the rendezvous that
apparently resulted In the preg- ;
nancy was arranged through let· :
ters, but wasn't detected because :
prtson officials are oot permit~ to ;
•
open first-class man.
The communlcatlollS officer said ;
the department would Uke to stress '
that no matter how strtngent the ;
rules may be, "It's very hard to keep :
them (men .and women) apart 24 ;
hours a day."
,
However, she said steps have '
been ta:&lt;en to try to avoid a
recurrence of the recent Incident. '
She did not elaborate on what the :
•
steps were.
"Many of the people who come •
Into the pre-release program have.
been Incarcerated a long time, and ,
they ate adults ," Ms. Unwin said.

r--------------------------------------------------------------~...,
Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992·2156
Register - 675-1333

. '
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~

P~Jblic

Notice

PUBUC NOnCE
The Cheshtre Townshtp Trustees wtlf hold a spec tal meeung
on Mondav eventng. Decernber

3 1. 1984 . at '5:00 p.m at the
Townshtp Buddtng tn the village
of Kyger for the purpose a t

fm•shtng uo the busmes s of

t 984
Irma Bales. Clerk
Route 1, Box 785

Cheshore. Ohoo 45620

Dec 30

AII IHIIIII r. I! 1111! IllS
l-::---:-----=--.3 Announcements

Giveaway

4

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

=-a--~P=-u-:b-::li,...c-::S:-a:-le-- '
&amp; Auction

1 female puppy. Coli 4489301 .

Cute ond cuddly Benll·tVPI
puppi11 to give 1woy. Have
bHn wormed. Coli 814·
992-8919.

Holf Border Colllo ond holf
Auatrellen Shepherd. com-

plete with dog ttouN. 304-

8711-11289.
Cute pupplea. moatly white.
'h B11gle, 'h Gorrnon Shepherd. 304·87!1- 1089 or
875-5119.

Poodle. 9 montht old. 3048711·2032.

SWEEPER ond oewlng mo-

chlne reploir. Pllrt•. a•nd 6 Lolt end Found
oupplloo.
Pick up ond • · - - - - - - - - dtllvory, Devlo Vacuum Cltoner, one hill mMe up LOST: Two German SheGeorge• Creek Fld. Coli pherd pup1. 1.111 -n It
814-441-0294.
home on Nebo Ad. 3 moa.

Bolloono for Got Well, AnnlverHryo. Blrthdeyo, partlea.
Singing Gorrlllo. Cell Bel·
loono • Co. 448-4313.

8

old. Block • .Ton. Reword

upon return of doga. ·Call
Hlrril ot 114-37.92702.

Joon

Gun ahoot at Rachw Gun LOST: Male Garmon Shepherd block • g.-y, 11r1yld
Club every Sundoy, 1:00 lrbm
c..e~~ ..... If
p.m. Factory chocked guna
"found cell C1roil Flouoh It
only.
814-387-7130 or 446-

J.....

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
Wishes You and Yours The lest Far tt.
New Year, See you in '&amp;5,
MARLIN WEDEMEYER-Auctianeer

245·5152 - 3&amp;1-&amp;249
SALE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT AT 7 PJl ~ .
Door Prizes Every Sale
.
Havt Something you want to sell? lrl11g it to the ,..
trio! Auctien lorn and we'll sell it f• you. Clllllil=· ~
monts acctpttd from 1:00-5:00 P.M. en Sat...,: •
Fra• G.Uitlolh, take lt. 141, hlnl left ewte
lt. 775; tum ri1ht onte tiNt Patriot-Call•;
laall. Wllfclt fit' sltlns.

8312.

Giveaway

LOST: 2 Slberl1n Huoky In
Ewlngton vicinity both hove
1 blue 11y1 • 1 brown eye.
8 pupplea ml•ed broad. Call Reword. Cell 114-388-

44f·0924 . .

9939.

Block Lib puppleo, 4 weokt loat In Chaa1er area. l•rge
old. Coli 1114·317-7228.
moil wi1111ong heir ell white
huoky typo dog. Anowero to
Klmbl. Very genlll. If ony
2 In Memoriam
inform•tlon. plea•• call
814-888-4337 or I 14-11853880.

In Iovine memory of
my dear mother,
Electa O'Neill, who

died Dec. 30, 1976.
Always missed by her
dauahter and two sons.
In LovinaMemory of my
husband, Bart Milltr,
who pilstd IWiy Dec:.

30, 1983.

.

In tht llrdtn of memories
We m11t ,very day.
I mls; you mort and

LOST: block. wttlte 111d

brown Beegle In Bailey Run
Rd. • -· Anowen to 8o.
Cell Roger ROUIII It 114·
882-3111.

LOST omoll blac~ Coc~er
Sponlel oround Jericho
Rood end At. 2 . vicinity,
Chlld'o ptlt, 304·171·7818.
Lo11 blue purM ot Super
Amlrloan 11111on. IIIIU"'
PIPifl end platura. no
q-*'• •••. 304·17!1711!1.

more.

In lift I loved you
dtarly,
In dtath I low you still.

In my hMrt you hold 1
piece
Noont tlst Ctn tver fill,
Sadly missed by wife,
Mildred, children end
lllndchlldren.
P.S. Honey, llowd you
11111 mill you 10 much.

AUCTION

January 5, 1985-10:00 A.M, ..
Location: Moore Jerricho Rd. from Gallipolis take .
State Rt. 7 to Addison , turn left on Addison Billa· '
ville Rd .. stay richt at Reese Holl~ Rd. T/R If · .
Swisher Hill. then left on Moore Jerncho Rd. Apo,
prox. 4 miles from Rt. 7. Watch for sians.
· .:
Auctioneers Note: The Mooney's have sold tlleir farm tnd ·
are moving to smaller quarters. They are offering·. , very nice · ·
variety of clean household items as well as a good se_iection .. ·
misc. ~ems trom the farm, at public auct1on. l!e on time for · 1
our lirst auction of 1985. This wil be a ilOOd one.
King si~e bedroom outfit includes triple dresser,chest and:
night stand; 3 pc. white French provincial bedroom suite, 72inch RCA radio &amp;stereo (maple) . coffee table, commode end
table RCA 25 inch console TV. lg lamp, floor lamp, dinette ,,.
set (4 chairs, rattan glass top, 3 matching rattan bar stoolsl, ,
GE automatic washer, I upright freezer, I chest type freezer, .
kitchen chair,! odd chair, Kerosun heater (Omni 85).
•
I
Lawn furniture, table with umbrella. 2 lawn mowers (Jacob, ,· ,
.sen &amp; Lawn ChieO, Homelite chain saw, car ramps, 4ft. bush
hog, 4 rolls barb wire, 2 wheel trailer, western Siddle; ,
bridles, 3 log choins, post hole diger, hay elevator, 3e;llo~ .
fruit tree sprayer, fru~ tars, metal cabmet, 6 ft . wood step
ladder, metal post (81. portable typewr~er, circular saw, buf.
fer &amp; KJinder, misc. hand tools and mist. items.
Ferguson Tractor 20, 1952 model- Winchester Modet 370 full choke 12 gauae sin ale barrel shotaun.
:
·
Salt Conducted by

Dt

McGhee Aucton Co.
""' illlantlltion illlllnl to tltl
IIIII! I COtWidloll al (llltiel
bnllll.. Ifill lllilllw on .,

JIIIII*IY, Ole. 1&amp;. 1114

C. R; STEVENS.

1

1,000 REWARD
379·2147

.. '

8allpolls, Ohla 45631
Pilollt 1'14) 446·0552

Avctollttr:
Myron l. (lid) lc81MI

•.
Salt Condlllad fol' '' '

ll1lvin &amp; • ~
SylytaMooaev ,
lloatt JentCIIO ·aa.•,

A.PJI. AlctiOiitr.
GeiU(IIIII. Olllo
Sttvt llc811te
FOR YOUI CIIOICI OF em AUCIIOI DAIII CML • •

•

�The

Tunes-Sentinel

Oecember 30,

Ohio-Point PlsnAm. W. Va.
18 Wanted to Do

KIT 'N' CARLYL! ®br lal'tJ Wrftllt

32 Mobile Home,p
tor lale &lt;'

32 Mobile
for
NNYIINitieolot:liiiUII•
fvl horne In. good ..........
hood. On 1 nlol lOt on

W1hted to clean hou• or
care tor elderly, honeot ·a
dependable. Coli 114-2111·
1tll.

.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY
-AND -N- Jo Ml ......tiel, caowwra.l, ooiol
••• a I "''"!Ita wllh- e1 G "pall•' rtput_..
owlhla. W. loone _,1, jtioiM a t.to ·flitht ina. . ..
........... ~-- •• load; , . e"" ..... ....
IN!· , . . . . r-. - ...... with lhelorol&lt;lf'l pe-l

.........., ........... John

Klcok or ilolll,4-ti2·U23.
leeutlful newly ...., . . .d

f 111.111 1: 1.11

t1ono bedroom horne with

z:wilot·

e~ '• ...... tlo111 jiOtia;.s poi Must
.,ollficllllooos: Noot ..,..,once, •·
. . Ia W, ....... willloog to wortr, pltatant pe..-Hty,
Ill ..... to .... iliatruc.- allll loe Mlf liiOtiwatttl.
W.. ..,.......ei;; lwllatote or rtlatlll fitW helpful lout
oat -em,. Ow office hila • txltlltnt reputation and
. - ............. aorn tap reoooMiaaion.
Write us ,..., hi' io conf*ntial iritorwlow. It would loe
· tht firat step toward a llr~llant new futunll Write:

We .." J
tlot f

'
:

I NOTICE I
THE. OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. reccommendo
that you do boaln••• wtth
people you know. ond NOT

We PlY caoh for late model

ciMn uHd care.

.Jim Mink Chev.-Oido Inc.
·- BHI O.ni Johnoon
448-3172 .
'! Wan~

to buy u•ed coal &amp;
• wood hutere. Swain Furni! ture; 441-31118, 3rd. •
; Olive St .. Gojllpollo, Oh.

11

geted the offering.

22 Money· to Loan

Help Wanted
HOME
OWNERS
Retlnonce
to
low fl•ed
rote. ·Uoo
equity
lor ony purpose. Leeder
Mortgage Co .. 814-692·
3051 .

lllloturt lady 10 lolbyollln my
homo. evenlngo. older kido.
Coll441·2188.
Help

2844 .

to send money through the
mail until yOu have inv&amp;~ti­

P. 0. lo1 903
Ohio 45631
Wanttld To Buy

- · Deed 111111 rood, .....
\fOrd, on organic ~ l!"rderi
- ' · Vwy .,._au; and
IICIIIdod . Corpeted
throughout, moltly now·
.Nfon:ed olr fuel oll
fum- with illlitlful wood
ldtohen co'* otovo ond
kingwood ooot burner. Lola
of emu mid 30'o. For
appointment coM 114-'742·

Bu1ine11
Opportunity

Real Estate

9

Wonted • reoident

23

manager and or maintenance couple or per10n for

Professional
Services

omell 24 unit elderly opart!1'1101 compte•. River .Bend
Place, New Haven, West
Piano Tuning ilnd Repa!t.
VIrginia,
Send
reoume
to:
Brunlcerdl
Muoic Co ., 446·
;: Row Fur. top P!iceo pold .
• Lake Jockoon Fin • Fur. Ook Colonial American Develop· 0887. Twentieth year of
ment Corporation. 380 l.q1uoll1ty service. lane Oa~
:; HUI, Oh. 81 4·1B2-7448.
South Fifth Street. Colum·
4-742-2951 .
,,
•; COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS buo, o•hio 43216.
TUNING ANO RE·
: FURNITURE . Bedo. Iron, NHd eomeone to care for PIANO
PAIR, Reduced roteolimlted
: wood, cup-rdo. choirt. elderly man in hia home. call time
onl~ . Ward's Keyboard,
: cheatl, basketa. di•h••· 304-676-3336.
304-676-6600
or 676·
tJ: ltone jara, antiquH, gold
3e24.
: and allver . Write-M . D .
"' Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy. Ohio
: 4&amp;789 or coli 814-992· 12
Situations
• 7710.
Re~l Es!o!B
Wanted
~ Buying doily gold, lilver
.., coine. rings, jewelry, sterling
31 Homes for Sale
1 ware, old coint, llrge curChriotlen Singleo. pen palo.
l r:ency. Top pricea. Ed. Bur· friendo, detes, 18 to 108. Three bedrooms, centraleir,
' loan Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave. Box 1B9. Allegeny "NV vinyl wall paper, carpet'
Mlddloport, Oh. 814-992- 14706.
throughbut, well inouloted,
- - - - - - - - l c" t471.
new paint, attached garage,
~ : .
·lc- Aoom and board for elderly; geo outdoor grill, ownlngo,
• 8UYING RAW FURS. Beef also sleeping rooms. Call mony e•troo. CoR 44B·2583
• Jnd DMr Hidao, Ginoeng on'd 614-992-6022 .
til 6:00PM, after 8 :00PM
:• yellow root. Selling coli 614·246·6869.
tropping oupplieo. Whoot
llghto, night lighto. George
3 bdr. ranch, city ochool,
.. Buckloy.phone 814-8114·
utilities. carport, deck. ca·
15
Schools
- 4781 ,hourt 12-9PM doiloy.
ble, t33,600. Coli 446Instruction
7144 .
Stonding timber. Coli 614·
388-91117 or 614-3B8 ·
Reel cute Middleport home.
Baginnera-Gultar le11on1 in reel Bargain Pricell Call
•eos.
homo. Call 446-3126.
614-992-6941 .

=
H

f

omas or

S I
ae

31

Remodeled 2 BR vlnyled
home, e~"rpeted, 2 1crt1s~
1224 pound. iobocco allotmont , city ochoolo.
822,600; Call 614-245629e.
Open Houn· new model.

big country home. 3 bdr.,

built on your lot, $18,900 •
up. Coii1-614·8B6-7311 .

Homes for Sale

For ulo or loou-1 room
houooln RoM Hill, Pomeroy.
614-178-2113.
3 loldroom ltouM for ulo or
rent. Coli 814-992-7351.

.

• ; Account Cle,. II. Solory
•10,140·•11.024 onnuolly
~ cllpendlng on qu .. Hicationa.
Muot be fomlllor with gen' ere! occountlng prlnc:lpleo
; 'nd dolo pooeoulng equip• -•t. Apply City Buadlng.
' 11Biocond A..nua.lilforo
~ • January 4, 19B5. Equal
• Employment Opportunity
IM·F-V-HI Employer.Plrt•tlmo help wantod, one
1
dey o waak. Mult be oble1o
• type,' file, a on•- the
~ telopt;-. eon 448-4109.

446-3636~

JUST LISTED - AnRACTIVE CEDAR RANCH
overlooking the Ohio River south ol town . 3 bedrooms, 2 aths, cathedral ceiling, nice kitchen and
dining room, 2 car garage plus more. Rural water,
central sewage. Loan assumption.

STAIIItR HOME OR RENTAL- Excellent opportunity

to own a home with payments under $230 monthly

..

11718

-

.. ~ ..

•
1

~

~

FARII OR INVESTMENT.
&amp; BUILDING LOTS

huae

· dutch style bam, exceiB11 lalie
site. crop land, pasbn, and
woods. Owner says "MAKE Of.
. FER ON AU OR PART''. Priced
· 1o selllu farm. Possible excel·
lilnt 1erms IVIillbie
MEl 1$ LOSIIIG THOUSAIIDS 1)1 THIS BEAUTIFUL 4 BEOROOM, 2
BATH 1W01 HOME. FIMILYROOM WITH FIREPIX£. 2 CAR GARAGE.
16132 POOL EXC£l.LENT LOCATION NEAR CITY.

A IIOII£Y fOI TltE IIOIIEY! NICE 2 BEOROOM FRAME RANCH
IN CITY, ATIACIIED GARAGE.
lMGE BAC1( YARD. BETTER
HURRY! $29,500.

Sl·

REALlY
315-7419

(614)

.Colllct C.lls Accepted

• art 011 ADIWI o.M -

3
Ill IWOI HAS FAMILY ROOM.
LOW MIIIITEHANC( VINYL SlJ.
lNG, FENCED BACII YARD. NICE

r:r~ET A~PER BUY AT

llilBfLE HOME PLUS 4'12 ACRES - 10x50' 1963
mobile home with IO'x26' addition. 3bedrooms, baltl,
living room, kitchen wilh range and refriaeraloi.
WOidlurner included. Located ~nton area.
' 11623
HUNTING FOR A SIAI.L FARM? - Then let us slllw
you lliis ore Nice 2story home with 4 bedrooms. bath,
luel oi florroace, 37~ acres, 11100! or less, lobacco base.
30x30 barn plus other outbuildings, traile! hookup.
Owner would consider land contract
H736

1 ACID ..;; $6.000 on Spring

•

story charming older home. Beautiful stocked lake.
Wooded ~nd to hunt deer and wildlile. Tobacco base.
Owner ,;n sell all or part

ACREAGE located on Cheatwood · Waggoner Road. 5
acres 101111. I acre1cleared. Holding tank for spring and
rural water available. Owners will sell on land contract
Mostly wooded.
• #643

-on
-WiWrt
- 2 Sl
niceWlllef
buildin~
.118
...... $4,000.00 eec:h.

.. . .MONTGOMERY

200 ACRES - PARADISE LAKE - Year around
retreat Located on Hannan Trace Road. 3bedrooms, 2

COUNTRY STYLE HOME ~
5,000 sq, ft. Raised ranch wrth 4 bedrooms. 3 bllhs.
fOrmal dining, spacious kitchen. fireplace, filii diVided
basement. 2 car garage, in·ground pool ~us 40 acres.
Don't hesitate, make an appointment loday.
#741

- .'no AllES 1 mile lrnm Ohil

~

11721

H69
Custom buil witlt over

Real Emta Ganerel

25~~gt~ .
~QQtpoQil'. ~~to

:Small. iltiMtlve, unfurn ., 2
;enge, In - · rent 11911,
:eo• hoi T - 441-0332
• devo. or 441·0111 eve.
. ;:~~y,

tumi8hld houH in
.,tulta only. Coli 441-

Z or 3 1111troom hou111 m or

Coli 441-3844 -

7PM.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo

......_ R - 33, North of

BLABEDj

BU1 .

- . 304-171-4124 ......
Furniohld etfi~ • · for 6 :00PM .
rent. t171mo. pluoutilitioe. 1-~------­
Large 2 bedroom •pt .
Coll 441·12B3.
c:orJNOt, oncl clrvSpociouol rm . opt. on Main - -... uc ·cond. pn...w
porlting.
quiet
neighbor·
St. Cheohlre camplatelu
tum., wo,.. paid. Coli 114- hood. 304-175 -1982 &lt;&gt;&lt;
245-5811 .
·~580 .

WliAI COFFee
OF'TEN IS.

() _._..,

(

,_A . (I I I

· Coll14-992·5434.
114-992-5914 . OJ' 304BB2-ZHI .

Nice 2 t11 S oom lpt, untur·
nished . downtown .
t171i.OO month. plus utii-

__
..
__
....... _"' I'
-..---·.

()

l (]

2 ll ; oom funaiwtwd epwt,

Furniohed opt .. 1 bdr .. U26
utHitieo poid, 820 4th A...
Gollipolio. Aclulto. Col 44114418oltor7PM .

: ~me~~

v_-s

.,

I )"( I I I I ]

«--.......,

- -lho-llthol--

1.,._,

a.c- of •'*"-' selltn IIIISt ;Matt . .
,1*41 1!1 offer 0. this utensi\oely reii!Mieled .._,_

114-992-7479 .

:49

Car,.ted throchout, f011111l entry. lar&amp;e co.try
•itl:hew, 3 bedrooms. 2 bJths. woodbunier insert, ,
full blostllltnt. 3 Ams. ~m . City schools.
t677

Forl.eaM .

Apt. for- . ~
city 1*!&lt;. LR, ~. -

-

GAVEl. FLANK SECOHO 1&lt;10111110
clull _ _ ,.. FOlJ( "SLLNGER"

-

51 Household Goods

~--------------~------------~-1--------------Picllono . - furniture, 304·
171-8413 01' 675-1450 .
RICK'S NEW AND USED

44

Apartment
for Rent

45

Furnished Rooms

U~

~

STUT
EAL ESTATE

..:1 ••f•igetaton. Compare
our pricas. aave today.

446-4206

Phone 304-n3-5430.

Red ond gold ploid twMd
couch ond choir. Foir cond.

304-882 .. 2616 ~

304-875-5375.

(Sonny) S.mes

Assoc .

Judy DeWitt-lllaltar-311-1155
1 Mini c.ter-Rialtvr-379-2114
V'orginia Smi1h-lllaltar-311·1826 '

Assoc.

,

BH•ie,

Wiseman Real Estate Agency

$111g &amp; Ctt6g :~

Sotunlap.

INCOME OPPORTUNITY - Owners have retired and
are very anxious 1o sell rental pr!JI)erty. The pnce has
been reduced on th~ bUSiness burldmg and 3 mobile
homes. LocafEd on 21o1S with all utilities. Th~ property
is in a prime location and are all presently rented. Call
today for all the detai~
#644
FOR THE INVESTOR - 4800 sq. ft. commercial
.building.· Office area, sales space, storage space, 3
rental units, 2 bedroom IIMibile rome, 2apartments. All
presently rented. Good income. EKcellent in-town
location
#712

~ 304-IB2-2811 .

. 42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent
: 2 bdr. trailer for ren1. near
• Morcarville. Coli 446·3159
• or 114-251-11152 ,ofter
; 6 :30PM.
14x70 totol electric 3 bdr ..
: fuini&gt;ohed. pluo woohor a
. d..,.. oro pri¥110 lot, 10 min.
· from · ezoo mo. pluo
~ dep uh

•

r.n Townslip ,

.

. t70i

#724
MINI FARM - 14 ACR£5 - Clay fownship. City
school district Uke new 3 bedroom modern house,
large comfortable rooms. 2 barns recently constructed,
one equipped with stables. SiK I!)I1!S fertile land, lOis d
fertilizer and lime has been used. Tobacm base. A
barpin at $51.500.

11715
RARE FIND- 41evel iot1l~ted withinlhe city ~mils.

Access to city water and sewer. One d city's better

mo

'URJAN UVING FOR THE EXECUTIVE - Hi acre
estate. Ia~ shrubbe,Y:'Irees, 3 bedroom brick rome,
built in 19r5. Ellicient helting, low maintenance. Six
mles lrnm Gallipolis. 5miles lillm hospital.One o1 ~
County's best

#674
HIIWDAT Hlll.S REIIEAT - .1972 Spartum 26'

~-contained camper with shelter rouse and

barbeQue situated on 2 lots. Has access road to
Raccoon Creek and ri~t lo boat docil. Excellent
opportuiily lor $9,900. .

m.......,_add

mi. from

3'h.

. 7 rm. loou• unfumlohed.
Aloo 4 cottage fur• ni-. Ill Garfield Avo.
' Muoo reforanceo.

MRYTHING YOU'D WANT lor only $34,(8). 0....
want to sell before Christmas and wlllla prese;l fit,
your lamily. Nicely redecoratEd 3bedroolll home will
steel silin&amp; new carpet, 24' pool. il1lely
flncl..
woodburner, 101rage. LocatEd '" city ltiiOOi dislrid..A.. .
must to see.
.
.

pnvac'

' 2 lodr. .....,.;.dryer, otovo,
twftlaerator, 1 mi. from
hoopltoi. •zoo mo .. uoo
clap. Col 441-1 3154.
Foi rent 2 lodr. a 3 bdr .
........ c.ll 4411-3371 .

;N--

2 ll r ' oocil mobihl home.

II&gt;-""""'*'

flll!
PIIICI REDUCED on 2 star ln:t """'"- ~ ""'"" to
loeii1JJn. Thts ..... .,., ail ......... JQO'I fol" !we ....
Plen1y o1 room bo ~ Jai!'l !lmlr. l m..l
eniJarx:e. palb, IMill rmm. drq """" d!n. 2ll&gt;rcases &amp;
2 ballls. Beaullfli li1l1l enlln:es Inn New li"
luma&lt;l~ &amp; untrol Or. lll!dJad to~~llll2

II
I
I
I

holt. Rocino
• • -· Call 814-992·6868 .
JJIII

·: 12•110. , _ bedroom. quiet
· • locotlo,, portiolly fumiohod .
. • 1100.00 ~- e1n .oo
· ' por month. CoM 8.1 4-992·
: . 1834 ..... 5:00 pm.

!JCm101AU.Y lEU D£QJIIAT£0 11 ~ A1i1enao1
"""" l4 -.,.,. beol1liiJ ""'' 100111 ..m iof!ll&gt;&lt;t .m
IRo5tlc .,..., ~ 111r ,., 11ce ,.,., "'"" """ 11&gt; me nw

": Double duplu in Middle·

tfjsh
-

·--------:-:-:-::--

: port. One bedroom un~o.

17 -

• ••,.•nell rMuir.c.t . K • K

.

.,_ •; 1711· 3000.

4 BEDROOM- 1\\ story lrame rome.I.Dcat.l3mlles

rom town. Eal·m ki!Chen, balh, living room. 11111111
basement with garage in the basement !MI. Holle
new roof, new furnace. Priced in the 30s.

.,.,

BRICK RMCH IN CITY - 3 bednoilms, t.th. dirft
room. INing room, kitchen, utility room. Allacloed I c.
garage w~h breezeway. Nice size IIIWfl with 111111 c111in .
link lence in back. Nicely landscaped. Home 11
excellent condition.

6ACRES WOODED CORNEA LOT -

l!tacldolliOid.

Electric and rural water available. $4,500.

.

·

SPRING BARGAIN, CHRISTMAS TIME - 3.8 ~re, ·
more or less. Tycoon ~oad . $1,200.
H7&lt;1$"

.

.
MAKE US AN OffER - I acre and atracliw lrlme
ranch located near Merceoville. 3 ·bedroorils. IMn&amp;
room. eat-in kitchen, 2 baths, basement Hell punlp.
woodburner. Rural water. 2 car pr~te.

ms

JUST LISTED - FRONTAGE ON IIVEI - Onlr
$25,000. 1~ story, 3 bedroom remodeled, batll,
larae kitchen and dinio&amp; area. Wiring; plulllllirlt.
roof have been replaced. Vinyl sillin1. lrpiMdilte
possess1on.
,

:

Cathy

'

.

r.,. .fteallw-379-278

....."'Lot.

.,..

· Inc .. 304 .

Rul Emta General

MEl! ruiiSFEIIlD - lUST Slll - E.octllenl
regjllxwlxlod qua11y Q)l15ti.CIIOI1. ...,. m. - " m
pnc:ed under 1113111&lt;1 ...... Mndw 3 t;odroom tro. rd
lrame fufy eQUIIll&gt;&lt;d lrll:liool. llriJ !lrAir nmo. 'h biolr6.
twi!J)Iace. iarl!l' tro. """' ond - - - prmll!
bockyard. EIIOfYII'oni aiDa 1111! !IOII"1Y" nu:ll berra lha1
~ "'"" lllliJid- By alooc ...... }QI ..... _..., lio&gt;l
cflontl! iii t This"""" ,_,...., m,.._
1135

IN 101111 - This 3 BR I\&lt;l .ay hos ,.. lllllji S11o1!. ,..
wirin&amp; new lulcflen QUras. ,.. """"......._~!a~!!
rOol and gas lurnn. 2 lot\. Feud boci yard ()1 • quo!
!!reel ~ IDwn.

TEAFORD·rD

W.

leal Estate

.

211 E. 2nd St.

Phone

1 ·11141-892-33211

lEW um111 - Over 1.000
lee! ol river fronlaee, ideal for
QIIIIJin&amp; 3 bedroom home.
ball! &amp;2 ciiled - $32.1ll0.
NlW USTIMl - ln!Uialed. 6
rms., HHtns, baltl. Wwater.
ILfOmllic hell and large leVel
lot in Tuppen Plains.

~

1103

IS PROPERTY
SELLING?

:- 2304.
:; _M_a_b_ll_;_h_IO_m_oo_in-::G~oN:::-Ipol-::1-o,
: nice for ...-,. citiuna or
. • monied coupll with · • - · no peee. dapoo~ end

lm1l yard) ko Sllll&lt;llnlings. 189,200.

IIZ21

flll

• "'"' iD;i 11 , . . """

""" aue! and

. • W•ter and aewage fur ·
• : .....,., Portiolty tumiohed .
:- .110.00 depoelt ........ ry.
· f121 . 00 month ond
· ' 1140.00 mo. CoM 814-892-

11182

· Maigout lrywd Rtaltw-245-9277
.lin! Cud1a:1 I llw U6·7Ul
lledly .... lltihaa.-446 0451

.e..,.......

'*
"""*""

NEW LISTIIIG - 2
Alint:he C. ilJl
tme on 2 """' dl!n 3 loedr1loiR5. 1 IRIIl. ,.,
krtcnen ...., • &lt;B~ dl '""" ._ ~&lt;or!&amp; l1lOill .m c~n~og .....
Haodwood Ibn
r i - UsJ
lo Ileal Garden spu. ar,.n l'ltiodioo !'lin
IQllt
mm"""""' b • ~ .,.,. 1liiiJ 50101313Xl

2 bdr. unfum . 12•10. 'h mi.
"""' HMC. eoH 446-4389 or
171·17110.

-11711

MOM WILL UKE THIS - 5th Avenue KMR. A very
livable ranch home, convenient klcalion. F~ring 3
bedrooms. bath. covered carport and workshop.
Curtains. refrigerator and range included. $37,000.

"*' '""""-

. ..... Cofll.14-258·1393.

• Holurt. Doyo 441·1323.
-114-246-9170.

finish as you wish. Level 1 acre lot in
and on~ 5 minutes from Rt 35.

1231

utilhtas. Ref.

• 3 lodr. tnilor. 2 belhs. in

EWINGTON - $16,500 - Remodeled 2 room alum.
sided ranch on Rt. ISO. Includes dining room, bath and
shower, part basement Iii furnace. rural water. large
garden area. Storage touildin~.

11739

.net

OWNER HAS DRASI'ICAI.lYHOlm llle price•
lh~ 3 bedroom lrJme ranch;-2"'ball1s, Win~ rooift.
kitchen, dinil\g area plus a 640 sqtJII1! bi ICiilition to

11729

NEW USTING - I YEAR BUYER·PROTECTION - 3
bedroom home situated on · 3~ acres near Crown City.
Over 1400 sq. ft. includes 2 baths, lamily room,
woodburner, wet bar, central air, large barn plus fruit
trees and jJlOd garden. Priced at $39,500.

IN REAL ESTATE
SALES IN GALLIA CO.

N~-1

~ In Mid d' ; -1. 3 bedroom
"hou•. N- kitchen. Con

SCENIC smiNG - Approximalely 40 acres wiltl nice
bi·level ilome surrounded by nature. 3 or 4 bfldrooms, '
2 baths, k~chen and family area plus utility room. large
separate 101rage, outbuildin&amp; Tobacco base, appro•. 5
a&amp;res tillable. Beauti1ul woods.
#651
JUST IJSTED - WANT SMALL ACREAGE? - Ideal
for building your new home or jusi a good place for
getting away (rom ~all. 7.5 acres, more or less, of rolling
land. Drilled well, rural water and septic tank all ready
instaHed. Call lor de!Ji~.

areas.

'

~Clift Boadotw'

44i-2701 Enninp 3&amp;1-1118 ht11i111F.

-·

d0W11, UBII.OO pluo oocur•
ltv depoolt. Sorry, no
c h i - cw peto. Phone
814·912-1292 eveningo or

·I

•.

So&lt;tsetrloay

In Middiet-'!. 2 bed-m

fumilhed opt. 1 child. 1 ~

· -~

Real Estate General

FUR~rrURE .

!

CENTUIY 21 Southern Hills U., Inc.

rofrig .. dining - · 2 - ..
1190
· ...... utii- - -Col
PJ' -4411-1111
~

We W'lllr You A
Hwg New y,,u

etor provided.Stotm wl.n-

detai~.

DDN1 DRIVE BY THIS BRICK HOME w~hout vie&lt;Mng
the inside and seeing the quality of the Cllllstruction
and style. 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, 1\\
baths, den or lormal dinin&amp; enclosed sunporch, ful
divided basement, central air, lOIS heat Large treed
lawn.
'

•

Elderly and disabled with an lncomole,lsthall '1111111
yearly can rent tor 30 percent at tllelr ln.. - .

11710

IIUULD YOU LIICE AIIIIIICIIUD IN YOIJI BACK YARD!- THIS HOME
HAS ()IE! Flvt: ACRES AU. FENCED ALLOWS COMPLETE PRIVACY.
8£AIJTIFUL 4 YR. OlD RANCH HOME CUSTOM DESIGNED TO CONSERVE
ENERGY. 6" INSUIATI()IIN WAllS. 12'' IN CEILING. ANDERSON WOOD
DOUBLE GLAZED WINOONS, HEAT PUMP PLUS WOODBURNE~ 3
SPACIOUS BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, OM CABINETS IN KITCHEN. FORfMI.
DINit«l PLUSH CARPET WITH COORDINATED DRAPES CARPORT
STOOAGE BUILDINGS. WE WOOLD LOVE TOSI«JoV YOU THIS BEAUTIFUL '
HOME CALL FOR AN OPPORTLJjiTY !roN. THE PRICE IS$54,000.

11

Ubrory, pro'ooolo,..;
. Call 114-192adult only. Cal &lt;141-0338. required
209'.

-~;;;;;;t;;;;;4iti;;n;:
• 2 b •;oorn houoo 42 Ch~li-

• bdr .. loundoy .._.., refv. •

" #725

,
-

ATTEITIOI BUILDERS
This PIOPifiY hos been subdi·vided inlo r ICill - 10 acre
··- can be sold individlllllv.
!.elK Wiler obllillble, priced
low, poaillle excelleri lerms.
, Tlis is in eKCAIIIeilt buy lor
eill1er farm or dMkJpment

U11LITIES INCLUDED

ranch on 2 acres, nice landscaping, lOw maintenance,
2 car garage w~h ~utomatic opener. 3 bedrooms, 2
batl1s, storage buidrng, 101rden area, concrete dnve.
Original owners, quality bui~ City sct-ool d1sk1ct
Rodney area. Priced to seU.

(includes !Jxes and insurance), $5,000 down, 9% APR,
2 bedroom home, 3 miles from towll Has fireplace,
new roo!, low utility bills. 23 acres in Washington Elem.
district $27,300.

f

.•. ~ .

2 bedooom ...,., cer· furniohed opt .• next - 1 0 peted,
totaiiiJCIJic, deposit

APARTMENTS, mobile
3 oooms ;orlovte beth. ........ ~Pt.M­
lot. floor. CaM 441-22111.
anct Gollipolio. I 1 4-441-

colha Rd. t210 por mci ..
: e71 dop. Coli 448-3870 or
:'41·1340.

A unL£ BIT Of COUNTRY - Very ni:e, ~t brick

~

River. rea~ures hotise,

14•70 Rlchordoon. 3 bdr ..
1~ bllh, 11,000 will tofte
car or truck on troda. Moy be
kept on prlvoto lot If · preferred. Coli 114-2111· 1393.

·711-

_ ,_ ....... Iota. Coli

1 bdr opt., 2 bdr apt..
•1 fiO..UIIO. c.ll 304-171·
·7213 1711·110• or 171113BB.
·
.

;cotho lid. 21odr .• 0210 mo ..

tor rent 42 ChiHi-

...._ horne lot.

...... 41h .• Neil. G · ·; a'il.

rl r

mooooge.

Fumiohed efficiency e1411,
utiltiet pd, thoro lolth. 107
2nd. Ave. Gollpolio. c.ll
448-4., I 7PM .

~

TWIN RIVERS
TOWER·

Put NtJ•riber l to work for you:

youghono Cordlnolo will
tlilll applicotlont for CUOIO·
, _ ·ralatlon potltiono of
ce_..i., 1nd Arry-out on
Fildey, Saturday, · Sundoy
end Mondoy. At Voughono
· ~ Cerdln•l.

•

----------

.

•
,;
••
,.
,
•

:
•
:

.

.SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

c·:.r_-________

~

'

F~;;oio;hotl - - · 3 bdr .. 28
NeH A.... Go. . allo. t225
p1ut utlltiM. ovhl•-•· Coil
441-441 ...... 7PM.

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

46 Space for Ram

month for 1We billrOOM, RNa · rr Apt8. ,. ~ ,. JDrt.
wttlt •200 .... Dllt lac 1 °
,
111111 lflrine
CitiaoM. 1130. Equal,...
Volley f'lolo, pool TV
Opportunities . 11•·
ont. Col 441-27411 or 1oovo ine
H2-7721 .

2 bed·
• Nice.
• room home ln Pomeroy:
lnMIIoted. otoveond ..tnvor·

II

I've, , Huntington, Wv
-· · -701.

"

·''

446-6610

~

.•
."•

-~-----~- :

\·

t&amp;l~ ··-•.-:

City. Coll14-211·114e~ · ;,

. HI dop. Cofl441-3870end
· 441-1340.

TRANQUIUlY nestled in 108 acres d nature. ApproK.
40 acres fi!lable with posture and IWJOds. Older ho.me
used lor hay storage. Rural water available. Farm has
been inlamHy UJO ~ars. but ready tiJ sell. Call for 11100!

BElT KEPT BECRET IN
AMERICA--Army Notional
r
O.nl. Join ond you hove I
~ good pert·tlmo corMr--good
\ bonot111--monthly
:: JNOYChack··NO LAYOFFS.
•. 304·171·31110 or 1·BOO·
: 1_42-3119.

·
-·-31111
Call ~
......441
or 114-2118

· e121. Utili•

-only. l111ac., O rt
lie. Ul 4411 olter I p.m.

JACitiOJC EITATEB gor.... ljiftllaftCH fur ·
APAIITMINTI ll111ual ...~ _ . , . . , ._ U10-.
iftchld11 water. . ,, reCol - -7201 .,..
-..... . . . 113 tor- ......
441-337.

,.....,...,eel

ooako, lffoguord. Juno 15-

•
•

v. acre 1ot'for 111o 111 C!Mfir ·.

Fwwiwlud -

opt. -

Pca-or. Fumilhed or
unfurnltlood. Rant end utili·
nogotioble. Dey 814912-2381. -ingo 614~
: at12-B723.

, July 27. AiiP.IY 733 7th

~

HOMEB
KESSEL'S
QUALlTV
MOBILE
HOME IALES,
4 MI. WEST. GAWPOLI8,
RT 311. PHONE 114-441·
7274 .

Houee for: rent._ Marcil IIIII

____ ....._ __

... ..,.. __

.......

ocr

Room~

pMr

,.:tor. buaineM manager,

~
~

Nrol w...,. Colt 441-:1113
after 1:30PM.
·

GENERAl FAAII, HARRISON TWP. - 175 acres.
Many acres have been treated lor extra production.
Two spring developll'enls. One large barn. Tobacco
base. Approximately 2,000 Christmas trees. ~th year of
growth. Older home has been modernized. C9Unty
water. Owner translerred. ·

Immediate · opening for
' claltc· tNIMioer potltlon for
'· ,.._ of Rutlond. Sand
'· .....,...t6 Moyer John Miler
• by Thurtday. Jon111ry 3.
18U. lol 212 Rutland.

H - for - t . C1R 3041711· 7213 1711-110• or
175-UII .

46 fumlttlad

Ai*biWht
forR.n

New 11M I

,_, ,., ••net

liiiiLDt;;-i'icni;I;;-T
36 Loti

NEW AND UBED MOilLE

44

for Rent

be dream •nd •ttl ...,

eon 81 4-112· 7741.

..,.~~~-----Apartment

APIIbl•nt

=~:::=..=

for ..... IU1'12'1Un•lllill.

V.ocreloi_lljltll,....

12•811 Mobile Homo, com·
plettlv furnlohld end let up
for· l"'medlete occupetlon.
304-171·1 3811 after II PM ,

11444:1-1111or304-2734411.

~2~411=.
~;;;~=~
12al0, two&gt; ' 001a tr8llllr ~

a..vtfful two bedroom wtth
two full bltha on 4 ac,...

Mony oxtroo. Country living
on lilhlto. u2.ooo and wMI
finance . 11 mil" from Mid·
dleport . Coli 114 -742 ·
2332.

........ Ohio.

:;,;.~ ~ 7:r~:t&amp;:

Real Estata Ganaral

loy lcoutt of America-• adult oppllcento for oummer
oemp director, program dl·

JOIN THE LEADER. Tho
N- AVON. D,.motlc n OMnlngo pion. protoulonel
now ...., trtlnlng, mob up.
color onolyolt. unlimited
now growth pot-1•1. Coli
now :104-1711-1429 01' 304344-0724.

bldg. Coll441-11011 ·

. .II - - .Jft

w. v•.

011'IKJ PuiJ I l
44

0331.

'•r

•
·:

=r

a

· 44

Muot ull, 12xll Torch, Z-3
loldroom, unfurnished. In·
cludeo otorm wlnclowt lnd
ocreeno. Coli 114-441·
7132.

Galllpollo Forry 8 yoor old
brick ranch, 4 oor gorege,
•43,000 .00 . Phone 304676-88111,

Realty

11. Halp Wanted

dropel, CKittldo cloolo w-

Indoor out-r aorpec

31 Uta a MfiiiJ8

UxiO, ·two h t101111 Wilt!
oentrol olr 1-tlo•l· ~ '
ond untlel',lllnllll, fMIIt
porch ol In . . - . . , •dliA. '
U,IOO. C"oll t14·741- ·

for Rant

f 1111JI11'/I!Wilf
s ~ ~ rvlct ~\

bdr..

12111 mobile homt, 2
aorpec, wuher • dryer,
AC, otovo a rtfrltl, oil

for Sela

~~c~·..~~,.~";,~.~~~~~~;;r;;;~;;;;;;;~~
31

'

32 !\llobile Homes ·

I '

-lc-

•:,.'

vinyl tiding on 1 ~

-

_.,_ • .. ,.._.., .... r...te.

1984

That is a question we are
asked almost every day.
FraM!y, the way a propetv
"moves" depends a lot on
how it is handled. For this
reason, when you ·are set·
ling, we suggest that you
gM! us a cal. We are old
enough to be experienced,
young enough to be ag·
gressiye, large enough to
be efr.cietrt and small en·
ouWi to be pet'SOnalized.
For more information and a
ptc:th uional market

PINE Till SUTIIIG - i9.5 aaes I.JXI !1IOd 1ronte &lt;Illf1! - 8lJ ll Olboc:o:n bo:so. 10&gt;50 I962 . . hlme. llPii - bo - """" ~ ... bo crtiCJS 17
_.i;nJ o1 .!W"' 7 oc.: ooor11 I~ 11 """'- It( "' 11oo
,.., .... nll3l IJIIt 1 ..... fnlm lbo Cnnoe. l.otfll iii
S24.1ID

1313

1
1

I
I
I

SIIM611 211 M:IIS lltDJOIIIIIl - Core o»r _,.,...~
•l1a Ill&gt;~ br
nl &lt;Wire .....
w/.... lim. ........ ,.,..lri!J)Iace. • mal!rl1 CI)I!1III;!R- ond • .
............. ]'J ~ 3 - • ""'""'"*- slidntlim .. •;
~
...... ,_., m """' """"' l ) - . o - 1 ar - ·~
~ pd!n nl ,..,. 11'11&lt; .... $1-. by ;;oprJIIO!Itlt

"'open-

tiOIIlU' M£A .:... 3 Bit Latif ll10ldom .... , - fnly....;
i&lt;or!&amp;llDil dlict 17 den. NaIll ..., Sllni" llJiiling c.y ~ ~

...,. PIO!d ...

~

Llllll COIITiliCT - 10\o !Dol f'aymonl !0\o illo'estlliiE - :5511..
-lio1d. !lac ...nx I.DIS d - ~ .....w. ~
..., ,.,.. !killp rood. Pnctd S20 000.
•

iiOI5 d

·oaimi illsl»&gt;ct II?;
ibM_,
.m aov"""""' ~..-rom. 110&lt; • am.;~- 1m&amp;
!11th ioOil&gt;&lt;t and • bot.i!llltiblt- ri 1!10 (ho I'Oiey. ~

sa:lUOID PIII'IATE IIOGIIIIMIHDOO 11)1)1!1

""*"""' """ """

-_ _!11th
Wlboltt... ~lot tulk&gt;
...,lull
IMidltr&gt;IIIOSUrboll\ 2
f1rtJ b!lirumS. cmmo: li!d iUI bn ..,_ IMI !11th !iljlo t.ollii~WII,..
and .......,~ Tits :as
..aoty bMI1taopelell........,.. Saeenek&gt; boci ruth Mil.....,.
t.rtmoe ... GI1XI1 ..., sllnil! II&amp; Lo~ Ill II&gt;""'""'lilt ~ rlll\o&lt; I!IAIIY (M "' • til ltlioy
•

... -

surv·

. ery, cal the professionals
at The Wiseman Real Estate Agency, 446-S&amp;«.

'*'""" ......

15 M:IIS- 01 LISS n ~ r,.~
""" .., jl1lllti!Y. Orir $7.500

-lilftdllftd&gt;
•

!!II FAIIIIIIT - U ;...: - 1~152 1 1 - ~&lt;A •,
1!11101 Ill !II "" Oily SUllO.
•
llftSI . .I HOPtilt -~1 lhnl A.._ 2w,-mcanbtll!l!ll
.. 2 ..mil. [Jil! """""' 3 "' 4 lleci!OOnl.. ilr.NII)q
imoliOIIIIl Nict bod&lt; ~ N5IJ i 1'•111 lont II pd ,__ It
aJOll8l c:or]JQil 11 ..., 4(A by -4116. IJI!t- $4Sl1lq
181111.

...s:

• IIUT\MD - 7 rill home. lliiS
hell, cily .-s. and
• 2 1M1 liJis. $22.000.

or_,

AllfDISMQ- 3.95 acres.

.'
LDCAitD II COOifT1I'I - lll 3 llRI. "*""". boll dlily nJD. oodo(
~ lulr c:;rp:l!ll.. Oiidllhlll.- ......... •..,...
f1rtJ - IUillillq pod!n. 16 xoa Wll !If b 132.111111.
:

LDMI' - Rtr100111d 8 rm.

U111 WIIII1CI - " - on 6li &gt;&lt;~o 1111 1111t 111m 2 1J 1
bokwotl. IU, li1lll. ..... - . -..idly -~~~~~~- . -

• loJil!r lfld .2nd Wiler lap.
S111,!i01.

fllnilr home.

New !Chen,

• ca pelic n1 ta •

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

hell

-

mol
IN GAUIA COUNTY

1Jallw-61i-Jt.a; ;::,

, ()1984 Cenlury 2111eal Eotate Corporotlon ulrllalte lor tile NAF. iJ and~ -trodelilllboltA!IIIUry 21 Reofi'AtoteCorporatlun. Printed in ~ ,S.A . Equal Hou•l nK!Jwortunllyta
' I!ACII omcz 18 INDII'I!NDBNTLT UWNID AND OPI!IATID.
• J

l' l r

I

• ' II

I

.

I

''"I"

.

I
CAU EVDUIG
OR ~-=:.=
I
WISEM-~A
t J. • • • -.c.-..1
HOUSE
.. WORD 446-3643 w.u.;
•
I .. , ,.
--I
to· .....
llllil~~l~·:~·=II:I~-~'5~5~5~d.
£,.....
I'll

t

cily--

-~ ~ 2siMI.ido$1~

n1 m,.,·IICU!!Il ,.,.... a

IXUII'I IDCaTal - W*1l ~to

,

____ 2.....,_2bollls..lllkiWe\ilq-.t!S
-llllllly-MIIol • • -..-.-...JDt~~.-·-lot.pd!n.lnilhosmFI"- .-.~..,.,. •
... Erlrll' ebol
•

•

101(11.- 2!11111*_1111!1...,- 145,0016' . . . .-.l:lif'
1111D111 doni

_, _ _ .............. -) ...

LR.41rioot _ _ _ _ U.Iol

lllilf

�Ohio-Point P'nnnt. W.

·,
111 HouMhold Gooda

Ill
County Appllenco. Inc.
Good u.... opplencee end
TV-· 0 - 14M 1o 8PM.
Mon thrv let. 4411-1188,
127 3rd. A... GolllpoNe
OH.
'

YoM., Furniture, ,now I
u..... U... _...,of qualIty """""'-· 1211 Elllorn
Aw .. a.tllpollo.
Sot of
bunk
-·
171
a Might
color TV
con~-

.40.

ropolra
call 114-248-84.. oltor 4.

. - . ml-

114 MiiC. Marchandila

Auto wllhor 181- five other
• Wllhort 10 • - from.
Goo ttow 118·. 2 ot11fn to
cll0011 from, oloctrlc rongo
1... 2 othoro to choo11
from . Rofrlg. 1811, lido by
, lido. rofrie. 1178. wood•burnlng IIOW .SII. Moytog
: wringer

Wllhlr

• Sklg.. Applionceo.

• River Rd. 441-7388.

Firewood Split- 95%
hordWoodo. S11aonod or
Knouff

er-n. You pick up Or we

dlllwr. HEAP ..nclor. 114·

2111-1246 .

•7•.
u-

Umottono, seiod. Grovel. ·
a. Son.
Coli 448-7786.
Pick up at Rlchordo

•

Firewood cut up olabt. •16
PU lood. Llrgor loado doll·
- Coli for prlcea. 81424&amp;·11804.

LAYNE'&amp; FURNITURE

Sofa. ch1lr.

rock~tr.

A penny saved
is a pound wasted

ono ~

mon, 3 tobloo, (oxtro hllvy),
18811. Sofoo ond cholra
priced from 12811. to 18811.
l'obloo, 1110 end up to •1211.
Hldo-o-bodo.l380. ond up
to 11110 .. aofo bella 11415,
.R oell-., 122&amp;. to 13711.,
Llmpo from 128. to 1121.
pc. dlnottH from 1108 .. to
4315. 7 pc. 1181 end up.
WoOd tlblo with oix cholro
1285 to t7411. Dolk 1110
up to 12211. HutciiH, 11150.
·Bunk bod complete with
:mittrollle. 1275. ond up to
13811. ·Boby bodt, 1110.

Stokermatic ltovea and
ltoker fumilnc11. Jack hag·
orty, ftodclill, Oh. 614-869-

3482.

7x17 white awning foi' Ala,

like new. Coli 814-387·
7418.
Firewood lor sole. 90%
hordwood. Cal448-1287.
Riding town mower 10 HP,
t100. Groon otcvo I!&lt; refrlgorator, t200 each. Coli
·448_2084_

Mattreuea or box 1pring1,

....

6 Misc.

erchandiae 6

fREEZER BEEF ·
· f d
Gram
e,

gg•·lb.

LOREN NOLAN
388-9676

centa nch. Thouunda of

Uud Furniture •• electric

llreploco. 6 pc, dinette, heoci
boordt, ond 2 bedroom

46't, 211 conta ooch. Coli
Stove ot 814-992-7180.

Rd. Dpen 9om to lipm, Mon.
thru Sot.
114-4411-0322

Whlto ook firewood for 11io.
126.00 pick-up lood deli-

GOOD USED A.PPLIANCES

tore. nnge1. Sbgg1 Ap-

vered. Dennia or Dele Tea-

lord. Coll814-843-li394.

For Sale: like new, couch, 2
matching chliu, 3 91au top ,

plloncee. Upper River Rd.

end tablei t800.00. Weohor

betide. Stone Crelt Motel.

and dryer good running
condition, UOO.OO.
I

814-448-739S.

SWAiN

EAST
• st 1

•

A

t

t

Q J eU

•lOtH

lrllrpotcll Konnllo. Promolonol A~·bnood eroomlng.
lndoor-outdcllltlol.
Engllth Cocker
•
n1o1 '"'"'"'· CaNII14·3 88780. · ·

bool'llli:·

•QJ31

so.VTB
. • A K 75s
• 5
t Kt 5
• A 86 4
Vuluerable: Eut-West
Dealer: South

Weot
Pill

Nor111 Eut
4.
Pill

Set of weather guard tool
boxet. includes cro.. box

AUCTION l!o FURNITURE
82 Olive St .. Qollipolit. New

and 2 oldo boxoe for eight

• u ..d .,.ood-coal ltovet. 6
pc woOd LR ouito 1399.

614-,92-8832.

foot bed. Phone evenings

. bunk bldt 1198, entron 1-:::---:--:-::---.,---. roollnoro .. 9. uaed bedroom
Dlllverodl goOd lump
coal 1 to 1 ton. caU

•· auitea, range•. wringer

: :;;~;;•.;: ohoos. Coll814·

24~76-7397

or

HOME LITE
CHAIN SAW
FHtotg Spt~ltll

MGM FARM
CITY,
INC.
PO..IOY, OHIO
614-991-1111

to

Farm

JMden't Form Equipment
Y11r End Sole on Mryjhlng
In 8todd Lang troctora,
y......., round btlor, rokll.
IMdort, _._round bllo
a bunk foodlr, bile movora,
~o. rolo·tllloro, tollry
~- ......._ b'·•·
PD".
driwr,
· -·wood-apllttora,
--··· --·--wolhora, pipe gotoa.
IHdere. grlncter·mixere,

.~Ill

p

111

declarer from makinl the A·K of
clubl, five spade ·trleka In IIIII own
band, aDd at leut three minor suit
ruffs In dummy. In fact, declarer
might even come to 11 trlcka.
·

1515 Building_Supplies

pl-.

Now

open

for

81

Farm Equipment

llfYiool

on all n.w and UHd

~rrn equipment end choln
11-ln ltook. Sldlro Equipmont, Hondoraon. W. Ve.,
304-1711-7421.

1One

Generitor.

po- toko
drive. Edword Bumgornor, lollrt,
304-882·281.2. coli after
5:00.

a~pplln,

----.....

Livestock

GIANT REDUCTION- Owners have moved .from area
and need action NOW on this charming 2 story home
located within city. 3 Bedrooms, spacious living
room, formal dining. knotty pine cabinets in
kitchen, family room. Nice carpet. Quiet street. Reduced to $29,900.
·
#

buaineaa,

Ean.rn Ave .• a ••., N•. c.n

114-441-2212.

77 ...,_ Grond Prix 301'
lir.PS/PI, good-llo&lt;l.
Dno o""-. 01210. Col
oftor &amp;PM. 4411-0137.
1 974 MUOIIrog PS. Alii-Fill
.. _ _ low mi.. now bot·

.,.1

E . M~iriW ~....

POMEROY,O.

ot. 'ol

PRICE REDUCED! s,_jR
- 3 bedroom rancll, large
deck, nice lot. Gas FA heat
Owner needs to sell! $32,900.,
EASTERN DISTRICT - ""•'~''" o
bedroom ranch
baseml!l1~ rec. room and
Level I~ acres. let us
you th~ one! $45,000.

CENTURY 21 Southern Hills R.E., Inc.

-

• .........

304-171..a2N.

:e

•••tic••·

1178 Chr I tin Cor-.

·•
·

or -

· o -. 304-571-

21315 - 1:00PM.

72

T _.__ for .. _..._

"ijg;iiCh;ru;;.....
~;;a;;;;;;-;;;;;;:

•

......

~ PICIURE.BOOK SmiNG....describes this

en stone and freame ranch, silrrounded by
l pines. Other outQJ&lt;ti·~ 1alures are 4
i:: aRs. 18x30 v Q--\:~.lnew carp6,
~ fireplace, kitth&amp;~-.. eye level liVen and
range, central air. (Ner five acres with a
!i pond. large assumable 9% loan.

~'VE

.i!
~

; .
;-

~

JUST WHAT
BEEN I.OOI(ING FOR
- In-town convenience, extra nice lot
rreasures 87x174. 3 « 4 fiRs, large
kitl:hen,LR. OR, Bath,large front porch and
small screened back porch, gas heat,
unattached one car l!llrage. Cali for an

~appointment

~

l OM HILl AREA - ~--- - ' •ROid 48 near
1: St. Rt. 279. 5! s-o-l-0 « less.vacant

WEU K£1'1' BRICK - OWNER FINANC.
IIIG - this lovely home offers 3 Ills, heat

~

!!i
...,

:c

c

"'

~ land. Nice buk-·~ - - $24,750.

!j OWNER IICMNG TO FI.OR10A AND liAS

:z: DRAS11CAU.YREDUaD THE PRICE OF
c: ntiS HOllE - \WI finance With 25%
en down and 10'16 inllnst on t11e bliarice.
! Vidorian !lYle 3 .bedroom also oftets I~
1: bitlis, ki!chen with rarte, refriJ, OW. and
~ displ., laundry room. living room, flmilv
room, carport, unaltac:hed prqe, 16132
!!l fanced ~ llum. siding. Attached beauCy
i! slllp would help make t11e payments.

I

~
I

5""~

Cal for detai~.

GOOD UVING FOR sALE - 78~ acres
mil. lovely bricl! and frame ranch displays
2 baths, 2 BRs, 161124 kitchen withwashef,
dryer, double liVen ""i. nfri&amp;. DW,disp(.
~Mae iving
Jireplace.
Mastlr bedroor .. ~ tSxla Cellar house,
shad .,d 30x50 t.m. 44 8CfliS r1 pasture

s-0::\.""'.:ial

with spring ll1d pond. l..ocatfXI in Cheshire

TWjl
.

WANT SOIE'IliiNI AFFOIOMI.I? Mille 111 IIPPCiillment ".,.w lhil 5 room
home. Femtreo.,~ i\.\:V. IIIEhtln, IMng
room, 11111111in~.... front and r8ll'
Pllld*. wilh 1 iat mil

Pi

REDUCED TO $44,900 - HillTOP
SUBDIVISION - 3 BR home fealures
kilchen, living room, dining room, famiy
room, ~replace, illS hea~ central air aoo
carpetin~ 9'h% assuma~

pump, cent air, well and county water,
large mge bid~ Over ooe acre of land.

Fond regards to
. you and your .
family in ·this time
,togetherness and
good cheer! Thanks
_
for your faith in us .
and for helping us make 1981(one of our· best yearS ever.
)

·

.

BIWID NEW

ment ror ttoe
Rd.

MUST SELL TO SElTL£ ESTATE! FINANCING AVAilABLE - EXCELlENT
TERMS - Cape Cod home offers 3 BRs, 2
baths, Mchen wrth eye-level oven, dinette,
living room has beamed ceilings, utility
room, double garage, storm windows,
woodburning stove, city school district
COUNTRY CHARIER - Th~ older two
Additional land can be purchased. Call fol
sttJY home offe"" o-', . t)'lath, kitchen,
·
16x24' LR, Ia.$- '-" ,., carpeting. 2 an appointment.
porches. Well !«."' nome on 3 level acres
5:;
land. Owner financing available.
LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOME IN ~ .
FARMER'S F.ARM - One of the area's COUNTRY! - This one story frame home ~ .
better farms. 101 acres m/1, lotS of can be yours for ,,..n,22,900. Two ~
bedrooms, livir.t'_().\:-V'len w/range,
Symmes Creek bottomland, pond, new
very
nice larg,.-:r.,;,oaburning firl!l)lace,
fences, large barp. several ether buildings,
concrete
block l!llrage. Fronts on Raccoon
large tobacco bise, mod. 3 BR home, 2
Creek on 2.97 acres m/1.
. baths, located on Cadmus Crossroad~ Call
for more information. ·
THIS COUlD BE YOUR PERFECT HOMEl
PRICE .REDUCED TO $35,900 - Owner - laYo FINANCING - FIXED RATE - !
20 Ylr,i.l - This home offers 4 BRs, 2 C:
says ~I this month. ~ 0 "f\lnch with brick
baths, krtchen w/range and eye-leveloven, ~
front features .. n.\:-Vily room with
15x48 LR. fireplace, woodburning stove, ~
chimney for W~.e. LR, large Mchen,
6x40
front porch, I car garage, storm ::t
laundry rm. and laree back porch.
wiooows, mce flat garden area, city school :z
IIEDUCED TO $35,000 - NEAR HOlZER district
c
- This raoch stv'e home offers 3 BRs,
LOOK NO FURTHER! - This outstanding.
ki!chen, 22x24 Fll, LR, bath, central air,
· woodburning stnw, electric heat 16x28 nearly new home is sure !o olease. It offers i::
2~ baths, 4 BR&lt; ,,.. t)g rm., dinette. ~
unattached prase. KC school district.
kitchen .w/ran&amp;" ~Q-\: .•en, displ. and
·
OW,
carpetin~~treplace,
central
air,
~
HAPPINESS IS....ownina th~ charming 3
.
BR home in town. NY&gt;
-es bath, eat-in unattached double garage.
ki!chen, Mnl•" n.\." orch, carport,
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 62!80 all c:
carpeting and ~.WOCKl floor.;. Just
steel oonslrudion with fireproof insulation. !"
minulas to everything.
has overhead crane, office and bath. !
Formerly used by boat sales and repair. 1:
MAKE US AN OffER - OWNERS HAVE
MOVED TO FI.ORIOA. .. and would like to Located across lrom Silver Bridge Plaza ~
with access lo , Ohio River. Potential s:
have Cl1eir home sold this month. Uke new
unlimited.
~
spl~ level is located on Debby Drive and
olfe11 approx. 3000 sq; It of iving area
Pus 2 car (!IIFII!I! and one of the area's PRICE REDUCED TO $29,900 - ~
ASSUIII£ 9Wlb LOAN .... Ronch style home
nicest pools.
offers 3 fiRs, """"-\:1)1 with ranJll!. 1 ·
20 ACiiES, Mil GIEflllf.'ElD TWP. - hood. and dis,$-V" .. ,,.,g room, utiltly 1:;::
· Shalter Scl1ool
acres level room. one car garage, city school district ~
and 12 acres i ...
.

i!!i

AmNTION HUNTERS! - 4 rm block
buil(ing on ao,.•( otely acre in
Greenfield Tw,,. 1\.\." ... n Road. Rural
water availabk~perty adjoins Wayne
National Forest $5,900.

FHA-VA SPECIAL - 3 bedrooms,
maintenance ~:(}\,-0 (Veterans, oo
down paymt .,.- . ... uuyer5, apjl'OlC .
$1,250 down). UJcated in Rodney Village II.

1:

I

tilTs OF POTENTIAL - . GREEN
TOWNSHIP - lBO acre farm located in
Northup area. Two story frame older home
with seven rooms and bath, county water,
16x60 conmte ~lo. com crib, equipment
shed, milk house and barn. On pmd road.
Reduced to $87,500.

ATTENTION FIRST TIME HOME
OWNEI$1!1 - Altra«' n_1 bedroom ranch
00 the edee ~ n.\:u groom. ki!chen,
bath, calhed!~...gs, carport, gas heat,
city water. Nice shady lawn.
.
.
GIIEENFIElD TWP. - 74 ACRES- more
« less, tllbacco base.-16x20 shed, 34x40
bam. Price has been reduced and owner
financing is available.
·

r:c:

135 acres woods. Comfortal*! lwo sCory
home offers 4 BRs, bath, kitl:hen, iving
.room, famiy room, two fireplaces, barn, 2
large screened porches. lovely quiet
setting

PRICE REDUCED TO $59,500! - 3 BR
ranch on II acres more or less. Pond, full
basemenL family room wrth woodburner,
living room, eq~ipped krtchen, dining
room, I! baths, attached 2 car ~\~rage.

SLUOO- WIIIM yau in !tis 3BR home
in the aMinlry ~r\) .n~ rlf1ll. ,.q,
Wl!he! lnd .~..:--- !\ room. bllll.
Wlllldbumer an.:; ""''fl!ini

r

i!

t·O

!r-Q-l-V 8

COIMIIIEIITLY LOCATED- Approx . one
m1e bniiMn lhil older home has had
. sonw rln10delfnl 2 BRs. kitchen, LR,

14\!xl!i\1 clnin(l room. bath, pert
._..11, 0111 Cll' ...._ l,Mt lawn.

~~~:~~R~c~~

IAN£

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•

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COIIIERCIAL BLDG. ...: 700 l*lcl! of 2nd Ave. Purchase or •
lease. ~ 22,620 sq. It; buoldon~ $7,560 sq. It Excellent
~doon.
.
•

e

--84

perilnced c:arpenht' • .a.ctrician. rn.aon. painter, roof·
ing (including hot ur

1979 CJ·!I GGiolen Eaeto.
Pl. Pl. - - Col 448-

0141-IIPM.

·

For Solo: 11J88 Bonner
camper, altepl I.

••If-

Electrical

lo Refrigeration

SEWIPIIG Mach ine repairs.
Mt'Vice : Authorized Singer

Rotory 0&lt; Clblo tool d&lt;illing.

Solei I Service S ~••pen
Scissors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 614 -992-2284.

coo. 304-895-3802 .

82

85

Plumbing
llr Heating

t;:=====~::::::;

General Hauling

James Bovs Water SeNice.

-11.1100. · Coli
tood 114-2118·
.-oon.

RUSS AND MAX
EWOTJCO.

opplicotionl 304·675-2088
Of 1715-7318.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump ~ and HNi ·

Business
Servin.rltQ

Alto pools filled . Calf 614·
251· 1141 Of 614 -446 1175 or 614-446 ·7911 .

Ken"s W•ter Service. Wells,
cisterns. poola filled . 'Phone

614-367-0623 or614· 367n•1 night or day,

t - Huti. l

Air~

tiollliJ. N.l Types 1-llliool.
EIICVieal W'orifll.

·C..II-«6-8515
or 446~.S . c

PlASTIC
GAS PIPE
1" 160 PSI
.18' ft. - pick up
20' ft. - delivered '
Also pipe · connections _and water pipe.

S&amp;H PLASTICS

Central (Vienna ). W~ Ya.
PH. 304-295-&amp;615

roollntl. - - gunora.
ttonn windoww. -"""~ ·
Col 114-317·0409"" 614387-7244.
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional IUwtitne fU.·
,...,..... Local ...... K:le.

tu....- . F-IItirnltn.
Cal -1-114-2370488. 9 o.m. to 15 p.m.
Roeera - Baeement

Wotocproofing.

Roofine,

2 lOTS AlONG BEAR RUN RD. with Raccoon Creek frontage. •
$7.500 each.

e

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2 BEOIIII. COTTAGE. located along Whrte.Ave. Buy now for •
$8,50000.

•
•

VICTORIAN BRICK HOME - lower River Road near Clay ••
School. Outbuilding~ and 7 acres. Buy for $37,500.

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3 BEDROOM HOME along Chestnut~ lot with seNice aHey in •
rear. 2 car garage and nice garden area. Price $38,500.
•

&lt;

End , ,

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y,, s,.,

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••

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VINTON: Brick 1-floor building. formerly used lor ban~
Reduced (o $42,000.00.

•
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VINTON: Commercial building. w~h 2 apts. upstairs.
Formerly used as hardware store. Reduced to:
$28,000.00!

•

APPROX. TWO AND ATHIRD ACRES within city limits.
Zoned commerciat Along Rt. 7. Price reduced !o
$20,000.00.

•
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•

••
. ••

3 BEDROOM HOME - Ranch style.

I~

adapted for woodburner. fenced yard and in-ground
swimming pool. Price reduced !o $38.!XXl.OO.

•
•

DONT OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN in Eurella. 2
bedroom home with 2 baths and lots of room for
expansion. Located Just off Rt 7 near dam. Reduced to
$20,!XXl.OO.
.

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·carport,

••

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ACONVEiliEIIT LOCAnON along Gartie!d Ave. Home can be •
used for 3 or 4 bedrooms and w~hin walking distance from •
most all services. Only $30.000.

e
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NOV LISTING- Comfortable 3-4 bedrm: oottage. 500 l*lcl!. •
•
Ave. Off-street parking.
maintained lot $26.900. · e
: e• roorm
INVESTIIOO PROPERTY - 5 rooms and bath down and 4 •
aoo bath upstairs.
along 2nd Ave. Buy oow
e•
• •
$17,!XXl. Price reduced!!
•

~!h

ea~ly

~ted

•

for

WE HAVE A HOlE AND PERFECT LOCATION for a famil)'. •
IJlCated almost across from Washingtnn School. 3 bedrm. •
home, 2 baths, 2 ki!chem, nice lol which ~ wide and deep •
enougll fol garden and swimming flllll. Needs scme wort

.

•• 2 BEDUIIIIOBILE HOME located aloni Hazel Ridee 25 ••
acres, more or less, with nice ;mien area and wooded ate1.
• Priced $27,500.
•

•

._try

~.

work

•d eonc:r.ta WII!Wk. Free

-

· CaH 441-3171 .

SUNDAY PUZZLER
WHY SETnE FOI nu.G n. WIIOLE
COUNTY, WilEN Y'l CAN1tll 111
WIIOII
lA ,_..., 111110•n•l••

"'*'?

•Willis T.

lt~dill&amp;flalll,

l11ltor, Pit. H- 446-9SS9
•Ed Ems. loaltor. Pt1. ..._ 446-0125

2~

•
•

••
•

gu~. oioling.

plumbing, . .

BEAUTIFUL BRICK 3 BEDROOM HOME with acres. 7 yn. •
oil. Just off Bidwell-Rodney Rd. Elec. heat pump, fi~ •
cent vacuum system. $70,000.
.
~
•

•
•

•!j

304-773-11151 .

,.,.,.u.

1 ttl S.C. Awe .• G·'·J C'*it

814-445-7133 or814-44411833.

•

J;i

kitchen, l-shaped IMng room
:z:
•room with hrepiace, HI
.
'basem«ll, wlh woodbuming
ilflll!. Carpeti~ Call for an aPIJI~ntn&amp;eirt.•

. . - olidintl - door
for 1877 chevy """· Coil

MOBil£ HOME lOT - located approx 2 miles below E,.elta. •
$4.00000.
•

•

•

acres

· oldo
.eood 81.
eor.dido.o for
1913
T- ....

Good-1 e.covotine. bloo-tic .......
tooters.londocaping
driwweyi..
Coli onytime 514-446 41137. Jomos L. Dovilon. Jr.

71140.

PURCHASE FADM I TO 5 ACRES with lhis 3 bedrm. farm •
home located along Rt. 218, Harrison Twp. f'rit!d from •
sso.ooo to s7s.!XXl.

YIIITOII: EXTRA CUAN - Clean, cool and convenient 2 •
bedrm. home located along Main Street Refri&amp; and many •
ether ~ems of furn~ure will go with house. Ideal klr newlyweds
and priced at on~ $22.500
•

•
•

PRICE REDUCED'TO $59,9001- Owner·
has bought another home 1nd must ~ I
this lovely 3 BR ranch on Debby Drive.
Apjl'OlC. 1700 sq. fl., dilling rm, LR, FR.
ki!chen, new custom drapes, carpetin~
woodburning stove, d«:k. central air.
natural wood siding

304-5782398 llfi114·4411·24M.
houoo . -. Col

RINGLES'S SEAVICI:. ••·

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Cam.,.,.
55.000
Call-114-387lock
out mi.
-- ---

ACIIOU
1 .... .,,

8 Mokoax&gt;l
11~

16&amp;iidoon
ollligltiOn

21Mol-22 Dltolls

HOME
Top Quality 9 room house
w~h 7 rooms carpeted. 4
bedrooms. bath, and full ba·
sement plus 3 car garage.
Good barn approx . 30x40'
plus ch icken house appro• .
12'x30'. Approx. 10 acres
lillable and 20 acres pasture
w~h large pond. Beautiful
location w~h hall mile fron tage on blacktop state high ·
way.

24~

841n1tltes

28 ttnder
30GnlsofrMpleo

SSGcddl! of
diooord
88 Bacteriologist's
win!
88 Peli1ions

35Logaln..teJs

, N571

IV. ACRES WITH COUNTRY smtNG

Nice and solid 2 bedroom home located on state highway.
Rural water system plus drilled and dug well. Extra water tap
!or a mobole home hookup. Nice restful area after a day's
work.
LOOK WHAT SO llnLE Will IUY
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, lovely wooded country setting. situated
on state route. lots. lots more. Possible land contract
1Hi21
111 ACRES ClEARED IOUING LAND
Approx. 40 A. tillable, 60 A. pasture. tile block barn. appro•.
40'x 60' equpment shed and lots of other buildinas. 4 cherry
trees. 3 apple, grape arbof. Stream flows throu(lh property.
All mineral rights go. 6 room home, 3 BR. basemen~ st«m
doors and windows, built-in kitchen cabinets. cookstove and
elec. refrig., fuel oil forced air furnace. Plenty of water, 2 prages. A real good farm only I' miles lo grocery and school.
Call now. .
LOYE THE COUIITRYl
Nice modern 3 bedroom home. 21.04 ~eres more 01 less.
Barn, tool shed and cellar. located on state highway. Priced
to sell. Call now.
. BUILDING LOTS
21ots in Bidwella1ea . Suitable t01 mobile heme or build your
own home. Rural water. Buy both for $2,800.
VACATION CAlf IY BlUE I.AilE
Owner financing. sundeck, rurll woter, septic system, elec:tric. Buy it w~h campin&amp; trailer or w~hout, concrete pod.
Gr9t fishing! Buy and move riaht ih.
lOW DOWII PAYIEIIT - OWIIll FIIIAIICINI
Are you looking far a 2 bedroom home owerloolina tile Ohio
River with little mainte~ance. lle&amp;inner home« reliretllllll
home. We have ~-

I ACRES
Within 10 minu&lt;es drive to duwntawn Gallipolis. City sc:hotl
system. Has hcloMp fvr lllllllile "-· Gallil rurol lflltr,
electric and septiC lin~ Nilfll IWit 1111 pale. 2110 Iaiii fna.
1111 1111 Gfaham School Rllld, TTmblr. Buildll&amp; sills. Clll
11011.

79~

82 Shoved

32 Olp~borog
33S...god
34 Once IIUI.I1d lrw:l&lt;

large
room r!modeled
home. 6 bedrooms. 2 baths
with modem kitch!n. Home
covered w~h carefree alu·
min um siding. Thermopane
windows, 2 sundecks. fuel
oil FA (urnace with a wood·
burner insert 4 car prage
and numerous storage
bldgs. 2.093 acres. Rolling
level land. A real Country
Gen~eman Home. Phone
now.

70 -~ precise
71 Music: as woittero
72Worm
74 Poker stlllkeo
76 D1lposil
n Singir og bird
78 Bridge

croat

25 l.nt of so..cwroncy
21Crioe

30 ACIES .

67 A state: abbr.
69F'Mr

ZS~qgedmouruin

OfFKE 446-761P9

•• 3 BEDROOII HOME with 17.9 acres. 9tualed wrthin Sec. 13, •
Huntingtnn Twp. Price $45.00Q.OO.
•

A STYlE OF ITS OWN ... describes this
lovely white brick home w~h 3100 sq. it, 3
or 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 20x40 FR, dining
room, kitchen ,;111 OW, disp., microwave
and ~ash compaclllr, intercom, cen~al air,
2 car garage, utility bldg., deck and a
20x40 pool. Beautiful~ landscaped.

in Zenith and

1331 .

• AcCIIIDrieS

4x4, PS, P I , - · - - ·

:· . LOCATED WITHIN THE VIllAGE Of RoDNEY - 2 bedrm. ••
collage with 86'x20Z klt Nat gas FA furnace. King coal and
•• woodburner. ~tan~ Gallipol~ cily school district f'rit!d to •
.:.
sell' $20.000.
.
•

:

YOU'Ll BE DELIGHTED .... with thii 3 8R
hi-level located jiiSI minutes from IDwn.
~ Also features 21! baths, LR. ki!chen.
- · carpelilg. hNt pump, city school district
::5 Call for more information.

w;q

Motorole. Qualar. •nd

removal. Call 304-875 -

u··.

1971ChlnQietl

lr

Fetty Troo Trimming, atump

Auto Parts

luelodr. _, .., •. 13.000

:e ·

•

l

78

'14 VW canvw ·• '' . . . . .

ee

:e

•

i::

-t.
----ICCw-u...

litt , _ 14 fL
1171 rwu '
..........
111 HP -.:ury
Brough••· ••c contl • jaM
.___ 114-4-41-101 II or
Colt 4411-2322.
....... 112

NEW liSTING - 3 Bedrm. oome outside city situated along
picturesque Wib ·Dr., klrmal dining room. 2l'd5' tamily
room, 2 baths, WB FP, fenced~n backyard. Modern ki!chen
with many amenities. Priced to sell. $58,500.
•
NEW liSTlltG - 3 bedrm. cottage located along Centra! Avenue..
:• Nat gas heat, city water and sewer. Price $24,!XXl.
UPPER RMR 10. - 3-4 bedroom home. wblp, 2 ballts.kar •
·• garage, rnoOie home hookup on lg. lot Owner interested in
trading for small bu~nessor ,;11 ~~outright Price $41.50000.

• . NICE 2 or 3 BEDRII. COlONIAl DUTCH HOM£ - Located
across from ne'll courthouse. Excellent location for attorney's
•
office!
.
•
HOUSE FOR RENT - Rodney Village II. $275 month.
•
Re!e1ences required.
·

-

loltsand
Motora for 8e1e

a JIM'S PlUMIIING. HEIIT·
Polo lldgo. lNG. Rt. 1, Bo• 3155. 011~­
1114-332-1741 Collect . polio. Colll14-387-0578.
opl.: 30X40X9 with
111' trackd0or1Nnd0or:
111238oroctod.
83
Exc.veting
liON 'S ToloYioion Sarvioo.
Iron Hot11tl·11111ra. Fum

Coitl•~tclol

TRISTATE
UPfiOlSTERY &amp;HOP

H I S Homo lmpro..mtt1tl
aluminum aicltng.

•

~

75

82 .

Home

vinyl •

'.
.•

6610

·

18e0 . . e II KDX-400.
..
. . , I:Dit ld _
• ..00.00.
Collll4-_
_

The

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
197!1 Ford f . 150 .PU truck 1977. 8oigo - • d PU . . . . Dr 114-2111-1878.
AND HEATING
With tOpper. ••c. cond .• truck, ruM oxc. Col 4411·
Cor. Fourth and Pine
11.995. Coli 614·268- 1768.
GallipOlis . Ohio
1168.
1--------Phone 614-446 -3888 o•
1877 ~ '!610ntruclo.
1114-448-44 n
1973 VW Su-11-. runo 5 cyl. AC. I'S, PI, good Bl
good . Col 814-388-8738.
cond. 304-11711-21113 5:00.
1 979 Codilloe Coupe 0..
ville. dorlo brown oxtlrior 1973 Ford pidlup, eood
and interior. ••~ condi- lhopo. 304-8711-8112 Of Mwc:um Roofing a Spouttion. will ucrific:e. Call 176-24811.
inti- N- inllllintl rubber
992-3283.
rooft. 30 VII" oxporilnce.
74 Ford tnrc11 G.C. 304- ~ing in built up roof.
875-3118.
Coli 114-388-91167.

0

ST. I!T. 338 - Approx. 37
acres with 2 bedroom home,
oulbuildings, 2 car garage. Gas
and oil rights. $28,900.
REALTO'RS
,
Henry £. Cleland, Jr. •
GRI 992-6191
•
Jean Trussell 949·2660 •
Dottie Turner 992·5692' ·
Jo Hill 985-4466
•

-... · -

304-171-1881.

1974 Chlvrolot lmpolo, 2
dr .. 350 V-8, oir, .900. Coli
4411-7838 15:00.
1974 Dodge Dart, 50.000
octual miJ,s. good - i cor, 11.000. eon 441·
9700.

702

4", 8",

for '10

·lmith l.,;,;lo-Porttioe, 1911

TUPPERS PlAINS · - 3
bedroom ranch wrth full
basement 2 baths, electriC
heaL central air. IOO'x361' lot.
$21,500.

molo 8ooion Tmtor,8
montho old, oil ohoto ond
hOUII broke. 304·11717871.

polcl

tory. 4 c.•
814-2411-8418
liter
.

CHESTER - Approx. I acre lot .
with 14x70 motile home, 3
bedrooms, central air, I~
baths, storage building:
$19,500.

I

. . . llcf&amp;

.,

2010 John Doo•• gao troctor. Powor ot11rlng with
"""ow front . Good condltlon. u 11oo.oo. Coli 814.
882-3318.

0

'10 ...... c.. u..toou.
VI. - . PL "· AC. All.

_ _ _ _ __

992 -2259

-~ . .

W. V•.
11

-

TOP CASH

!-~__;,

-0

1 2'.' block. Delivery 11rvlco.
Phone dey 304-882-2222.
evening 882-3239.

•

11113.

10

tncton a oil ~ of
wooel·bumora. 8oo ua for 1 63
oornplete lne of porta I

y01r with bit Yllr-ond dlo- I'G;;;-l&amp;:Oiii)YW(ii;;;;;;;tO.:

COUntl

Stele Block, Rt.
33, New Hewn. Complete
meaonry

1810 Oldl ~ ....

WhMI H - ~~- I gordon

SPOCiol Price- AKC roglollrld Cookor &amp;ponlol pup- Equipment.
rr::3:~7~nl. color. Coli Qravlly tractor whh ·mowor
I ouU.v. Coli 448-81 311.
AKC R 1
c
Coli 111~·~~~:113~~uohua. liola-Solo-Salo
Sovo now on Farm Equip·
n'Mmt. New •nd UHd over
1,000 pea. Troller load of
borb wlro . Jlm'o Form
Equipment Center, Rt. 36
W.,Qolllpollo, Dh. Coll4488777 or 448.2484.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISII

ARMY SURPLUS, Som Building Motorlolo
Somorvlllo't, Eott o1 Ro- Blook, brick. IIWif
vonawood 7 mlloo (old wlndowo. llntolo, oto.
Route 21) N- ERA. open CloudeWintoro.RioGrondo,
Fri.Sot,Sun1:00-7:00.Coll O.Collll14-2411-11121.
In order 304-676-3334.

Mountol~

1

74- II auowch

71

·Flnlahod fur ""'· rod ond
grey !011 130, grodo 1 a 2
moil mlnll U2, ~mole ond, ·
amoll ...... 111. Muokrat·
Iorge and oxtro Iorge 14.21,
roccoon Ull dOwn by - IU,.,....t. Crolg Raw Fur a
Supply, 211 mHot lOUth, Pt.
:~:;er :R:•;do2~. ond
304-7112Mon·

corn pl1nter • v.r 1vlty
wagon . "Jividen's F1rm

#150
lEG. PIICE $319.95

We Price $21995

Ohio-Paine P' ..,

Uood equipment: MF 1111. 8 yr. old Polomlno gliding.
MF 180, MF 180 w·l1!tdor, 1300. Coil 814'·218·8411.
Drogonwynd Cottory Kon- 2-MF-80. Ford 3000, Ford
not. CFA Hlmoloyon, Portion •01 Workmottor, II round For tole. 11wn mo. old colt.
. ond Slomooo klttono. AKC btkora, 2-oquoro btlon, 3 1160.00. Coli 814-8.BiiChow pupploa. Coli 814- rllcel, mowara, 1·hlyblne, 3891 .
'
rotory cunora, plow• blodo.
441-3844 otter 7.

Openlllc lead: •10

1515 Building Supplies

ON SALE AlE
SUPJI 2-14"
240-16"
240-11"

oecember 30. 1984

--------le-

Put

IC.

111

Judy Tovlor Groomlne. Coli
114-311-7220.

• K J 10 a
A 10 73

s•

Pet• for Sale
Firewood. oil herd woods, 66
eplit, doNvored ond ttockod - - - - - - - - 136.00. 304-175·1773.
AKC Shollond· Shoop Doe
pupa (Mini CoHioJ 11blo ond
Stokermetlc Stovea end whitt. Hod oil · thott. 304·
Stoker Fum10111. Jock Hag- 4118·10111 or 481-11103.
erty. Rodcllff, Ohio. 814-.
881-3482.
Rod Bono ond Wolltor pupa
crooo. 8
old, ., 11.00.
304-8'715-8071.

Hundred• of Fecord1, 60

W111hera, dryera, refrlgera·

e

• K
WEST
• 1

Peta for

------~- ~~~~~~~;;;;~;1~iii;;:=ii;,~;;.~;][iiria~;;~~ji';;=i
We would like
thonk our
M
cuotomoro
for to
1 vary good
4
4 Ml

full or twin. 1118 .. 11rm, 118.
end t71. Quoon 1111, 11911. Mobile home now p~no end
4 dr. chooto, 149. II dr. dcora.lnolde, cutalde.storm
Chilli, 1111. Elod lromoo, doora, trailer ·windows.
120.ond 1211., 10 gun- Gun About 600 !priced to otlil
coblneto, 13110. Got or McArthur,Dhoo, Routa 1.
electric rongoo 1378. 8oby Coll814·1il6·4282.
mottr•-•· 1211 I 1311. bod
!romeo 120. 126, a 130, Porokotel10tc813. Cockking !rome 1110. Good oolec- ltlalo UO, lovo blrdo 880 o
tion of bedroom 1uitea, pair, finchea $6, upright
r9cken. metal cabinet•, :~~~- ' 186 · Cali 814 •98 5headboordt 031' ll up tc

auit... 3 mllea out Bulaville

•Qt7'U2

By Jomet Jaeolly
.
Here Ill anodler chapter In our
never-eadiJic saga . of brldae bauds
. where the play can be d-rlbecj only
as " penny-•1ae, poun d-f oolloh."
RecelvlngtbeopeDIDtlleadoftheclub
10, South won In dummy ond quickly
played a spade to tile ace 10 he could
di.ICard dummy's diamond oa the club
ace. Then he played a heart. Eut won
· th e ace and PIaYed . a aecond trump.
End of sad story.
Declarer could get to his band with
heart ruffs to trump two of his losing
mlnor suit cardl In dummy, but be
could come to only Dine trlcb. The 41 heart split had wrecked his ablp..
Declarer wu wilucty In the UDiortunate heart dllltrlbutlon, but be had
only his own peedy instlnctl to
f
f Ill
to ma~e
L
f
bl
ll!le or a ng
our
spades. Instead of l'lllhiog to his bond
to get rid of the diamond loser, thereby wutlng the lead of a trump, he
should simply lead a heart at trick
two.. The defender With the heart· ace
Will now no doubt play a diamond, but
th
Ill be
ere w
no way to prevent

December 30. 1984

HIHCIIUT KENNELS
loor\tlng.JI broode. H11tlld
Indoor-outdoor locllltloo.
AKC D..........n PUNieo:
ltud llivlae. Codl14~4417781.

NORTH
· 12-Zt·l4
.QJ 101

t

v•.

311Fomwrullr

37 Hl!1t mountain
38 TiWiiiQI40 To provide food

42 Food fish

89

En1ronce

90Sedatll
92 NotiYe of Crete
94 Foreordain
98 N:tor Reiner

99V100 Soak up
102 Growing out of
103 Hindu cymbals
104 Pnnter's ,_..e:

43 Look ln18nlly

105 MOclure
106 europe.. ermine
money
108St-o
108 Roman six
47Eiotel,...
o49 Emerges vlc:lorious 110 Compass point
111 Dregs
50~ tor Cll);ng
112 Person having a
51 Nut
loud vok:e

511 TCII
8082Ptopog
84 Bodgor

114 v-·s CUNed
plriing
116 P.-1 for portrait
111 Po op&amp;led ror prinl
119 Floalln air
120 Golf mounds
122 Upoel

e5 AIIWi•tlrG

12~

'-lllelsof

.........

c:urTWII: tor
-. . S)rnbcl

1~7

More unusual

149 W8f18r

150 Mercenary
1521s defea1ed
Is.! Hindu quean
156 Ukeness
156 W881 away
159 Expunge
160 Protect
161 Unit oflraqi
currercy
DOWN

pl.

" Urwr••led wamll'l
45 Anglo-Saxon

54 Snlcl&lt; ond 55 Workmen
5I Smooth the

128 Errc&gt;ioY
129T-.
131 Mob
132 Conducled
133 Aelitl1
135 MMI turl&lt;t111
138 Hurried
139 Obstructs
140 Haul
1~ 1 Girl's nickname
1~2 Coroner: abbr.
143 Near
144 Fiber plan!
145Gotup

Cerise

125W126 Pounding
insttUmerll

1 Frighten
2 Tull&lt;lc toibeSman
3 Emmel
4 Maiden loved
by Zeus

5 Recent
6 Trlcl&lt;s
7 Occurs
8 Possessive
pronoun
9 French article
10 Hailudnogeroic
drug: lnll .
11 Lena led

12WII god
t3 Weigh! of India
14 KinO ol type: abbr.
15 Stops
16 Prophel

17 Thai go ~
18 Negative prefix
19 Units ol l'anian

92 Expense
93 Midday
95 Platform
aJ~rercy
96 Pertaining to
20 Retains
the navy
27 Guido's high note
97 Choice part
29 God of love
99 Hairless
31 Vehide
101 StrOked
36 care lor
105 Hastened
37 Assistant
106 Arillered animal
39 European capital
107 Pedal digits
40 Scene of first
11 t CoOk slowly
miracle
112 Melody
41Rage
113 Soa!&lt;s. as flax
42 Vtndicates
115
Possessive
43 Sharp SO&lt;.tnd
proooun
44 Encounter
46 Artificial language 116 Barracuda .
48 Musical instrument 118 Coo..nlry of Asia
119 Transgresses
49 Stall
121 Dertvne
50 Oecorale
123 Postscript: abbr.
51 Later
125 Speci,...,
52 Rent
126 Church bel ICheo
53 Quaffs
65Gap
127 Avoided
56 Ache
129 Desire greatly
57 Pertaining I o birth 130 Tardier ·
56 Peruses
131 Schoolof..t~a~es·
61 Pilasler
132 Flexible
63 Leal&lt; lhrough
134 Dollar biU
64 RaiSed
136 Greel&lt; letter
68 A judge ot Israel
137 Measuring device
70 Gill
139 Erase: printing
11 Entt.Jsiasm
140 SpaniSh for
73 Besmirches
"three"
74 llr)'
144 p
75 Rain anO hail
145 King o1 JUdah
n At What place?
146
Unit ol ene&lt;gy
78 Chimney carbon
147
Ti&lt;!m!
del Fuegon
80 SeM coating
lnOian
81 Superlative ending
148 Free ol
83 Eat
t 49 Prohibit
84 Flower
15
t Japanese drama
87 Christian festival
153
Eilher
89 Pawl
155 Symbol for gold
90 Par1 of play
157 Note ol scale
91 Domesticated

�··-···"4 .. ,,

......, •.. .

~ 1 ,•

. ,.

.
Pomeloy-Middllpart 01,fl1llle, Ohio Paint P IM!"t,. W. Ve.

Maverick director Sam P~pah ~ead
jcklllmmlkerSamPecldnpah,who
"\lintthed the gUts of mllllons with
~violence In "Straw Dogs"

._ '':lbe Wild Buncb,", Uved tbe
:·"alleme Impressions" he con·
;'le3('ed on the acreen. friends say.
, Peddnpah, 59, died Friday of
beart failure at Centlnela Hospital
•MedlcalCenterlnlnglewood,where
~ was flown Thursday from Puerto
; Vallarta, Mexloo, after l!octors
-~a blooc! clot In a jilng, said aide
~ Nancy Galloway.
.
l He had a hlslory of heart trouble,

.

.

Pege D-8-The SuOO.y lime. Sentinel

B)'CABOLYNSKOilNECK
~
A•rt • IPreila Writer
: LOS ANGELES (AP) - Maver·

.,

said his brother, retired Fmllo
County Superior Court Judge
Denver }&gt;ecldnpah.
Pecklnpahgothlsstartwrltlngfor
such teleYislon westerns as "Gunsmoke" and ''The Rifleman" and
created the classic western "Ride
'the High Counby" for tbe big

screen.
He reached new heights of movie
gore In "The Wild · Bunch" and
particularly In · "Straw . Dogs,''
starring Dustin Hoffman, with Its
styUzed, slow motion views of
bloody mayhem.
·
. Pecldnpah "was little understood
within Hollywood, but vastly appre-

•
'
'8
·
•
.T op 4 stones
.

, 1Contlnuedfrompagt!D-1)
dollar overseas that hanned U.S.
two critically Ill Amertcans. exports. And Interest rates re:teams ol suigeons ImplantEd a mained high though they dropped
baboon's heart In an Infant and an markedly toward tbe end of the
artll1clal heart In a 52-year-old man. year.
• Baey Fae, born with a COI)gelll10. Eachpasslngyearproc!uceslts
•tally defonned heart, lived three
share of the unexpected. What are
. weeks with her walnut-sized baboon called "acts of God" !live us
: beart before sucCumbing In a earthquakes and tornadoes and
'.California hospital In November. floods. But there was no way· to
,Ten days later In LoutsvUle, Ky., explain what happened In San
WllllamSchroeder,aretlredfederal Ysidro, Callf.,last July 18.
empioyee whose own heart was
· Onthatday,amanwhoclalmedto
-clalnagW beyond repair, became
have heard God's· voice and bated
' tile world's second recipient of an · God'sworldshottodeath2lhwnan
: artll1clal heart,
beings as they enjoyed tbelr leisure
: 9. The American ecoDQmy reco- at a McDonald's restaurant. It was
;vered strong!)' from the recession,
theworstmasskUllnglnaslngleday
Inflation was stymied, unemploy- In the nation's history.
·
ml:nt dropped. Still, there were
Before the year ended, McDo. ~ uncertainties - foremost nald's razed the ·restautant and
, among them the towering deficit
donated the site to the town, for a
., 8lld the continued strength ot the park.
:

:of

December 30. 1884

.
Ord'y emel-gency applicatiom taken··

'
clated!J&gt;'thewondlllniCOIIIIliUJIIty
BeamJa PaladCll, and llllter1 Fer!t
wJUch knew that bla lleld ol vllloD . Lea Peter, were with blm wben be
tranlcellded his 111bject matter,''
died.
director wan. HW llld In a
Born Feb. 21.,19Z, to a family of
CHIBlmtE - OUD!t Colimy'a Roo!ft Rehabilitation Projp Bill ,
statement. "His lo!IS wiD be acutely
lawyen and Jui!lel tor whom the
lw r«leevv!d Its quota ci applcadolll b the lrlt.IJ'OUI) ol booiel for
felt by everyone who really cares
Ped&lt;tnpab moumaln niJille was
. major work, m:oGdlba to RrxiCrawb'clolGallla-MelpCmununlty
1~tfllm."
named, l'l::d•hteh earned a masAetbJ AiJD:y.
His quarrels with prodUcers 8lld ter's decree Ill 111eeter arb at the
Dapt b enemlll!!.a•W~~~'lY lltuatlonl, applications Will be not bt
studio executives were Jeaendaey.
Unlvenlly ol Soutbem C811fornla.
~ UDtll after tbe.llrlt quarter In ApriL .
"I've stepped on a Jot ol toes over
Bealnnlna Ill tbe 19501, be proQn•!lfled
wltb enwlj&amp;J&lt;'Ielcan ltll1
and receive
tbe years," be said In a 1982 duced and directed sbtJWa for tbe
I!ID!!ijji!ICy repairs up to S2,eOO to ccnect a housing problem,
Interview. "ADd' executives, they HuntlligtonPark1beaterandwJSa
Crawford said. Work Ia llldd!!d out to local contractoni. lt II
don't f(qet. I f&lt;qet, but they don't. ~ at a Ia Allples televl·
necenery to caD liefclr1! C0111i111to CAA offtcel at3117·7344 or446-00U.
.So for a while It was like I, was slon station befl!re writing toa ~pch ·
blacklisted."
.
shows as "GunsmoJre."
But James Cobw. n, who appeared
His pntteature film was " Deadly' .
In three Pecldnpah films...: "Major COrnpillllons" !JJ 1961, followed In ·
Dundee," "Pat Garrett and Billy 1962 ey "Ride tbe Hlgb COOntry,"
. GAILIPoLIS - A statewide 1Dcree11e In fees for birth aDd deaui
'llleKid"and"Cn&amp;ofiron"-sald abouttworetlredlawmenplayedby
certlflcates bas been autliod2Jed bY new legislatiOn, a&amp;rua County
tbe ..--lveness w~ part of tbe · Joel McCrea and Randolph Scott.
Registrar Deborah J. Role said Saturday.
director's aentus.
Followlni "Coovoy" In 1978, he
'llle new statute requires an addltlollalr.l for each oertltled copy of
"He lived a life of extreme tookfouryearsotr811dretreatedtoa
a birth or death cert111cate to fUnd child abue and neglect J.li'OII'IU1is.
Impressions and he was able to · log cabin In Montana, wbere be
'llle fee for a certified copy Is now ~. Role said.
· ··
convey those Impressions on film,'' concentrated on wrttlng•.
Certified copies ol births 8lld deaU. frcm tbe year lQ to tbe ·
Coburn said.
,
Pecklnpah's most recent work
JKcamt may be oblaliJed frcm the GaWa County Hj!alth
Pecklnpah's family was gather· was "The Ostennan Weekend,"
Ilcpartment, now In tbe basement oftbecourtJiouae. Office hours ari!
lng In Ia Angeles, but nil 9ervlces which failed at tbe 1\DX offkie, and
8 a.m.-noon, and 1-4 p.m. ;Monday through Frlday.' For ~
were scheduled lrrunedlately, said twomuslcyldeosforJultanLennon,
Information, call ~. extension 292.
;
Ms. Galloway. H;ls second wUe, sonofslalnBeatleJohn~n. · ·
f

- .

'

awucam.

BPP!Y.

.

Birth, death certificate fees up ·.

.

City furloughs 10 employees
POINT PLEASANT- Ten Point
Pleasant city workers were laid off
Frlday, according to Mayor J.J.
Wedge. ,

Wedge said tbe layoffs •are
necessary pecause ''the revenues
just lndlcafe that It's got to be done."
Those to be laid off are all hourly
employees trorn the water, fiood·
wan and street dE!partments, the

mayor said.
Just how long the workers will
remain ofl tbe job Is not knoWn at
this time. 'llle mayor BBid city
emplayees were told at tbe begin·
nlng of December to expect the
layoffs and that tlnse relieved are
eligible for unemployment benefits.
'llle city last laid off employees In
lll83, wheh five people were out of
work for three months.

'

Holzer Clinic closed Tuesday
GAU.JPOLIS- Holzer Clinic Ltd. wiD be closed Tuesday, Jan.l,
.In obllervance of New Year's.
Urgent c;are aervit;cs Will be provided from 1·9p.m. that day at the
main clinic on U.S. 35 near Gallipolis. Physicians from tbe family
pracj!cc ai1d pedlatrQ departments will be available for treatment
of Ul'lleJlt Illnesses 8lld .inJuries.
'I'IIolle needing ~ should enter through tbe emergency
room at Holzer Medlcai Center. Pediatric patients should call
446-5287 for e 'time to be ~-

SALE_ SA I.E- SALE- SALE -SALE ..... SALE -SALE :-SALE- SALE...:. SALE

Smith's Famous

'

y,,, End Tsx -R.edu~tion Ssle
CO Tl UESI
_ "~'

SPECIAL PURCHASE

~~"

..u,~~"'
..\J

20

~ --

.A guide to local
TeleviSion .programming.·

Ike. 30 thru Jan
- . .5

l

,,...,..

'

LAST DAY· OF ·'84 · :.~.

.

.

Includes complete

·~ DON'T MISS OUT ON THE FOOTBALL BOWL GAMES
I OR THE RICH COLORS OF THE HOLIDAY PARADES.
listings

l,f~

7c~

·

Sophia Loren
Page 5

'i//
·« .

1984 BUICK·lEGAL LIMITIDS
2 Dr. and 4 Dr. Bonnevilles, Cutlass and Ciera
Broughams... . _
Low mi.les, extra clean, 100% Warranty

"C.hannel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

S899500 &amp;UP
'84 BUICK
PARK AVENUE

'84 BUICK
LeSABIE SEDAN

Factory official car, silver,
8,000 miles.

~:ooo S15,900

~~~400 $12,900. ~~ooo S12, 900

~~4oo

5-Buick Skyhawks

'79 CHEY.
414. PICKUP
3A T.,

:~5

Black, auto., air, alum.
wheels, sharp.

auto., blue . .

S3997

'4995

'82 CHEV.

4280

'79 CHEV.
PICKUP

CONVERSION VAN
by loclcwoed

$

WAS

Air, captain's chairs, and the
works. We sold it new. /

Auto., air condition, 4 whl.
drive, one local owner. Expect the best.

~~too

*5995

S9900

WAS

NOTICE II

GM announces effective
Jan. 2, 1915
A 2°/o Price
Increase.

$

.

5500

Slalion li8ainas

WSAZ
CBN

Huntington, WV
CBN Cable Nlllwltt

ESPN

SIJC)IU NIIIWOrk

WTBS
WTVN
WTAP

Allllflta. GA
Columbu•. OH
P.Ursburv, WV

WCH!Ii . ChertHton, WV
· - WPBY Huntinn»n, WV
' WBNS Columbu•. OH ·
.
WOUB Alhen8, OH

'80 OLDS
DELTA 88

WOWK • HuntingtOn, WV

4 dr., navy blue, nice.

Sl 0, 900 5-Pontiac 1000's :~5
'79 FIIEIIRD
FORMULA

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

Factory ~fficial car, white,
10,000 miles.
.
.

Rnsl Clo1eoutl

Brougham
Factory Official Car

-

'84 BUICK
LeSABRE SEDAN

Dark blue, dealer driven,
10,000 miles.

'84 PONTIAC
BO.vlll SEDAN

.

WVAH

Hunicane, WV·

MAX

Cl-

HBO ",. Home Box Ofllce

S3980

'80 CAMARO ·

Blue, air, N.A.DA book
&lt;

'4975.

$2990
' .

.MDGVY -AdarPU:wa W •
IGI
t

21

1111111 t ' , lpllllo.llts:1 b,a11 'll•meonbwcri''The ........."lllllells,..._ •
(Af'lnnrp'lta).
' "

...,ca.t'V..._

WINDOW VAN ,
Air cond., auto., red and
white, nice for large family. .
WAS
S5995

$4995

Showbeat
Page6

'

. Sen,i"'!·~ Gailia, MeigB ~~~d MII80r&amp; ·:Co~tie~~,, ,
'

'79 CHEV.
If• TON

;..wta. ......,_er..~tslsv...._....,.;,.._luna

.··

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