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Page

12-The Daily Sentinel

~roy-Middleport,

Ohio

Also Victor Palnler, Mlcldleport,
· speed, $21 and costs; Robert
FQreman, Pomeroy, speed, $43 and
costs; .William Hayes,Dexter, falled
to display valid registration, $15 and
costs, unsafe vehicle, $10 and costs,
suspended; David Wolf, Chester, no
motorcycle endorsement, $75 and
·costs, three days cOnfinement, If
ilcense Is obtained In 30 days jail
sentence and $25 of fine wUI be
suspended, failed to display valid
· ucense, $W and costs; Charles D.
Wllson, Middleport, hunt squirrel on
· posted CIHlp hunting agreement
land without permission, $25 and
costs; Michael Smlth, CoolvUle,
speed, $16 and costs; Ronald

Pu.bli"C

Lemon, Clear Fork, W. Wa., sjJEed,

... ___ ____
(Continued from...:,...::._.
page 1)

Plummer was the only witness
called Thursday as McDermott
concluded the defense.
Plununer lestlfles
Under questioning about the
charges Plummer testified:
-Jeffrey Plummer was an employee of the 648 board and, as such,
would not be under Blll Cantrell's
supervision. Cantrell, former maintenance supervisor for the IIicounty mental health center (now
the Woodland Centers) testified
earlier he never saw Plummer
working at the Jackson bulldlng.
-Her husband Elnon did not pay
for his airline ticket Immediately
because of a slip-up. However, both
ber and her husband's tickets were
later paid at no cost to the board.
-More than $22 mlillon have
passed through the 648 board In 12
years and one90 cent beer Is the only
Wl8Uthorlzed expense she knows the
board paid.
· -Whlleonecharge accuses her of
damaging relations with the mental
health center In connection with
contract negotiations, Plummer
said she received no reprimands

Cincy councilman
wants pit bulldog
ownership banned.

$W and costs; Richard Herman,
Middleport, no mumer, SIO and
costs; Michael Schloss, Pomeroy,
falled to display a valid registration,
$15 and costs; Russell Nltz, Pomeroy, no dlivers license, $40 and
costs; Ern~t Rollins, Albany, DWl,
$WO and costs, three days confinement, license suspended six
months, left of center, SW and costs.
no drivers license, $50 and costs,
three days confinement; Otis
Drawdy, Jr., Rutland, DWI, $150
and costs, three days conftnement,
license suspended 60 days; Freda
Swan, Rutland, littering, $25 and
costs, fine will be suspended on
condition that litter Is cleaned up In
seven days; Terry May, Gallipolis,
non·support, pay $WO per month
regular support, $00 per month on
arrearage, two years probation;
Rodney Spurlock, Tuppers Plains,
criminal damaglng,15daysconflne.
ment, restitution, one year probation and costs; Robert DeMoss,
Covington, Ky., trespass, threedays
conftnement, one year probation,
refrain from visiting a partlcuk'U'
n.~ldence, costs; Ron Prldemo:-e,
Rmland, flst.lng without a license,
$15 and costs; Tim Herdman, no
addrf'S.• rerorded, pet~· theft, :lt
days co!1f1Mment; restitution and.
costs; Beth Gloeckner, no address
recorded, disorderly conduct, $25
and costs, six months probation;
Danny Buffington, Pomeroy, hitskip, $00 and costs, 30 days
conftnement, 18 days suspended,
assault, $50 and costs, :ll days
conftnement, 18 days suspended,
nine months probation, criminal
.mischief, $25 and costs, restitution; •.
Ste-ven Nease: Mjnersvllle, left of .
center, $40 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Melody
Bowyer, Mllton, W.Va., Melissa
Oesterling, Butler, Pa., Richard
Egnot, Cambridge, and John He!·
muth, Massillon, speed, $50 each;
Jeffrey L. Gerenclr, Charleston,
Speed; $41; Jeffrey Webb, W.
Portsmouth, overlood, $.llO; Peter .
F1uhr, Underwood, Ind., falled to
display valid registration, $45;
Louts Furmanskt, Blacksburg, Va.,
speed, $42; John Mackie, Gahana,
speed, $43; Kenneth Hagy, Taron!a,
Clh.,speed,$44.

from board members during the
process.
-Health Insurance was not
cancelled for Mark Johnson after he
left the board because It was part of
his compensation as a consultant.
-The . board approved actions
which led to the following charges:
spending of $445 for two paintings;
spendlngo!$15,(XX)for publication of
a book; h1rlng of excessive numbers
of employees and consultants;
engaging In too much travel.

.CINCINNATI (AP) - A city readY by then.
councllmanwantstobanownershlp
"I'mlnfavorofsomehowbanntng
of pit bulldogs In Oncltmatl to pit bulls from this community or ...
protect people from the danger of making.a presumption In law that If
belngmauledbyunrestralneddogs. a dog attacks a person, that dog can
Falling that, counclln)an Charlie be ~ed to be a vicious dog and
Luken said Thursday, be wants to the owner can be subject to criminal
give the city authority to criminally prosecution," he said.
Hesaldltwtllbedlfflculttolegally
prosecute ownG·s whose pit bul·
!dogs attack other people.
define a canine breed for tbe
He said, however, that he Is stlll purpose of banning It, particularly
willing to bear and consider the because breeding alters a dog's
rebuttals of owners who protest the ancestry and characteristics.
The city already has an ordinance
restrtcttons on their bulldogs.
Last week, one of the dogs designed to protect the public
attacked and killed 11-year-old against attacks by "vicious dogs,"
Marcellus Hampton In Cincinnati, butLukensaldltlsn'tstrongenougb.
mauling his head and severing a The ordinance prescribes a tine for
neck artery. Police later shot the allowing vicious dogs to run loose.
He wants to make It a first -degree
year-old bulldog, which had ~
·purchased about three weeks ear· misdemeanor for an owner whose
Iter as a watchdog for the victim's pit bulldog attacks someone, and to
mother, Nguyen Hampton.
provide the stiffest penalties the
,.
Luken said he Is concerned CltyCouncO can assess - a $1,0XJ
because of that attack and other fine and six months In )all.
COUNCILMAN WANTS BAN - Cincinnati City oouncUman
CharUe Luken has asked lor a ball on owoenhlp ol pll bulldog!lln the
recent maullngs In· which the
TwoyearsagolnCinclnnatl,aglrl
victims survived, but were Injured. was bitten by another pit bulldog,
city following a fatal ~k on an 11-yeaJ'o&lt;l!d boy last week. (AP
Laserphoto ).
He has asked City Solicitor which pollee later shot. A month ·
Richard Castelllnl to recommend later, another man was bitten by his
an ordinance to accomplish what pet pit bulldog.
. . · . . Tuesday In Tol!'do, .a pit bulldog
the coW1Cilman wants to do. .
:. (''
"Tm sort bf reluctant to pass which had · broken tree from Its
anything that cannot be enforced," owner's leash bit a 6-year-old boy In
Veterans Memorial
Emergency runs
Luken said Ina telephone interview. the groin. The victim, Identified as
The councllman said he has Robert Gresham, was visiting
Admitted--Ste-ven · Lush, PorTwo calls were ansWered by the
received
complaints from people relatives In the northern Ohio city
!land; WUbur Whaley, Shade;
RaclneErnergencyUnltThursday,
by neighbors' pit bul- with his farrllly from Fort RUey,
frightened
Joyce Smith, Rutland; John Cay· the Meigs County Emergency
!dogs and from ownets of tbe Kan. He suffered a deep cut on his
oor, Jr., Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Medical Service reports. At 8: 32
animals who oppose the proposed groin and was reported In fair
Dlsclulrged··Raymond Lambert, a.m., Steven Lush, Stlversvllle, was
restrlctlons. He has scheduled a condl~n Thursday at Toledo's
Wllllam Morris, Tamara Ervin, 1aken to Veterans Memorial Hasp!·
Sept. 'n meeting to bear citizens on Riverside Hospital.
Rebecca Davidson.
, tal and at 7:"29 p.m.,-Don Hill was '
Admltted·-VeJya"l\mburgey,Syr:- · taken to the Holzer Medical Center. · ))oth sides present tbelr·case. but he
doesn'tknowWhetherbewtllhavea
acuse; Tamara Erviil, Raclrie; ·
draft of his proposed ordinance
Dortha Handley, Langsville; WOStill h08pitalized
11am Morris, Racine.
Monday picnic
Dlscharged··Rohert Preast:
Don Folmer,who was Involved In
Gladys Moore, Carl Ralrden and
T""''"l.J
a motorcycle accident two weeks
lx•.ouoo(ully ,lf,,igno.~l
Racine American Legion AuxllOra Rice.
ago, remains a patient at Holzer
f urw: r~l JrrJn~•·n~t·m .
lary, unit 602 wtll have a picnic
IU" ullnr •b or
Medical Center. Hlsrpomnumberls
\
Monday, Sept.l9, at 6 p.m. at Lewis
POMEROY
Mortgage burning set
.322.
Park.
FLOWER SHOP
Mei..,.
yearbooks
here
Persons to brtngcovereddlshand
.. n. ""' '""'"'"'''"''' .........
Nine years ahead of schedule, the
mortgage on tbe Laurel Cliff Free
Meigs
Methodist Church wt11 be burned
.. High School 19&amp;'1 of
yearbooks
are now available. Books
during morning worship services at
may
be
picked
up at tbe school any
10: 30 a.m. Sunday. Speaker on tbe
week
day
from
8
a.m. to 8:40a.m. or
occasion with be tbe Rev. Eugene
Buckley, a former pastor of tbe fromll::lla.m. to1p.m.
church. The pastor, theRev.Robert
1!18ued license
Miller, Invites tbe public to attend
the ceremonies.

...

Meigs County happenings

r-;::===·

~--=~====~

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

~

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WEEK-END SPECIALS

Unusual values this week-end on men's Lee jeans,
boys' and girls' wann-up outfits - men's sweaters - boys' shirts - women's sportswear - ladies'
PJ's - men's sport shirts -girls' jeans -travel bags
- junior blouses - furniture specials - boys'shirts.

To end marriages

, Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy tonight with a 40
percent chance of showers. Low
5J.58. Winds southwesterly 1~15
mph. Partly cloudY Saturday. High

70.75.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday throulll Tue8day:
Fair. Highs In the '70s Sunday and
In the a&amp; Monday and Tuesday.
Lows~Sunday, wannlnglo55-415
by Tuesday,

Gospel sing set

$39

99

Gilbert and Vicky and the Singing
Gospels, Columbus, wtll be featured
Saturday, Sept. 24,at7::llp.m. at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church,
Middleport. The group will appear
at the Rutland Freewill Baptist
ChurchonSunday,Sept.25,atlp.m.

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Kentucky .............. 24

Auburn ................-... 7

North Carolina ...... 48
Miami, OhiO .......... 17

Wi.scort.$in .............. 21
Missouri··············~· 20

I O'tf)(J •••••••••••••••••••• ·•• 42
Penn State ............ 34

Michigan State ...... 28
Notre Dame .......... 23

Texas ..................... 20

Indiana ..·. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 13

+

unba

tmes

Gallia·school bus·accident injures· 13
MERCERVILLE -A collision between two Gallla
County Local schoolbuses south of here Friday
afternoon sent 13 people, most of them elementary
and secondary students, to the hospital.
No one was seriously Injured In the accident, and all
~ later treated and released from Holzer Medical
Center, a hospital spokesperSOil said Saturday.
The Gallla-Melgs post o! tbe slate highway patrol
said the accident occurred at 3: W p.m., about two
.mlles south of this soulbernGallla &lt;;ounty cooununtty
on Ohio 218.
·
·

Trooper Kelly Worstall said the buses, both 1981
Fords, were southbound at the time of tbe colUston.
One bus driven by MerrlJl S. Waugh, 63, Rt 2, Crown
City, attempted to stop and was struck from behind by
tfte other oos, driven by Franklin L. Brumfield, 45, Rt.
1, Crown City.
Brumfield's bus was reported severely damaged In
the accident, whlle Waugh's bus was moderately
. damaged. The patrol responded to a call for
assistance, and tbe.. GaUia Cauniy Emergency
Medical Service ·sent four ambulances to tbe sCene tO

tend to Injuries. Parents of chlldren riding the buses
were also present at the scene.
Brumfield suffered minor Injury In the collision,
and was cited by tbepatrolforassuredcleardlstance.
Twelve other people, all students In the Hannan
Trace attendance area, were taken to HMC by the
EMS and laler treated and released for bruises and
strain, an HMC spokesperson said.
lbey were Identified as Christina M. Caldwell, 11,
Rt. 2; Crown City; RobertM;. Harr~$0~1, 5, Rt.2, Crown
City; Paulil Van Hob!ie, 14, Crown City; Angela C.

Caldwell, 14, Rt. 2, Crown City; Joyce J. Garlinger ,16,
Crown City; Mary Al)n Barcus,10, Rt. 2, Crown City;
Beth Mills, 11, Rt. 2, Crown City; Cynthia J. CaldwPll,
11, Rt. 2, Crown City; Amy Mills, 9, Rt. 2, Crown City;
Mtcbelle Harrison, 12, Rt. 2, Crown City; Chris line L.
Unroe, 16, Crown City; and Tracy L. Brannen, 8,
Crown City.
Gaiita County Local Schools Superintendent Gary
Toothaker said Saturday .an ~t~mai · inv~tlgation
Into the accident Is underway."
·

State tax repeal
could lead to hike
in college tuition ·
By KEVIN KELLY
Trlbuae Sial! Writer
RIO GRANDE - The boards of
trustees of Rio Grande College and
Community College are expected to
discuss the possibility of Increasing
tuition and fees If the move to repeal
the state Income tax Increase Is
successful fcln the November
election.
·
TheboardsmetthlSweekend,and
faced with a possible 30 percent
decrease In tundlngfrom the state If
~ Is approved, one college
otllqal feels the boards of both tbe
private and community colleges
wtll have to .look at cutbacks as an
alternative.
...We're under pressure here,
because tuition has never paid for It
all," said Dr. E. Wade UndeJWood,
college provost, who said an
lncrease In tuitional the107-year-old
private college has gone Into effect.
Underwood said tuition for the
year In tbe pr1vate college has gone
up from $7,900 to $8,250. A corresponding Increase In room and board
fees of $lJl has been approved,
meanlngastudentalsopays$650per
quarter to reside on campus.
But no Increase has been Implemented for the community college,
Underwood added. The cost lor
attending that Institution's course
offerings remains at $19 per hour.
Ally projected Increases In the
community college - which has
experienced enrollment growth In
tbe past few years- wtll depend on
repeal, Underwood said.
·

Underwood ooted that some oftbe
college staff have taken a stand
supporting the retention of the
Income tax Increase, but trusteesnf
both schools wtll consider tbe Issue,
In his opinion.
Enrollment at both colleges has
topped the 1,500 figure, tbe maxi·
mum the boardS have said Is Ideal
for the school.
Tultlon and fee Increases at
RGC.CCappeartobelnllnewiththe
Ohlo Board of Regents' report th8t
showed the state's public college
and university fees have gone up 9
percent this fall.
That flgure Is slightly less than the
national average of 10 peJcent,
regents learned IJ1 a special report.
Chancellor Edward Q. Moulton
noted that the modest Increase was
attributable to the first stable higher
education budget In tbe state since
1979. Moulton said the 191!3-l!5 state
appropriation to colleges and uni·
vers!tles Is $125 rnllllon less than the
regents' recommendation, but was
enough to halt "rapidly escalating''
fees that were caused by state
budget cuts.
"At the present budget level,"
Moulton said, "Institutions are able
to maintain services and assure
access for nearly 400,000 students.''
Moulton took a sland two weeks
ago supporting tbe Income tax
Increase to maintain the relatively
stable ftnanclal picture for colleges
and local school dlstrlcls he said has
been created by ~ddltional
revenues.

Block grants
awarded for
. area
jobs
,
programs
.

ACCIDENT VlcnM - GaDia County Emerpncy
Medical Service paramedic Tom Saanderll pnplll'fl8
1o"""""" 8-ye81'0ld Tracy Braanen of Crown City Into

By JEFFGRABMEIER
'l'lmM
SWf
POMEROY- Dave Isn't his real
riiune, he won't reveal his age and
he'll only say he lives In Meigs
Cpunty.
·· He'd rather be employed, oot
while looking for a permanent job he
h8s found a way to make ends meet
- growing marljuana.
. Dave agreed to talk to tbe
'limes-sentinel about being a martjualla growerlnMelgsCountyunder
the condition his real name and
other personal data not be used.

a stretcher following a collision betWeen two
!!Citoolbuaw oo Ohio 2lll near Mercerville Friday.
Twelve ot11ers were lrealed for minor Injuries.

GALLIPOLIS - Grant awards
totalling $700,(XX)wtll help create job
programs In Gallla, Meigs and
Athens counties, Rep. JolynnBoster
announced Friday.
The funds are part of an $11.7
91lllion dlstlibuted through the
state's Community Block Development Program.
Mrs. Boster, D-Gaillpolls, said the
money wtll be dlstrlbuted In this
fashion- $2.ll,100 to Athens County
for home health and education;
$143,750to the city of Athens for alley
Improvement; $229,800 to Mlcldleport for housing construction and
training; and $100,000 to Gallla
County for bridge and guardraJJ
improvements.
· TheOhloDepartmentofDevelopment received the funds earner this
year from the Emergency Jobs Bill
legislation, enacted by Congress.
Funding ts used to create jobs and
stimulate business development In
rural and non-metropolltan
communities.
"Our objective was to create as
many jobs as quickly as possible
with the Jobs Bill funds," Mrs.
Boster said, adding that she !eli
state government has targeted
money to areas In thestatewlth the
greatest employment needs.
Across Ohio, 2,WO jobs wtll be
created In 58 communities as a
result of tbe $11.7 rnllllon 1n grants
awarded through the state.

Woman alleges discrimination in hiring

By BOB HOEFLICH
gerty said be was disappointed at
not having been asked to return to
'lbnell-lle!l&amp;lnel Sial!
the position when the salal'y was
POMEROY - A Middleport
Increased.
woman Is considering charging the
Meigs County Board of Health with
Young was one of two appllcants
discrimination as a result of Its . Interviewed by the board. In a letter
recent employment of an assistant
to several public officials, the
sanitarian.
second applicant, Evelyn Bauer,
That position- tbefllllngofwhlch now charges she Is more qualified
had alreadY causedcontroversydue tor tbe Job than Young.
The following excerpts from that
"I'm not Into It really big-time," to the resignation of a fanner
employee
and
the
hiring
of
a
letter
contain Bauer's allegations
Dave says of his Involvement. He .
became
avallable
replacement
concerning the board's action to
makes between $3,000 and $10,&lt;XXI a
.
year - enough, he adds, to pay bllls when David Haggerty, Rock employ Young:
Springs, resigned.
and ooy Christmas gifts.
"This Is In concern of the position
. Haggerty was hired -at a salary of tbe new assistant sanitarian. I
For the past seven In eight years
am very perturbed by this whole
be has grown three or tour small of $7,(XX) per year - as assistant
situation. I also applied for the
patches each season, each with 15 to sanllarlan this summer, but resigned from the post on July 22 to ,position and was one. of two
:1Dplants.
applicants called In for an Interview
Although It may look like easy accept a better paying job with the
for tbe position.
money In some, Dave says there Is 0.0. Mcintyre Park Dlstrlct In
"The Interview and notification of
work Involved. Marijuana growers Gallla County.
Recently, JoeYoung was hired to who got the job was very poorly
have all the problems of a
conventional farmer and, of course, fUl tbeposltlonata salaryof$12,(XX) managed by Mr. Jacobs (Ed. Jilote:
per year. Last Wednesday, HagJacobs Is deputy health commls·
(Continued on page A3)

stoner). ·The Interview with the
board was okay, but the following
nollflcatlon was very tacky and of
poor taste In my viewpoint. Mr.
Jacobs had Mr. Young and me both
sitting In the lounge at the health
department together. Then he
came In and announced the winner
and loser. I have spoken of this with
many people and most were
appalled at tbe way It was handled.
"Mr. Jacobs came out and satd,
'I'm sorry, Evelyn, but the board
!eels Mr. Younghasmorequallfica·
!Ions for the job than you.' - right
there In front o! Joe Young. It was
quite humlllatlng. It was bad
enough I didn't get the job, but he
didn't need to degrade me also.
"What Mr. Jacobs did not know
was that whUe Mr. Young and I
were sitting In tbe lounge, we were
talking. And In our conversation I
learned: I have two years of college
In the health field, part nursing and

part medical records with classes
In community health whtch covered
environmental aspects. Mr. Young
has only one year of college In
ooslness and accounting which has
nothing to do with being an
asslslant sanitarian. After having
studied In classes of community
health and pathology, the study of
disease, and 1 dld many medical
records reports, I am very much
aware o! the tmwrtant role a
sanitarian plays In a community. I
have also worked In health care
facilities and once as a waitress. I
know what Is expected concerning
food service faclllties In the san!·
tary field. Mr. Young has only
worked In loan companjes and ,
banks and mostly as a deputy
(sheriff's deputy). And as far as
being certified, Mr. Young wtlJ
probably be paid or reimbursed to
take classes I've already had, or I,
(Continued on page A3)

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Ohio University ..... 14

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'Meigs County .
Green': farming
with a difference

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Friday, September 16, 1983

O'Brien finishes
50 court cases
Forty defendants were fined and
10 others forfeited bonds In Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Kevin Enos, Ocean Springs,
Miss., speed, $24 and costs; Dixie
Dldlsse, BeallsvUle, Ohio, speed, $W
· and costs; Joseph Newman, Les·
age, W. Va., speed, $22 and costs;
Allred Rusche!, Sr., Pomeroy,
speed, $17 and costs; Jay Mitchell,
BeallsvUle, failed to display valid
registration, $10 and costs, no
drivers license, $00 and costs, three
days confinement, jaU sentence and
$Wofftnewtll be suspended If license
Is obtained In 30 days; Steven
Trussell,' Long Bottom, speed, $22
and costs; Paul Mllllron, Racine,
!allure to control vehicle, SW and
costs; Gregory Thomas, Pomeroy,
left of center, $10 and costs; David
Blake, Indianapolis, Ind., speed, $21
'and costs; Rodney Carl, Belpre,
speed, $22 and costs; James Wyatt,
Pomeroy, speed, $26 and costs;
· Michael O'NeU, Pomeroy, faUure to
• controi,$W and costs; Carol Baker,
· Racine, passlngbadchecks,15days
· confinement, eosts, restitution; R&lt;r
· !Jert E. Johnson, Columbus,
speed,$W and costs; Edwin Ash,
. Racine, speed, $21 and costs;
. · :Thomas Smith, Pomeroy, and
: David Mlinn, Pomeroy speed, $22
· and costs each; Guy Sargent,
:. Pomeroy, falled to display valid
· license plates $10 and costs; ~lnda
· Goodin, Pt. Pleasant, speed, $22 and
. costs; Raymond Hawk, Gallipolis,
. Speed, $24 and costs.

'

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A lut of bani wort., and patience,
lltlderiiDM lhe elfor&amp; undertaken to
IJ'Illn Alldrew IUc!Uu-d Lambert 1A1
bec:Grue lelf·•dflclent. 'l1le braindamaged Melp County youth Ill
being trained by . . famlbo and by
wlunleen, allundertheiiUpervlllion
ol bill ~. with oped•l
lnlllrudlon from a 1 1 - potential
center balled In PhDadelpld• 'l1le
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12 boors with volunteers working In
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llll'oulb 111110 Andrew can move on

biiiOWD.

�September 18, 1983

•

Commentary and perspective

..
:
S.ptenlber 18, 1983

.-weather:-----------__, Ohio lawyers' groups

•·

'.

By Tbe A880Ciated p.._
Outdoor working weather Will be acceptable through the weekend.
Evaporative IDSS rates will average 15-hundredths to two-tenthS of
an Inch dally. The recent soU surtace recharge wasn't great enough
in most cases to ellmlna~ field access, so harvest and early taU
seeding preparations should be able to continue.
Surface winds at mldaftemoon will be gusting above threshold
levels for controUed drift, but growers will have ample owortunlty
duting the morning and evening hours to make spray appllcatlons.
Hay drYing weather wOI be acceptable for a couple of days, but
cutingrnaybetooslowtocompletedrydownbeforethenextthreatof
welting early In the coming work week.
Southern Ohlo tobacco cutting and curing weather wtU be good
through the weekend. Leaves should dry quickly In the field, but cuts
wtU have to be In the barn by Sunday evening. Afternoon hwnldity
levels Saturday will c:lroP below 50 percent, and there will be a strong
enough breeze toprornote moderate air excbange through open
vents.

.Psywar operation __________:_:W:..::il::.:lia:::..:m.:.....::A.=..·..::..:R_us_he-:-0-~
~~

•

~

~~.,...·~=-

8ZS Third Ave .• Gallipolis. Ohio
1614144&amp;-2342

l1l Court St.. Pmner•y, Ohie
1&amp;14) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

HOBAR T WI! .SON JR.
F.X t' f 'U li \

PAT WHITEHEAD

c Edit t•l' .

Assistan1 Publ1sh,·r...Conln 1i11T

Russians to make senous compromises In the current arms
negotiations is to proceed with the
deployment unless theY do so. Even
If it takes place as schedUled, the
deployment wtU only match Soviet
IRBMs already deployed in Eastern Eu!'Qpe. They can forestall it
any day they want -to, sbnply be
agreeing to cut back the missiles
they already have In the ground.
But here the Russians are
counting on the &amp;&gt;-Called "peac"
movement" in the United States
and Western Europe to puU their
chestnuts out of the fire. Huge
demonstrations against deployment or the Pershing lis are
planned for November and De-

.

cember in abnost every major
Ametican city and every country r1
NATO Europe. The governments of
the United States, Brltatn, France,
West G;ennany, Italy, etc. are
bracing for ronfronta lions that may
easUy tum violent. In Moscow, Yuli
Andropov wtU walt to see what his
cat's-paws can do for him. before
deciding what concessions he must
make.
It is at just this ct111cal point that
ABC intends to air a two-hour
television spectacular entitled "The
Day After." Starring Jason Robards and costing a cool $7 mUUon
to produce (more than three tbnes
the normal cost of such a production), this niellerdrammer pur-

~t!IES

Glenn's task: to
.add an element
other than hero
'

'

riskY

Johri Glerin iSembai-ldnion a
but necessarycoursethisfall, irylng
to give Americans something more than "astronaut" to put next to his
name.
" The Ohio senatorwtll begiv!ngalotofspeechesaroundtbecountrytn the
next few weeks. Glenn, a Democratic presldelitial hopeful, will be laying
out his personal [ilatform on the issues.
· In a deeper sense, he will be telllng Americans that he Is a politician of
presidential caliber. not sbnply a test pilot, an astronaut, an American
hero.
He must tiy to add this new ~vel to the puljllc mind without losing ~
foundation provided by those favorable "VIews generatea In his younger
days In the space progiam. It's that favomble foundation that has helped
Glenn close In on former Vice President Walter Mondale In the polls.
Americans have been more than wiUing to attep1 "non-poUtldans" as
presidential candidates - as long as theY are convtnvced the candidates
can bandle the job. Dwight Elsenhower'7's. But 40 percent dkln't know
enough about hbn to say or didn't answer.
Those with favorle views were pressed for their reasons. General
personal quailties were mentioned by 23 jlereent, honesty by 13 pel'CE!It and
his astronaut days by 13 percent. Only 16 percent mentioned political or
lssue--orlet!ted factors.
The poU also showed how Glenn's task Is compllcatro by the nature of his
main opponent - Mondale.
Mondale has a long and varied record In public. Ufe, a llst o1 elected
offices that he has won and dUlles hehascarriedOill That record Is a key to
his status as a leading candidate for president.
That has made Mondale more famll1ar to the public, but also given him
some higher negative ratings. The CBS-New York Times poU said 40
percent were favorable to Mondale, Tl percent unfavorable and 33 unsure.
And those who like Mondale mentioned his public service. Twenty-four
percent cited his years in government as the reason for their good views.

Job justice in Ohio·
Gov. Richard Celeste cites statistics slwJwlne that 70 pereent of
households headed by women have inC!mll6 below t!le poverty level.
He also says that one of every three women with a lull-time job earns as
Utile as $7 ,OOOa year, and that 85 percent~ them work In only25ofthe more
than 400 job categortes listed by the U.S. Lallor Department.
Celeste used those figures this waek in amnmclng a soon-to-beappointEd state pay equity studY committee wblch wiU locus 011 the job
claslllflcat.lon system In Ohio, not only for wmnea but mlnor1tles as welL
"It Is absolutely essential that we take this flrst saep Iowan! jusUoe in
Ohio," he said, adding that Callfomla 8lld Mlllnesota are Wldertaklng
similar studies. "We, too, must meet our responslbllltles to the W!lmoo ~
Oblo," he lidded.
The panel, which wtU consist of representatives ~ ~ and Iabar,
along with representatives of womens' and mlllortty &amp;JWPI, wtJI be aslu!d
to complete Its study and report back to the ~~~~Vernor by !)@cemller 1984, be
said.
,
Meanwhlle, Ohio's Supreme Court has ll8lll asked 10 Invalidate a
newly-enacted law because lt aUegedly runs llfoul fJf a constltutkJnal ban
against btus containing more than a single sullject.
Thomas J. Dlx of Cincinnati flied thesult, clalmlngbestUllsa membl!rof
the Ohio Development Financing Corrunlssion, which the law abolished.
He claims the Legislature erred when It made appropliatlons for the
~ent department, which absorbed tbe commission, a part of the
bUI.
Appropriations bills take lmmedlate effect, so that the flnanclllg agency
"thEoretically" was abolished when Gov. Richard Celeste signed the
me&amp;SUI'!' July 14, Dix sald.
Recutar btus do not take effect for 90 days.
The Clncirulattan's sult Is not unique because the Legislature has been
challenged In court previously, without success, for allegroly Ignoring the
constitutional provision.
1n another matter, House Finance Chalnnan WUUam E. Hlnlg, D·New
Philadelphia, has criticized the natural !'eSOilrct'S depart:rnoont for hiring a
Pennsylvania finn on a coal mlne reclamation project in Belmont County.
The state Controlling Board this week authorized a $45,270 consultant
·contract with the Beaver, Pa., firm for the project at Barton, Ohlo.
Department omciats said the company had been Involved In sbnUar
work In southeast Ohio before and it was felt lt would be cheaper In the long
run "to go with the same consulting firm."
·
Hlnig rejected that ratlonale, saYing be doesn't believe "that there Isn't
som" Ohio finn that knows how to clean up a gob pile."
He didn't mention Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste's "Buy Ohio"
program, which the administration on several occasions has not adherro
to, but the reference to lt was clearly bnpUed.

Today in history
Today is Sunday, Sept.lS, the 26lst day oll.!l83. There are 104 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Sept. 18, 1961, United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold
was killed In an air crash In northern Rhodesia.
On this date:
In 1793, President GeorgeWashlngton laid the cornerstone of the Capitol
in Washtngton.
In !810, ChUe declared Independence .f rom Spain.
In 1850, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act, pennlttlng slaveowners
to reciaim slaves who had escaped Into other states.
In 1973, East Germany. West Germany and the Bahamas were admitted
to the United Nations.
Five years ago: Egypt's foreign minister an4 antba-oor to the United
States resigned to protest the Camp David agJ'I!EI'I'Ieftt with Israel.
'l'oday' s birthdays: Actress Greta Garbo is '18. Former House Mlnoiity
leader John Rhodes Is f!l. Actor Robert Blake 1s 50.
Thooght for today: "And that's the name of that !w)e, " - ftollert Blake, ·
AmeriCan actor (J933.present).

•

•

The liberal and leftist bias of the
television networks. is a national
scandal. but even they seldom try to
get away with anything quite so
barefaCed and brazen as the stunt
ABC Is planning to spring on the
. American people on l'fov'. :;MJ, If
conservatives have the sense God
gave a jack rabbit, they will get
busy now on plans to lay down a
counter-barrage.
November, you will recall, is just
one month ·before NATO's planned
deployment of our Pershing II
Intermediate-range ballistic mlssUes in Europe. 1be Soviet Union is
resisting that deployment With aU
Its formidable propaganda resources, and the only hope offorctng the

ports to show what would happen !d
Lawrence, Kan., If II were hit by:d
nuclear bomb.
:1
If advance reports are to ~
believed, tittle Is lett · to ~
Imagination. To quote the NIM'
York Times, · tbe tum "Is releQt~
lessly depressing, With scenes of
enormous destruction by flrestorm;
people being vaporized, ~
graves, the Irretrievable lossoffoocl
and water supplies, vandalism an4
murder, the breakdown of medlcBJ:
care and disfigurement and death
from radiation sickness.'' n.re.i
thousand residents of Lawrence (d
college town) posed as corpses, a111j
"water wagons f!Ued with food dyl!
were used to paint fields black.'' ;
One wonders what tbe Sovie!
Union would hilve ·had to spend, on
production, air time and promotion,
to broadcast this two-hour horrot
show on the ABC television networ~
from coast to coast sbnply as ~
Soviet propaganda ploy. LuckUy to~
the Russians, however, it won'tcost
them a kopek: American corporate
sponsors are being approached
right now by ABC salesmen, and
wtll not only pick up the whole tab . ·
. but leave ABC with a tidy profit; ·
(What the weakness of NATO mi!Y
ultimately cost the world, If thl!
Pershing lis are riot deployed and
no meaningful counter-cot;tcesslons
are obtained from the Soviet Untop.
1
simply doesn't bear thinking

..

about.)

; •'

The Irony is that plenty f&gt;(
sensible Arnertcans will be up l!l,
arms on Nov. :;MJ agd 21 ·,.. but ·by
then it wtU be too late. This whole
psywar operation by ABC is stW
two months in the future, howeve.:,
and much that is effective can be
done if preparations begin rlgh~
away.

Dangerously 'vulnerable.____.J_ac_k_An_de_rs-..::-0~
WASIDNGTON - There's a
valuable lesson for Pentagon
planners In tl)e shooting down of the
South Korean airliner. It's a lesson
that could save Uves and money in
the continuing Cold War intelligence gathering - If the Air Force
brass will only heed it.
The Incident has given an
additional arguing point to those in
government who advocate the use
of remotely-piloted vehicles to
carry out vital but dangerous fllghts
over Soviet territory. These lowDying, unmanned drone planes are
not only far cheaper to build than
heavier, manned aircraft but burn
so lltUe fuel they can stay aloft
many times longer. 'They are also
nearly bnpossible to shoot down.
Actually, lt shouldn't have taken
the Korean airline massacre to
hammer home to the Air Force the
lesson that manned planes are
dangerously vulnerable. If it had
been the U.S. reconnaissance plane
that had strayed Into Soviet air
space, it too would have been a

sitting duck for the Russian fighter
pilots.
A top-secret report, prepared by
an Inter-agency group that Included
CIA experts, has urged President
Reagan to consider greater use of
RPVs. My associate Dale Van Alta
has seen a copy of the report.
Along With more and better spy
satellites, the group wrote,
"remotely-pUoted vehicles, possibly using stealth technology, should
be reviewed for possible tactical
inteUigence-collecting value and for
stra tegtc tnteUigence coUection ... "
The drones could be launched from
larger rec6nnalssanoe planes.
Besides their lnteliigencegatberlng advantages, the pilotless
planes have a provenrombat value.
This was dramatlcaUy and convincingly demonstrated last year by the
Israelis In the early stages of their
attack Into Lebanon.
The Israeli rnllltacy's biggest
fear ws the devastating potential of
the Russian surtace-to-air rnlssUe
batteries the Syrians had deployed

near the strategic Bekaa Valley.
Most were SA-6 missiles, the kind
that wreaked such terrible destruc·
lion on the Israeli air force ·ln the
1973 Yom Kippur war.
But 1982 was a different story. To
the astonishment of the Sytians and
the Sovlets (and the Pentagon, too),
the Israelis In two days destroyed
all 19 SA-6 missiles battelies
Without the loss of a single plane.
One key to their success was the use
of RPVs. They not only gathered
Intelligence but acted as decoys to
lure the Syrians into firing on them
and giving away the position of
tbelr batteries -which the Israeli
alr force then wiped out.
Ironically, the Israeli RPVs were
based on technology developed by
the United States and tried out
during the Vietnam War. Yet the
American RPV program has been
under-planned, under-prioritized
and under-funded. There Is no
American RPV in operation today;
a drone being developed by the
Army won't be ready untlll~ .

Even in their Vietnam heydai,
our RPVs were never exploltro td
full advantage, though their record
was Impressive. Tbey flew more
than 3,00J hlghly-classHied rnilsions, photographing targets ro~
manned bombers, recording poststrike damage, dropping propaganda leaflets and dlscovelin!l;
unsuspected targets.
'
Essentially the RPVs are highl)i
sophisticated model ai'l'lanes, con'
trolled from the ground with fat
greater speed and maneuverablllty
· than plloted aircraft. The Utile
planes were more than a match tor
North Vietnamese anti-aircralt
gunners: The "casualty" rate was
only 10 percent.
So glittering were the prospect of
the RPVs that even the hard-eyed
auditors of the General Accounting
Office were Impressed. The GAO's
traditional role Is to uncover
wasteful programs, but In 1981
agency issued a report that actuaUy
urged more funding for RP

tl)e

Pentagon garage sale._.:.._______Ar_t_Buc_h_wa_w
The Pentagon was having a spare
parts garage sale the other day, and
I went over to see If I coul~ pick up
any bargains. There were spare
parts spread au over the parking
lot.
I picked up a Ph!Uips screwdriver, and a colonel came over and
warned me, "If you break it you pay
for it.''
uHow much is it?"
The colonel looked In a book. "I'll
let you have It for $760."
"Seven hundred and sixty dollars
for a screwdliver?"
"We paid $990 for it. It's a
heckuva bargain. This Is not an
ordinary screwdriver. It was made
to screw bolts In F -l6s. "
"Let me think II over. What else
have you got?"
"Here's a chief petty officer's
flashlight that you can't pass up. It's
yours for $2.10, without battenes."
"How much are the batteries?"
The -colonel referred to his book.
"We paid for $140 for two. I'll throw
In the batteries for $5) If you take
the flashlight for $220. •'
"You'll be loslngalotofmoney oo
the deal."
"This Is a garage sale, and we've
been told to get lid of our spare
parts before Congress finds out how
much we've been paying for them,"
the colonel said.
"What are these little black
squares?''
"They're slllcon chips for our
night fighters. The aviation company who made the fighters sold
them to us for$1,500apleoe. But you
can have a dozen for $999.''
"You can buy these chips In any
Radio Shack for $4.95," I said.
"We just fOilnd that out," he
repUed. ''1bat's why we're selllng
them so cheap."
"What are these tires over

launchers, Tbey: re a steal. The
defense contractor charged us
$1,200 for each tire, but we've
reduced them to $600."
" How can you afford a 50 percent
markdown?"
" We're suing the co.n tractor for
overcharging us $900 a tire, and If
we win we'D come out ahead."
" And if you lose? "
"It doesn't matter because every
time we fire a missile aU the tlres on
the launcher blow out."
"I really don't need any tires."
" Uyou want a good buyyuu ought
to take one of these M-1 tank
transmissions. We pal(~ $400,00J for

there?"

"You better believe lt. They've
never been used. The list plice was
$6,000 for each one, but because It's
General Patton's birthday, we're
giving them away for $4,000 today.
You'll never get to buy a pup tent at
that price again."
"I've been to garage sales
before," I said, "but this one beats
them aU."

The colonel said, "The way w.~
look at It it Is the taxpayer paid tor
these things, so he should get first. '
crack at buying them at a discount.'
It's our way of thanking him for.
supporting the mUitary bulldup.'' :
"There are so many bargains, I'd,
like to buy everything In the :
parking lot."
•
"I wish you would, It would
me off the hook."
l

"Why?"

get;
t

for $18.95.''

'84
CANPAIGN
~y

uncover A-bomb link

. OAKWOOD, Ohin (AP) - A · knowledge that some sort of atomic
ciiupte writing a history of this researchwasconductroatafederal
laboratory at the Rwmymede
affluent Dayton suburb say they
Playhouse, a private recreational
stwnbled across InformatiOn that
building
In Oakwood, during the
Showed material crucial to the
war. Oakwood Is !I city of ab9ut
development Of the atomic bomb
lO,OOJ south of Dayton,
was prodlieed lhei'e:
·But the significance of !hi!
"It was a serendipitOus thing nOthing we expected to find," said contributions of the Monsanto
VlrglnJa Ronald, co-author of a Chemical Co. scientists was unco19().page hisloi;' of Oakwood re- vered only recently.
"We'd known what they were
lie8sed this week. "It's not etten that
hard-coyer books break hard doing, but we did not know how
bnportant lt was.'' Ronald said.
DeW'S."
''People
had even told us, 'We can't
.. Mrs. Ronald and her husband,
Bi-uce, said at a news conference leU you what weweredolngthere.'"
Friday that they learned of the
Ronald said he and his wife
secret World War 11 project while
delayed
publication of their book
doing research.
white
tiytng
to declassify lnforma·
1bey sald It was common

lion about the Dayton Project, the
code name for Monsanto's work.
The federal governrnent declassified the lnfonnation In July.
The scientists at Runnymede, led
by Monsanto's Dr. Charles ADen.
Thomas1 begandeveloptngmethods
around 19M to produce the radioactive element polonlwn In quantities
large enough for use in atomic
weapons, according to the Ronalds.
Before the Dayton Project - the
code name for Monsanto's work polonium had been produced only In
microscopic amounts.
Polonium and beryUum were
used In the Implosion homb, the type
used at Nagasaki, to supply a
stream of neutrons. Without a
neutron supply, the nuclear fission

reactlon that gives an Implosion
bomb Its destructive force could not
occur.
"This thing made It go boom,''
Ronaldsald. "!twas probably about
..
a walnut In si2e."
Rona:ld said · the llrst atomic
bomb, · dropped Aug. 6, 1945,- at
Hiroshima, was a uranium homb.
1be bomb dropped three days later
on Nagasaki was a plutonium bomb.
The Runnymede Playhouse was
demolished in 1950 and the land Is
now occupied by ptivate homes,
Ronald said.
"It was so radloactjve at the end of
the tbne that they tore It down
entirely IU!d uncovered earth 7 feet
... and removed It to Oak Ridge,
(Tenn.) for burial," be said.

_

• g...__
Fannm
.

!roll) theOhioStateBar Association,

which said It had a duty as a
professional organization to helll
Inform voters.
Cuyahoga Coonty Common Pleas
Judge Frank Gorman, chairman of
the study committee, said he hopes
it can complete Its work by earlY.
.nextyear.
•
(Continued
from
page~)
____;,
_,;.

____

some that are unique.
''There are a lot of factors that

But the financial rewards tp
growing marijuana keep people tn
have to be considered.! try to plan a
the business. "Meigs Coon~
year ahead.'' he says.
Green" has a national reputatlop
First, he buys, trades or grows his
and people are willing to pay.
own marijuana seeds, trying to find handsomely for II. Tile best v~
the hybrid that will require the least
can bring $3,00J a pound, Dave says.
care and bring the most profit.
"It's just got a great repulatloJ!.
One of the most Important
Even people in Flotida go crazy,
decisions is where· to place the
over II ."
marijuana patch.
"Money talks. Growers like .the
"Ithinkaboutltalot. You(mveto
people that come in from out-or-:
thlnkOiltalltheangles: isitgotngto
town With two or three thousand
dollars tn spend," Dave says.
be sate, Is lt good soil, can you get
water to lt easily?"
He says greed - or a lack Qf
Uke au tarmers, Dave arid other steady Income- prompted a lot of
marijuana growers wtU find some of
the current Meigs County marltheir crop eaten by deer or other
juana growers to get startEd. And
anbnals and destroyed by poor · not all fit the stereotype qf drug
weather.
dealers.
This year, high heat and low
"A lot of people who groW
ratntaU has been disastrous to
(marijuana) are good members of
marijuana growers.
the community," he clabns.
"I've lost a whole patch to the
''They'rejustpeoplewhoWanttoget
heat,"
says.
.
.
ahead. They help out . In the .
Mainstream farmers, however,
community, they got famllles;
some even go to church.''
don't have to worry about sheriff's
deputies destroying their crop or
Many persons that don't grow
competing farmers stealing II.
marijuana "reaDy get upset" beAlthough Dave says his plots have . cause pot farmers make money so
easily.
.
not been dlscovered by poachers or
law officers, Its a constant threa:t.
But Dave says he - and other
"1bere's always constant fear. A
jobless Meigs Countlans- need the
lotofparanola, Growe~~ looking
money marijuana brings.
oVertheirsbouldersandaSklng'Can
''I'm not really gaining," he says,
Itrustthlsguy?"'
"l'mjustkeeplngup."
r~...:......._..::...;:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

nave

Celeste opposes fair managers pay hike
. OOLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Ohio
SiateFalrManagerJackFOilstsays
the governor's objections to Foust's
4q.7 percent pay raise are "under·
, s~" even though he took the
)lib with the ll1lderstandlng that a
raise was coming his way.
In a closecHioor session, Ohio

Expositions Conunlsslon members
voted Thursday to give Foust the
raise from $ll,6!ll to $45,000, but
Gov. Richard Celeste told them to
reconsider.
"Action taken yesterday by the
commission Increasing fair manager J .a ck F011st's salary is bnpru-

Woman
••.•
rroni 'page
(Continued

·-----::unsutflC:::
.=:z=ten=t..-:!:tiiii=e•to;:-;;ded=de:;:;-:on;;;;-;a
Al)
$12"""
,uuu pos ltlon.

With my background, would have
more aptitude to learn.
""As 1 sat In that lounge talldng
with Mr. Young, I really started to
get my hopes up. I thought, 'Gee,
I'm way more qualllled for this
position than Mr. Young.' Then
John Jacobs came out and gave me
the bad news.
"Mr. Jacobs did not present the
board with copies of my resume
untU they arrived at the meeting. I
do not know how Mr. Jacobs
presentEd Young to the board. I was
not present In the room. I have a
feeling that he reaUy pushed a hard
sell for- him. The board only
contemplatro their decision about
~0-lS mliwtes, which I feel is

"I honesUy feel I was only caUed
In for the Interview as a token, and lt
wasalreadydeddedbyJacobsthat
Young would get the job and gave
him a hard sell to be sure he woold,
So they hired the least qualified
person who needs mc:-e education
than I do to become certltled.''
Mrs. Bauer commented that she
was taken back a bit when she
appeared before the board of health
on the day a selection was made for
the assistant sanitarian post. Board
members asked her no questions,
she reports, and she was left to
doing aU of the talking Instead of
answering questions the board
might have In regard to her resume
and quautlcations.

dent during this time of fiscal
constraint for our state," Celeste
said In a letter he sent to the
commission Friday.
Foust, 63, ol Marysville, was
appointed In January to .replace
John F. Evans, who was making
$ll,680 when be resigned In
November.
Foust said. Friday that he hadn't
seen Celeste's Jetllir. He said board
members promised him when he
was hired that they woold review his
pay scale after the 1983falr and gave
him the Impression It would be
raised.
''1bat's what theronunlsslonsald
at the time. but, after au. they're
appointed by the governor," he said
after being told of the governor's
letter.
Before voting on the ralse 1 the
board praised Foust's workwltll the
fair, which netted abOilt $100,1XXl
more In gate receipts than the 1982
fair.
"I can't think of a better
adrnlnjstrator; that's a 24-hours·a·
day jOb," said A.G. Lanclone, a
commission member.

Henry M. O'Neill, also a commission member, called the fair "one of
the finest In Ohio's history" and
lauded Foust's admtnlstatlve
abUity.
"The responslblllty here Is really
tremendous,'' Foust said. He called
the starling salary "very, very low''
tn comparison to sbnUar jobs and
said he appreciated the board's
confidence In his work.
Mike Froehlich, assistant fair
manager, said Wl8udltro figures
show that the fair grossed $3.3
mUUon this year, compared with
$3.2 mUUon In 1982. Pugh Shows 1nc.
of Lancaster, Ohio, was paid
$992,1XXl of that amOilDt to operate
the midway Iides, and the fair kept
$2.3 mllllnn.
Froehlich said part of
fair's
tncreasedrevenuewas 1becauseofa
more favorable contract negotiated
last spring with Pugh Shows.

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OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Two
statewide lawyers' groups have
taken different stands In testimony
before a spedal Ohio Supreme
Court panel examining the way bar
associations rate judges in
elections.
Defense or the practice came

•

.I•

-

By The Associated
A storm system over southel\Stern Ontario brought gusty winds,
rain and cool temperatures to much of the Northeast Saturday, while
a few showers and thundershowers lingered along the GuH Coast.
Sides were overcast across the Great Lakes, upper Mlsslsslppl
VaUey and westward to Washington. Fair weather prevailed for
much of the rest of the nation.
Showers were scattered from western New England to the upper
Ohio VaHey. Western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio received the
heaviest ralnfaU, with half an Inch at Bradford, Pa. Southerly winds
gusted up to 25 mph, and temperatures dipped to the 50s In the
stormy areas.

MONDAY TiffiOUGH WEDNESDAY: Scattered showers and
thunderstorms Monday and Tuesday. Fair Wednesday. Highs In the
Ills Monday and Tuesday, and In the 'lll'l Wednesday. Lows mostly In
the 00s Monday and Tuesday, and 45 to 55 Wednesday.

THIS WEEKS SPECIAL

:•

The nation's weather

Extended Ohio forecast

••
•
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:

~-~

WEATHER FORECAST - Tile National Wealher ServkJe
fol'I!CIIIIts lor Sunday predicts raiD for pal1s ol Wlllblngton and Oregon.
Showers are predicted for most ollhe norihweotem pari ollhe oounlry
fnpn the Dakotas, welt. Showet'!l are also predlded for parts ol Arizona,
New Mexloo, t!le Mlallaslppl River Valley and Gulf Coast regions, and
Florida. (AP Laserphoto).

•

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STATION
THE
ALCOVE

"I was the chief purchasing 1
officer for the Pentagon untU they ,
found out this $5,000 walkie-talkie !
could be bought at Sears Roebuck '

I•

here?"
'"lbey're for

each one, but we're letting them go
tor $50,000."
"Do they work? "
"U they worked do you think we'd
be selling them for $50,000?"
"Are those Army pup tents over

take different stands

Ohio agricultural advisory

September 18

I

A Division of

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page A-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea50nl, W. Va.

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�A-4- The Sunday TimH-Sentinel

Page

l'am!II'O'f

Septwmber 18, 1913

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. Vo.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

IRS doesn't want to be debt collector
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
Internal Revenue Service, Its hands
full trying to catch tax cheaters, 1s
.not happy about the prospect of
becoming a collection agency for
other government debtors.
· It's not just the extra work. IRS
Commlssloner Roscoe L. Egger Jr.
says any use o! IRS Information for
non-tax purposes COUld dlsWuslon
taxpayers and reduce compliance
with the tax Jaws.
Egger testified Friday before a
Senate Finance subconunJttee that
Is considering a bW requiring the
IRS to withhold tax refunds !rom
people whose federal student loans
are six months overdue. Congress
~ 'already requires the tax-collecting
agency to wlthbold refunds from
parents wbo are behind In making
child-support payments and whose

spouses receive welfare.
"It 1s our belle! that most
taxpayers proceed on the assum~r
tlon that the Information on thelrtax
returns 1s Inviolate and wW not be
pulled from their returns and used
against them 1n a non-tax matter,"
Egger said. Even tllough such
programs are autllorized by Congress, he added, that "Is. of little
consequence to these taxpayers;
they still feel it somebow violates
thelr trust In the tax administration
system. This attitude, rlght or
wrong, 1s very real."
'f!ie IRS already has the task o!
trying to catch tax cheaters, who
cost the government an estimated
bUllon a year.

m

John F . Simonette of the General
Accounting omce, noting that $14

bllllon 1s now past due In non-tax
debts owed the government, said the
IRS should be able to use what It has
learned In the child-support program to develap a workable
debt-collection plan. But he cautioned that GAO's support of such a.
plan "should not he Interpreted as a
recommendation thatiRSbecomea
debt-collection clearlnghouse."
In a ·one-month test In 1979, GAO
studled613dellnquentdebtsthathad
been wrltten of! and found that 36
percent of them, or $153,001, could
have been collected over a two-year
period by reducing tax refunds.
Simonette noted that In 1981, Oregon
was able to collect $3.7 mllUon In
delinquent debts by withboldlng
state tax refunds.
Egger sald the IRS expects to
report later this year on a study of

READY TO FINISH FURNITUR[

how enforcement of the childsupport . program, which began In
January 1982, has affected taxpayers. Because divorced or separated
mothers often must · apply for
government · welfare when they
don't receive child-support payments, Congress told IRS to go after
delinquents.
In the llrst eight months of 19!3,
the IRS reduced the tax refunds of
323,001 delinquent parents bi $1'10
mllllon. 'IIM!moneywasturned back
to state welfare agmctes.
John P . Abbot, a Utah state
official and president-elect of the
Natiooal R.eclpriJCal Famlly Support Enforcement A ssoc1atlon, said
more than half of all woinen wbo
receive child support get less than
they are SlljlllO!Ied to, and that
chlldren are owed more than $4
billion · In delinquent support

FEATURING:

Nazis say they will appeal
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -

Six

ant Frank Lee Braswell. "We still

Patsy Keeter Braswell, 33, Bras-

Solid Wood Fumitu~e

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Round Ook - o l Tllll"
Roll TOll lleok
GunCoblntts

Etauert .
Quilt..- elonlttl Holdlrl
EIMITnl•
Towloxn

TrHIIITIIIIIS

corner CUI)bOerdl

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MIIIIZino Holdln
Pov Hot RockS
FlriWOOd IOXH
Curio Coblnoll
Orw Sink
Trays

eu"tr Churns
Harvest Tablet,
Armotr•
Pr'HIDACk Chairs

L-ri&gt;Kk Choirs
Splcttnd Medklne Ctblntts
Fool Sloola
HeUTrft
Small Cheal

•

city pollee,
Indictments for aggravated bur.glary and vandallsn'l were returned
against Gladys Gehrlng, 44, Bld·
well, ID connect:lon with an Incident
at BldweU on Aug. 26, .sheriff's

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GALLIPOLIS - Multiple lndlctftll!lltl were returned against two
people by the September term of the
Ga111a Cwnty pand Jury.
'lbe lwY cOOducled a two-day
sesSion lD ·common pleas court
Friday afteltmu.
Mike Ganison, 32, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, wu Indicted on two counts of
&amp;nJ8II ~ lmposltlon and one
count rl attempted gross sexual
impos1tlon_ The lncldents occurred
In Gallipolis' east end on Aug. 4 and
Aug. 21 and were lnvestlgated by

A Complete Line Of Quality

payments.

"The
tax-offset program has
hem a tremendous success and
should he further expanded" to
cover non-welfare families and
people who owe debts lo the

Grand jury returns
multiple indictments

-

Fern Stencil

•

avowed Nazis convicted a second
believe we're Innocent."
well's wife; James Christopher ,..~go~v:emrnen~~t~,~A~bbo~tsa~ld~.
!~25:506~Go~;a;•d~C.~::;•;ai~A~";;;"~V~leti;IID~,~W~.~V~•~·!"'!!!!J_:---:tlme of conspiring to bomb GreensBraswell, who prosecutors said Talbert, 32, of Walnut Cove; and
bora say they'll appeal the verdicts,
was leader o! the group, said he Roger Allen Pierce, Zl. Joseph
which they claimed stemmed from · believed the Nazis' political beliefs Pierce's brother, received two-year
prejudice because "people are
brought about the convictions.
suspendedsentencesandwereflned
STORE HOURS:
afraid of Nazis and they don't want
"It's hard to put prejudices $1,001 apiece.
9 am t1l 10 pm
uswalklngthestreets."
aside," he said. "We're Nazis,
It was the third time the six l(ad
. . 1l)ree of the defendants ·were . people are afraid o!N;~Zis and they been trledil) lt!ecase. Tl)eflrst trlal,
Fri.,Sat.9 am til 10 pm ·.
sentencedtollveyearslnprlsonand
don.'t want us walking the· streets ·· .JnJuly1!m,eridedlnam1strlalwhim
three others received suspended
with them."
jurors were W!able to reach a
CLOSED SUNDAYS
sentenc~ after a federal court jucy
U.S. Distrlct Judge Woodrow unanimous verdict. The second
._._ _
.·.;;OUR TOWN'S FINEST SUPII MAIIKIT __ _,
Jones serttenced Braswell, 49, of trial, In September 1981, ended In a
returned the verdicts Friday.
GO TO CHURCH [V[RV SUNDAY
Prices good thru Set., Sept. 24. 1983
The siX were conVIcted o! plotting Penland; Raeford Melano Caudle, guilty verdict, but the 4th U.S. COurt
Wit Reserve The Rinht to limit Ou•ntitiea
with an undercover agent to
41, of Winston-Salem; and Joseph of Appeals ordered a thlrd trlal In
firebomb patts of Greensboro In
Gorrell Pierce, :ll, of Walnut Cove, Aprll because the prosecution had
· 198l If six Nazis and Ku Klux
to five years In prlson and a $10,001 not provided the defendants with a
SUPERIOR
' .• Klansmen were found guilty of flne each. The sentences, the transcript of the first trlal.
DELl
kllllng five communists ala 1979 maximum possible. were the same
Assistant u.s. ' Attorney. Jerry.
SLICED
anti-Klan ' rally. ProsecUtors conasthosehaJ)deddownbyJoneslnthe Ml)ler; who ·prOSecuted all three ·
• tended they canceled the .planned
defendants' Hrsttrlaltwoyearsago. trlals, said be was satisfied with the
'SUPERIOR
. . attack after the six were acquitted.
verdicts.
"We will definitely appeal, we've ~~------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~i;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
already decided that," said defend•

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Investigators allege Meek stole guns
from the Robert Roberts residence
on Ohio 218 on May 19.
An Indictment •on passing bad
checks was returned for James M.
Smith, 41, 1740 Eastern Ave., after
evidence was shown that Smlth
alll!f!'!d!Y wrote a worthless cbeck
for$:H8.12 to the K-Mart InGallipolls
onJune:n
The seven-woman, !lve-man jury
returned no secret lndlcbnents.

55, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, causing moder:
ate damage to both vehicles.
In other matters, the windshield
on a car driven by Jack E. Curry, 56, .
Rt. 1, Ewlngton, was slightly
damaged when struck by a rock on
Ohio 160 at 11: 40 a .m. Friday.

LEGAL Nm'ICES have been placed on the two
bulldlnp owued by Amy Klnpland Jo,_, Jacll.loli,
located .., Court Street, Pomeroy. the buDdiDp have
been condemned and lear down orderB have beeo
luued. The - bidldlng was suited by !Ire on Aug. 14.

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MOSCOW ( AP) -Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei A. Gromyko has
canceled his trlptotheU.N,General
Assembly on grounds hls safety has
not been guaranteed by U.S.
Hll..LSBORO, Ohio (AP) -John authorities, the otflclal Tass news
Charter IV, 38, and his wife, Linda agency said Saturday.
Keeley Charter, 31, have been
' The move came after New York
returned lo Highland County to face
and New JerseY. officials banned the
} 15 year sentences lor 197( drag . Soviet U.N. delegation from landing
convlctiOns.
at New York area commercial
The couple lett $:JKJ,OOI worth of · airports, to protest the Soviet
cocaine In a motel after landing at shooting down of a South Korean
Highland County Airport In 1977.
jumbo jet Sept.1. The jumbocarrled
TheywerearrestedbypoUceasthey 269 people, Including 61 Americans,
prepared to take ott again.
to their deaths.
They were extradited from Cost
The State Department had said
Rica this week.
Gromyko would have to land at a
The palr jumped $78,001 appeal mllltary airfield In the New York
bonds In 1979. They have since area. Gromyko has attended every
married and had two children.
U.N. General Assembly session
They were convicted o! posses- since 1957, and If he had followed
sion of cocaine and transporting a
past practice would have arrtved
controlled substance. Charter was
Sept. 25, the !lrst Sunday after the
also convicted of commanding an
sess!on began .
airplane used for rommlsslon of a
The three-paragraph Tass anfelony.
nouncement of Gromyko'scanceled
The couple waived extradition
vlslt was the first o!flclal confirmaafter spending six months In a Costa
tion that Gromyko was to have
Rican jall, they said.
· headed this year's Soviet U.N.

delegation.
"In violation of generally recognized lntematkmal norms, the U.S.
autilorltles do not give the guarantees that the safety of the head of the
U.S.S.R's delegation to a session of
the U.N. General Assembly wW he
ensured and that normal conditions
!n thls_respect will be created.'' Tass
said. "They do ·not guarantee the
adequate InSUrance of the arr!l!al
and servicing of a special Soviet
plane either."
Because of this, Tass said, It was
decided thatGrornyko, whowasthe
flrst Soviet ambassador to the
United Nations, would cancel his
v!slt to New York for the General
Assembly session.
Gromyko's visits to the U.N.
headquarters have been occasions
for major foreign poUcy speeches
and also have Included meetings
between Gromyko and the Incumbent U.S. secretary of state.
According to Tass, "The question
arises In general whether a ccuntry,
which does not fulfllllts obligations
and does not ensure the necessary
conditions for foreign representa-

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.

•

TOMATO SOUP'.

PEPSI, PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW,
DIET PEPSI

Closed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas

8

- -- - - - - - --·-·- -

•

CAMPBELL'S

8-16

tlves to take part In the work of the
United Nations organiZation, suits
for the U.N. headquarters to he
situated there."
Tass did not specify how U.S.
omclals !ailed to guarantee "the
arrlval and servicing' ' of Gromyko's plane. ·

ROYAL CROWN
COLA
~~L~z. $}39

'

•

0

WEEKDAYS
9 A.M. TILL 9 P.M.
SUNDAYS
11 A.M. TILL 8 P.M.

ma.

Gromyko cancels_U.N. visit

HOMEIIAOE

IWe8 Outs"" Ohi&lt;J
:--a Wrek s ..... ............ .... .. ... ........ S5f.lti

FRUTH PHARMACY

'Die l!lllllle bulldiDg had 1Jeo!n Involved lD an extensive
!Ire In the lower blocll of the bwdness dlstrld In
January
'lbe bulldlng wu basically a 8hell as a
nsuJt of the 11176 lire.

100% COMFORT

LEAN JUICY

BONE IN

SLAB BACON

'l2 Weeks . .... .... .... .... ...: ........ ..... $51.48
:26 W(.'('kS .•...•.. ... .•... ,,, ,,,, ........... $Z1.:Jl

22.
The jury returned a grand theft
Indictment against Benjamin p.
Meek, 19, Rt. 2, Bidwell. $herlt!'s

.-

GROUND
CHUCK

$7300
MON. &amp; FRI. Tll8 P.M.
TUES., WED., THUR.
SAT. TIL 5

WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Agriculture Department 1s making
government-owned surplus food
: available to processors who wUl use
It to make pizzas and other Items for
sale to schools at reduced prices.
Officials said Thursday that the
lower-prlced food products wUl be
sold to schools and other Institutions
which are not now able to get them .
Commodities to be offered the
processors Include cheese, butter ,
non-fat dry mill&lt; and honey.

LB.

EXTRA LEAN

To carriers.

Onr yea r .............. ... . ............... $\lUll
Six months ....... ..... ............. .. ....$10.40

..

GROUND
BEEF

available.

MAIL SURSCRIPTIONS
Suoda.v Only

Investigators said.
Freddie E. Kuhn, 41, Middleport,
was Indicted for theft In COMECtlon
with the theft of a handgunowned by
Woodrow W. Kuhn, Vinton, on Aug.

FRESH LEAN

Shoemakers to America

ThP Sunda y Times-Sent:Jnel will not bE&gt;
rt&gt;Sp::mslble for advance paym en~ mack&gt;

Sl 69 EPORK CHOPS
$129

LB.

HOLLYWOOD

$169

LB.

No sut:scrlptions by mall permitted in

PORK
CHOPS

BONELESS

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
35Cents
towns where home carrier service Is

LOIN

CENTER CUT

GALLlPOLJS-Twopeoplewere
sUglltly Injured during a two-vehicle
- accident on Ohlo2481nMelgsCounty
. Friday morning.
'lbe patrol cited Margaret A.
Stncla1r, 40, PtwtiEioy, for failure to
, ,yteldlnthe7:55a.m.accldent.
' . 'lbe patrol saki Sinclair report·
· 1edlywaseastboundwhenshetumed
·· lett IntO the path of a westbouhd
vehlcledrlvenbyMicllaelP.James,
·26, Rt. 1. Rutland. and collided.
'lbe accident caused severe
damage to both vehlcleS. Both
.!lrlvers were Injured, but were not
treated, the patrol said.
Two drivers were also ticketed In
an accident on the ramp totheSllver
~ Bridge at GalllpoUs
Frldiy afternoon.
· 'lbe patrol said a vehlcledrlven by
Charles L. Price, 54, Rt. 1, Galllpolls
, ·Ferry, travelling northbound on
~ ;o.oo 7, reportedlyturnedleftlntothe
palt! of a southbound vehicle driven
•' by Janet L. Pei'IIOIIS, 25, Rt. 1, Long
. ;Bottan, andcoWdedat1:05p.m.
· Both vehicles were sUghtly dam~ In the accident, and the patrol
cltedPenons!orunsafevehlcleand
Prtce for failure lo yield.
Tloopen cited Barton W. Davis,
;18. l&amp;l Brentwood Drive, for failure
to yield In a two-vehicle colllslon on
•Bob McConnack Road Friday
'afternoon.
Davis . was southbound at 1:27
· p.m. whel\ he reportedly went left of
·
struckanorthboundauto
; ldt1vJIII "11)1 Char~ R. McCormick,

l-

PHONE 446-1543

Sul!e aN. Detroll, Michigan , 48Tr5.

processors

Two hurt in accident

WOOD WORLD

__

Surplus food
available for

"

COWMBIAGAS
''

I·

. ..

•

'

!•• L--------~--------------------------~--------------------------------------------------------~·~

�The

September 1

Timet-sentinel

·· POINT PLEASANT - Bessie
Mae Greenlee, 76, Greer Road,
Route 2, Point Pleasant, died
Friday m orning in the Pleasant
'Valley Nul'!ling Care Unit.
· J'lom May 8, 1907 In Mason
:eounty, she was the daughter of the
late R.E. and Sarah McDermitt
MarshalL
She Is SUJVived by her husband,
Howard Greeniee; · a son, John
Greenlee, Point P leasant; three
daughters, Delor es Newberry,
Point Pleasant, and Rosalee McCoy
and Dorothy McCoy, both of
Huntington; one brother, John
·Marshall, New Haven; one sister,
Wanda J ones, Florlda; 14 grand,c h!ldren and nine great grandchildren.
She was preceded In death by two
daughters, Mary Greenlee and
:loann Greenlee Paul, and one son,
Oscar Greenlee.
Funeral services wt11 be at 2 p.m .
Monday In the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with the
Rev. J ohn Icenhower officiating.
Burial w1ll follow In the Greer
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. today.

88, Pinecrest Care Center, died
there at 8 a .m . Saturdav.

are a daughter,

Mrs. Helen Claybrook of Trenton,
Tenn.; three sons from an earUer
marriage, Harrison and John, both
of Arizona, and BUI of Akron; a
stepson, Gerald Sa..yer of Akron; a
half-brother, Steve Lewis of Columbus; four half-sisters, Lout.se Pen·
nlngton, Mary Lewis and Golda
Caldwell, all ot GaWpoUs, and
Melissa Wray of Bladen; and 12
grandchildren.
several half-brothers and

Probe theft cases

RIGSBY - Ron IUpby 18 leader ol One Wa.v Track, ooe of a
number of.mlllical poupe which wiD be ap~l !laAtrdq altenloon
· BDd eveniJIK a&amp; lbe lint Middleport Chamber of Commerce Block

Party.

GALLIPOL~·:... Two therts were · traffic accidents Frl~ay.

The bike was chained to the porch
and both the chatn and bike are
gilne, Syrus !Did pollee.
City pollee also charged two
persons as the result of separate

Wednesday on grand theft and
eecape charges leveled against him
F'l;day.
AppearlngtnGallipoUsMuntclpal
Court, 20-year-&lt;lld INiy T. Huf·
tman was placed on $!5,000 bond on
both charges.
1n other matters, Peter D.
Antoine, 34, Midland, Mich., was
!owxl guilty of DWI and was fined
$:01, sentenced to three days In Jail,
given a Slkiay driver's license
suspension and put on 18. months
probation.
Also charged with no operator's
llcense, Antoine was lined costs.
James A. Bloomer, 40, 25Madlson
Ave., was found not guilty ol DWI
and no pperator's Ucense charges.
VernaB.Evans,GaWpoUs,w1ll!ace
arraignment Sept 23 for failure to
pay city Income tax.
Leonard J. Maynard, Spruce
Street Extension, was fined $3J lor
menacing.
ln traf!lccases, LenoreT.Dotson,
Eureka Star Route, was found not
guilty of failure to obey signs for a
ban1caded street; Lyle S. Sheets,
38,' 5()! Circle Drive, forfeited $!10
bond for no muffler; Steven G.
Hardin, 00, EUzabeth, Ind., forfeited
$50 bond for failure to ·stop lor a,
rallro&amp;dcrosslng; JamesD.Peters,
58, Bald Knob, N.Y.; forfeited $!10

He married Clara Sawyer, who
sUlVives, onAug. 31, 1951, In Akron.

He was also preceded In death by
half.
sisters.
Funeral services wUl be held atll
a.m . Tuesday In WUlts Funeral
Home. Burial wtll be In Rldgelawn
Cemetery, MerceJVille. Friends
may call at the funeral home from
, 6:9p.m. Monday.
.
·. . .MasoniC
serviCes wUl be held at 8
William Strait
p.m. Monday In the funeral home.
VFW Post 4464 wUl conduct
GALLIPOLIS - WUllam Strait, military graveside rites.

reported recently to area law
enforcement agencies.
· Several items were reported
stolen from a Patriot residence
sometime since Thursday.
·According to the Gallla County
Sherlfrs Department, a rl!le, kero~lamp, coffee maker, trash can
and other household limes were
taken from George Carpenter's
house during a brek-tn.
Total value of the goods was $193.
In Gallipolis, city police report a
bicycle was srolen sometime recently from the porch of Penny
· Syrus' resklenceonSmlthersStreet.

GALLIPOLIS - A Patriot man
wtll face a preltmlnary hearing

Born J an. 6, 1895, ·In Harrison
Township, Gallla County, son of the
late Henry and Loueva Houck
Strait, he was a World War I
veteran, a minister of visitation at
the Cai!Jedral o!TomorrowtnAkron
In 1952-78, and a member of Eureka
Lodge 4ti9 and Knights Templar of
Colwnbus.

Also surviving

'·. ·

Edward R. Parkins, Ill, Rt. 2,
Patriot, was cited for failure to yield
from a stop sign after a 10: 25 a.m.
collision.
Pollee say Parkins pulled from a
stop stgil at VIne Street and hit a car
travet!ngsouthonThlrdAvenueand
driven by Shirley Ann Boster,36,Rt.
4, GalllpoUs.
Both cars were slightly damaged.
PatrolmencltedBruceC. Gordon,
45, Point Pleasant, for Improper
backing after a collision at 11: 11
a.m.
Gordon was backing his car onto
Eastern Avenue from the parking
lot ol Gino's when he bit a
northbound vehicle driven by Dorothy F. Baker, 61, Mlddleport.
Baker's car sustained moderate
damage and Gordon's car was not
damaged.

Bluegrass group will
play at block ·party

MIDDLEPORT - Ron Rigsby
and One Way Track of Guysvnie, a·
new group playing In the West
VIrginia, Kentucky and Ohio area,
wtll be one of the featured groups at ·
the !trst Middleport Chamller of
Commerce block party slated from
noon to 9 p.m . Saturday, Sept. 24.
Rigsby Is the leader of the group,
playing banjo, guitar and singing.
He has had wide experience In
playing with a number of Bluegrass
groups and sat In with Glen
Campbell wblle playing In Las
Vegas.
Other members or the group are
Randy Brady, guitar; Marsha
,Brady, bass, and James Price,
mandolin and IIddle.

Music w1ll be featured on the Coal
St. stage throughout the block party
with Crossover being the first group
at 12: lOp.m . All p.m., Van Johnson
and the Lone Wolf w111 be featured
with square dancers to be featured
at 1:45 p.m.
At 2: 40 p.m . Light wtll appear;
Charlie Lllly at 3: 15; a presentation
by the Meigs Community Theater
group at 4:20; Sunrise at 5; Rigsby
and bJs group wt11 play at 5:45 and
again at 8: ro with Dtlllnger appear·
lng at 6: 55 and again at 9 p.m.
ln between the musical groups,
drawings wtll beeld lor some 60
prizes contributed for the block
party by Middleport merchants.

Mason County fair profit put at $3,500
By JEFF
MORRIS
OVP Slaff
PT. PLEASANT- The bills are
stU! coming In but from all
llidlcatlons, the 1983 Mason County
Fatrw1llclearabout$3,500,acrord·
lng to Kevin Durst, fatr treasurer.
"Income was. up this year but
costs were up also," Dul'!ll said. "So
the bottom line Is we didn't make .
any more than last year."
Some of those expenses Durst
referred to were in addition to
normal operating costs. He said
S16,000 was needed t? revamp the
lalr~rounds' electncal system,
$8.600 on new bleachel'!l for the
tractor-pull area and about $1,000
for the upgrading of the Demolition
Derby track.
The fair, which was held August
!H3, took In more than $94,000 and
bad more than $81,000 In expenses
not countlng the addtlonal costs.

More than
1,000 fair
morethan
people
In 1982
to $50.530 this year
attended
this year'.s
last $42,912
and season
pass profits up from
year. Dul'!lt said approximately S18,255 to S2Q,5:1ll.
31,338 people passed through the
Booths and concessions at the
gates this year compared to 30,184
1983 fair netted abnost S7,000, the
In 1983. This doesn't take into accarnlvaiS?,OOOandmorethan$5,000
count children under six years of
from advertlsers in the fair
agewhoareadmittedfreeorsenlor
catalogue.
citizens who were admitted free on
Entertainment was the biggest
Senior Citizen's Day (493 attended
expense totaling almost $31,000.
this year.)
Country western singer T.G .
Friday (August 12) had the . Sheppard took the biggest chunk of
biggest attendance with 8,174
that earning Sll,500 for his two
people passing through the gates,
shows on August 13.
netting abnost Sl5.000. Saturday
The second biggest expense was
(August 13) also drew a big crowd
the more than $17,000 paid out in
with 7,4'11 attending, netting ll'ore
prize money at the fair.
than U3,500.
About $4,000 was spent on
Thul'!lday's rain showel'!l resulted
trophies and ribbons, more than
In the lowest attendance and single$3,000 on general maintenance and
day gate recelpls with 4,261 at.almost $3,000 on the fair catalogue.
tending for receipts of almost
MorethanS85,000 was paid out to
· S5.ooo.
livestock exhibito... with a cost of
Gate receipts were up from
about S845 to the fair.

'
w
ill
•
•
•
•d
aency
ffiVeStJgate
ffiCJ
ent
A
N
U• • e
~ONTREAL (AP) - Despite
Moscow's objections, the U.N.'s

-..:mtng International behavior and
elementary · considerations of

Sovletflghtersaftergolngo1fcourse
whlle !Jy1ng from Anchorage to

SovletdownlngofKoreanAlrl,Jnes
avlattonagencyw1JltnvesUgatethe
Flfl!ht 001, calling the attack "a
~ve threat to the safety of
trlternationalclvll aviation."
'The governing council of the
Internatlonal Civil Aviatlon Organ!zatlon, at the end of a tw!Hiay
efuergency session Friday, said
atmedforceagatnstaclvtlplane"ts
fn¢ompatlble with the norms go-

The United Nations agency
humanity."
passed a resolution urging the
Soviets to help !amU!es of the
vlctlmsvisittheslteofthecrash,and
"deeplydeploringthedestructlono!
an aircraft In commercial' InterRa·
tiona! service.'' It did not directly
condemn the Soviet Union,
The South Korean Jetliner, a
Boelng747,wasshotdownSept.1by

Island of Sakhalin. All 269 people
Seoul and passing over the Soviet
aboard were kUied when the plane
crashed Into the Sea of Japan.
Yves Lambert, ICAO secretary
general, said he would begin over
the weekend to set up a team from
the agency's technical staff to
conduct the Inquiry.
"We have to take very et!lclent
andqulckact!on,"hesald.

Community needs
80ught by CAA
•CH;ESHIRE - Input on communIty needs w1Jl be sought by the board
of directors or Gallla-Meigs Com·
ll}unlty Action Agmcy when It
meets at 7 p.m. Thursday in the
lObby of Guiding Hand SchooL
Executive Director Sklney Ed·
wards said representatives from
JaW-Income and the orgnalzatlon
representing the poor, labor, bust·
~s and private sector organiza.
tlons are Invited to attend.
·The board seeks input on how the
Cmununlty Block Development
Grant should be spent to best meet
the corrunu!Uty' s needs. Once those
needs are Identified, CM wUI
~ a grant appllcatlom
qe and submit It to the Community
Dl!vefo!mellt Division tn Colwnbus, ·
Ettwards explained.

pack·:

.Ohio-Point

Patriot man faces
court appearance

Area deaths
Bessie M. Greenlee

1983

STOP Wlsltlng for Thai Good Job
STOP Wishing for Securly

DO Sainelhlng Aboul H

· NOW!

FALL TERM OPENS
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26
TRAIN IN FIELDS THAT PAY WELL...
ASSOCIATE DEGREES AND DIPLOMAS IN
•Business Administration •Executive Secretary
.Computer Science •Accounting

.

ELiGIIILE. FOR THE TRAINING OF VETERANS

Business
G1lllpolls, OH.

Of the more
$5,300 IIIli
went
toward
the than
livestock
resales,
$3,713.49 went to the Citizens
Natlonal Fair Scholarship Fund,
S810.61 to the Mason County Bank
Fair Queen Fimd, $376.20 to the
Hannan Athletic Boosters, $152.21
to the Mason County Farm
Museum, $152.48 to the Hannan
Home Economics Department and
$166.32 to the Bible Broadcast,
Lincoln, Nevada.
Durst said the goal of the lair Is to
pay for itself not make a profit so
with a $3,500 surplus the 1984 Mason
County Fair Is off to a good start.
The fair bulldings are used to
store boats and campers during the
winter. Dum said the S7 .~.000
earned from those rentals wUl help
pay for maintenance costs and
utilities and help with next year's
initial expenses.
Durst said the fair also keeps
$10,000 In a special accoont for
em.er~ency situations such as the
problems experienced with the
fairgrounds' electrical system this
year.

bond tor !ollow1ng too Closely; R.
Richard Martln,19, 913SecondAve..
forfeited $40 bond lor failure to
display valid registration.
Timothy Angel, 20, Rt. 2, Crown
City, forfeited $40bmdfordefect!ve
exhaust; Robert N. Poplin, 27,
rrmton, forfeited $40 bond for
insecure load; Camess Leedy, 2L.
Cheshire, forfeited $40 bond for no
muffler and $i'i bond lor speeding;
Steve D. Danson, 21, Washington
Court House, forfeited $!10 bond for
failure to obey a traffic control
device; Jack Hannah, 66, LucasvOle, forfeited $189 bond for overweight load; Carlos C. Caldwell, 23,
Rt. 2, Bidwell, forfelted$:15.50bond
for overweight load; JamesR.Seitz,
25, Powell, forfeited $40 bond for
passing on the right; Joseph E.

Alcohol's fuel future cloudy :
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) - The
future of the entire alcohol fuel
- Industry hasbeen cloudedasaresult
o! excessmethanollnsomegasoline
helng sold In Ohio and Michigan,
ARCO Chemical Co. officials told
The Coiwnbus Dispatch.
The Ohio Environmental Protec·
tlon Agency and the Ohio attorney
general are tnvesttgatlng com·
plaints that some methanol blends
are stalllng cars and damaging
plastic auto components and fuel
storage tanks.
ARCO Chemical, a Philadelphiabased affiliate of the Atlantic
Richfield Co., warned last December that Improper blending
could be a ''potential black eye for

Hoover, 18, Rt 1, VInton, was fined
$12, received asuspendedslx-month
Jail sentence and six months
probation for no operator's license.
Forfeiting bond forspeedlngwere
Jane A. DeVore, 31, Columbus, $38;
Richard A. Sturm, 26, Cincinnati,
$45; JosephB.Retd,41, Tayiorsvllle,
N.C .. $42; Raymond M. Cruse, 52,
Gallon, ~; James B. Knwm, 24,
Detroit, Mich., $l6.
Rex J . Warner, 41, West Lafayette, lnd, $41; Jack L. Ann·
strong, 21, Lancaster, ~; Rodney
A. Pullins, 26, Pomeroy, $38;
Frances L. Thomas, 38, Rt. 4,
Gaillpolts, $47; Dot1s M. Robinson,
59, Rt.4,0akHUi,$44; GeOI'getteM.
Zaklng, 53, Dayton, $41.
K. Marlene Johnson, 28, Pomeroy, $39; Paige A. Hwnphreys Jr.,
32, 342 Spruce St., $41; Charles F.
Angel, 24, Eureka Star Route, $44;
Vinson A. Stapleton, 28. Rt. 2, Crown
City, $43; PhU!Ip A. Gullion, 25,
Columbus, $41; BUlle S. Bosley, 44,
Gay, W.Va., $38.
Dennie J. Stsver, 32, Colwnbus,
S39; John G. Reddis, , 31, Sunman,
Ind., $40; Wayne V. Waldecker, 24,
Monroe, Mich., $37; WUilarn H.
May, 54, Salem, Va., $36; Milan
Vronlsh, 51, Bethel Park. Pa., $43;
Robert M. Bonner, 24, Columbus,
$4i;·Rhonda G. Ptice, 32, Colwnbus,

KEEPS TROPHY - 'lbe Po1n1 Plee•ent Big
Black&amp; wW keep lbe Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Rotary
Travellnr Trophy lor tile tbJrd stralgbl year followlnK
PPIIS' :IIHI win over GaDta Academy Friday night.

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

SPRING VALLEY

WATER BEDS
1129 JACKSON AVENUE
SPRING VALLEY PlkZA
S~LE IN PROGRESS

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 A.M. TIL 7 P.M.

·.35 STYLES

TO CHOOSE FROM
From ·our catalog and on

thli troor. ~e have matchi~

furniture and beddi~
along with a complete line
of accessories.

all

$}9995
$399.95

• REGULAR

..

•

.,

#

'

.

EYE DISORDERS &amp; DISEASES

, .o.T_D
..

Announcing New Fall Office Hours

Monday thru Friday .•.B:30 a.m. To 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday evening 'till 7:00 p.m.
·saturday ••••••••• 9:00 a.m. To 12:00 noon

Meet Tuesday

CLOTH

NEW PATIENTS NOW BEING ACCEPTED

The board of directors of the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce w1ll meet In special sessiOn
Tuesday, Sept. 20, at noon at the
Meigs Inn. All board members are
urged to attend.

OR
VINYL

Telephone (304)-675-4580
Point Pleasant ·

626 Main Street

WE CAN GET IT'

Ambulance Service

8 A.M. til 12-'ltidnight

~,tr&amp;s:,:y

•Free Delivery &amp; .Set Up
•All Men:hendiee

;!~:AVII~~.

~~;;;;~4~4~6~-8~3~2~2=;;~~~~P~H:O:N:E::44::6·:7:2;5:4~~·•
''

OPEN HOUSE

.•
(I&amp; ' ~v

' b

..AI~ERIC4N
. . ..

.

li()ME$

. .

.

VAILABLE -

, .

WATCH FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE
IN ATHENS SEPTEMBER
&amp;

24 25

WASHER &amp; DRYER ONLY $574 .FOR THE PAIR

2 HOMES ON DISPLAY-CAPE COD &amp; RANCH HOME
DOOR PRIZE - ELECTRIC RANGE

HOTPOINT
LARGE CAPACITY
WASHER VALUEI

HOURS 9 TO 7 ON SAT., NOON-7 ON SUNDAY
NEAR AM·PACK PI.AZA NEAR TilE PIC PAC

PORCElAIN
ElllMEl
FINISH

·

~j

0
COMPLETE
S.EASONAL
CLOSE-OUT
ON
HOM ELITE

COMPLETE SEASONAL
CLOSE-OUT ON ALL

String trimmers

NO REASONABLE OFFER

ST 200 ONLY 9
ST 100
LEFT

HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO
SAVE. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.

REFUSED.
DON'T WAITUMITED OFFI!R
OUR LOSS IS

YOUR GAIN

USED SPECIALS

DT1m0d dry1ng se lec tio ns

SPECIAL
15 Cu. Ft. ........................... ..... $325.95

\

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r.1cd• I O~ I!IHO!l

-uo 10 1J Q m1nutcs

1-16 CU. FT. GIBSON

0 4 Vent1ng optrons

STARTS AS AVALUE

0 Separate start control

•. •STAYS A VALUE!

UPRIGHT MQDELS
17 Cu.

Ft~

REFRIGERATOR
ONLY Sl75°0
1-HOT POINT DELUXE

GAS DRYER

ONLY $225.00
1 ALLIS CHALMBtRS8

JUST RECEIVED A NEW

H.P. 42" DECK

S700°0

POMEROY LANDMARK

JaclW. C.U,, lltr.
Drive 1 title lftd - i lot-Fr• dtllwlty •~hiR 75 llliiM
Ytt, 11 Mnicllt JOir 1aCII Hillpoint Deller
Stor1 H011n: 1:30 to 5:30...1
II 5:00 P.M.

WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

CloStrvlta .... 1111111 •d lluoll Cotllllts

'

-

•

$355 .98

$469.00

•,

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SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE
$349°0

20 Cu. Ft ................... i•···.·· S458 9 5

5289

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19" DIAGONAL
COLOR 1'1

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&lt;~:w•~&gt;­

MENT OF VENTLESS GAS HEATERS &amp; KEROSENE HEATERS.
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REGULAR PRICE

......................... 542795

SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICES
POMEROY LANDMARK ON
MINUM ASPHALT ROOF CRATING. BLACK ASPHALT, ROOF
ROLL ROOFING, ALL

1-16 CU. FT. G.E.

ONLY

__

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

SAVE ON THIS HOTPOINT SPEC IAL!

Jacobosen Mowers · REFRIGERATOR
ONLY Sl75°0
16 H.P.-50" DECK

14 H.P.-50" DECK
8 H.P.-34" DECK
18"PUSH MOWER
20" PUSH MOWER

5 Cu. Ft. · ·····~········ · ··············· · ·· $235.95
8 Cu. Ft .... .' ............................. $285.95
15 Cu. Ft ............................ ..... $355.95
Cu. Ft ~ ................................ $418.95
5 Cu. Ft ............................... .-. $472.95

DRUM

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3til!!J!J~

90 DAYS SAME AS
CHEST FREEZERS

L-SPECfAL-SPECIAL

rr---~~~~~~~~~~~~~O~N~~50~W~I5~T~T~O~W~A~R~DAL~B~A~N~Y~~~;:;;;:;;~

OUT THEY GO

said. "The industry recogn izes that.
but what bothers us Is people getting
into the position of saying
m ethanol (In gasoline) Is bad."
Arthur Zadrozny, ARCO 5e11ior
business analyst, pointed out \!"~)
small amounts of m ethanol - Q.3 to
0.5 percent - have been used ,in
many brands as a de-Icer since the
l950s. The company's Oxtnoi blend
conslstsofequalpartsmethanoland
a stabilizer, tertiary butyl alcohoL ,
But some jobbers and blemjel~
Ignore recommended levels when
they blend methanol with gasol ine,
"The tact is tha t the ;nm·e
m ethanol you put in , the rT\OQ'
m oney you make and the ll1QI'e
problems you create."
.•

DRS, NIBERT &amp; NIBERT

program at the Friday night dinner
meeting of the Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary held at the Heath United
Methodist Church.
Rev. Middleswarth, introduced
by BiliFrancls, program chairman,
gave a slide p_resentatiO!i of Meigs
·County. He showed sUdes of the
Meigs County Fair and the Rotary ·
Uons golf outing and picnic to name
a!ew. ;
I
Claude Grimm of Florida, former
resld""'t of Meigs County, was the
guest of his brother-in-law, Edison
Baker. Roger Luckeydoo, president
presided. Dinner was served by the
ladles of the church. .

WE NOW HAVE CAUFORNIA
WATER BEDS &amp; ACCESSORIES.
"IF WE DONT HAVE IT

FREE

.

MIDDLEPORT···The Rev. Wtl·
Uarn Middleswarth presented the

the still-youthful Industry" as It
COmmissioned Its new $m mUllon
m ethanol reftnery in Houston.
George Yogis, the company's
business development manager ,
said methanol sales this year are 50
percent below est!mate and that at
least one major oU company has
canceled its contract. That translates Into about $.'i!l mUllon In lost
sales. he said.
"It's hurting. Tha t's why we're
here," Yogis said Friday as an
ARCO delegation visited The
Dispatch.
Methanol blends were developed
tD conseJVe oil, reduce pollution a nd
reduce gasoline costs, Yogis said.
"We think there's a problem," he

Sbown above are Don Roblnlon, left, of the Galllpolts
Rotary presenting u.e trophy to PPIIS Head Coach
Steve Safford, right, Mild Bob Cochran, center, of the
Point Pleaaant Rotary. (Photo by Tim Davis I.

Gives slide pr-eSentation

~-

Gallia .County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad
NOW OFFERING

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A~7

W. Va.

ONLY

. ,,

$325°0

MO TIADl II IUDED

~"'" NOW ONLY

$59995

J10 TUOI II IDDID

$7500

.

_.....,

NO TRADE IN NEEDED

�The

18, 1983.

W.Va.

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To l!llClOIInlgt! leg movement (left) Ut1s IDcllne plane sUde en&lt;lOUl'&amp;fiUI
Andrew to coatrad his 1eg!l as he moves down lhe sHde. To coodlthl
tmn to noise (below) Diane Walker pans, banging two pans togelher.
'lbll, aoool'dlag to lhe lnsUtules, conditions Andrew to noise, as weD as

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1983 .

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GALLIPOLIS -

FredeliCk E.

Mills, vice pri$1derii and director of
publlc affalrsforBancOhioNational
of Colwnbus, will visit the
Gallipolis area to discuss "The
F)lture of Banking" with citizens,
~hants and college students.
. Mills' visit Is part of the Ohio
.Bankers Association's banking ad·
visor program, which waslnstltuted
to help valious groups better
IIJI!lerstand banking and h&lt;JW the
b;mking lhdushy tits jnto national
.and local economies.
Mills will speak first to a joint
meeting of Gallipolis retall merchants and the chamber of commerce, ·s lated for noon Tuesday In
the Down Under Restaurant In
Gallipolis.
:Reservations for the session may
be made by calling 44IHJ596 by
Monday.
Mills will then move on to Rlo
Gl-ande College and Community
College, where at 2:30 p.m. he will
sl!eak to students In the Emerson E.
Eyans School of Business Management In Florence Evans Hall.
lils activities will be concluded at
6:3lp.m. Tuesday In a joint meeting
with Galllpolls area service organizations. On Wednesday, hewUlmeet
and hold breakfast discussions with
~a bank executives.
Mllls has been employed since
1982 In his present capacity with ·
BancOhio. He was previously
superintendent of banks for Ohio, a
legislative assistant to former Gov.
Jap~es A. Rhodes and Involved In a
law practice.

Bank

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:~2 hours a day, 7 days a week patterning helps
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~ By C~ HOEFLICH

Andrew, his parents, Mr. and was hope for her grandson. It took

.'
'J'!aj, Se::tlncl Stat!
Mrs. Michael Lambert, and his :)a months to get an appointment,
~MEROY - "We now have grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest but when the famlly finally went

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,of lmprovemeqt, whlle before Lambert, spent a week In Phlladel·
had none/' commented Mrs. · phla whlle the youngster was being
i l-ambert as she cuddled her evalua~ and they were being
~ee-~a; old braln-da~aged lnstrilcted on calT)IIng out a
two-year development program for
Lambert was referring to a him. !t'"tlne of therapy, exercise and
A newspaper story and a visit
' trttlon prescribed by the lnstlwith
the parents of another braintes for the Achievement at
uman Potential where Andrew damaged child earller enrolled In
~hard Lambert ytas enrolled In the program, convinced the elder
Mrs: Lambert that perhaps there
August.
,

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lf!e

Marriage license

••

GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples filed for marliage this past
week In Gallia County Probate
COurt.
Joseph R . McCoy Jr., 51, Rt. 4,
G•lllpolls, Iron worker, and Orpha
E ; McCoy, 44, Rt. 4, Galllpolls,
housewife.
Ronald E. Jones, 19, Rt. 4,
Galllpolls, Captain D's assistant
manager, and Anna M. Clark,18, Rt.
4, : Galllpolls, Econo Travel
employee.
pavld P .· Fahringer, 29, Pittsburgh, Pa., supervisor, and Karen
A.; Houston, 29, 53 Grape St.,

bookkeeper.
John L. Damron, '57, 117 Bastian! ~--~~~~~~

D~ve. Kaiser Aluminum employee,
ani! Leoma J. White, 48, Rt. 3,
Gaillpolis, Rlo Grande College
employee.
Rlchard D. Burris, 23, Rt. 2,
VInton, Bob Evans Farms employee, and Carlena K. Jones, 18, Rt.
2, McArthur, dental assistance.
Joseph C. Hurlow, 19, Rt.l, Crown
City, laborer, and ValleryG.Cox,31,
2018 Eastern Ave., homemaker.
Gerald E .. Roach Jr., 21, Rt. 3,
Galllpolls, student, and Anne J .
Wiseman, 18, 30 Oakwood Drtve,
student.
Harvey A. Brown, 29, Bidwell,
unemployed, and Gayle C. Craig,31,
717ThlrdAve., teacher. ·
Richard N. Haldmlan, 25, 26
Central Ave., unemployed, and
Debra S. Alexander, 25, 26 Central
Ave., mother.
Thomas W. Shope, 41, Kanauga,
retired, and Emma Gibson, 35,
Kanauga, housewife.

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Allllrew's gnaclmoUier, Mn. Erneo!t Lamberi, (above)
lbe pi'DiftiD pceaallld by tbe WMulee for AcblevsDea&amp; Ill Jluml!n
P......,1, udloeepnecat*oltbel tM- Al!fP*,volt•e.enLinda
Wrflbt. Vldly ~Mid n.- WiiiJrao, MJn.we crawllnJ by
plol I '*'c. In I*, I* !111M lllld lep lin!~ M weD Mlhe bead 111111
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Plants confiscated
POMEROY --Friday afternoon
the Meigs County Sherltf's Depart- ·
men! seized 68 marijuana plants at
OWl Hollow, Orange Township.
A spokesman for the sheriff's
department reported the prosecutIng attorney's otflce is to tile a
motion In Meigs County Common
~leas Court for an order authorlzlng
deStruction of plants that have been
seized over the past several lveeks.

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they understood why there was
such a long walt. Famllles were
there with their brain-damaged
children from all over the world.
Andrew was born with mlld brain
damage, then at 15 months had a
106 degree temperature which
resulted In seizures of a length to
cause more brain damage.
His grandmother who arranged
the trtp to Philadelphia and now
supervises the program, said that
untll the seizures started, he could
function fairly well. Since then, he
has not been able to talk, walk, or
even sit up without being propped
by plllows and has had to be fed
blended or mashed food as well as
·given water with a spoon.
A healthy looking child, It has
been taking the famlly more than
an hour to feed h!m one meal. On
recommendation of the Institutes
he Is now fed six 20-mlnute meals
and the foods are more natural with
sugar, salt, andpreservaUves being
ellrnlnated.
His medication has been de-

creased although he remains on
phenobarbital twice a day to control
the . seizures which someUmes
occur three or four times an ho14r.
Mrs. Lambert says that already she
Is beglnnlng to notice a decrease In
the Intensity of the seizures.
Special equipment had to be bunt
to carry out the therapy and
exercise prescrtbed !or Ahdrew.
Relatives, Raymond and Prexal
Lambert, assisted by Paul Lambert, an electliclan, wasted no Ume
In gelling it ready.
The equipment Includes a large
light box with.a glass top onto which
Andrew Is placed on his stomach.
Five large llght · bulbs lns!de are
then flashed on and otf at intervals.
Mrs. Lambert explained that the
youngster sees In outllne form onlY,
and that the daUy repeated use of
flashing lights sends a message to
his brain to dllate the pupils. This,
she sa!d, wUl In time Improve his
sight. In fact, Mrs. Lambert said
that the Institutes project that by
Dec. 12 when the chlld is taken back
for review of his progress, hewUl be
able to see a face.
A long boxed-In slant sHde Is used

In the daytime to teach the as to be draft free since the only
youngster to crawl, and at night is clothing recommended for Andrew,
awake or asleep, is a diaper and a
laid flat and serves as his bed.
A large table padded and covered shirt.
With plastic Is used for "pattern· ' To carry out the treatment
lng," an exercise earned out by progam, expected to be ongoing
three adults where the arms and for years, takes 18 adults working In
two hour shifts In teams of three ·
legs and head are manipulated in a
from
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a
crawllng fashion, and where "tacThe youngster's grandweek.
tll," a sort of massaging is done, ad
mother
records every procedure
well as "panning'' where pie pans
every day as well as any progress
are banged together to make a loud
noise recommended for condition- noted. These reports are sent
pertodlcally to the Institutes for
Ing Andrew to noises and to also
evaluation.
stimulate his healing.
Another procedure carlied out
Relatives, neighbors and
for Andrew Is called "masking." A members of the famlly's church
plastic hag Cllllltraption is placed (the Rutland Church of God) have
over his face 72 times a day for 75 rallled around and are giving their
seconds each t!me and he breathes Ume to give Andrew his chance at a
In and out of it. This technique is more normal U!e.
Mrs. Lambert, whlletaklng!tone
designed to get more oxygen to his
brain.
day at a time, ls concerned about
Temporalily, tl)e Uvlng room of having enough people to carry out
the Lambert home has been turned the program day after day after
Into the treatment center. How- day.
The farnlly would welcome help
ever, lumber has been donated and
either on a regular dally basis or
volunteers are now buUdlng a
special J'OOll! onto the elder Lam- occasionally as needed. The
berts' home which will be "An· number to call If you'd like to
drew's place." It Is constructed so volunteer is 742-2545.

�•

September 18, 1983

Pomell)y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Pleatant W. Va.

f'age-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 18, 1M3

:~B:~=t=of7t7h;e~B=en~d~==============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===.====~~~~~~~~~

.

Calendar

=New emergency numbers
listed for residents

SUNDAY

POMEROY - Homecoming
services will be held Sunday at
the Mt Hennon United Brethren
in Christ Church, Texas Com·
muinity. Phll Thomas of Cool·
ville will be speaking and singing
du ring afternoon services atl:ll
p.m. Sunday School at 9: ll a.in.
worship service at 10: :I} a.m. and
potluck dlnnec at noon, Public
invited.
LA URAL CLIFF- Mortgage
bunning seJV!ces will be held

Sunday at 10: ll a.m. at the
Laurel CUff Freewill Methodist
Church. Public invited.

We Re .erve The Right To

Umit Quantities.

STORE HOURS

Mon.-Sat 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU AT., SEPT. 24, 1983

,
·

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• GALLIPOLIS - Evangelist
€huck Redford will minister at
i!:45 and 7 p.m., Sunday at the
lgpthouse Tabernacle Assem·
, y of God. Revival services will
be held Sunday through Friday,
7 p.m. nightly.

" : . CROWN CITY - Dale Sand.ers will be guest speaker at the
Mt Zion Baptist Church in
: · .Crown City Sunday at 7 p.m.
: ' RODNEY - Rodney Metho:. dist Church will observe their
.annual homecoming Sunday
· · beginning at 10 a.m., and
worship seJV!ce at 11 a.m.
Basket dinner at noon, and the
Sunrise Gospel Singers will
appear at 1: ll p.m.

With tl!'e birthday people is Edlty
Grover Burton who will be observ·
lng her 90th.anniversary on Satur·
day. Sept. 24. Cards may be sent to
her at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center, Rock Sptlngs Road,
Pomeroy.

Leona Hensley is looking for a
· pllotograph of tbe old Methodist
Church whlch was located near
. Sand HUl Cemetery. This was back
about 1890. If you have oDe among
: your collectibles, would you contact
Mrs. Hensley at Long Bottom? '

29
Ground Chuck.ul!;
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

__

Ambitious members of the
Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department will be staging another
• A couple ol reminders lor today of their chicken barbecues begin·
nlng at 11 a.m. next Sunday, Sept.
~
At 10:30 a.m. this morning, 25. Thecompletedlnnerls$3.50and
.. mortgage burning ""remonles will . will be s_erved at department
: be held ·at the Laurel CUff ·Free headquarters in TUppers Plalits.
: Methodist Church. The congrega• tton Is nine years ahead in paying
Mrs. Edna Cooper, Mulberry
~ off the mortgage on the church. The
Heights, will observe her OOth
• Rev. Eugene Buckley, a former birthday on Sept. 26 and will be
' pastor, will be speali.er. ·
celebrating the event on the 25th
: At noon, the annual party will be with her daughter, Mrs. Dan White,
" held lor all members or Drew . Porneroy, and son, Wlillam G.
~ WebsterPost39,AmerlcanLegton,
Cooper, Morehead City, N.C., and
" who helped.with the motor vehicle !heir farnllles and her brother
~ parking at. the Meigs ())unty F'aii. ··Lester Hart Ql PomerOy. Fl'i~
~ Post members did again a corn· &lt; are having a card shower. The
; mendable job with the parking address, ol course, Is Mulberry
:- chore - not an easy one. Dinner Heights, Pomeroy.
:: wlll be served at 1 p.m. today.
Friday's rain - as light as It was
: Edison Hobstetter observed his - should help all of us to keep ·
::.78th birthday TUesday and on the smlling ... We don't get so much
:. 28th of this month wlll mark his 55th dust in our teeth.

$· 19 :
8

Chuck Roast ..... ~ ~.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$ 89
¢ Round Steak..... !~-.
·.

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GRADE A

Whole Chickens~.

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VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Barrett, Langsville, and
Rev. and Mrs. Noble Russell,
Vinton, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their
children, Peggy Barrell and Law·

Thelma Firchpatrick,
Walter Ellis

Wiseman - Roach.___~-GALLIPOLIS - Plans are com·
pleted for the open churcjl wedding
of Anne Wiseman and Gerald
Roach Jr.
The wedding will be held at St.

Louts Catholic Church Sept. 24.
Music will begin at 6:45 p.m. and
the ceremony at 7: ll p.m. Father
Wllliams Myers will of!lciate.

Bailey - Venoy_ _ _ _ __
POMEROY - Plans h;tve been
completed for ·the open chureh
wedding of Brenda Kay Bailey,
daugliter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Bailey, and Craig Venoy, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Ed Venoy.
The wedding will take place at

6: 30,p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 24 , at

POMEROY - Bookmobile service in Melg~ County is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmoblle schedule for Mon·
day, Sept. 19 - Hemlock Grove
(Post O!flce), 2: 45-3: 15 p.m.; Pageville (Store), 3:554: 25t?.m.; Harrisonville (Church), 4:35-5:05 p.m.;
New Lltna Rd. (one mile south of

.
W1eners................
SUPERIOR FRANKIES

12 OZ. PKG.

Fort Meigs), 5:20-6 p.m.: Rutland
(Depot St.) , 6:40-8:10 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 21 - Chester
(Fire Station), 2: 15-2:45 p.m.; Keno
(north side of Keno Bridge), 3-3: 30
p.m.; Success Road (near 39060),
3: 41}4: 15 p.m.; Long Bottom (Post
Office), 4:25-5:10 p.m.; Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 5:211-6:10 p.m.;
TUppers Plains . (Lodwick's). 7: 107:40 p.m.; Baum Addition, 8-8:30

p.m.

ACROSS
·r~IE
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POMEROY - The Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Men's Fellowship will meet at
the Bradford Church of Christ
Monday at 7 p.m. There will be a
short business meeting following

...

$

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSETT

Potatoes ........

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Monday thru Friday
9AMto9PM

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as guest speaker.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce board of
direCtors will meet at noon
TUesday in the Meigs Inn. All
board members are urged to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette .
White Shrine will meet at 7::11 1
p.m. TUesday at the masonic
temple.
GALLIPOLIS - St. Louis
Catholic Women wiD meet TUesdaY, Mass Is slated lor 6 p.m.
and a covered dish dinner has
been set for 6: :JJ p.m. AI
Gabrielli w1l1 present a t1lm on
the history of tbe parish. All
parish women are Invited to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS Monthly
meeting of the American Legion
Auxlllary Unit 27 will be held at 7
p.m. TUesday in the legion hall. 1
l'luckeye Girls State delegates ·
will be introduced. Members are
.!0 bring cookies.

Helping hand
WASHINGTON (AP)- When tbe
FBI left tbe squeeze of government
cutbacks; the trade association for
the nation's banks agreed to lend a

• GARLAND M. DAVlS
51"2 Secortd Ave.
Gellipolls, Oh.
Ph. 446-1235

Home lU-9691

MODERN WOODMEN :
OF AMERICA
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FraJ(&gt;rnal.L•fe
Home Oll1 ce. •

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Rock- lsland .. l~hno•s • :-·. •

In diamonds, as in all things beautiful, . ·
Lazare Kaplan &amp; there iS an ideal. If you are Interested

Sons has been dedi·
.
in purchasing a d iacated to achieving the ideal for mond-for yourself or as a gift-we
three generations. cutting dia-. invite you to come In to see our
monds to bring out all of their natu· selection of LK Ideal Cut Dt'a ral brilliance and beauty As a re- · monds~· We will be pleased to
sull. lJ&lt; Ideal Cut Diamonds h&lt;Ml be· answer your queslions and assist
come the standard lor excellence you in choosing a diamond that Is
among those who va lue beauty. idea lfor you.
·

i2r

(.,t,ll f0~

446-9510

-

IDEALOJT

.

DIAMOND ' ,
JEWELER

MeiSQge fnlm The Bible ...

GOD FORMED US

.'

PARKAY
VALVOLINE

¢

Motor Oil ...........~~

$

MAXWELL HOUSE .

.
Coffee •••••••••••••••••
3 LB. CAN

60th anniversary

, RIO GRANDE - Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence H. Davis of Rio Grande
:ObseM!d tbelr lllth wedding ann!·
·versary on Sept. 8.
: Mrs. Davis IS tbe former Goldie
::rhome, daughter .or' tbe late Alva
:and Ruth '!borne. He Is the son of
"the late Enos and Margaret Davis,
:and retired !rom farmlDg in 1967.
; The couple have tJu_"ee chlldren,

TIIESDAY

•:
MIDDLEPORT - Annual
, father-oon banquet of Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp; AM, will be
• held at 6: ll p.m. TUesday with
Charles A. Brown, Portsmouth,

Ask me about our new Flexible
Pr emium Annu ity and its tax·
tree interest accumulations.

Af'PQINIIIJI~Nl

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Davis

~Davis,

59
2% Milk.... ~~!~·~~!~.$

.'

'·'

•

FLAVORITE

POMEROY - Past matrons
of Harrisonville Chapter 255,
Order of the Eastern Star, will
'meet at 7:ll Monday nlghtatthe
home of Gracie Wllson.

·.•.'

.''

individual retirement account .
(IRA) .

Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

•
•

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• FOR RETIREMENT!
• ON TAXES!
wlih - a M.odern Woodmen

'A NEW DIRECTFON IN HAIR DESIGN "

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Awdllary Unit 602 will
hold a picnic at 6 p.m. Monday at
Lewis Park. Covered dish and
table service are required.
..
RACINE - Soulbern Local
' Board of Education will meet at
'.'. 7-p.m. Monday in tbe high school
:.;..· .cafeteria.

·'.

SAVE

renee Russell.
The open church wedding wili
take place Sept. 16, 7:30p.m. at the
Morgan Center Wesleyan Church.
Miss Barrett attended the Meigs
High School.
Russell Is a graduate of Nonh
Gallla High School and is employed
at By-Line Manufacturing and
Upholstery Co., Jackson.

Meigs bookmobile schedule

39

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Fitchpatrick - Roach _ _ __

·• the revival servJce.

..'.

Defense Officer stationed at Schofield Barracks, Hawall. He was
previously a police otflcer for ~
City of Gallipolis and worked for tbe
Attorney General's office, tnstruciing for the Ohio Peace Offlcet
Training Academy.
A May wedding Is planned ti.
Lyndhurst .

hand. .
the Pomeroy Chureh ol Christ.
Pre-nuptial music will begin at 6
In 1982, the FBI was forced for
p.m. Nell Proudfoot will perform · budget reasons to suspend a
fingerprint card processing service
the ceremony.
The reception will be held in the used by financial Institutions to
social room of the church.
check for any crlmlnal records of
new or prospective bank
employees.
To keep the seJV!ce avallableto Its
RUTLAND - The open church College Ave., Rutland.
member banks, tile American,
· The · Rev. ··j'ohn ·Evai:tS 'will
·wedding of Theltna: .J ean Fltchi')a·
~lafuq stepped in and
perform
iliot ceremony'. '8otl1 Mtss · Bankers
irtck and Walter Arthur Ellis will lie "
became the offiCial fingerprint card
held Sunday, Sept. 25, at 2 p.m. at Fitchpatrlck and Ellis attended
processor for its members.
the Rutland Church of God, Main Meigs High School. He is In the
Anny National Guard at Point
St., Rutland.
Miss Fltchpatrtck Is the daughter Pleasant.
' A reception will be held at the
of Claude and Eunice Fitchpatrlck,
groom's
home following the
Rot~te 1, Rutland, and Ellls is the
son of Roy A. and Clara M. Ellis, wedding.

MONDAY
··.·;,
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'

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Homer H. Hankins announce the
engagement of their son, First
Ueutenant Kralg E. Hankins to
Judith A. Bliss, daughter of Jack C.
Bliss and the late Mrs. Gene D.
BUss of Lyndhurst, Ohio.
Miss Bliss is a graduate of John
Carroll University and Is attending
Case Western Reserve University
School or Law.
Hankins Is a U.S. Army Air

Barrett - Russell,______

John Mohler, Rt. 1, Middleport, is ·
again the first to mall his Christmas
cards - now that's being on the
ball. John's health continues to
Improve and he Is most grateful for
that.

f

uming ceremony to mark the
yment on the church struc
I he heid at the Laurel CUff
ethodlst Church durtng the 10:
, ,m. worship service Sunday.
• GALLIPOLIS- The Gabriel
· Quartet will sing at Ellzabeth
' Chapel Church, located slx rniles
: south of Gaillpolis, off Route 218
: a.t Raccoon Creek Bridge, Sun·
, day, 7 p.m. The Rev. Alfred
: Holley, pastor, and the Rev. Ted
• Wooten, associate pastor, invite
: to publlc to attend.
'

Kraig Hankins,
Judith Bliss

Emergency Med·

;leal SeiVIce. For• merly, you could
•cali the i'esldence
Mrs. Mae
tCleland, 949-2121. However, that
; number Is now discontinued, so
: please put the new number where
: YOU can find It easlly. Hopetully,
• ~u won't need It - but do be
: prepared, Just in case.

~

: GALLIPOLIS - The Ga111polis ChurCh of Christ in Christian
· Union will have Homecoming
· Services Sunday, with preach·
ing by tbe Rev. John Jenkins,
· . ·former pastor, at io: 30 a.m. ·
· · : Basket dinner will follow the
morning worship.

Hankins - Bliss ______

By BOB HOEFUCH
year In being associated with the
I! you are In an area served by the fol'lllJ'r Pomeroy National Bank,
Ractrie Fire Department, please Jot · now'Bank One.
down the number you are to calli!
you need tbe
Mary and Pat O'B'rten a few days
• 'l'he number Is
ago found that a lew head of cattle
992~ and this
had joined their herd. I assume by
•goes lhi-cugh the
this llme the owner has claimed
Meigs County
them.

LAURAL CLIFF- A mortgag

·: GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
·t:ounty Historical Society will
meet Sunday, 2: ll p.m., at St.
.l'eter's Episcopal Church,
. ••;lpeaker will be Anne Bradbury.
'·-the publlc is Invited to attend.
!l'he Board of Trustees will meet
)I 1 p.m.

-------Engagements--------

•'

- GAL LIPOLIS - Coalton
&lt;;:ountry Jubilee will be Sun.
day,apprmdmately three .rnlles
below Erueka, admission free,
l;lring youyr own lawn chalr,
canceUed In the event of rain ..

The Sunday Tirnes-S.ntinel-f'age-&amp;-3

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

Margarine ...... ~~.

Delbert of Grove City, Ohio; Mrs.
Wlillam (Imogene) Morbltzer and
Mrs. Morgan (Norma) Copley,
both or ColumbUs. They have eight
grandchildren and two great·
grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis celebrated
with the gathering or !be Thome
family reunion at tbe Salt Fork
State Park Lodge at Cambridge.

The

300 Second Ave.

Shoe Cafe

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0 .

Second Awnue

•
•

•

••
I

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99

69

•

FRI SAT SUN 8EP 18·18

•

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FLAVORITE

SUGAR
SLB.

$149

Limit One Per Customer.
. Good Only At Powell's
Offer EKpires Sept. 24, 1983

OXYDOL DETERGENT

·aoz.

$299

Umit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 24. 1983

CORONET DELTA

ASST. BATH TISSUE
4 ROLL
PK.

69¢

Umit One Per Cuetomer
.Good Only At Powell's
. Offer Explrea Sept. 24. 1983

(For Free Bible Cooespondence CoiNSe Wrne ... )
'

GOLD MEDAL

'••

ON

FLOUR

••

Coats &amp; Sweaters

SLB. BAG

89¢

Limit One Par Customer
Good Only At Powell's
•
• · Offer Expires Sept. 24, 1983

••

•

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••

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•

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.••
•

•

William B. Ku&amp;hn
Man has a two-fold nature. physical and spirrrual. He did not evolve from alower form of life into his present likeness, but was designed and made by God ltle
Creator, in the beginning on the sixth day (Gen. 1:31).
'
Physical Man: "Bara" is translated "crealed," meaning to call into existencethat which previously did not exist (Gen. 1:1, 27). "Asah" is translated 'make".
denoting something made from ltle materialltlat was in existence (Gen. 1:2~. ·
"Yarsa( is translated "formed," implying the forming of something from the·
material existing (Gen. 2: 7). Man was the earth, ltle materialthat ltleo existed after
having been created (Gen. 1:9, 10). Wrrh extreme personal care and work of God : ·
man was formed and organ~ed by the Spirit so lhat ltle particles of dust. forminr
the f~arfully and wonderfully made framework of man with his physical and
mental faculties (Ps. 139:14), rema1ned Intact. Man's fleshly body, derived from
the dust of the earth, is perishable and subject to corruption (Eccl. 3:18. 20; Job
10: 9; Ps. 103:14). Man did not accidentally spring from matter, nor did he evolvefrom the umverse, but was created, made, and formed by ltle power of God, the · ·
Divme Creator. The word "formed" (yarsar) is not used in regard to other living
crllalures, but only to man. This distinguishes man from all the other living '
creatures, domesticated and undomesticated, making him superior over ltlem. All
living creatures were created at the proper time to his natural habitat. So rr was
wrrh man. He was·lfle last of God 's creation since he was to have ltle dominion
over all, making him superior.
.
Splr~ual man: Man being made in ltle image of God and becoming a living
soul, denotes the sp1rttual make-up of man. "Us" and 'our image" (Gen 1:26)'
suggest ltle tulness of the Godhead (God, ltle Word, and ltle Holy spirit) which was·
active in the creation. God was the Original Designer, the source of al creation. He'
was the Creator (Gen. I: I). The Word was God's agent in creation (Jno. l:l-3, 10: I'
Cor. 8:6; Col. 1:16; Heb. 1:2). The Holy Spirtt was the Organizer, giving form to it,
g1v1ng and estabhshmg the laws in ltle realm ol nalure, giving procreative power of
the continuation of lfle creation, and plunging ltle creation upon its mission in ltle'
umverse (Gen. 1:2, II, 24). God is infinite and is not fimrred in the flesh and bones(Jno. 4:24; Lk. 24:39): The material or fleshly body was not formed in His image,'
but the Intellectual, h1s m1nd and soul, formed after the perfect nature of God. This'
image con~ss rf knowledge, righteousness, and holiness (Eph. 4:24; Col. 3:101:
Man was, at the time of his creation, wise in knowledge, righteous in his life, and
holy in sporit. Man exercised his intellectual being by giving names to evei'J living'
creature (Gen. 2:19, 30). Man exercises his power by giving dominion over an·
things to him. Ma~ called his companion "woman", whom God made trom his ril)
(Gen. 1:21-23). How wonderful tt is to know ltlat we are made in the image of God!

ONE WEEK ONLY
SEPT. 17-24

Chapel Hill Church of Christ _
Bulaville Aoad • P.O. Box 308
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 46631
Sund1y Momlng

fllble Study 1 :30
Worltllp 10:30

IUAdl'l' Ev1nh1g

WOIIhip 1 :00

...,.

" M".... trom
the • ..,.. ..
Dl61y-WJEH

--- &amp;tc. o

..

11 :Ill A.M.

' 'The Church with the Meotoge"

,.,...... et.nMI

u..... uo 1.111.

'

�Pag1

11-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Julie Napf)er, Steven Stanley

a

Jeff Tackett, Obetz, was best
man. He and the groom wore navy
blue suits with white carnation
boutonnieres.
The reception W'IS held at the
N828rene Fellowship Hall. The
three-tiered cake was decorated
with a gazebo surrounded by blue
and pink flowers with two heart·
shaped cakes at Its side.
Serving at the reception were
Wtlma and Anna Davidson and
Sherry Arnold, cousin of the bride.
Beverly Napper, sister of the
bride, registered the guests, and
Rebecca and Roberta Napper, twin
sisters of the bride, dlstrlbuted rice
bags.
After a wedding trip to Florida,
the couple now reside in Obetz.
The bril\e Is a graduate of Meigs
lllgh School.
The groom, a graduate of Meigs
lllgh School and Ohio University
College of Engineeling; Is em·
played at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. in
Columbus.
.
Out of town guests were Mrs.
Walter Brewe~. Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. George Estep, Teresa and
Allee, McConnelsville; Bob Joseph,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Denzel
Stanley, Albany; Jell. and Brenda
TacRett, obf,tz; Mr. a-nd Mrs.
Wllllam Scott, Nelsonville; Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Redwine and tamtly,
Lexington, Ky., and Mr. and Mrs.
'J ohn Townsend, Westerville.

Mr. ana Mrs. Jeffrey Thomas Smith

Gallia Seniors' activities
GALLIPOUS - Activities for
the week of Sept. l!i-23 at the Senior
Citizens ·Center located at Z!l
JacksOn Pike are as follows:
. Monday, Sept. 19 - ChoJ.'US, 1-.3
p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. ll - S.T.O.P.
Clllss, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15a.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 21 - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.; Blood Pressure Check,
1:00 p.m. (tentatively scheduled).
Thursday, Sept. 22-BibleStudy,
11 a.m.-noon; Bingo Games, )·3
p.m.
Friday, Sept. 23- Art Class, 1·3
p.m.; Craft Mlni·Course, 1·3 p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 24- Yoga Class,
10:30 a.m.
Burlington, North Carolina Trip,
Sept. :n-2i,22, 1983. Leave center at

7:30a.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
wlll serve the following menus:
Monday - Spaghetti, tossed
salad, Ita11an bread, pears, butter,
mtlk.
Tuesday- Meat loaf and tomato
sauce, parslled potatoes, peas,
'p each cobbler, hot rolls, butter,
milk.
Wednesday - Roast beef and
gravy, mashed potatoes, lemon
)ella salad, oatmeal cookies, bread,
butter, mtlk.
Thursday - Chicken and rice,
green beans, beets, fruit cup and
coconut, bread, butter.
Friday - Beef barbecue, cole
slaw,
applesauce, bun, butter'
mtlk.
,
Choice of beverage served with
each meal. Meals subject tochan!Je
without notlce.

GALLIPOLJS - VIdeo cassettes
are available at the Dr. Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library.
Part of theroUection is In VHSand
part In BETA format.
Some of the titles that are
available duling September and
October are "West Slse Story,"
"Rocky," "Star Wars," .. Mr. Ma·
goo in Sherwood Forest" and
"Mickey Mouse."
These may be checked out for
three days. Therelsa$5Jatecharge
per day if held beyond the three-day

period. The library belongs to a
group of libraries, and at the end of
every two months the coUections of
video cassettes in the vartous
libraries wlll be exchanged with
another library so there will be a
different selection every two

months.
Through the year more than 200
different video cassettes will be
avatlable for the public's use.
H there are questions concerning
video cassettes call, or stop by the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library, 641 Second Ave.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulbeny
Heights Pomeroy Invites all el·
derly
the countY fD take part in
activities at the center. The center
1s open Monday through Friday
from 8: oo a.m. fD 4: :lJ p.m.
Schedule of actlvlties tor the
week of Sept. lll-23 Is as !ollows:
Monday - Pbyslcal fitness, 11: 00
a.m.; square dance, 1 p.m.
Tuesday- Center blood~
cllnlc, 10 a.m.-noon; Chorus prac·
tlce, 1·2 p.m.
Wednesday - Physical tltness,
11::ll a.m.; bingo, 1·2 p.m.; !Jo.
wllng, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday - Quarterly blrtbday
party.
Friday - Physical Fitness, 11: 00
a.m.
Coming events:
Make plans now to attend the
center 011 Tuesday for blood
pressure reading. This 1s a good
way fD keep check on your blood
pressure free of cbarge. Call ahead
for your meal reservation.
Quarterly birthday party WW be
held Thursday. there will he games
and enterllllnrnent prior fD the noon
meal. Followtng dinner, seniors
celebrating their blrtbdays In July,
August and September WW be
bonored. There WW be music tOr

oi

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Craig Stanley
. ··'

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Best man was Ron TaWney.
GALLIPOLJS The First
Church of the Nazarene was the Ushers were Matthew Withee and
setting for the June 15 wedding of John Brammer. They wore white
PaJl.lela Sye McCarty and Jeffrey tu.x~.
. Thomas,Srnlth. She Is the daughtet • 1'he bride's mother wore a formal
· of Mr. and Mrs: Jesse White, go\vn of blue ~ with a JeweU
Gallipolis and Paul McCarty of neckllne, with empire waistline and
Johnston City, Tenn. He is the son of A-llne skirt. A caplet covered the
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Smith, shoulders into a butlertly sleeve.
Gallipolis.
Flower girl was J aclde Merry and
The ceremony was officiated by rlngbearer was lllck McCarty,
the Rev. George Jones, and music nephew or the bride.
was provided by Cindy Borne,
A reception followed In the church
organist and John Borne, vocalist.
fellowship room. The bride's table
Escorted to the alter by her was decomted with greenery and
brother, JohnM.McCarty, the bride
rainbow
wedding
wore a white gown of English sheer cake
wascarnations.
topped withThe
a bride
and
net with a sweetheart neckline and
empire waist, with long sleeves ro::n.and featured a water
!lttedatthewrlst. The bouffant skirt
Assisting at the reception were
featured five tiers of reembroldered Madge Neal, Lara Earwood, Mary
chantilly lace, !lowing Into a chapel Putney and Anita Merry. Mrs.
train. Poms of reembroldered George Jones attended the guest
chantilly lace highlighted the neck· register.
line, sleeves and waist of the dress.
The bride Is a graduate to Gallla
She also wore a small Jullet cap of Academy lllgh School. She Js alace, holding a veil and blusher. Tha supervisor at Duff's Smorgasboard
cap and vell were trimmed with ltl Gallipolis.
seed pearls and chantilly lace
The groom Is also a graduate of
rosettes.
·
Gallia Academy High School, and is
Maid of bonorwas Betty Johnson,
employed as a medical assistant at
and bridesmaids were Allee FreeSoutheastern Equipment Co.
man and Yvonne Walters. They
The couple resides at Honey·
woregownsofralnbowdottedswtss. . suckle Hill Apartments.

BASS - BASS - BASS- BASS- BASS - BASS- BASS- BASS-

..
Walking Shoes ~.
"'
..
"NICK"
~
MEN'S

I

laupe or .
Brown

~

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~1:
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The

·

:ton Second Ave.
~

ShOe Ca1.e

lafayette Mall

Gallipolis, 0.

Flip &amp; Sew• Machine
Model1425N

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING
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pur t t&gt;;l~t'd

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wu •

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Sale Pgrice

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1700

$3

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Our Reg. 4.88

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48·oz. • Size Crystal Vanish®"

Rubbermald®Wastebasket

Helps to disinfect, and remove
stains from toilet bowl. Save.

20-qt. capacity. Durable plastic. Color cholce.14Y.x8Y.x15".

·Net WI .

19.88

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AM/FM L.E.D. Clock Radio

Wake to radio, buzzer. "Feather-touch" snooze; sleep switch.

•

Sole Price

Sale Price

~

'4.66

3.66

~

Power Strip® Sponge Mop

Angler®.Household Broom

Cellulose sponge with scrubbing power. Squeeze handle.

"Get the dirt other brooms
miss." Sturdy plastic bristles.

Film Oevelopin

..

Special!

Develop And Print
Roll Of Color Film

LOGAN MONUMENT COMPANY, INC.
POMEROY, OHIO
Leo Vaughan, Mgr.

VINTON, OHIO
James 0. Bush. Mgr.

,,

Ph. 982-2688 .

MARAUDERS
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SOUTHERN .

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TORNADOES

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SCHOOL SWEATERS

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24 oz.

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With ammonia.
Trigger sprayer.

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most belutiful head of hair .

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Total Savings

Kmart Dry Roast
Peanuts
Regular or Unsalted.

707

Sale Price

1nd Wlin't llilmlp hair.
They're made from 111 natural inplients. They 1111
so safe, you Clfl Mil driri·
them. .They ldd shine and
luster to the hair. For the

WOOL •••••••••••••••••••••• $2550:.
ACRYLIC ••....•...••...•.•. $1850 ::
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exposure roll of
Our Reg. Focal"' or KodaLow Prices color"' II and other
C-41 film. Save.

If you bring a friend to Raphael's Hair Remedies durthe month of September, you and your friend will
-get a $5.00 discount

•

Singer Rebate

•

Sale Price

Our Reg. 17.58

•A Trademark ol The Singer Company.

THE FABRIC SHOP

.l!llft tam•"'

~

Automatically cleans and deodorizes. Tints water. ·12-11. oz.

MONOGRAMMED

SavingsOt!
Regular Price

on _ooo

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K mil'! • II .s~ue ~ A• r1 Chflco on,.,..,.,_.,
lor 'lie metCnAri(Jose l()nf! •1!'111 01 &lt;I!IMiOtl •

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WHITE FALCONS

Free-Arm Machine

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a.o ver1o sea olem •• not avll&lt;labiG 16r

Each
Sale Price

SPRING VAUEY PLAZA- GAUIPOUS

Singer Rebate

Savings Off
Regular Price

luni" "'~~n1100.1 o5 10 r~~ &lt;!•ery 01&lt;1•~

-

Blue Or Green

PHOIO&amp;RAPIIY

35;

75

ClJ•

A TOTALLY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

Li/t~

$

$

baby's breath.
Bruce Boyer served as best man
and Carl Paulson was groomsman.
The nower girl, Becky Hot!man,
sister of the groom, wore a long
white dress with tloral plint, daisies
In her halT, and carried a basket of
petal . daisies. .Vincent . Broderick· ·
·.was ihe i1ilg . bearer an'd he· was
dressed in a blue sailor outfit and·
carried the lings on a white lace
and satin plllow.
A reception was held lmmedlately following the ceremony.
The bride's laNe featured a
three-tiered white on White wedding
cake trlmmed In yellow and blue
daisies. Between each tier was a
bouquet of yellow and blue daisies
.and baby's breath tied with match·
log ribbon. The cake was topped
with a gazebo decorated with
yellow arid blue daisies, and a
miniature.bride and groom stood In
the doorway. Two side cakes were
Inscribed with the names of the
wedding couple. Sandwiches,
punch, nuts, mblts and coffee were
served bY Oteryl Burris, Bonnie
Scott, and Linda Broderick.
The bride Is a graduate of Meigs
lllgb and ~ is now living with
herparents at Route 4, Pomeroy
while attending Ohio University.
Chappelear is In the U.S. Navy
stationed at Great Lakes.

escorted

OUR SCENE MACHINE HAS MORE THAN 50 BACKGROUNDS
FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE. THE GREAT OUTDOORS IN THE COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE OF OUR STUDIO.

WAHAMA

25

POMEROY ..: The double-ring
weddlilg ceremony of Krls Lisa
Snowden and Robert Charles Chappelear was held Ma-y 21 at the borne
0( Helen and Paul Roush, the
groom's grandparents, Roush's
l,an~g. Racine.
:, TI!e b~ Is the daughter of
F.lorenc~'. and ~rnol!l Gene
SnoWden Jr.. and the groom Is the
son of Bruce and Patti Hoffman,
·and the late Wayne Chappelear.
; The Rev. Richard Rothernlch
~clated at the ceremony, The
archwaywasdecoratedwithyeUow
daisies, fern, white doves and
rjbbon. The bride was given in
marriage by her parents and
to the altar by her father.
. For the wedding the groom wore
hls U.S. Navy dress blues. The
bride's gown was VlcfDrian style of
allo()Ver venJ.se lace. Tile waist was
III'Cf!ltted with white satin ribbon
~th fabric daisy motifs. The bride
carried a booquet of yeUow roses,
pastel daisies and baby's breath
With ftowlllg pastel ribbon strea·
mers tied in lovers' knots.
· Paula Harten and Cindy Crooks
.Jere the bridesmaids. They wore
yellow tiered dresses with spaghetti
straps that were trimmed In white
lace and ribbon. Each carried a
white lace fan decorated with
and
blue and white

·

SavingsOt!
Regular Price

50

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

Open Daily 1 0·9;
Sunday 1-6

Miss Snowden, Mr. Chappelear
trades vows in Racine ceremony

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS'.'·

75

$
$

on campus, concludes Qleir final
preparation for commissioning as
second Ueutenant in the United
States Anny Reserve.
Thousands of cadets from col·
leges and universities throughout
the nation attended the challenging
Advanced Camp.
For the first two weeks of camp,
thecadetsweresubjecttolntenslve
evaluation. Cadets were placed in
various leadership positions and
their performances closely monl·
tared by the cadre.
Training subjects ranged from

badges. These badges are awarded
fD cadets whO score exceptionally
high on a series of test subjects. .
"It was a memorable experience'
that enhanced my leadership capa· ·
blllties and provided me the ·
opportunity to test my mllltary'
knowledge," stated Cadet Robbins,
a prior service veteran. Robblnsfinished the camp in the upper 10 · .
percent of hls JO.person platoon and·'
Is now the cadet ·battallon com·.
mander at Rio Grande.
Each cadet received SIDI for
attending the camp. AddltlonaUy, ·
transportation from Ohio fD Wa1 •
shlngton was financed by the Army ,

Mr. and. Mrs. Robert Charles Chappelear

It"-jr;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

$

Model6136

PhoneU&amp;-~

ChesterPI'OwlllmeetMOIIdayat
Chester Elementary at 7: :lJ p.m.
Retreslunents WW be served and
child care provided. Parents are
urged fD attend.
(

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

"'I

land navigation to rappeUlng and
the filing of artWery. During the
last week the cadets conducted a
JS.hour air mobtle exercise. AJ .
though each cadet was tested on
physical fitness, land navigation
and markSmanship, leadership
was the paramount skill which was
emphasl2ed throughout the camp
cycle.
Of the five Rio Grande cadets
attending camp, three finished In
the upper third of their platoons and
two finished In the middle third.
Nelson was the recipient of a
physical tltnessrlbbon: Overly, and
Estep were given RECONDO

to meet

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.--.1 MEIGS

Deluxe Free-Arm Machine

*******

IP

Office Hours by Appointment Only

mE.

auvant't!O camp, m ..uwtlon

·

~~~~~~~~~:::::::;:::::::;~ "--'

BASS - BASS - BASS - BASS - BASS- BASS- BASS- BASS-

$}}0I Total Savings

Frankly, much depends on
CHECKUPS: HOW OFfEN? · your particular eye problem or
How often should you get an whether you're bothered by eye
eye examination?
strain or headaches. Most pea.
There are only two people who pie, too, can recognize changes
can answer tht question. One is In their vision. Seeing objects
your eye doctor. The other Is clearly at a distance or close up
may becoming more of a
you.
People who know they have problem. Perhaps the words In a
vision problems probably should book are becoming more
see their eye doctor at least once blurred at your normal reading
a year. This Is usuaUy recom· distance.
These are just some of the
mended for children and young
people whose bodies ~re stW symptoms that teD you a
gorwtng and changing. Once checkup is needed.
they reach adulthood and their
eye problems seem to be under
control, some people are mntent
In the H~leresf Of b e tter vis ion
to see their eye doctors every
/rom I he office of
.other year. Those rnltldJe.aged
' and beyond usually go back to
~ge W. Dllvll, O.D.
the once-a-year schedule.
458 Second Ave., Gallipolis ·'

Sl:pt. lll-23:
Monday - Macaroni and c~.
carrots, waldorf salad, Boton
cream pie.
Tuesday- sandwiches (OIIe-balf
pimmfD cheese 011 brown, one-balf
egg salad 011 white), green beans,
fruit cup; TI!XllS sheet cake.
Wednesday Pork chops,
creamed peas and potatoes, cole
slaw, fruit.
Thursday - Meat loaf, ovm·
browned potatoes, green beaDs,
roll, birthday cake and Ice cream.
Friday - Liver and onions 111
gravy, mashed potatoes, splMch,
orange/grapefruiVbananas.
Choice of milk, tea, coffee
av;dlllble da1ly.

1 ne

to their senloryearo!ROTC classes

Eti;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;C~L~OS~I~D;M~O~N~DA~Y~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I,

'
1

day of the reservation. The followlog menu Is planned lor the week &lt;t

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROM
GENERAL ALLERGIST

.. . .

g:
=

","·ij~7i.

servesabotmealatnoon~day.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

l

.,

RIO GRANDE - Five ' Rio
Grande College and Community
Colli!ge junior year Anny Reserve
Officer Training Corps (ROTC)
cadets recently graduated with
bonors 1mm the · six-week ROTC
Advancce camp at Fort Lewis,
_
Was!:.
Kenneth Estep of Chillicothe;
' Marjorie Nelson of Crooksvtlie;
Paul Overly n of Mount Vernon;
and Charles Phllllps and John
Robbins, both of JacksOn, wtll now
he entering their senior year of
ROTC after having successfully
completed the rigorous camp
requirements.

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

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

Rio cadets complete . training at camp ·

Call 992-2161 to make a l'l!llei'Vatlon
for a meal no later tllan 9 a.m. the

PTO

The Su!1day Times-Sentinel-Page-a-S

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Pleasa!11, W.Va.

entertalmnent aDd dancing WW
Callow birthday Jli n'atlons.
'!be 8l!llior nutrition program

.

Pamela Sue M&lt;Carty exchanges
vows with Jeffrey Thomas Smith

corn,

Library offers cassettes ·

$ep,.mber 18, 1983

Meigs senior activities

trade vows in Rutland ceremony
POMEROY - The Rutland ·
Church of the Nazarene was the
setting for the July 00 wedding of
Julie Ann Napper, to Steven Craig
Stanley.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. David Napper. Rutland,
and the groom Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Duane Stanley, Pomeroy.
The Rev. Lloyd Grimm per'
-formed the double-ling ceremony
!allowing a program of music by
Beverly Baylor, Gallipolis, organist
and soloist.
The altar was decorated with two
baskets of white mums and white
bows marked the family pews.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown of
polyester taffeta and sheer or·
ganza, fashioned With a sweetheart
neckllne, empire waist, long ta·
pered sleeves, and a tlowtng skirt
with attached train. The gown was
trimmed . with . alencon lace and
seed pearl acc,ents.
Her lace cap, also trimmed with
pearls, held a double tier fingertip
veil and blusher made of illusion
· and lace motifs. She carried a
bouquet of mums, and pink roses
with baby's breath and greenery
tied with blue and pink streamers.
Tammy .Johnson, Pomeroy, was
matd .of honor. She 'wore dusiy ;
rose gown with cream mlored trim,
and carried a bouquet of pink
carnations, baby's breath with
greenery, and ribbons.

. Seplilnlber 18, 1983

Pome10y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

"YOUR MONOGRAMMING HfADQUARTfRS" ,
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

STORE HOURS·

8:30A.M. TO 8:00P.M.
' FRI. 8:30A.M. TO 8:00P.M.

$15

: Aslc any
; 1tyll1t for
; Information.

Ph. 446-7090 or
/r

walk in.

Scatter Rug
Luxury high pile rug.
36x60" oblong. Machine wash·

·~

.

3.97

Our 5.97-7.97
I Quarts IOW40 011
All-weather motor
oil tor many cars.
5-qt. IOWSO, 3A7

~9la.

Sold 1n Sporthg Goods Dept,

3" pocket knife,

sharpening sticks,
or kit. sove now!

•
••

�Page-~ The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Debra Smith, Donald Hysell
solemnize vows in Rutland
RliTLAND - In an afternoon
ceremony Aug, 6 at the Rutland
Church ol the Nazarene. Debra
Darlene Smith and Donald Lee
Hysell exchanged wedding vows.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
· and Mrs. Herbert Smith of Middle·
port, ii.nd the groom the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Hysell. Rutland.
The Rev. Uoyd Grimm per·
formed the double ring ceremony
following a program of music by
Janice Grimm and Bllly Hall . The
altar was decorated with candela·
bra and bouquets of lavender ahd
· pink Cowers.
The guests and wedding party
entered the sanctuary through an
archway decorated In the wedding
colors.
Given in marrtage by her
parents, the bride wore a formal
gown fashioned with a high neck·
llne. full short sleeves, both accented with lace. The skirt flowed
Into a chapel train.
She wore a circlet of Cowers In
her hair with an attached vell of
Illusion, and carrted a cascade of
white roses with lavender and pink
accent. Her jewelry Included a
diamond necklace, gUt of the
groom.
MaldofhonorwasLisaMaurerof ·.
Brtdgepori-' Her -bridesmaidS were
Anna Sinlth, Middleport; Rhona
ADen, Columbus; Pam Smith,
Bridgeport; Sandy Hysell, Middleport; Allee Fox, Chester, W. Va.,
and Cheryl Thomas, Washington,
D. C. Becky Casto of Bridgeport
Was the Cower girl.
The at1endants wore lavender

floor-length gowns with ba ck
drapes and wore headpieces of
lavender and pink rosebuds
wreaths, They earned arrange·
ments of six lavender rosebuds and
baby's breath.
Richard Dean of Happy Hollow
Road, Middleport, was best man,
and the ushers were Tim Smith,
Bridgeport, brother of the bride;
David Hysell and Gary Hysell ,
Rutland, brothers of the groom;
"Danny Edwards , Rutland; Phillip.
Stewart, West Columbia ; Mark
Killingsworth, Huntington, w. va ,
Adam Grimm of New Haven was
the rlngbearer.
Following the ceremony a recep·
tlon was held at the Rutland Clvlc
Center. There were a buffet dinner
and dance durtng the evening.
Baskets of lavender and pink
Cowers and lavender tapers were
featured In the decorations.
The tiered wedding cake Included
a fountain and stairways leading to
side cakes, all decorated with
flowers 1n the weddlng ·co!ors.
.:\ttendlng the guest book was
Sheila Stewart,
The couple took a wedding trtp to
Burr Oak State Park. They now
reside In Rutland,
The .bride Js . a · graduate o!
Bridgeport High School and of the
Art Institute of Pittsburgh, Pa. She
Is employed at the Parkersburg
News and Senilnel,
The grOOm, a graduate of Meigs
High School, Js associated with
Hysell's Used Cars In Rutland.

PORTSMOUTif Shawnee
State College will hold the flfth
annual wrtter' s COJiference Thursday on Its Portsmouth campus.
Lee Pennington, a well-known
writer, poet and storYteller from the
Greenup, Ky. area, will be keynote
speaker for the day-long session,
beginning at 9: :ll a.m. and running
until noon In the mezzanine area of
the actMtles buUdltig.
Pennington has publlshed more
than 1,000 poems, 100 articles, 11
books and four plays. His book, "I
Knew a Woman/ ' was nomJnated
for a Pulitzer Prize.
Presently, Pennington Is a proles·
sor of English a r JefferSon Community College lnLoul.sville, Ky. He
has been a frequent guest of the

September
r,:=====::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::===t-1
Coat
ENCHANTED MIRROR
· Promotion
-.

529 JACKSON PIKE

Sharon Kincaid of Enchanted Mirror Beauty Salon would like to
welcome to her staff Barri Westfall, Rita Hunt and Renee Kiser.
They would like to invite their friends and patrons to join them
by offering a 10% ()iseount on all Perms.
OPEN MON.-SAT.
, PHONE 446-2600

throughout the day, ending at 11
p.m. Blddlngs will close with
auctioneer Bub McGhee conduct·
lng. The sUent auction Is free and
open to the public.
The second event ol the day
Involves the festivities of the
Oktoberlest. German delicacies
and cuisine will begin serving at
6: ll p.m . and continue through 9
p.m.
In addition to this "all you can
eat" menu, served on the outdoor
patio under candleUght, wtll be an
array ol entertainment Including
demonstrations of European folkdances by Jim Ramsay of Berea,
Ky. Ramsay will also conduct a
"lawn dance" Involving partie!·
pants In the festivities ol European
and Danish folk traditions.

.

ER 3RD &amp; COURT STS.

10°/o DOWN-UP TO 15 YRS. TO PAY
WITH FIXED SIMPLE INTEREST RATE!
REG. PRICE

SALE PRICE

$12,795
$13,995
$14,995
S15,995
S16,895
S17,995

~

~
~

'l619t5

·

70'x14' 2 dr. Wh SOlD, total elec.
70'x14' 2 Bdr. Triumph II, total elec.
70'x14' wflx24' Expando lnnsbruck 2 Bdr.

$18,495
.'16,495
'26,995

~

(Cedar Siding, Shingle Roof, 2 Baths, Total Elec.)

SECTIONAL &amp; MODULAR HOMES REG. PRICE

SALE PRICE

~
(2 Baths, 2"x6" sidewalls on 16" centers, gable roof)"
52'x24' Monterey 3 Brdr., total elec•• 2 baths

52'x24' Gettysburg 3 Bdr., total elec.

S21,995

70'x28' Twin Oaks 3 Bdr. or 4 Bdr. ':.
64'x28' Paradise Manor 3 Bdr.

'21,995
$36,595
S33,995

(Total elec., Ultra-energy house)

Johnson's Mobile Homes,.lnc.
2110 EASTERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

446-3547
.,

Attending the bride were Krtstal
Hash Brenner, Misty and Mindy
McGmw. Flower girl was Jennifer

Cremeans.
Attending the groom were Mark
Wmy, brother of the bride, Scott
Grubbs, brother of the groom, and
,RJchardK. Grubbs Sr., father of the
groom. Ushers were Roy and
FreddleWray, uncles ofthebrtde:
Attending the guest register was
Moneta Grubbs, sister of the groom.
Areception followed In the church
yard. Assisting at the reception
were Margaret Hall and Julie
Roush.

successful splashdown. One of \he
By KATIE CBOW .
.. original. Gerrt'!an ·I'O!'ket men who
, We hear so many negative things came over With Werner von Braun
' about young people It Is a pleasure also works with the campers.
: to hear o! the good things they do
Mark was taken to Huntsville by
: and accomplish.
hl5 mother, Pat Circle, and his
~ Mar.k
sister Martanne, along with another
: grandson of
student and his mother and sister.
: rles and
Pat and group spent the week In
~ Blakeslee,
Atlanta and Chattanooga, Tenn.
: roy, and
Molly Fisher Kreuzer Is with the
' Fisher Kreuzer,
u.s. Air Force and Is stationed at
: daughter of Mrs.
Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii.
Molly Is In metereology. She Is a
: Bonnie Fisher: Racine, and John
: Fisher, Pomeroy, are two such graduate of Southern High School In
• people,
Racine and Ohio University.
: Mark recently returned to his
Her mother recently received a
: home In Wichita, Kan., after letterwhichreadaslollows: "Molly
• spending a week at till! Space Camp has been selected Detachment 11
: at the Alabama Space and Rocket Data Monitor of the month for
: Center, the world's largest space August 1983.
· museum.
"The members of her Data
1
Mark, recommended by hl5 Monitor Section have been setting
.science teacher, was one· o! 1,400 all·tlme records lor collecting and
students, aged 12·14, using the salvaging vital Russian and Chi·
NASA Marshall Space Flight Cen· nese weather data.
ter,theU.S. ArmyRestoneArsenat
"Being at the top of this highly
and the Space and Rocket Center competitive group Is really an
lor a hands-on experience with achievement. Scortng 99 to 100
simulators, space capsules and percent In all three quality control
rockets.
categories, she de!lnltely earned
:: Thl5 Is the second year lor the thJs honor.
.-,program but plans are In the
"You'll also be Interested to know
:·making to make It available year s~ Is wrttlng an In-depth Standard
&gt;round. It attrac!s students lrom the Operating Procedure on the proper
:united States and Europe. Each 10 handling of outdated weather data
,campers . are under a college -a complex subject that Molly has
"Student ·counselor majortng In sbown a real talent ln. It's great
·:aerospace and englneertng. Plans having her as a member of
::are being completed lor an ad· Detachment 11."
: vanced training camp.
Congratulations to both.
:· The campers get their assign; ments each day from a cmputer
A Cashing caution light has been
...and have lessons In technology,
Installed at the Intersection or U.S.
::astronaut training, lasers, electron- 33 and State Route 7, thanks to
·lcs, robotics and physics.
Pomeroy Councu.
· : At the end of the camp the teams
The light, which was badly
iJo a simulated shuttle Dlght. Each needed, Is located at the lntersec·
..team has an emergency situation tlon where the Beacon Service
~rown ln. Mark's team had a
Stat!Qn Is located.

ALL COATS
&amp; JACKETS
"COME SEE OUR NEW
PETITE DEPARTMENT."

300 SECOND AVE.
LAFAYEnE MALL

Important Reasons Why
You Expect More
~rom Ohio Valley BankYour Hometown,
Home-owned Bank
Independent banking is a vital and
essential part of the American enterprise system.

Directors and officers of the Ohio
Va)ley Bank are folks with a
whole- hearted interest In the
prosperity and well-being of the area
we serve. They have a real stake In its
future. They know its conditions and
needs intimately. It is their home.

ln. Motherhood: Th e Second
0/dert Profeuion, Erma reaches
new levels of creatiyiry and originality with a case of characters
readers will readily recogn ize:
from the mother who ears her
children's Halloween candy and

Janet who considers Joan Crawford a role model ro frank who
srayed home a
became the

first suburban

orher in

Rocheser wit a musrache ... who
wasn't on e rogen ."

You do business with the officers of a
GaUipolis Independent bank.. We're
tight here to advise and serve you.
There's no problem of decisions
made from a "home office" somewhere else.
Whether you deposit or borrow or
use some of our many other bankjng
servlc~. you benefit by dealing with
your hometown, home-owned bank.

Motherhod: The Second Oldest Profession is a work that

•

•

breaks new ground for irs author
as satirist and social commentator. lt is nor a book for everyone

. . . lee d ...................
•••

PDIC

Gallipolis, Ohio

-••••••••••••••••••,ti2J'
OPEN DAILY 9:30 1U. 8:00

a

.

tZJJ~
.,

•

OSfD SUNDAYS

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

must carefully evaluate each pa·
!lent and determlne whlch must be
seen t!rst. Therefore, a patient
entering an emergency department
with an Injury or Oiness that Is not
!lie-threatening, may be kept walt·
lng untlj the prtortty cases lire
handled.
Emergency physlctails under·
take extensive tralnlng In emer·
gency medical care to prepare
themselves lor a demanding ca·
reer. Sixty-three residency pro_g rams In emergency medicine
have graduated 1,100 physicians,
and are currently training and
additional '100. In addition, emer·
gency physicians must participate ,
In continuing medical education
programs, which enable them to
keep abreast of current advances In
health care.
In 198l, the American Board o!
Emergency Medicine admlnls·

Head~
. ./Quarters

43 State St.

by
Juanita

Gallipolis

"Merle Norman Cosmetics"

-J, ·

PH_O_N_E_44
_6_2_6_73
_·_ _

l - -_ _

MARTY REYNOLDS IS BACK
f'RI[IAY 11 TO 7 , SATURDAY 9 TO S
SIX OTHER STYLISTS TO SERVE YOU

20%

Off ALL PERMS

MONDAYS &amp; SATURDAYS

TIRED OF DRAB HAIR?
TRY NEW CELLOPHANES
By Sebastian
SP'.ukles, shines, non ~ peroxide. From clear m
black orchid and 20 sim b in bcrw.,n.

"Capture the Sunshine in Your· Hair"

Early space -s uit

Tender Bite Size
··. Shrimp Dinner
An erua large serving
of delicious bite sized
""•~' lried shrimp, nalural
hies, cole
slaw, hush puppies,
cocktail sauce and
lemon wedge.

rr:~===:;;:::==========;:::::::==~
.'
SEE AND HEAR

EVANGELIST
CHUCK REDFORD
A ~ lioN U'\IAaLE TO OltERCO'H THE ~AlP lH.O.T A ~ COHOL .u ;O OHUGS "AD Olo &gt;&lt;!'-"\ .
A F H il 'q ; .o.llS OF T01lM£10T TO A FII.IIIII.Y 11-U\1 &gt;&lt;E '"'AO TA KEN THROUGH ... GU""IHR
(l~ I'I~T~ 11.~0 S i ll: fQUIIIO T HAT JES US CA'I SET fREE A~O GIVE -.Ew LifE
NOW 111.11: E\,IANGEI...IST ~Rf.O.CHINO TH[ S... V!NG II.NO OE~IVE !II ii:G ~OW !i R O&gt; J ESUS CHR IST

BRING THE LOST AND BOUND
FOR SALYATION AND DELIVERANCE
WITH
THINGS ARE
POSSIBLE
MARK 10:27

20 Piece Boiled
Shrimp Plate
20 boiled shrimp,
chilled and ready for
dipping. Just peel'em
and eat 'eml Served
wtlh creamy cole
crispv c!Odters. cocktail
sauce and lemon wedge.

.....

GO Om

CaDtain D's.

a .,..TUttle aeafeod plaee,
..,..,.
217 Upper River Road

lighthouse Tabernacle
Assembly of God
GAlliPOLIS, OH.

At. 1,0 , Milos North ot Rt. 35

.

SUN.: 10:45 A.M. &amp; 7:00 P.M.
SEPT. 19-23 AT 7:00P.M.
For """" lnformotiOA coll446-3514

!~c
~IHJ
""" " ·~'- ~' • '''"""

lortl\11111 me 1;1
OUI olan hombl!
11 11. 011 1 ol tr.e mor·1 ··l •v. •nd ..,, my le~)

m, ,... ~

~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~-~P~w•~m4~0~2~~~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CARPET SALE
WALL TO WAL

.SPECIAl
00

LIVING ROOM
ONLY
DINING ROOM
Based On 40 Sq. Yds.
HALL
Other Sizes Priced Accordingly
REMNANTS
GALORE
ALL SIZES
ALL COLORS

SAVE!

$678.00
lue

INSTALLED

LAYAWAYS WELCOME
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A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL.
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UNTIL YOU ARE!

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Includes Complete Wall to Wall Installation With Thick Sponge
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Anso IV or Antron Ill Nylon. In . Over 20 Different Color
Combinations.

IN STOCK

The Alcove
' ·42 Coun St.

flrst-coine, llrst-served basis. 'They

passed the comprehensive wrlt1en
and lora! examination and are
board certllled.

l"!'esses

•
•
•
•

tered the t!rst bOard certlllcatlon
examination 1n emergency medl·
cine. Today, 1,175 physicians have

Unlike many other medical
practitioners, emergency spectal·
lsts cannot see patients on a

BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP) Aforerunnerofthespacesultsworn
J.8.24.
by astronauts was developed almost
The newest medical specialty, 50 years agQ by aviator WUey Post.
emergency medicine, 1s ·thli prae· ·· · PQSt ~elo!JOO ,rpressurlzed suit
tlce ol evaluating, stablUzlng and 'with a metal hebnet In 1934 when he
treating life _ and limb· set a world record torstratosphertc
threatening
and Injuries. Clght. In.a slngJ.e.englne plane, Post
Emergency physicians provide this cOmbed to almost 55,000 feet, more
care, In addlilon to aiding all other . than 10 mlles. The· fught was
patients who seek medical care 1n sponsored by Phllllps Petroleum
emergency departments.
Co.

-only for those who are morn ·
ers .. or who had one.

When you depolil, wtMtn you bonow. when ·

'--------- ~~s;;k ._;.,,

POMEROY - You are awa·
kened from a pleasant dream by
the sound of choldng In the baby's
room.
The electric hedge trtmmers sllp,
and your linger Js sei1ously cut.
Your father clutches hl5 chest
and begins gasping for breath.
Your f.olldler has been playing In
the kitchen and you suddenly notice
he has an open bottle of household
detergent In hl5 hands.
What do you do In the above
situations? Where do you turn?
Veterans Memorial Hospital
emergency department has a
physlcljul on duty 24 hours a day to
deal with cr!ses of thl5 nature.
Tilese physicians are experienced
In emergency medicine, as are the
members of the emergency room
support staff. The hOSpital's emergency department can be reached
at 992·2104.
In 1981, over 83 mlll1on Amert·
cans turned to emergency•depart·
ments In their hoQr of need.
In honor of medical practitioners
responsible tor saving lives, and In
an effort to encourage the publlc to
learn more about emergency medl·
cal resources In their communities,
the American College of Emergency PhysiCians Is sponsoring
Emergency Medicine Week, Sept.

-

tells them rhe anrs gm it to the
Mom who puts her kids outside
ro play when the chill factor is 40
below.
Mothers run the gamuc from

A good portion of our depositors'
funds are Invested-in the communities we serve-in sound loans
to the individuals and businesses of
our banking area.

M

.,

BIDWEll. - Alena Shorr Wray
became the · brtde of Richard K.
..t::rubbs Jr., Ina July16ceremony at
-: Morgan Center Wesleyan Church,
with the Rev. John Hessman
· olllctatlng.
. She Is the daUghter of Robert and
:w. Jean Wray of Bidwell. He Is the
e sonofRichardJ. and Paula Grubbs
\ of Hillsdale, Mich.

1
•

GALLIPOLIS

AFFORDABLE HOUSING SALE!

Alena-Shorr W ray trades vows
with Richard K. Grubbs ]r.

Bondrs received by youths

.

Let Us Setl It For You.

'

56'x14' 2 Bdr. Happy House, total elec.
70'x14' 3 Bdr. Triumph, total elec.
70'x14' 3 Bdr. Starlite, total elec.
70'x14' 3 Bdr. Starlite, total elec.
70'x14' 2 Bdr. Spr'sOLD ·bour, total elec.
70'x14' wflx24' Expando 3 Bdnn. Triumph

200/o

.

BRUNICARDI MUSIC
INC.
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Mr. and Mrs. Richard K Gnibbs Jr.

:.Katie's Korner

Off·

Do You Have A Musical Instrument
·You Are Not Using?

i

.•

. .

The

Emergency physicians honored Sept. lH-24

: Music was provided by Kathelene
:- Sargeilt Slinker; pianist and Judy
: Grubbs, sister ol the groom,
· vocalist. The. groom also sang
: during the ceremony.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

Can't afford a New Home?

(Total Elec.)

Shawnee State Poetry CirCle, and
keynoted the third annual wrtter's
conference.
At 10:ll a.m., June Berkley, the
1982·83 Shawnee writer-In·
residence, · wtll address partie!·
pants. The popular author ol the
novella, 11 Shanna Ganey Blue." wU1
discuss wrttlng techniques with
conferees. Mrs. Berkley's short
story "Mltty Groves" was noml·
nated for the National Pushcart
Prlzeand "ThatManofOddParts,"
another of her short stortes, was
Included In the Carolina Quarterly
Competition In Chapel Hill, N.C.
Alter a lunch break, the confer·
ence will continue In Room 213 of
Massie Hall, with a panel discus·
slon.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lee Hysell

Walk In or call. No appointment nece11ary.

MOBILE HOMES

September 18, 1983

Writer's conference on
Shawnee State campus to
feature poet-storyteller

Silent auction; Oktoberfest· set ·
for Oct. 1 at French Art Colony
GALLIPOLIS - The third an·
nual Oktoberlest and SUent Auction, sponsored by the French Art
Colony and located at 530FlrstAve.
In Gallipolis, will be held Saturday,
Oct 1..
The events of the day Include a
sUent -auction of unique services
and Items donated by area Individuals and businesses.
Last year's Items and services
ranged from specialties such as
delicious gourmet dinners, custom·
!zed car washes given by city
olllclals and businessmen ol the
area, handmade collectables, labor
services from area residents and
businesses, legal services, vartous
sports lessons and fine art donated
lrom regional 'artlsts.
The bidding wlll begin at 11 a.m.
on Saturday, Oct 1, and continue

w.

r'

CARPET LAND
161 3RD AVE. ON THE CORNER

Gallipolis, Oh.

44~1641

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CONVENIENT
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SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
.MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3480

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1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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PRESSURE - Oldaborna quarterback Danl)y . Spenoor Nebns (54) In Sarurday's clash at Nonnan.
lindley. left, Is rushed by Ohio !It$! middle guard . (API l'erphoto).

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ARGARINE

1

Harrison, Ohio's main offensive
threat, completed 21 of34passesfor
2!Xlyards and two touchdowns, one a
36-yard ' strlke to wide reclever
Lance Pickens and another of 10
yards to wide receiver Eddie
Washington.

32

Serlesgamesofthe197Us.
"It's sort of got a World Series
atmosphere," Bench told reporters.
"I sort of think of this as a World
Series, but this time I'm going to
enjoy It ... not worry about whether I
have to perform well tomorrow."
Bench was In a celebrating mood
at a pre-game news conference In a
corridor of Riverfront Stadium, just
outside tiJe Reds' clubhouse. He said
his main "concern driving to tiJe
ballpark was making sure his
visiting friends and relatiVes had
arrangementsforseelngthegame.

OPTION - BaD SUte qwuteliJ8ck Nell Brllt (7)
keeps lhe ball on an option play In Mid-American

Coalerence game a&amp; Aibemo 8alurday afternoon. BaB
state downed the Bobcats, 31-U. (AP Laserphoto).

double by Rick Leach and a single by Wayne
Krenchlckl, but tiJe Red Sox bounced back In their
half of the Inning.
Boston, held to three hits for six InningS, tied the
score 2-21n the seventh on a pop double to left by Reid
Nichols and an RBI single by Rick MIUer. Jerry
Remy singled and Wade Boggs followed with another
ground single to score MIUer.
Sau Diego Z, AtlaDta 1
ATIANTA (AP) - Garry Templeton smacked a
two-out, two-run triple torlght-centerfteldoffrellever
Steve Bedrosian 1n the eighth Inning to give the San
Diego Padres a 2-1 victory over the Atlanta Braves
Saturday.
Atlanta starter Len Barker, 1-2, took a five-hitter
Into the eighth but departed after walking Bobby
Brown and Tony Gwynn. Bedrosian struck out Kevin
McReynolds before gMng up Templeton's triple.
The loss dropped the Braves four games behind
ftrst-place lAs Angeles, whlch played In San
Francisco Saturday, In the National League West.

singles.

Blll Johnson, HJ, got the win.
Mookle WUson had four hits, stole three bases and
scored three runs for the Mets 1n helping I!Jem take a
6-1 lead. The Cubs nicked Orosco for a run In the
eighth before rallying In tiJe ninth.
Bo8ton 9, Detroll 2
BOSTON (AP) - Tony Armas belted his 32nd
homer leading off tiJe eighth Inning Saturday, llft1ng
the Boston Red Sox to a 3-2 victory over Jack Morris
81ld the Detroit Tlgers. ·
The loss dropped the Tigers 6\!, games behind
Balttrnore, which played Milwaukee Satunlay night.
Armas drU1ed a 2-2 pitch .for a 410-foot horner,
giving tiJe victory to Dennis Eckersley. S-12. Bob
Stanley pitched the ninth tor his 29th save.
Morris, D-11, and Eckersley were In a scoreless .
duel for six Innings before Chet Lemon led off the
Detroh seventh with a high fly ball down the left-field
Une for hls 24th horner.
The Tigers added another run In tiJe seventh on a

Atlanta and lAs Angeles each have 15 games
remaining.
.Reliever Luts DeLeon, &gt;-6, went 2 2·3 Innings and
gave up twil hits. Gary Lucas got the final out for his
16th save.
Toronto 19, Minnesota 3
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Toronto blasted ihe
Minnesota Twins 13-3 Saturday on a Jearn record five
borne runs by Rance Muillnlks, Ernie Whitt, Jesse ·
Barfield, Wlllle Upshaw and Cliff Johnson.
Luis Leal, 13-10, pitched seven Innings to·get the
victory, with relief help from Roy Lee Jackson, while
Jay Pettlbone,0-2, was knockedou! In theBlueJaysln
the four-run, sixth Inning that broke a 2-2 tie.
The key hits In that Inning were Whitt's 16th homer
of the year, a two-run shot and Dave Collins' tw()o()Ut
two-run triple off reliever Jack O'Connor.
Barfield had four hits and slammed his 24th homer
o! the year to lead off the seventh.
Upshaw and Johnson hit baek-to-back homers In
the Blue Jays six-run eighth Inning.

Keith Moreland and Davis followed with RBI

J{entucky hands Indiana 24-13 .defeat; Wittenberg triumphs

oz.

BOnLE

"LEXINGI'ON, Ky. (AP) Randy Jenkins ran for two touchdQwDs 81ld George Adams added a
third Satunlay as Wlbealen Kentuck;y came fl'llm behind 1n tiJe
eecond baH !(Idefeat lndlana 24-l31n
a reglmally ll!levlsed college foot-

KRAFT

ballpme.

AMERICAN
SINGLES

JlllkiDII' lint IDUchdown came on
a M-yanl run that pw Kentucky a
IN leld wltllB:II',IID Ill the third
quarter. ' l b e - C8lllll two plays
lfllr Paul Celhnull lulacepted a
pllll by Indiana's Slelle.Bradley at

2 OZ. PKG.

24-yard line, setting ,up a 2-yard
touchdown run by Ball State
fullback Steve Strausbaugh. Tom
Short, another Unebacker for the
Cardinals, picked off a pass by Ohio
quar!erbackDormleHarrlsOnatthe
B!&gt;bcats' 34.

drop Cards, Cubs nip Mets, Padres stop Braves

. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -John Denny pitched a
six-hitter and Gary Matthews homered and singled
tw1re as tiJe Phlladelphla PhUlles beat tiJe St. Louis
Cardinals 4-1 Saturday.
. Phlladelphla began the day tied for first place In the
National League East with Pittsburgh; who played
Montreal at home Saturday night. The Phlllles have
wan seven ol their last eight games and 14 of 21.
Denny, 11Hi, struck out five and walked one. Danny
Cox, U, was the St. Louis loser. AI Holland pitched
tiJe ninth for tiJe PhWies and picked up hls 20th save.
Cldcqo 7, New York 8
NEW YORK (AP) - Jody Davis' two-out single
drove 1n tiJe winning run In the ninth Inning, capping a
three-run r&amp;Jzy as tiJe Chicago Cubs slipped by the
New York Mets 7-6 Saturday.
The Cubs rallied to pin ·the loss on Jesse Orosco,
13-7. Larry Bowa led off the ninth with a dQuble and,
011e out later, scored 011 Ryne Sandbefi'S Infield hit.
After anothhel' out, Mets shortstop Jose Oquendo

$}69

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diiNPed Ron Cey's Uner tor an error.

..

ORANGE JUICE

· . ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Tallback with 224 of them comlng on a .
Tony Bonanno rushed for touch· 16-for-28 passing day by quarter®wns ot 34 and 1 yards and galned back NeU Britt. Britt threw aJ.O.yard
106 yards Saturday 1n undefeated . touchdownpasstowtngbackTerrell
Ball State's 31-14 victory over Ohio
Smith.
Un!ve!'slty In the Mld·Amerlcan
Confet:mee football opener for both
The Cardinals took advanta~ of
schools.
Ohio mistakes, converting one
Bonanno's sconng runs In the fumble recovery and one lntercei&gt;second .quarter broke a 7-7 tle,
tion Into tiJe pair of second-quarter
leading ~ 3-0 Cllrdlnals Into a 20-7
touchdowns by Bonanno. Ohio
halltlme lead. The Bobcats, 1·2,
fumbled six tlnnes.
were never closer t11an 13 points
Outside Unebacker Uoyd Mosley
· thereafter.
recoveredafumblebyOhlorunnlng
BaliSiateroUedup41iHotalyards,
back Glen Hunter at the Bobcats'

CINCINNATI (AP) - "Johnny Bench said he couldn't have asked
BenchNight"tookoni!Jeglitterofa
for a better sendoff. He's been
honored 1n other National League
World Series Saturday night, as fans
packed Riverfront Stadium to honor
clUes when the Reds made their
oneoti!JeCinclnnatlReds' greatest
final appearances. .
"If you WIShed for those things,
players. . ·
A standing-room-only crowd you couldn't wish this good," Bench
said. "It's been better than better, ·
streamed Into the oval stadium an
hour and a half before a game · more than good."
The Saturday game had been sold
Saturday night against tiJe Houston
Astros to applaud Bench, who has outfor over a week, with more than
announced his retirement after tiJe
52,&lt;XXJ fans expected to fill the
ll!Kiseason.
banner-decked stadium.
At a news conference before the
Bench said the atmosphere retributes began, the J.O;.year-old
minded hJm of the Reds' World

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OU drops3l-14 battle

Fans honor Johnny Bench

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FRESH LEAN .

The game was played ln93-degree third-down attempts along the way,
By HEBSCHELNI'ISENSON
weather and it was a reported 135 Including a 2-yard sneak by TomeAP Spot18 Writer
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Sharp- degrees on the arlificial turf. The zak and a 19-yard pass to Keith
shooting Mike Tomczak fired his setback put Oklahoma at 1-1 and
Byars .
fifth and sixth touchdown passes of prevented Barry Swltzer, ln hlsllth
MSU28, Notre D"""'23
the season Saturday, with both ot year as head coach of the Sooners,
SOUTI!BEND,Ind. (AP) -Free
them going to tight end John Frank from achieving his 100th career safety PhU Parker's second lnJerIn the first half, as sixth-ranked Ohio vlctory.
ception of the game set up Dave
En rouJe to Ohio Stale's first Yarema's lhlrd touchdown pass
Stale went on to defeat No. 2
Oklahoma 24-141n aqon-conference toUChdoWn, a drive which took 13 Saturdayto~adMichlganStat.etoa
college football game.
plays and ale up 6:16, Tom~ 28-2.1upset overlourth-rankedNotre
Tomczak; who was the nation's completed four of five passes for 40 Dame.
No.' 1-rated passer after completing yards. The 6-foot-1 junior, who
Patker, wboselilterceptlonsetup
21 of 25 passes form yards and four completed hls lastlOpassesagalnst a first-half Spartan touchdown,
touchdowns In the Buckeyes' open- Oregon, connected on his first two picked off a Blair Klel pass midway
lngvlctory against Oregon, whipped Saturday, tying Bill Mrukowskl's in thefourthquarterandreturnedlt
a 1&amp;-yarder to Frank to cap an school record of 12 consecutive 42yardsto.tllelr!sh3-yardllne.After
SO-yard drive following tiJe opening completions In 1961.
a 2-yard loss, Yarema hit Butch
kickoff. He made It lW with a
Tomczak flnlshed with 15 comple- RoUe with a &gt;-yard scoring pass to
J.5.yarder to tiJe senior tlgh! end
tlons ln25attemptsfor234yards. He · break a 21-21 tie.
early 1n tiJe second period.
was 3-for-4 for 47 yards during a
With four seconds left, Yarema
That came on the first play after a 57-yard march In the third period.
rant!JeballoutoftheMlchiganStaJe
fumble by Oklahoma's Marcus RomanBates' 2-yardrunati!Je6:30 end zone to give Noire Dame the
Dupree was recovered by Ohio State markgaveihe.Buckeyes:a21-7lead: saiety. _ ·
.
The Sooners made · it 21·14 on a
ThevictorygaveMlchiganStatea
· linebacker Rowland Tatuin.
Less than a minute earlier, a 22-yard fourth-down pass play from
2-0 record and dropped Notre Dame
superb goal-line stand by Oklahoma Bradley to wingback Derrick Sheto 1-1.
thwarted the Buckeyes without a
pardwlth1:011eftlnthethlrdperlod.
UntU Parker's lnlerceptlon , the '
point when cornerback Dwight The drive covered 62 yards In eight
second halfhad been scoreless In a
plays following Buster Rhymes'
complete reversal from the !Irs!
Drane threw Ohio State tailback
Keith Byars for a short loss from
half.
24-yard punt return and Included a
Inside the 1-yardllneon fourlhdown.
27-yard pass play lnvovUngBradley
Wisconsin 21, Mlssourl20
Oklahoma matched that less than and Shepard and an elght-yarder
MADISON, Wis. (APJ - Wlscontwil minutes later by !l"ing85 yards
whlchtailba.c kEarlJohnsoricaught sin l.ljrned two fumbles on punt
1n four plays. Redshlr! freshman
afier It was tipped by Ohio ~tate . returnS · by Missouri's Ron Floyd ·
Spencer Tillman raced 37 yards for cornerback Garcia Lane. ·
Into 14 third-quarter points and the
tiJe touchdown after a 39-yard pass
But Tomczak directed a time- Tigers missed a two-point conver-'
play from Danny Bradley to Busler consuming drive ol 6:44 which slon attempt with 3: 41-lo play as the
Rhymesanda9-yardrunby~s
ended In Rich Spangler's 22-yard Badgers bung on for a 21-211
Dupree. Oklahoma completed only
field goal with 9: 15lelt 1n the game. non-conference college football victwo of nine passes In the first half
The Buckeyes converted three tory Saturday.

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OSU wins24-14;
Irish lose, .28-23

. SPECIAL GOOD
SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER '18TH
THRU
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 24TH

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ao

Hooslerl2.
Jenkins got tiJe clinChing score on
a &amp;-yard bootleg run with 5:04
retnalnlng In tiJe game.
Kentucky llnebackerJolm Grimsley snuffed tiJe Hoa~lers'lalltchance
at a comeback when he Intercepted
a Bradley pass at the Kentucky nine
with 2:54 remaining.
The vlciDly, Kentucky's third In
as lll8ll,)' start&amp;, rnarlls tiJe lint time
since 196&amp; that a Wlldeat team had
mark. 'lbelae)'playlntllatdrtwwu , won Its flrllt threegames laaaeuoo.
Jen!dN' «1-yard 1Cn11Jb1e ID tiJe . Indiana fell to 1-1.

I!JeH006ler24-yardUne.
'lbeleadlastedlustthreeplaysas
Bradley teamed with Stephan
Benson on a 74-yardtouchdoWnpass
play that pul the Hoosiers back In
front :l;i-lOwlth 7: :I!Mll81J11niln the
peRld.
But Kentucky mustered another
r&amp;Jzy before the quarter ended, with
Adams' Z.yanl run capping a
'l'l-yatddrM!IhatgavetheWlldcats
tbe leld b' aood. 17-13, at tile 3:53

Wiltellbfq M, M!llldnlllllll 0
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) Quarterback .Dave Tobias passed
for one touchdown and ·ran for
anothe!' Saturday In leading un·
beaten Wittenberg to a 4W noncoufetence college football decision

aver Musklngum.

Tobias threw 9 yards Jli'spUt end
Rob Lear for one score 81ld ran 1
yard for a secooc1 laichdown wg!ve
the Tl&amp;en a U record. Tallback
Brad Keenan. w11o scored on a
11-l',lll'd run, accounted for 109 yards

rushing.

Wittenberg rolled up a 332-140
advantage over Musklngum, 1·1, 1n
total advantage.
Wllmlqton 24, Earlham 8
wn.MINGTON, Ohio (AP) Quarterback Jim Sposet and receiver Roy Boil iii!! hooked up for a
pair ot 13-yard touchdown pass
plays as Wllmlngton defeated
Earlham 24-8 Saturday In the
pplilllng college football game tor

both Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
schools.

Kenyon 10, Oiterbeln 0
GAMBIER, Ohio (AP) - Quarterback Dan Pantle threw all).yard
touchdown pass toToddStonerwlth

7: 32 remaining Saturday to seal a
10.0 Kenyon victory over Otterbein '
Bethany 17, Oberlin 7
OBERLIN, Ohio (AP) -Quarterback Brad Overly ran for two
short-yardage touchdowns as Bethany, W.Va., opened Its
football season Satunlay with a 17.•1
1
vlctoryoverOberUn.

cou;;i
I

.

•

•

•

•

•

~---·"""

'

./

'.'

•

••

..

\

·- _ _!.

�Panthers stop
Pirates, 21-20
VINTON - A 5.5-yard pass by
!ioutheastem' s Jefl Falrchlld to
senlor Ed Yates erased a narrow
North Gallla lead In the fourth
!J11M1Er Friday and gave the
Pan~rsa 21-~non -leaguegrldwln

over the Plra tes.
Southeastern notched Its second
victory of the season while the
Pirates, following an open date last
~.are 1-1 overall.
North Gallia dominated tlle first
half of action, wttll senior back Eric
Penick running for 218 or his 234
y3rds In the first and second
q1!8rlers.
·Penick also bad an 87-yard dash in
tlli! closing minutes of the half as tlle
Pirates built up a~ advantage.
;But penalties, coupled with a
sputtering NG defense and revltal·
lzRd Panther offense, turned every·
thing around In the second half as ·
Fairchild, Yates and juillor Paul
Ailedge led sOu theas tern on the
roineback trail.
;n.tngs began going the Pirates'
way In tlle first quarter when
qUarterback Scott Pickens dashed
!hfough a hole In Southeastern's
deJense deep Into Panther territory.
Pickens took control on the
one-yard line witll 8:11 remaining
· · and ran it 'over to p~t- NG on the

tmni.

.

: ~ kick by Pickens for extrapolnts
faDed.
: :Penalties plagued NG for the rest
iit the game, with the hosts
~tuaDy being whistled 12 times
l!liot!lctals for Uiyards_. Southeast·
er')l, by contrast, was penalized
lieven ttmes for 8l yards.

NO '1984 PRICE

North C..Wa lll'onld Its ~
louclldown wllen l'elllck ran two
yards w1t11 6: 54 IWnllldng to up the

~;".;,~~av~~c=e:co:
•
ldd&lt;ed
the extra point.

t:Ot1D
one period
and Kerry
York
: jn thethesecond
the Myers
to
a.,n,.ad combo clicked twice for
~hdowns. the first on a 42 yard
!ltflke, and the second comlng with
U seconds rernab!Jng In ~
llalf
• when a 21 yard• completion
ta"e Logan a :»6 halftllM leed.
• )lldway to the fourth canto
~ aialn hit Conrad with a 21
)l)l(d slrtke, and York's kick made

illY

It !7_..

; :he Stars ta1lled on the last play

giving the
KnerCreekBobcatsahard-earned
7-j) non-conference vtctory over the
Waterford
Wildcats.
·
.
.The lnuchdown Was set Up When
Bobcat John McGuire's hit on
~at QUarterback Tom Ellis
call9edafumbleattllellve. The ball
lhl!n rolled Into the end zone where
Btadbury pounced on It for his
second lnuchdown of the year.
Anthony Kitchen then booted the

1n the second half, the Panthers,
Wlder eo.cb TOOl OJle' s dlrectklll,

Ef'.

:'Ibe win gave the Bobcats a 3-0
recordwhlleWaterfordJs1-2.
Kyger Creek's offense, for the
mOst part, suffered a frustrating
day as costly penalties killed
fX!SSible scoring chances. The
Bobcats were tnskle Waterford's20
·yard line on six different occasions,
hQwever, all drives fell short after
~tly mistakes. In the first half, the
Bebcats were Inside the 00 three
ttmes,allthreeendedastheresulto!
15;yardpenalttes.

regrruped.

(:olumbus Centennial, 27-12
ran 41 yards to score.
Centenillal, now G-3, saw several
drlves killed by major penalties as
they tiJIIShed willl nine ftrst downs,
10yardsrushlng,andl58passlngon
10 of 17 attempts.
The Chle!talns rolled up 13 first
downs, 75 yards rushing, and
completed il1ne of 15 passes lor 151
yards.
Logan's Dave McBride lees all
11112
:tll.:::"
trips.

ru::!

Spencer comeback drops Wahama, 34-14

SaturdaY afternoon

to~.

seconds
left Ill the thin! quarter on a
Southeasternscoredagalnwith31
one-yard nm by Fairchild. The
. Panthe- sopllorrlore then passed to
Yates for the !;(inversloo, reducing
the Pirates lead to:»15.
For most of the llnal quarler, NG
kept the Panthe- rushers at bay, but
· a defensive teak pennl!ted Yates
througb the Pirate Hnewith 1: 32left
to allow Southe&amp;stern gain a
slngle-polllt lead.
North GaWa travels to ParkersContinued on C-3

fumble recovery
gives KC, 7-0 win
WATERFORD-KygerCreek's
J.D. Bradbury recovered a Wildcat
fumble
_
In the end zone here

points failed.
NG's kid&lt; Into Southeastern
territory was deep, andottense kept
lla.rnmerlng aWIIY until there was
1:54 left In the half when Penick
made Ills 87-yard da8h.
Penick took the ball Inside from
seven yards out top make It 1.8-0.
Pickens passed to Glassburn for two
points to up the Pirates' advantage

After forcing the Pirates back to
tlle 25-yard line, Arledge slipped
past Penlckanddellted paydlrtwlth
7: 46lett In the thin! period.
Arlecl&amp;e also ldcked the extra
point, maJdng the score :»7. From
(hen,, the Pirates defmse was
unable to hold back a concentrated
Southeastern push despite individual efforts by teammates Bill
Harden," Brian Hawks, Joe Moore
and Tim Smith.

Pamen~y--Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

.

ON OUR LOT

score to 12-0. A run for lddltlonal

tn~n- g008 to air,:tops . ·· ·
: :LOGAN - Quarterback Keith
";Yers connected with Flanker
tarrY Conrad for three touchdown
~ses Friday night .a s the f.ogan
~dumped OJlumbus Centennlal27-12.
: :~posting their first victory cl the
ll!ason, the Chiefs pennltted the
~ just 10 yards rushing and saw
~ Columbus team penalized 1!i
tjilesfor165yards.

INCREASES

S.pNmba, 18, 1983

1-. """'""'""

( daar, . 1••r wHh dirk red
ovenlrlw lrHomlulon. Thll hlo tile -rk• with tho but ride ,..•n find
oround.
·

IN THE EYE - Norih GaDia Qlllll1erbllekSCGti l'ldu!ll8 (U) ippean
to be poked In llle eye by an •mlf.a!llfled Sowl!! ¢..., IUiber durin«
111'81 bait adloo of Friday'sl'lnlte-Paalller pme a&amp; Norih Galla. The
Panlherll were held a&amp; bay :IN a&amp; llle bait aDd came back In tile 10001MI
bait to beat NG 21-00.

!J~,901f

NOW

•15,500

·

'

· .

e

•'·
''

'

&gt;,

Yards pautn 8........... ,.............. 176

611

3:H

Total yards .,....... ..................... 210

~·

Pu•tn• · ·· ·· ·· ····· · ·· ··· ··· ···· ·· ···· ·· ..s.z
tnrere.,.lons ti"&lt;own ...•.••.••••••.••.• 2

0
Fumbl ..·toot. ,........... ................ HI
J.l
Penaltl ..·yards ..... . · ............ 9-81 Ut21.

~"~i:;~_::::::::::: :::: :::::::::::~~~
ay q........,
wahoma ········13······
···· ·· ··· ·····
Spencer-uto
14 1 ·w

2
.J7

0

0 14

~

ll-!4

rr.=~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~· ;;;;;;;;,:

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER
SINCE 1949....
Our primary concem has
~n

to provide good
hearing through amplifica·
tion. for thousands of
individuals with hearing
PH. 594-3571
444 W. UNION, ATHENS

• '

0 0 60 12
0 I 74 28
1

o n cc

l't. Pieosant .................. .... 2 I 0 ~ 33
W!&gt;eolonbw-tl-··················· 1 2 0 65 . till

L&lt;jpa .... ,......... , ............ .... I 2 0 41 ·51
.Athona ..............•......, .... ., ..o 3 o. 21 ·. 611
"=;~·~·········· 0 3 0 J:l 110
}'t. Pl.... nt ill GaUipolb 6

..

qt.

lrontm 32 Portsmouth 0
Rack H1D 26 Greenup l2

Logan 27 Columbus Centennlal12
Clrct..We 33 Atbens 7
~eotmburg 3.'5 Waverly 12
Jackson 14 Portsmouth West 6
Bo)&lt;l County 14 Lexlngtoo Bryan Statlon 0
Ripley 21 Huntlngton High 6
1CaJdweU played at Coal Grove Saturday

nlahtl
llepi.IS-:
Bo)&lt;l C&lt;Junty at Galllpotb
jUpley at Huntington East
Athels at Waverly

-z:x:r~l ~AC:.
nL.."-1..1 11\..11 ..JT...JI LJrLJ

145 N. Columbus Road - Athens, Ohio

r~Cols~-~Cen~tennlal~~~-~--~6~0~0~6-g12~!~~~~~~~~~~~§§~~~~~~~~~
IMOIIIO 1-I00-592-1tl7

Colwnbus Wehrle at Jackson
Wheelersburg at Coal Grove
:flurrlcane at Pt. Pleuant
South Point at Rock HW

..

1982 BUICI&lt; REGAL

'l'ti-Vallef Cont.......,
Ov...U
Team
WLTPOP
Belpre ............. ................. 3 o o 46 6
w"""" l.oca! .................... 2 o 1 -, 36
NO!.- York ... .. ... ... : .... .. ........ 2 1 o 31 25

Copper &lt;Oior with mo.- l1nd1u top, V6, outom1Hc. PS. PB, 1lr,
cloth seats, sport mlrron, r~lol lin11, AM r1dio ..

NOW

•7600

Mttp ........................... ....l

I I 65 36

Vlnt&lt;XI Co ... ........... ............ I 2 0 42 49
A!exander .. .. ..... , ........... ... . 1 2 0 13 4.'i
Fed.·Hocking ................. .... I 2 0 21! Ql

Are you driving a· ·
headache?

Trtmble ..... ... ..... ....... ........ 1 2 0 7 tl
W~t"' . ......................... 0 2 I 47 99
Miller .... ... ..... ................... 0 3 0 22 In
'IVC Daly
Team
WLTP OP
Warren Local .... ..... ........... 2 o o till 29
Bolpre .......... .... .......... ... ... 2 0 0 ill 0

. Moli!o .. ... .... ...• ... ..... ,.. .. .•••• 1 0 I 62 ·n
N!t.-York ... ......... .... .......... 1
Alexander ......... .... .... ,. ...•.. 1
Trimble ... ... .. ...... ......... ... .. 1
Fed.-Hocktng .....•............... !

•

after mfg' s s3.00 rebate on 12 quart pun:haae

78C

Valvoline 10W40
Sale 6~ Limit 12

STANDARD
Reg. II9C Limit 16

t.oean at Irootoo

•

YIU"dl ruohlna ..... , ...................:U-4.'1 H-2119

WLTP OP

OiaJ GJ"OYO •... ......•............ , 2
IrQntoo ............................. 2
ftlPel/ .........................,.....2

lhls FUUY GUARANTEED dilh
1181 10n1e collllllic 'blemithes',
kt there's nothing wrong with
its perfonna11c:e. Match it with
a S!Aelle America 2000
receiver with stereo &amp; i11f1• ed
,_tt tuning, and you've got
a pntty picture.

cl•tbe game whetl Mark Atanwfl

1.

Boyd County ...................... 5 0 0 1!14 49
Rock Hill ......... ................. 3 0 0 92 1l!
Jaokson .••.....•..•................ 3 o o till 28

0' Compression _Mol ed

•aTNIII5

Flrtt &lt;1ow111 .•• ...•••......•.•...•.......•..e

AU GAMES

$M

FOOTBALL.

Logan •..•...•........ . .. 7 13 0 7-27

!

""~"""

·lkolloilao

. . . , . -................................,.w

theYellowJackets' nextpossesslon
with 4:02 remaining 1n the thin!
and
quarter
set up the hosts' final
touchdown with an Interception
which he returned to the Falcon 12
yard line. Nichols passed seven
yards to Tom WUson to conclude the
game's scoring. Mike Garrett
coMected on one of the extra polnl
kicks for a 34-14 Spencer victory

Area
. . .. football
~tandings
·; .

Just In time tftrl

~

i::l'Y=':::::::::::::::::::::::::::Ji

went the final two yards for the
touchdown at the 8:23 mark of the
nd
rtod The xtra point
seco
pe
.
e
attempt was blocked by Mike
Pethtel.
Once
again Wahama came roar·
lng back, with a62-yard, seven-play
drive. TheFalconsrodelhepasslng
arm of Bradley during the drive
with the senior quarterback comPletlng three . . - Thompson for 27 yards,
to Boyd
Matt
Northrop for two yards and to
Pethtel for 29 yards and the
touchdown. The toe of Donnie
VanMeter gave Waha!na the lead
for the first time this season at 14-13
wit~ 4: M remaining In the half.
Spencer regained the lead for
good midway through the thin!
quarter when Buck set up the
go-ahead touchdown with a 53 yard
punt return that gave the Yellow
Jackets a first and goal at the
Wahama one yard line. Wayne
Jarvis went over on the first play
from scrlmnlage following the punt ·
return and Nichols found Buck In
the end zone for the two-point
conversion for a 21·14 Spencer
d
a vantage.
Buck scored on a 11 yard run on

~~~'sde~secontlnued r-----------------------------------------------------------------_1~~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~~·

rr==~~~~~~~~~~~=~~:~~;-=11
~~

sA

By GARY ClARK
'l1mee-Senllnel st.n
SPENCER - A devastating
toplaytoughlnrecordlngthetearn's ground attack took Its toU In the
second shutout In three outings. second half Friday night as the
w rf
. ate ord never crossed the 50 yard Spencer Yeliow Jackets overcame
line and was held to just three first a 14-13 halftime deficit with two
downs and a total of 37 yards third period touchdowns and
rushing.
• another fourth quarter score for a
Kyaer
'""-k
collected
13
fi
t
341'
.,
'""""'
rs
· • t ri ump h over the .v1s itln
.· g
downs an d l!i1 total yards but as Wahama White Falcons. 1
second year coach Mark Hartman
Thelosswasthethlrdstralghtfor
put It, "We totally dominated, but Coach BUI Jewell's White Falcons
couldn't get in,".
whUe Spencer won for tlle second
Steve Waugh, junior fullback, led
time In three tries.
KygerCreek'soffensewlth76yards
Spencer's first score came on a
rushing while senior tailback Shane 22-yard boOtleg run by quarterback
Stover added 21. Top defensive
Doug Nichols 48 secondS Into the
players were Bradbury, Waugh,
second stanza. Mike Garrett's
McGuire, and Chuck Vogel.
extra potot boot was true.
Kyger Creek goes to Minford
IttooktheWhlteFalconsonlytwo
Friday.
plays following the ensuing kickoff
~
Slalllll..
KC
w toknotthescorewhenRonBradley
Ftrotdowns ..... ......... ............... 13
3
foundMikePethteloverlherillddle
Yardt rusblng... .. ,. ,.. ...... .......... 9Jl
37 for a 50-yard touchdown pass with
~ 10:05 remaining In the half. Donille
p...., attempted .... .................. 15
2
VanMeter made It 7.. 7.
0
p...., cornpt""!' .... ................... 4
Spencer came back on Its next
=":~~~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~
possession to regain the lead with a
Fumbl.. loot ··········· ...... ........•... 2
2
ttve play 57 yard drlve which was
Brq~
Kyt~ercreek ..... .............. o o , o-o
aided by a 15 yard penalty against
Wat«Jord ....... ......... ,........ 0 0 o o-o
the White Falcons. Wayne Jarvis

The Sundoy Times-Sentinel-Page--C:t •

Point PleaiiCint, W. Va.

1 0 19 17

99c
Purolator XSV Air Filters

sac

alter

mig's S1.00 rebate

For most domesllc ar1d loreign cars limit 2 Sale 1.99

RESISTORS
Reg. 1.24 Limit 16

SAVE$1.00
til,.,.

ACor
Champion
Spark
Plugs

rlll.t i~ 11-..4

tflll -lit
POIOUTIIII'IODUm IJII til PI Jl \ lOIII I N
1/I/J .... MI~"fff tf ,_,I.IIIIIIIII I".,JI

....
- ..,....:::.~
...""'
. ~="""
""'"'
•'
~IIHI -----~
(il) _ _ )till _

li' -

=

rtl,. ,..,...., ....... ,.

P~MI•uthiM I HI.ItfSIIIII , •.,, :;:
tii!INttM,..I tf Pl!llhN(lW.IIH't ....
ilolllto,hfiiiMt)plu~t.U. •., IIII•••J' ;:_i
~ltelt lltlt IHM ltlftll
!:
IO!ttlf'IIII~UB
,;.
1 111141111y.,. t111 mer.,., 1\W.lir f•t11 :;

J ntllt!lllilll\lo\ttM-hlnttli!y
,.,...;
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l..,nl

•r.~•tt '..,••u"
!Mil~~-"'~ --~
a..w.

...

1...,_,
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) , .......... .04t'llltr~.... ,

o

~

!I
.•

..

, ...... .-...

Champion Pluga
lmprofl Mll..gt

I 0 13 13
1 0 7 19
1 0 26 41

Wellst&lt;XI ... ..... ..• .•........... .... 0 1 I 41 53
Vllttoo Co...•.• .•• .•........ ....... 0 2 0 21 49

MJ\ler ...............................0

Burgundy, V6, outamaHc. PS, PB, crulll, olr, AM r1dlo, rHIII
tl,.., wtn1 whHI c:11von, 21,000 miles.

~9~

NOW

2 0 22 61

Sept. IS...,..
Alexander at Wellston
Vtntoo (()_at Belpre
~ble Ill Federal-Hocking
Melp at NelsonvtiJe..York

Warren l.ilcal at MWer

•6700

Panthers ...

- ..

OJntlnued from C-2
bUrg (W.Va.~ CathollcSaturday'.
Ile!laftinetll

NO
Flrlt downs .•• .•. .• ........................!
Yardl rushlng .. .......•................ 275

Bring In this a&lt;l . . . get a FREE

-

Y.,;b puatng ... •.• .............•.•••.•. ~

$575' mower and hilch when you
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hitch wllh purchaae of a

Tolol y~ ....... ... ................ 2!11

p...,. attempted ....................... 6
p - completed .••.• ....•........•..•.• !

1600 or 2400 Series
tractor. Hurry! Offer

.,'

expire• 11/30/ !3

~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :

._......

Fwnbl.. loot .•... .... ... ...•........... ....

Pelllltle! .... .......................... 12-l:f;

Turtle Wax Excallbur
Camauba Spray Wax
Sale price 2.49 EX t2

lrom

SE

15
72

3.95

241
316

Exhaust &amp; Tailpipes

34
19

2.69.a.

1
1
I

7-!1)

eher -mlg'a 12.00 rebate

Nor!h GaUla •••.•..•. .. ..•..••......6 14 0 ()-:1)
- -························0 0 13 8-21

1979 CHEVY C -20 % TON PICI&lt;UP

•

Aussies down
~2 in cup race
NEWPORT. R.I. (AP)- Thetlde
of : E'lll!fl!s, even the weather, Is
tuinlng against the crew of Austra·
II and Skipper John Bertrand as
they trail :uJ In the best-of-seven
America's CUp finals.
~I guess we'll Just have to go out
aJill win tour to a row," said AUllSle
gmJp chief Alan Bond Friday after
a day fuD of woe over grievanceS.
After the overrullngofanAustral·
laJ! proiest by an International Jury,
the challeng1ng syndicate will have
to Win ttonthewaterlfthey are going
to llo .what no one has clone In 132
:Ye~
take the Cup fr&lt;m u.s.
pYWskln.
1be troubles began for Bond and
coborbi when they lost their claim to
a ~t canm1ttee of the Interna·
tiOial Yacht Racing Union that
.AuittNlJ8 II was fouled In Thul'II-

Aiter mig 's S1 .50 rebate

Prestone
Super Sealer or

on 2 gellona.

Water Pumps
'

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11.77

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1181·11 (.)07·3SOI SIIOU 77087 witn
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Coolant

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19.88

Monroe Gas

Malic Shocks
•

.

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Sale price 3.69 Limit 4
Anli-Bolls, Runs Cooler

Reg. 22.95

ua:

We can remedy your "lemon-on-four-wheels blues!"
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,.

'·

...

'•

Idler Anna &amp; Pitman Anna

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-

STOP IN AND SEE:

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Open Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. - 8 p.m;,

Parts

.

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or N&amp;W Disc ·

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Reg. 10.95

daYsracebytheU.S.yacht~

REED'S

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

. COUNTRY STORE
REEDSVILLE

378-6125

I

25 Court Street

'

Silver Bridge

Plaza

Member FDIC
Spring Valley

•

sailed by Dennls Comes'. That
l1lliana Uberty keeps Its 8l'COIId
victoly bt two races.
1be Allllla allo lost their claim
lllat the u.s. crf!N, not Aultralla,
had calllld for Friday's day ott The
A"M'" ca•t aak tor a!V'Opr Ulllels
theii!I'I!IIOI!Irnorelhanblrraces.

HOIIS: 5111. 10.5
l·f 1:30-1:00
511.8:...

•

209 UPPER RIVER RD.
J

'

446-3807
'•

'

.

�Pav•

'

1he Sunday Times-Sentinel

C4

.Sap•••

Septan liar 18, 1913

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

STOLEN BASES-Rliendenm. OaltJ.nd.
102; Rlaw, 0\kago, 1U; JCruz, Otkago,
52; WWilsm, Ka.oSilS City, ~; Sample,

Majors
By 'The~ P'rtY

Texas, u .

AM!mlc.\N LEA.GUE

EAST DIVIiiOI'!I'
WLPct. GB
Baltlrrore

""""I

.5716

more. 11-i• .7ll, J.()l; Dotson. Chicago, 187•.7'11. 3.53; Gossai('. New York. U.5.

82

63

.566

1

.'106, 2..43.

81

611

.5f4

10

19

68

&amp;I

82

.5J1 11
.4111 t9~
.til 25~

56

.614 -

n n

""10'
Cle'leland

WF.BT DJVI:UON·

tblcago ..

WI'
70

r.o

.!"d;! -

483 16
.466 ts ~

Qallland

m

75
79

Ill

81

.456

ca.Jit:lrnia

lli

81

.445 21 ~

64

84
91

.432 23 ~
.3T7 31~

Kansas .c!ty
T"""

w..-.

Seattle

!iJ

w

~·•Gunes

Boston 6, .Detrdt l
Baltlmore 8, M!Jwaukee l
NI!W Vorl!: at C~'t'land. ppj., ' ralll

ChJcago 7, Sean)(&gt; 0
~UToront o ~

Onzy games soheduled
~·Gams
New York at BoltDn, {n)

Milwauka&gt; at Balt:lrncft, in)
M1MeSOta at ChlctiJIO, (D)
Calli::lmia at Kansas OtY, (nl

iamcs schl'CMed
NA'I10NAL urAGVE
EAST DIVBION

W L Prt. GB
'M
.524 -

rr m

.su -

MoltlNal

75

71

.5U

St. Louis

7J

0\lcago
New York

65

13
82

..5Xl 3'n
.442 12

61

86

.us

1~

16

weT DIVI!IION
l.n!! Angel~ ..
HS 62
Atlanta
HI ' r.'i

.57!1 -

Hrustoo.
San Diego
San Frandlco
CtnctnnaU

.521 8*
.¥17 12
.too 16
M33 17

'I&amp;

'10
74.

48
68

18
79

......,..Game.

.!Hi

3*

Plttsbu'lh 9. Montreal o

Dl!iO 0

PhUadr!lphla 3, St. Louis 2, Lllnnlngs
Clllcfti'O 7, New Y ock 4.
San Frandlco 1, ~..A» Angeles 0

_.. .......

ChlcqQ at ~ York
Montreal at Plctsbilritl

_ .. ·

9'1:· 'M&lt;e!tlV!dy,

McntreaJ,

174;

Cruz,

les, 47; WilSon. New York. 44: LeMaster,
San Fi"Mtlsco, J9: LoSmlth. St.1..oo.Js, 39.
P~G

U4 ded!lons) ·Deruly, Philadelpbla, "15-ti. .n~. 2..19; ~WUliams.
Plttsbul"l!h, lf-6, ,700, 3.2'7; Clrn5ro, New
Y«k. 1J.6, .Git, l.:!i; APeta, Los Angeles, 12-4i, .66'7, 2.18: Tunnell, Pllt!ibursfi, 9-

.. ::;, .&amp;0, 3.82.
.
.
j
;
.•
·STRIKEOt!l'S-Carlton. . Phlla(telphla.
l49; Solo, Cincinnati, %19: McWl111ams,

Plnsbufib, 179; Ryan, HoostCil. 167: VaIEmlJe-la, Loo Angl!lf!S, 167.
SAVES-u&amp;nlth, Chlcft&amp;'l, 25; lb&gt;ardon,
Montreal, 'II: &amp;dn:alan, Atlanta, Ul; Hol-

Transactions
.

iWll1~.iJ..

-.. AhNrtc:e ......

-

BOSTON RED SOX-5Janed lUck Miller, out11elder, to a two-year oontract.
'TEXAS RANGERS-AcqWred Ricky
w~~

Dodgers
1n

Plttmlrgh at New York. tn )
St. Louis at Montreal, (n)
Ht~.~ston at Lori AnR'Mes, ( n )
san Dk!KO at san FranciSCO. 1n1

Mllner had just belted a two-run
homer on the first pitch from
Houston reliever Vern Ruhle- the
Reds' second homer olthe inningto give the Reds a S.3 lead.
"Eddletoldmetoswlng'atthellrst
pitch," Redus said. " He said
(Ruhle) threw it right tliere on hls
first pitch."

USED EQUIPMENT SALE
GOOD FARMALL H ........~ ............ S!l50
(2) VERY GOOD FORD 3 PT. DISC m,, $650
EXTRA GOOD IDEA CORN PICKER ... '3150
CYCLONE GRASS SEEDER, LIKE NEW······ *150
686 I.H. TRACTOR (580 HOURS) ......... SU,990
1
LAWN TRACTOR (NEW ENGINE) .................'650
NEW POST HOLE DIGGER ................·S375
NEWW HEEL RAKE ....................~ ... s475

Jackson remains undefeated
terback Jon Clay ran 41 yards to
end end zone and Wyant's kick gave
JHS a 14-7 cushion.
Jackson's offense struggled to 12
first downs, 169 yards rushing, and
made good on lour ofll passes lor
21 yards.
The Senators dropped their llrst
contest of the season. as they
generated 10 llrst downs, 84 rushing
yards, and made good on six ol14
passes lor 89 yards.
Price led aU rushers with 73 yards
on 14 carries while Tim Mershon's
42 yards on seven attempts paced
the losers.
Score by quartera:
Jackson ........... .... o 0 7 7-14
Ports. West. ...... _. .. O ··O Q · s-: .6

PORTSMOUTii - The Jackson
Ironmen won .the battle of the
unbeatens Frtday nlghf as they
traveled to Portsmouth and
emerged with a 14-6 victory over
the Portsmouth West Senators.
Following a scoreless first half
the Ironmen set up their first score
by blocking a Senator punt at the 10
yard stripe.
Three .plays later John Price ran
13 yards lor a TD and Joey Wyant's
kick made It 7.0 with 8: 54 lett.
On the llrst play of the fourth
canto a 47 yard pass !rom Bart
Evans to Floyd Phelps got the host
team on the board, but a conversion
run faDed.
The 7.fi score stood until the clock
showed 2:58 remaining Whenqllar·

251 WEST MAIN

m

Bal~.

10R; EMur, ray, Baltllmre, UM; MO!leby, Toronto. 99;
· RHenderson, Oakland, !II; Boggs, lUton,
.
RBI-Rioe, Boston, U7; Cooper, MU·
waukee, U4; llWarrtsh, Detroit 100:

"'·

Wintiel.d, New York, lOt: S!Jrumn.s, MU·

waukEe, 98.
Rlpk81, .Balli·

more, 183;: Whltall:er, Det:rott 1.82; Cooper. MUwau.kfe , Ill); McRae, Kansas City,

173.
DOlJBLES.Bogp, Bostm, 44; Rlpla,
Baltlrrore, 44: LNPIIJ'rlsh. Detroit, u ;
" McRae, Kansas City, 38; BrPtl, Kansas

.

~

. Qty. :rr.
1RIPJ.ES.Cr1ftln, Toronto. 9;

F'Tanm,

Oeveland, 8; Gantner, Mllwaukl!e, 8;
Hemoort, Detrott, 8; KG!bson. Detroit. 8;
Wlnfteld. NeW York, 8; Yount, MU·
• waukl!e, 8.
HOME RUNS-Rice, Boston, .J3; Kittle,
Ch~ago. 32; Annas, lbi1on. 31; Luzlnsld, ·
Chicago, :Jl; Cooper, Milwaukee, 27;

, EMurray, Baltiroore, 'Z"f.

Terminal posts

J!ulldogs.
· · The Tigers, with a 2-1 mark, used
: all of Phlller's talents as he ran one
. yard to paydlrt in the llrst period
•and caught an 11 yard pass from
: quarterback Eddie Stms for a
;-second period TD.
·
·~ Athens took the ensuing kickoff
;and marched 73 yards on a 10 play
··drtve, capped by a 15 yard scoring
:strtke from Dave McAIUster to
Cllrls Leonard. Chris Torres toed
:the conversion to reduce · the
:Jialftlme lead to 12·7.

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The Bulldogs' losing streak now
stands at 15, dating back to 1981.
Clrclevtlle tlnlshed with 216 rush·
lng yards and hit on seven of 17
passes lor 77 yards. ·
Athens had only four yards net
rushing, but completed eight of 15
aerials for lll yards.
Score by quarters:
Athens·....... .......... 0 7 0 0- 7
Circlevllle .......... ....6 6 14 7-13

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51

2t3
D

Continued on C.fi

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l
I

Point Pleasant

STORE HOURS1
MoiMfay.frldey u.m.lll p.m., s.turuy u.m.-12 . _.

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Other than a knee Injury suffered
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DETROIT RED WINCE-Signed Dann,y
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ur

pp

'"WE MAKE IT RIGHT"'

••

oro

In the third period, Phlfler scored
on a six yard run and Keith Hampp
tallied !rom the one, with Phltter
running the conversion.
Phlller picked up his lourth'TD in
the fourth quarter on a nine yard
blast with Jay Sharran kicking the

Yards I'\I.Sh!ng ... ,.... ,. .......... ..... . l96
Lost rushing ................ ,............ :rr

coverage."

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protein.

RErEKINS-Placed
Monte Coll'man. 11neb&amp;cker, on thr In·
tured te!l'rY~ 11!.1.
UDI&amp;ed SWe8 FooCbd l..eape

GEORGIA SfATE-N.amed Bill Muse
asSistant ~tball coach.

Dep-

•

nulflenlt, Including

$650

D E 1' R 0 IT UONS-Released Tom

Letendre and Todd Francis, ri&amp;ht wings,
Serglo MOllli!UO, t'erlter, aDd Jean-Guy
Be~ron and Jolm I&lt;DrdJc. defauemen.

hitting contest.
Friday, Galllpolls will host Ul)·
beaten Boyd County, Ky ., a 1~
winner over Lexington Bryan
Sta tlon Friday night.
:
Point Pleasant will host Hurr!·
cane. "We haven't beaten them
since 1979," Safford said.
·
Statistics:

have In our backfield with IIashes of
speed. He's come up with some big
plays the past two weeks."
Too Many Mistakes
Meanwhile, Saunders said, "We
made too many mistakes again
tonight. Point Pleasant has a good
ball club. That doggone draw play,
We worked hard on It aU week, but
our defense just broke down on the

A t'jghly palatable.
complete l~e cycle

BOXING

CARTERS TRACTOR SALES

runner. He's the one runner we

at regular prices

U.S. OLYMPIC TEAM-Named Pat
Nappi head lndn.g coach.
FOO'I11AlL
N.._. FoudJal J..eaaue

The Lightweight Saw

carries, paced the OhiOans' attack.
Jim Beaver finished with 51 yards
on six carries.
GaWpolls chalked up 12 first
downs. The Blue Devils ,rushed lor
159 yards In 38 trips, and added 71
yards passing (four oflO attemptS,
two Intercepted) lor :m total yards.
Both teams punted lour times.
Safford felt his quarterback,
Brian Wedge, Was "Improving with
every start." He added, "We knew
we were green back there. (PPHS
lost Its entire backfield by gradua·
tlon last sprlng) . Wedge no doubt
played hls best game thus far."
Salford added, "We were lortu·
nate to goet about everybody In the
game." The veteran PPHS mentor
pointed out John Oshel (two-way
performer at tackle) was a steady
performer. " He plays like that
every week," SaUord added.
Salford also praised the running
of Thomas. "He"s an explosive type

.•·

Rabbit Chowe
Complete Blend

.

,.• CIRCLEVILLE - Tailback
, Gary Phlttf?r ran lor 99 yards and
scored lour touchdowns Friday
n!ght in leading Circleville to a J3.7
·Victory over the vlsltlng Athens

period. but John Oshel and company put an end to that threat.
driving the visitors back to the Big
Black 21 on consecutive losses. Big
gainer In the drive was a 52·yard
scamper by Jimmy Beaver, who
was knocked , out-ol·bounds by
Nibert, preventing a Blue DevU
score.
Doug Hern recovered a fumbled
GAHS punt on the GAllS six to set
up the Blacks' third touchdown.
Wedge hit tight end Guy Morrow
with a lour-yard strtke (6: 29 left In
the hall) to make It 22.0. Wedge
found Nibert all alone In the
end·zone lor another two-point
conversion.
Alter Wedge sprinted 34 yards on
fourth down with 8: 31 left In the
third period to make It :ll.o, both
coaches llooded the field with
substitutes.
Gallipolis got on the board with
5: 48. Jell In the third stanza.
Sophomore quarterback Todd
Slone lolled · a 4o-yard strike to '
junior split end Joe Watson to make
It 3().6.
1bomas Top Rusher
Thomas led all rushers with 108
yards on 12 carries. Point Pleasant
rushed for 243 yards (48 trips) and
added 22 passing (on threeolll) tor
265 total yards. The Big Bli~eks had
14 first downs. PPHS ran 59 yards
!rom scrimmage.
}'aU! Close, with 65 yards In 12 ·

Sensational "End-of-Season"
price on Armadill~ V chain
. link fence outfit

Honeycun trade.

Athens losing streak reaches
15 in past two and ·half years

Junior quarterback Brian Wedge
Plunaed over from the two with 6:01
left to make It IMJ. Wedge then hit
Shawn Nibert with a .two-point
conversion,
Jell Rile's pass \nterceptlon set
up PPHS' second toochdown. Rife
returned a Todd Bergdoll "erial to
the PPHS38.
Shawn Thomas, 16Q.pound junior
taUback, raced 62 yards on a draw
play to make It 14-0 with 2:.54
showing on the clock.Again Wedge
hit Nibert lor the two-point
conversion.
GAllS Threatens
GAHS moved 72 yards In lour
plays to the PPHS nine late In the

Boso ·Agri-Center

M .
,}Qiteor

N....,_. BMkefb.U .t..Mc~Mion

AMERICAN LEAGUE

HMt

Point Pleasant aoored 011 Its llrst
two pt UFIIiOIUIIn the Initial period,
then llll!llt 011 to hand vWtlng
Gallipolis a oo.6 defeat on Sanders
. ,Memorial Field here Friday night.
:- More than 3,(01 spectators looked
•)II II Coach Sieve Safford'S Big
: ~ challred up their """'l''d grid
',wfn In three starts. It was Point
&lt;Pteuaat's home opener.
:: Coach Brent Saunders' GaWpolls
: ·IQuad dropped to~ on the year,
.;
Wedp 8cora
:; The West Vlreinfans took the
; aame's opening kickoff and
:·11181"Ch!!d 70 yards In 12 plays (with
•'the aid of three GAllS penalties).

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

P.HOENIX SUN5--Siined Rod Foster,
guard., to a three--year contract.

BA.'ITING {370 at bats)·Boggs, Boston.
.:.i2; Carew, caurom1a, .346; Grlfley,
NI'W York. .324; Mose~ . Taronto. .!lli
McRae, Kansas City.

; POINT PlEASANT -

PH. 992·6441

saars

1he Sunday Ti..,_Sentinei- Page-&lt;;-:;

Ohi-Point Pleasant, W, Va.

Pleasant hands GAHS third consecutive loss, 30-6

POMEROY,OH.

~- LOUIS CARDlNAI..S-Sent John
Fulgham, pilcher, to Arkansas of thP
Texas: League.

Leaders

Po!s~en~y-Middleport-Gallipalis,

DALE HILL FORD TRACTOR

~. ~ ~~ ~
11! ur player to be II&amp;ITM.'d Later

the Rick

18, 1913

MANY OTHER ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM

I!MKEIBALL

HITS-Boas. Boston. 193:

the Reds abeiKI. Clnclnllatlltarter
Bruce Berenyt !hell doubled to
chase Heatbcock, who was making
hls first major·leaglle start.

Paul Householder walked, stole
second and scored on a throwing
error by llrst baseman Ray Knight
on an attanpted double play to put

NMioMII..e~

ramea schedUled

RlJII&amp;Ripkm.

An&amp;'f'k!s,

1,.(18

re

Dawson,
P hlladelphla, !PJ:

1RJPLESButier, Atlanta, 1.1; Gre'!n,
fJ.J..aJis, 9; Thon, Howlton, 9; 6 an! tied
with 8.
HOME RlJNS.Schmktl, l'tillade!phla,
li: Murplzy, Atlanta, 3&amp;; DaW!Oil. Montreal, 31: Evam, San FranciK'o, 28;
Guem.'I""O, l.o5 Angeles, 28.
.
STOLEN BASES-Ralnes, Montreal, 73;
Wli!R1ftS, San Diego, 56; SSax, Los Ange-

.~

Sl.· LoUis &amp;\ "PhJJade!phl.ti"
-san Dleio 111 Atianta
H!l.lston at Clnctnnatl
lM ~ at San f'rllnctsro
Moad.lo'• GIII\M
Chicago at Pblladelphla, (n)

~

Atlanta,

Schmidt.

land, Philadelphia. 19; MlntCil, San Francisco. 19; Sutter, StLouis, 19.

ClnclnnaU 8, Houtofl 3
Atlanta 6, San

Ick, St:Lo.lll. .:n7; L::&amp;nllh. Stl.wls, .317;
Murphy, Atlanta, .316.
RtJNS.Murpey, Atlanta, 126; Raines,
Montreoal, U6; DawtM, Montreat gJ;
Schmidt, Philadelphia. 91; Evans. San
Franclsco, 88.

173; Oliver, Montn!al. 172;
RRamlrw. Atlanta, 170; M~. Atia11ta,
l!il.
OOUBJ..ES.OUver, Montreal, 11; BuckrEr, Chk:ago, 36; .TRay, Plttst:Jurgh, Jf;
Knlibt Houston, 3oJ; ' GCarter, Montrea.l.
JJ.
.

Texas at Call.fornla

13

NATIONAL LFAOUE
BATI1NG (JM at ~ts )-Madlock , Pitts·
bUr'ih, .m; O'uz. lbutoo, .322; Hendr-

Houston,

MUwaukre at Balt:tmore

'

»..

9'1.
HJ'I'S.Daww:ln,

New York 111 Cleveland
SM.ttle at Chic8iQ
oakland at KaMas City

"n

Stanley, Bc!ritoo, 28; RDavLs. Minnesota,
'l1; C8Lli1Ul, Seattle, 23: Gos.&lt;lagto, Nt&gt;W
York,
[.add, Mllwau&amp;, m.

SanD~.

New York .at Clf!vel1tnd, 2
Df'tmit at Bosbl

F'tlUadelpbla
Pittsburgh

SAVES-Qubenbeny, Kansas Cl!l'. 40:

Guerrero,

sum.y.a.n-

Astros.

~TRIKEOl!I'S Morrls ,
Oetroll,
IDJ';
F'Bannister, Chicago, 1'19; Stleb, Tc.unto,
17l; Rlghl'ttl , NE'W' York, llli: SUtciUfe,
C!Eoveland, 146.

RBJ-MIJI'l)by,
Montreal. 106;

Kansas City 6, Qakland 5
calllornla 8, Texu 6

~

more, U'll, .186, 3.ll; McGregor, Bald-

8a63

EEl

NEw York
Tc.-ooto
MUwaukEte

PITCHING (14 decllliDDII) ·H.W., Milwaukee, UJ. .813, 117; F!a11ap.n, BaJU·

However, Redus chooe a more
patient tactic, waiting untU the
fourth pitch to unveU hls home run
swlng. Redus swatted hls 16th
homer over the ]ett·fleld wall to cap
a live-run inning and give the Reds
three homers In one lnnlllg.
Nick Esasky hls a solo homer to
lead o!f the inning and start the rally
that sent the Reds to their fourth
straight victory.
. With the Reds trailing 3-2, Esasky
drWed a J.l pitch from rookie Jeff
Heathcock, H, over the cenler·fleld
wall, his 12th homer of the season.

,

~oint

Big fourth inning gives Reds 8-3 win
CINCINNATI (AP) - Gary
Redus. the Cincinnati Reds' No. 2
hitter, got some advice from Ieado!l
man Eddie Milner when he came to
bat In the fourth Inning Friday night
ot an S.J victory over the Houston

t

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
·SHOPPING CENTER
GALLIPOLIS

our
-pledge
to yotl

...,

.•

.••••

.

•• •

'I

,I j

'

�l'age--C.6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pom-t· Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea~ant, W. Va.

Southern slips pa~t Ross, 12-6
By SCOTr WOLFE

ton 22. Five lays later, quarterback
Brtan Allen br\lke the scoring tee
with a lour yard TO run. The PAT
run laDed. SHS led 6-0.
AU was quiet unw the clock hit
the 1:5() mark 1n the second stanza.
Senior end Paul Harrts hawed tn a
27 yard touchdown pass !rQm Allen
to make It 12.0. The PAT run failed .
With eight seconds left In the hal1,
quarterback Todd WUilams rolled
outotthepocketandhltT.Grubbon
the scoring end of a 14-yard
· touchdown pass. It was 12-6 at the
hall.
Southern threatened several
times In the second half.
Despite these threats the reltlalnder of the game was played
between the ~ yard lines as both
clubs traded possessions.
A cUpping penalty nullified an
apparent Southern score 1n the
third frame when Brlan Allen
galloped 40 yards. The play was
wblstled back and thus the closest
hint of a score 1n the last hal1.
Alter the . game, a Tornado

'lbne&amp;&amp;!ntlnel Staff
CHILLICOTHE - Southern's
Tornadoes made It two In a row
Friday evening as they rolled to a
12-6 grid trtumph over the Hunllng·
ton Ross Huntsmen at ChUilcothe In
a non·league battle.
Southern Is . now 2·1, (just two
points shy of a perfect J.O mark)
and Huntington-Ross Is 0-3.
Despite the loss of starting
quarterback Tony Rlme, Southern
did well with Brian Allen guiding
the Tornadoes' offensive unlt.
Rltfle was hospitalized due to
illness. Also absent from the
Tornado roster was starting half·
back Greg Nease.
Nevertheless Southern grossed
106 yards rushing under the raindampened field conditions, netting
a total of 78 markers for the night.
Southern scored flrst with 2:50
left In the first period after tackle
Chad Roberts blocked a Huntsmen
hi h
punt w c was recovered by Jason
HlllsettlngupaSouthernscore.HIU
ed he
:eve~ ~lgskln and rambled follower quipped, ''The Tornadoes
yar s
eld to the Hunting· are back!" and that I!IPUld very

t:

Pt. Pleasant ...
·
mpletto.. ............................... t

· Warriors Romp
BEVERLY -The Wllrl'ell Local
Warriors jumped out to a 28-0 lead
In the second quarter and coasted to
a 42-15 trlumph over VInton County
to share a flrst place tie with Belpre.
Ron Rltfle scored three TD' s on
runs of 11 and 36 to go along with aM
yard punt return. Other Warrtor
touchdowns were John Fryman on
a six yard run, Bryan Benson on a
one yard run, and Cralg Lochary on
a two yard run.
Yinton's points came by way of a
St!We Crow receptlon of 25 yards
froin Terry Radekln and Jim
Campbell's six yard run.
· By quarters:
VInton Co ......... .. .. 0 8 7 0-15

Warren Local; .... ~ ...l4 ·u 7 7-2 .

·Lancers Trlwnph
STEWART - Fed~ral·Hocklng
broke Into the win column with a
Frtday.decision over MWer here
26-22

The Lancers broke open a 20-14
game with their final points with
1: 15 lett as Kevin HyseU ~an 13
yards. Other Uuicer ~res were ·
runs of 34 lllid nve by Glen Singer
whUe John Murphy had a two yard
run.
Mlller, who scored their final TO
with two seconds left In the game,
scilred on 1115 yard run by Joe King,
Ray Jenks' 42 yard run, and King's
receptlon from Keith Roberts of 18
yards.
By qWIIiers:
MOler .................. 7 0 7 8-22
Fed.·Hocklng ....... 14 0 6 6-26
Trimble Nips Spartans
Trimble gained
their flrst win of the young season
with a 7-6 w1n over Alexander here
Frlday night.
The Tomcats scored In the first
Quarter wbUe the Spartans scored
In the final quarter. Alexander
attempted to run In the extra points
In going for the win but was stopped
short.

21-20 win over North Gall!a.
Wade Connolly led Southern
rushers with 37 yards on 14 carries
despite sulferlng an ankle Injury
early In the first perlOd. Allen
rushed for 22 yards on 17 carries
and Keith Cook 14 yards on nine
attempts.
Paul Harrls led the SHS receivers
with three catches for 57 · yards.
Joey Wolfe was one for eight, and
Jason HOI one for nine. Brian Allen
had an lnterceptton. Leading Southern tacklers were Dennis Teaford
with 14, Chad Roberts 11, Keith
Cook eight, and HOI nine.

.

maNTON - Fullback John netted 36 yards on 17 carrles for the
Pemberton and Tailback Pierre Trojans.
Tlsrno each scored a pair of
Score by quarters:
touchdowns Frlday night as the Portsmouth ......... . 0 0 0 0- 0
undefeated Ironton Tigers crushed Ironton .......... ..... ... 7 0 25 0-32
Portsmouth, 32.0.
In running their record to2.0.1 the r-------------1
Tigers thus averted a regular
season defeat lnr the 56th consecutiVe game, dating back to 19'17.
Pemberton's 11 yard m run and
Ryan Ainsworth's kick was the only
scortng In the first hal1 as both .
teams traded mistakes.
;However, Cary MOler ignlted the
(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)
crowd and b1s teammates when he
110 Spring Ave., Pomeroy)
returned the opening ldckolf of the
PH. 992·6101
second half 90 yards to paydlrt.
;The Tigers tl;len scored three
more touchdowns In just over seven
TINGLEY BOOTS
nitnutes as Tlsmo scored on runs of
Wort Boots ............. $14.00 pr.
11 :and six yards, and Pemberton
added another, but allot the extra
Knee Boots ...•.......•.. $18.25 pr.
pelnt conversions failed.
:The Tiger otfense rolled up ·1s
KENDALL FILTERS
fits! downs, 195 yards rushing, and
completed four of seven passes for
2Y4'x24" .•...•..•...•....... $14.00
54 rards.
4 9/16" Rta. u.so... NOW $2.50
The Trojans, now 1·2, flnlshed
"While Supply Lasts"
with 96 rushing yards and 17 .
passing as they hit on just two of 11
aitempts.
·
"See You At The Bnf field Day,
:Pemberton played just three
Sat.. Oct. I, at the leics County
q\)arlers but carrted for 100 yards
Fair&amp;rouds."
·
on 15 trles wbUe Alvin WUilams

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.

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

2

Loot furnt&gt;M

-

._...,..,ulw;
r..-ntp&gt;Ho ........................... o 0 6 o- 6

118
3
2

2

3-15 '

f.llt

Pt. PIMMnt ........•......... .... !&amp; 8 6 11-Sl

o._.

s

Rushing ······ ····························· 18

l
65
25

Passes-comp-att ..... ................. ~·lO

90
2·5

Fuml&gt;leo ......•.. .... ..................... J.J
tn~erceptlons ................. :............. 2
Punts ......................... ....... .. ,. 5-386

1·1
1

~~,:~~.;;:d~ji.;·::::::: ::

:::::::::: :Jl

Penaldes . .. ............. .... •...... ......4·30

By qwonen,

6

canal Fultm NW 33, Fa1r.1ess s

PLUSTAX

If You're Planning On · Putting A Tank In,
Now Is The Time·.
·

:h15
!1-25

Zl.,

MiddlttiM'Jl

FenW!rk

0

Cellaa :D, Kenton 1
a.acrtn Falls 7, BP(uoro o
Chanl:tn 2.1, PalnesviJ.Je. Harvey 7
Cln. Aca~ :W. Gl"l'l'fftieJd McClain 0
Cln. Aiken 31, Cln. H~~ghes 6
ct\. Bacon 1l, HamU!oo Badin 0
Ck\. Col@ndn 11, C!D. McNicholas 0
Ctt. Elder 35, Lima 21
Ctn. Marlernom 33, Madeira 14
C1n. Moeller :JJ, Lancaster- 7
ctn. Relldlng 15, Norwood 8
ctrcWvtlle 33, Athm!i 7
Cle. Benedict!nf' 25, Oe. Marshall 6
Clover-eat 31, Wooste-r 7
Col Aca:lemy 11, DanvWe 6
Col DeSaJes 14. Col. Nolihland 13 ,
Col. Ham.Dton Twp. 21., MWersJX)rt 0
Col Mariiln-FrankUn 10, Col. Br!ggs 0
Col. M1fiUn 28, BJi Walnut 6

Tank Rent Free.

$29900

Cam~ll-MemortaJ~.Gr_weQry, ,~a .
Carlisle

At A Special Price For A Limited time Only!
500 Gallon Tank, Plus Regulators, Plus Une and Fittings, Plus 200 Gallons Gas.

Only

15, G.~ 0

Bl!rea 27, Norctonia 6
Bl!me lJntm 6, Bloom-Carroll o
Black River . 6,. S. Anthem 6, tit
Brooklyn 13, O:Jhlmbla 0

.

H

Flr!t downs ....... ................ ..... ... 8

~

:n.

Day. Can'oU
Sp-tng. Ncrth 8
Day. Meadowdale 11. an. St. Xavle!- tt

Akron Gartteid 23, Akron St. V-SI: . M 12
Akron M.anctater 34, Doy~n 0
AshtaWia Jl. WGnmwllle 24
Barberton 35, ~ E. 12
&amp;!pre 17, ~York 0
Bl&gt;rilhlre t2, Grand Val. 0

Get Your Lp Gas Bulk, Tank
Set Now

-

-·-

.....

.,......

Col. Reedy 46, Grandview 14
Col. South 21, .Col. Easl lti

Col. Wattenon 23, Col. Whetsto~~e 0
OJI. West ZJ, Zanesville 19
Col. WeiUand 18, Hullard 6
Cay-RaWDI li, Pand:Jra-GII'tna 1
Croobvtlle 14, River Vlf!w 6 ·
CuyaOOga Falls 19, Akron Ksumre 0
Dlllltim 7, MassWon 'l\is1aw ~

Hunt.·Ross .......•. .... ............ o 6 o 0- 6
Southern ..... ........... .............6 6 o 0-12

Day. Wa~ .15, Xenia 11
Day. WhitiE' 21. SidneY !J
Delplm Jt&gt;ftersm U, Columtaa G!"DYe I)
l&gt;o\.w ~. Clayrmnr o
rA.tblln 16, w. Jef(en;on u
.
E. Clew&gt;Jand Shaw 18, Ck&gt;. KenniE'dy 6
E. Krtox :.Eo, loUie&amp;. Rosecrans o
E. Palestine 28, Soullrrn Local 8
Elida 21, Bath 7
Elmwood :!&amp;, H~li- LOudon 0
Elyria 3, N. Oll'nswci I)
Elyrta Cath. 47, BE-drord Chane! 0
Euclld H, Gent,&gt;va 6
Findlay 28, Tol. DE'Vllb!ss 12
Fostoria :tl, 11trin ColumbiM 0 ,
F'runont Ro&amp;s 7, Tol. Sl. F'rancts 1, tlo'
Girard 19, PaJnesv&amp; RJvenlde 1:i
Gos!len
Wllilam,'rura 28
Grove CITY 7. Col. Franklin Hts. 6
Hamilton :15, Cin. Pui'I'ell-Martan 6
HillSboro 13. Unioto G
Huron :11, WI~ 15

n

Indian Valley S. 34, "-·ett&amp;io 0
Lexington 7. Gallon 6
Uberty Ul\lo'm 27, loti;an Elm 16
12

Lima ShaWl'IIE'I£' 21, CB'ianoe

LucltSVile Val 31, bne 'J'raee 6
Mane. Madison 24, MI. Vemm 7
W. Musklngum 0
Meadowbrook u, CosOOCton 6

MayMlle 21,
Mltklletown

~.

Day. Be-lmont 12

w.

Midvlew a,. EIYJ1a
11
Millbury Lake 16, Gcnoo 8

Late Rocket rally. ties Marauders, 27-27 ~
By KEm1 WISECUP

bound back from a J.9.13 lui!rume
deftclt with two fourth quarter
touchdowns to take a 27-19 lead.
''We didn't play well defensively
In the flrst hal1, but Improved In the
second. Simple mistakes really
·hurt us. But don't take any credit
away from Wellston.! thought they
played well," commented Meigs
coach Charley Chancey after the
game.
"Both teams showed a lot of heart
and character,"' said Wellston' s
coach Paul Blankenship.
:•n was our best game the
season. We would have beaten
Warren Local (Warren defeated
Wellston 26-14) by two touchdowns
If we played like we did tonight,"
added Blankenship.
Meigs started the scoring In the
flrst period when senior tailback
Jon Perrtn ran In from four yards

Tlme&amp;&amp;!nllnel Staff
WELLSTON - Some days one
gets the elevator and other days the
shaft. Both the Meigs Marauders
and Wellston Golden Rockets received a little of both as they battled
to a 27-27 tie In a Trl-VaUey
Conference game here Friday.
Wellston knotted the scored with
1: 26 left In the game when
quarterback Steve Newman picked
up a teammate's fumble and
scooted Into the end zone from nine
yards out on a fourth and two
situation. .Newman's pass to
France Coleman completed the
two-point conversion for the
deadlock.
The tie was the tlrst for Meigs
since 1971 when It battled Pt.
Pleasant to an 8-8 t1e only the lnurth
In Meigs' 16 year blstory. Meigs h'!d

RU,·TLAND BOTTLE GAS

RUTLAND, OHIO
742-2511
rAI.ex;an;der;;~··~··;···~··;··;···~o;iiioiio;;~;;~iiiijiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Min1ord 21, McDerrmn NW o
New Albany Zl, Col. Webrle 13
New PhlladeiPhia ~. CIIE'. CoWnwood U
New RlctunOnd 6. aem»nt NE 0
N. College Hlli 13, Harrison 12
Onv1lle "'· Copley 8
Parkersburi. W.Va. 7. Ma.rle118 0
Philo ~ Tt1·Vailf&gt;y 14
Reynoldsburg 13, Pickerington 10
Rk:hmond um. Zl, Cuyahoga Ht». 14
Sbalcer Hts. Zl, Cle. South 6

Dale- o....-um
Pool
Sept. 1B M p.m./Open Rec... ........................................................... 2-4 p.m ./Opon Swim
Sept.l9 6-8 p.m./College R.ec. ..................................
.. ..... Noon-1 p.m.IF:Itness Swim
.
6-8 p.m .!Colege Swtm
Sept. ·3&gt; 6-8 p.m ./Colleg~ Rec.................... ... -.............................. NoM-1 p.m.IFttness Swtm
·
•
·
&amp;-8 p.m./College Swtm
Sept. 21 Closed ...... .......... ....... .. ....... .. ...................... ... ... ..... .... Noon-1 p.m. !Fitness Swim
Sept. 22 Cl&lt;llied ...... .•.......•••.................•......... .............. ... ........... .. .•..•....•..•.•..•..•... Cl&lt;llied
8ept. 23 6-8 p.m./Open R.ec....... .................. .............................. Noon-1 p.rn.IFttness Swtm
IHl p.m(Open Swim
SePt. 2124 p.m./Open Rec........... .. .................................................. 24 p.m./Open Swim
Sept. 25 2-4 p.m ./Open Rec ......... .. ........... ~ ............................ , ........... 2-4 p.m./Open Swlm
I

i

~~~Is Jim Mink Chev.-Oids

.

TIEMPO

1983 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC 4 DR.
DEMO

R
RADIAL

400 GALLON GAS &amp;
INSTALLATION

$4290 3 '

WHITEWALL

ESTATE WAGON, FULLY LOADED

1983 OLDS CUTLASS SIERRA 4 DR.

E~erything you need in one greallire'
Asteel belted radial with bigger foot ·
· print, more grip in mud and snow.
Grl!llt tracton in rain, hydroplaning re·
sistance, tread wear and · durability.
Plus responsive hand)ingand quiet
nde. Natural contour helps prolong
lire lile.

FOR MORE DEY AILS CALL
YOUR BUCKEYE GAS
PRODUCT'S CO. DEALER

BIG DISCOUNTS

1983 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
DEMO

Ridenour's Gas Service

Light Sable with contrasting landau roof. Fullly equipped.
Compare mywhere.

FREE MOUNTING
Computerimd Wheel Balanci•
'3.99 Per Wheel

985-3307
DISCOUNTED - DISCOUNTED -

.

....

5u

0

i5

u

N
T
E

II'

I
0

Ill

....

z

:I

~-0

I

D

.

.

DISCOUNTED - DISCOUNTED -

DISCOUNTED -

DISCOUNTED -

sz
Ill

D
I

s
g
z
~

m

J

0

I

c

0

u
E

D

DISCOUNTED

We Are Your One Stop Automotive Store
i

WATCH OUR ADS!

i:

'•
•.
•

...••'

'KING
WOOD&amp;
COAL
STOVES ·

,• '14 " Steel Construction
ioAccep~ 22" Logs

sEE THE

•5&lt;Vear Guarantee
~Optional GlaBS Door &amp; Blower

USir~

MORRIS SHEETS, TERRY HAMILTON, MIKE SICKELS
•
OR ROGER DILLARD.
.

MODEL #9001 :~~ER S4J995
MODEL #KCC90 :~~~n S38779

.,,.''.
,.

w/o BLOWER

$38995

w/o BLOWER

S329" '

$37495

w/o BLOWER

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.

*

CaD Today!

200 SECOND AVE.

698-6121

446-3672

1640 EASTERN AVE.

446-0069
••

60.00

64.00
68.00
70.00
70.00
72.00
74.00
79.00

f.n

$68

• lftlptlCI all rnur Urn~ COI't'Ut:l

tllr

prt~aNurtt •

l111port or
' domestic cars

S"t front or rttAt

!Mlfpunslun ad KftmrtnM ~yslt!m •
MOf'l lJ.S. Cll'ti 11nd lmport!» ·Wt1h
ttdlu!d~tbl., KUhptm!tkm. lnt :lutlt:N
front wtu"tl drt._.,. Chw.. nlh ::&gt;~
IIAhl lruc:k!4 Kmlt :ur.. n•ttulrhtll.
M..:Phunut t S1rul r:ttrrt ~t :lturt
'''''•· P11rts nud ttdtlitltm.,l
'ot't\' ICONI!XIt~l tfllm:dml

FMC COMPUTERIZED

GAS HEATERS

20,000 B.T.U ............ ~. '193.39
40,000 B.T.U .............. '239.95
.

POMEROY,OH.

)

I.SO to 2.H

~st selltnK hla!i ply polyt!lll~r hr-t!.
wllh ~l ·flb lrl!ad lor !(real road RriP
and smooth. rump-fret! ndr..

$32995

EBERS BACH
HARDWARE
,
PH. 992-2811

•

Sale
48.00
.49.00
51.00
53.00
;7.00
62.00
64.00
67.00
72.00

whmtl r.aHiur. t:Amhnr, tmd lun
W profNtt ~thnumnnl • lnt-iJHtt:l

,

)

POWER
STREAK ·Il

WOOD &amp; COAL STOVE
WITH BLOWER

..

•

Plus

anolht11 hraml nlt!IIUill
ht!Ht!t tl\lithly wll ht• miMh! wtwn
.

~lwall

II\..uP

48 MONTHS OR 4,000

• .• ,, • UIIITED WARRANTY

Addition31 parts

and uNices

lacltt4et: lnslatll n~w

hjtll!'A+t·il!t..

Mala. ptd front whttt:l biulinJ(:-.. ,
1pect h~dr~t.uiH . sys~m. 111dd flu 1d
road ltllil
2·"'-1 frenl INK: Install nttw fnanl
brake Pld". ll'!&lt;~Uff~tuo front ru1o .
IRJJPPCI CdliJWt.,

'

I

!

01

~
1
J

•

•
.•

•wa...th•: lnsiH II 1\t!W bral.tt lin·
tnt 1nd tiHturfdt:t! all lour dnuns.
Wamnled ll monthttur IUDJ mhM.

: :·

'

MEIGS · TIRE CENTER
242 W. MAIN ST.

992-2101

•

:

e•tra It needed

DOWN TO EARTH TIRE VALUES NOW THROUGH SEPT. 24TH

.

•WETAKETRADE-INS
*USED STOVES AVAILABLE
ADOON FURNACES FROM rroo

Sale
42.00
. 46.00
50.00 ·
54.00
54.00
58.00

SAVE

MARTIN UNVENTED

J

Reg
54.00
59.00
63.00
(.00
69.00
74.00
77.00
82.00
84.00
86.00
88.00
90.00
93.00
99.00

P155/BOR13

.

FIRsr TEAM _

~

Whitewall
Size
Fils
PI55/80Rl2 tbtkl
Metric
Pl55/80fll3
Meine
.Pl65/80RI3
AR78xl3
PI75/BORI3
BR78xl3
Pl85/80Rl3 .
CR78xl3
Pl75/75Rl4
BR78xl4
Pj85/75RI4
. CR78xl4
PI95/75Rl4
ER78xl4
P205/75Rl4
FR78xl4
Pl95~75Rl3
ER78xl5
P205/75Rl5
FR78xl5
P2l5/75Rl5
GR78xl5
P225/75Rl5
HR78xl5
P235175Rl5
.LR78xl5 ·
Plus F.E.T. of 1.41· to 2.90

s4200

We will be moving to new facilities very soon to better
E
serve you.
.
:
•
•
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.

60.00
66.00
72.00
7400
77.00
79.00
76.00
78.00
80.00
83.00
89.00

Sale
. 39.00
,. 40.00
44.00
46.00
48.00
54.00
56.00
54.00
54.00
56.00
60.00
64.00

It's any Radial buyer's dream! The tire that keeps its feet
even in the rain. Features two strong baits of steal plus
the smooth ride and durability of polyester cord body.
Whitewa)l
S.ze
Fits
ReR.
Pl75/80Rl3
BR78xl3
64.00
Pl85/80Rl3
CR7Bx 13
66.00
Pl75/75Rl4
BR78xl4
69.00
PI85/75Rl4
CR78xl4
74.00
Pl95/75RI4
[R78x 14
79.00
P205/75Rl5
FR78xl5
85.00
P215/75Rl5
GR78xl5
86.00
Not•! Rib count and sideP225/75RI5
HR78xf5
89.00
wall atyllng vary with aize.
P235/75RI5
LR78xl5
94.50
Not •II tirealook exactly like

WONDER COAL

:·············································································
•
•

:

.,"

N

T

5~. 00.

CUSTOM POLYESTEEL
RADIAL

DISCOUNTED

1-1983 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME
2-1983 MONTE CARLOS
2-1983 CHEVY CELEBRITY, 4 DRS.
1-1983 CHEV. CAVALIER ST. WAGON
2-1983 CHEV. S-10 1--l:Jutg=
4-1983 CHEV. CHEVEITES
5-1983 CHEV. CUSTOM DELUXE PICKUPS
1-1983 CHEV. CUSTOM DELUXE 4X4
1-1983 CHEV. SILVERADO PICKUP-LOADED

z

c

DISCOUNTED -

NEW CAR CLEARANCE
-

w

s

DISCOUNTED -

Reg.

FREE MOUNTING

DEMO

White on white with Royal Blue 50/50 seating full power and
all the optional equipment you would expect. ·
SAVE

..
DEMO
Air, cruise, tilt, AM·FM stereo, locking wires, Sable Brown
eKterior.
SAVE

It may b~ all the tire you'll ever need
.all year round! Has smooth · nding polyester cord body. double .steel cord
belts. Specially compounded tread
rubber for sure grip in any weater ...
. wet, dry. hot or cold.

$2402 4

1983 Chev. Capriee Classic St Wagon

Whitewall
Size
Fits
·
Melric
Pl55/8ffil3
Pl65/8ffil3 .·
AR78xl3
Pl85/BOR13
CR78xl3
Pl85/75Rl4
CR78xl4
Pl95/75Rl4.
ER78xl4
P205/75RI4
FR78xl4
P215/75RI4
GR78xl4
PI95/75RI5
ER78xl5
P205175RI5
FR78xl5
P215/75RI5
GR78x!5
P225175R1.5
HR7Bxl5
P235/75RI5
LR78 xl5
Plus F.E.T. ol !.51 to 2.90

RADIAL
.ALL SEASON

200 GALLON GAS &amp;
INSTALLATION

·Model Year End Sale of Sales

0

117 yards on 20 carries, galloped 57
yards for a score four plays after
the Mel~ kickoff to narrow It to7.j).
Continued on C.S

ot

.83 · FALL TANK
SPECIAL

I

capping a 60-yard lJ..play drive on
Meigs' tlrst possession. Dave Barr
kicked the extra.
Coleman, wholedaUrusherswith

l,yneCem«Scbedule
Week or Sepl. IB, I98S

,Jerry· Green scored Alexander's ·.
six pOints on a three yard run. No
detans were given on the Trimble
scoring.
By quarters:
Trimble .... .... •.... ... . 7 0 0 0-7

D

The Sunday Times--Sentinel- Page- Co,..

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

·High
school results
_,...._F_

SPECIAL

Southern hosts ljannan Friday.

ALBANY -

Ironton blanks Portsmouth

3

l'oaaltlel ............................... ..uo
.................................... f.llD

22
:116
Iii

Tolal yarda .......•...•...............••. 2!!
Piayi .••••..• ..• .•.••••••.•.......•.•..•..•• IB
Ro!urnyl!'llll ..........................,. 2!1
Fumbla ................................... t

September 18, 1983

:~~.~~'::t!~~rz:s:oc~~ r~ln~te!&lt;epted;;~~by;·~···~···~···~··~
·····~··~···~···~·o~iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...•..•. .•...•...•.·•···•···•····•·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill

Belpre. knocks off defending
champion Buckeyes, 17 to 0
NELSONVILLE Belpre
gained a first place tle with Warren
LOCal by virtue of a 17.0 win over
defending TVC champ NelsonvilleYork here Frlday.
The Buckeyes managed only 16
yards rushing In losing their flrst
game of the year. Belpre Is now 3-0.
Bill Meriweather kicked a 36 yard
. field goal and 1\\&gt;0 extra paints on
touchoown'S ·b}' Emle'WUilams (M
yard run) and Lee Holder (one yard
run).
By quarters:
Belpre................... 0 10 0 7-17
Nel.·York ........... .. 0 o 0 0- o

Yuda pou~nc ............ ,.............. n

ContlnuedfromC·5
C&lt;&gt;

S.pe.mber 18, 1983

992-2101 .

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�Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

September 18, 1983

Eastern drops 40-0 decision ·

READY FOR RUNNER - Southweotem's WUI
Halslop (32) gets ready to Iackie Symmes valley
rumlng back Brian Clark durlnl{ ~'rlday'snon-league

Late ...
Continued from C·7
A pass for the extras failed .
'tn theseeond stanza, Perrin, who ·
h.id a career-high 97 yards rushing
ori 24 tries, ran In from 17 yards on
thl' !lrst play after Tony Welch had
.recovered
Wellston lumblo.
Barr's kick sailed wtcie.
Wellston came right back on Us
next possession as Coleman ran In
from live yards and Ed Spriggs'
kick knotted tt at 13·13.

a:

The Rockets drove 93 yards on 13
plays after a Meigs punt as Je!!
Cheatwood scored from one yard
out. The .kick tailed.
.• The Marauders topk the' second·
half . kickoff and drove to the
Wellston five before losing thl' ball
on downs.

Meigs grabbed the lead with 11:20
to go In the gamP as Perrtn scored
his second TD from one yard out.
Barr added the extra.
Meigs made It 27-1910()th5: 53 to go
when Perrin sprinted eight yards
for his third TD and Barr kicked the
extra. This score came after a
61 -yard, 10-play Meigs drive.
The Marauders forced a Wellston
punt with three and half minutes to
w&gt;, but tumbled at their own 39 on
their first play.
Wellston then look seven plays
!rom there to clbnax the evening's
scoring.

.

••

'~hawn Eads, who played spar·

lngly because of stckn~s. gained 56
yards
tn 11
while InChrts
Burdette
hadcarries
46 yards
13
attempts . Dave Fotlrod added 34
yards In thr,... carries.
Burdelte paced the Marauders on
defense with eight solo stops whlle
Mark Hammonds, Jay Evans, and
Dan Thomas ali had lour each.
, Meigs remains unbealen In TVC
play at 1-0-1 behind front-running
Bl'lpre and Warren Local (2-01
while going to H·l In all games.
Wellston Is 0-2·1 overall and 0-1-1ln
league play.
Friday, the Marauders continue
a grueling four-wl'l'k road schedule
with a bOut at NE'Isonvllle-York
against the Buckeyes. Wellston
hosts Alexandl'r.

Highlanders drop
14-12 grid battle

second

Scioto Downs

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-your-·

Ridenour Supply

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Eas1Pr'r1 ..... :
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Do You Have A Musical Instrument
You Are Not Using?

CORI~ER 3RD &amp; COURT STS.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

HONDA
FOLLOW THE LEADER
I)

INTERSTATE

Oh.

$2,795

r:::::":::::\
IIUI UtM

.Jill.

. .

~ONDASALES

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - Union
ol,.ee.ders lh!'eatened to call a strike In
;!lie nation's semnd·largest school
.~trlct If talks Sunday Ja11, alter
·aloout l2,000 teachers played hooky
a day - disrupting classes tor
:5®,000 students.
•: ·Students had to double In class·
.(!iomslaughtbyadmlnlstratorsand
:substitutes Friday as more than halt
·the city's 23,:nl teachers stayed ott
the Job. United Teachers of LOs
·~les spokesman Len Feldman
c;Uied the action "an overwhelmtng

'

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•

fleer BDI Rivera.
Groups of up to 500 teachers
picketed several schoolsanddlstrl~
headquarters Friday morning, and
all protests were peaceful, he said. '
Rivera said teachers who stayEid
ott the job would lose a day's pay an average of $125 - but no other
disciplinary action was planned.
The boyCOtt was .stall!!d ~protest
stalled CQntract negotiationS, which
broke ott Thursday.
Talks were set to resume Sunday,
but union leaders distributed ballots
sqccess."
for a vote Monday that could
; ·Meanwhile, 5,450 teachers reauthorize a strike.
nialned on strike In 20dlstrlcts In six
Los Angeles teachers have been
sfp.tes - Michigan, Rhode Island,
without a contract tor 16 months.
Washington, Illinois, Pennsylvania
Last Week the school board unilateraftd Ohio - affecting 88,850 ally granted teachers a 7.8 percent
~tudents.
. pay raise, but the union Is asking for
, Los Angeles school offtclals said a 9.4 percent raise pius 1.5 percent
s:i percent of the district's 23,312 Increase In pald medical benefits.
teachers falled to show up at 578
In other school districts around
schools. However, that means not
the nation Friday:
all of the union's is,OOJ members
-Contract talks In Chicago, the
boycotted classes.
thlrd·largest district In the country
/'The number of absentees Is
with 400,000 students, recessed and
al)out what we expected," said · weren't to resume untD Tuesday.
The 28,000-member teachers· union
school district communications of·

THREE·WHEELER
FOR ALL REASONS

PITI'SBURGH {API - A phony towing service
allegedly run liy a high school student In a wealthy
suburtJ preyed upon motorists whose cars had broken
down - strtpptng unguarded vehicles of seats, air
conditioners and transmissions, officials say.
Three teen·agers, Including the J8.year-old who
allegedly mastennlnded the scheme, have been
arrested In the bogus "23-hour towlilg'' business
which authorities believe was Involved In thefts of
$100,000 across southwestern Pennsylvania, pollee
said.
More arrests are expected this weekend, said
officers In Upper St. Clair Township, an affluent
suoortJ of Plttsbw'gh.

'If!.

.•

has voted overwhelmingly In favor
of a strike on Oct. 3.
Elsewhere In Illinois, a tentative
settlement was reached In the
3,IDstudent Blue Island district,
which will return 200 teachers to
classes on Monday. One other
Dllnols district remained on strike.
affecting 857 students.

...__

~.

-In Washington, paren(J; ln' the
CloVer Park district llled suit to end
a strike by 640 ieachers which has
extended summer vacation for
115,00Jstudents. Strikes In two other
districts continued to affect 5,4&amp;&gt;
students.
-Juilges told more than 1,600
teachers In two Rhode Island
&lt;mtrlcts that they ·wouW face jall
tef111S for contempt of court if they
did not go back to work on Monday.
The strikes have Idled 21,000
students.
.-Court-supeJVIsed negotiations
aimed at ending a walkout In
Michigan's Chippewa Hills district
began as strikes by 2,:1Xl teachers
there and In nine other districts kept
41,000 students at home.

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•
TE8'11Flll8 ON JACKSON SANrrY - Columbus psycholopt Ruth Mclnlyre U8e8 a bar 11'8Pb
chart to belp explain her lesllmony conoomlng the

8IUilly of Dr. Edward Jackson Jr. Jackson Is on trial · ·
IICCUlled ol2:1 rapes. (AP Laserpholo).
• ·

But Tanner, In finding that the state violated Title

seek $1:.!5 mWion In wtige hikes and $275Inuuon In
back pay wben Tanner rules on a remedy. A second
phase of the trlal on that Issue Is due to start Nov. 4.
The unions alleged that workers In Jobs held almost
exclusively by women - such as clerk·typlsts and
cooks - are paid at le~t ID percent less than men
holding Jobs of' equivalent worth to the state and
requiring similar skllls and background.
State lawyers denied any Intentional bias existed.
They argued that the pay scale merely reflected
prevalllng wages outside state government and that
there were persuasive, legitimate business reasons
tor the salary-setting.

VII of the federal Clvll Rights Act, said despite
knowing since a 1974 study that the Inequities existed,
the state has continued the wage bias.
"The discrimination Is pervasive. It Is Intentional,"
he said.
The rullng did not mention the state Legislature's
vote earlier this year to appropriate $1.5 mlllton next
year to begin a 10-year program abned at ending the
wage dlscr1m1nat!on.
George Masten of the Washlngton Federation of
State Employees, AFL·CIO, called the rultng "a
major step forward."
...There Is no . question that there are national

bnpllcallons on all government agencies and In the
prtvate sector," said Masten, whose union brought ·
the suit along with Its parent group, the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees."
In an aside, Tanner said he may not allow the ruling
to apply to men wbrktng In traditional women's jobs
because the Clvll Rights Act provision on sex
dlscr1m1nation In the wor!&lt;place applles to females. '
11 the rul1ng stands, Spellrnap said, It will have
bnpact "In every job In the United States and
would have some federal entity say who gets patd how ·

an .
we:

much."

Aeooc'ated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
135-pound chimp that attacked a
motorcycltst along a busy stretch ot

Nearly • decade and a haH ago, Honda "Invented" three
wheeling with the ATC". We've been leading the way aver since.
For 1984, the ATC" tine has been further refined and has grown
even larger, ensuring that there's a machine tor every type of
activity whether Ira recreation a~ utility atl·out racing or s
convenient blend. Thera's also a Honda ATC" for every level of
riding ability from beginner to pro. So, If you're thinking threewh. .llng. you needn't think any further than ATC"s. You see.
Honda just doean't know how to rest on Its laurels.

highway has been quarantined lor
21daysataZanesvlllecampground,
and his vlcllm says he's "glad to be
alive.''
Gary Mon1son, 49, of Roseville,
said he was riding on U.S. 22 south of
.Zanesvllle on Thursday afternoon
when he saw cars backed up on the
highway and slowed down, tblnldng
. an accident had OCCUlTed.
· Hesublequentlywasattacked by

STOP IN FOR A SNEAK PREVIEW OF THE

'84 MODELS

",'
ATC"250R

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Cassidy would tell customers that they had
telephoned during the one hour the business was
closed. Before ending the conversations, he would get
the make and location of the disabled cars and
promlse service within the hour, pollee said.
It Cassidy found the cars unguarded, pollee said, he
would strip them of such saleable parts as seats, air
rondltioners and transmissions, then leave. Altogether the opera t1on netted about $100,00J worth of
parts, pollee said.
Upper St. Clair Pollee Chief John Kelty said reports
of stolen auto parts had escalated In recent months.
"All summer long we kept getting these reports
abOut auto thefts and we couldn't bnaglne what was

"We don't know how b1g this thing Is or how many
people are Involved. It couW Involve as many as 10
people, maybe more," Upper St. Clair pollee Sgt. Don
Bryson said Friday.
.
Only one of the youths, Edward Cassidy, 18, who Is
accused of masterminding the operation, has been
charged so far. The other two are minors, ages 16and
17, and pollee said they were petitioning for a juvenile
hearing so the youths cojl)d be charged wtth theft and
receiving stolen property.
Officers who arrested Cassidy said he operated by
·dlstrlootlng business cards reading: "Cassidy's
Complete Auto Service, Foreign and Domestic Cars,
23-Hour Towing."

the 4-foot·lall, 14-year-old male
chlmpnarned "Bongo."
"I was hurting more than I was
scared," Morrison said Friday from
his hOspital bed. "WewaswaJiowlni
around. Blood was flying f!!Ye'tY·
where. I'm just glad to be alive."
Monison was In good CCllldltloD
ll'rlday at Riverside Metllodl5t
Hospital, Columbus. The holpltaJ
reported that Morrison's hands
were fractured and cut, and be had a

p

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going on," Kelly saW.
•
"The kid (Cassidy) was Intelligent, that's obvious,"
he said.
·•
Pollee made the arrest earner this week alter a
man spotted cbrome wheels he once owned roiling
under Cassidy's 1978 two-tone Cutlass Oldsmoblle 1
according to Bryson.
.
The unidentified motorist, who had his name etched
on the Inside of the wheels, followed Cassidy to Upper
St. Clair High School on Monday morning and
reported the Incident to pollee.
Cassidy rontessed toone countofthett In connection:·
with the wheels, then was arrested again Tuesday on :
14 more theft counts, pollee said.

.•

·c himpanzee confined after
highway atta~k on-'cyclist
By lAMES HANNAH

"

not all the women who were assaulted In their
Columbus homes by Jackson were on a Ust of &amp;:;
names found In his automobile alter his arrest.
Mrs. Mcintyre said Jackson told her he did not Ust I(
vlctbn' s name unless he "achieved bOndage," or tied
them up.
Jackson said he once mtstakenly attacked a yoong .
man with long hair, Mrs. Mcintyre testified. She said
Jackson told her he had lied the man up before
realtzed h1s error .
Defense attorneys attacked the credlbWty of IN!
Southwest report by noting that a Ionner member of
the center's staff had been one of Jackson's vlctlmll.
The attorneys also said Jackson was working at an
Institution associated with the center at thettrneofhb
arrest.
.
Asked whether the fanner employee's rape
!n!luencedherreport,Ms.Hasldnssaid, "Ireallyfelt
that had no bearing on my abillty to be objective:".'

Teen-agers· arrested in auto parts theft ring

HONDA
FOLLOW THE LEADER ·

Just South of the Holiday Inn on Route 7, Gallipolis, Oh.

·.'

'

985-3308 .

NOW ON DISPLAY!

•

TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -ArultngthatWashtngton
state dlscrlmlnates against women by paying them
leSs than men for jobs of comparable worth Is
"~!early o.;rong'' and will affect "every.Job In the
United States," Gov. John Spellman said.
SpeUman denounced U.S. District Judge Jack
Tanner's rullng Friday as untatr to the state and said
he Is "fearful of the-net Impact" on publtc and private
employers throughout the country.
· · !ranner's rultng could mst Washington stale up to
$ mlllton, although state lawyers pledged to appeal
aqd said they wouW try to lessen the bnpact.
Jubllant union leaders, who flled suit on behalf of
aliout 14,000workers, mostly women, said they would

ONLY 2

REG. 14;395

Both psychologists testified they disagreed wtth
defense wilnesses' diagnoses of Jackson as suffering
an obsesSive-compulsive disorder and having a
P,..anoW schizophrenic personallty.
The state witnesses diagnosed Jackson as a sexual
sadist, a person who "repeated an Intentional
lnfilctlon of physical or psychoklg!cal surterlilg ot
another to achieve sexual excitement."
"There Is some actual pleasure, enjoyment tram
enacting the fantasies, and that would not be a true
obsesslve&lt;!ampulslve," Ms. Haskins said
Mrs. Mcintyre said Jackson did not meet crtterla
for an obsessive-compulsive dlsofdelj, rut did show
stgns of a rompulsive personaltty.
Mrs. Mcintyre said that during the course of iour
Interviews with Jackson, she asked him what. he
would do If his wife or daughters were raped.
-"He said he would kill the assatlant," Mrs.
Mcintyre said.
There was some Indication In testimony Friday that

Judge rules .State discriminates against ·women

GL 500

• •

•

:rpr
··

417 Second AYe.
Gallipoli~.

;

BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC.

situation and so forth and did not participate In this
behaviOr Where !here was a posslbWty he w~uld be
apprehended," she said.
Jackson, 39, an Internist, Is 011 trlal before a jury of
seven men and ave women. His lawyers say he knew
the attacks were wrong, but that Jackson was Insane
and unable to control himself at the tbne.
The trlal was moved to the Summit County
courthousebecauseofpretrtalpubllcitylnColumbus.
All the charges stem trom a series of attacks from
1975 to the time of Jackson's arrest Sept. 5, 1982.
The state's reoottal of defense claims that Jackson
was Insane 1s to conclude Monday, wtth cl051ng
arguments possible as soon as Tuesday.
Mrs. Mcintyre saW Jackson showed control
because he was selective about his victims and
refrained from assaulting those who were virgins or
trail. She said he only attacked women In early
morning hours and didn't stage attacks whlle
vacationing with his famlly.

•

... ...6 8 6 8-28

Let ·Us Sell It For You.

September 18, 1983

LA teachers·hold one-day
boycott; pi~ .strike vote

Tnu.v ._.. .... ....... , ..... , 0 0 0, 0- 0

Otester, Ohio

Buicks &amp; Pontiacs

By STEPHANIE NANO
A8!JOC!•ted P..- Wrller
AKRON • Ohlo (AP) -Prosecution lawyers will put
a psychiatrist on the stand Monday to support the
contention of two psychologists that a Columbus
doctor was noqegally Insane when he raped do2ens Qf
central Ohio women during a seven-year rampage.
Dr. Edward F. Jackson Jr. Is standing~ tor 60
crimes, Including 21 rapes and 39 other counts. He
faces a second trtal for 15 counts of rape and21other
charges.
Testifying Friday as rebuttal witnesses for the
state, Ruth Mcintyre and Kristen Haskins, psychologists at the Southwest Forensic Psychlatrtc Center In
Columbus, said Jackson was able to control his
actions during the assaultS and thus did not Itt the
slate's dettn!tton of legal Insanity.
'Mrs. Mcintyre said Jackson "did Indicate
considerable" control.
"In fact, be dld extensive scouting, swveytng of the

'l-:11.~

',!6

~ime5- ientinti Section D.

F

Psychiatrist will .testify to doctor's sanity

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JUST SOUTH OF THE HOLi~AY INN ON ROUTE 7-GALLIPOIS

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1982
MODELS

A&lt;ol•ll n• ol iil&lt;• IU'oWIIIH o• ( nrn! lo Uly

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....
First downs .....
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Yards..rushlng ..... .. ................. Ill
Yards passlf1R .... ..... ................. '!1

If you're
,9
for a good bt 'Y
on car insurancE&gt;
-and great
service, too ...
)
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lJl ( .._J,(' l( /1/:

Homr-446·4511

FOR THIS AND
OTHER HOMEUTE
CHAIN SAWS
SEE

State/ ational

from the one with nine minutes left.
Most ol the flital minutes Eastern·
had possession and took advantage
of Cadet penalties to move the ball
from their own 15 to the Cadet JO
yard line.
Michael Heiss ted FF with 96
yards on 15 carries, whlle Kevin
Stewart had·68 yards on 11 carries
before leaving the game with an
ankle InJury In the first halt.
Overall, Eastern had eight total
yards rushing.
Tom Dyar caught bOth Cadet
passes lor 56 yards, whlle Everett,
Jeff Hawk, and John Rice each had
receptions lor Eastern.
Eastern hosts Wahama for
Homecoming Frtday.

Phone 446·4290

............ ........ 17

1-'ll'.\l duwn.s

.

. Kick was good. It was 14-0.
Eastern had Its problems rom·
pounded when three starters were
sidelined early with Injuries. A
fourth , Troy Guthrie, played the
contest with Injuries that hampered
his performance. EHS dld not have
a first down untU the final quarter
when three penalties boosted Its
offense downtteld.
In the semnd quarter, with 9:09
lett, Fort Frye mntlnued Its scoring
as fullback Michael Heiss tallied
from the one. The PAT kick was
blOCked.
With 3: 181ett In the halt. Heiss hit
paydtrt on a three yard run. The
PAT was blocked. It was 26-0 at
halftime.
During third period action, the
Cadets scored tlve points, then hit
the endzone tor two fourth quarter
scores. A safety and a Sidney Huck
tleld goal accounted lor third
quarter scoring.
In the . last stanza, quarterback
Kane sltpped Into the end zonp on a
sneak, thl'n Stewart rambled tn

Green ·blanks Hannan Trace·

. FRANKLINFURNACE-Going
alter its first victory of the season,
Green held Hannan Trace's offense
PATRIOT- Southwestern broke
kickoff
to
Its
40.
On
the
flrnt
play
to a standstill Friday night and
Into the scoring rolumn for thl' first
scrimmage,
Halslop
rambled
from
defeated
the Wildcats, 28-0.
Ibn~ this se;tSOn, but sWI fell to
!j9
y.a$,(orthe
TO.
A
run
for
ihe
.
Thei3obcatsgotootrackwlth6;08
visiting SYJ11I'IlesValley, l4-]2, here
extraswas stopped. ·
··
remaining In the first quarter alter
Friday night. The toss left ,the
According to tbe charts, Halslop Dean Nance rushed through the
Highlanders wtth an 0-3 recordwhlle
Symmes Valley evened Its mark to · enjoyed a fine offensive night for the Wlldcat line on a two-yarp run to
Highlanders. gaining 145yards In 10 post Green's first scoring ol .the
1·1-1.
carries.
Fulks led Symmes Valley night.
Coach Jack James' Highlanders
with
60yards
rushlngand76yardsln
broke the game's scoring Ice with a
A pass attempt by Green for the
receptions.
extra points failed .
.56 yard touchdown run In the second
Defensively, Jim Burnette,
With 9: 25 left In the semnd
period by Will Hats lop. A kick for the
Randy
Layton, Bl'rnte Kilgore and quarter. Green's Tom Gifford
EP salled,w)de. ..
David Rainey were all credited with passed 12 yards to Bryan Roach,
In the waning semnds -of the ·
·
good P,.rtorinanccs.
who burst ·through the line lor tJie
S&lt;&gt;rond perlod ..·the I,awrence Coun· .
Southwestern
·
hosts
Buffalo
of
·
ttans scored what appeared to be the
Bobcats'
TD. Roach then
Putnam County, W.Va. Frtday.
tying points but theTDwas nullified
teammate
Rob Robinette
passed
to
SbUWIUt
lor
the
two-point
conversion,
upping
on a penalty. Thehaltcametoanend
sw
~:::::::::::::::::::
::::::::::::~:
the score to 14-0 at the haU.
following two untbned downs.
7
Yards rustuna.. . .. .. .. .. .. .... ...... ... Ia
193
Symmes Valtey took the opening
Yards pus.slng ................ , ......... l61
:n
Gifford threw another pass to
Total
yardagt"'
......
..
.
......
,.
.......
.
.
:l4.1
klckoffsome60yards to !lethe score
2:11
Roach
with 3:18 lett In the third
PusS('§ attemPil'd ................... ... l~
9
when Paul Fulksgrabbl'd a 14 yard . Pa.'iS('S
cumplrtro ..... .... ..... ....... . 7
canto to bring the score to ~. A
3
m pass from quarterback Scott lntert'epllons ... .................. ...... .. o
I
pass attempt f~r extra points also
Fumbleo~ .. ...... .. .. ..... ..... ..... ... ..... 0
II
Bow Ung. A run for the conversion
falled,
and the Bpbcats made their
F'tlmbles lost ... .................. . ..... .. o
0
was stopped.
Pt&gt;nallles.. .... .. ..
....... .. 640
~
final
touchdown
of the night wtth
By qwvtent:
Southwestern also suffl'red from
10:
061ett
In
the
founh
quarter when
Symmes Vallt&gt;Y .......... .. .... 0 fl G H-14
an untbnely penalty in the third
Southwesll?rn .............. .... ... .!! ti 0 6-12
Mark Pierson scored on a seven·
period when sophomore IPft end Jim
yard run.
BurnetU&gt; scorro on a 1!\ yard run.
Roach passed to Gtftord for the
However, a holdlngpenaltynulllfled
conversion, leaving the scoreboard
the score and killed the drive.
at 28-0 lor the rest of the game.
In the fourth quarter. Fulks
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- L'Eg.
grabbed a pass from halfback
gins, drlvm by Ray Pav&lt;&gt;r Jr .. won
Sylvester Bloomfteld .and rambled
Friday's feature pace at Scioto
loo~ 1
59 yards. A pass from Bowling to
Downs by 51!, lengths over FairFulks was good for the ali
meade Miss, going lhl' mile In
Important, two point convPrs!on.
1:564-5 and paying $10, · $.1.20 and
Southwestern returned the VIking
$3 60

• 16", 30" 8o 24" guide bni1V.tl8bte
• Pow•fl.ll 3.3 cu. ln. t63.1cx:l.,gine for
hellVy-duty cutting concltiuno.

lh•tmrtnw·nl
v. anl ~
Y o\l'll~

encounter at Plllrlol. The Vlldngs held on to defeat
Soulhwestem, !HZ. - BW Bahr photo.

By SC0Tr WOLFE
'l'lrn58entlnel Staff
EAST MEIGS- Attermmtngup
Winless In two starts, the Class
"AA" Fort Frye Cadets took out all
ot their frustra !Ions against the
Eastern EagleS with a 44-0 l,'Omp In
the rain at EHS Friday evening.
The non-league win boosts Fort
Frye to 1-H on the year. Eastern
dropped Its lh1rd straight tllt.
·
While Eastern continued to strug.
gle, Fort Frye reversed Its performance, mllectlng 254 total yards
offensively. Besides capttallzlng on
Eastern mlsta)&lt;es, the Cadets took
the upper hand by domtnatlng the
· battle or the trenches.
On Its !lrst series, Fort Frye's
quarterback Chris kane scored on
a one yard plungewtth7:(11tett. The
PAT Kick by Sidney Huck sp111 the
uprights.
Alter Eastern lost possession on
downs, tailback Kevin Stewart
who last week gained 1'19 yards:
sprinted Into the endzone on a 10
rard run wtth 1:24 left. The PAT

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bite on his leg.
two ~ed In the dirt .by the
"The chimpanzee had wandered roadway.
.
out Into the highway," said Rick
"He got me down and started
Rose, a deputy with the Musklngum biting me heavily on my hands and
County sberlt!'s depar1ment who leg,'' Morrison said.
flled a report on the InCident.
Morrison said he doesn't blame
"That's when the rnotorcycllst
slowed down because be couldn't the other motorists for staying
believe what he was seeing," Rose their cars, adding that they
probably frightened.
said.
The animal's trainer, Jtrnrny
He said the chimp's trainer finally
Estep, who lives In Zanesvllle and'lo
fought the animal off with a club,
Tampa, Fla., said Bongo had been
Dve to 10 minutes alter the attack '
chained to a tree In a trailer park
began.
where Estep Is staying for the
Morrison, an Ironworker with six
winter. Rose said Bongo broke his
chllilren, said he believes the animal
chain alter becoming excited as
was frightened by his motorcycle
workers prepared his pen tor the
helmet, which is black with a tinted
winter.
visor.
.
Monison said the chimp walked
Bottgo was originally to be taken
out bt ttont of his bike, forcing him to
to the Columbus Zoo to undergo 21
stop.
days
of observation for possible
''He came over and came toward
rabies, even though authorities
me and jumped m the bike with me
acknowledge that chimpanzees
and started biting me," Mon1son
rarely contract that dl.,.se.
said.
But a zoo spokeswoman said
He said the chimp practlcall)'
space at the zoo wasn't avallable
pulled h1rn trcm theb!keand that the

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INJURED IN CHIMP ATI'ACK - Gary
Mon'llall t1111a1 011 a lelepboae held by a friend as be
Ilea ID a Columbus llolpltal hed 'l1lurlldaJ w11b 1M

,,

Iumcli In bMdap8. Montson was InJured by a ...
llt-potnl clllmpmaee lbat altached him while he - '
WM rtdbi11M motorcycle lhruup a tndllc Jam. (AP : :

Jeurpholo ).

·

�·B usiness

1983

~im~s- ientiaatl Section i D~
September

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

The

.They'll Do It Every Time

"ard sales

Tribune - 446-2342

8, 1983 ~

Timft-S.ntinei-Page-0-3

Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

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11· - a . . H o

11-CI . TVIIIadiof • ...,._

i- '

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( 'lt~.&lt;~ifio •tl j&gt;Qj(o•• , .,,, o·r llr r·
(uii01Wi11JIIdo•1•1t""'' ,. ,, l11m1:•'·' •

lt-A..,o ~01101.

.... ,
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,....

17-M .....OI .... tno-ftiO
.,.._,b~o

1UI..Ioiii-

4ruC~)OI

71-Co ...... iot!q~iltmo"o

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'It's not as though
.: I'm ji.JSt blindly
. pushing buttons' ·: · so says lim Reed,
· computer operator
at Southern Ohio
·coal Co.s
Raccoon No. 3
mine in Vinton
_:county.

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the American Electric Power
system.
Central Coal's Sporn mine Is now
Inactive, and Reed transferred to
Southern Ohio Coal 8~ years ago.
He worked underground at the
Raccoon No. 3 mine for 1wo years
until the preparatfon plant was
completed.
Any dlfflcultfes Involved In learnIng the new computerized system
have been more thari offset by the
thoroughness and the convenience
that the compu1er affords, Reed
explained.
"It's really amazing all the things
that an operalnr can control in this
plant, just by knowing how In direct
the computer," Reed said. "You
can open up or shut down valves by
just presSing buttons, where In the
orlgtnal plant, somebody would .
have to walk down there and
physically open or close down that
valve."
Reed said that being able to
visualize the components of the
preparation plant Itself makes It
easy for him to handle the
computerized controls of the new
facillly.
"Knowing the old plant gtves a
person quite an advanlage In
working with the computer," Reed
said modestly. "When I call up
some lhformation on the computer

Business Briefs:

"

· ;: POINT PLEASANT- Howard M. Selby of 100 Pleasant St., Point
· ·Pleasant, has been named a general agent of Midland National Life
Insurance Co.
· Active In the insurance industzy lor the past 10 years, Selby Is a
. ;:. member of the Charleslon Chapter o! the Association of Life ' "
. · · Underwriters.
. His agency will offer Midland's complete portfoUo of whole life,
• .term, and annully products. Tbe agency specializes In current yield
,..• permanent life insurance.

Incorporation articles filed
.. Iff' ....... ~

PQMEROY - Articles of Incorporation have been flied with
~ .Secretary of Slate Sherrod Brown's office for Progn Slables,
Pomeroy.
.
..
Brown's
office
said
600
shares
were
flied,
with
Larry
C.
Powell
•
•• listed as the Incorporator and Fred W. Crow Ill Identified as agent. ·

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Radio Shack appoints vice president

FORT WORTH, Texas - George J. Berger has been appointed
vice president and director of personnel of Tandy Corp.'s Radio
Shack division.
Berger joined Allied Radio In Chicago In 1963 and came In Tandy In
1970 when Tandy acquired Allied's chain of consumer electronics
stores.
He slarted RadiO Shack's personnel department In 19'12 as Its only
- employee and now supervises all department operations. He Is also .
responsible for applicatiOn of ail personnel policy and procedures.

-'• Professor appointed at RGC-CC
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u-u-•••'

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•••q ......._

Rd., Firat houae on right.
Sept. 19-21. Mon. 9· 6 ,
Tueo. 2-8, Wed . 9-4 . Child-

]

~~~···-·
01&gt;•~ .......
""u, .... _,. ,,._
... ,..__
u, .. 11w..... I•• , . , _,..,

1.......... --.~ . .........,

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ren clothing, 2-24 months,
amall appliancea. curtelns,

rodo, mloc. Coli 446-2946.

Women-Men need 1 part
time job cloae to home? Can
earn up to 87 or more pet'
hour. Phone 304· 5762518, 9·6.

BEDS·IRON. BRASS. old
fumtture, gDid. ailver dol3 Announcementa
laR, wood ice bOJ(81, ltone
jara; antlqua1, etc.. CDmSWEEPER and - n g mo.'
plete houaeholda. Write:
chine repair. ,.na. and
M.D. Mlllor, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
oupplloo.
Pick up ond l~;o:]i!::~:=~~tai:e;~ Oh. Or 982· 7780.
delivery, Davie V1cuum I'
C._ner. one haK mile up lforrwl~at
Wanted tO buy. New, used •
Chorgoo. Cr"" Rd. Call
antique furniture. Will buy 1
441·0284.
p*e or complete hou••hdlde. Al1o complete Auctilortoono lor lirthdoyo, Oot
onMrlng Mrvice. CeQ Olby
· Woii; •.Annlv-ryo, aw... I&amp;L.;;;t;;;(iF(jjJjjdA. Mortl~ .114·882-1370.
lhoi.U. portleo. Coli Bll'
loono • Co., 448-4313.
1~-:----,------ Buying ctally gokl, ellver
colna, rlnge.jawelry, 1terllng
BIG 81NOO Choroku North ~~~~~~4-245-11~;-:.t o,no. ware, old colna. large curCorollno. tliO,ooo.oo covor
rency. Top prlc11. Ed. Buroil. October 8th • 9th. LOST: 1 Iorge brown dog. 1 , kett Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
1913. tiO.OO round trlr. · amort brown dog. 1 amort Middleport, oh . 814-882tran1portadon and mote. bleck • brown dog. Stlvefi- 347t.
Call LUCAS TOURS 304· ville oroo. If ·found · contact
348-74112.
52 3 311 a old Knob 8tlvoravlllo Rd.
' '
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lltNOO t7,IIOP.OO glvu- 1---------~
w-v. Chorlooton, WV Civic LOST: F0nott, block, white
Contor. Ootobor 12th. • brow~ With mooklld'faoo.
1883. WIOdnaidoy, Eorly In vicinity of 1813 J-rblrdo ltlrt at · 1:30 p.m. 1011, Pt. Ploa.. nt, 304-1710ooraopon 11:00. Roundtrip 7730.
treneportatlon to the game
UI.OO per poroon. Adgomo FOUND: In Lotortoreo, omoll
•million to the game Poodle. To clolm, ldontlfy •
U8.00. Coli LUCAS pay for od. 304-885-3382
TOURS. 304-341·7452.
or 891·311114.

WANTED : a reliable woman
who needs a home to live ln.
full time with elderly lady .
Mutt be non·drlnking a
fumi1h referencea. Thi1 i1 a
non-payingjob. FrHiivlng in
country home located betwHn Pt. Plaaunt a Me·
eon. If ·you meet above
qu·aliflcetlons ple..e write
for interview. 641 Capitol
Blvd .. Elkhart, lndiena
41516.

7811 .

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· Insurance company names agent

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Thuu .. Sept. 22 .

Yard Sale Johnton Ridge

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·l:;jA\;E,.j·!i~~.ti;;.;;,;:1 .!iMi;o;cPP;;ort;;y;;,or

WILKESVILLE- "When I first
tieard about having a computerized
control center In a coal preparation
plant, I said to myself, 'It will never
Work.' "
' . -But Jim Reed now works In a
" ~O mputer-asslsted preparatfon
:p~i!Jlt - the newly-renovaled and
ol&gt;&lt;panded Raccoon No. 3 prep plant
at. Southern Ohio COlli Co. - and
·f{e-s the first to admit that
compulertzation has been a big
!llYS.
· "· "I really like the new system
· here," saJd Reed, a Rt. 1, Albany
-roesldent, who was the first operator
In .the original Raccoon No. 3 plant
wHen It was completed In :IJm. "I
only wtsh they could have had It five
or sb&lt; years ago.
- ~·1 had my doubts about compute!:", sure," Reed admitted, "but
now I know that computers can give
you he1ter control. Considering the
qlfallly of coal that we need to
produce these days, a computer Is
till&gt; best system to have In a prep
plant."
• Reed can speak with authorlly,
J:]e(!ause his experience with coal
preparation plants stretches back
tii jl decade ago, when he worked as
an· operator at Central Coal Co.'s
f1.!'E!p plant near New Haven, W.Va.
· Cenlral Coal and Southern Ohio
-Gila!
. ,.•.. are mining subsidiaries wllhln

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Ill
·~

J8PIInne Sword• Wanted!
Poylng *200.00 min . Tom
Winter, 824 Potton, Spring·
flold, Ill. 82702 (217) 644·

Thenk you for the card• we
recllvocl on our 89th Annlv•llry. Mr. and MR. Delbert Barber.

:R accoon ·preparation plant goes lo computers

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Jn - - ....,
JU - 111 .......
117- hl+oloo
L__ _ _ _:::_:.::__ _ _ _~-1

11·11_.....,_,.

laJtl•nd. Wed ., Sept. 21 •

Paisley.

.. .. ··P1 ·Piiiiis'i'1it" ·· ··
&amp; Vicinity
There will be 1 flee merlf;et

day, sterting Sept. 20th.

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:~~7!
,~:~.. _....
_ ..

old latern, ate.

Route 38, Henderson et the
railroad ove,..,.11 . Anyone

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,., . . . . . . ,

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171 · -IOI•u..

every Tueldey end Wednea-

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171

112- UUidl•pM

&amp; Vicinity ·

------------Y•rd Seta Ewl~gton 19th II ······-----------• _..._
20th . Clothing, oi~,,~~:~~i· l Herman .Grate re1ldence.

lllnD~CD , WW

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HT - CM&lt;"••

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14 .........1"' ...

II·'-" let hlol

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

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1J-Y•••••wo

I•Mhc 1111...::-loo

.......,c:;.n&amp;;ov........ .

RIO GRANDE - Kofl Konadu Apraku of Columbus has been
named assistant proA?ssor of finance and economics at Rlo Grande
College and CommunJiy College.
·
Apraku holds badlelor's aad master's degrees In agricultural
economics from 0ni8Dn Slate University and recently completed lis
doctorate ID agricultural ecoaomlcs at Ohio Slate Unlverslly.
This summer, Apraku has served as a research associate In the
agriCUltural economics and nu-al sociology department at OSU.
Prior tn that, he served as a comp~ler programming assistant for
that same deparlrnenl, and was a gracluate·research assistant In the
agriCUltural and research economics at Oregon Slate.

. ,••:· ~.~------------------------------------------------~
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screen, or when I change a sump lng clean coal system, the magnelevel or slart up a piece of tite recovery system, and several
equipment, I can visuallze exactly others."
whal's going on, even though I'm
The mimic alS!l o!fers diagrams
not there to aclually see jl happen . of the conveyor system which takes
It's not as though I'm just bllndly clean coal from the preparation
pushJng buttons."
plant to the stockpile, as well as lhe
Three television screens sit on the feeder and conveyor systems that
console In front of Reed In the .carry clean coal from the stockplle
plant's control
The rlghl to the mine's rallloadout. The coal
television screen, known as the Is then transported lo flhlo Power
display analog, provides Reed with Co.'s Gavin generating plan1 at
Information such as air pressure Cheshire.
readings from different locations In
Most of Reed's concentration, .
the plant, gravlly readings on the however, Is directed Inward the
heavy media used In the cleaning center television screen, which
process, swnp readings, lorque monitors the current slalus of some
levels on centrl!ugal dryers, and 15 different groups of equipment in
data concerning the plant's two the 700-lon-per-hour plant.
thickeners.
The 15 different groups moni·
"It's good Information to have," tnred Include such components as
said Reed. "It's all In the form of the raw coal conveyors and feeders ,
bar charts, and It can keep you from
refuse thickeners and conveyors,
having spills on the plant floor, and the fine coal notation circuit,
chutes plugged up, that type of
among others. Reed Is able to
thing."
designate a "set point," which Is the
The left television screen Is
optimum rate or level for each
known as the mbnlc, because It
component, and cmpare that with
provides diagrams of the dlfferenl
the actual plant performance which
segments of the plant. "I can call up
Is conslantly Indicated on the
any of the 16 mbnlcs which are
I
screen.
available," Reed pointed out, "and
Using the center screen, Reed
check the Slalus of the small coal
can also check the condition of the
lreaiment system, the coarse coal
various valves, pumps, and other
system, the filter press syslem, the
working parts of the planl. All three
outgoing refuse system, the outgoscreens are color-coded. If a

room.

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component Is shown In red, II going wrong."
means that the component Is
Another valuable fealure of the
working. If it Is shown In green, the renovated Raccoon prep plant,
component Is not working at the says Reed, Is the computer's
moment, but Is ready.
printout capablllly which can pro"Lighl blue means that 1he vide written reports on just how
component Is down because a well the plant Is doing.
breaker has b!!en turned off, or an
"You can gel a prlntoul which
overload has been tripped, and tells you exactly how much raw
purple means that one of the crew coal entered the plant, and ' how
here has intentionally thrown the much clean coal came out/' Reed
circuit In make a repair. A explained. "It can also leU you how
component that's shown In dark much avallable production time
blue lells me that there's a plugged you had, anp how much downtime
chute or a faully belt allgnment,"
there was. It can even give you the
he said.
maintenance. history on each of the
The computer has proven 1o be a dlfferenl pieces of equipment inside
reUable troYbleshooter, Reed said.
the plant, or tell you how much
"In the original plant, you'd have to magnetite or flocculant lhe plant
call one of the crew and ask him to used In a certain lime ~rlod."
find whalever was going wrong,"
Reed ga~ b low whistle when he
he recalled. "Now, you can call one
thought of how much the coal
of the crew and tell him what's
preparation business has changed
going wrong and where It Is.
In the past 10 years. "The original
"It's a lol easier to prevent Raccoon plant did a fairly decenl
problems when you have all of this
job, but It was nothing compared to
lnfonnatfon In front of you," Reed
this.
smiled. "You can see thai there's
"I've always believed that II
an Imbalance, or that the levels
takes abou1 two years to become a
aren't what they should be, and you
capable plant operator, and after
can either correcllt yourself In the
that, It's still a constanl learning
control room, or get someone to
process," Reed said. "Siartlng up
tha1 spot to correct It. Wlthou1 a
this new plant, with Its computer,
computer to show those trends, you
makes me believe that all the
might not know that anything
was
.more."
.
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USA Today making progress
By M.R. KROPKO
A....-teh&gt;d Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) The

television and radio andotherfonns
of media avallable to you, you are
well served.
"WeslmplyhopethatUSA Today,
as the different and new voice,
might supplement that. We do
compete for . the reader's time In
order In share a Uttle dlfferent
perspective on the Issues and
happenings In our country and also

leader of the Gannett Co. says USA
Today, the company's national
newspaper, has made good progress toward Its eventual goal of
becoming the most Widely read
newspaper In America.
Allen H. Neuharth, Gannett's
chairman and president, said Tuesday one year Isn't enough time to
judge fairly whether USA Today
wiD capture a pennanent nationwide audience.
Tbe newspaper, which began
circulating In much of Ohio on
Monday, has Its first birthday
Thu~y.
.
''With our launch of USA Today In
Ohio, the newspaper Is now avallablelnahout60percenl ofthecountl)'
In terms of population," Neuharth
said In a luncheon speech lo the
Cleveland chapter of the American
Marketing Association.
"We emphasize, In the spirit of
candor,lhat It Is still tooearlytncall
USA Today a success," Neuharth
said. 'We are exceeding or have
exceeded all of ourprojectlonssofar
In atlve-yearbuslnessplan that calls
lor a circulation at the end of 1987 of
abut3.25mllllon. Thatwouldglveus
the largest printed dlstrlbution In
the countJy."
Neuharth, 59, a joumallst Who
first became ail executive In the
Gaimett organization in 1963, oversees Gmmett's operation of lrl dally
DeWSpapers,lncludiDg USA Today.
Gannett alao 33 DOn-dally
11eWSpapSB, se.- lelevlsDn slatlolls and J3 radltntatlons.
"Most areas of the countl)' are
served very wen by print and
electronic rornmunlcatlons," Neu·
barth said. "There are many
newspapers In this region that do a
superb job, and when you add

In help other parts of the countzy
learn a little more about this area."
He said USA Today has had more
than 750 natiOnal advertisers, representing some 900 brands of
merchandise, on Its pages.
"Our original projection for
circulatloll was 1.15 million by the
end of 1983, and we're confident
we're comfortably ahead of that

GlvNwey ·

Rogloterlld Auotrlollon Shophord. Colll14-2tll-1188.
Molo 1 mo. old Gorman
Shophord. Fomolo 1 yr. y,
Oormon Shepherd • Yo
Doberman, ahote. good
homo. Coli 441-3B:JI.

Neuharth also spoke about a
UNESCO-sponsored report lhat
suggested licensing of journalists
and restrictiOns on news gathering.

Lorgo trM blocking drlvo·
way, cut down end remove
for wood. 304-1182-3188
after4 P:m .
Port Alookan Spitz, lamola
puppy, 3 montho old, 304·
878-1894.
Heppy Ada

2

In Memoriam

lui In our memory you
llvt on,
AI thOUJh It ..,. , ...
ttrday •

Y011r hNrt of &amp;old hu
stopptd btatl"l.
Your amlllq flee 11 11

""·
pronto ua.

God brokt our lltlrta to
Ht only llk11 the btst .

Wt couldn't undtrsllnd
It then,
Just why you hid to 10•
wtw God wold lib riJhl
From 11111 llldst lhl one
WI Ill lovtd 10.

Tho Oil' hurts were bro-

kln thin,

••tel

'

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We pey caah for late model
clten uud cera.
Jim Mink Chov .- Oldo Inc.
Bill Oena John1on
441-31172
Wanted to buy unci coal •
wood hNtere. Swain Furnlture. 441-31118, 3rd. •
Olivo St., Oolllpollo, Oh .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RON· .
Nl! UE CAITO. FROM Mloroacope. Coli 448UNCLE BILL. OOLDI · 4137.
IDAO, N.C .
Wa1here • dryer. Molt eny
cond. Call814-387·05110.

IWIY,

the campus. Mll8 Ev11118, a
long-time member of the Rio Grande Calqe Board of
TNrtees, wu honored In dedication ceremonies '
receully at lhe Complex, 'lbe facility, located 011 Eu&amp;
CollegeAveaue,taou..estheEmei'IIOIIE.EvansSchool
of Bnst-e~~~~ Management •
!' .
1·

Auction avery Tueaday
night, Pt. Plaaeant, wva.
Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth
Canter Bldg., Camden St.
lt4·317-7101.

Clothing, 304-418-1 B23.

PIUtd 1nd &amp;ant,
Slnct you wtrt Cllltd

F. Evans Hall •

Public Sale .
Auction

1 female pup . port BNglo .
304-171· 7430.

September 18, 1889
0nt lORI month _h ll

BUILDING DEDICATION - l'lort!llce F.
Ev11118, center, of JaeUoo, recelvee a plaquetrom Rio
GraDde CaiJe&amp;e and Commully Co1ep Pr lrleat
Paul C.lleyee, rlgll&amp;, and 1'1 aldeul Deelpa&amp;e Clodus
R. Smith COIIIIJielnOl'lg the dedlcadon of F1oreuce

1;=::;;:;:;::;;;===
8
&amp;
1----------

Colllo ond Shepherd pupa, 8
-ko old. 304-178-2214.

H~ W. Reibel
On HIS Birthday:

I ••-·"" ' " ' '

Loot fomolo beogle pup
ml ..lng alnae Wednaaday In
eroad Run area, If found,
coli 304-812·2184.

llt1t Ills
lhl Plln
God likes care ol broken
llttrts•
Arid WI pny we'll IMII
~&amp;~ln.

M lllillltl bJ WKt.
lliiiiht. IIIII a.. dlkl
- - · · · d 10

~

Good uMd or rebuilt motor,
for 71 Plymouth Horizon.
Coil 441- t 107.

11

Help

Wented

.___....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,_.;..___,1
P

CARRIER WANTED
PART-TIME HELP IN MIDDLEPORT
NEEDED 1AT ONCE•
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY
GOOD PAY
CONTACT 992-21'56

--------~------,1

ATTENTION

We Are Now Acceptine Applications for Motor Route Drivers.
FOR MORE INFORMAnONr CONTACT:

THE DAILY SENTINEL
155

31 Homes for Sale

Business
Opportunity

Stripping Furniture • Metal.
lnatent ce1h flow I Firn time
In this area. Our expert tteff
h11 many 'ftill'8 of experience and h11 •• up relto·
ration centera throughout
the U.S . and Europe. We
turnlehed equipment. chemicals, 1u~plies, and an exten·
elva training couraa at one of .
our succeilful center• nur-.
111 · yo.u. ·Total colt :
'32,600.00 'Bonded' Cell
Toll Free: {BOO) 241-2269
or Write for fnore Info: U.S.
Stripping. 1776 , Tho Exchange, Suite 600, Atlanta,
GA 30339.

HOME LOANS Low fixed
rate. Leader Mortgage, 77 E.
State. Athen1. Ohio . 1·~14·
692-3061.

Program Coordinator· for
two ln1:ermedlate Care Facil·
ltloo for tho Mentoly Re·
.. trimming and r4tnoval.
lardod In 011111 County. Tr
Fr80 eotlmateo. 614 - ~92Poaltlon requires the direc- 8040 or 614-949·2129 .
tion of dav to day operattona
of the 'focllltleo. A ooclol Babyaining in my home.
aarvice related degrn I• Racine area. have referenrequired: epplfcants must be ce•. 61 4·949-2779 for
Quollfllld Monlal ROiarda· information.
lion Profeoolonol (QMR PJ or
QMRP ollglblo; oxporlonco Explflenced care for elderly
In working wtth paraon1 in my home. Oood mul1.
whh mantel retardation re- Prtce baaed on care given.
quired and experience In 61 4-992· 6022.
working In reoldontlat foclti·
tlea preferred. Sand re1ume1 WILL do babysitting and
tD John Lohow, P.O. Box
hou11keeplng, have own
804, Jockoon. Oh 411840. tren•portation. Cell 304·
So lory rongo • 1 4,000· 875-415B oftor 3 p.m.
1 1,800. II hi rod, muot reo Ide
within 30 mlnut11. travel
time of program loCation. 13
Insurance
Buckeye Community Servl·
cee la an equal opportunity
employer.
SANDY AND BEAVER lnrlcel EJCICUtive Plrt time IUranca Co. hal offered
to t980 mo. International Hrvices for fire insurance
fUm corp. haa one local coverage In Gallla County
poaitlon . Call today. for almost a century. Farm,
hom• and personal property
(714)821 -8900.
co.v eregea are available to
There hal never been 1 meet Individual needs. Conbenar time to be an AVON tact Kail Burleson. agent.
RoproMntatlve. Colt 446- ~~P;;h~on~·~;:445::;·2:::;92:1:.~:;==
3358.
18 Wented to Do
Wontod lmmodlatolyll ' - - - - - - - - - Someone to clean out and ,repair cisterna. 114·98&amp;General Hauling and Tra1h
3111 or I 1 4-985-3877.
removal Service. Reliable
end depondeble. Coif 448Ladln~Eam extra money for
the holldaya. Become en 3169 between 9 and 5 .
undarcov• wear agent with
unlimited oomlna potantlol. lawn Mowing no yard to big
Sell Unger.. at h~Dme par, or smell. Reliable and depentlea. No delivery, fr" trwhf~ . dable. For eatlmate call
lng. Coli 304-2$5-9787 or 441-3158. 9 to&amp;.
814-8BI·4134. Wo nood
Chimney Sweeping ServldNiars In vour area.
1-:-=-::-__;-:-:=:----:- coo. Coli Lloo ot 448-2319.
UOO to t400 1 weak
po11lble after company MOther will babyelt In own
hmo. Colt 448-4047.
training. Manegeme'nt po1~
olblo within o few montho.
Earn while you l.. rn. Full or
pert time. Forperaonallnttr·
view rooumo to P.O.
lox 721·0, o·o Tho Dolly
lontlnol, Pomoroy, Oh.
417111.

12 ln. turnlna rlow for Ford
trootor. Cot 114·311· 1----------,~
HOI.
Loot ohonoo, loot week
hiring, loclleo lor Hou..
ht of good qullttna fro moo. Uoyd. n per hour, fr80
CaR 304-4111·1818 oftor t300~::~;ork tNI firlt
I'M.
of D
. No ln...,.
mont. ea
112·1111
Cub or A 'armolltrootor ond or 114·317·7770 Of 304·
oqulpmont. Colt It 4-371· 773·11 1 t or 773-1224.
2401 otter IPM.

21

22 Money to loan

c..

In IDviJW MIIIIOIY of:

-~---------:_ __________________________

i

4

for Sale

For lea1e. Auto Service
Center. Ma1on. WV. 3 bay a.
2 hoilts. excellent location,
1ucce•sful bu1inen for over
30 years, avellable after:.
Aug. 9 , 1983. Celt after 8
p:m ... 1-304-876-2982.

.

projection," he said.
Clrculatloll campaigns are
planned In October for the Dallas
and New Orleans regions, he said.

peu 1 catalog and earn
Chrlatmaa preaentl FREE .
Guaranteed giftl. toyt.
home decor. Call 304·676676B for information.

32 Mobile Homes

.. . . ..
·---

'
_,, ' " " '

21

Buaine11
Opportunity

23

Professional
Services
---------C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Broad range of bookkeeing
and tax 11rvice1 available to
auit your bu1ineaa need1.
Corol Noel
446-3862
PIANO TUNING Bock to
School ·special 826 normal
tunlnga. September only.
Ward's Keyboard, 304-676·
3824.
PIANO TUNING-LANE DA·
NIELS . 742·296t .· Also
'cash for Spinet or Grand
piano'. (Even damaged con·
dltlon).
SUBKEN SERVICE CO.
Lockamilh aarvice. toolaharpening, acr111n • gl111 inotallad. Call 034 -676-3694.

Newly remodeled 2 atory
frame. 11h bath, 3'1/J acrea.
city schoola. riverview.
$32.000. Cell 448-4222
between 9 &amp;. 5 .
4 bdr. ranch home, large LR,
full baaement, wl1h garage.
wood burner included, city
tchoola, 2 miles from town.
Coli 446-0276 .

tion, cell 304-875· 7385 Of
875-6722 .
1974 Chomplon 1 4x66 fur- l_:;:=========
nished, with many eKtra•. on t
lerge lot et Quail Creek MH
Parte. French City Brokering
Sorvlc... 445-9340.
36 lots &amp; Acreage
Free c&amp;ntral air, 1983 Red ·
men 14x70, 3 bdr., 2 full
batha;·cathadral ceiling, del- 36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
ivered In set. French City Wat1on Rd. Owner financMobile Home1, Inc., 446 - Ing ovolloblo. Coii441-IZ2t
9340 . .
after 6 weekday•.

Middleport. remodelocl, five C11h diacount1. 24K40 One acre lot with platform
rooma and bath, 11111 fur- Clayton aactional. 3 bdr .. for hou11 and in-ground
r11nce, co1y fireplace . .g.o od . 1 1h t»ith,. flr.epltletPt · patio pool. for informatlori, 81 a,..
.
·
neighborhood . P·rice re- door, Cothocltol ceiling, Del - '666·123Z.
duced. Coll814-992-6941 . ivered In 11t. French City
Mobile Homeo. Inc.. 446 - Nice lot on Raccoon
with 19 ft. travel t111Her
Located In Syracuee-~tiar 9340.
awning &amp;. deck. priced to
1chool a. swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one- 1979 Sterllna 14x70, 2 · 1111. Cell 446-9340, 448;
third ocre lot. *24,600. or bdr. , total electric. central 7901 or 614-266·1413 . •
will rent for e276 mo. , air, eKe. cond. Can be left on
rented lot. French City Brok- 8 acre• with lot cleared
304-856-3934.
overlooking river. I mf.
ering Service, 448-9340.
below town. fl600 . 814·
Ronch typo {Brick). 3 badroom•. fireplace, attached For Sal•: Small trailer. Make 266-1210.
garega , full baaemenl, me on offer. Coii448·8U6 .
2.2 oi:reo lond with 2 rental
newly fhinglitd roof, walkln·g
dlttance ·t o · Pomeroy Ele- 1982 Vlndol• mobile homo ·trailer. Call448-8183. :
mentary School. 840,000. 10x80 'with range. •3.000
or belt offer. Call 448- 1 acre or more Iota tor •le,
Cotl814-982-6143.
on old At. 180 nHr Port•.
2798.
Cell 614-38B-B801 .
3 bedroom, 2 bath, range,
refrigerator, wa1her lc dryer, 1979 l2x66 !liberty mobile
frHrer. gaa or wood burning home partly fum .. very good 2 large lot• in New Haven
·furnace. $32,000 . 614- cond. Muat aell. Call 814- !Twin City Addition). City
246·9294 or 814- 245- sewer and water. PhOfNii:
949-2839.
304-882-3198.
6176.
6 rooms, 2 bedroom•. carpeted, natural gas, city 1981 Klng1ley mobile Thrtt acre• of ground, ' 2
water and aewava. with home. An· electric, central house trailers set up, 2 water
extra lot·100x102. Located air, 2 bdr. fireplace. utHity taps Ia septic tanka. On St.
In M11on at the comer of 15th room, 1' 1h bath1, awning. At. 1 43 on mile ow· Hanl&amp;. Brown . For more info. call underpinning. reason for aonvllle toward Porneroy.
selling muat relocate. Eatate of Bobby Mold4gt,
814-949-2815.
•18,000 . Cell 814-246- Robert Molden 1dmlnlatra·
tor, Doxtor Oh. 614-888Open houM Sept. 17. 18 6672 or 614-246-6600 .
6092.
hom 6 10 9 Saturday and 12
to 4 Sundoy. ~00 W.d\llaln 1 972 1 4x66 Cootie with 82
St. Pomeroy. 1 to 4 bad- Vemcc roomette 1 Ox20, air 18 acraa out1lda Rutland.
room&amp;, 2 bathe, completely cond., fireplace . Call 614- Hand dug water wall and
246-6308.
remodeled older home.
capped off gaa well, h11
go6d timber, vary HCiudeci,
Hou11 and 3 loti for 1ale. 12x88 Vindele mobile all mineral rights. *115,000.
home~ 8 • exp.-ndo living Ptlce nogotloblo. 814-992• , 2,000. 304-882·2831 .
room, all electric with wood 3901.
Baum Addition. 3 bed- burning stove, large con· 1------=o!;_-room•. 2Yz baths, a. c .. fam~ crete patio Including_1 room
ily room. with fireplace. 2 remodeled 1choo/ building,
stove,
acre~. •es.ooo. firm. Loan · with wood
anumptlon po11ible. 814- carport &amp;
building on
986-43B7.
lock Grove. 811n•¥1-30
---~ ••.b2,fcloo04
after 5 for more
&amp; rooma and bath. Furnl•hed. Enclo1ed porch . 1974 14x70 3 bedroom.
Gorogo. 6t4-992-3640. 3 Total electric. 814-992- 4 bdr. hou11 &amp; ecrea of land
blocka from Tin Middleport. 6687 ofter 6:30 p.m.
on At. 110 In VInton. Central
No Sunday calls.
air, *3&amp;0 mo., sec. dep, &amp;
For Sale-Hou11 trailer by ref. Colt 441-3175.
aealed bid1, 1989 model. 3
bedrooma . For lnformatfon House. 3 bdr., unfurnllhed,
cell 814·288-5061.
Rodnoy Vlllogo It. U71 mo.
Coli 448-4418 oftor 7 p.in,
USED MOBILE HOME. IN
GOOD SHAPE, 304-676- Modern 3 bdr. ranch w . .
2711.
bo1omont. North Rt. 1 tO.
Ref. • dep. Coli 448-0815.
1986 SCHULTZ mobile
home, 1Dx&amp;O with tlpout, 3 bdr. hou1a nur Rio
B room hou11 with bath,
cantril al(, city water.13 · new carpet, priced e2700. Grondo *235. Adulto only,
acr11 on Uevlng Road, Welt 1 962 Jaguar XKE Bll per- no pets, Me. dep. Can
Columbia. 304-676-1 922 cant restored. eKcellent con- 814-246-6439.
dition, •9.000. Call 304after 4 p.m.
67&amp;-1678.
Small1 bdr. conagalocated
HOUSE end 3 Iota for sale,
on Neighborhood Rd. Rot. •
t1 2,000 . Cell 304-8B2sec. dep. required. Callevee.
34
Business
448-02114.
2831 .
Buildings
2 bdr. houH on Rt. 7,
unfurniahed e2so mo. plu1
Building 24x24. 4 roomo. ooc. dop. Coli 814-258fumance, blth, paneled &amp; 1413.
carpeted. Excellent bulldfng
for office. C•n be moved eaa Chormlng 2 otory, 2 bed·
doublo wldo. Coll441-3417 room houH. fireplace, rtvar
or 448·4188.
vlow. gorogo, UOO. month.
304·882·2831.
.

c..-.

Full booomont 1 \llnory with
gorovo.
verden. amall child ac~
capttd. rlfereno••· 304·
871·1071 .
Extra nice houn on Rt. &amp;154,
opprox. 3 mi. Eoot of Porter.
price roducod. Shown by
oppolntmont only. Coll4411340, 448-7801 or 814·
258·1413 .

I••

Hauaea for Rant

FOR RENT
Outstlndiq Brick Home for Rent, 8 years old,

2200 sq. ft. of livln&amp; sp1ce. 2~ blths, form1l
entr1nce, firepllce, I'IIIJI, dishwasher. 2 car
. pr111. - Rio Gl'lnde - $450.00.
CAU 446-3644

Wiseman

Modern 3 bdr. home. full
b11ement, central heat Ia air.
ruql water, 2 acres. Call
814-379-2513.

w.- ~

city wotar. · dbl.

Schultz·Tho 111 new Schultz
modular home. quellfled for
I NOTICE I
W.VA. hou1lng money.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- ot Fran~h City Mobile
LISHINO CO. rooommondo Homoo, Inc .. 441·8340.
that you do bu1lnesa with
poopltr you know, ond NOT
bdr. houM, llvlngroom.
to aand money through the kitchen, &amp; bath. 9 ecru on
moll unll you hovo lnvootl- Johnoono Ridge Ad. For
gated the oHerlng.
more Information, 448·
7130 .
Clgarotto Dlotrlbutorohlp. 1---:---:--:---:--lnotant cooh flowl Wo ora a In Choohlra 3 b*.. gu.
Bonded national firm ex- forced air hilt, 2 car r.rage,
pending Into tho oroo. lfyou alum. oldlng, U .000.
oro -lng 1 oacure buol- Ownorwlllflnoncowhh20%
neu opponulnty. Wo pro- down. Coli 114-317-7898.
vldo oil rotolt location• ond
oll.no-rv training. Full or Two -oom homo, utility
Part time . lnveatment from room~ attached prage, new
U,OOO.OO. Wlnoton- fumonoo, lanood In bockSolom-Koolo. 1·800-241· yord, In city. Colt 448·1431
2218.
or 448-1885.

41

·BNutlful brick home no
charge to buyer. Clo11 to
ho1pltal. Take over paymenta. Cell 448·061 8.

wishing to HI up are

come. No fee .will be
charged. For more Inform•·

Estate Agency

·3
TRI·BTATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED- CARl.
TRUCK&amp; . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
448·7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
iTY MOBILE HOME &amp;ALES,
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35. PHONE 441· 7274 .
64 Misc . Merchandise

'

FOR SALE ,
6 NICE DINING
ROOM CHAIRS
1 PONY MARE
AND GUINI!AS
CALL 441'1-2222

Special Discount
Prices At
POMEROY

LANDMARK
Alt111. ASphllt Roof Collin&amp;
Black Alphllt Roof Collin&amp;
Roll Rooflna
Aluminum Roofina
in All L1111th1

Announcement•

M6igs County
Fairarounds

SEPTEMBER
23-24-25
HOURS:
9 AM-6 PM
Located
Junction
Rt.7&amp;33
Pomeroy, OhiP

Dealers From All Over Will Be Here
RATES:
INSIDE SPACES ARE SOLD OUT
' PLENTY OF UNDER ROOF &amp;OUTSIDE
SPACES AVAILABLE
UNDER ROOF:
75' Per Ft. (Frontage) DAILY RATE
OUTSIDE:
50' Per Ft. (Frontage) DAILY RATE
ELECTRIC USAGE '3.00 A DAY
CHECK OUR WEEKEND SPECIAL RATE
11111 Rutrvotlan With Poymont To:
FLEA IIARKET-270 IIIII St., lllddltpart. 0. 45630

FOR IIORE INFORMATION CALL:

Valley Shopper 992-5900 - David llann 992-6300
lllkt lltrtln
.

�~u1n&lt;11:ov

41

Houses for Rent

spacious, 3
bedroom home. new kitchen
with JennAir, family room.
fireplace, 2 batht. patio,
nice yord. 304-882-2406,
304-876-6540 II&lt; 304-8822447.

Times-Sentinel

44

Apartment
for Rent

NEW HAVEN,

Furnished apt. 1 bdr .• adults,
807 2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis ..
s 200 mo . utilities paid.

· Ohio--Point Ploasont, W . Va.

Silver Bridgey Shopping
Canter. Call 448-3647 or
446-4028 aftor BPM.
M'obile home for rent. 304·

1 be'd room Apt. S19 6. mo.
including utilities . Equal
housing opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apts.

614 -992-7787.

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

12 ft. dump bed with 2-3

· washers, dry ers . refrigerators, rangea . Skaggs Ap·
pliances, Upper River Rd .•

stsge cyUndera, lower frame
hoMI a. pump complete.

8625 .• Recliners. &amp;176. to
$360., lempa from $28 . to
$76 , 6 pc. dinenoa from
999., to 5436. 7 pc .. $189.
and up. Wood table w ith s ix

chairs 8425. to $746 . Desk
$110 up to $225. Hutches.
$560. and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete

2 bedroon furnished Aptl.
614-992-5434, 614-992- with mattresses. $260. and
6914. or 304-882·2686.
up to t396. Baby bods.

S1 10. Mattresses or box

676 -4046.

1 room &amp; bath, furnished springs. full or twin. $68 ..
Mobile home lots for rent, efficiency. Apt . in Langsville. firm, S68. and 878 . Queen
water sewer furnished . 1 Oh. 8100. month. 614-992· sets. $196 . 4 dr. chests.
. S42 . 5 dr. chests, S54 . Bed
small ·child accepted. 304· 6892.
frames, $.20.and $26 ., 10
676-1076.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . gun - Qun ca,inets, 8360 .,
Apartments now available to dinette chains $20, and $26.
44 Apertmont
elderly &amp; diabled with an Gat or electric ranges, 8325
income of leas 'than ~P to $376. Baby matresses.
for Rent
•12.300. Renting for 30 $26 8t 836, bed frames $20,
percent of adjusted income- $26, II&lt; $30, kingframo $60.
Good selection of bedroom
2 bdr. Regancv Inc. Apart- .Phono 304-875-6679.
auites
, cedar chesu .
manti Utiltie1 partty furn .• FURNISHEO apartment.
rockers , metal Cabinets,
•partmenta aveileble now. aduhs.
no pets,. phooe 304- swivel rockers.
UOO per mo. A-One Real 676 -1463.
Used furniture ·· bookcase.
Estates, Carol Yeager, Anitor. Call 304-675-5104 or TWO bedroom apartment in ranges. chairs. dinnen set.
wood table and chain, dry304-876-7388.
Henderson , phone 304· ers. ~efrigerator&amp; and TV's. 3
miles out Bulaville R~ , Open
Furnla"ed apt. $186. Water 876-1972,
9am to 6pm, Mdn. thru Fri ..
paid; 2 bdr .. 131V. 4th.
9am
to 6pm, Sat.
Gallipolis. 446·4418 alter 7 46 Furnished Rooms
448-0322
J?.m.

bdr. apt.. 2nd Ave. , For rent Sleeping Rooms TV II&lt; Appliances. 627 Third
Qallipollo. 8190 mo. Call and light house keeping Ave .. Gallipolis, 446-1699.
448' 4222 between 9 &amp; 5. roama. Perk Central Hotel. Spin washers. gas&amp;. electric
dryer•. auto washers, gat &amp;.
Call 446·0768.
electric ranges, .refrlgeraUnfurnished. downatalra, 3
raom apt .• 1 bdr .• no pets. Sleeping room $116, utili- tora, TV seta.
Inquire at 87 . Vine St.. tie• paid, range S. rafrig.
Galllpolla.
Share bath. Man only. 448- REBUILT APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, ranges.
:-:----~---1 4_
4 18 aftor 7 p..m.
refrigerators. St,op repair,
Fui-nlshad _apt.._ 2 bdr ., nee'r
.bring it In &amp;: Save,. Call
HMC, $235 utiiHift pold&gt;
446"-8181 .
.
243 Jackson Pike, .Gallipo- 48 Space for Rent
lio. 448·4418 altor 7 p.m.
Kenmore washer 875. KenApartment 1 bdr.. furn. COUNTRY MOBILE Home more dryer $66, alec. range
Trailers 2 bdra., furn .. beau· Park. Route 33, North of $66. gas range 565, Hoover
tiful RiverView. Kanauga, Pomeroy. Large lots. Call portable washer t75, Maytag wringer WBther 896, GE
Fosters Trailer Park. 446· 992-7479. .
coppertone washer like new
1802.
$17&amp;. side by side refrig.
8176, Coldspot refrlg.
$160, living room suite 845,
swivel rocker 836, Sigler oil
heater $76, chest of drawers
866, 11,000 BTU air cond.
$96. Skaggs Appliances,
Upp·a r River Rd. Gallipolis,
SWAIN
I
AUCTION II&lt; FURNITURE Oh. 446-7398.
Small furn. house 1 or 2 62 Olivo St .. Gallipollo. 6
adultt only, no pets. Call piece wood living room suite $66.00 &amp; up good used
with 6 Inch tlot ormo $399. washera &amp; dryers. 30 days
4~8-0338 .
bunk beda complete -with warranty, good number to
.Apt. for le..e overlooking bunkles $199, 2 piece an- choose from. Call614 -266·
city park, unfurniahad. 8176 tron livlngroom suites $199, 1207.
mo. Call446·1819 or even· antron raclinera $99. other
lngo 448-4425.
recllnara t80, maple dinette New commercial wood
aeta S179, love seats $70. heater, holda 300 lb. of
Futnishad efficiency and 2 hide - a-bod 1250, box wood. Auto thermostat,
bttdroom Apt. In Middleport, apringa I. mattra11 twin or $490. Call614-256-1216.
Oh. No pets. Month1 rent full 100 aet regular-firm
plvo 1100 oecurily. 614- ·$120, maple dinette chairs Kenmore washer-dryer and
t36, wath standa $34, portable dish washer. Power
9112-3874.
maple rockerl' e69, 7 piece lawn mower. Exc. cond.,
Apartments . 304-876- chrome dlnene aet S149, 6 Cash &amp; carry. Call 446place dinette set *89, used 3294.
51"48.
bedroom tuitet, refirgera·
APARTMENTS. mobile tora. ranges, chest, dre11ers,
homes. housea. Pt. Plaannt wringer waahers, TV ' a,
ond Golllpolio. 814-446- dryeras, • thoes. Call 4463159.
8221.

3

*

54 Misc.

1425. Coli 814-387-7898.

1979 Molroe Bobcat "Loll
lhM 800 hro", trou.r. I ft.
York roke. buckfl, -18ft.
ftot bed troller with rocko.
304·675-2702 or 8711 4128.

10 ALUMINUM ac-no,
5'8"lll21". 1 aluminum door Zenith stereo, receiver. turn·
6'B"x31Yo'', with track II&lt; table, 8 track, and I(Moltoro,
screws. UMd to acrMn in a •eo. Boby bed with mot19'x7' porch , · 304-675- treoo,
304-8911-31177.
4871 .
Dinette Ht, smoked gla11
300 Romance Booko. 304- tabla, 4 cholro. 10 opeod
B96-3877.
bike, both I)CC&amp;IIent condl·
lion,
304-875-7824.
Building lor children wolllng
for bua. 304-896-3821 .
21 foot. m.ulawnlng. good
condition, f1 110, 304-875Two dlocontlnued dloptoy 5693.
kltchena. D1f11 kitchen
Center. 304·11711·2318 .
56 Building Supplies
SNrt white metal d1tector.
uood vary little •126.00.
Now coot •41 0. 304-e711Building motorial•
8943.
.
block, brick, ilewer plpoo,
Fall hunting clinic Sunday windowa. lintels. etc .
Sept. 26th, 12-5 p.m. Foe- Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
tory rep. from NVen com- 0 . Col e14-2411-5121 .
panlaa, door pr~tl, archery
lhooto, opeclol 1 cloy clinic,
Pets for Sale
l•t us help you get Into 68
archery or hunting. Tri

•40.

1 almoat new chain saw, 18
ln. cut. Coll448-7273 alter
SPM or anytime weekends.

Slightly irregular clrpet1.
remantl and whole house
size: lde•l fOr ren-tal income
Ute. Prices starting at $2.9·9:
S3.99 sq.yd . Call814-9926173.
ponable washer &amp;
dryer like new. 4-16' 7 .50
tiret, Zenith portabte TV exc.
cond. 1976 LTC 64,000
actual miles. Call 446-7273
Hoover

New Oak Furniture, tablei,
chairs. cupboards. pia safe.
dry slnb. , Paul ·cOnkels

Antiques, Tupper~ Plains.

Will-Burt stoker furnance

24', good cond , Call 4461672.

REPOSSESSED signl Nothing Down! Take over PlY·
manto $58. monthly. 4 'x8'
after 6 and Saturday and flathing arrow sign. New
Sunday anytime.
bulba. letters. Hale Slgn1.
Coli FREE 1-800-626 Firewood 1 load 836 4 74,4&amp;.
loads etoQ, 10 load~ sioo.
P~ hardwood . heap 2 horaaa. 2 saddle~. bridlta
voucher~

accepted . Call

&amp; blankets. 1 smalf camping

814-256-1471 or 446- troller. 304-882-3242.
7077.
PreWay fireplace from new
Used gas heater with fan. trailer. Complete with
60,000 BTU heats 4 rooms. blowor. ·a 260. 814-992Automatic off control, See 2924 or 614-992-6971 .
at 87 Vine St. Gallipolis.
For aale-Babycrlbcomploto
Hotpoint 12.000 BTU air
conditioner, used 1 summer, Hoskins all wood , folding
8300. Coll875-7231.
play pen. Coaco Pateraon
stroller.
American
family
with mattre11
&amp;
Firewood- cut up, , slaba, nursing acale. Handcraft
$16 pickup load . Coli 614- electric bottle aterilit.er.
245-5804.
8100. for 614-992-6039.
all or will 1111
- -- - - - - - - ooporotoly.
Antique metal trunk, 3x4
mirror, pole lamps. Call Gunt-600 gun1, new and
814-256-1768.
used. Hand guns. rifl81,
shotguns, extra barrels,
AntiqUe coffee table made priced fer below current
out of a wagon wheel, with market. 26 percent will lay
bran knobed horse, hames away. Will trade for boats or
as lago. 8260. Call 448- most anything. Shot thelia0822.
high power 16.00, slugs
.
- $2.25, other ammo below
CAMOUFLAGEO now army coat. 9-6 except Sunday.
clothing. Denim pants 14 814-992-7494 for evening
oz. $10., surplus rental appointment. FIFE'S. 3rd.
clothing. Sam Somerville's, St. Mlddlaport, Oh,
7 milea east Ravenswood,
open FridaY Saturday, Sun- EXTRA good top soil, deliday. 1:00-7:30 p.m. Phone vered , phone 304-676304-675-3334.
7771 .

Window awning•, Kreon enclosures, underpinning, carporta, Cutltom sizes and
shutters.
108 GRIM
446-7519- (614) 992-3148

NEW USTING - PRICE REDUCED -A really
neat 3 bedroom ranch house with new carpeting
throoghout Aluminum
.
80'xl00' lot. Rutland

SUNDAY ONLY

WOODBURNER SALE
ADD-ON

FURNACE

D

NEW LISTING - .7 ••-i
a Ml, house ~ in
secluded area &amp; nee SO'- . jlilir. Must be seen.

•Holds 300 lb. at one loadina
•Heats all your hot Wiler
•Heats up to 3,000 sq. ft. House
•lnsta!ls easily to your present
Gas-Otl or electric system

REG. '1095

fvouR
jCHOICE

::-::=~== ··
: ..:

-----~ ·.

Clarinets,

flut~• ;· 111111~

phones. trombonel.
trumpau . Franke Pawn .
Shop. 448-0840.

8

Write Crodhe Monogor, P.O.
Box 537, Sholbyvfllo, IN .
48178.
'
Bundy

.
trumpet used 8 wk1.. -.

Farm Equipment

•1oo.oo -h. 1 u1011 can:

buy, 300 gallon puH oprayor,
hydroullc contriftcot pump
21 ft. boom, 1800.00 . .;
Uood Alllo Cholmoro 72
auger fHd pul combine
•1 .2oo.oo. 1 Uood c1i

Gleaner combine,

13 ft.

;rein hood, •&amp;,600. 1 Uood
Gleaner E combine, 10 ft.
grain head • 2 row corn
head, U.IOO. 1 Uood
Gleaner model K. corn &amp;
IOybaen 1peclal combine
with 2 row corn hud.
excoflont condition, 1973
model, •8.900.00. 1 Uaod
Allis Chalmera modal
190XT. 98 turbo chortlod
horH power. new pafnt.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

EVERY TUESDAY

LACK

7 P.M.

NIGHT

*

I'T. Pt.IAS4NT, W. VA.
In Youth Center Building.
Also Tlttlrsd1y Nllht, 7:00P.M., Recine Ohio Ainetican Lecion Bulltflna.
'
'
At least $5,000.00 of V1riety Loan of Merchandise.
GtOCerles sold tvt!J othar 1uction. Door priz11.
AUCTIOII.EER: LONNIE E. NEAL, l67-7101

AUCTION

MAIN ST. - POMEROY,OH .
We Are Expanding Our Parte Dept. Will
•ell •II old but Unu. .CI parta. Terms:
Cash or Check with Poeltlva I. D. · · ·
.
''Not Roapon1lble for Accldonlo''
AUCnONEER: JACK :CARNAHAN

PUBUC AUCTION
SATURDAY,

SEPTEMBER 24,

1983

10:00 A.M.

t.-... a- SlrtJI.
t-..
.......

,:re'n~ piltJ!, co~=

=~:i~~:t:·i=-intr~~

aod on. '*I llootll, Sito'er II1Yl, 1111nt1e tmdo, delil schocll bill, and
aa. mistelnous and Cllitedllrs illms.
Ttr•a: Cesh
·
Blrlow &amp; Clrrla liM lim, Co-hacutors
LH Joh"aon-AUCTIONfU
CROWl CITY, OHIO
PHONE 25&amp;-67'0

.446-0008
.~

ESTATE AUCTION

SATURDAY. SEPT. 24, 1983
10:00 A.M.

NEW LISTING - 2 fami~ un~ 2 story house, large
l&lt;t, downstai~ rented at ,.esent Want $8,000.00.

RIO GRANDE AREA- Rio Centerpoint Rd. (Cherry
Ridge), appmx. 75 acres woodland, fronts on 2 rds.,
county water availabla Owner may h~p finance.
Pr~ed to sell at $400 per acre.
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENlRALLY LOCATW . 1
Ro 58S
112 11.11! arm has frontage on Slate . ute
·
Fa.field Centenal} Road &amp; Vanro F81rleid !Ul.
Excellent for larningor devebpment. Oder 5 rm. &amp;
bath also included. Owners will consider selling
smaller tracts of sMrl term finandn, Call for more
Information.
PRICE REDUCW TO $56,900! Excellent cattle
farm. 132 acres m·l, mostly clean h~ pasture, good
fences. 111 stor; oome, 5 rms. &amp; bath, large barn.
tob. base fronts on 3 roads in Walnut Twp.
'
FURTHER! Th~ outstandin&amp; nearly new
It offe~ 21! bat~. 4 BRs.
1Mn1g rm., mr1ene, krtchen with range, double
DW, carpetin&amp; fireplace. central
a~c&amp;~~=~~garage. Located minutes from
ni
,
PRICE IIEDUCED TO $29,500 - Modem ranch
with 3 B~.. IMng room, krtchen, bath, carpet,
ela:tric 88 hell~ and an attached garage. Located
in Rodney Village II; Excellent buy for mt tine
horne owner!
story lrame offers 4 BRs, bathi
, carpet, !root and rear pm:hes
altat:hed garage. Assumable loan at 911'16.
HAVE YOUR OWN BOX SEATs...Walth all the Blue
Devi~' home. games from your own private sun
deck. Other attractive features are 2 BRs, equippe:f
~hen, dining are~ laundry w/washer and dryer,
tcwety custom drapes, l"ing room, carport, centrol
air and nat gas heat On~ blocks nm school and
shopping.

OHIO RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - Located 3 miles
below Eu. .oi&lt;a Dam. Ideal for campin&amp; bUilding or
mobile homes. Call Ranny Blackburn.
COIIIIERCIAL BUI.LDING - 62x80 all steel con·
suuctMin with fireproof lnsliation. Overtlead crane,
has office &amp; baths. formerly used for boat sales &amp;
ll!par.LocatedacrossfromSiverBridgePiazawith
access to tile Ohio River Potential unlimited Cal
·
·
Ranny Blackbum.
WILL BE YOUR PROUDEST POSSESSION!
Beautifully ~ndscape:f. Splendid whie brick home
exhibits approx. 3100 sq. II. l~ing area w4h 3 or 4
BR, 3 bat~. 20x40 family room, dinin~ room,
beautilul carpet, kt:hen offers IJN, disposal,
microwa~ and trash rompactor, 1n1errom, .air
ronli00mn11. 2 car garage. !Ox20 utility buildlll&amp;
declo nd 20140 pool
OWII YOUR OWN CAIIP SITE -In the wilderness
of the Wayne National Forest 5 to 9 acre tracts of
woodland now available, adjoining toousands 'ol
acres of 11JVt111ment land. Public huntin&amp;_fishinl
and camping permitted. Prices start at $J500 with
financing available.
.
GREEN TOWNSHIP _ GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD
_ 12 acre! m/1, aNVOX. 720ft. level Rd.lr..._
,....
~·....-.
rural water available, exc~lent for building or
mobile homes. Call for more infol'malion.
PliiCE REDUCED TO $35,900! -Owner says sell
this month. 3 BR ranch w4h brick tront features a
nice lamily room w4h chimney for WB stove, LR,
large kilthefl, laundry om. and large back porch.
Located on Bulaville !Ul.
FARriErs FARII - Approx. 50 acres near
Vinton. All clean crop &amp; pasture land, remodeled 3
BR home, 60x80 barn, 2 si~s (former dallY 1arml.
fronts on 2 rds:, large pond. SEE Tl-11S~E BEFORE
PLOWING TIME. $49,900.

Estlte of CllrtnctllcNeal. Located 1t 558 Mill St.,
lliddlaport, Ohio.
;
"ANnQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
~g wheel, !"'illie top dresser, marble top wash stand,
h91 back bed, oak chail!. 9 pc. china wash bowl pitcher,
dhember pet. and etc. to be sold separately, violins, tilt top Ia·
ljle, lamps, oil lights, cedar chsst, misc. lables, cuckoo clllCk,
an1HIAS of dishes.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Frilidaire refrigeratcr, 5 pc. dinelle set, HoiHer washtJ, dryer,
l!lnd$. lamps, sola bed, RCA IBI6vision &amp;reoord player, cha~~s,
tan, piano, rocker, i!lidtJ, sewilg machine &amp; ~8' misc. items.
CASE NO. 24197
HELEN GULLEY-ADMINISTRATRIX
CASH
POSITIVE 1.0.
DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER
949-2033 DR 992-7301
'
. MARLIN WEDEMEYER - Apprentice
"Not naponalble fllr eccidentl or lou of prop\lrly."

"

counts. "bcludlng model
10-10. "'lnterellt frMflnanc·
lng on 111 new &amp; UMd New
Holland hay toolt unti17-1 ~
84-, lnttrelt frH financing
on all uuct &amp; new foregl

oqulpmonl until 9-1-14.
KEEFERS SERVICE CENTER, St. Rt. 87-Riploy Rd .
Pt. Pluaent, 304-895·
3874.
BN Ford tractor wtth bush
hog . good condition ,

410 Farmall diesel tractor
with 3-14 ln . plowo. 7 fl.
mowing machine. Call &amp;14-·
248·5081 oltor &amp;.
83

Livestock

Or1velv tor ula. Purchased

from Carol Snowden State
Farm Agent, Golllpollo, 0~ .
Coli 614-2&amp;8-1 661 ,
8 vr. old m1re. 17 hinds
high, gentle, good rider,

r

npert defe111lvo play alter
NORTH

tiOVTH
+IQIIIU
•Q1012
+10 I

+J
Vulnerable: Eu!-West
Dealer: Weot
Wett

Nortll

Eul

Soul

I+
Pill
Pus

Pau
2NT
Pau

Puo
Pua
Pau

I+
3.

By Oswald Jocobr
aDd Jom01 Jocoby
Eddie Kantar, one of Our
lfUiell playen, bll been
wrltlni ortlcla coiled "Kantor lor tbe Dofenae" for
oome time. He hao Just producod a book coverln&amp;l 00 of
them.
Here Ia a hood !h•t 111111·
tratn ••veral ' P.lnto of

GUYAN TOWIISHIP - 108 acres mil, located
JUST ALmLE lAND ... app~ox. \\ acre on Rl588 sooth
ol Mercer;ilte. Approx. 20 A. tillabl~ balance
just min,_es from town. Priced to sell!!
woods, lob. base. Owners will help linance.

•Heavy Duty double wall construction

·

REG. '995

II
1
I
I
I
I

••
•

'

•

,.....lilt

cao

"'
,.

Rot

far lou ar accldtnt.

FOHm TUI.R. AUCTIOIEER
114-51W721

.

71

Autoa for Sale

Charloia cow with 15 month TOP CASH paid lor Iota
old calf. •aso. 814-9811- model u•d cart. Smith
3U8.
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eoolern Ave.• Gallipolis, 446·
Horsea for atle, Palamlno 2282.
white gelding &amp; a 110rrel.
1970 Volkswagen station1114-892-&amp;102.
wagon. with Iota of extrl
Reglstared Tennetste parts. Will sell cheap. Call
Walker Boy mare. 10 yooro 814-388-8834.

Autoa for Sale

71

2·1941 Ford Coupe. Call
448-1019.

1 --------~~,.·::··

lea1her upholstery, new ..
tires. Exc. cond. 814-742-

2844.

1---------1978 Uncoln Mark V. All

opolono, Bill Blool doolgnor

old. 82 lnchM tall. Gentle.

1-:----------

Single reglotorod walking

1 --------~- 1 ----~---~­

UIIO. 114-742-2023.

mare. Bred to a double

..

, 1982 Ootoun 280ZX. Block
with gold trim. loaded~ :·

11rlea. Beautiful.muat1"to

1972 Ford Maverick for oppreclete. Will taka trade.
oole. 1400. Coll446-7481 . 614-949-2763.

1980 Corvette under 1981 Olde Cutlesa Supreme
r.glotorod otolllon. ••oo. 10.000 mi. T·tcp loother Brougham Caleia, loedad, ·
Unregittered roan walking Interior loaded. Call 448- Exc . cond. low mllaag•. ·
horoo colt UOO. 814-1192- 4913 daytime or 448-2800 17,796. 514-992-117112 of- •
72153.
eva. &amp; weekenda.
ter D p .m.
Plgo, 304-882-3448.
84

Hey &amp; Grein

1000 baloo good quality
IICOnd cutting d1lry hay. E.
Hollon 814-949-2831.
HAY II&lt; •trow,phone 458·
1168 .

1977 Buick Rogol 42,000
mi., new paint, U,500. Call
448·7139.

-"·1

Reel Estate General

1978 Honda Accord . 1976 Ford Grenad•. P.S .• ·
U ,950. Coli 446-20&amp;&amp; p .b .. e.c.. am-fm radio . •
evenings,
•460. or beat ofl•r. 814·
843, 5231.
1978 Cutlooo ·s·. 4dr .. Hd ..
3&amp;0, V-8. auto .. AC. PS , PO, 1988 Mercury Couger XR7 •·
radio. all lnst.. 6 sport GT. Good cond. •1.1500. or "l
wheela, good tires, 81 ,600 . boot offer. 614-B43-U31 .
Call 448-0940.
1972 Chevy Malibu. Am- ..'
1981 Flreblrd· V-6, air, PS, Fm, new recaps. Completely •
PB, tilt, crui,e, AM-'FM. tuned up. BodY rough. Auto· -..
cas"tta, re1r window d4!J· malic trent . 814· 992 - foggar . Cell 448-3200 after 3703.
,:
6:00.
1976 Plymouth Volara ·
1978 Ford Future 6 cyl., Ranch Wligon: runs good.
auto. PS. AC, good cond .. good condition. 83150. neg11,860. Cell 446-4063.
otltoble. 304-676-1987 or .
676 -2 882.
1973 Pontiac Grand AM
aut~ .• · PS, PB. air. low
1977 FORD LTD II, SW, PS, ;
mileage. t760. Call 446- PB . excellent condition. beat "•
2082.
offer. 304-676-4437 or.,
304· 676-3354.
~
Real Estate General

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

Ike Wiseman, Broker: 446-3796 Eve.
Jim Cochran, Associate, 446-7881 Eve.
PLEASAIIT VALLEY ESTATES - NEWLY OWNER SAYS SELUI Nia~ and well maintained 3
RWECORATED - Yoor family will hwe this bedroom home on 2nd A·~ Th~ •·me off~ an
attractive 4 bedroom home off Rt. 35. Has new
~ '"
•· •
car
. pet. palflt, etc. lnoi!d
. es. w.b. fill!.'"- formal eat-in krtchen, dilng room, woodbumer, tl! bat~.
d
..,.....
nat gas heat plusatreeshadedyard.You must see
mm&amp; 21fuR bat~. mce ~hen, uti. room heat inside this oome to appreciate.
· pump. cent air &amp; (lllflia Owner transterrin&amp;
$59,900.
. SINCE THE' FO"'""Iu" AD WAS WRimN
....,. ""
OWIIE!IIIAS REDUCED
THE PRICE TO $85,000. 70 ACRES - MOBILE HOllE - II yoo enjoy1lots
_ SP""'IAL .,,., EST'"" OfFERING. I've been
of woods, plenly.olwi!tflrre,streams,sprinf..a arge
rover and just plain elbow room, then you II want to
llllllna ~ estal8 !of 23 yea~ and this~ by far the
see this. Includes 12x64 mobile home w/wood
best buy I have- seen. California owner will do
stove. $32,000.
almost anything to sen one o1 the larae quality
lllmes in the county. Over 5,000 SQ. ft. of unusual
IMng area, 2 fireplaces. Outstanding kitChen, .len
Air range, d~hwasher, •ash compactor, mui!Hioor
OWNER MUST SELL - WAS $51,900. NOW
pantry, breakfast noo~ formal dining. library,
$45,000 - Modern 2 story 4 bedroom home with
enclosed atrium !full s~ed tree,ltoweiS, and water · wal~ng distance to SChoo~. Has 2 fireplaces,
t•). huae family room, 3 bedrooms, 211 baths.
equipped kitchen, dining room, knotty pine fam~y
:...o..- """'
-'-'-' patiO.
· 2 car
,..,.
,...., ....,...,
...' deck and """
room, I'L
" baths• 1u11 basem en,• nat gas H·w· heat
gnge. carefree calar sidin&amp; one of the county's
2 car. ~arage and everything in vel} good rond.
best ~Hiioloorhoods, 4 ac. wooded kit overlooking
Immediate possess~n.
private lalte. Priced $99,000. WiD accept first
reasone~e offar. Unable to make payments and
wil"" to tab hi•la;s. House had waterline break
...
.,.
which caused some damage but very minor when 1ST AYE. - Older rome in the city, reslaed in
~.~
. · ed. Serious~ this~ an outstanding good taste. Large modem krtchen llilf1 cathedral
""""'w'"''
ceilin&amp; dining room, loing room, family room, 3
bedrooms up. Offire area in homa Separate
39.4 ACRES - RIO GRANDE -For on~ $22,000 en~ance wrth two nice size rooms. Located on 1st
you wit own th~ large wooded acreage 1n a very Avenue near the courtoouse. As~ng pnce
·pd area near Rio Grande. Paved road frontage $135,000.00.
1,000 black walnuts planted approximately 15 ~·

"' .....

I
.I

PHONE 446-3643

,

n••

a!JI.

3 bed
b. .
- dl roor, Ocit Includes 2240
SQ. II., baths, pow er room, amny room, equipped
ktchen, fireplace, c·air, excellent location. ·vel'/
nice roomy oome wrth view. $69,500.
RIO GRANDE

RODNEY 11 -The corner klt which this nice 3 BR
house ~ located on provides privacy in a nice
nei~borhood. Wrth 2 lui baths, soop, utility room
&amp; 2 ,_
m•P Iaces. you don't wantto look past it Call lor
appointment
lAKE DRIVE _ RIO GRANDE _ Possible 9 ~%
assumption on th~ lovely 3 yo. old brick, 2 story
homa Includes 4 beClrooms, 2 full &amp; 2 half baths,
nice bui~·in krtchen with bar, full basement. family
room w/fireplace and 2 car garage. $67,500.
OWner anxious to seN. Call Jim Cochran.
NEAR COLLEGE - Space and romfort are found
in· th~ briclt and frame residence srtuated on 16\i acres on Rt 35 with trees, pond, barn and
mini-orchard. Home has a spacious dining rorn
romp~ kitchen, 3 bedrooms, sun room and
basement with a rec. room. $79,900.
CUSTOM BUILT - 8rick ranch in Crown City. Very
attractive and well maintained 3 bedroom home
with over 1580 sq. It of living area. lndudes an
equipped kitchen with dining area, 2 full bat~
fami~ room, 2 nice cuvered PIJ'Ches plus a lari!tl
landscaped yard.
·

WHY YOU SHOULD LIST
WITH THE
WISEMAN AGENCY:

Sellers Protection Plan protects
your home's maior components
against repair or replacement
Free.
"Moving Machine" exposes your
to buyers all across America
.tnhome
1ust mmutes.

.

.

DCEWIIT IUSIIIESS UICATIOI - Here il an
to own a bu$hlSs on one ol the
hea'liell traveltl:l streets in Soutl&amp;&gt;1&amp; 11 Obi&gt; near
Bob Evans'~ Fried and PilZI Hut IncludeS
WIIIHn cooler-and lllrsctiYe cusiDmer area ldeel
locltion for .lilY type of business.

opportunity

WF1E SELUIIG HAPPIIESS! Peaceful Sellin&amp;

1n1s11 rountry air, lois ol ~acy, wonder!ulh
. ~ to
raise chldll!ll You ae1 i al with t .........., 3
bedroom home on a1.31C11kltin Green Township.
You'l enjoy 1 VI!! nice cabinet filed kitchen, 2 full
btlhs, 1ar1e tditly 10011\ 2 tM' prage. A large
ldtllllon makes room for a lamily room. enllrll!ltf
dinin11nd rae. room. Priald II $67,900 and has a
10\\!1 ISIIUIIIIble loon.

All you

1..

~ '

5 BEDROOM HOUSE IN CITY SCHOOLS- W~ 2
baths, l~ing room, dining room plus much I!IOI'e,
th~ house can't be overtoolted. Circular sta1oway
leads downstaios to the tar~ tami•· room with
•·
''
fireplace. 2 bedrooms, full bath, an,d utility ~ ·
AlsQ nice k4chen, central a1r, 10' of msutatioo,
mus~ room or den, sewing room and a garage w4h
stcrage. All srtuated on a landscape:! lot in Mil~
v·l''
1.ga Low 8Nus.
BRICK TAl-LEVEL - 2 ACRES - 5 year old, 3
bedroom home oft Rl 218 includes a tami~ room
w/fireplace. I~ bat~. large kilchen, heat pump,
central 8\r and 2 car garaga Priced to sell at
$59,000.

OWNER IIOYittG TO COWMIUS - Check the

doon 1Bad111g tea huge new sundecll Located neor
Rio and Buclteye Hill on 2~ ac nat lot Owner
wants rt sold - Priced at $72,000.

9.25 LOAN ASSUMPTION - Modern 3 BR, full
basement home on 1.91 A. just2 miles m/1 west of
Kyger HS., co. water, excellent view, good
mortgage assumptiOn possible. Asking $39,900.
CaP Clyde Walker.

,

J:
1··

I'·
I',

.1
1"
-·

''
I"
OWNER MUST SELL!! Quality brick ranch with ·
enlrance foyer, 1ormal dimn&amp; 3 be rooms, very nice I
krtchen an 2 car garage. 11 mile lrom Holzer Center .
and ronvenienl to sho~in&amp; 01·:r.;schools. Located 1,

1·_

,... neigh rhood.
on a quiet street in good

167 A. FARII LOCATED 2 MILES SOUTH OF RIO
GRANDE - ~ Mile west of S.R 325 on Cora
Centerpoint Road. Appr"".70 A. nice laying ridge
land for crop &amp; pasture wtlh some brush clearin'
Balance in good growing timber with some ready
for harvest. Has ~rge lrame barn with partial buitt
sluls on two sides. Has 2 other buildings &amp; silos
Small tobacro base. No house but several ideal
locations to buld. Good water supply &amp; gas well.
Pr'·"" at $85.000
....,
·

NEAR RACCOON CREEK - Yoo must see this
lovely 3 bedroom oomesituatedon 5 acres more or
less wrth boating access to the creek. The home has
a lui~ eQuipped eat-in kitchen, fireplac~ family
room/wet bar, dining room, 2 baths, 31' deck,
30x36 newer barn !used as 3 bay garage), plus a
beautiful nat to s~pe landscaped, 5ac. yard. Priced
at $59,900. Call Jim Cochran.

I '..
1--

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5'16 DOWNPAYIIENF~\l'la% INTEREST I:
f~ed rate, low interest tinancing ~available on this I ~
3 bedrm. home in Washington Elem. school district.
•
Has deluxe equipped krtchen, fireplac~ lull I ~
basement, 2 baths and 16x32 in-grJUnd poot '% I 1

2 STORY OLDER HOllE WITH modem features just
off NeighborOOod Road, 4 miles from city. Has
almost 4 acres for l~estock &amp; garden. Make an
offer on th~ ona
acre. Only $47,000.

featunl! of this out - slanding2 slllry coklnial.Has
been rompletaly ll!modeled. New metal siding,
new roof, new modern basement, comPelety new
kitchen with n.ly 30 II. of cabinets. 2 wood
burnets plus bted ai furnace, 31ia txDootns, 2
lui balls., formal entrance. format dinin&amp; patio

I'
I.

B. J. Hairston, Assoc., 446-4240 Eve.
Clyde Walker, Assoc., 245-5276

For 40 years we have been Gallia
Co.'s leading real estate agency
and now teamed with ERA we
can do even more for you.

ca~

!subject 10 prior ale).
• IIIIJ - • It- too 1111-1 te -lion.
· Lnd: lllnlll'l ICIOUitnll PlttltJ of flit peRiq.
•111•:
ar clllcllllltll potltlw ID 11 dtJ of Ill•.

{mtPAia.INt'a.PIUA

Uvestock

.------.1.------..J-------------··------.i.------..i
1· ··wiSEMAN REAL ESTATE · ·r
I1
, •AGENCY · · ·
l
REALTOR I'

606 EAST STATE STREET

till: Several used

West, who tnowo that hi•
partner has a very poor
hand , opens his diamond ace.
Easl drops tile deuce and
declarer !he 10.
Who has tile mlsalnl five
apot? lrt export play Wesi
knows that Eut would blvo
started a blp-lcw with a
doubletoa, eo tbe deuce wu
a C&lt;!rtaln alncletoa. Weot caa
give hlJ partner an lmmedlate rull and hold South to bla
contract, but Weot ohould 10
alter a pooalble !Uth trick.
The diamond ruff wiU keep.
Eaat can't pt two diamond
ruffs since Soolh Ia l•lna to
overrun the third diamond,
but watch what West ran do.
. It lo olmple Indeed, At
trick .two he takes hla ace of.
hearts and Irrespective cf
whal Eut ploys, continues
wllh the jack.
·Declarer wino and Ieoda a
trump, but Weal lo In
control. He crabl the llrat
trump and Clvn lila partner
!hat diamond ruff. When
Eut ·retul'lll 1 b..rt, Weat Ia
able to ocore !he aettln&amp;
trick with hll el1bt of
spadn, which II one opot
bl&amp;her !bon dummy'o 10ven.

Real Eatete General

SAI'l~~.i~7sJ:~~r

- (In rter of Paul laltz Services 1nd Sties
OFFICE EgUIPIIENT: 131 Secretary desks, II! managers
desk 12) 3x6' storaae cabinets, Ill 4 drawer Ide cobinet1t~fe, antique manual Natiooal cash register, numerous
&lt;!lairs, calculators, Ill antique glass parts dis~lay case, mi·
orofitche machine, microfische lazy susan, (21 6' wooden
$llelf units, typewriters 12 manual, I eleclricl, and large rol·
.lina safe.
.RVICE EQUIPIIEIT: Auto scan 1020 en~ne analyzer,
IPI5 service test machine, Sun EPA-75 emiss1on tester, Rotunda drive on alignment rack !subject to prior sale!, Hunter
l)lin balancer/adapter, weights and stand, spark- plug
'cleaner, hydraulic transmission jack, manual lire changer,
l!Ydraulic press/adapters, portable grease cun /35 pl. bar·
Jel, portable oil drum, weldin1 cart, weldina reeulllor,
fillS, hose, 'aoales; 4-whnl enaine &amp; transmission cart
ble aur lube dispenser, (4) jack stands, 2ton noor jack.
n portable enaine hoist (manual), air hose, exhaust hose
&amp; system !overhead), 16) 35 111. traslt barr~s. 121 portJble
ps cans, oil drain pans, carb. clean·er &amp; basket. extensiOn
bords, 12!3' buiH·in exhaust fans, 4'x8' wood storaae cabiJflll, 4'i5 wood storaae rack, assortment of wooden work
ches, Ill wood and steel work bench, Ill 3'x3' sleel weld·
table, 13) service p,arts counters· 8', 1~'. 16', 4' lillrted
rts book sland, 18' parts book holder, 19 worted parts
extra slttMs, ~II B'xl2' WIICiden lllell 11111. (4) parts
nter stools, (9) 4 x8' sheeti of peeboad, nume.rous s~es
of parts bins, Ul sinlleside 3'x6' parb bin, 131 d.ouble wide
~rb bins 3'x8', various types of storate boxes.
•
'IICELWEOUS: Tires, rims, lenders, bumper, bolts. AMC·
ontiiC special parts &amp;ltlols, booll on special types of AMC·
ontloc cars, hubcabl !some new), exhaust Pipe!. heavy
duty tanks, pop 111achine, 16) lire extiniUishen/sians.

t·11-U

+AQU2
· WEST
EAST
+A a
+tu
.AJ
•aTu s
+AI71U
+2
+oou
+K 76t

IILL EDWARDS PONTIAC AMC/JEEP INC.

.

South stops atlhnle spodea.

+71
•u
+KQH

·: PUBLIC AUCTION
:.

83

Ultimate defense

Openlog lead: • A

SUN., $EPT. 18, 1983

._llrGI~d u•e111Chas~'1~cutpsand
•lint, kll:loen •~iances, m Mil. popmm... ttaic INk blinder with SMIIIIIIIIchmllllts, vaaot111 cialill
IIDic lnln, -.me lin, .....
lllldl. JntiQ
'
1*11' ciiiJI. llltique wllh
IICIId ~~ lmlllad
, llien, Stable=lillre
dllin
Slinomu quits, bo
· itldul',
roftoe

HEY, LOOK AT liE! I'm a
and lrame bi-level
with 4 Bos., living room, lamily room, me tun and
two half bat~. 2 car garge, central air,just minutes
!rom shopping and hospital. Good buy.

new rur tlraa. •7.100.00. 2
Now model 110-110 Alllo
ChalmoroiiO HP dleoollroctora purcha11d from AUla at
a very special deel.
19,9tti.OO. Inter- frM financing on Allla Chalmers
tracton untl 12-1-84 or
teke big whopping dla·

Plgo for oolo. Coli 986·
4104.

12:00 NOON
Simmons Old_s.-Cad.•Chevy

BRIDGE

Farm Equipment

ooddlo lncludocl. •eoo. Coil
., 4-388-9989.

aa.

REALTY

81

•1.900. Call 4411-348&amp; oftor &amp;PM.

Wlpotll, ONo, to 111111 tt. - · of
CIM No. 17514, tllllolkMifw wll bo sold:

$588

•Fire brick lined
•Dual Variable speed blowers
*BURNS COAL OR WOOD
OPIN Til DARK. •50 DEPOSIT .HOlDS FoR 30 DAY5
5 YIAI WARRANTY
HAllE BRANDS WITHHELD DUE TO PRICE
Olrectlona ... South on Rt. 7 ... II mltea below
Qa,lllpolla to Raccoon Creek bridge and follow

*

inonthly J)llyment• on apln ..
piano, Can be IMR locally.

FIREPLACE INSERT
•Lirl• ajrtilht ash pan
•Automatic draft control
•Lirlt Comin&amp;lllls door

ONE uood 7t I Now Hollond
Forogo Choppor', 1 row
hood, •:1100.00. 1 Uood 8
717- Holland Choppor.
1 row hood, tZ, 100.00. 1
Ropo- 4tl 12 ft.
NO!W HoiiMd hayblno, uood
1 · n.fiOO.oo. 1
N- model 847 Now Hol.lend r~_ und btler .
.7.000.00. 1 Uaod Now
Hpllond modol 23 blowor,
U71.00. 2 Uood Now ldoo
model 323 com plckoro.
U .200.00 - h. 1 Model
276 hayti-. Now Holland
bolor, SS plolwp, Long P'TO,
12, 700.00. 1llood Olenco 7
ohonk oqll-. U.600.00.

Piano lergoln. Wontod: Rooponolbto
PIII1Y to take over tow 1

like now, U25. C.ll 441- '
M..on Co. Fairground, Pt. HILLCREST KENNELS 7317.
Plnaant. W1tch this nawa· Bordlng all breeds. Selling
paper for Hunting Speclala. Happy Jack Dog Food. Trombone. axe. con d. Call ·:
Doberman puppiaa: Stud 614-388-8488.
.'
MOVING SALE-MUST Sonice. Call 448-7795.
Martin Acoustic Guitar~ -·
SELL 30-7' locuot fence
paoto, brown ooddle, brldlo. Judy Taylor Grooming. Call Hoovy duty COH, ouporior ~
cond. After, 7 p.m. coli
2 blank.,., block ooddle. . 1114-3&amp;7-7220.
814-«e-7221 '
'
bridle, 1 blonkot. lord - ··
4 -10-16 LT Goodyeor Briarpatch Kennell Profes ~
trackor AT tlroo, XP-1020 aional All-bread grooming. Traynor 8 chonnel. mixing :
Homelite 22;; chain uw • 3 Indoor-outdoor boarding fa ~ omp,' wlth ·equall-. lor PA -.
spare chaln1. Wui11tiar· up: cilitift ..Englllh Cocker Spo-· oyltem. 304-175-3971.
~•
right plano, Unico 21 cu. ft. nlol puppleo. Coli &amp;14-388ul)l'ight freezer, Olbaon 8 ~ 215 9790.
58 ·
Fruit
guitar, Silverton&amp; electric
guitar. phono 304-676- AKC Rog. Old Engllah
a. Vegetable 8
4217.
.
Sheepdog pupo. Wormed,
"'
"•
ahoto, UOO. Coll448-7906 - - - - - - - - NEW 8" tilt arbor saw end otter 5:30PM.
YELLOW k ...tone con"lng :
table, Searo Craftomon. Still
peaches now evelleble, reaa- ·
in carton. $125.00. 304- BooutHul AKC Reg. Poodle anable
prlcea. PleaM bring ... :
puppies. Oood quoUiy • your own
876-1383.
bushel contain... ··
breed. low prlcoo. Ph. 44614th
yeor
of ooNtng tho •
'0867.
TABLE II&lt; I cholro, 2 end
arM . .Bob's Market, Ma10n. .
tablaa, 2 chalra,
31)4-7.73-6"721 . Open 7 :·
T,..ng Wolkor Coon Dog. cloys,
chair, potty chalr. 30'1-B~
till dorJi, ·.
·
7436.
.
Guarlnteacl ~t to run trllh.
614-247-24.8 4.
For Sale: Lumber 1" and 2'' 1 - - - - - - - - - dimension, popl1r, oak or Garman Shepherd pupa. 69 For Sale or Trade
pine. For priCII and av8ila· *76. 814·881·3849.
.. •
bllity. Contact Millwood
Inc .. 304-273-2622, Rt. 2 Puppleo. $10. ooch. Mother 4.5 ocroo, oily ochoolo, 3 mi. ':
at Evergreen Hills Road. il full Germeo Shepherd. 4 from Hollar, 3 from town. ~
~a~~.~:~:~~~~~: B-4:30; ~;r9•yeo. CoM 814-843- ::~~·~~·.~~..&amp;~':.· .C•tt....

....

hrm Equipment

., Domonolrot..·7 ohank 1011
~~-. •4.1100.00. 2 Uood
Now Idea No. 7 com plckero

Splnet-Conaole

aheeta.,l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

•

ENJOY PATIOS YEAR ROUND WITH ALL
WEATHER ENCLOSURES.

Cocl&lt;atielo. brHdlng oge; ' ·
yellow. white • groy, oomo •
unuouol cotoro. 304-4581626.
•.
Musical
Instruments

81

81

- - - - - - ---

SUNSHIELDS

'

AKC Pokl- whlto malo, '
ahott. wortnld. 8 Me.
.1211. 304-171-1030.

57

..-...- . -.. .
'

FIVE leonole r.glol- T-lng w.- pupploo. 1M of :
excellent dogo, 304-171111371 oftorll p.m.
, •

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-0.5 ·

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

- .-. .-.

County Sport Shop. next

ALL DECKED OUT ... describes this calar home,
which features 3 BRs. large l~ing room, kill:hen
wiiJN and range, central air, patil, wrap-aroond
declo and 2 car garage. Located in a nice
neflllborOOorl.

FREE ESTIMATES
FREE INSTALLATION

Sapl•nbar 18, 1983

~=:5;4~M;i~8C=.;M;e:rc:h~a:n:d~i:ae:,=~6;4~M~i=sc:.:M~a=rc~h=a=n=d~ia:oT~6=8==P=et=a=f=o=r=s=.=~.=

Household Goods

446-4418 alter 7 p.m.
, _ _ _ _ _ _.:.__ _ betide Stone Crest Motel.
448-7398.
Furnished eflk:iencv · aptt.
Good location lri town. no
LAVIllE 'S FURNITURE
~ts, dap. &amp; references req.
Sofa, chair, rocker. ottoI
new
42 Mobile Homos
Call Mr. Dobson 446-2046 · man, 3 tables. lema heavy
owner of this bareain priced ranch with
Rs, bath,
days, 448·2602 eves. ·
for Rent
by Frontier). &amp;685. Sofa.
·large kitchen, 12xl8 LR, 10x181amlly rm. and launchair and love seat, · $275.
d II 1 · C
C
dry. Locate on at ot In entenary. BLA KBURN
Unfurnished garage apt., 4 Sofa send chairs priced from
rooms
&amp;
bath
.
332
Third
3 bdr. doublawide in John·
$286. to $896. Tabies, 9 45 li!::R:E::A=LT=Y==4=4=6=-0=0=0;:8;;;;::::::.:::::==:;:::;:::;:::::;:~
sons Mobile Home Park, Ave .. Gallipolis. Adults, i.o and up to S1 26 . Hide·abeds
,$ 440 . and up to
Prjvate yard, S300 per mo ., ~~':: ~~~ 90~46_- 3748 or
26

includet water. aewage, garage pickup &amp;. gas. Has gas
range, water heater. Electric
not included, no pets. Limited to 2 children, city
school. close to K-Mart &amp;

Sept.tnbar 18, 1983&gt;

'

J

I~
WANT AumE ROOM TO STRETCH - Here is a 2 I :
bedroom home on 91! ac. only I mile lrom city 1 :
limls. 2 bedrooms with full basement Nat gas
fum ace and 2 car garage. Raise yoor own beef and I .1
ve&amp; garden and be c~ to everythin&amp; $49,900. I ~
~

I:

to know in Real Estate:---..J!Ii,

1111•1--l•l••••••••l•l•l•t••••••••t•l·----------·--------

r

�1983

Times-Sentinel

Chi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

W.Va.

Chi-Point

Motorcycles

71

73

Autos for Sale

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1976 Ranchoro . P.S. P.8..

1977 Honda Civic . 38.000

auto. New brakes, wiring,

actual miles, •1 ,760 . 304·

paint.

675·2464.

undercoating.

very

good condition . 81600 .

378-6307.

1976 - c;:HEVROLET No.vo,

power ' itll8'iing . power
brakea, autom•tlc transmis-

1980 Customized Ford van .

F160. 302 engine. 4 speed
overdrive, P.S., P.S ., am-fm
8 trlick stereo •vstem . Call

alon, vinyl top, rally wheels,

.1500.00. 304-876 -1284.

614· 742-3066.

78 MALIBU Cla11ic station-

wagon , automatic, power
steering &amp; brakes, good

74

condh:ion, $2600 .00 . . 304-

Motorcycles

CENTRAL REALTY
lAC RES IN RACINE -Surveyed flat land, privale and pea ceful location. Owner will he lp finance.
NEW LISTING - Rustic home in country, 3 bedroom, fully
carpeted throughout, sets on wooded lot, stream '" front
yard viewed from comfortable porch, has hookup for trailer,
extra i•1come All of this can be bought for $34,000, orirailer
can be sold.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
Phone: 949·2901
Or 992·2751 To Leave A

882-2466 anytime.

1974 Honda 360,

72

7,400

actual miles. Call614-388-

Trucks for Sale

9766.

80 model Ford pickup good
cond., 83, 800. Will take car
on ·trade in, Call before 2

1974 Yamaha 100
trailer. Call 446-3637.

PM, 614·367-0632.

· ~wf

STUT .....
0

"

REAL ESTATE
446-4206

Bon~ie

Stutes, Realtor

rn
REAl. lOR

BMR426- OWNER SAYS SELL- tthasanassumableloanwith
on~ 9\0% interest We are tal~ng ai!Jut avery clean, 3 BR home
snuated on nice flat lot in a fami~ oriented neighborhood
REDUCED! $3,000 down and assume loan!
~

1- (614) · 992 -3325

1982 'h ton pickup truck. 4
speed , standard shift. 614-

NEW LISTING - l.g. 7 rm.
house, central air and heat,
carpet;ns bat~ modem knchen, lull basement witl1
garage. Is front D«Ch overlooking the river. As~ng $34,000.

992 -6434 or 614-992·
6914,

1967 Chevy 2Y2 ton truck,
combination dump, grain

bed. with cattle racke, 304-

676-2166.

NEW LISTING - This 8 rm.
house ha; the room for yoo. 5
bedrooms. bath, showet in the
full basement and level lot near
Card~nal for $38,000

1973 G Me :s.4 ton pickup,

50,000 mlloo, t1600. 1974
.,. • Ford LTD, 5o.ooo .. •1.o·oo.
304-675-6461 .
1978 Ford F150 4x4. 304676.-2623.

73

NEW LISTING - Lincoln Hts.,
6 rm. home wnh bath, sta.oe
refrigerator, Micro-wave, car:
peting vinyl siding furnace,
bud~et $58 00, and off street

Vans S. 4 W.O. ·

1985 School bua 30 pastenger. 292 engine, 4 apd.,

6.
1976 Chevy '30', box v.an
350, V-8, new AT, dual rear
wheels, rollup rear door,

PS ,

PB.

RACINE - l.g. 10 rm. home
with new bath, 6 bedrooms,
lots of remod~ing and a
woodworking shop about
24x42 . Will sell very
reasonable.
·

t2.760. Call 448-0940.

1948 Jeep rebuilt engine &amp;
drive. New brakes, winch &amp;
battery. Mud tirea. price

negotiable. Call446·1769.

lAND, LOTS7 ACRES - More or less, River view, KC school district '75,000
BUILDING SITE- 5 acres, water........................ ...... :.. .. •I0,600

district (Green Ell'm.). Call to see this one!

614-992-7810.

1963 CJ 38 4 whool drive
jeep. $&amp;60. 614-986·3688.

IIIDDLEPORT - 7 rm. brick
witl1 foyer, Is new kitchen witl1
sta.oe &amp; refri$erator, gas·
furnoce, carpeting and 2
porches. As~ng $45,000.

Real Estate General

FOR SALE BY OWNER

RIVER FRONTAGE - Beautifuii,(XIO ft. of almost levelland.
Ideal for campers, driNed w~l
and a 3 bedroom home. All lor
only $38,500.

'

Housing
Head uarters

81

Motor and auto tran1mia~

1981 KaWIAkl 301 otreet 378-6349.
blko. Llko now. 1,300 miloo. ·
f760. 814-992-7483 oftor -,.;;--;:;::--:--~6 p.m.
78
Camping
19.82 Hondo Aopencocle GL
Equipment
1100. Include•

an

optiona. Two tone aitver,
new condition.

0

avlllleble

lall then 3.000 mlln. Uke

e&amp;.aoo.

Phone 814·982-6816.

2 0' CAM PER, g11 or electric
heat. air conditioning excel·
lent condition. •1s'00.00.

304-882-2468 anytime.

1983 Hondo XJI80, $1100.
304-671-3031.

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING •'
textured cellingo commer-

V 'l

clal end residential, free
estlma111. Cell 614· 258·

l

_..t

·=-..::::----

1182.

PAINTING
- iinarlor
end
lktarior,
plumbing,
roofing,
aoma remodeling. 20 yrt.

t
I

NALTS

Work by hour or job. Cell

"'l
...A

IIC~~~~q~o:r...,

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ono

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout-

'17' Sao Star ski boat, 140
. HP, 10.

ICC8110rl81,

excel-

· lent condition. Treller.
: tar BPM.

' 12'· JOHN boat. 304-676: 1393.

cemper, gaa

It ova,

lea boX,

sleeps aix. Light weight, like

new. *1 .600. Call814•246·
6226.

304-676-2088 or 676·
1978 Starcroft 231-1 ft. oolf 4660.

KJ
AAE "(

oo-bylhO
__
.
"""'
... -_
-.. lUll·

I 1 I )-[ XXI t

x·r

t-Mondoy
Y8sterday 'el Jumble1 : FO~CE OUEEN EXODUS PIGEON
Mtwtt:: "I am the flrat one In tne grammar
cl..e '' -"PE~SON''

Water Walla. Commercial
Double axles. 814-992- and
Domaltlc. Teet hole~.
7467.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-896-3802.

·446-6.610
J. Merrill C.rt., RNI!or, 379-2184
Becky bne, Assocille. 446-0458

RANCH WITH ACREAGE - Nice ranch home. 3 bedrooms, 2 car
gnae. large barn, over 7 acres mal!e this ve'l attrac!Mi place.
lDca!8d on Upcreek Road.
112449
IIPBILE HOllE - 1973 Holly Par~ ooe own~~, excellent
condi!im, 14x60, 2 bedrooms, extra~ storage buiding located in
Quail Creek
NI095
NEW LISTING- Very nice Sectional Home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
fully c~. wife approved klthen, dining room and nice lol

*1345
7 ACRES - La'ree brick &amp;frame home. has new roof and sPQUtine
Large borl\ owner will finance. city school district

Nll45

bvildlng•

691 Miller Dri.,e

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

446·2642

Free Estimates

.4.46-7833 or 446-1833.

SOLUTION

doz8n, crane,

16 hoe,

dump truck. Call
1 142

between

6:00PM.

. Good· 1 Excavating, b•t•·
· ments, footttra. driveways.
·septic tanke, llnd1C8ping.
. Call anytime 448·4537.
James L. Davison. Jr.

.

·owner.

Melge Excav•ting. Bulldozer

&amp; baickhoa Hrvice. Ba ...
ments. footere, landacaping,

farm pond1 .

driveways.

jfJ89

814-742-2407 or814-742·
2088.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

1.57 ACRES
7 ROOMS
Nice home. Central air, rural
water system, large family
room, 26'x22'. Gan~ge, sttrage
building storm windows and
doors. Nice horne. See rt now.

SYRACUSE - Need a nice brick
ranch. l.g. living room, formal dining 2 baths, fireplace. ,
baement, 2car garnge. Spacious lawn. Priced in the

tl

#570

•.

BACK WHEN THINGS WERE BUILT RIGHT
620 4TH AVE.
Verj spacious and livable 4 bedroom, 2\\ baths, large new well
equipped country knchen wfth bay window, living r001t1 plus
pa~or, dining room,garage and cellar, and much more. By appointment only. Priced at $55.000.

BEAUTIFUL WATERFRONT ALL BRICK HOlE
CITY SCHOOLS
ldesl for boatin' fishing and picknicldng at your bacl&lt; door. Enjoy
this spacious cheerful house wth 3 bedrooms, I\! baths. large liv·
ina room, eat~n kitchen, 2 firl!llllteS. full basement. 2 parches,
chain ink fence. plus much more. Clll taday to make an appointment to see ttlis lovely year round home.

Aluminum utility

Tra~aportation.

SUPER USTING. THIS ONE TOPS THEM
Attrac!Mi brick and trame trHevel. 3 bedrooms,
baths. formal dining, equipped kitchen with loads
cabinet space, family room, den, wori'Shop, 2 car
. garage, 21ireplaces. tlirely landscaped. State Route 35
West location.

CHARliER AT $27.900- POSSIBLE ASSUMABLE
LOAN WITH LOW DOWN PAYIENT
Could be 4 or 5 bedrooms. Large porches, bath, iving room, fire.
place with gas~ dining room,, kilchM with buiK-in cabinets, lui
basement, storage building and garden spd in ely schOO diltricl
Call for more detai~.
1550

Mobile home awnings

thdney Co.naday CReaQton
· 25 5£oc~gt gtrteet,
. ~kto.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

DRIVE A UTILE, SAVE ALOT
3 BR. fuU basement, white aluminum siding. fuel oi FA furnace,
30'x40' barn. shingled roof, lois ol young peach and appletretS. All
tlls reduced to only $16,900
·
'
11452

siding

1163 Sac. Ave .• Gallipolis.

Excavating

r

How met Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms

Upholstery

Hanna, pond1. ditches.
beaemenu, ate. Cell 4484907. Carter &amp; Evan•

Jutfr DeWit!, RNllor. 318-8155

Bill's

Nu-Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl

Cell ·Jim Lanier, 304·676 ·

87

~t&gt; LMPI!DVEMENTS

f: ·..

JIMS WATER SERVICE .

DOZER WORK By Ted

*Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home446·9Sl9
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446·32U

llOqD TASTE AND GOOD BUY
'CROUSE BECK AREA
Beautiful 3 In 4 bedroom, two and one-haW baths, 2 car garage,
extra large _kitchen leadlni to sundeck overklo~nga beautiful20 II.
by 40 ft. IO·found poot. Family room witl11iteplace. Extra lot
ava1~ble. Superb oondifion. ~II for .persooal showing
#514
TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE
II ~s lots of space you need, we IIJf it!n 4 bedrooms, 2~ baths,
tri-level home. Formal living and dining room. spacious fully
equipped eat-in kitchen and family room w~h fireplace. ~I this
house is situated on 4\1 acres more or less that i; beautifully
landscaped.
•
1#576

1

- - - - - - - --

83

Ul.

#515

poolo. 614·992·6868.

Plumbing. Coli 614-387·
0678.

IEAlltll

. FEEL RIGHT AT HOME - $59,90ti'
,
Spacious 3 bedroom brick &amp; frame bi-level wnh attached 2car garqe with automatlt opener. 13ft. x 22 ft. fomily room with stone fi.
replace. Buitt~n kitchen wnh ranae. dishwasher, and prbage dis·
pcsal. Beautifully landscaped with chain link and wood privacy
fence. Many more extra~ be the fim to see this home.

.

Will do water hauling for
sleterns and swimming

4477

J'.AKiNG
. . HOMES AFFORDABLE. MADE us
.

TRY THIS FOR A STAlTER
Where else can you find a home in Gallipolil under $20,000 with a
possible assumable mortgaee?This inflation fighter cozy home has
paneled living room 2 bedrooms, cheerful eat-In kitchen, bath.
large carport plus a' metal storage buildin'
!!4!
3

1743 .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine

1381

ACROSS
RESIDENTIAl MD COIIIERCIAL PROPERTY •
Briel&lt; and frame home w~h finished basement, garage,
large, deck in back of house, formal living room, 2
fireplaces. Commercial building 40'x60', mobile home
court with 11 hook-ups, and 9 mobile homes, central
sewage, sidewalks, 2.53 acres.
· ·
#]16

1 Period or

TilE SEARCH

IS OVER ""' Look af .
bedroom
ranch. Living room, eat&lt;n kitcher!, family room with
woodburner, batlt tll~n link fenoo around back lawn.
Priced in the' 40's.

#579

ms2

low ratea . Call 614 -266 -

·SOUTHERN HILLS R.E.r INC.

PEACEFUL AREA
A haW acre more or less w~h frurt trees, plus a tllree bedroom
home. living room, kitchen with buitt-in cabinets, utility room, full
basement and garage. that is partially converted into aden.Unfinished room with aheatolater fireplace. Nice fenced in yard Call for
detllib.
#492

SWIMMING POOL
SALES SERVICE

something hauled
Installation -Repair
Got Your Corpot IN SHIP Need
or something mo.,ed?
Dozer. •-~~- &amp; Dump T-·~
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN away
We'll do ~ - Call 446-3169
-"~
'~
STEAMER . water removal, between 9 ·and 6.
I · L~~~_,!O!!_r23~88!.:,·8!!_!8~6;!_9_J
tumhure cteenlng. FrM Eltl·
motoo, 814-448·2107.
Water hauling, F411t Service ~

INO. Fomarly Dewitt's

time

&amp;Worms
11 Snared
18 Tree snake
t9 Brand

20 Mend•
21 Tolled
23 Stalk
24 First woman
26 Father
27 Symbol for

-um
29 Aep!JIH
30 Pour forth
31 Capuchin

2 ACRES PLUS NICE COUNTRY HOME
Large 12 room remooeled home, 6_bedrooms, 2 baths wdi[th
modern kitchen. Home covered w~h carefree alum. ~ ng
Thermopane windows 2 sundecks, fuel oil FA furnace with a
woodburner insert. 4 car garage and numerous storage
bldgs. 2.093 acres. Rollin~ to levelland. Areal Country Gent·
Ieman Home. Phone now.
41578
NICE BRICK LIKE NEW. CLOSE TO EVERYTHING
Beautiful surroondings. 7 rooms. all bric~ two-car garage large
lot. Family room 14'l&lt;28', living room 14'l&lt;28'. Nice modern
kitchen. And the best part about this property is the low, low price.
Phone now.

DUlSTMDING BUY - l.ar&amp;e ranch home. 3 bedrooms, 2 ball's
fern~ rm., central ar, 2 car garage, beautiful carpet, yoo'llloveth~
home.

j

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

~

The Stan-Shor Co.

Phone 44lll-3888 or 441- 7397.

BMR 440- 2 STORY FRAME home for ooly $10,500. Rent I or
live in it Uher way the value is there. Call now for appointment

~

Shop.

General Hauling

85

CARTER'S PLUMBING .
AND HEATING

Becky Elliott, Associltt, 446-G185

BRICK HOME MD
2 ACRES -$47,000
3 bedrooms, 1~ bath home
w~h lots of extra features,
builtin cabinets, seW-cleaning
range, d~hwasher, garbag~
dGj)t$31 and large dining room.
Kyger Creek Schools.
#501

Fabric

Pomorov. 992 -2284.

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Coli 614-387-7471
or
614-367-0691 .
3417·0184. ' ,,.•,,,,.. - ' ' '

_ _ , . _ _ to

contained . Carefree ewning.

BIIR 441- 9%ASSUIIABLE -Owner transferred. Must sell this
love~ 3 bedroom, I\\ bath, fully carpeted home. Situated in Green ·
Twp. on a flat 12axl80' well landscaped lot Priced to sell Mid:·
SO's. Call now for en appointment
'

ElllOTT CO.

lennox Heatirc &amp; Air Condi·
tionint All types Insulation,
Eloclri~ Wlrint
Coli 446-8515 .or 446-044S.

Roofing and Carpentry

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

rienced roofing, including
hot Ulr application. carpenter, electrician. maaon . Call

RUSS AND MAX

work. general repalre. call
~nthony WIIU!ImJon 814·

RON'S Television Service.

24 ft. Royal Highlander house calls. Call 676-2398
good co~d . Call 614 -379- or 448-2464.
2353.
F &amp; K Tr~ Trimming. dump
Starcraft, StarleUe XL removol. Coll676,1331 .

Sciuora .

tor, tDoy 814-892-4088.1
(night 114·898·8206.1

Ing. 30 years experience,

1---------

nrvice. Authorized Singer
Salas &amp; Service Sharpen

p*e cunom fit your home.
GuarantCMd, AdvancH Gut·

Motorola, Quezar. and

a.

ofte&lt; 6.

oxp. Coli 614-388-9662.

Specializing in Zenith and

'·tilt trollor. Call 1114·246·
:6676.

FURNITURE 446-7903.
. CAPTAIN!;;=: :; : : : : : : :: : : :
STEAMER 1114·446·2107. 84
Electrical
E • R T- s ...lco, tully
S. Refrigeration
ln1ured. free utimatu.
Phone 814·387·0836, call SEWING Machine repairs,

Coli 814-388·9867.

79 Motors Homes

Business
Services

Lonnie Bogg1 E~tcavating .
Oour. beckhoe. dumptruck.

specializing In built up root.

S. Campers

: 1 4 ft. flbergla81 V bottom

Excavating

83

lion for 1979 Chavette

, $6,600. Call 448-3486 of·

BMR 389- OWNER SAYS SELLTODAY! Your family will enjoy the
roominess o1 thil house. lndllles 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR, OR, buiR•n
kitchen. Srtuated on large corner lot. Oose to town in city school

Auto Parts
S. Accessories

RACINE - furnished 3
bedroom one floor home. Nice
bath, carpetins lg eat•n
k!chen, oo level lot Ready to
move ihto immediately.
$27,500.

1978 Chevy 4 wheal drive
pickup. Good cond. Sharp.-

Brick home, 3 bedrooms, I\1
blth.llr&amp;t liYit1 room &amp;lomily
room with w.b. firepiKe, ell
.,.-poted, nice kitchen, central
air, in-pound swimmi11 pool
16132. I ocre lot, O'leltooki,.
Ohio RiYw obovo Eureb Dam.
Price rtducod. Will !Ito trldtin. Con h"" financo.
446·2573-446-1171

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes,
plush Cllrp&amp;t, attached 2 car gara~.
situated on 12 acras with stable, raJ! ·
fences, swimming pool, garage·
workshop. Immediate possession.

HOMESROUND HOME - I A. woodland, basemen\ Pomeroy .. '65,000
STARTER HOME -3 BR, ci!J schools ...................... $42,00.0

BMR 436 - EXCELLENT STARTER HOllE with 2 BRs. LR, OR. nice
. kitchen, utility and new bathroom. Carpeted tllroughout. Screened
patio, .carport large lot Can for appointment

IIINERSVILLE - 4'A acres
wnh a ca~ 7 rrns., bath, 3
bedrooms, furance, wood ·
burner, lull basement and Is
carport $28,000.

bodv. Coil 446-2836 after

battery,

For
By Owner
Phone 446-8221

KYGER CREEK AREA-L-shaped ranch overfoo~ng river.2 acres •
of woodland. Kyger Creek school district

BMR 435- IDEAL STARTER HOME- 3 BR, large k!chen, LR,
carport, natun~l gas heat new roof, located within Gallipolis city
limils. Priced at $31,900. Be the fim to see this one!

1e74 Honda Choppe. 30 in.
front on d. 08 760 F.
614-949-2737.

par~ns

axe. running cond.. good

new

RODNEY- Home and business or rental. Completely refinilhed
o~er 2 story. Large buildins Storage. City schools.

Phone

S1 ,600. Coll446-1026.

BMR 43i - NEW LISTING - FIRST nilE ON liARKET -7
lleluxe brick n~nch situated oo flat 1 acre lol. House inclllles 4.
BRs, 2\1 baths, deluxe kitchel, 2 fMli~ rooms (1 with fireplace, I :
wnh woodburner). Electric heat pump. Much nwre. Call lor details!

schools.
TARA ESTATES- Bi-level,. 4 BR, lg fam i~ and rec. room, Kyger
Creek Schools. Pnced $70's.

ROONEY AREA- White brick rnnch, w~llandscaped. 2444sq.ll.
living space. Ve'l nice home.

76 Ford Courier 36,000
miles on o'llarhauled. topper,

'R,eol~

Call 446-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245·9507

BMR 431- Briel&lt; n~nch includes 3 BRs, IR, DR, family room, 211 •
baths, situated on 38 acres. Call to see this one IOOay!
· ·

HILDA DRIVE BI·LML - 3 BR, basemen\ landscaped lot, all
br~~ city schoob. Priced $50's.
1969 Chevy V. ton, &amp;600.
Coli 614-367·0641 .

M~GKEE

Broker-Auctioneer

110 GRANDE - $29,900. Secluded. 1.121 acres. City schools.
BUHL·MORTDII RD.- 16.340 acres. Tennis ootJrt 54x120, pool,
pond. Contemporory i'llm~ 2.272 sq. II. plus basemenL City

SPIIING VAllEY - Modern bi-level excellent home. Well
landscaped. Owner financins 10% Int.

CB. AMca11:ette, good tlret.

76

Raal Estate General

The

monkeys

LIFE IN THE COUNTRY- Watch the w'ldlile from the
lawn of a lovely restored W~ch home. All modern
conven~ces. Stone ,fireplace and bay window .in
family room. 12 well balanced acres to enjly.
1374
PRIVATE, SECLUDED - For tile peBon who would
like to get away from~ all and still be wnhin 5 minutes
of town. 5 acre tract Nice home site. Partial~ wooded.
Rural water available.
11406
~382

. c=.~---SPACE YOU COULD 451( FOR- Beautiful

THE
- 01 Tliis 3 bedroom brick home
overloo~ng the Ohio River. Uke new carpet, fami~ room, WB
firep~c~ in-cround tm- Property has river frontage and shaded
rear yard. Cllllor an· appolntmentl

ft. home situated on 5 acres. Kitchen, dining
room, !amity room, 5 bedrooms. 2\\ balil&lt;
extras lro numerous ID mention.
!!414

DUTCH COLONIAL HOllE - Located acrms from new
ootJrtho~ 2 baths, 2 \l' 3 bedrms. l.g. kitchen, detached garage
and additional parkilg 1n rear. Full baseml!lt
·

- HouSe and IGt located
hai fire and smoke
rePaired..Lot size is
water and ·natural gas Ilea
!!416

STATnY OLDER HOlE - Situated along 4th Ave. Util~ed as 2
allis.. however, can be converted back to sin~ family residen~
Ideal location for family with school children.
151 ACRE FARM NEAR VINTON - .Bottom land, grazing and
some bmber. 3 bedroom ftrm horne wrth heat pump. Owner has
reduced price to $86,000.

11408
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story stucco home on Fn11t Street
H_mne has 3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, living room,
d1~1ng room or lam1ly room. Sliding glass dooo from
hv1ng room to redwood decl Pnced in the 40's.
!!427

N354
22 ACRES SII,OOO --, Sugar Creek Road. Well
Mineral righ~ Tobacco Base. Partially wooded.

2 BE.DRI. HOlE .-:-located along linton Ave. Owner occupied

and 1n &amp;OOd condition. A &amp;OOd s!Jrter home and priced af only

.

I\OME AND INVE~IIENT - 2 bedroorJ&lt;\ .
~!-equipped kitchen, oil furnace. fireplace, partial
balemlllt Rental home, 4 rooms with batlt Nice 2 car
,.aee. Utility building, over '1\1 acre lawn. Garden.

UKE PRIVAC'I? - We have a 3 bedrm. home only \\ mile from
city, family rrn., 2 wb fireplaces, in-ground poo( attached garage,
approx. 2 acres. $59,000.

Strawberries.

MOBILE HOME WITH 2 ACRES- Oay Chapel Rd. Buy now for
$13,900.

,336

MEIGS COUNTY -WHOCOULDWFOR IIORE13\\
aaes and larji ~one ranch will fuU basemlllt
3 bedrooms, 211 ba!li see through ~ builtin
'IV, 2 car garage. M new drnperies. Ill ocre stocked
_pond.

I ACIIE WITH IOBILE HOME -Woods Mil Rd. $23,000.
3 BmRM. 11011£ - Situated on 2 acres. convenientlY Wterl
approx. 2 mites from Holzer Hospitl( Kemper Hollow Rd. Buy for
$24,500.

"'em RIGHT MD CLOSE TO TOWlf - 11 year old
~ with 3 bedrooms, bath, liv~g room and 14
b•!T81l Also incltlcled on this 1.38 ocre lol is a
IIIObile home (look-up. Priced in the 20s.
·

NW EUREKA - Beautiful 3 bedrm. brick home. 0ver1oo1is the
Ohkl Rio$72.ver,ifl.cround pool, approx, I ocre, WB fireplace, family rm.
Alllor
500.
WE HAVE 9 LOTS IN PIANIZ SID. Buy all for $20,000.

W~h vinyl
siding large living room, kitchen, bath, !root D«Ch and
wei landscaped lawn. Unattached garage. Located in
city.

3 BEOOROM RANCH STYLE HOME -

lARGE LOT - ApprOl&lt;imately I\! acres. Drains well.
County water available Electric oo land. Near Park
District on state highway. Owner fmancing iXJSSible.

2BEDRI •. COTTAGE -located within Galipolil. Why worrjaboUI
Winter dnv~na! Move close to stores and churches. little
maintenance. $25,000.

$32.000:

NICE BI·LEVEL and 40 acres located in Perry
Township. Home has 3 bedrooms, living room, 2baths.
Kitchen and fami~. area in lower lev~. sewing room
and utility area 24x36 unattached garage. Land mostly
wooded. Approx, 5 acres cleared. Tobacco base.
#352

!f432

\

APAIMNT FOR RENT- 2 bedrm. apt near Jill course. Adulls
only, no pets. Relri&amp; &amp; n~nge fooished. Cent A/C. $200.00.
COIIIIERCIAI. PROPEIIIY - Existmg business with daily cash
flow. Situated oo 100xl50' corner lot 11 Kanauea. Some fmancing
av11~ble. Cal lor more details!

APPIIOX. 4.000 SQ. FT" downtown Gallipolis, lease or purthase.

1505'
'

'

. .

"

40 .QB- 3 BR. ~ Lo. ~. IWMf 1111a onm~.

GREEN toWIISitiP - Laree modem home, 40Jt00
metal bam,-chicken house. fwo car garage. AI in l5)od
condifun, city water. Approx. 47 acres lencec! for
livestock. Approx. 2\\ miles from city limits.
11407
MER NEEDS Td SELU - Price reduced oothis
beautiful cedr n~nch. 1500 sq. It oo main level Full
basement completely finished. Kitchen with all
appliances, 2 ful baths, 2 car'attached gan1ge. Owner
wilhng to negotiate terms.
#321
SECLUDED AREA- 62 Acre farm. New 3 bedroom
modular home. A remodeled farm horne and a set of
modern buildings by themselves. Good fences. Alfa~a
and clover ~ay. Free gas. Call for more.

.11444

BEST BUY - Yoo can't buy 111J)re for you,·money lhan
this 4 bedroom, 111 bath, ln:k &amp; vinyl 2 story home.
Has new Buck Stove, IOxl2 outbuilding, rural water,
blacktop road. Approx. 1 acre efland. Priced in the
40's.
11373
BEAUTIFUL BRICK REDUCED $20,000 - This has
2,058 SQ. ft. of living space and everything in a home
you could possilly want Use of club house, pool and
&amp;rounds at Tara Estates. Call to see this lol'ely home
today.

11435

11384
CLAY TOWNSHIP - 4 bi.Jroorn motile home with
12x28 ft. add-Hoom. Some extras. Propane FA heal,
woodburner, drilled well. Most all appliances. 5acres of
land Pond stocked with fish that will excite you. This
and more. $24,900.
!!421
NI.W USIING - LIIOfCING FOR AN INVESTIIENT
OPPORTUNITY? Egg production business.l6,00 sq. ft.
buidin&amp; 35,000 chicl&lt;ens. 4 bedroom lri-fevel house, 2
bedroom motile home. 100 acrm. Owner will sell
chicken operalion separatl). Call for more details.

11445
NICE RANCH WITH YINn SIDING - LDcated in the
Kyger Creek orea. Home consists of living room, bath,
kithel with counter top ron~ and oven, 3 bedrooms
and very nice basement Priced at $35,000.

A PLACE TO BEGIN akrng wlh all t~e conveni61lces.·2
bedrooms. lqe IMng room, formal dining room.
!*hen. bath. Aluminum siding Slmge building
Cemer lol 93 Pine Street.
"
8385

.
11397
'CLOSE TO iOwN - Tho 3 bedroom home ~ localed
approx. 211 rnies from Galhpolis. l.ivine room will1
WQOdburner,f brmal dining, 2. ful baths. 0\ltbulding
apprtJK. 12l&lt;24. City school distrid. priced af $29,900.
11353

EicfwNT BUY lor new~ 2 bedroom furnished
home wllh living room. kitchen, bath. V'II'IYI sidin&amp; Ful,
bllemenl 2 liD. $29,500.
-

IEIG.S COUNTY - State Rouill325 &amp; Painter Road. 2
Aaes, more or less. Wei. No 1estlictions. $4,000.

i)

baths. large kitchel, living room, utility room.
home i; oo a permonent foundation. flam, garage,
chickm house, 2 sheds. loc:aled oo Rll41.
M17

IOillll~~'iJ

tq23

RACCOON CREEK LOCATION - 1970 Mobile home,
20x24 garage, Nice flat 1o1. Molile home includes
central air, woodburner, ~liDo, sbwe and dinette
set. Nice 1rorrt porch for lazy llourn. ·
Nl61
NICE MODUlAR AID DIIE ACRE -Home has rioe
size rooms with 3 bedrooms, 2 bltm, family room,
kithen with buik-in raOJI! and oven, plusrelrCeialol.
Formal dining area Tbi&lt; home is located in a very
scenic loC8Iion.

7r

M37
DRM BY ...but don1 judge llis immacuiatl ranCII
throuf!l1 your windshield. 3 bedroms, kitchen !hit
woold please agY· New deck. I acre of maniand
lawn. Only $37. . Cll today.

11375

SECLUDED LDCAnON - 45 acres mostly wooded
Owner says &amp;OOd timber. Log hotae. bern and -.1
outbuidings. II you want to filii away from ~ a1 this
- could be it Priced in the 30s.

Mil

27x30 BlOCK GARAGE - On corner lot in l'illlon.
Concrete floor and fuel oi fumece in garage, Room on
lot for motile home. Call for details.
114~5
' 0

32 Guido's high
note
33 Drunkard
34 Gaelic
35Mix
36 Stripe or
leolhor

38 Wlrenllil

· 40 Baker's

product

41V-

. 42 Garden

tools
43 Vanillate
45 Omit from

pronuncla·

tion

· 46 Diphthong
47 LOYBd one
48 North AmerICan acoter

40 Showy

nOWO&lt;

61 Skin
52 Rupees:
abbr.
- 53 Organ of
hearing

$4EApente
55 Polaon
57 Compass
point
58 Chemical
compound

60 Fruit of

city
66 AetaJn by

force
67 Chore
69 Declare

71 Male sheep
73 Lament

74 Arrow
76 Mak9s

amends
79 French for
''school "
81 Sunbum
82 EmplOy

84 Growing
ou1 or
85 Denudes
87 Remainder
90 Figures ot
speech
92 Small rug
93 Winter
preclplta·

Uon:pl.
95 Bend over
97 Fruit
98 Exist
99 Pronoun
101 Jogs
103 Possess
104 Founder
of Pennsyl·
vanla
105 Young
horses
108 Everyone
110 Ear1hquakw
112 Vessels
113 Hindu
cymbals
114 Sun god
115 Metal
fastener
117 Impel
onward
118 Charts
119 Halrtees
120 Paid notice

121 Coral island
123 French for

''summer"

81 Anger

124 Repetition
125 Inclination
126 Propoelllon

64 Initiate of

129 Mistakes

28th Pres.
65 Chaklean

131 River duck

tho'"""

62 Look l~odly

127 Fragile

132 Tropical

fruit
133 Bitter vetCh
134 Pervading

Influence
· 136 J;uropean
capital
137 Fondles
138 PhJUpplne

Moslems
139 Pturel
ending
140 Egyptian
ll~:ard

141 Mountain of
Crete
142 Sailor•:

colloq.
143 Deflect
144 Smoothed
the featt,ers

or

146 Approaches
148 Specks

149 Having scal loped edge
150 VIper
151 Peak of
wave

DOWN
1 Pass, as

11me

2 Martinique

volcano
3 City in
Russia

4 Food fish
5 Height:
abbr.
6 Chemical
compound
7 Cook slowly

22 Weirdest
23 Part of
fireplace
25 Byway of
27 Most frigid

28 Pittsburgh
looiball
player
30 Play leading
role"
31 Let It stand
33 Secret
agents

35 Float In air
36 Chimney

carbon
37 Locations

39 High

mountain
41 Ursine
animal
42 Stockings
44 Leases
47 Antlered

animal

48 Pardons
49 Place lor
combat
50 Lasso
54 Part or shirt
55 Cry

56 Boxes
59 Indulges
60 Native
Egyptian

61 Pronoun
63 Short jacket

66 Pronoun

89 Hauls
90 Spanish :
abbr.

91 Teutonic
deity
94 Cubic meter
96 Atop
98 Venture·
some
99 Sea cow

100 Click
beetles
102 Strike

10-4 Head ot
Catholic
Church
105 Hall
106 One guilty
of treason
107 Most
mournful
109 King of
beasts: pl.
111 Trample

down
112 Strokes
113 High
116 Doctor or
Laws: abbr .
118 Additional
119 Pred ilection
12:?. Ch ief
124 Cit izens
of Rome

125
126
128
130

Dampens
Plaines!
One borne
Land
measure
t31 Brief

8 Everybody's

67 Compass
point
68 Musical
instruments
70 Glossy paint
71Legal

uncle
9 Printer's

72 Perform

area
138 Small

73 Expel from
country
75 Units of

140 Exist
142 Chinese

measure
10 Lances

11 Encroach
12Noteot '
scale
13 Part of

church
14 Buckets
15 Buccaneer
16 Before
11 Symbol ror
dysprosium
21 Make ready

matters

132 Pigeons

135 Genus of
frogs
137 Recreation
amount

Chinese

pagoda

currency
77 Greek letter
78 Deposit

143 Click beetle
144 Postscript:
abbr.
145 Latin
conjunction
147 Printer's

80 AaveUngs
83 Verve
86 Rap ier

88 Retail
.
establ ish'·
ment

measure
148 Megacycle:
abbr.

�Page-D-B- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

PEEPS: A Gallipolis Diary

Agriculture and our community

September 18, 1983

Column welcomes ideas First fall feeder calf sale scheduled Tuesday~ Sept. 20
By HENRY ETI'ER PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - We had about
lour of these columns prepared for
just the kind of emergency which
took this scribe out of action three or
tour weeks.

project ·and those helping him
Included members Sandra Masqew, Susan Frazier, Ral('h Durst ,
Wanda Parsons, and Denver Yoho .
Approximately 4,300 marriages are
included in the ' publtcation and
Include bride, groom, date of
marriage, name of person who
petiormed ceremony, and a reference to the volume and page of the
original record .

PEEP$ IS so old that It Is more an
Institution than one person's local
opinion. You can get a hint as to Its
authorship by looking at the byline:
Henry Etter means Henrietta , for
Instance.

THOSE WHO PURCHASE the
book may actually do some of their
·research at home and spend
leisurely time checking records at
home without having to go to the
court house and peruse the heavier
volumes. It Is also extremely
beneficial to our out -of·town
members who will no longer have to
write for a record and can check
various spellings and other clues on
their own.

HENNY EVANS, by the way,
tells about some drudgery ln. the
courthouse, and she is president of
the committee sponSoring the toil .
She wrote the next four
paragraphs:
TilE GALLIA COUNTY Genealogical Society has produced Its first
publishiJ;lg. effort - Gallia County
Marrtages; 1!ll3-1850. Many, many
hours of court house research using
the old volumes of marriages to
copy pertinent data were entailed.
Some of this time was spent during
monthly work sessions whlle a very
great deal of it was accomplished
by individual effort.

THE BOOK contains 116 pages, Is
softbound, and measures 8% x 10%.
It has been produCed under the
auspices of the Gallla County
Histortcal Society of which the
Genealogical Society Is a committee. It may be purchased from
members or at the Chamber of
Commerce for $10.

: MICHAEL TROWBRIDGE ac;tually. was editor of the entlte

.

0

-

Old French City had 6 main
~g stores 100 years ago
By JAME'! SANDS
Special Correspondent

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Exrenslon Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS- It's time for Fall
Feeder Calf Sales and local
farmers have several to choose
from.
.The sales listed for Ohio Valley
Llvest~k Company here In Gallipolis and the Union Stot:kYards at
Hlllsboro are sponsored by the yard
owners. All of the other sales that I
am listing are what's known as
"Ohio Approved" Feeder Call Sales
conducted by stockYard owners in
conjunction with Farmer Feeder
Calf Committees.
Sale dates and places are:

Sept. ~. 7:30 p.m., Ohio Va:Uey
Livestock Co., Galllpo\ls, all beef
breeds and yearlings.
Sept. 28, 8 p.m., Producer's
Livestock, Hillsboro, Ohio, all beef
breed hornless calves and
yearlings.
Oct. 4, 7:30 p.m., Ohio Va:Uey
Livestock Co., Gallipolis, aU beef
breeds.
Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., Union Stockyards, Hillsboro, Ohio, · all beef
breeds, calves and yearlings.
Oct. 11, 8 p.m., Athens Livestock,
Athens, a:U beef breeds, calves,
yearlings and dairy. ·
Oct. 12, 8 p.m., Producer's
Livestock, Hillsboro, Ohio , all beef

breeds, calves and yearlings.
Oct. 11, 7:30 p.m., Ohio Va:Uey
Livestock Co., Gallipolis, all beef
breeds.
Oct. 17, 7: 30 p.m., Union Stockyards, HUlsboro, Ohio, Ohio State
Charolals Sale.
Oct. 25, 8 p.m., Athens Livestock,
Athens, Ohio, all beef breeds.
Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m., Ohio Va:Uey
Livestock, GaUipolls, all beef
breeds.
Oct. 26, 8 p.m., Producer's
Livestock, HUisboro, Ohio, all beef
breeds, calves and yearlings .
Oct. 31, 7:30 p.m., Unlon Stockyards, Hillsboro, Ohio, all breeds,
calves and yearlings.

Nov. 7, 11 a.m ., Unlon Stockyards, HUisboro. Ohio, pre-weaned
and conditioned sale.
Nov. 9, 12 noon, Producer's
Livestock, HUisboro, Ohio, Buckeye Feesllot Sale.
Nov. 14, 7:30 p.m., Union Stockyards, HUlsboro, Ohio, all breeds,
calves and yearlings.
Nov. 15, 7:30 p.m., Ohio Valley
Livestock, Gallipolis, all beef • 1 ·
breeds and yearlings.
Nov. 21, 7:30p.m., Union Stockyards, Hlllsboro, Ohio, Ohio State
Charolals Sale. There will also be
some December and January
sales. Check with me If you need
dates.

Meigs County agent's corner

Farm Science Review tickets on sale until 4 p. m. Monday
By JOHN c. RICE
wUl start at 10 a.m. and conclude gen feeding over a three- to different farm, the famUy does not
Exrenslon Agent
around 3 p.m. A more detaUed six-week period. So, ,be sure to qualify. O.D.A. hopes to use the list
Introduce treated suage Into the of names to illustrate the retlable
Agriculture, Melp County
agenda will appear next week.
contribution farming makes to the
POMEROY - Farm SCience
Fa:U Seedings - We are ap- ration slowly, Staubus cautions.
Don't Forget- The Ohio Depart- economy. U your farm qualifies, we
Revlew tickets will be on sale up till
proaching the cut off date for fall
seedlngs. Seedlngs need to get off to ment of Agriculture Is asking would appreciate your calllng us at
4 p.m. Monday. Sept. 19. Tickets
can be purchased at Landmark,
a good start to survive the winter. county agents to submit names of. 992-1i696 &amp;o that we can add your
ACS, SCS, Sugar Run F1our Mills,
With the ground as dry as It Is, third generation farmers to them name to the list that we wUI be
and our office.
chancesdonotlookgoodforlatefall by Oct. 1. O.D.A. plans to award sending ln.
Calendar - .E'arm Scl~nce Re- ·
...The feedj!r ·Calf R~und-Up In
seedlngs, Any seedtngs after Sept. certificates . and provide other
Vi.W
-Sept. ~. 21, 22.
. .. . .
as
To
qualify,
recognition
Columbus ts one of the manyJ)laces
15, I feel, could be veryiiskY. !have
Feeder
Calf
Roundup
(Colum4-H and FFA members can purbeen wrong before hut sometimes I famllles must have a portion of the
same farm in the farm operation bus) - Sept. 29, 30, Oct. 1.
chase club calves. The show Is Sept.
am rtght.
Meigs County Beef Day (Fair30 and sale starts noon on Saturday,
Cut Dairy Feed· Costs With for 100 years or longer.lf the home
grounds)
- Saturday, Oct. 1
Non-Protein Nltrogel! John farm was sold and replaced with a
Oct. 1. The Round-Up Is located on
the Ohio State Fairgrounds in the
Staubus, Extension dairy special- , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Swine Barn.
1st, suggests adding non-prpteln
Meigs County Beef Day _
nltrogen to corn sUage.
DON'T MISS IT. Saturday, Oct. 1,
One pound of urea- a source of
.at th.e Meigs County Fairgrounds.
non-protein nitrogen - and six
Dem&lt;inst~atlons; exhibits, presen- . pounds of groUlld shelled corn will
lations, a ·barbecue lunch, and
replace the en~rgy In crude prote!ri
demonstrations on how to cook
In seven pounds of saybean meal.
beef. Grading with Uve cattle and
Corn sUage Is a high energy
•
Implanting all will be a part of the
forage that Is low In protein. Adding
program. Dale Stoll, Home Econon-protein nitrogen Is an economlnomlcs, will be demonstrating
cal way to raise the protein content.
many ways to fix beef.
Thestandardrecor'nmendatlonls10
WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH HIM IN THE PRACTICE OF
Regardless of whether you raise
pounds ol. urea per ton of normal
beef cattle, come for the barbecue
corn sUage containing 32 to 38
lunch and Jearn more enjoyable
percent dry matter. This increases
ways of fixing beef. The beef day
the crude protein content Irom
eight to 12 percent on a dry matter
basis.
OFFICE HOURS WILL BE EXPANDED TO MONDAY THRU
If the sUage Is lower In dry
matter, reduce the amount of urea
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT.
Toilet Soap, 4 bars for 19 cents; and
added proportionately.
Daisy coffee at 15 cents a pound.
"Urea sbould not be added to dry
i
The store even had a motto- "For
corn sUage that contains more than
Both Doctors Are
Welcoming New Patients.
your dollars to ha'ole more sense,
40 percent dry matter,\' be says.
Phone 97 ." The Puritan Market
"At that level the_ non-protein
continued Into the 1970s, when It
nltrogen won't be captured and
PHONE
' was replaced by a second hand
retained."
N. Second Ave. ·.· .
' '

wen:

"Schaaf's Herbs" which be sold
around the county to grocery stores
GALLIPOLIS - Needless to say
for sale by them. He a:Iso made red
ineglcine has come a long way In _ .clover tonic, magic pain ltr)lment,
PJe_last 100' years from the quack
worm candy and:Cerman cologne.
· docton; and . crazy cure-alls to
According · to Schaaf's ·ads his
herbs
were the best blood purifier,
computerized dl~
- -.
agnostics. For Inliver regulator and kidney renovastance less than
tor on the market. The ad reads:
1
1
100 years ago in
• - _ , • •
"The largest and one of the most
GaUipolls (1889)
• ·•
lmportant glands In the body Is the
the biggest atliver. Its duty Is to prepare and
traction to the
secrete bUe; It serveS as a filter to
county that year was the Klckapoo
the blood, cleanlng It of all
Indian Medicine Show. 'Jlhat same
Impurities. The blood passes
year Dr. Charles Warrener moved
through the Uver and when It Is
to tbe Old French City and claimed
diseased and secretes Impure bUe,
he was the county's best veterlnar·
this polson is distributed throughout
tan and dentist. He pulled people's
the entire system impeding all the
teeth by day and operated on
organs of the body." Ills interesting
to note that one of the so-called
amlma:Is after dark. So confident of
herbs used then was celery. SChaaf
his standing was Warrener that he
o!lered a $100 reward to any
also used barks, roots and other
Yet-dentist who was better.
herbs. "SChaaf's Herbs" could be
· In 1889, the pharmacist had
bought in a powd~r and made Into a
become to many people the most
tea or mixed with alcohol.
Important man in town in terms of
Besides the aforementioned malbeing a healer. The doctors were
less apt to operate and more prone
sla,
blllousness,
atso cured:
dyspep- rrst:or:e:.
adlesheadache,
the herbs dropsy,
to prescrthe drugs as treatment. In
jaundice, fever, malaria, colic,
1889 there were six main drug
colds, heartburn, diarrhea, dysenstores In Gallipolis who not only
tery, flatuency, boDs; plies, rheumdispensed drugs as treatment. In
atism, nerves, skin disease and
1889 there were six main drug
bladder Infections. And all for the
stores in Galllpolls who not only
low price of 25 cents per package.
dispensed drugs but also made
So far as we can tell Mr. SChaaf
medicines using their own well
left town about 1894 when he sold his
guarded recipes. The six were J. H.
stock to Dr. Barton who moved the
Whitmer (Second and Spruce), P.
drug store to the corner where
A. Sanns (across from the Park on
Gillingham's Is now located. The
Second and at the corner of Second
building at 756 Second built by
and Locust), C. o, Kerr (Third and
SChaaf was then used as a grocery
store.
Court), G. A. Roedell (358 Second),
J. L. Hayward (Second and Pine)
At the turn of the century the
and J. H. SChaaf (756 Second).
. Martin McHale grocery was at 756
It Is the SChaaf building that we
Second. During thedecadeofWorld
feature today. Justin H. SChaaf was
War I the Scott brothers ran a
born in Marburg, Germany and
grocery store h'l,re giving way In the
was educated at the University of
19:lli to a man from Wellston who
Marburg, Immigrating to the U.S.
had worked on the railroad- W. G.
about the time of the Clvll War.
Summer. The latter gave his store a
SChaaf was In the drug business In
name that would stick for the next
Louisiana for about a dozen years
half of the century - the Puritan
!Jefore locating in Gallipolis and
Market. The Puritan store was also
opening a drug store In a frame
at times located In 800 block of
Second.
buDding near the corner of Second
and Pine.
From 1933 to 1945 Henry McClung
ran the Puritan Market at 756
· It was in 1882 that SChaaf erected
the brick bullding tbat today
Second. We have an ad from 19391n
occupies 756 Second. In part of the
which he sold new potatoes at 22
llullding SChaaf operated an over
cents for 10 pounds; mackerel 10
tbe counter drug store and In
cents a can; Huskies cereal at 2
another part he manufactured
boxes for 25 cents; Sweetheart

..

. ,.

•' .

0

R, CRAI~ MATHEWS, DDS

A guide to local
•
Television p
September
18 thru Septelnher 24
.
'

·'

IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT

*LARRY D. KENNEDY DDS*

Includes complete

GENERAL DENTISTRY .
Beginning July 20

listings

Now

992-6658

205

Hollywood
Pages 3, 8

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WTBS

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