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~
lf'ilae:

Inside:

Art Buchwald discusses discrimination and the
)»erceived sexiness' of first names-Page A-2

April 29th
Bob Hoeflich says the lack of funds for Meigs
highway improvements is "par for the coursePage 8-3

Spring forward

Sunday

Along the River .. .. .. ............. 8-H!
Business ....... ..... ... ............ .... A-3
Deaths ................................. A~

Editorials ......... ...... ............. . A-2
Feature Section ........ .... ... ... . E-1-8
Sports ......... ............ .. ... ...... C-1-8

•

Middleport

Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Ohio weather:
showers possible
on Sunday
--Page A-4

tntint

tnttS
Vol. l9 No. 12
Cop;iiylllrN 1984

--D-1

visits Great Wall of

14 Sections . 110 Pages 50 Cents

Sunday, April 29, 1984

A Multimedia Inc . Nawsp•per

Health union seeks 'exclusive' status at GDC
By KEVIN KEU.Y
Times-Sentinel staff
GAlliPOLIS - Gallipolis Developmental Center
employees may be voting this summer to elect an
exclusive bargaining agent.
Ohio Health Care Employees Union Localll99 has
been organizing employees through Informational
sessions, and If It receives state certlflca tion, It will be
the only union In Ohio to represent the state's mental
health and mental retardation employees.
The union, which represents health care employees
In West Vlrginla and Kentucky, filed a petition for
cert111catlon with the State Employee Review Board
AprU 19.

l

The union has two selling points, explained Katlna
Cummings, a local organizer. The first Is that under
the collective bargaining law which went Into effect
this month, It will be allowed to negotiate a contract
for GDC workers; and the second, the union Is
pushing for Increased safety for state hospital
workers.
The union recently released results of a study
showing state mental health-mental retardation
facilltles have an Injury rate of ll.8 percent among Its
employees.
The union claims the rate Is higher than accident
figures compiled on people hurt In mining, dr illlng,

construction a nd manufacturing jobs.
No specifics were made available to the union for
injuries suffered by GDC employees, explained Ann
Garcelon, a spokesperson for the union's Columbus
office.
"We got our figures from the Ohio Industrial
Commission, which would not break them down for
us," she said. "I guess they didn't want us to point a
finger at anything."
Garcelon said the study shows that more than 40
percent of Injuries have been caused by patients.
Cummings said concerns over safety have been
mentioned to her by GDC employees.
"What I do know Is, numerous employees who have

been kicked a nd hit with flying objects still bear that
In mind today," Cummings said. "Staffi ng is so short
on the units, a nd many of these (accidents) could be
prevented If attention is paid to stafiing levels."
She said another employee concern Is deterioration
of resident care In recent years. "and they understand
our union wants to improve pa tient care. "
Union recognition was granted under current policy
in J anuary 1983 when members hip in Local 1775 of
American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AF'SCMEI showed it had more than 20
percent of the employee population Pnrolled .
!Continued on page A-41

Mays guilty
plea "lucky'
says Mason
prosecutor

March jobless rate:
increase in Gallia, ·
decline in Meigs
Area jobless
rates in March
County

Percentage

Athens ................ .... 10.4 (10.3)
GaDia .................... . 12.2 ( 11.8)
Jackson ............. ..... 13.7 (13.4)
1u &lt;14.7&gt;
:)Uip .... .. ............... 13.1 (1.3.5)
VIntOn ..................... 12.3 (12.2)

I£wrence ................

JON »;SKATE- Meigs and
1£\lm!Doe were the only two
counties to post declines In their
unemployment rates between
February and March. AD other
counties In the region continued a
two month trend with increased
jo.._ rates. In chart above,
February figures are shown In
parenthesis.

----

By LARRY EWING
Tirnfs-Sentlnel Staff
GAlliPOLIS - The unemployment rate ·In Gallla and Meigs
counties continued to remain significantly above state and national
averages In March, reports the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services.
While posting one of the few
declines In unemployment In the
Immediate area, the Meigs jobless
rate of 13.1 percent - a drop of
four-tenths of one percent from

February - remained above that
counties 1984 low of 12.8 percent
posted In January .
For the second month In a row,
Gallia County's jobless rate Increased In March.
According to the OBES, the
number of unemployed Gallla
countlans rose by four-tenths of one
percent - from 11.8 percent In
February to 12.2 percent last month.
rietween January and February ,
the Gallla rate rose by two-tenths of
one percent, from 11.6 to 11.8.
Gallla's February and March
postlngs represent the reversal of
three months of steady decline for
the county. Between November1983
and January 1984, Gallla's unemployment rate fell from 12.8 percent
to 11.6 percent.
Gailla County's Increase In both
February and March was In line
with a trend that seemed to hold true
throughout most of southeastern
Ohio. In February, the jobless rate
In all s urrounding counties
Increased.
Similarly, with the exception of
Meigs and Lawrence Counties,
unemployment rose throughout the
area In March.
The OBES shows 1,768 of Gallia
County's estimated work force of
14,456 without work In March.
In Meigs, the OBES reports 1,432
of that county's estlma ted work
force of 10,896 as jobless during the
month.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . !API

AN AFTERNOON IN THE PARK- A couple
enjoys the swnmer-llke weather In the Gallipolis city
park as temperatures continued to reach Into the
sultry 80s this weekend. Although rain Is expected to

reach the area today, wann weather will continue
today and a sUght cooling trend Into more seasonal
00-'11}-degree weather will he seen early In the week.
(Tbnes-Sentlnel photo by LeeK. Withrow) .

Mason County Prosecutor
Damon Morgan says hew as lucky to
~Pt a guilty plm in a murder case
involving an Ohio man wh()l;('
previous conviction wasovenurned
by the state Supremp Coul1 .
Morgan sa id Dexter Ma ys, Zl, of
Chesapeake. Ohio, pleaded guilty
earlier this week to second-degrPe
murder In the death of 35-year-old
Johnny Wa m sley of Huntington .
Wamsley 's body was found in a
Mason County field In November .
1900. He had been shot threetlmesin
the head and once In the neck.
Mays was convicted of first ·
degree murder In the case and was
sentenced to life Imprisonment with
a recommendation of merey.
The state Supreme Court la ter
threw out tha t conviction and sent
the case back to Mason County
Circuit Cou11 . The high cou11 sa id it
overturned the conviction because
Mays was not brought before a
magistrate for a hearing "In a
timely fashion.''
"In the trial that resulted In the
original conviction, we had a
confession, a weapon and other
physical evidence." Morgan said .
"When the Supreme Court overturned the conviction, they said we
couidn 't use the confession or any of
the 'tainted' evidence that resulted
from the confession.
"That meant that this time we had
no confession, no weapon and none
1Coni lnued on Page A-4 1

City solicitor points to $5,000 saving for local government
'

'

GALLIPOLIS - A savings of approximately $5,!XXl
to ' local government has been created through the
_"night prosecutor" mediation program undertaken
by the Gallipolis city solicitor's office.
In his six-month report on the program, City
Solicitor Douglas M. Cowles said the amount listed as
a saVIngs does not Include monies saved by law
enforcement and Gallipolis Municipal Court.

The program was lnltiated by the city and county
last October to reduce the Increasing misdemeanor
caseload In municipal court.
Cowles said the average expense for a courtappointed attorney Is approximately $110 per case.
He said 56 cases heard by the night prosecutor would
have required court -appointed counsel if charges has

been flied , at a cost of $6,160.
In his report, the solicitor listed a tota l of 69 hearings
conducted from October through March. with the
most amount, 14, heard during January . Of the 66
cases resolved, there was a 96 percent settlement
rate. 'The highest number of resolved cases was also
14, and those cases were also settled In January .
There were also 56 Indigent cases, 81 percent of

those that were heard in the six·month period. There
were ll Indigent cases each during November and
December.
The hearing officer has been paid a total of$1,118.:,0
In six months, Cowles sa id . Both the city and county
each paid $559.25 toward that salary, the report
Indicated .

Reagan's daughter, Mondale's wife stuntp in Ohio
Maureen works to
raise women's role
CLEVELAND (AP) - Maureen Reagan, President Reagan's daughter, oot only Is
actively campaigning for her
father but Is working to Increase
women's national role In Republican poUtlcs.
Miss Reagan, who made an
1,11l$uccessflll Senate bid In California In 1982, is a consultant to
the Republican National

cmuntttee.
"We're working to have as

close to a 50 percent women
delegate structure at our convention as we can get without a
quota system," she said. "We
have been doing a series of
briefings for women otflce
holders In Wastllngton. We're In
constant cornmunl(:atlon with
our cllbdidates and our otflce
oolders. As a party. we &amp;redoing

the best we can for women, but
we will do more because I will
see to It that we do more."
Miss Reagan said her appearance at a RepubUcan rally
Friday at St. Maron's Catholic
Church was her third for the
re-election effort since Reagan
launched his campaign In
January.
She said she remains committed to the Equal Rights Amendment, although her father has
never thought It was needed.
"I will work on statutory
refonn while I work for the
amendment," she said. "He's
·canmltted to stahltory reform,
and I'D take help anywhere I can
get it. I will continue to work for
an .amendrnent. ''
Reagan, 73, Is well-suited for a
second term, she satd.

Joan campaigns for
pay equity, husband
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Joan Mondale has told Ohio's
women that If her husband
becomes president, he will
implement a dormant federal
law requiring women be paid the
same as men for comparable
work.
She campaigned Friday In
central and western Ohio, not
only on behalf of former Vice
President Walter Mondale but
against President Reagan, accusing the president of haVIng "a
callous attitude" toward
women, minorities, the elderly,
poor and handicapped.
Mrs. Mondale said her husband has supported all those
groups for years. "What he's
saying today, he was saying 19

and ~ years ago," she said.
Mrs. Mondale told reporters

that while Reagan Is Indifferent,
the former vice president has
always been "on the cutting
edge" of efforts to advance the
rights of women
A federal law requiring pay
equity for women has been on
the books for 20 years but It has
never been Implemented, she
said.
"The other preside'nts haven't
been Interested, " she said, adding that President Carter and
her husband had a plan ready to
go "but then we lost the
election."
She said she and her husband
Teiarc! Ohio, with Its 175natlonal
convention delegates, as vital to
his bid for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
"We are half way there," Mrs.
Mondale said.

Joan Mondale,

wife of
Democratic presidential hopeful
Walter Mondale, left, and Dagmar Celeste, wife of Ohio Gov.
IUchard Celeste, play with
aeveral children Friday at a
downtown Columbus day care
center.

�--:--

·-.--- .....
~- -~----

Comment

and perspective

.4. Division of

~~~

~m:sJ

~~

K25 Thin! Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) W&gt;-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 99't-215fi

ROBERT L Wll"GETT
Publisher
HOBART 1\'ILSOI" JR.

a nd

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publishcr ·Controller

F,x('('utiH' Editor

\ ·' 1E\18EH olllw .-\..,...;(lo(·latf"d Pres.o;. Inland
·\11\t&gt;l't(•an ~tow~ Puhlisbt&gt;rs \..~ ·ladoo .

Ual.l~· ~

:\s..;;oc'iaUoo and ttw

L.I:.TfEHS Ot' OPI~lO~ art' welt-onwd. Uwy should Ill' lt'!'iS than :JXl v.·QI'd;; klnK. :\II
k'lll'f" art&gt; suhjt"t·t to ~tin~ and m11."ii bt• si~ wllh niUne, ad~andwl.,.hont&gt;num­
ht•r '\"o Ull'ii~t'd h'ttt'"- ~ill bf&gt; puhlio,;hf&gt;d . LRttt..,. !&lt;t.houkll..,ln guod l.a-'iU•.If.ddreo;..••iin~ k.,llc"'. no( Jl'l'f""'maliti~ .

Gnashing of teeth
•
In the White House

one from a re-no\\.'lled academi-

cian whom I greatly admire,
Professor Harry V . Jaffa of Claremont Men's College in Claremont,
Ca lif. The iss ues ar~ worth
n:o\·isit ing.
Hussein had said , "We see things
this wa~·· Israel is on our land." I

commented: This is substantially
true. as witness Resolution 242 of
the Sec urity Council and, ''wit h this
and t hf' other qualification." the
Camp Da\·id accords.

In I!Wl. ,Jordan annexed the WE'st
Bonk. Thr whole of the coml&gt;ined
area had been sPparated from
IPrritor~·

on th&lt;' Israeli side of the

Jordan Ri\'CI' b.r the British in 1922.
The t.: .f' . demarcation of 1947 did

not grar.t the West Bank to Israel,
which occupied the West Bank as
late as In 1967 when It trtumph&lt;o'd
over Jonlan and Egypt In the
Six-Day War.
Now to question the legality of
Jordan's annexation of the West
Bank In 1948 Invites that dreary
archeology of who-owns·what that,
as Professor Jaffa concedes, has, In
the hands of fundamentalists,
Mexicans "re-entertng" Mexico
when they move toto Arizona or
CaiUornia. It can be maintained by
historical purists that the West
Bank Is not Jordan's, but to say that
for that reason the West Bank Is
Israel's requires biblical fundamentalism, and a greater obedience to biblical geography than Is
generally paid to biblical morality.
The point to stn'SS, surely, Is:
What has Israel agreed to in two
documents: Resolution 242 in 1%7,
and the Camp David accords?
Clause I t i I of Resolution 242
reads, "tThe fulfillment of charter
principles requires! w1thdrawal of

Israeli armed forces from terrorIsts occupied In the recent conflict."
Provision 1 (a 1 of the Camp
David accords reads that Israel
agrees that "In order to ensure a
peaceful and orderly transfer of
authority," I.e., from Israel to
another government, "there should
be transitional arrangements for
the West Bank ... Gaza for a pertod
not exceeding live years. In order to
rovtde full autonomy to the Inhabitants, under these arrangements the
Israeli mllltary governmPnt and Its
civilian administration w111 be
withdrawn as soon as a selfgoverning authority has been freely
elected by the inhabitants of these

areas ...''
Ninety-six percent of the population of the West Bank is Arab. It
follows that self-rule of the West
Bank would mean rule other than
l&gt;y Israel, which In fact Is exercising
authority over the West Bank six
years after the signing of the Camp
David accords.
Now Professor Jaffa makes

On .\pril ~. la&gt;~~Wr .Jamb A Stein called reporters to hts offtre to gpt the
bio,o·aphir s of ttu·re assistant s he had hired . "This will be m,· last pn'ss
rf'lra ~P. ··

he said.

It ~ras J mundJJlP unnounrement. buT it spoke volumC"s. And it must ha\'£'
cau.&gt;&lt;.'CI some g-nas hmg of l{'('th in the Whit e HouSi'.
· An' doubt about what kind of invcstigal!on Stein intended to run
,;anis hL'Ci with his lunng of Da,·id T. Austern. Richard L. &amp;izer and
CrorgP T . Frampton as his dPputies. A wE't'k ca rliPr, Stein had been
srlf'Ctrd b' a panel of tha~· judgl&gt;s as thp special pmsPeutor who this
summer will in,·estigate the affairs of Edwin A. ME'&lt;'Sf' Ill .
\l('('Sf' s nomination b\ Pr£&gt;Sident Reagan to bf&gt; attorney general has
llc&lt;'n put on hold while Stein investigates whethPr Meese got government
j~b~ for fnends who helped him finandall~·.' , was involved in the transfer of
polit 1ral docum(&gt;nts from Jimm~ · Cartf'r' s campaign to Reagan 's in 1980
lnd got SpPCia I t fC'at m e n1 in his :\rm.\ · RPser.-es promotion. Stein will also
look mt o \'lee~t' s failure to list an intf'rrsf.free loan on his financial

disclosurf' form
Thr appointmf'nts b~ · Stf'in showf'd that hr meant bus iness
He b highlv rcgarrlm in legal ctrc lcs. but he'd ne,·er held a political job.
nr\·1'1' bc'f'n ,1 proSPCutor and wa s so apoliti cal that he had never even voted
in c1n ri0Ction Hr liw1::i in thf' District o f Columbia bf'fof'f' its rpsidents had
be&lt;'n giwn lhr rtght to \'Otr in rlcctJOns. he Pxplainrd. and " I guess I nevPr
dl'\'Piop&lt;'d the habit ...
· AustC'rn and &amp;-izC'r arr formC'r gO\T'rrunmt proSf'C'utors. F rampton
spent two 'mrs as an as sistant special Watergate prosecutor.
..-\ustcrn was an assistant distric t at tome~· in Nrv.· York City for thff'f'
,\'Pars. handling organized crime a nd officiaJ corruption investigations. HC'
worked in Washin!-~On as an assistant proescutor specializing in fraud
inH•st igat ion.s.
· BPizrr was chirf of lhP fr&lt;.JUd di\·ision in t.hP C.S. atlorney's office in
\\'Jshington. supPrY ising the prosecution of Pconomic crime caS(;'S.
Frampton is best known as the author of a memo to special Watergat ('
pros('cutor Leon Jaworski. urging Jaworski to seek the indictment and thP

GAU.IPOLIS - Ron Toler, who has represented Integon Life
Insurance Corp., Winston-Salem, N.C., since January 1982 through
Toler &amp; Toler Insllrance Agency, 2M Jackson Pike, has qualified lor
the company's top achievement award, the Inner Circle.
Toler Is in his first full period of e llgibllity. The Inner Circle is
composed of the top 30 agents from Integon's lleld Ioree of 4,00J for
the 15-month period ending In March 1984.
Toler was also recognized as Integon's "Listener of the Month" for
December 1983, leading the entire field Ioree In production for that
month .
Toler &amp; Toler, which Is noting its 15th anniversary In business, Is
presently ranked llrst in insurance protection for lamllles and
businesses among all Integon agencies In Region 12, consisting of
agpncles In Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
The agPnry has protected area residents with more than $25
mlllion worth of insurance In force during the two-year period.
Integon operates in 43 states and Is a subsidiary of Ashland Olllnc .

prosecution of Hichard M

:\ixon. follov..ing his resignation from the

pt'(&gt;SidencY but before his successor. Gera ld Ford. pardoned NLxon.
With the mw'stigation of Mt:'E'se ltkcl!' to be concluded before the nation
\'Otrs in .'\'m·C'mber. Stf'in. Frampton and Co. are like!~· to be in a position to
afff'Ct RC'agan · o;;, F.IPCtion Da~· fortunes.
A rrpo11 c lf'armg ~1eese could help Reagan: a repor1 n'CQmmending
proSf'(·urion of \1Pf'Sf' or condf'mning him could be most damaging

knows that better than the people working for Reagan 's elect ton
~11~,. must IX' wrrading that l~ :.·ear~ld Frampton memo- and what it
~ o o n~

impliPS &lt;:.~OOut his altit udPs- with cdnC'C'rn.

Letter to the edit.o r
Source of acid rain
rPmain.~ a question
( ·ITIJin members of

CongrP~s

.-\ n 1nrreasing amount of scir n-

hd\('"l''nut ro· ~oJ\·r·· lhcso-cal\rd

lific P\idence suggest that the

tdtn pr nblPm .. by placing
('16 11 ~ c~dd rt i o nal rrsl rictions on thf'
burnrng of eoc~l
H 1{ . :&gt;lil t. the leading acid rain
btl!. would boo'i th•• electric bill s of
O h ir,an~ b\ hundrrd ~ of dollar~ a
yPar- bu l m ;J_\ hCJ\'P no effE'Ct at all

fi sh-killing acid is coming not from
rai n. but from thE' soi ls surrounding

.. ci('J cl

on lhC' po:orc·l'i'·pcJ probiPm .
In Oh" '· H R ..1400 would cau s~
&lt;;igni fi ( .Jilt rnnT·a~f&gt;~ rn rnPrg:.·
co~1:-

fr!l

both

C'lmsumPr~

and

bu...,im·"·"t:'-. jrop ardi..dng thou sand s
of joh..., ami making () Ur industriPs
J ps~;, compc&gt;t itin•
If r.tin i _..., rhf' '-fJU!T f' of acidifica ti on of l ak f'~ tn _'\p,~ - York and J\pw
En gland . wh _\ arpn't all l akt?s

ciffPctC'd in .::t similar manner?
Could 11iY' thetl rain is not t he sou reP
of t h(' problrm .-, Lmissions of sulfur
dioxidf' 1n fhP :vlidv.:est ha \·p been
(£'ducN1 b~- man? than 2D perrent in
~('('('nt ~ - f'ars -yet. there has bff&gt;n
RO apparrnt r ha ngP in the chemical
r:hnkf'· Up of rain in thP Northeast .

crnai n lakes in

the impacted

rf'g-iun . C'ongrpss 5hould not lock -in
high&lt;'r Plectric bill ~ to " sol\'e" a
pr·obi C'm that ma y no1 l'\"Pn exist .
E\"Pn the !\'ational Aeademy' of
SciPncps has sa id that Congress
dOC's not ha\"C' enough information
Yet about acid ra in to takP &lt;~ttion.
Thert? is stilltimf' for r esea rch and
n:•ason . ThPrr is no demonstratf&gt;d
need to act before mor~ of the facts
and figures arP known .
If you an electricit\ consumer in
Oh io who would not like to sef' ~~o ur
dollars wasted on a hurried "acid
rain solution" that may be misdi ·
rectt?d, ~·au should contact your

U.S. senators and representative
toda.'· Urge them to oppose H.R
.1400 and similar measures.

R. K. Ash
Ohio Power Compa ny
Pomeroy, Ohio

Today in history
: Today is Sunday, April 29. the l201h day ofl984 . There are 246days left in
thP _vpar.
Today's highlight in history :
On April 29, 1894, several hundred unemployed men known as Coxey's
Army swarmed into Washington to ask Congress for help.
On this date:
. In 1639, the colonial settlement or Newport, R.I. was founded.
: In 191J, Swedish·born engineer Gideon Sundback of Hoboken, N.J.
P."tented the zipper.
In 1945, American soldiers freed 32,00J prisoners from the Nazis' Dachau
doncentration camp in Germany.
; And in 1900, film director Alfred Hitchcock died In Los Angeles at the age
of 00.
: ,Ten years ago: President Richard Nixon said he would give the House
J~diciary Commitlee 1,200 pages of edited transcripts of Watergate
c;onversations and make them public.
· Five yPars ago: Military negotiators for Egypt and Israel met In
J:.rae\1-occupled Sinal to begin working out the final details of the phased
"""'rn of the peninsula to Egypt.
:One year ago: Harold Washington was swam in as the 42nd mayor of ·
~hlcago, the first black to hold the office.

several points, among them: I)
Jordan's hlstor1cal title to the West
Bank Is insecure, to which the
answer Is: That Is Irrelevant to the
obligations of Isra£&gt;1 under agreements signed by Israel. 2) Israel
saved Hussein's life in 1970. True
a nd irrelevant. 31 Hussein Is a
HashemUe and scorns P alestlnlans
and ruled miserably and profanely
when he had de facto authority over
the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
True and Irrelevant . 4) A guarantee
of Israeli security by the United
States Is as reliable as our
guarantee of VIPtnam security. A
good point, but a point Begin had
plenty of time to reflect upon when
he slgoed the Camp David acconls.
And llnally, 51 Israel's evacuat)on
of the West Bank cannot be done
w1thout reference to Israel's own
security.
This point - that Israel is
correctly concerned with the prim·
ary responsibility of Its own
security - was not challenged In
this space. Indeed, several times In
the past I havE' argued that only a
demilitarized West Bank, on !be
order of a demilitarized Austria,
can be responsibly created by
Israel.
So where are wp? ThP whole
world understood Resolution 242
and Camp David as signaling
Israel' s agreement to vacate the
occupied terrltoriPs. The annexation of the Golan Heights violated
Camp David, out the maneuver
was so ol&gt;viously related to Israelt
security as not to challenge the
mora l conscience of Israel's well'
wishers. What Is now going on,
however. does this exactly. Because the ruling par1y of Israelis in
effect engaged in colonizing an area
of the world to which tw1cPit agreed
to grant conditional sovereignty.
Given that Israel Is an enclave of
Western-minded morality in a
hostile sea. It should look after its
safety oot onlv by keeping its
arsenal dry, but by maintaining its
moral prestige. It is this that it Is
risking.

Incorporation papers filed
GALLIPOLIS- JAF Trucking Inc. has filed Incorporation papers
wllh Secretary of State Sherrod Brown's o!ftce.
Jeffrey A. Fraley is Incorporator, and Warren F . Sheets, 19 Locust
St., Is listed as agent.

Administrator wins accreditation
GALLIPOLIS - Arcreditatlon as a professional in human
resources has been received by Juanita G. Atha. personnel
administrator for Woodland Centers Inc.. from Personnel
Accreditation lnstltutP, Alexandria. Va .
Atha has passed an examination showing a grasp of knowledge in
human resource management . Theoretical knowledge and practical
experience combined are requlrements for accreditation.
The institute is a non-profit. educational n'search and accrediting
organization that upgrades performance s tandanls and professional
levels for those involved in human n'source occupations.

Mutlimedia earnings released
GREENVD..LE, S.C . - For its first quarter of the year,
Multimedia Inc. amassed earnings of $7,032,00J, according to the
corporation's chief executive officer.
Wilson C. Wearn said it represented a 23 percent incn'ase over first
quar1er 1983 earnings of $5,732,!XXJ. Earnings per share were42cents,
compared to 37 cents last year, a 14 percent increase.
Revenues lor the quaner, which e nded March 31 , lotaled
$65,938,(XX), compared to $58,:JJ7,00J last year. a 13 percent Increase.
Wearn a lso reponed that the board of directors declared a
dividend of 15 cents per share. paya ble May 15 to shareholders of
record as of May 1.
Multimedia publishes the Sund ay Times-Sentinel, the Daily
Sentinel, Gallipolis Daily Tribune a nd Point Pleasant Register.

there discards voter lists that were
pl'€pared at a cost of $3 million to

U.S. taxpayers.
How is the American public
expected to ma ke head or tail oft he
Salvadora n mPss'? Is the White
HouS&lt;&gt; lying? Are reporters being
gulled by communist propaganda?
\\'he!'€ does the truth lie? Only with
accurate inforration can the Ameri -

can people decide whether U.S.
Jm·olvPment

in El Salvador is

worth the price.
One of thP m ost knowledgPable

horror to tel l: of discovering
mutilated corpsps dumped by the
roadside. of relatives or fr1ends
dragged out of their homes In the
mldd\p of the night by armed thugs
and never seen alive again.
ThP sickening !ruth is that
Sa lvadora n politica l murders an'
like "The Texas Chain-Saw Massacre" come to Ille . ME're killing is not
enough fQr the depraved executioners. Victims are decapitated , dismembered. sex ually tortured even burned alive. Salvadorans

America n reporters on the scene is

recall what they've witnessed with

m~·

a curious, detached wonder, as if
it' s all a nightmare they can never

man in El Salvador, .Jon Lee
AndPrson. HP has traveled w1th
ha lf~ a ·dozen guerrilla groups on
both sides of the battle over Central

COLUMBUS- Investment earnings of $3l4.822,1D.30 during 1983
were reported by the Ohio Industrial CommiSsion and the Bureau of
Workers Compensa tion.
Earnings were '1:2 percent higher than 1982, said Leonard T .
Lancaster. cha irma n of the indu strial commission. Lancaster said
$281.079.50162 was earned in 1982.
.James I... Mayfield, workers compensation bureau administrator.
said assets of the state Insurance fund continue to grow, showing an
annual increase in 1983 of 10 percent. The figun'S rose from
$3,211,5.'!8.043.4&gt; in 1982 to $.1,553,00!.119.64 In 1983.

America.

His latest report confirms the
most pessimistic perceptions of El
Salvador - polarized by political
extrPmism. has a personal tale of

forget but sttll do not quite
undPrstand ..
Armed men - soldiers, security
guards, pollee. personal bodyguards - are Pveryw here. Ar·
mored vans a nd Cherokee Chiefs
\\1th smoked-glass w1ndows cruise

the stn'ets. constant n'mlnders thai
murder is a standard f&lt;&gt;aturp of the
Salvadoran political process.
Another knowledgeable reporter
is Raymond Bonner of The New
York Times. one oft he first to alert
the American public to the horrors
in El Salvador. I hayp seen the
uncorrected galley proofs of
Bonner's l&gt;ook , "Weakness aod
DecPil : U.S. Policy and El Salvador," to be published next month by
Times Books.
From first ·ha nd experience and
government documents -

will continue to have a positive

Impact on the company, Chairman
Cornell C. Maier told the com ~
pany' s annual meeting this past
WE't'k.
In the first quarter this year,

C. Roberi Hmnphreys

Slanley L. Lane

Area personnel file
GAU.IPOLIS - C. Rober1
Humphreys, a former assistant
professor of biology at Rio
Grande College, recently graduated cum laud£' from thf
National College of Chiropractic
Medicine, Lombard, IU .. with a
degree In chlropract lc medicine.
A Massachusett s native,
Humphreys received his bachelor's degree from Nasson College In Maine, and his mast er's
from Kenl State University .
At the graduation ceremony ,
Humphreys received the Fri·
Frat Anatomy Award. He was
also listed In Who's Who Among
Students in American Universities a nd Colleges.

Corp.'s Kyger Creek plant , was
recently promoted to system
load coordinator at company
headquar1ers in Piketon.
Lane joined OVF:C at Piketon
in June 19!'ii as a member of the
transmission crew. In November lflffi. he was promoted
to plant load coordinator at
Kyger Cn'Pk.
A Por1smouth native, Lane is
a 19:xl gradua te of Portsmouth
High School and served with the
U.S. Marine Corps from Febru ·
ary 1951 until February 1954 . He
and his wile, Betty, reside at 110
Mabelene Drive. Gallipolis.

As if thC'rC' wasn't eno ugh sex
discri mina tion in the business
world, a rec-ent Rt?nsselear PolytPChnic lnstitutC' stu dy says that
women wi th sex:' names have less
cha nce of being selected for
manageri al jobs than those with
non-se-xy flrst names.

ThP study. conducted l&gt;y Deborah
Linvi11e. a for mer graduate student
in industria l or ga nizational psy-

chology. ts titled. "Prej udice Toward Women Applican ts Based on
Their First Names." and claims
that mc&gt;n more often than women

hold the traditional "sex role"
sterrotype abu t managers.
That stereotype: managrrs
should possess masculine characteristics, such as motivation a nd
decisiveness, and tha t first names
create expectations about people.
Ms. Linville asked seniors a nd
graduate students at RPI. a
popular training ground for Fortune 500 company managers, to
ra te the "perceived sexiness" of 250
female names on a scale from 1
tnon-sexyJ to 7 (sexy).
She did not define the word
"sexy" but left that up to the
students.
They considered some first
names sex ier than others. For
example, among the highest-rated
sexy names wPre Dawn (4.8).
Jennifer (4.8), Cheryl (4.9) and
Michelle \4.8). The least sexy were
Ethel, who only got a 1.0, Mildred
(1 .5) a nd Esther (1.8).
She then asked another group o!
students to play "boss" and rate job
applications with these seven
names. The non·sexy applicants
were chosen for employment and
promotion over the sexy ones by a

much la rger margin of ffif'n than

women, which made Ms. Linville
concludp that men, when choosing
women for jobs, are prejudiced by
the sexi ness of their first name.
In case anyone is interested. here
a!'€ some of the other first names

that RPI men perceived as "sexy":
Alicia , AdriennP. Andrea. Candace,
Christine, Gall, Heather , Holly,
Jacqueline . .Julia, Kathy, Marla ,
Marilyn. Melanie, RenE'!', Susan,
Tamara an d Tina . Christine got a
5.~ . the highest. There we!'€ no 7s.
If Ms. LlnvillP's conclusions are
correct. these women wlll have a
tough time making it in a man 's
world .
Here are a few of the namPs
which were perceived as non~sexy:
Alma, Cornelia, Doris, Edna, Elvira, Florence, Magdalena, Myrtle,
Rosalind, Silvana and Zelda .
These women w111 have no
problems rising to the top on the
corpora le Iadder.
So what are we to make of all
thL'? There Is nothing much one can
do at this stage of the game unless a
woman wants to change her first
name. But if the prejudice continues In the business world, new
parents may think twice when It
comes to naming their daughters . U
they gtve them "sexy" names they
may never see them rtse to a vice
presidency. U they give them
non-sexy ones their daughters could
become very successtuj profession·
ally, but might scare away nervous
prospective suitors.
Of courSe, parents can compromIse by gtvtng a girl one of the nrst
names which would up In the
middle of the Unvllle survey. Those
polled diSagreed as to whether the

The compan y's aluminum busi ·

ings of $14.6 mill ion or 33 cents per
common share, compared with a
loss of $28.8 million, or 67 cents per
share in the same period of l !l\.1.
The factors benefiting the com ~

ness is also being strengthened by
the recovery ot the U.S and
wpstern world economies, the
K(.lisc&gt;r Aluminum chairman said
·'This has lncrPased our shipment

pany include inltlal returns from
implementation of the aluminu m

ment in pricC'. but furthPr gains arP

division 's strategic plan. Maier

needed ."

levels and l&gt;rought some

Improv e~

said .

Republican
RE-ELECT

David ]. /(oblentz
Qua( ifit•d

Capable

Candidate for
MEIGS COUNTY

COMMISSIONER
! For Second Term)

Pau:ltor by thr Cand 1dat r Rt J.

Thank You
PrJmEIO\"

OH 4)/69

Russell Wood

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Republican Candidate

Ph. 992-5776

NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON

COMMISSIONER

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Best dividend announced
RICHMOND. Va. - A regu lar quarterly dividend of six cents per
s hare has been authorized by the &amp;st Products board of directors.
The dividend will bepayableJune 15 to shareholders of record as of
June 1.

some

obtained under the Freedom of
Information Act. some by other
mea ns- Bonner unmasks the ugly
truth abou t E l Salvador.
OnP par1icularly disturbing point
Bonner makes is that administra·
tlon officials have tried to cover up
massacres commUted by thP Sal-

FOR SENIOR CITIZENS

Wednesday, May 2nd Thru Saturday, May 5th - 9 a.m. TILL

"Major Medical Hospitalization Plan Available for Underl 65."

RETURN TO: CLIFF MYERS
RT. 3, BOX 110
ALBANY. OHIO 45710

Art Buchwald

------------------------~
following first names were sexy or

the only cri terion for promotion
used in selecting women lor .
Anne. Audrey, Barbara. Betsy, responslb\(' jobs. But Ms. Llhville's .
Betty, Carolyn C"therine. Char· study should be invaluable as
lotte, Elaine, Ellen, Faith, Hope, evidence in a job discrimination :
Jean. Jill, Joanne, Joyce. Laura, · suit. If an Ethel gets promoted over ·
Linda. Marcia, Marian . Mary,
a Christine, although Christine has
Patricia. Priscllla, Ruth. Shirley,
been in the, organization much
Virginia, Wendy and Yolanda.
longer, I think Christine has got one
These first names may never
heck of a case .
make it to the top, but at least they
On the other hand , If Candace
won't starve to dPa th.
gets to marry th~ boss and Mlldred
Space forbids me from printing
w1nds up as onl y the controllPr of
how all 250 first names were rated.
the firm, Mildred has nothing to
a nd one should say that this Is not
bla me but . hPr first name.

not :

1

I

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vadoran army .

I

of the plan- particularly moderni·
zat\on of our Trentwood rolling mill
-a r e put into place," he said .

Kaiser Aluminum recorded earn-

"Guarantee issue life ins. all ages. No medical questions."

Sex and first names

magnitude as additional elements

ELECT

CHESHIRE - Stanley L.
Lane, plant load coordinator in
the electrical operations department at Ohio Valley Electric

Syracuse, Oh.

"The gains tn operating e!ft·
ciency wP've strived for through
capital spending programs and
changes In work mPihods and
marketing practices an' beginning
to be realized . they "111 increase in

Bureau's investment earnings up

WeakneSS and deceit ______la_ck_A_n_de_rs_on
1\'ASHI\ GTO.'\- TheAmNica n
public. v.ith whom rests the ulti ·
ma IC' d('("ision on continued U.S.
im·okC'nlC'nt in El Sal\·ador, can
onJ~ · tx&gt; confused bv the contradicIOI). rPporls emanating from that
unhapp~: count!)·
LPft -wing terrorist s and rightwing dra th squads al ikP sla ughtPr
peasa nt s li kr ca 11 lc . AmP ric an
rhurchwompn are rape d and mur dered on thrirwa~· from the aiq:ort.
Amrrican land·rf'lorm Spc'Cia lists
arr gunned down in their hotel
cotl('{' shop. T hr counll·~··s Catholic
archbishop is assassinated whilf'
sa~·i n g mass in thP ra thN1ral.
:--.:one of thr murdrrrrs is brough t
to justi ce. ~· Pt lhr RPagan adm inistration ass urrs thf' nation that
··pr ogress" is being madf' in hum an
rights in El Sulvador. The \\'httc
H ous~~ lauds the ··frN' riC'C'tons·· in
El Sah"ador. ~'r t thP go\·ernment

RAVENSWOOD, W Va . Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp.'s financial results are benefit·
lng from a variety of factors .that

Toler qualifies for award

Jordan question revisited.__w_u_Lia_m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_Jr._
A few weeks ago when King
Hussein of Jordan blasted U.S.
policy in the Mideast , concentrating
on our toleration of the gradual
annexation of the West Bank by
Israel, I wrote substantially agreeing w1th Hussein's principal point.
The result has been letters of
protest. some of them scholarly,

Kaiser outlook good

Business Briefs:---.

April 29, 1984

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

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

April 29, 1984

The Sunday Tlme..S.ntlnel
Page A-2

.. ····

19" REMOTE

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�-·--...·-----

- -...-- -- --~-

Puge---A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh~Point

,---Weather:----.

60

Ci.
........

Fwies

Low
T&amp;mperatures

FRONTS:

60 70
Cold-Occluded,... Stationary ""T

w....,-

~

W•"*

~NOAA .

US Olto' ol Corrwnecce

\\"E..\THER FORECAST - Tht• National Weatlw'r Service
lon"&lt;'a.'t lor Sunday predicts rain lor most or tiM' East Coast with
.. no" mix.N with rain in parts of the Great Plains. Snow Liit also
predicted lor parts of the Dakola.s. 1AP Laserphoto).

Ettended Ohio forecast
\-101\"DAY THROL:GH WEDNESDAY:
A c hance of showers each cta,· Highs between 65 and 75 :Yionda1·.
fmm the lower 50s to the lower 60s Tuesday and in the 50s
W t~lne&lt;;rlal t .ows betv;een 45 and 55 Monday. in the40s TUesday a nd
from thf' lowPr ,11};; to thP low er -IDs Wednesday .

Showers possible Sunday
Ry T he Associau-d Press
With o cold front well east of Ohio Saturday mght. the 1\'PathPr will

l:x· dry

Some showers m a1· spread back int o Ohio on Surday in advance of
pt'l)o;sur£' J.pproac hing from ths southwest.

ltJW

Sunda1 ·s hig hs will range l'rom the mid 60s through the 70s.
Low pr&lt;&gt;ssu "' \\'ill mo1 c nonh of Minn('S()ta Saturday night. A cold
front cxtmdin~ out from thP low to nonh of Lake Su po2rior and then
curYing to Lake Hw-on and western Ohio will moYe to near the east
coa.-,r b_\ late Sunda\ morning.
:-\ small high pressure area will movE&gt; across the Plains states

Sc1turd a" night and across the lower Great Lakes region on Sunday .
,\Jlothrr low. den•loping O\'C'r the southwest. u:ill move to central
K. msas b_\· Sund a~· night .

Th f' cf&gt;nter of a low pressurp area moved northward thru

mt o Ca nad a this morning . A cold front coming out oft hat
s~·s tf'm sln:'t c hed from crntral Michigan through Indiana to
southC'ast ML"souri and w as mo\·Lng C'astward through Ohio
Thf' nrxt low pl"f'surr s~·s t em v..ill be moving into the Jowf'r
Miss iss ippi valley and rna~· rriggrr showprs in Ohio as rarly as
Sunday. with some chance for rain continuing through t hP early pan
Of nPXt W['{'k .
,\ pl'E'limina.,, look a t the l'ia tional Wmthcr Ser;icc 30-dayoutlook
for May indicates below normal temperaturE's and above normal
prPripitat ion amount s.

Wetting should amount to one-half lnch or less in most areas this
\q"('kend. Howen:·r. ad(_Wional rain rna~· fall early next week. and
wi th onl1 limited d.,·ing , fit'ld conditions \\·i ll haw litt le c hance to
i.mprove durin~ the next several days.
Soil trmpo2ratures at 4 inch&lt;&gt;s under bare grou nd reached the 60s
most of Ohio during sunn~' periods late this week. Cloudiness
more- wpfting will stPm further warming and m ean
trmpt• rJi un:'s \Vhlch had m on ?d into the 50s rna~ · falJ back to arou nd
:'~) d! ·):;TPf"S h~ · lhf' first of nrxt week .
Th f' thn"at nf showprs will hamper spraying opera tions Sund ay.
Spr; t_\'ing conditions rna!'· !'('main poor through the Parly part of next
lWf'r

and

(Continued from page A-I )
But under the new law, individual
institution policies on union recognl·
!Jon wUI have no meaning. Cum·
mings explained. She added that
tho5e employees were unable to
negotiate wage and benefit agrl'{'ments until the advent or collective
bargaining.
Current Jy, Cummings' union and
AFSCME are vy1ng for representa ·
lion of state employees. AFSCME Is
•seeking to represent mental health ·
mental retardation employees and
t hose from other state departments.
such as natural resou!U'S and
transponatlon. she said.
But her union Is the only one to
petition exclusively for MH-MR
employees .
CUmmings said SERB Is scheduled to hold hearings in May to
Cf"rtify w hich union will represent
which segments at the state
e mployee population. Should Ohio
Health Care Employees Union ga in
that cenlfication, CDC employees
will vote. po2rhaps in July , for
representation.
lf the vote is successfuL members
of a statewide negotiating panel will
be elected.
"Up until April I. public em ·
plovees did not have the opportu nity
to negotiate a contract, and instead
were leaving it up to the politicians
and the legis Ia ture," Cunumings
said .
"We've found employees a t GDC
wa nt a strong union," she said. "I
think there's been some serious
problems there. They're tired of
being divided , and they see an
opponurity urder the collective
bargaining law."

\\'('( ·k
I ,l,t _\1imf' IC'mpf'ratuf"('s avr r agffl. in thf' mid 50s to low ffis during
rhr· wr'!'k That's :l to 8 d&lt;'gTWS below normal. r toudiness helped
mo(lf'r ah' low~ which a \'C'ragC'd from the upper .?Ds to the mid40sand
\\ 1'1'1' 2 10 :~ dpg-rf'f·s abo\'(' norm al 0\'('r much of thr s tatP .
Sor t IPmpPrJrurt's at 4 inc hf'S unclc r bare ground awr agf'd from
riH' up pr •r lOs to nec1 r :.0. with hil'hrr va lues during sunny w!'ather
in tht' \\'1-'t'k.

H..1 rnfall tota Is for t hC' "'''r•n da\'s ending Frida\ momlng excC&lt;'dcd
an inch in must arL•as.

The nation's weather
By Th&lt;• Assoda«.'ll Pre"''
.- \pnl brought JUSt about everyt hing but s pring s howers to the
r:,1 11un :=::..aturda~·. as the Sout hras t hradC'd into anot her round of
&lt;ummN ·IikP heat . a bli7..zard thi'('W more s now at the Pla.Jns an d
h;11i hcanng t hunderstorms rumbled through the Midwest.
lk&gt;nse fog cm·f'rf'd much of thP f ;q l&lt; \ ·oast. when? prt"-dawn
rrm pnatures had alreadv hit the t&gt;l&gt; ond iOs . SkiPS wew pan ty
dnud:'-' tn the f\,;ortheast an most!\ ciPa r wpst of thP Rockies
Alt hough II was o1·ershadowecl b1· the :&gt;..toot s nows m pans of
\\\nming and Montana . there' was additional snow in Utah in the
p;tst thrf'f' da vs - ju st ow•r 2\ in ches. That brought the tota l a t the
.-\Ira s ki resort s inCf" last l'io1· I to 7:\.1 inc hes; normally. Alta gPts 64
tnrhf's.

Off ic ials closed the face of a mounta rn east of Willard, Utah , to the
public. fearing m ud s lides. Don Chase. &amp;lx E lder Countv
Commiss ion chairman, sa id the situation was "spooky enough tha t ·l
have a man v.ith a walkiP·ta lkieon top of the mounl&lt;~in" wa tching for
movement In one big mud flow .
To the East. 4Q.. mph winds kept Nonh Dakota under a blizzard
wom ing Saturday .
Thunders torms and tornadoes , like those that left at least l6people
dead in Oklahoma . Wisconsin and Minnesota s inCf" Thursday, wpre
the worry Soru rda y from the Cull Coast to the Great Lakes and mid
Atlan t ic Coast as a cold front moved eastward .
Tempo2ratures around the nation at 2 a .m . EST ranged from 78 in
1\•·v West, Fla .. to 5 above zero in Yellowstone, Wyo.

Morgan said he doubted that he
could have obtained a conviction on
a nother first -degree murder charge
without the evidence that was
thrown out of court.
"Quite frankly, I don' t know l!we

CLOSED SUNDAYS

VOTE FOR THE CANDIDATE WHO HAS THE PROVEN ABILITY AND THE EXPERIENCE TO BE YOUR
NEXT SHERIFF.

JOHN TAYLOR

A VOTE FOR
IS A
VOTE FOR GOOD GOOD LAW ENFORCEMENT FOR
THE NEXT 4 YEARS .

F

R
E

0

u

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B
L

I

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A

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We .....rva The Aight to Llml1 QutntitiH'

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nigh t in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 931.
In the " Pick 4" game. played
Monday throug h Friday. the win·
ning numbe r was 7960.
The lottery reponed eamings of
$767,683.50 from wagering on "The
Number."
Earnings cam e on sales of
$1.290.388.50. while hold&lt;&gt;rs of win·
ning tickets arc e ntitlr&gt;d to share
$.';22,705.
In the pa rimutue l "Pick 4" game,
sa lps totaled $183.151. Holders at
wi nning tickets""' entitled to share
45 po2rcent. or $82.624. A winning $1
straight ticket earru; $9.288. A
winning$! boxed ticket eams$387 .

$}2 9
$}69

T-BONE
STEAK LB.
SIRLOIN

The

"".nning number draw n Friday

$}39

SHOULDER
STEAK LB

CHUCK
ROAST
PO UNO

$219

CLUB LB.
BOLOGNA

BONELESS

LB.

HOMEMADE

HAM
SALAD

LB.

SPECIAL ORDERS
WELCOME
PHONE 446-1543

PEPSI FREE
DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW

DIAl

BAR
SOAP

8 PK.

3

REG.
SIZE BARS

AJAX

Plus
Deposit

Attend meeting
POMEROY - Thirteen Meigs
Coun tians a ttended the District 7
and 8 fair boards meeting held
Thursday at Zanesville.
The group included Mr . and Mrs.
William B. Downie, Mr. and Mrs.
William Radford, Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Douglas, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Wallace Bradford, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Windon, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Smith and Bob Lee.

$319

CHICKEN
OAN-DEE

CORN
TWISTERS s oz.

4
ROLL
PKG.

lUCKY lEAF
PIE
FILLING 21 oz.

$}09

$} 39

VAllEY BELL
COTTAGE
CHEESE
24 oz.

$}39

VALLEY BELL

FESTIVAL

VALLEY BELL

ICE CREAM

2%
MILK
WILSON

~~~i3 OZ. 2/99¢

A Multlmt"dla Ne w !i p&amp;~r
Pu bll stwd f'ac h Sund ay, 825 Third
An&gt;n ut'. bv Th&lt;&gt; Ohio Va fl(&gt;y Publish·
in~ lompilny Mu lti media . Inc. St· ·

coml class posT aj;!'E' paid at Gallipolis.
Oh to 45631. EntPred a s S&lt;"cond cla ss
mailing mattPr at PomProy, Ohio.
Post Off kP

Assorted Flavors

SALAD
DRESSING

SlJBSC RIPTION RATES
By Carrie r or Motm RoutE'
Onr WC'e k ...
.. ...... Sl 10
One Month .. .
.. ... .. ..... s'u~o
SINGLE CO PV

$l59QT

PRI CE
C~ nts

1\'o sub scription s hy mal l )X'rmitted

In town s w here m otor ca r r ier
Is avai lable

~erv!Cf•

Tht&gt; Su nda y Times -Senti nel will not
be respons ible for advance- pay m ents
m ade by ca rriE'rs.
MAIL SU BSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only
OnE' vf'a r .. . . ... .
.. ....... $26.80
SIJ{ months ......................... SlJ.OO

Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ins ide ObJo
52 Wf'f'kS .. ............ ...
. $58.24
26 Wrt&gt;lts ............................. $29 .12
l J Weeks ...................... ...... .. $14 .56

Rates Outside Ohio
52 Weeks .......... .. .................. S59.irl
26 Wf"f!ks ...................... ... . $31.20
13 Weeks .......... ..... ................ S15.60

OR

CHIPS

MIRACLE WHIP

land Dail y Press Assocla lion a nd llw
A mPr lcan NE"wspaper Publlshf'r ~ Association, Nati onal Adverti sing R('·
presC'n!a1lvt&gt;, Branham, 1717 Wpsr
~l n e Mi lE' Road. Sultf' 204, Det ro ll.
Ml ch i~Bn . 4Bm5.

50

~~~~EG.

B.B.~
12 OZ.

159

HEINERS
8 CNT
HAMBURGER OR5
HOTDOG BUNS

TOMATOES

.59¢

LB.

JAMBOREE
2 ui.
STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES ·

$}19

RUSSELL D. WOOD
"

PlANT RECOGNIZED - The Bob Evans Fann
Sausage Bidwell plant, In operation since l!N7, will
receive the Industrial rewgnltlon award rrom the
Gallla County Safety Council at Its anrrual banquet
·Monday at the HoHday Inn. This plant served six
southern Ohio counties untO 1953, when a second plant

was opened In Xenia. With the introduction of the
product Into the Detroit market in 1964, anolher plant
was opened at Hillsdale, Mich., and 10 years later,

Galva, m., became the site of the fourth plant. The
company's fifth plant In Gallipolis went into operation
in October 1983.

Agent testifies in De Lorean trial
LOS ANGELES ( AP) - An FBI
agent admitted under crossexamination at John Z. De Lorean's
cocaine-trafficking trial that he
masterminded the scheme for De
Lorean's arrest and raised the
su bject of drugs before the auto·
maker ever mentioned it .
Benedict Tisa , who m asqueraded
as a crooked banker in the
government's cocaine "sting" Op&lt;'r .
a tlon. conceded to the automakcr's
a ttorney Friday that he assumed De
Lorean was interested in a drug deal
because an infonnant told him so.
But In talks stretching over a
month, De Lorean never ment loned

drugs. Tlsa said.
"You initiated the conversation.
not John De Lorean. about dop&lt;'.
didn't you?" a sked chief defe nse
a ttorney Howard Weitzman.
" I brought narcotics to his
attention so that he fully knew what I
was talking about." Tisa said.
"You initiated the conversation.
yes or no?" Weitzman said, his voice
rising in anger.
"Yes." said the agent.
·'Not John De Lorean. correct?"
asked the a ttomey, pounding on a
lectern.
"Correct," said the agent.
Outside court. Weitzman said he

WASHINGTON tAPl-Aithough
ont"·th!rd of Amf&gt;rlcan adults don't
drink, theothertwo-thlrdsconsurne
,• enough alcohol for e very person in
the country over the age ot 14 to
annually have 591 cans ot beer, 115
bottles ofwlneor35flfthsofwhiskey.
a r cpon to Congress said Saturday.
Health and Hwnan Setvlces
Secretary Margaret M. Heckler
released the "Alcohol and Heallh"
l'E'pon at the second National
Conference for Youth on Drinking
and Driver. The conference was to

of avoiding alcohol abuse by their
contemporaries.
The repon describes alcohol as
"the most widely used and a bused
drug In America."
Mrs. Heckler cited the report in
he r remarks. which were prepa red
for delive ry at the conference.
She said alcoholics have a suicide
rate six to 15 times greater than the
general population and the y die
from fire 10 times more frequently
than non-alcoholics .
Drinking is believed to be a factor

from
a ll 50 states to talk about ways
bringtogetherabout300adolescents

spouse
abuse c to
ases
as many
as
in 45 po2rcent
68and
percent
of the

believed he had scored a m a jor point
in his attempt to prove De Lorean
was a victim of overzealous
government agents wn o set out to
entrap a celebrity.
In the videotaped conversation
referred to by Weitzman. Tisa first
m e ntioned cOCaine on Sept . 8, 1982,
and s uggested a plan for launde ring
· drug profits through De Lorean"s
company.
De Lo!'E'an responded. "It looks
like a good opportunity."
Government prosecutors. visibly
stung by the assault on T!sa, their
first witness. refused to comment on
Friday's dPvelopments.

$·}99 IOLB.

·2 89¢
PKGS.

38percentofthechildabu secases.
Alcohol also causes a variety of
negative health effects. the report
sa id. Chronic brain injury from
alcoholls second only to Alzhe imer's
di sease as a cause ot me nt al
deterioration in adults. But unlike
Alzheime r's, the deterioration can
be a rrested or even reversed if
drinking stops.
Drinldng duringpregnancyposes
the risk of low birth weight. mental
impairment and birth defect s to a
fetus.

d 'nki'ng haS alSO h.~n
E
linked
to hean
xcess
n damage; cancers
"""'of
the mouth, tongue, pharynx a nd

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Slain policewoman eulogized ~r:a~:~a~n~~t=~at::dwi~~
SALISBURY. England tAP ) -A
police officer who was one of "the
· best" was buried hou rs after the end
ot a n 11-day se!ge ot the Libyan
Embassy that was sparked by her
s hooting death. Those Ins ide 'p erhaps her killer among them were sent home.
Yvonne Fletcher. 25. was shot by a
gunman in the embassy on Aprll17
when she and other police officers
.w ere assigned to a demonstration
by Libyan exiles opposed to the
regime of Col. Moarnmar Khadafy .
After the ·shooting spree, which
wounded 11 protesters, police
cleared St. James's Square, site of ·
the embassy. and marksmen
trained their weapons on the
butldlng. No one was allowed to
. leave and no one could enter. Miss
Fletcher's black-and-white uniform
cap lay In the square.
As her funeral neared Frtday, one
of her fellow officers defied orders
·and dashed across the square to
n&gt;trleve the hat, sign of a profession
which Miss Fletcher's family said
she want.id to join since childhood.
·shortly after, the siege ended when
the
emerged to be floW!!

home to Tripoli.
Police investigators say they
believe her killer may have been
among those freed.
The 1.500 mourners who came to
her funer a l a t Salisbury Cathedra l
overflowed the church. They
watched as six constables carried
her coffin.

Traffic accidents arc the fifth ·
leading cause of death in the U.S.
a nd drinking Is linked with abo ut
half of thf" 49,tXXl traffic deaths and
150,tXXl permanent injuries which
occurred in 1981.
A stuc'y using 1977 data estimated
that the national cost of alcohol
abuse was $49.4 billion.

MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS

MAY 4-5-6
HOURS: 9 a.m. Till Dark
HDealers From All Over Will Be Here"
INSIDE &amp; OUTSIDE SPACES AVAILABLE
From SO•per fl. Frontage and Up

*

WEEKEND SPECIALS AVAILABLE

*

Junclion Roule 7 &amp; 33-Pomeroy, Ohio- Signs Will Se Posted

f!~~I4G

,._,...

LIJNci1Ro

DAFVOIRDMMAONRNE INFORMATION CALL ~v~l~s&amp;.,
MIKE MARTIN

614-112-1300

614·11S-43tl

This is all
you wear!
COCA-COLA. SPRITE.
TAB. DIET'COKE

8 BTLS.oz.$ .148
16

COCA-COLA. SPRITE, TAB

CARROTS

•

\'OTE FOH

~~k.M~~~~- 2/$109

POTATOES
BAG

j\ul f' fur rwl mort• th :mll't:!

CORN

CRISP

IDAHO

( t-ull Tt·rm ( :.,mmntf'inJt 1-.l -a;J )

9q

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

FLORIDA

For County
Commissiont•r

reduced Sf' X drive.

TYSON HEAT
&amp; SERVE
32 OZ

BATHROOM
TISSUE

99¢

$}99

LAUNDRY49 oz
DETERGENT

COTTONELLE

T. KAIL BURLESON

:· Alcohol study released to Congress

TIP
ROAST

JAMES C. SAUNDERS

For County

$119

SU PERl OR 'S

Gels. 39. joined the &amp;aeon
Journal in 1900 from the Miami
Herald. where he was director of
consumer marketing A Cincinnati
native, he earned a bachelor's
degree '" economics and did
graduat e work in business admlnis·
tra tion at Xavirr University .

OFFICIAL REPUBLICAN PRIMARY BALLOT
PRIMARY ELECTION - MAY 8 , 1984
lA
NTY

$119

SHOULDER
ROAST LB.
POUND

man. editor since 1976, will continue
In charge of news and editorial
operations.
Gels announced the appointment
of David M. 8eihoff as vicP
president of marketing and Glen L.
McCaulley as vice president of
finance .

J-MPLE BALLOT

"·

- ---...

GROUND
BEEF LB.

CUBE
STEAK

j,.

HOLLYWOOD

FRESH LEAN

LEAN &amp; JUICY

M ember: T he Associat ed Prt'ss In

p

Prices good thru May 5, 1984

GO TO CHURCH [V(RV S UNDAY

Lottery winning
numbers: 931,7960
-

AKRON, Ohio (AP I - The
(Akron) Beacon Journal has named
James V. Gels president ot the
newspaper.
Gels, vice president a nd general
manager of the newspapo2r since
191ll. will be rosponsible for all
business opei ~:~ •iup - . Paul A. Poor·

Olll fOWN"I fiNIST SUf'll MAIICIY

second-degree," Morgan said. ''I'm
just glad he decided to plead guilty."
Sentenc ing is scheduled Monday.
Morgan said. Mays fa ces a sentence
of five to 18 years in prison .

!API

Akron newspaper names president

9 anftil 10 pm
Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm

.__.;.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

;1111un.-Thur .•

could have gotten a conviction on

CLEVELAND

-

STORE HOURS.

ot the physical evidenCf"."

~1 innPsota

l ~!tf'

Health•••

rCon tin uro from page Al l

By TIH• .'\.o;,;oc iali&gt;d Press

•

April 29, 1984

Pleasant, W. Va.

Guilty ...

Ohio agricultural advisory

___ ......._...

--- .... - -#.

DIET COKE,-MR. PIBB.
MELLOW YELLOW

24

CANS

$625

GALLIPOLIS
..
ICE HOUSE

109 FirstAve._

Gallipolis

The Audiotone INSIDER
has the advantages you want in a hearing aid; small size, com·
fortable fit, and the performance you need to help improve
your hearing quality. Come in and we'll show you the many
advantages the INSIDER has to otter.

IN OUR 35TH YEAR- THE ONLY HEA.RING AID
SERVICE YOU WILL EVER NEED. HOME APPOINT·
MENTS AVAILABLE.

DILES HEARING AID CENTER
4-«

Athens. OH. 45701

W. Union St..

P.O. Box 511

Tel .

594-3571

State Bank No. l:lO
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF COND ITION
(Including Domestic Su bs idiarics )

The Ohio Valley Bank Company
Federal Reserv£&gt; Dis trict No. -t

of Gallipolis, Ga:Ua Cou nty, in the State of Ohio at the clos€' of husine~s on March :n,
1984.
ASSETS
Cas h and bal ances due from depository instit u tio ns

a. No nint e r es t-bearing ba la ncPs a nd c urrency and coin ..... .
. .. 7,00:\,000. 00
b. Interest -bearing ba la nces ..... .. ............ .....
. ................... . 675.000.00
Securit ies........ ................ .. ......... . . .. ..... ...... .. .........
.1~.900,000 00
Federal funds so ld a nd secur iliPs purchased
under agrf'ements to r ese ll ...... ...... ............. ................... .
.. 9.7.&gt;0,000 00
Loans and lease finan c in g receivab les:
Loans and LeaS&lt;• s, net o f unear ne d income ......... o1,82o, OOO .OO
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............. 926, 000 .00
Loans a nd leases, ne t of unP a rnPd in come .
allowance, and r eservP ......... ., ............................ ... .
... &gt;O ,899, 000. 00
PrPmises and fix ed asse1s (in cludi ng cap it al ize&gt;d lea ses)
............. 1,488,000.00
Othe r real es ta te owned ...... .... .... .. ... .... .. . . ........... .
. .. 1:&gt;,000 00
Other assets ...... ............................................ .. ..
. 2.1&gt;'&gt;.000.011
Total assets ........ . .................................... .
. ..... 111.88i. OOO 00
LIA Bl LIT I ES
Deposits:
In domest ic offices ........
.. 102.~~h. ll0i llll l
(I) Noninterest -bea rin g
. . . ... ... ............ 11.779,000.00
(2) Interest -beari ng ...
. ... ..... ..... 90,647,000 00
Other li a bilities .... .
. ............. .... 1. 278 .000 0!1
. .... .. .. . . . ....
Tot a l Uabillt ies .... ..
.. .. ............. .
. .. 103,704,000 00
EQUITY Ci\PJTAL
Common s tock ...... ,
. ....................
. ............ ... ..
.. . l.i :.0 .000 00
Surplus... .. ...... .....
.. ...................... .... .
..... 3.500,000 00
Undivided profits and ca pita l reserves
..... .... 2,9:\3,000 00
Total e quity cap it a l.
....... ............ .. ...... .
..... 8,18.1,0!111.110
Total liabilities. llmlt ed· llfe preferred stock, a nd
equity capit al. .. .......... .... ...... ........................ .
. ........ .. ... ..... 111.88i.OIJU.OO
I. the und ersign ed o ttlcN, do here by.declare th nt this Heport of Cond it ion r in
eluding the s upporting schedule s .r h as been prepared in ~o n form a ncr wi t h ot fic ia l
Ins tructi ons a nd Is true to the best of m y kn owledge and bel ief.
Madge E. Boggs
VI ce President a nd ControiiN
We, t he undersigned directors, attest the correc tness of this Report of Condi ·
tlon (Including the s upporting schedu les) a nd dec lare th at It has been exa mined by
us and to the best of our knowledge a nd be lie f has been prepared In confor m a nce
with official Ins tructions a nd Is tru e and correct .
Keith R . Brandeberry
Selwyn R. White - Directors
John McNe!ll
Sta te of Ohio, County or Gallta, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before m e this 24t h d ay of April, 1984 a nd I he reby cer ·
tlly that I am no1 an officer or director of this bank .
My commission expires March 25, 1986. Ci ndy L. Harri ngto n . Notary Public.

�.

...- - ---":'"-----

Ohio-Point Pleaeant,

April 29, 1984

~~Pa~~se~~A~-6-~T~hegs~un~da~y~Ti~mes-~~Se~n~tin~e~I=======~;1:
~,'*~--,"'~~.~~-:-;?"~M~idd~le~po~rt~~Ga~lligpo~li~s.~Oh~io-~P~o~in~t~P~«~~sa~n~;!t-~~,,~.,,~~;j\:~~~-=[=):e
; ;=s:;p
;=i:; t;=e==m
==:=i=S=S=:i:n
; ;=g=~b~o~d;=y=,=

Area deaths

• &gt;

'

: Dewey R. Cochran

will be in Letart Falls Cemetery,
I Rtart Falls.

: VINTON - [)pwpy Raymond
:Cochran. 60. died Satun:lay morning
• in the home of Lavonia George, Rt.
Vinton
; Born Aug Jl, 1923, in Gallia
·County, 50n of the late ])pwev E.
;Cochran and Glenna Georg~ Coch-

:I,

.: ran, who surv,ives. he was a World

:war II Arm;· \'~ teran .
: Also sun·i\'ing are a son , Ray·
• mond Junior of Vin ton; thrt'f'
: brothers, MerrUI Jim of Columbus,
: and Charles a nd Or ly n Bob. both of
1 RL 1. Vinton: and fi vf' sisters. Mrs.
:clifford 1MJ I)' 1 McClintick and
: Mrs. Edward 1Jean1 Kruskamp.
•'bolh of Columbus. Mrs. William
• (Ma rgarell Mllchcll of Rt. I ,
:Bidwell , Mrs Freda KlaiberofRt.l ,
:vmton . and Mrs. Burgess !Loui.S~..&gt; l
•Mullins of Rt. 1. Gallipolis.
.
• Hewasalsoprecededmdmthby"
: brother .
: . : Funeral sen ·1ces will be held at1
;P1'll- Monday in Morga n Center
=arristian Holiness Chu rc h. wit h the
~v. Noble Russell officiating.
;tllirial will ill• in Pinp Grove
,. call at
-Cemetery. Frie nds rna_
:McCoy-Moore FunPral Home. \'m : ron, from 2--t and j .LJ p_m _tOOa~
•

.

Noble W. Shot'maker
GALLIPOLIS - FUneral servi·
res were held a ill a.m . Sa tun:lay in
Hopkins Funeral HomP. Mogadore.
for Noblf' W. ShOf'maker, 69,
Mogadore. who died Tuesday attNnoon in Akron City HospilaL
ThP RPv . Donald T. Davies
officiated, and burial was in Hillside
MPmorial P ark. Akron.
Bam April 26, 1914. in Gallipol is,
son of the late William E and Myt1a
Wr lls Shoemaker, hP l"'f'Sided in the
Akron area for m ost of his life. He

was cmployf'd for :~ t _\·rars at
Gene ra l T iro &amp; Rubbor Cu., Akron.
rPtiri.ng in 197..J . Hp wa~a mpmlx_•rof
the Akron Baptist Temple
SuJY i\'ing an hi~ wif(\ I nrz G .
Sh()(&gt;ma ker: .1 son, ( ;ar:.· !\' o f
Akron: two daughters. Mrs. Roboti
!Marle ne! Hudson of Toledo, a nd
Mrs. R a lph 1Bettv .! .1 Mille1· of
:\1ogadon.•; a brot hPr. Clendon of

Ga lli polis; 1hn'&lt;' sis lers. Ha1d
Sh{'('t S a nd Kal hlf'f'n Sirback, hath
of roJu mbus, and Emogpnr Swain
of Gallipolis: six grandc hildren and
rv.·o g-Jl'at -grandchi ldn•n .

Billy J.
E \ 'A.'\iS. \\' \ 'a . - .lusil' Luuc11&lt;~
~'.al' t t'. 9:1 . \l illwood . W.\'J.. died
:niursdaY in Ja ckson CRnf'ral
:Hospit al: }{tplc\. \\ \ 'a. fo llowmg a
'brief illness.
: Sht? wa s J rnt:•rnbPr ol' thf' United
:Methodist Church Jl ,\ pplP C ru1r.
:Ohio. a nd a ltencle&lt;l :Y1iliwood Unill'fl
-MethodiSt Churc h. She w" s a
dnembf'r ot the Ja c k ~on Count~
~ni or Citi?&lt;•rt.'

Club.
.. SurdYing arr thi'f'f' clowghtPrs.
:ivl i!d rrd ScarbetT;· of Coltagf'l·illv.
:W.\'a .. Fa\' Me rica! of Millwood .
;artd Leota Saunders of Seminole.
-Fla.; four sons. Telford of&amp; nwood.
:w .va .. Ashford of P&lt;~r k e rsburg.
;w .\ 'a. , Dan of &amp;•minolP. and .Jac k of
'CullodPn. W \'a .; a sistPr. Ml'.
~aud e Hun ter o f R(l('k CaSIIe.
:i.v .va ; and 22 grandc hildre n. -10
;g-reat -gra ndchildren a nd 11 grca l:great -gra nde hi ldren .
F unera l services \-d JI I::K&gt; hf'ld .11

;,3;30 p .m. toda_v in Casto Funvtal
;Home. Evans. w ith the Rl'l'.
"'William Su Uivan and thf' Rr-1.·.
1\\'ayne&gt; Hi n:zma n of liciatmg ~urial

'

~izt·mort•

F:\'i\NS. \1'\'a. - Bill;· .JO&lt;·
Sizrmo1t'. o,&lt;;_ Colla~e\'il lc•. w \';, .
died Thu r sda:- in Jackson General

HaspiWI , RipiC''· W.Va .. following a
loni(t h1· il lness.
A Na\y· VPIPran, hl' was a formrr
empiO}'Pf' of Kai SC'r A luminum &amp;:

C'hC'mira l forp _·s R..:n·f'nswcx.x:L
W.\'a plan!.
~UJYi\' in g

ar(• hi.;,; "dft:, Betty Lou
Sizf'morr: a da ug ht l'r. Vlrs. Anna
Click of \'irgi nia &amp;•ach. \ ':1; two
sons. Ja OJ(&gt;s of Groton . Conn . Hnrl

F rederick of Coli agc, ·iJic·: tw o
sistf'rs. N f' ll Roggsof BrokC'n A tTOIA' ,
0)\1 {1 ., a nd Nanc:v· Cruikshank of

Clinton : lour brothers, Jakl• of
H1ph . Ned of Cullagl'vilh•. PPte of
Crorg&lt;'town. DeL. and ,)&lt;'n-;· of
\\'oodbridge \'a .; hi.s mothc•r.
l ,.olrtie Har.c:. ht'.l0rger: and fh ·f'
grandch!ldren
F'unf'ral ~1"\ ' if'PS w ill lx' hPid a t 2

p.m .

1(xl ~n

in Casto Funeral Hom&lt;'.

F\·ans. wi th thP HP\ '. H.uss('IJ Bur('h
official ing. Buriu l will bf' in .Jn c k son
Co unt .\· f\.1( •morial G&lt;:~rdc n s.
( ·orI agf'\ ·till '

.

Vinton man faces hearing
ehargf'd by· Cit\ pJiicr with grand

!heft .
: Mul lin s was

arrP~ 1 f'd

IJy IXJiic1~

fhursda; nig h I alli' r ill' '' Uegrdl.l
shopliftf'd a l'ar ton of cigarPtt es
(rom \.a llipo! JS Foodland . :Sc Third
~ \ 'E' . Bee a uS£' it \\·a.-; !VI u llin~· S('('() nd
theft offC'nSC'. policf' prrpdrPd a
ij-rand theft cit&lt;J tion ag&lt;Jinst him .
: ,\ di sordPrb· conducT cha rgf'
~gainst

Pam

Johnson.

HI

·1

Gal li polis. was dis mi "Sf'd ~1 1 r equr·st
of prO.";.P('U t ion
Tv.:o nwn - F r&lt;.~ nk iP E Caqx•n -

tN . :!9. Rt. ~- \ 'inton. chargl'll with
DWI a nd spo:Hling. anrl .lam rs I{ _
Warlr. 2-1. Addisnn. charged wllh
0W f and IC'ft of C"Pnfpr - t ·ntf'rf'd not
gu tlt v plPas and wpn· _..,c h(--'Ciulf'd for

p~1 ·1 riab

~ l an'd
~md

: CALLIPO I.IS -

The foll owmg

ciouples fi lM for marlia g0 licf'n.'-1'..,
Olis past Wf'C'k in Call i &lt;.~ Count\

ProbatP Court .
: &amp;ti S. Brainard , 1g, Call ipolis.
tostauranl e mplov('('. and 13f·ir;· S.
Johnson. 18, Ga llipolis. res1au r:m1

Ca rr}(~ nt f'r

WadC''s bond \.,·as coni inuNl

Ct •tald E Bums. :14.1RI7 Ch"'lnu l
St. (' hargf'(] wtth OWI. was g i\"(•n
lmt il \\ .Nln P.~.cl:l~ · !OPnfPr ;_ t pl(•a. HP
\.\."a-" put o n $J.( U l rf"'('()_gniza nc{'

bond Susa n K 1-lurdtam , .10. Rt. 1.
CaUipolis. c•nt&lt;• n'&lt;l a nor gu il t\' plr a
to fa ilu rf' to ol)('\ . a traffic rontrol
riPvirf' a nd hrr cas(' was cont inuf'd
until Thursda~· f,-) r ~ hf'arin g.
Tht• co urt i ~s uPd !ht• follov..i ng
finPs dgai n ~l Dadd S. Walkt'r. 21.

Ga lli a St. . un 1he following
chargrs· $11 for unsafP V(•h iclr: S l ~
for failu IT' to &lt;; top for a stop ~iJ:.,rn : $ H
;mel $44 on two coun ts of s ~ing .
rrs pcct i\"f' l~· : and $.~J. &lt;.t suspc"ndf'd
: \0-d&lt;:~\ ja il st'r1 1Pnn• &lt;Jnd I X month"
prubat inn for no OJX'rat ur·" li l'r-ns('
Michaf'l R TUmPr. !./, 24-(l l .!

Ja cksnn Pike. forfl'i trd $411 bond lor
I{ _

C'IP; Jr

di stancr-, ;md ('a rol \· n

Whittinl'(ton. 21. F: urc•ka Star

Hou1r. folif'ilt'(! $40 txmd fo r assun'Cl
d! 'J r distam 'f'
Fntif'it ing bond fm sJX'('dJng ""-'f' rl'

Hl'an V Easlr1·. :&gt;:J. RL 1. llidwrll.
$-'IX William L Nessclrolle, l'il,
Sou til l'irnnJ. $.1R; Lany D. P ell'r&lt;&gt;.
:17. Rt . 2. Cht'sapeakc. $.1H: SpencN
C Clrnn. ~9. Bass&lt;'tL Va .. $.'11: l&lt;ei l h
W. .Jackson . 24 . Rt :\, Ca tlipolis, $.19

ia County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad

~ ~

Viet• Pn'S idcn t Wcil ll'l' Mo nda lP for

te le\.·is ion. radio and new spaper

ads.
However. HPnke l - who predicted the Colorado S!'na tor will win.
Ohio's May R primary- sa id Ha n
has a bettPr organi?.ation than
Manda le or thP Rev. Jesse Jackson .
He sa id the can1paign has ll field
offi ces a nd about 3.800 grass-routs
volum E'f' rs that will mol'(' than offset
p ho n~ banks, m a ilings and other
support Monda!P is receiving from
organ ized laoor.

Ol i1w "Pudgr· · HPnke l of Clpwla nd . thP senator's national cam pa ign dirf'Ctor. told ;-1 nPw s confer·
f'nc-p Friday that rvC'n in accepting

monc\', some$5!XI.fXII, Mondale
broke a promise hr mad e in 19&amp;1.
lh~

"All candidates makl' promiSE's.

but

h~

broke one

be fore the

ca mpt.J ign was rvrn ovPr. · · Hf'nke!
said

Thf' broa.rlcast a nd nf'w s papPr
ads arr ('XJX'&lt;' If'd ID IX"gin this
\\"('('kf'ncl or po...; _..,ihl\

M o nd a~· .

but

EA'&gt; T ME ICS - Offi cers for Ihe
19R--i-H.l

sc hool

.\ ·r·ar

hcw p bfof&gt;n

rlrclcd b1· lc:aSicrn Local School
Di,lrict Chapter 44R of the Ohio
Associat ion of Sc hoo l E:mployr"f's .
Thr groUIJ inc ludt&gt;s Franc is
Fk·nt'(lum. pn.•sid1•nt: Huth A nn
Scur brough . vif'P pt"f''jidc nt: Barhar:l Young, SC'C' rrtar:v. a nd Harba rJ J-b nnum, t r&lt;'&lt;Ls u rf'r.

The group wi ll be inst alled al the
Mav 2H mPl'ling 10 be h&lt;'lil at 7:30
p.m . "'!~ astern High Sch()()l

Emergency runs
PUMEHOY -

Four ca lb \\'Cn'

ansv..n""C'd b\· local units Frida ~ · and

Sat un:la, ·

mornm g

the

Me ics

\ount~· l-:mPrgf'nC"y Mrdical St'n'i
&lt;'PS rf'po r·t s.
AI ~: ~1 p.m .. Pomrm~· wl' nl to
Lihc·rt\" LanC' for FlorencC' R.eynolc.ls, takl'n to Vr h•rans M0morial

Hospital ; Middleport at 11 : I ~ a. m .
took Dora Hl·nmc: n from l{utlanrl
Si r('(•! t oVC'tera n ~ . a ndat HI: 1Sp.m.,
took HomC'r Bradshaw from Gr&lt;J nt
S1J«•t to VPIPran !--&gt;.

Saiu i'Ciav Jl 4: 41J a.m . Tup)JPrs
Plilins took C'.rl'n£' .Jonf'S. Rogrr
B isSC'Jl and .kff CowdP0" !rom an
a ut o accident &lt;.~ 1 Lo ng lJott om to

NOW OFFERING

FREE

Ambulance Service
8 A.M. til 12 Midnight
24 Hour Service
Saturda y &amp; Sunday

GALI.U' OLIS - The Gallia Meigs Post of 1he Ohio Highway
Pa trol cited Kevin E . Bloomer. 17,
Rt 1. Non hup. for failu re to control
following an accident on County
Road 411 in Green Township Friday.
Bloomer was notihbound in hi s
picku p truck when it reportedly
went off the road. The pickup went
over a n C'mbankmPnt and st ruck a
lf'nce.
The drivPr w as not injured in the

:1:20 p.m. accidmt .

Placed in jail
GALLIPOLIS - Lodged Friday
m Ga llia County .Ja ll wpre Ronald E.
Smoot . 23. Rt 3, Chesapeake, DWI ,
and Stanley E . Medrano, 19,
Hammond, Ind . driving unde r
suspPns ion

430 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH . 45631
1-614-446-0840

•

••

·-

•

POMEROY - Meigs countlans wishing to follow the absentee
route In casting ballots In the May 8 primary elections have until
noon Saturday to do so.
Absentee balloting will be handled Monday through Friday from
8::1la.m. to 4: :llp.m. at the MelgsCountyBoardofElectionsofflceln
the Masonic Ternpfe building in Pomeroy, and from 9 a.m. until noon
Saturday.

Permit transfers requested
GALLIPOLIS - Transfer of liquor permits for two Gailla County
rustnesses are now being processed by 'the Ohlo Department of
Liquor Cont roL
William F. Jolmston, doing business as Riverview Bypass
Carryout, Kanauga, Is transferring hls C-2 (wine for carryout I and
C·2X (beer for carryaut) pPrmits to I &amp; J Carryout , doing business in
the same location.
The D-2 (wine for on-premises consumption and carryout and
D-2X (beer for on-premises consumption and carryoutl permits held
by Jolm W. and Karen L. Simmons, doing business as Merrym!nt
Tavern, 89 Garfie ld Ave .. are being transferred to Lorena K Mullins ,
doing business as Garfield Bar &amp; Grlll in the samP location.
The average time for processing a pPrnn!t transfer Is 45 days,
according to thP department.

21.0 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR

TRADING

PLACES

Cheshire cleanup scheduled

fRJbAYTiiE 13

1
N

THE FINAL CHAPTER

NOTICE
An Auction Will Be Held
May 14th at 10 A.M. Disposting of Real Estate and
Personal Property of Gallia
Roller Mills, Inc. at 4th &amp;
Grape Street - Gallipolis,
Ohio.

CHESHIRE -A nnual clean up WL'&lt;'k in Cheshire will be held May
7·12, according to Lois Snyde r, village clerk.

Free clothing day Monday
CHESHIRE- Gallia-Me igs Corrununity Action Agency will stage
its free clothing day from 9 a .m . until noon Monday for a ll residents
needing clothing.
The agency's clolhing bank is located in the former high school
building in Cheshire.

High school group returning
POMEROY- Meigs High School's Collegium Musicum m e mbers
arrived safely in Philadel phia for the ir three-day visit, according to
word received by Pat Thoma.
Mrs. Thoma has been named liaison person for the trip and has
requested parents to listen to their scanners and WMPO lhis
wrekend for any wocd from the young people.
The group will be in touch with Mrs. Thomas tonight whe n they are
scheduled to arrive in Marl~tta an the return trip. Through scanners
and the radio station, Mrs . Thoma wUI advise parents on picking up
their children at the high schooL

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2-posltion adJustable freezer
shelf rollers and more lor convenie'nce. See all the Gibson
refrigerators on our display

floor today.

BIG TOP
PRICE

BIDWELL- Post office boxes are now avaUa ble for renta l a t the
.
Bidwell post office, said Postmast er Roger Ret's.
The boxes which are accessible when..ver the lobby !SOpPn , are 14
inches long ~d range in size from threE' inc hes by four inc hes to five
lnches by six inches.
Rees said boxes are In demand, not only because of convenienCP.
but also because they providP greater securi ty for mall when locked .
The postmaster added that a "caller service" is available. This is a
system by which mall is held for customers in special ~tacles
and turned ove r to customers when the~· call for their m a il , he
explained .
.
Caller service is for c ustomers who receive more mall than
available post otllce boxes can hold; for c ustome rs who want to rent
more than a maximum of five boxes: or for those who prefe r caller
servlxe when boxes are a vall a ble.
Information may be obtained from the post office or by calling

3Sil-lliD2.

Gibson~
PEARLS

SPRING
TENNIS SHOE SALE

CHAPMAN SHOES

Gibson

Post office boxes available

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SELECT GROUP OF
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FOR MEN,
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Gibson·

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Ka iser Aluminum &amp; Chemical Corp.'s
Ravenswood fabrica lion plant has been dPsignated a "cert ified
supplier" by Grumman AerospaCP Carp. for "cont lnued high l..ve l of
quality.''
The designation means that quality control on all products
manufactured by Kaise r tor Grumman has been dane by Kaiser
prior to shipping.
Grumman launc hed il s certified supplier program on a pilot basis
in 1982. DuP to the succPss of that test, the program has been made
pPrnnanent.

GALLIPOLIS
360 Second Ave .•446-0699

OFF

9 A.M. TILL ???

GALLIPOLIS- Gallia rountians have been reminded by County
Auditor Ronald K Canaday that Monday is the last day to file forms
lor pPrsonal prope11y taxes.
If more time is required for filing, an ext&lt;&gt;nsion of up to ~5days may
be granted .
The auditor's afficP reponed tha t for the first time this year, a
$10,CXXJ exe mption is being allowed on propPrt y assessed a t more
than $10,CXXJ. However, those not liable to pay if they met't that
exemption must s till file form s with Ihe a uditor 's office.
If forms are not filed on time, the propPrty owner can be pPnalized
up to $5.CXXJ.If help Is nf'eded with the forms, auditor's e mployws will
assist propPrty owners in filli ng out and submitting the fornns.

@)

20°/o

GIVE THE GO AHEAD FOR
RUTLAND FURNITURE
COMPANY'S
BIG TOP TENT SALE!

Personal property tax deadline set

Join
Today and Receive
These Plus Many Other Valuable
Benefits.

( FRANK'S PAWN SHOP

•

DAN AYIIROYD EDDIE MURPHY

Including Travel Guides · Camping
Guides · Tnp Planning Selvice'

VISIT US TODAY!

•

FRI.·SAT.-SUN.

LOOKING FOR
A ROAD MAP'?
®HAS THEM!!!!

®

)

Kaiser plant honored

Driver cited

446-8322

QUICK CASH LOANED 6 DAYS A WEEK

•

description of the killing was
accurate.
·
" l don't agre&lt;" with every detail
but I do agree in subst ance,'·'
Douglas said
·
"Old you sttikc her with a
harruner?" Donahue asked. "And
did that cause her death• "
d""
"Yes, sir," Douglas respon &lt;v
calmly to both questions.
Theadmisslonprovokedanangri'
outburst by Miss Benedict's boy·
friend, Clarence "JR" Rogers.
"Shut up! " Rogprs screamed at
Douglas. and he shouted aJ)
obscenity.
Douglas a ppeared unfazed bui
apologized .
·
"I have caused tha t farnlly a great
dPalofgrief a ndwarry,andfor tha tl
am sorry," Douglas said. "I would
also Uke to apologize to my own
family because I caus. 'd them ~
great deal of angu ish and ;'lief."
Shirley Benedict. the ·.1 ctlm's
mol her, leaned against RogL rs a ncj
wept. Rhonda Benedict, thevictim '~
s ister. fought back tears.
lovestigators said Miss Benedicl
c harged Douglas $100 JI1 hour fo r
sex, forcing him to stea l to mainta in
the rela tionship.
Douglas faces up to :!0 years in
p rison under the plPa bargain. If
convicted of murder. he could have
received a life sente nC1". Sentencing
r-w_as_ sc_hed
__
ul_ed_fo_r_M_a_v_7_ _ __

Arrests made
GALLIPOLIS Two Mason
County women were charged and
arrested by city police Friday for
shoplifting at two Gallipolis stores.
Arrested at 4: 31 p.m . at the
Kroger store in the Silver Bridge
Plaza for allegedly taking two
packets of ba tteries was ])plla M.
Hughart, 56. Point Pleasant.
Apprehended at the Jones Boys
Siore, 137 Pine St .. was KathPm
Stanley, 65. Southside. W.Va. She
was arrested at J: 34 p.m .
Also cited by police were Roge r A.
Spurlock, 21, Rt. 2, Patriot, failureto
control; Wayne 0. Bergdoll. 42. 500
Oak Drive. speeding; Johnny
Vv'hite, 26, 500SecondAve .. follo"'ing
too closely ; Norman C. Adkins . 19.
S15 Second Ave., assured clear
distance ahead.

I

--Local Briefs:---

Go

WE'll LEND YOU THE MONEY
LOANS ON PERSONAL PROPERTY
'

111th a comparat ively meager
budget of about $150,CXXJ.
Candida les in most s tatewide
races haw spPnt rwif'1" tha t much
and more in recent years for

r('{'riving m onP_v throu g h so-calJf'd
df'lega If' committ( '('S C'\'f'n 1hough
1hey· Wf'ff' disbandf'd and arr gC'tting
1hf'ir monf'y bac k .

Vrtrrans .

NEED CASH?
.,

Ga ry Hart's m C'dia ad\'C' rt ising for
Ohio's prirnary willcrit icizC' forml' r

~1()1:1

~mployw .

. Randa ll L. Corbin . 21. I~ Pine Si
Caborer. and Lisa E Full~r. 21,
BidwPII. K Mali emplu;cl'l'.
Chest e r R Hall. 44. Hend••rsan.
W .Va .. machinC'opPrator. a nd Bel tv
L. Bing. 19, Rt 2. Ga llipo lis. senior
Cl tizPns emp!oyl'&lt;'.
• Timot h\' R. Stout . 27 , Rt. 1,
~idwell. collegP student. and CynQ-.ia L. Butcher , 25, Rt. 2. BidwPil.
Oncmployed.
• Paul Hollingshead II , IR, Rt. 3.
Bidwe ll. programmer. M idd!Pton
e:sratPS. and Lynn Ma rcum. 19. Rt.
~.Bidwell. waitress.

By ROBERT E. MOLER
AS50Cia1Rd Pre'" Writer
COLUMBUS. Oh1o !APt -Sen .

w;1 s

on Sl .lll() m·ognizancr bond

assUJY"d

Fil.- for marriage

on May 7

Hart ads will knock
Mondale contributions

Officers elected

·'

· GALL IPOLfS - ,\ pn •l irnin arv
hParing has bl'C'n Sl'l for Wf'drll'scla\
in Ga llipolis Mu nicipal Cow1 fm
~: a .\11.(' MuUin.s . Rt . '2 . Vin ton.

OPEN HOUSE SLATED - An open house has been scheduled by
stall at Gallipolis Developmental Cenl&lt;lr, starting We&lt;Mesday and
running though untO next Sunday. The open house will be conducted
from 10 a.m. lo 3 p.m. Wednesday through Satunlay 1111d I p.m. lo 5 p.m.
Sunday . Guid&lt;'&lt;l tours have been plwmed to Introduce visitors IAl new
buildings, programming and lifestyles for 3~ cllents. Large IAlur
groups, such as high school classes, are requested to call 441&gt;-1642,
extension 310, or the s uperinl&lt;lndent's office to arrange a tour. Small
groups may report w the dining pavilion durbtg the specified time.
Evening hour.; will also be accornmodaled with advance notice.

missing.
"It would have been folly to go to
trtal,'' Thomas Troy, attorney for
TUfts University Prof. William H.
Douglas, 42, said Friday. " I've
realized for perhaps a few weeks."
Douglas originally pleaded innocent to first-degree murder in the
death of Robin Benedict, 21, a
graphic artist last seen at his home
on March 5, 19&amp;3.
But just as opening arguments
were to begin, prosecutor John
Klvlan said Douglas had agreed to
plead guilty to a lesser charge of
manslaughter and would show
pollee where he had disposed of the
bod YKlvlam sa id he discussed the plea
with the victim's family on Thurs·
day and they had agreed to it .
KJvlan said he could prove his
case using labora tory tests on blood
and brain matter found in Miss
Benedict's car, which was a ban doned inNPwYorkCity,andachunk
of bra in tissue found in the pockel of
a shirt in Douglas' home.
Douglas was asked by Judge
RogPr C. Donahue whether Klvlan's

The

A bsentee voting deadline Saturday

suspect confesses
DEDHAM, Mass. (AP) _ An
anatomy professor confessed at hls
murder trtal to bludgeoning his
young lover wlth a sledgeharruner
because the evidence was "insurmountable," his attorney says despite the fact that her body is

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Pag!

The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis,

Oh~nt

April 29, 1984

Plea.nt, W. Va.

Ion theri er

Summit County officials try halting 'swingers' convention'
AKRON. Ohio (AP) The
manager of a hotel that Is the
advertised site of a swingers'
convention

says

a

prosecutor' s

challenge of the event gives him a
reason to try to cancel it.
The convention, according to
advertisements, wouldfeatureorgy
rooms. X-rated \1drotapes a nd
"tota lly enclosed S~&gt;Wg areas."
11 faces a legal challenge from
Summit County f&gt;rosf&gt;cutor Lynn
: Slaby. Sa;mg he does not want the
· c ity to become " thesexcapitalofthe
· w~rld." Slaby asked Friday for a

tempol'!il)' restraining onler wxler
Ohio's obscenity law. A hearing was
set for Wednesday.
Ohio Connection magazine has
been promoting the convention for couples only - as a "Frontier
Frolic" at the Cascade HoUdaylnn.
Hotel manager Mlchael Lynch
sald Slaby's action had given the
hotel Uhe opportunity It Deeded to
cancel the contract.
"The Cascade Holiday Inn on Uhe
Plaza has notified Mag Corp.
officials of its Intent to cancel the
May 4 and 5, 1984, convention,"

Lynch said.
However, Thomas G. Knoll, a
lawyer for Motel Management Co.,
which runs the hotel, said, "I think
that was In error. There's been no
cancellation of the agreement"
Knoll said he ls cheCking on
grounds for cancella tion and said he
entation
by the magazine as one
was looklnglntoposslblemlsrepresposslb1llty. He did not elaborate.
"We w1ll walt for the outcome of
(Wednesday's) bearing," Knoll
said.
The prosecutor sald he would also

lssueasubpoenaforhotelrecordsof
all persons who had registered to
attend the convention, describing
the regtstratlon records as lmpoctant so tie could get the names of
"potential witnesses" who might be
called to testify.
"I think that will have some

more of Detroit lSsued a contempt

c itation F'riday against the Erie
Supply Co. for interfering with the
grand jury's activity. HP also
ordel'f'd the finn to pay $7!!0 In back
wages to Ronnie Webb, Norwa lk, a
$7".;() civil fine and court costs.
Tlw U.S. Justic'' [);cpartnlcnt
&lt;if'fmdf'd Webb in the cose. th&lt;' first
public

i..I C'ti\' ity

rC'latrd

to

lhC'

probe of Batllsti, chief
fcdNal jud[:e fur the :-Jort hern
District of Ohio.
"WPbb was intimidated by his
1~ - month

C'mployer

his C'mployf&gt;rs

clischarged him only because he

served on thatgrandjury," Gilmore
said In his ruling .

State Bank No. 983
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries)

The Commercial and Savings Bank
of Gallipolis

Erie Supply had claimed Webb
was irresponsible and violated rules
in the company' s handbook.
Webb contended during the hearing that he lost a promotion and
ult imately his job because of his
grand jury service.
The Sp&lt;'C'Ial grand jury. which
Gilmore Is overseeing, was empaneled in March 1983 after a req uest
from the Public Integrity Section of
the Justil'&lt;' Department. The panel
has met an average of four days a
month since March 1983 .
Webb testified that his ju ry
service led to a reduction In his work
hours and kept a supe1visor from
recommending him to become
manager of a branch outlet of the
plumbing and electrical supply
business.

"He said It wouldn't be feasible for
them to put me into that position
because they could not afton! to send
someone to cover for me two days a
week whlle I was on the grand jury,"
Webb testlfled .
He said he was placed on
maintenace chores in January,
adding that he thought he was helng
pushed out of a job.
But Jeffrey Savage, part owner of
the firm, said hours were cut for
nearly all employees after poor
business In l~l He sald Webb's
hours were reduced because he was
the highest -paid counter sales
person.
Webb, Savage sa id, had refused
reinstatement of the two days of
work when offered them. Later
testimony revealed the work was In
a store requiring a 100-mile roundtrtp drive each day.

of Gallipolis, Galli a County, In the Stale of Ohio at the close of business on March Sl,
1984.
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from de pository Ins titutions
a . Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin .................. 2,306,000.00
b. Int erest-bearing b a lances .............................. . ........................... 1,000,000.00
Securities .................................... _............... _..... ... _... .... _.................. 22,266.000.00
Federal funds sold a nd securiti es purchased
under agreeme nts to resell ............. ... ................. _.... _....... .. _........... 3,900,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and Leases, ne t of unearned Income ......... 18,016,000.00
LESS: All owa nce for loan and lease losses ............. 190,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned In come,
allowance . and reserve ...... __ .. .. ..... ..... ............. ....... ..... ........ ......... 17 ,826,000.00
Premises and flxed assets tln cludlng cap italized leases I ................... 874,000.00
........ ........................
____ _ ........... .... 773,000.00
Other assets..
Total assets
... _____ .... ............
. ........... .48,945,000.00
LIA RILITIES
Depos it s:
In dom estic offices ...........
---------------- ---- · ...... ---- .. .41,139 ,000.00
111 Nonlnt erest-hearln g ............. ..
. --. 5,517,000.00
t2) Interest -bearing ....... _______ .... .
. - 35,622,000.00
Federal fund s purchased a nd securit ies sold
under agreements to repurc hase ......... ____ ................................... 2,600.000.00
Other ll a bilit ies ... ... .. ... __ _ ... __ ................................................... _.... 601 ,000.00
Total liabilities
.................... ....
. ....... ................. .44,340,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Comm on stock ... ..... . .... ... .............
. ..................... . ............. 900,000.00
Sur plu s .. .. . . ... .. . .. .. . . . .. . . .. .. . . .. .... ____ .......... __ .... __ .... __ .. __ ___ ... .. . .......... 2,850,000.00
.. ..... .. .. .. ...
. ...... 855,000.00
Undi vided profit s and ca pital r eserves....... .
Total equity capItal...
........ __ .. __ ............ __ ... __ .... __ ......... _....... __ .. ___ 4,605,000.00
Total liabilities, limi ted-life preferred stock, and
eq ulty capital....... .
. ... __ .......... _..... ___ ..... _...... _.... _....... _..48 ,945,000.00

We, the und ers ign ed direc tors , a !lest the correctness of this Report of Condi tion I Includi ng the supporti ng schedules) and declare tha t lt has been exa mined by
us a nd to th e best of our knowledge and be lief has been prepared ln conformance
wit h official in struction s a nd Is true a nd correct
Dona ld L. Cra nce
D . Pa ul Davies - Directors
Alva D. S hoemaker

with federal Inspectors or "there will be no real
safety." Zegeer and others spoke w the National
Independent Coal Oper..tors Association meeting.
( AP Laserphoto) .

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Pomeroy man magical at both horne and work
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY He's been
desc ribed a s a "mystifying,
mirthful man of magic", "Amer
lea's amazing magician." a n
"electric Illusionist" - Pomeroy's Lee Jacobs, a n entertainer, a uthor, publisher, and
bookselle r. who operates a

highly successful mall-order
s upply bus iness out of hls home
on Butternut Ave.
The tall lanky Jacobs of Lee
Jacobs Productions can be seen
mosl any afternoon at the
Pomeroy Post Office mailing
out dozens of bundles and boxes
of magic !licks, m emorabilia.
full-col or poster reproductions.

and many of his ov·m OOoks as
well as those of his wife. Miriam
Ruthchi ld, an astrologist.
And they're going around the
world.
He is considered the larges t
reproducer of rare magic mf'morabiJia in 1he business.

Jacobs, who has appeared
with success on telev ision and
s uch "greats" as Mmme Pearl,
Henny Youngman, David
Brenner, Ray and Joey Heatherton, The Harmonalrcs, Connie
Smith, the Gospel Harmony
Boys, Tom T Hall. Bob Braun.
and even Miss America. has
concent rated more on his mail~
order business than petiormances for the past several years.
It is nol unusua l. however. fo r
him lo jet across t h~ country for
an appearance.
Jacobs credits the late
Tommy W indsor of Marie tta. a
ve1eran r iver showman,

tent

show a nd theatrica l ente rtainer,
with teaching him about 1he
publishing a nd magic su pply
business.

AROUND
THE
WORLD - Lee Jacobs and hi.s wiff',
astrologist Miriam
Ruthchild, seen at
right, operate Lee Jacobs product ion.~ from
their home in Pomeroy. He i.~ said to the
the country:~ lnrKest
reproducer of rare
magic memorabilia.
At the left , Jacobs
works with some of hi.s
"act," from the top are
Jacobs with hi.s cat
Houdinki, arn:l below
with a puppet he
utilizes.

NEW CHEVROLETS &amp; OLDSMOBILES
WE'VE GOT 'EM
Check our lot
We will not be undersold
•
Our selection IS big and the Prices are right.
See Roger Dillard, Mike Sickels, Terry Hamilton or Morris Sheets

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.
JIM
MINK

1616 EASTERN AVENUE

446-3672

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BILL GENE
JOHNSON

'

1'

stages across the count ry wi t h

State of Ohio. Count y of Gallia, ss:
Swo rn to a nd s ubsc ribed before me this 27th day of Apr il, 1984 and 1 hereby cer tify that I a m not an officer or director of this bank .
My mmmlsslon expires August 1, 1986. Christi na Day , Notary P ublic.

I 29, 1984

Sunday

ELECTRIC ILLL'S/ONJST - l"ec· Jacobs from Pomeory magu:wn, illusU.mi.~ t .
publisher and mail
order magic supplier
- ha~ I mvelt•d ext en.1ively throughout the
United Stat('.~ in that
capacity, and crnlit .~
wte Marietta -~lww­
man, lf'flt ,,hwr nr1d
theatrical entertainer
Tnmmv• ff'imLmr with
teaching him al•out
publi.~hir~g and thl'
mutric supp/_,-lm.&gt;itii'-'·'One parrm•r in rlw act
;., his mr , Huwlirrl.-i.

Federal Reserve District No. 4

I. the undersigned officer, do hereby decl are that this Re po r t of Condition (i ncluding the s upporting sched ules! has been prepar ed In conformance with official
instructions and Is true to the best of my know ledge and belief.
Wayne L. Niday
Executive Vice Presiden t &amp; Cashier

COAL CONFERENCE - David Zegeer, a fonner
coal operalorwhonow heads the U.S. Mine Safety and
Health i\dminlstr.Uion, told a L'Oal conference in
Le"ington, Ky. Friday that opernrors must cooperate

Sectionl gj

Theadsays,lnput: "Aluxurlous
northeastern Ohio botel,excluslvei;Y
booked for our weekend of pleasure,
will be tranSfonned Into a carnal
corral where sexy marshals will
beckon you to break all !be laws and
daring dance-hall girls will shOw you
some brand new moves."

r•·-------------~-----;.·------------~

Fired grand juror wins back job
lDLEOO, Ohio iAP) A
Norwalk plumbing supply firm has
been ordered to rehire an emp loyee
It fln&gt;d for serving on a Sp&lt;'('ial
federal grand jury investigating
C.S. District .Judge Frank J.
13attisti.
U.S. Distlirt .Judge Horaee Gil -

Impact on !be attendance," he said.
Slaby said the $235 to $245
registration fee tor the convention
could be construed as an admission
charge to an event With an obscene
performance. He said he may even
use the magazine's advertisement
In his arguments tor an InJunction.

'mimes- jenthtel

"Prac li cally every thing good
I learned about S('IJing magic. I
learned from Tommy," J acobs
says. "And I learned more about
perfonnlng just from argu ing
with him , than I did from a nyone
else .
One lesson he says he learned
well from Windsor " was to kee~
my operations home based in a
small town, to limit costs and
overhead, so that my prices
could be kept reasona ble "
Jacobs and Ms. Ruthchild
wlite many of the books and
bookle ts Lee Jacobs Productions publish. They market
selected books and t1icks by
others, together with used books

and some collector s· material.
Included in the publica tions of
Jacobs Productions is a series un
publicity a nd promot ion for
magicians. a directory of thea trica l agencies, and a detailed
manual enti tled "The Rt•al
Met hods a nd Sl'ci't'ts of thP
Cha llenge Escape from 75 Feet
of Rope," a fea t Jacobs perfOims himsPif to generate
hl'adline ~ maklng public it y.

1-lowrvcr, 1he most popular
Sp&lt;'C'ialt y of lN Jacobs Pruduc
lions is the r eproduction of ra rr.

vintage post ers of famous magic ians inc luding 11oudini, Th ur-

ston, Blackston. Dant(•, LE•llar.
Chu ng Lig So. Lero)'. Talma.
Bosco. a nd many ot hers.
.J acobs. son of Kathryn Jacobs
and the la te Robert Jacobs.
Pomeroy bu sinessma n. has
been interested in magic for as
long as he can l'f'member Hr
says he was performing for
famlly and fri ends a! the age of
five . a nd by the t imc he was
e ight . h~ had given school shows
and was adver1ising h1 s availability as a magi c ian ror part irs.
While al Pomeroy High SchooL
hP bPcame a rf'a il~' scrious
student of magic.
J acobs a ttended Ohio Unive rsity where hr r ec(• ived a mas
te r 's in English a nd went on to a
position of English ins tructor at
the uni vers ity .
But teaching soon lost out as
the pu blishing a nd magi c s upp l_\'
businC'ss and his personal appearance popularitv grew. Jar

obs played rr·so r1 s. nightc lub!-i
and telf&gt;vi sion. Hr IX'rfUim&lt;:'d for
co rfX)r ations and d\·ic organiza tions. al shopping cpntf'rs and
cou nt!' fairs .
Howpvf'r, Jacob~ tT'C' Jll~ as a

highlight

uf

his

carr•f'r

an

invitat ion 10 appear bC'forr thf'
New York Cil!' Parrnt Assem-

bly of the S&lt;x·tcty of Anwrican
Magi cian s. In thi s show. thf'
imaginat ive Jacobs pt-rformf'd
lx&gt;forP an f'XJrting audif'ncp2:)() profP.ssional magicians.

Jacobs is a member of that
Soctety a long with tht• New York
Magic Tablt•. the Internat ional
Brot herhood of MagicJans, the
American

Gui ld

o1

VariPI\'

Artists, the Magicians All ian~
of the E ast ern Sw t&lt; •s. a nd Dr
Rloch's ln stil utr of H_l·pnotLsls.
Although to man.\· Pomcruv.
Oh io rn a\. be' an unknov.-11
communi ty, to mogir f'nt hu sl asts around thr world. Lf"f'
.Jacobs- through his talf'nt, hi ~
unique ab lt it \· 10 come up with
the novel. and hi ~ promorlonal
abilitif's - h3s "m&lt;~gieall\'" put
P omPm\' on thf• m;1p.

�April29, 1984
Page

B-2

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Me igs Coun ty
POMEROY -The MPigs Count\'
S&lt;Pnior CitizP ns Cen tf"r . Mu ltx-rry
H eight~ . Pom C"my. h as srhf&gt;dulf'&lt;i
the fo llowing ac ti\· itif's for thf' WC'f'k

of April .'l(J.May t
Physical Fitness.
Monday 11:40 a.m .: Sq uare Dance. 1-3 p .m .
Tu&lt;'Sda\' - Phys ical Fi tness.
II : 40 a~-: Chorus Practice. 1-2

F:Jcl~rwal k

at 1 p.m .. begi nning at
th&lt;' M iddleport Park by thP pool for
two mile w alk a nd reTurn .
rPfr f'Sh m ent s of fr uit punc h and
l'OUk if'S w ill bfo Sf'rvPd follo wing thC'
wa lk F Xt~rd~P Cl ass a t T 11 p .m
i:J

p.m .: ExPJT iSl' C l ;.~ss, 3: 15p. m .
Wt&gt;d m•sday - Soci al Secur i ty
RPpr espntat i\·p a t thC' Center from

F'rillay - PH ysical F itness . 11: 40
a.m .: Bingo. 1·2 p .m .
Thf' S,C.nior ISu tr ition Prngram
mf' n u for thC' wwk i-'" :
Monda\· - W iener . sauf'r kr au l.
mashed · potatOf's. bread. mixed

10 a .m . to 12. :~1 p.m .. Physic al
F it nC'ss. 11. ~0 a. m .. Bingo, 1-2
p.m .: Bowling. I. 30 p.m .: Paint mg
Clas~. 2--t p.m .. Lois Pa uley· will b('
in!" I r u('ting a begi nning pe~inlln g

Gallia County

fruit .
Tuesday - Baked cube steak In
gravy, hash brown pot atoes. broc coli and caultnowe r . biscuit .
pudding.
Wed nesday -

GALLI POLIS - Activities for
the week of April JG-May 4 at the
Senor C!tlzens Ce nter loca ted at 220
Jackson Ptke are as follows:
M onday. April 30 - Chorus. 1-3
p.m .: Ga\ ll a County Sc hool s Art
Exhibit this week: Socia l Security
Exhibit all this m onth.
Tuesday, M ay 1 - S.T.O.P.

P orcupine m eat ·

ba lls in mushr oom gravy, m as hed
pota toes, tossed salad , brea, straw:
berry gelatin with fruit cockt ail .
Crea med baked
Thursday chicken, sweet potatoes . pear with
cheese, ch()('o\ate no bake cookie.
Friday - Ham loaf . buttered
peas . krau t salad. brown bread.
plums.
Choice of milk. coffee or tea
st'n •ed with rr eal. Call the Cent er at
992-2161 to make r eservation for
your m eal before the day you plan

•
AUCtlOll

rontrt"butt"ons
• Sought
belng
\ •.'

to eat.

POMEROY -

P Jul~

.lmn Swin -

rlf&gt;i l b.·camf' tht • br idf' o f ChJr J~ ~ s
F n 'Ck&gt;rick t'h:..mcf'y· in ct Marc h JO
\\'(&gt;dd ing at thl' L:nitf'CI Pt •ntN·osta l
( 'hu n ·h o f M1fl d lf•po11 Thf • 7· ;l,IJ p .m
candlpllght cPrPmnn.\· wa~ IX"r
fnnnPrllw thf' fl('\ '. Clark H.l kt•r.

hours.
Fort't'St TUm&lt;'r of At ht'ns has
dona ted his scrvicr s as auc1 ionC'C' r
for the sa le and numerou s contribu
lions have t:Je('n received from an
appeal by !.h&lt;' sorority chapter s for
do nations. Among the antiques
being offered a re a pump or gan ,
pictu J'(&gt;s and pi ctu fC' fra m es, je-

S~TLI(' U S('

\\' J~

pi'P\'Idt ·d tl.\'
M r~. RoSf' Ann J r nk i n ~. nrgan i!"t.
cmd M r s. Bonn il' 1-klkC'r. pw n ist.
\rilh .Jo hn Lis lr. soloi.&lt;-;t. c,i ngi nc_

welry ,

records,

glasswar C'

and

·'Thr• Wt'&lt;lcl tng Song ·

dJshes. There w ill be exer ctse bikes.

(;iw•n tn ma rn agP t1.' hPr p.an ·n t"
,lfld (~I 'OI Wtl lcJ rhP tillar h\ h1·r
l;n ~lt'r . thf' brid£• wurt· a cown
f~t !" hi o ned of pr•;~u ta l'f!'t a wi lh d
n4JUJl('t'(] hPmlint• PX tt&gt;nd ing in! ll d
chJ J&gt;t•l trai n Tlw t-Jod in • v. ·;~~ nl
rP-em hroidt·rr'tl LJet' "'·ith pt •;tr·J
; l("( 't'llf . and ff o. Jt urf'd &lt;I \ ' ic l o r i;tn
nccklmc a nd ]('go m uff on sl('t ,, t .....
\\ it h Jacr cu f fs

pa int . dishes and othPr coiiPC ti ble

T h( ~

br ich:,

, tth•nd Jn!~

w o iT'

,lu bt 'l'gint · gu,, ·n~ w ith s pr a _\'~ of
II (Jtn·rs in !hPir hJi r , a nd C' aJT if'(}
\'•tlil (' hurricane can dle la mps
trimm f'd \dt h aul:x•rgi nP an d whi tr
fl( )\\'(' )' .

k.t •ri Sv.:imlPI!. A l hf'n.'-. WLI,... thr
Oo\~.:er gi r l and wore &lt;J f!O:')J' IC'ngl h
a ubP r;~ m · dn·s." with w hil f' r u!flt&gt;d
txKi icr . Sh; 1w n Hu nll'r. A thens. wa .-..
th(' r in):! tX"arrr M ontl' Swinrlf•ll.
hn 11Jl j •r ni l h(' tJridf•. wa s th f' acoly tl'.
:v1 tc tl &lt;.H·I Cha nce'_
\ · Sf'f'\'t'Cl ,1s bc~ t
m.tn ]lit' hi-. hrnthl•J l 's ht •r.'&gt; wP n '
:'l. l. tll \ '; 1n \'r;J nkf•n . SenTI Pic ·kr-ns.

C&lt;.~m i ll {'

Swi nd 1·IL . . istt·r 111 l h£'
v.·a.'- Jhr m a id IJI ho nor
BrkiPs m J iCI-" wrn• ,\nn S m J II ~\ ·t x~I.
Ro tnn r~.
W .VJ .: C a t h.\ 1)(•;111.
l ~ u t l; tn d . .JO\ Sdulf• r .-;, PrHnt·J'IJ.'&gt; .
.md .·\l ll:·,on Mdnt os h. A tht&gt;n ~ .
hr id('.

::0";;~·

By BOB HOEF1.JCH
Times--Sentinel Staff
The num ber of Ohlo's~E:Jtgh,va
aPCidents and the
death rate on our
highways were
down about two
percent In 1983.
Officials credit
the new drunk
driving law as a contributing factor.
Could be . However. the 55 miles an
hour speed limit emphatically
enforced also has to pl ay a big part
in the Improved conditions. 1 must
adtnlt though I wonder som etimes
al:&gt;oflt enforcem ent. Some of those
car$ and trucks out there at times
seeln to be flying low.

Sloppy Joe. cole slaw .

gingerbread, bun,

butter.

Choice of beverage served with
each meal. M eals subject to change

~-·r~·h:_::e_Se
~n~io::._
r ..:_N~u:_::tr~lt::_:io:::n_P:._ro~
gr:.:a::.:m.:..__wi_t_h_ou_t_n_ot_lce_._ _ _ _ __

Congratulations to Lloyd Blackwood. F latwoods Road. Lloyd is
among the four appointees to the
board of director s of the Ohlo
Hereford Association. Sel ection of
officers and board m ember s took
plate during the association's
'• recpnl meeting at Springfield.

MAY 2ND THRU MAY 5TH, 9:00 A.M. TILL ???

RUTLAND FURNITURE
COMPANY

G ,\ I.I .IPOI.IS -

,\!t hough pw
h; l'- C'I()S(-'CJ for t hp
,\ nn u,tl F1 •·1w h Cit\ I { u n, to bt~ hf' ld
S; tt urd;l\ :vLl : - ' J. in Ctll li j x&gt; li ~.
runn (•r-. ( · ;tn ~ J ill pJrticipd tf' b\
r f'gi:... lf•r mg rm thr- morn in g of rh rru n .
!E'gl,tr ~ lliqn

~rdi Ld

Crn lf'l f-{Pcrr&gt;a l ifm C'omrnilh'f' a nd
thP Oh11 1 \ 'al l(•\· Publi ~ hm g Com

pa n y. The• !·'rpnch Cit\ Run will opron
" 'i tJJ ~~ :1-K r~ICl' . brg1n ning nt ~ I a m
aT rtw r;~!llq;oli.-. Cil .\ ' Pa r k Arf&gt;&lt;J
Th(• llldin £·\-Pnl. J 10-- K rilC'f'. w ill
bf'gin ar 9: .'~0 a m . Duri ng this racP.
thP Di n!•"aur Dash. a o nfl miiP f un
run. wi!l -'-l.::Jrt at Y : -t ~ a .m .

J ll (•ndan t ~ ~\-'OI'f' blnck tu.'\r'd&lt;x·s.

b('r ly Douglas r Pg is iE'! l &gt;d ~TUl'S t s .
A r('('f'p tion W il ~ hcld at thC' MPigs
Mu llipurJX&gt;S&lt;' Building in Pom f&gt;r ny·
with Mrs. Bak f'r. Joycf' Sa uh•r-s.
Sh(' JTif' Sa u tf' rs. C lo ria M c intosh.
ll.ff'k.\' J--f unr r r J nd T '--l nna SwmdPII
l.lf'r\ 'ing 1he' rr· frf'~ h mcnt
ThP rou plf' n ·srdl' in Pom eroy·

tfJJ I! Pnl ra nt.'i int hf'Di nosau rDa sh
R t~gi~ t rari on on Sa ru rda .v wil l b('
~~1. !\ rPgisrralio,1 drs k. locatf'd in

ma tin concf'rni ng thr rarr may
('On tact Dawn M art in . in ! hC'
hospit al M ai ntenance Df' par trnr nt

theC iti' Park. ltilloprn at Ru.m 1\11
ru nn"" mu&gt;t chl'('k in at th c
rcgist r•ti on dPsk tn r('('('i\'c a

Offi ct'. at t6H 1 446-.'i.'lffi nr Ron
Sa und&lt;'rs in the hos pit al Rcspira tory ThPrapy 0Ppartm enl . '' ' th 141

run nPr 's packagP .
Runnf' J-., arp rt &gt;quirC'd To comf'
d rf'ssed ~o ru n. :'\o drrssing room s
or 'i hnwer fad lit iPs \\'il l be a\·aiJa hlf' Hl•s t roo m~ will b(' availabiC' at

446-54 19,

Largest
Selection
of Fabrics
Suitable

For
*Vacation Clothes
Wedding Gowns
*Prom Dresses
•Banquet Gowns
• Sport Clothes
• Quilts
* Decorating
•Crafts
*Table Cloths
•Pillows

THE fABRI C

A m Pr irn .~P nd~

PJ!i ~~~:mt

lOMEROY. OHW E ACCEPT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CAROl.
~
AND WIRE FLOWERS EVERYWHERE •_

..

.-"'. 'A···
...
" :..;
'.

"" .'

'

'

pecl istaJ VaS(&gt;S 01' gladioli, pomponS,

I

burgu ndy rler-orated the front of the
church.
Escon ed In lh P all ar by hf'r
father . t h(' bridf' v..·orc a V ictori an

m u tt 1m slPC'W's all trimm C'd in clu ny

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Howani Stone

lace. Th&lt;• bouflant skin with d&lt;'Cjl
boltorn Oounce llnwcd tnto a rull

OU seminar Counseling
Mentally Retarded set
Ohi o Uni ver sity and PAR wtll
co- sponsor a workshop on " CoUJJsrlin g

th e

M ent all v

chapl'i t r a i n . 1lw br idr worC' 1..1 back
upswf'p ! brim h ~11 tri rnmf'(l wit h
JaCP, ~·J rJ!-- and !l OWPrS With CJ n ~· Jon
nC't tra in J nd blu ... hr ·r n•i l o l ill u!' inn.
Slw C&lt;.Jrr i('{l a cohm iai iJOuqupt ol
Whi ft• !'OS('~. Jil l ~ f}f tilP \'&lt;J IIf•, ·.
ha h v's hrP&lt;-IIh ;mel q pphanot i~ tied
wi th pm k . hut J,'llnci\· and ,,·hitf'

ing Proccss Stops Jnd Counst'ii ng
Skil ls A ~pli rd to Process Steps .
Parti cipants wi ll br n: q uired to
attend simulation ski ll tr aining

Rf'tar df'd

Adult " Wed nesday. M ay 2, 6::109:]) p.m .. Sa turda~' . May 12, 9 a.m 3
p.m .. Wl'dnf'sday . May 2.1, 6-9: 30
p.m .. Wednesd ay, .Jun e 2, 9 a. m .-.1

s t ream Pr~.

Shf' won• diamond ~.1 nd j)( \ 111
r arr ings hon TJWf'(l !ro m J c:ousin.
fJE&gt;f'nu KPn nf'&lt; i ~· . ;\ hluf' gart C'r. nnd
carrif'fl .1 l nrf' hrm dkpr ch!C'l \Yhi ch

px erT ises : co m pl Pte co un sc~!in g
s ki ll ac ti vit if's in a m anu al pro-

vid&lt;'li : applic• tion of th&lt;' skills in a
counseling sit uation on-th&lt;'·.iob; and
r e)Xlrt on counse li ng sessions.
Participants c a n earn certificat es. credit hours. and credit

p. m .. and Satur day. June IJ, 6 -~
p. m .. a total of 20 class hours. T hc
wo rkshop will be condu ct 0d Jt thf'

Atco Sheltered Workshop. 21 Sout h
Campbell, At hens,
T hl' wo rk shop is dr signf'd for
s h l'itf'n~ workshops and r rs idrn -

tx·longC'CI to her gra nrlmotl11·r.
Mmnie Sargl'nt. K ist ler. \\ '_ \ ·a. 11it h
twr '"''txlding gov. .·n.
ThP hridr\ allrndJnts \\'t'' n '

toward cPrti fi cJ!ion upon r f'quc&gt;sl .
Regis tr ation form s and fu r thpr
informa tion may bf' obt aintxl IJ~ ·

I i a I serv ices pe rso nn c! a nd wil l
fcat ure instru ctor La r ry W.. Jagf' man, Ed .D. Special Educa ti on
F aculty , Ohi o U niver sity .
Courses include: Counscli ng E f -

c a II i ng 0 hi o L: n i \' c r." i I _
v ' s Off icc of
Work shops at 1 - Fnl-621 -~21 ~ or
w r itC': Officr nf Confere nces a nd
Wnr kshnps. Oh io U ni vf'rsi t ~· l.ifC'Iong L f'arnin g. VlPmor i al A ud -

fcctiveness , Selecting a Counseling
M ethod. Counse lor E thics. Counsel -

itnrium - Low er L f'vr l. l\ tl1ens.
Ohi o 4:1701 .

K Pnnt'fh ·. ma tron nt honor .
Pnnw r ov : L y nm• O li\'f' l' ancll.i n(b
L t ~OII ,
P orn t'ro\ ·, hridrsma id'- .
Dt'{ ' JIJ

A-line skirts. ThPy carried colonial
bouquets similiar to the bride's.
Kr ll y Crueser in a long du sty rust:&gt;
Iaffera gown v.·as the tlowrr girl, and
Adam Sh&lt;'&lt;'l s. the ring bear er .
Dan Thom as. P o m Proy, was best
m an, ancl 1he usher.'- wr:rf' Mike

Drehcl. Mi ddleport. brat h&lt;'r of the
bride. and M ike Stone. MiddiC'port ,
brot her oft hr gmom
For hordaug htf'r'swedding. Mrs.
DrPhPI worr a roSC' rnscmblf'. w hile
Mrs. SlotH' w as in a praroc k blur

dress. Both h ~d pink roSProrsages.
C uE&gt;Si s wrn · rcgis tPrPd by Rhonda
Nf'('C'f'.
A r( 'C'I~p t ion was held in ttx:-&gt;c hurrh
SCX'Jal nxjm to l low ing the ('('remony.
Tlw thr('(' tJ crf'd ,,,.(&gt;((ding cak p was
~urrnund £'(1 h.\· -.m alkr r akcs wit h
li\-'f' nm \'f'r" m thc wedding colors
and tall hu rgu nd.\ ' ta l)('rs, and was
toppc'(l w ith th(' t ra ditiona l m in ia·
tu rr hrirk a nrl gToom Guf'sts we re
Sf' T"\'('(j h.\ · U irm a Smit h. Janice
HagL.r:. . IJ4•hhir · Cr1Jf'Sf'r. and Sy lv ia
~( '( '('(' .

Th1• t'o upl&lt;' rr-~idf' &lt;1! 409 E liC'nMarif'Tt u
T hr- In iLl£ ' i~ u grad uat P of M eigs

~I.'IJnU r\\ 't• ..

Hig h Scltml

:~nd

thP

1-iof'king

'J'( 'C'hnir ·J I Collf'g(' w hrrr she reC'f'i\'C'd &lt;HI JSSIX'iJt (' clcgr('(' 111
nurs ing Shr· is vmplovrd at Vetera ns !\lh ·morial Hospit al
T hf' gnK"ml i ~ a lso .:.1 Mt •igs and
HtX'k ing T ('('hn ica l Collpgp gradu ;J tf'. JT'{'f' l\' ing his dPgrff' in rec rpa tinn and w ildliff'. HP is l'mployed
\\·ith thP Ohio DPpa rt m cn t of
:\ atu ra l RPsoutTC'S.. UJ,· ision of

1\'ild lifo.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

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

•8 Y e ars Business Expe r ie nce
•Trust"'(orthy
•Reliable
Pd for by Bonn1e St utes. Rt 3. Gallipolis. Qr]

W.T.

TUESDAY, MAY 1ST

Zl3 10A /PT

SATURDAY, MAY 5TH

WE ARE HAVING A GRAND OPENING AT OUR NEW LOCATION
IN THE OLD MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING AND WE ARE
COMBINING THIS WITH OUR 1OTH ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION!

W. T.

i 15 W. 2nd

Pome roy
Pho ne 99 2-2234
ZENITH 25" Di•gooat CustomSerie s Colo r TV Special •

Srnger Appr oov ed Deate r

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

S('hiffl i embruidt:&gt;ry accent . and

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Democrat

$29995

v?i~

with a m atching lace cape_ The
bridomaids' gowns were burgu ndy
poly&lt;•stPr taffeta with puffed
slPews, illusion net yokes with

$46995
Senes Color TV •

p ·

dian p!Pa!f'd skirt, w hir h she wore

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

TREASURER

ZENITH 13" 0 1agona t Custom-

'..

Mrs. Kennedy wore a dusty rose
gown wit h an empire bodice,
spaghett i shoulder straps, aceor -

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;;;~

rr======== ::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;____.-1

S1mulated r1c hlygra1ned Am encan
Walnu t fm1sh

..

a nd

brida l gown of shee r polycstPr lin ed
in taf!C'ta. The fit ted t.xlice featu red
a \' -shaped il lusion front and ha ck
yak&lt;' with a stJndup coll ar and !ego!

OecoraterComoact stytmg

BIG TOP
PRICE

branch l'aildl'labra,

and ca r nations in pink , whi tt? and

. ..f'

The annual M eigs Cou nty Elderwalk , part of a statewide event, wlll
be held on Thu rsday, M ay 3, and tht&gt;
theme will be " Walk for the Long
Run_"
This year the participant s w ill be
walking in M iddleport starting al
General Hartinger Park a I 1 p.m .
and the walk w ill lasI from JO to 45
minutes . A two mile walk is planned
but a bus will be at the one mil e
mark for those who might need a
r ide.
Buses will leave the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center right after lunch
Thursday for the park or those
wishing to drive may m eet the
group at the park. Following the
walk , r efreshments will be served
at the park shelterhouse.
Incidt&gt;ntally, the oldest male and
femalP from the eight counties of
Southeastern Ohio m aking the walk
will receive plaques at th e Ohio
State Fair. Ben Quisenberry who
resided al Syracuse befor&lt;' m oving
away was 1981 and 1982 w inner of
the plaque for the oldest ma l&lt;'
pa rl icipa nt.
So you're runnin g a lit tle behind
today what with the time change.
Don' t w or ry about it. You have until
fall to catch up on that hou r.
Meant ime. do keep smiling .

sevf'n

..

"

SS1929W

SHQp
S2552P

_,_\

.---.... ":J
-. ·

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&lt;

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Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wayne Hudnall

W.T.
ZENITH 25" Diagonal Custom-

Se ries Color T\1 Speci al •

llSl4P

W.T.

meral colander. h's fresh beaut y
~h ~'l l lnvc on Mother's IY.ly .. and
fmc qual1r y she'll love..ifin
Murher's Day. Best o ( all. nne
4u1ck call to our shop sends 1t
anywhere in the country. So
make her day. Call now.

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
''The Wov
Lot,_, ..
.

have r eturned home from North

Cora Pullen - "Grandma ," as
she Is k nown in her Palmer Street
neighborhood In Middleport - will
be m arking ht&gt;r 92nd birthday
anniversary Wednesday, M ay 2.
Mrs. Pullen Is very alert and still
doc,; her own housework - a fine
Christian wom an m any of you wlll
want to rem em ber Wednesday .

Gallia County

Fresh colorful flnwe~

Send the
Colander
Bouquet for
Mother's Day
~~-:;;;7 Sunday, May 13.

1don' t want to be discouraging or
any th ing but in the past few weeks
several comm'1JliCations from the
Ohio Department _,. of H ighways
have cros.&lt;;ect my desk dealing with
mlllions of dollars in coni rae! s
which haw been awa rded for
bridge and road proj ects in Ohio.
Meigs County is no w here to be
found am ong the counties getting
the dollars and the im provpm ent s.
Now is that par for the course- or
Is tha t par for the course!

Carollna where they were guests of
their son-In-law and daughter,
Nancy. Strange, but Nancy is
recuperating !rom gallbladder
surgery and Mrs. Wallace also
recently underwent the same operation. Nancy gets back to Middleport now and again - and she just
doesn't change - always friendly
and happy to see everyone. We need
that!

Bonnie L. Stutes

1m1dt' an 8- mch, while en&lt;1 meled

liill1""''"'

I

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Wallace

M,1m w1r h the new Colander

Pll lU4UC I.

~

I

I;'arenls of M eigs High vocal
m usic students in P hiladelphia this
weekend . should listl'n to their
scanners and radio for any message from the student s particularly
Suhda y when they will notify Mrs.
Pat T homa as they ar r ive in
M•rietta on their way hom e. Mrs .
·n-iom a wi ll put out the word so that
parent s wiU know when to pick up
their youn gster~.

POMEROY -Shar i Ann Drehel ,
daught er of Mr. and Mrs. .lamPs
Drehel. M iddlcpon. and Charles
Howar d Stone. Marietta, son of M rs.
Renee Stone. MiddiPport , and the
late William D. Stone wPre m an-ted
on Jan. 21 at 2::10 in the Jftf'm oon at
the LaurPI Cl iff Free Methodist
Church.
The RPv . Jack Parsons, Prin ceton, W .Va. perfor med the double
r ing cerem ony following a program
ol music by Ed Harkless, pianisl .
and Camill&lt;' Sw indPII . soloist
Select ions included " The Wcddi ng
Song'' as thl' m upl e lighted the unit, ·
candle.
A dC'cor atr'li archwa1· fl anked by

ELECT

Co
In Bloom.
'

W.T.

I

Th&lt;' mot her of the bridP wore a
rose &gt;:own. and th&lt;' m other of thr•
groom won· a wh i tf' . . . uit v.:l! h a
wint&gt;fx•rr:.- bluust&gt;. Bot h had orc hid
('Orsa gPs. Susa n A r nold Jnd Kim ·

thc starl , fi nish a rPd. Mf'd ical c an'
w1 ll bf' providC'd. a nd thf' paramf'd ics ha v f' I hf' au thority to ta kf' .vo u
OUl of t he racf' . if conti nuat ion ~v iii
IX' a healt h haza r d .
Anyo nr nC'f'ding fur ther int or -

r:::=:::::-~ Surpnsc

$359

95

and Gr&lt;'g :\case. Th&lt;' groom and hh -~;::::::::::::;;=::::::::::j

AwarTh \\'Ill t)f · pn·c, 1·ntt'1.l !1 1 thr
fi r&lt;.,~ two m;J ir and ft •m;t!f• fi iiJ'&gt;hf'rs
in bot h lhf' ~-- K &lt;.-1 nd 10·K ~-~w. ·sa nd to
the to p thr(l(&gt; rnalf' ~1 n d fe-m a lew innrr s of r cJ r h i-lgf' g roup Special
pa r t icipa tion Jw arct" w ill l::lc&gt; gi vf'n

•

BIG TOP
PRICE

arr anged b" ca lling Ga rv Snouffer
at ~2 744\i nr Susie &amp;l er . ~2- 72 14 .

French City Run registration
must now be made on May 5

l06 BUTERNUT AVE.

Piano Lesson. 10:30 a.m.;
Art Class, 1-3 p.m.: Honor VI nton
Meal Par ticipants: Evening Actlvl ties. &amp;-10 p.m .

arliclcs in addition to a q uan tify· of
nf'w mprchandisc cuntribu tf'd b.v
Bend m erchants_
Can t ribut ions fo r I he sa lc m ay bC'
lf'ft at thr Pomrro;' M ayor·s OffiC'f' ,
t ht' Pomcrn~· F'it'f' Stat ion . T l1c Da ii.Y
S.:•ntin cl Otfi c~ or pirkup c: lll be

\Jr. and Mrs. ('harles F. ChancPy

rh ttprl 14'nh1 h n.., il ol IJnrL1I
J! Jus1on lf' ll lmrn J .lulif •tlt• c; qJ ot
l.H'f'
r rnb roidf'rl'd
CcJ'-c·aUt•'rrimmf 'CI wiltl ;1patTern of !J n • ;u a l
.-.rpd Pf' i l rb ShP &lt;'iJ rTlf'CI ~ 0 "Juqw ·I o f
.... -hitr· s i l k ro~·-. .wcrn tl'cl H·it h 1..d111 t •
da f fodil :-. r&lt;.ullt •r hur'\'
h; JIJ:'- ·· ~ hrrtJ th

'

bun. milk.
Friday -

a silve r tea se t . r ugs, la wnmowers,

1---fl~r

Sp.. ·n~IJ fl ·d tw Ho lzcT

1 -~ p.m .;

will serve the following m enus:
Monday - Pepper steaks, noodies. st ew ed tomatoes, pear s,
bread, butter, milk.
TUesday - Roast turkey, dress·
lng, carrots and peas, pudding. hot
roll . butter .
hed
Wednesday -krWietners , r;:,•sple
potatoes, sauer au • app
•
bread, butter.
Thursday - Ham. pota to salad,
baked beans, chocola te chlp cookie.

Soror ity. Sor ority members w ill
oper alc a food conc~s ion stann
inside t hr fi re sta 1ion rluring rh esn If'

The b1 Kk i:- th t• daug ht l'r ol Mr.
:md Mr . . . t: !\pd SH· indr·ll. Sha clt• .
a nrl I h( · bridt&gt;JZrt.I( JJn is t h t ·.'&gt;On uf \1 1
and ~r s _ ( 'har lt •s 1-: . ChancP_
\,
:\'uptiul mus ic

Class. 10:30 a.m.; P hysical F itness.
11 : 15 a.m. ; May Day _ Spring
Time Festival, noon; Craft Class.
13
. ~.;;;'~esday, M ay 2 _ VInton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.: Crown City
Moblle Unit. 1 p.m .: Ca rd Games.
1-3 p.m.
T hursday, May 3 - Bible Study,
11 a. m. -noon: E lderwalk at 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park. 10:30 a.m. ; VInton
Crafts, 1-2 p.m.
Fridav M av 4 - staff Meeting.
B: 15-8: 4S ·• m .: Craft Mini -Course.

Shari A. Drehel, Charles Stone
wed in Laurel Cliff ceremony

Meig.rJ Elderwalk
planned for May 3

POMEROY - Residents have
only this week to contrlbu te art icles
to a public auction des igned to r aise
funds for the purchase of j aws of life
eq uipment for the ::&gt;omeroy Em&lt;'rgency Squad.
The equipment alth~ugh being
pu rchast-.:1 by the Pomeroy Squad
will be available for use ttu·oughout
the county_
Staging the publ ic auction from 11
a.m . to 3 p.m . next Saturday behind
thf' Pom er oy Fir e Slation are all
thrf'!' chapter s of Beta Sigma Phi

Swindell,
Chancey wed
March 30

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-1&gt;3

Beat of the Bend

Seniors in Meigs, Gallia, plan weekly activities
rlass . the&gt; cost is $3. You do not hav(&gt;
to bP an art ist to attend instruction is givpn so you will have
a finish('() pictu re to take home and
display .
Thursdav- Ceramics. 10 a . m .- ~
p_m : P hy'.~ical F itness. U : 40 a.m .;

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galli polis, Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

I

April 29, 1984

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

Regina Lynn Kingery trades vows
with Gary Wayne Hudnall April7
ME R CERV ILLE Regin a
Lvnn KingPry, daughter of M r . and
Mrs. Ronnie KJ ngery of M ercer ville. was married on April 7 to
Gary Wayne Hudnall , son of Mr.
and M rs . Harry Hudnall of Leon.
W.Va
The double-ring cer em ony was
perform ed at t he hom e of Rev
Richard Gr aham who officiated .

Reveval set

Banquet planned
ZENITH 25" Diagonal C&lt;lstomS..ieo Remote C.,ntrol Color TV
SZ2511PN

MIDDLEPOR T
Th e
Women ~ s Ministries of the M id·
dleport N azarene Church w ill
hold a mother -daughter banqu et
on M ay 7 at D alley's Country
Restaurant In Racine.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.

W. T.

WE
LD LIK
THANK OUR LOYAL CUS
IN THE TRI·
COUNTY AREA - BECAUSE OF YOU WE HAD TO MOVE
TO

MANY OTHER SPECALS THROUGHOUT THE STORE

$37500

OVER
IN
GIFT CERTIFICATES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY

REFRESHMENTS
Poprorn &amp; RC

•Garfield #1 Seller in tbe Country
•Shirttales
•Precious Moments #4

452 Second Ave .
Carole HoUyfleld. Owner Ph . 446-8303

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~- "-

.~

.. .. .. . . ..
~·

.

Ga!lipolis. Oh .
"'" Post Office

·-

~-

•

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... .

•

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Comt&gt; In and Join
Our Celt&gt;hration!

Stop In At Our New Location At The Middleport Masonic Temple

Free Gift Wrapping.
-

SAVE UP TO 75%

DAN'S

Beautiful cross-stitch and candlewicking kits for Mother) Day.

MARGUERITE SHOES
POMEROY, OH.

M IDDLE PORT - The M iddleport Church of the Nazarene
wil begin revival services on
May 1 through M ay 7.
The Rev. Llnard Wells of
Dallas will be evangelist. Services begin eaCh night at 7 p.m . al
the church
ted at 5lrl Beach

Over 200 different cross-stitch
book titles in stock.

Tiny air bubbles in the c ushioned
insoles work together with flexible
soles to give you a walktng-on-air
feeling . New Miller leather sandals
in a wide range of sizes. widths and
sunshine colors.

"Tho Middle Shoe Store In Tho Mlddl• Block"

T he bri de is a gr ad uatP of
H annan Trace High School and
Buckeye Hill s Ca r eer Center .
The groom Is a Point P leasant
High School gr aduate.
The couple res ide in Danvlllr .
W.Va .
A reception was held at the home
of the bride's aunt and unci&lt;'. Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Russell.

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�Paga

B 4 The Svnday Times-Sentinel

April'29, 1984

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

29, 1984

============En agements=============

CROWN CITY King's
Chapel Church will have an old
fashioned baptlslmal Sunday. 2
p.m., In Swan Greek .

Melanie Haskins

Donna L. Holderby
WIDiam A.J. Stambaugh

wri Dee Church,
Timothy L. Lanier

Suzanna M. Comlier

Patricia A. Lawrence

Gary Ltoe Jarvis

Grate Burnett

Barnett Hysell
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. a nd Mrs.
Grorge R. Rarne tt ~ of Ga llipol is
a nd Mrs Rosem a r v Hysell of
MiddleJXIrl announcf' th r r ngagrment of their childrPn. Brrnd (:l Lt'f'
H ysf'l l a n d E dw a rd Wil so n

8.:J l'n('l I r
M iss H ~'sell is a gr3dua 1r of

MPigs High School.
B a r n f'tt f' L-; a gr~l dUJI C' ol C alli3

i\c,tdcm y High Sc honl.
Wf'd t.lin g plan s art'"' incom pit ' lf'

PATRIOT Mr. a nd Mrs .
Willard C rate of Rt. 2. Box 15,
P a tr iot, a nnounce the engagpment
and forthcoming m a rriage of their

daughte r. DPbra Lynn, to T imothy
W. Burnette, son of Mrs . :v!ary

Hu r nt'ltr of Ga llipol is, a nd the late

Haskins - Mcxx:ly

Wi lli am BurnC'tfe.

GA LLIPO LIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Rob&lt;'rt H. Ha s kins. Ro ut&lt;&gt;&lt; Box 3&amp;3.
GalliJX&gt;Ii s, &lt;.tn' announcing the

M ai n Strf'f' l Rapli st Chur ch i n Poin t
P lrasan t
M iss Ha skin s is a g r Ltduatl' of

L'ngagf'mPnt and appro uching mar·

CrcPk l!i gh Sc hool. She
alt f'nds G allipolis Bu s in cs~ Collcgf'
J nd b t•m!Ji o_vf'd ~d ( "arl"s S hoe
Sto rP
Mood ~· g ra d ua trd from P oint

riage of their daug hter. Mela nie
Su&lt;:&gt;. to William F . Moody Jr .. P oint
P leasant . W.Va. HC' is thr son of

Mrs. Anna Moodr a nd the la te
William F
Moodv Sr . P omt
Plmsant.
Thr Opt'n -churr h wC'd ding w lll
takf' placr .June :~nat 7 p.m . &lt;.~I th f'

J{ 0·gcr

1--'lC'asan t lligh School. Hr is f'm ·

pl oved " I HO M LD Si-r vic es in
Point 1--'lr·; ·t."~•nl

GALLIPOLIS - Springfield
Baptist Church will have Family
Night, Sunday, 7 p.m., with
special singing by Elmer and
Virginia Stapelton and Alvin
(Casey) Boster. The church
pastor will speak. The public is
Invited to attend.

tROW:\ CIT Y - ~ l r . and Mr,.
L a rry Chu r ch , Crown r n ~·- a n

shC' ~~· :1 s ac l i \"{' in thP Or ~L md Ciui.J,
Yr.trhorlk Stctff ..1 nrl \'; •r -. i t\ Cht•1•r

nouncr lhC' Pngagf'm en t and app r oa ch in g marr ia ge of th Pir d &lt;.lll g hte r . Lori De£&gt;. to T imoth y L . L ani f'r.
so n of M r . and \ 1r-. CarlLl nd

lr ad r r Shr i&lt;; PmpiO\T'Li b\ Di\·t•rsJ
fi f'd Jm ·C'"tor:-o. I nc. wh t' l l''h ' ['-. l ht•
srcre t cH v u f S. Ll t·:-. and
l "l&lt;·\·t ·lopnwn t
l.. ul lf'r i ~ a g r:nlu;Jtl' 11f &lt; ; ;tlli ~J
.-\L·.1 d C' rn ~
Hi!.! h Scho(Jl. ll f' is
;ll!( •ndi ng O hio t :ni\"f' t" ~i t _\". 1\ t h(•n'-i.
rn. tjoring in Politi c;.J I St- if'nr P Prr I.J v.·.

I~

:1

.J ul\ 7,

op&lt;&gt;n wedding.

Mi ss Church i" J g-r adua tP of
Hanna n Tr a rf' Hi gh Sch ool wtwn-'

Roush - Atkins
CHE SHIRE: - Mr a nd Mrs .
E dward Ro us h. Chf'sh i rf', a n no unce t hf' rn gagemrnt and approachin g marri agr () f 1 hri r d a u ~ h ­
ter , D C'bbie, to Ly lr ,\tkin s, son u f
Mr . a nd Mrs l.y lf' Atki ns. \1 iami.

W.Va .
ThP or&gt;Pn-&lt;"hun:h W(•dding will
takP pion • :11 av 2.1 " 1:: :Vt p.m . at the
Wtnfi Pid P rPs by tr nan Churc h .

IV infiPld , W.V a .
Miss Rou~ h i ~ ;1 ~~ ;!du;J tt ' of
K_VJ;! t'r Cn't..'k Hi g h Sc hor:,] d nd
R u C' kl'~"l' Hill.'"&gt; C'a r('(~r Crontf'r dnd is
r mp lo~·rd
h~ · Culltpr•ll..,
!'.1fl.'-'
Wan·hoUS('
/\ I ki n ~ i.'i a gra rlu at r· of l·:as! B, ln k
J-ltgh Sc hoc)i a nd i-; f'mp lo_yf'f l Js ~ ~
salf'\ rrprPsrnt atlvf• fnr Sa f f' ty.·
K IPf'n, Ni tro. W .Va.

ThP O!)f'n-churrh Wf-'ddi ng w11l

takP plaN' .J une .10. 1: .10 p.m at thP
Oa k Hi l l U nit Pd P r Ps h ytPrian
C hurc h. Rev. Ja m rs A M . Hanna
will offic ia t£&gt; t hf' douhlr ri ng
cer€'mon y A reception wtll fol low
Mis.s DouT s a!tPnds Rio GrandP

L_v nn .

to William A non

J e ffery St ambaugh, son of Mr. and
Mrs . William Roge r Sta mba ugh,
\ ':1lp~1r aiso, Ind .
T hr, wl'ddi ng will take pla ce .J une
in P J int s ville, K_v.
\tli.c,s HoldPrby is a graduate of
r; ;dlLi Ac ..tdemy High Sc hool,
~ :l

Morf' head Sta te University, receiving her BA dPgree in Early
ChildhOOd and Elementary Educa ·
lion a nd Marshall Univers it y,
r&lt;:&gt;ce iving her MA degree in Special
Education . She is employed by
Mason County Schools, teaching
special education at Polnl P leasa nt
High School.
Stambaugh is a graduate of
Portage High School, Portag~. Ind.,
a nd is employed by E lm Coa l
Compa ny, Prestonsburg. Ky .

1 '0~11-JWY Mr. a nd Mrs .
.James /\ . Sisson of Route 1,
Mtdd!Pport, are an nouncing the
mgagPme nt and approa ching mar·
riag&lt;· uf thcir daughter. Jamie Lynn.
to Frr;IPrick J . Blaeltnar. son of Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Blaetlnar,
P m TH 'J T·~·-

TIH· open church wedding wUl
ta ki · pian• a 1 !i :JO p m . on Saturday.
.Jun:· l!i, a t Trinity Church in

Miss Sisson is a graduate of Meigs
High School and attends Ohio
UnivNisty . She wUl rece iv&lt;:&gt; a
bachelor ol science in element ary
educa tion. She Is a m ember of Alpha
Della Phi sorori ty.
Blannar Is a graduate of Meigs
High School anrl a n ends Ohio
Univerrsty . He will receive a
bachelor' s degree in special educa ·
tion. and is a member of Delt a Tau.

Pomi ·rnv

Monda v lhru Friday
9 AM lo9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

CollPgf' and w il l rc'&lt;:·r·ivc· i.l BLl c hf'lor
rjf SciPnr·f· df'gT('f• in . \-1i1rkrting
hn ly nr···n yf·a r
:vl rJV'\. &lt;;,nn rJf \1r a nd Mrs. Hoy
.- \
~r)~c.. . a tt(·nds Rio Gra nde
(,"rJi lt·s;r· a nd w!ll gra dua tf' with
hr,nr;r&lt;-. in ~ a y .....-ith a [la c he lor of
Sr·1r·nc-P d~Pf· In ~ at h emat i c~ and

'fi-lE

·rIll
.....
r
'J '\tt

W-'I.K li&gt;l
A~trj

r-.

~

tAI.l '0R

API'()INr'-'iNI

446-9510

A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN .

;, m1nr;r in Cr;mpu1N Sc if' nCP. 1-l e 1---------------------------~
ha ~ ar·cr·p1f-d d p(""JC.. it ion wit h AT &amp;T
T (.'(· hn rJ l rJ giP~

Svc.,tr·m~

a~

Jn Inform a tion

Dr-sig-nPr In NPw Jersey .

STARTING AT.. ..

Shorts to
Formal

ENVIRNOMENTAL GRAPHIC MURALS
ONE MONTH ONLY
Now

$2999

50 NEW SPRING WAllPAPER PATTERNS
JUST ARRIVED-MAY FAIR &amp; YORK.. ..............

$1 99
stR

GALLIPOLIS Gallla
County Soldiers and Relief
Commission will m eet Monday. 9
a .m ., a t 220 Jackson Pike.

s~f35°/o
ARTICLE'

Whtte. Blush, Opal

The
Shoe Cafe

PASTE TABLE FOR RENT ...

$3 00 ~4

HOURS

KYGER CREEK - Kyger
Creek Athletic Boosters wUl
mee1 Tuesday. 7:30p.m .. to plan
the Spring Sports Banquet. The
meeling wil be al the school.

Lafayette MaD

Gallipolis, 0 .

Curl up and be comfortable! Colonial-lovers will admire the styling with winged backs, roll-arms and
deeply tufted cushions. Budget-watchers will love
the low price! Beautifully tailored in long-wearing ,
easy-care Ant ron ®nylon fabric with ruffled skirting.

GAL LIPOLIS
Walnut
Ridge Church will have Bible
Study, Tuesday, 7: ~p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- There will be
a special meeting of the Gallia
County Dlstrtct Library Board of
Trustees. Tuesday, !i p.m., In the
Rare Book Room of the Dr.
Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library .

SPRING

VALLEY
PlAZA
WEEKLY SPECIAL

SOFA- CHAIR
Regular Price $1,29995

Dinner Sfltved with : cole slaw. bnr-

- LOVE SEAT._..,.,

BIG TOP PRICE

POMEROY - Womens' Association of Jaymar Golf Coul'SI'
will have It s organizational
meeting Tuesday a t 10 a.m. a l
th&lt;' golf course.

Barbecued Rib or
Barbecued Chicken
Dinners
52.95

S899'5

becued beans &amp; dinner rolf

POMEROY - The J aymar
Mens' Golf Leagues will play lhe
first week In May . Tuesday
Evening League on Tuesday and
Wednesday Evening League on
Wednesday. Those wishing lo
play In either league are aksed to
call the club a nd s ign UP..
Immediately.
LEBANON - Lebanon Township Trustees wUI m eet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the lowns hlp garage.

HOURS:
11 to 10 Sun. thru Thurs .
11 to 11 FrL and Sat.

Janis is a graduatf' of Hio
Grande Colle ge with a Bilchelor of
Scie nce degree in accounting . He is
employed as a rC&gt;ve nue aCC'ountant
In the finance departml' nl uf Shell
Offs hore Inc .

Smokroumtar!!l
Hickory Smoked
RIBS &amp; CHICKEN

.1 Messag,_. From Tht&gt; Dible ...
PllAYING IN TONGUES

William B. Kughn
ndt' TCfJ:H; lml )~'r us wi th griJ an. i n gs

which cannot be u.ttered"(Rm. 8:26).
Till'• ... nipt urf' tl nf''i not teach !.hat the S pirit cloth es our groa nings in
!um:ul'" ~~~ ; • ~ to plt•ad for us before God. We mu s t e xamine Paul's
1\onb in l l~h t of what. the- s niptures teach concerning (H the work
!lw llnh ~ piri t a nd 121 in s pired praye r :
The Work Of The Holy Spirit
Tht· mi..._ ... ,o n or th(' Holy S pirit was to search out "the deep things of
(i~~tl"ll ( 'nr . ~ , lUI , rrvea linK II istruth.thewordorgospe i(Jno.l6:131,
;u1d m nfirmi nJ.{ t.tw auth e nticity of the word with signs (Mk. 16:19,201.
Tht· rt•v('lation which came by in s piration was miraculous. The
mnfirmat 1nn wa" a demonstrat ion o£ the mirac ulous. The miraculous
•nrk nf tho· llnl .v Spirit in inspiration and confirmation separated the
1ru•· frnm lh(· fal sl'.
ThP mi . .; s ion of thC' Holy Spirit was not to reveal the mind man to
«.od . Thi ~ c·om piPIC' Iy rf' vi'rses t he work of the Holy Spirit. God knows
alllhin~'-' t 1 .Jno . 3:20), f' Vl'n our hearts (Acts 1:24), and as our Father,
"k""" ·l'lh " 'hat things ye have need af, before ye ask him "( Mt. 6:81.
If t hP llol v Spirit was to reveal the mind of man to God, this
parli1·ul:1r work is limited La the Ch rist ian Dispe nsation, for there is no
n ·•·onl of IIi ~ working in this manner in the past Dispensations. God
h• ·a ntl snwl "yruaning" In Egypt without the Holy Sptrit interpreting
!lw ir ~·rij •_,. hl'fore God (Ads 7:34) .
Inspired Prayer
Tht' rj· w ;.t~ insnirt•d pr)lye- r dur ing the fir st ce ntur y c hurch. Pau l, as
he deals with the abuse of tongues in Corinth, speaks or inspired prayer
(I Cor. 12: 10 : 14:14.151 . As the Holy Spirit revealed God's word in •
tongut' so as lo benefit t he one or ones being taught, so did the Holy
Sp irit reveal praye r in a ton~ue so as to benefit the one or ones
praying . However. the gift of "tnspired proyer" was not limited to just
the one who spoke in tongues, for the faithful Christians were "J&gt;Nlying
in th e Holy Ghost "I Jude 201.
"Praying in the Holy Spirit" was to pray by "inspiratWn." An
"inspired prayer" was revealed by the Holy Spirit to t he one praying .
"Intercession, •· as used here, denotes "to draw near so as to converse
familiarly, to intervene. interfere ," and not "to plead on our behalf."
The Holy Spirit took part in their prayers, revealing unto them that
whieh God wanted them Ia know and say in prayer. This would be to
their benefit . not God's. The Holy Spirit, during the miraculous age,
he lped l ht•m in prayers conce rnin g t he ir infirmities.
T hP "unknown tongue" is spok e n of in I Cor . 14: 14, while the
"inspired prayer" is referred loin I Cor. 14: 15. The Holy Spirit was as
m·Livr in rPvcnling t he "inspired prayer" as He was in revealing the
"i11spired UJOTd, "a nd both were without edification and unfruitful when
tho·y ahu scd lhP "gift of tongues. ..
W(&gt;, in th£' non -miracu lous age, are no lon§er in need of the
mirarulous rpvelntion of "inspired proyer" and of • the i'IUJpired word."
V..·' t• ha vt• lhe complete word whic h in structs us in prayer.

or

POMEROY - Th&lt;' ladies
auxlllary of the Fraternal Order
of Eagles will rneel Tuesday al 8
p.m. to e lect officers. There will
be a layette s hower for llecky
Kloes. The auxiliary wUI sponsor
a yard sale May 2, 3, and 4 at the
Beacon Slation, SR 7 and U.S. 33.

or

co.

BIG TOP$1

PRICE

3 PIECE
Regular Price
$1,79995

P LAINS
TuJ~• · rs
Plains Elementary
Sc:h&lt;•JI will hold a l&gt;ook fair the
wr.,k of May I ,lhrou~h May 4, al
thr• school.
A variety of l&gt;ooks for children
grades K-H wlll be available for
purchase.
The fair wlll be open during
school hours and on Wednesday
from 3:30 p .m . lo 4:30p.m. All
proceeds wtll be used to purchase books for the library.

BIG
TOP

PRICE

$1,248°0

1rl0p.....

Rummage sale

~

" M..... fnt•

.,..,•WUH

..,......

1-304-295-4532

. .

...

VINTON - VInton Full Gospel
Church wUI conduct a rummage
$8le at the church, May 2, 4 Wid 5,
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.

•

....'1 .... ' • ·

.

... . . . .

"

.

....

~

'

OTTOMAN
OPTIONAL

BENCH
CRAFT

Tl:i'i'EHS

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

I

14800

OTTOMAN OPTIONAL

Book fair

lllllttklld,

PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

BEIGE CORDUROY

Regular Price $1,95JOO

RUTIAND - A yard sa il'
planned for early May by the
Rutiand Fire Deparlment has
be&lt;&gt;n postponed due to a lack of
re.ponse with donations. The
sale will be held later, however,
and residents a('{' being asked to
r.•mtrihu tc. Proceeds will go
toward a new room on the fire
." a lion. rPpalrs at the park, and a
tankr·r truck .

WtdiiiiQ):

(Across from G11nd Celllrll llaill)

BUSHLINE

Yard sale

Bulavlllt Rood • P. 0 . Boo JOS
GatllpoiiJ, Ollto •5631
!Mnda,E•...... :
Wot~hlp 611&amp;

3 PIECE

Happenings

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
hiHIIp Mon~a.11
BUilt St•d~ t:lO
Wonhlp t•.- 31

YOU'I.I. NEVER FIND
BIGGER SAVINGS ON
TOP QUALITY FURNITURE
AGAIN. YOU MUST
SEE THESE NOW AT
RUTLAND FURNITURE

F1.A'!WOODS - Sunrise Gospel Singers wlll be at lhe
Flatwoods Unlled Methodist
Church revival services Tuesday a1 7:~ p.m. The church is
located on county road 26. on&lt;:&gt;
mlle north of Five Points.

"Likf'JJ"i:&gt; l" rh1) Spin"f also hel peth our infinnities: for we know not
u h(Jt 1n· s h(nlM pray f or as w e ought: but the Spirit itself maketh

704 Grand Central Ave.
300 Second Ave.

NOTHING
HELD BACK
BETWEEN TENT SALE
AND STOREWIDE SALE!

TUESDAY

&lt;For Free Bible Correspomknce Course Write ... )
ON PATTERNS SELECTED FROM
OUR WAUPAPER BOOKS·WE HAVE
THE LARGEST SELECTION Of
BOOKS IN THE AREA.

• • •

LEADING CREEK - The
board of directors of the Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
meet In special session Monday
at 6 p.m.

•

Miss Cormier rs a gra duat e or
Louisiana Sta te University Medica l
Center with a Bilehelor of Science
degree In Medical Technology. She
Is CU('{'ntly employed as a Medic al
T('('hnologist with Tulane Medical
Center In New Orleans.

.,.,~

CHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
Community Action Agency free
clothing day, 9 a.m. to 12 noon
Monday at former high school in
Cheshire; open to area residents
needing clothing.

Orleans, La. a nnounce the e ngage·
ment and approachin g m a rrlag&lt;:&gt; of , - - - - - - - - - - - their daughtE'r. Suzanne Maria. to
Gary Lee Janis. son of Mr . a mi
Mrs . Howell Jarvis of Galli poli s. He
is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Cordle Smith Sr. or Northup a nd of
Mrs . E lberta Jarvis and thl' la te
Calvin Jarvis of Rod ney.

Sisson- Blaettnar

J.\CROSS

Boutes - Moses
OAI&lt; HI L L - Mr . a nd Mrs.
M ~l v ln Guy Br,ut&gt; of Oak Hill
announce th f' l'nga~P m rnt and
forthcoming m ar riage· of their
daug ht r r . Gingrr Suza nnr. tr1 R rr
b&lt;'rt C Moses of Th urm a n.

C AI.I .I POI.IS - Mr . and Mrs .
H:nTv W. Holder by Sr .. of 436
II Pdgcwood Dr, Ga llipolis, a n·
nouncl' the engagC'mf?'nt and forth coming marriagf' of the ir da ug hter,

NEW ORLEANS. La . - Mr. and
Mrs . Maurice Cormi r r of NPw

9:00a.m. till

MONDAY

T1J PPE FL'i PLAINS - Mr. and
Mrs. K en F ausnaugh arl' announcing the e ngageme nt a nd approaching marr iage of tlwir daughter,
Rl10nda Phillips . to Michael Lee
Collins. son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Collins.
The op&lt;&gt;n chu rch wedding wUl
take place Saturday, May 5. at 3: ~
p.m. at Success Church of Christ,
Reedsv ille . A recept ion wUI follow a t
the Tuppers Pla ins fiff' house.

The wedding will ta ke place June
9 at Saint Maria Coretti Church in
New Orleans . A recepllon wi ll
follow at the Knights or Columbus
Ha ll

Holderby- Stambaugh

Do nna

Church - Lanier

La nier . R IO G r andf'
The couplf' is pb nning

An open ·c hurch weddi ng is
planned on Saturday. June2, a t 6: 30
p.m . at Sa lem Baptist ChwT h,
Gage. Ohio.
Mi s~ Cratp is a gradua te of

Southwestern High Sc hool and
Buckeye HIUs Vocationa l School.
She is employed at the Galli poli s
Development a l Center.
Burnelte is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and Buckeye
Hills Vocational School. He is
empl oyed at th e Gallipolis
Foodland.
A reception will follow the
cer emony in the fellows hip room or
the c hurch.

Cormier
Jarvis

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2ND
THRU SATURDAY, MAY 5TH

PA1RIOT - Salem Baptist
Church wUI have potluclf al 5: ll
p.m ., and the Grande Chorale
wUl sing at 7 p.m., Sunday.

Phillips
Collins

-"L·

BIG TOP TENT SALE!

MINA - Mlna Chapel Church
will have Sunday school, W a.m.,
and evening services al7 : ~p.m.
this Sunday.

REEDSVILLE Announcement is made of the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of Patricia Anne Lawrence. daughterofMr.
and Mrs. Howard M. Lawrence Sr ..
to John Albert He nderson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Henderson,
Reedsville.
The open church wedding wUI
take pla ce Sunda y . May 6, at 7: ~
p.m . a t the Re€dsvtlle Methodist
Church. Music will beg1nat7p.m . A
reception wUI be held In the church
social room immediately following
the wedding.
Miss Lawrence is a graduate of
Eastern High School and the
Parkersburg Beauty College. She is
employed a t Hair Happening,
Ravenswood , W. Va .
Henderso n, also a graduate of
Eastern High School,ls employedat
the Re&lt;'d Country Store In
Reedsville.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page B-5

RUTLAND FURNITURE COMPANY'S

Calendar

LawrenceHenderson

w.

Ohio-Point

..

'

0.

OTTOMAN
OPTIONAL

BENCH CRAFT
3
Piece
Brown
Shaneil
Regular
Price
$1,69500

B~~~p

$1,050°0

�Times-Sentinel

Ohio

Cremeans
.
anntversary
celebrated

Bo.\-[f&gt;S tn Midd lppor1 .

Married on March 31. 1934 at
Rutland. the rouplc have fiVl'
childrm . Mrs. Boy iC'S. Middl(von :
Mrs. E a rll' 1fl&lt;• tt:v 1 Nelson, Mans
fil'ld ; Mrs. Hum&lt;'r 1Ruth1 Smith.
PumC'roy, M;:,uvin Crem eans a nd
MPh· in ( 'rf'nwans, l 'ol umbu ~. T he\·
l~

gra ndc hldrPn LJnd sf'w•n

g n·.1t .L.'L_tndchi lda•n
:\11Pnding 1hf' dumPr \\'f'f f' Mr
,md :vir~- L :trlt•.'Jelson. Be lind&lt;J and
H.1rhara. and Bob Dielm ; M r . and
\1r' il u m(~ r Sm ith . Mr. and M rs.
f {omPr Smi t h. Jr .. Mrs. Susir Smith.
f l:ttrici;J &lt;tnd ChrL.,Tophr r : Mr. and
\1r ·~ - Man·iJI Crrmf'ans. Nicolf' anfl
l&lt;ri(': Mr· . ancl Mrs. ~lf' I \' Jn Cn 1
~1 r.

mt·an..,_
~~ ~-'

J nd Mr.'-&gt; . Charlt•s

j{•s . P arr:.· dOd \ 't t'ktP and lhf •ir·

lkt hanv a nd Hl'allu·r ·.
Mr" . 1·.1'1 it• Busk1rk and ~o~ on . Bob
J-'\JJIUwing !flt' diru1f'r pdrty, gifh
\\'i ·n • pn ·si ·nft,-110 1hl' n1uplf•

d 1ildn•n.

Mr. and Mrs. BasH Cremeans

Welsh fest
planned
at Farm
RIO GRANDE- Whether you're
of Wf'lsh a ncE'stry or just interested
in learning more about the rich
heritage of Wales. Welsh Herllage
Days at the Bob Evans Farm near
Rio Grande, Ohio, is a unique
cult ural experience for aU to enjoy.

UI'E:\ HOI ISF: - Mr. 'u1d Mrs. Arthur Martin will c"lebrate their 50th
wt·dding ~utni\'4~rs.u·y ~ith UII opt·n hou~ · for friPnd~ Wld rt'lativPs,
Salunta~: , '! to 5 p.n1., al Lht•ir homt• m·ar Patriot. 1\lrs. Martin i"i Ow
fonm•r :\nnahdl4• ('rcunli."ih. '11u·l WI'N' marri('d May 5, 1931, at Pt .
Plt·a.'oi&lt;Ult , W.Va. Thf•ir ~uJdn·ss for thoSt' wlo,;hing t.n send ('ard."; ts RouU•I,
Jinx -1-1, I'at riot . Ohio . 1~ . '11w l&lt;lUph' has a son. Donnie, in Springfield.

Ylr. and

Mr&lt;. ll.al]lh

April 29, 1984

tGravyl

Grav•"
•

It was almost 200 years ago that the
first Welsh em igrants (Cymry)
landed nf'a r the Bob E vans Farm i n
SPptember 1818.
Taking place June9 and 10, Welsh
Heritagf' Days will offer a varied
progTam with crafts, food, music ,
dancing, genealogy, history of tlle
Welsh and the sacred Welsh song
service Gymanfa Ganu.
i3f'ginmng at 9 a.m . Saturday in
the farm's Craft Barn, craftspersons will share their knowledge of
their crafts including Welsh pot If'!~·. pllinting. rug weaving, wheat
wea\'ing and the carvro Wf'lsh
LO\'f' Spoon. V isitors r an also
sample fried Welsh cakf's and
retrace their genealogy at thf'
!(enmlogy booth .
A Sa turday morning lecture and
slid&lt;' show of Wales and Welsh
events will be presented by Ivor
.lom•s and Roy Moses at 10: JO a.m.
on thE' HumPstead stage, rPminiscent of the Eisteddfod held In
l.lan gollan. Wales.
During the Saturday afternoon
program a nu te solo, clogging
danet:•rs and a lyric solois t wUI be
featured, as well as a talk on the
history of the area's first Welch
Church - Moriah.
A Nason Lawen 1Happy Time)
will be held Saturday evening at lhP
Welsh Heritagf' Museum In Oak
Hill wtlh music, jokes and stories.
Sunday's program will take on a
morP SC'rious tone as the traditional
&lt;.ymanfa Ganu Is held with sacred
songs sung in the Welsh trad ition
with audience panlclpation. A Te
Bach !Welsh Tea) will follow.
Admission for Welsh He1itage
Days is free. For more information
thf' Bob Evans Farm, P .O.
Box 330. Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 ;
614 -245-53ffi.

Rtm.J.\ND The Rutland
Church of the Nazarene was the
setting lor the March 24 wedding of
Laura L. Mrllwralth and Donald R.
Rlrlunond. TheRev.Jamesl&lt;eesee
pertoiTIII!d the double rtng ceremony at 1: llin the aftemlonlollowlng
a program of nuptial music presented by Beverly Baylor.
The bride Is the daughter ol
Olrlstlne A . Green, DaJWtn, and
Hugh R. Mcllwralth, Melrose,
Mass. The groom Is lh&lt;' son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Richmond,
Rutland.
Given In marrlr;e by her parents,
the bride wore a gown of lace and
chlf1on over taffeta fashioned with
long lace sleeves, a fitted bodice wltll
a bateau neckline, and an A-Une
skirt with a deep flounce which
flowed Into a chapel train. Her
fingertip vf'll of illusion fell !rom a
headpiece of lace and she carried a
cascade arrangement of sUk pastel
flowers.
Debra J. Mcllwralth sezvro as
her sister's maid ol hooor and the
brtdesmalds were Florence Stearns
and Carol Richmond, bothslstersol
the groom. Tiley wore gowns in the
pastel colors as did the Dower girl,
Candy Hysell, daughter of Pat and
Jim Hysell .
Chris Richmond, best man for his
brother, and the ushers, Darin

places the week of April J0 to May 3.
Monday- Lewis Dr., noon-12: 15
p.m.; C&amp;S Bank (Rt 35 ), 12:1512LJO p.m .: 35 West Apts., 12:35-1
p.m. ; Meadowbrook. 1:05-1:30
p.m.; Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
1:35-2 p.m. ; Gallla Metro Estates,
2: 05-.1 p.m.; Pinecrest Care Center.
3: 15-3: JO p.m.; Rodnf'y Village,
4:15-4:45 p.m.: Crousf'beck Rd.,
55: JO p.m.: Northup, 5:45-6:15 p.m .
Tuesday - Mitchell Rd., .1-3: JO
p.m.; Sanders; Adelaide, 4-4:.10
p.m .; McGuire Subdv. I, II , 4:455:15 p.m.; LeGrande I. II, 5:20-6
p.m.; Neighborhood Rd. I , II.
6: 15-6:45 p.m.
Wednesday - Chatham. 3-3: JO
p.m.; Venz Rd . tDa\1s Dr.),
3:40-4:15 p.m .; Kanauga 5th, 4: 3().5
p.m .; Johnson's Tr. Ct., 5:15-5: JO
p.m .; K&amp;K Tr. Ct. , 5:45-5:15 p.m.
Thursday- Cora, 2:45-3: !Op.m.:
Raccoon Tr . Ct .. 3:15-3:45 p.m.;
Patrlot/Pauley's, 3: 50-4: 05 p.m.:
Patriot P.O., 4:10-4:40 p.m.: Gallla,
5-6 p.m.

Meigs County
POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County is brought to
you by the Meigs County Public
Library under contract wltll the
Ohio Valley Area Llbrartes.
Bookmobile service for Monday,
April JO - Burlington !County
Mobile Home Fark), 3:35-4:05
p.m.; Harrisonville !Church), 4:35-

Mr. Jnd Mrs

)Lilpll 1(~1'&lt;1\~· 1 ( ;t'll \'P SOf Jlomt·ro.\
\\'I '&lt;kl i n~
M ~ ~ ~· 1; .

wil l n ·If't) r all • 1h('i r ;&gt;{ l1 11
. HHll \ I'I'"''''Y

on Su nda.v.

wi ll n•n1•w tlli'Jr
·\'1 m·&lt;, during 1h1• 10: :Ul.:J .m
..,4'1 '\ JC'I' :!I tht• Trinif\· Chureh in
1'()llHH&gt;.\ . :\n OIJ('n !l'{'i'(&gt;tion will tx•
lll' id in lht·ir hnnu1 al !hi ' ~· nior
{ 'ililt'll ..., ('p nt Pr. Mulbt'ITY Hl'ig ht s,
111 lil t · d fi t •rnoon frum 4 to 7 p .m . All
ftwnd s Df th&lt;• couplt • an · cord ia lly
Til('

CllUp iP

nLir ~· i.~ ~ ~

Gregory Mun'l'. S&lt;'a ll l&lt;', Wash.
Tfw cuuplt • n'q uPs! s no gifts.

anniversary May 3.

Thl" roupie were married May .l
1922. at Bidwell, Ohio. by the lale
fu&gt;v. Lester L. Roush .

WAriT ADS

: · has openmgs
for workers

Cremeans, and Todd Johnson,
escorted brtdal attendants. Philip
Green, brotllerofthebrlde, was ring
bearer.
A reception honoring the cou pie
was held at the American Legion
hall following thf' wedding. The
bridf''s table featured a threP·tif'rf'd

cak&lt;e sun·ounded b!' heart -shaped
cakes. RPffC&gt;shmf'nt s werP scr.'ed
by Pat Smith and .Jud)' M an in.
· The bride is a r osmc1ology
student at Meigs High School
The groom gradu;~ IP&lt;l from Meigs
High School and is .-mpl oyed by th&lt;'
Meigs Local Schm l Dist riel

5:05 p.m.; New Lima Road 1onr
mile south of Fort Meigs), 5: IS-6
p.m., Rutland (Depot St.), 6: 40-8:10
p.m.

Bookmobiil' sch«lulr for WE'd ·
nPsday. May 2 - Tuppf'rs P lains
(L odwi c k's), 7: 2S- 7: ~:1 p.m.;
Riggscrrst Addition. R: 10-R: 40 p.m

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

no matter
where you look
Service You Can Count On,
Quality You Can Trust
Complete line of Hospital Beds/Side Rails
Large Selection of Wheelchairs. Walkers,
Canes, Portable Commodes
Brace Shop with Trained Fitters
Full Line of Convalescent Supplies
BP Kits/Stethoscopes
Sports Foot Products

Sales • Rentals
i&amp;lna
lilelliemlllnmrar.»• Inc.

HEI\Lm SL'REENING PLANNED- June t-Il has
been set for a health screening clinic to be held in.the
Meigs County Multipurpose BuDding on Mulben-y
Heights. The clinic, funded withfederaldollars, Isopen

IAl all Meigs Coonly residents. Appointmenls are IAl be
made at theSeniorCithensCenter, 992--2161, wlthoneol
the coonllnators, Debbie Hauber, R.N. seated Jell,

Eleanor Thomas, standing, dlredor uf the Senior
Citizens Center, or Noreen Ondrusko, P.A.

Health Screenings scheduled
for Meigs County residents
By CHARLENE HOEFlJCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - A four-day multi phasic health scrccning clinic
funded with froeraldollarsandopen
to all Meigs County resldentswUI be
held at the Meigs Multipu!1JOS€
Building, June4-K
. Thf' clinic to serve a maximum of
:CJOO residents is a cooperative effon
·of rounty health agencies, volunteer
·medical professionals, and the
Meigs County Council on Aging and
is being coordinated by Eleanor
Thomas. du-ector of the Senior
Citizens Center program. Debbie
Hauber. H.N .. and Noreen Ondmsko. P.A .
Hours will be ~ a.m to 5 p.m . on
Monday, Tuesday and Friday , and
12to8p.m . on Wednesday.
A varif'ty of test s and examina tions, including blood work, will be
offered fr&lt;'&lt;' of charge to those on
limited inrome. or at a fee of$17 for
.thoSP in higher incomf' categories.
Dentists. dental hygienists, audiologists, optometrists. podiatrists,
lab technicians , registered nurses
and emcrgrney medical techni·
clans across thP county have

For every $25.00 purchase or more we
will give you a t' RLE FRESH ROSI;
for your Mom or for the Sweerhc1 rr of
your choice. Stop in any tim e between
now and May 12th and you c tn pick up
your token for a tree ro se.

What Retter Way To Say
I Loz·e Yoll.

• ••

This does not include repairs.

~

you haven't stepped out this season
in bouncy, breezy Wlmzees, you haven't
lived! Bright and airy Wlmzees make It
easy. Do It right. Do It on Wlmzees.
St. Hrs.:
lion. &amp; Fri. til I P.ll.
Tues ., Wed. Thur.

&amp; Sat. Ill 5

positions.

volunteered their services for tbe
health scr&lt;'f'ning clinic .
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
play a key role in the clinic,
according to Mrs. Thomas, who
repons that all ofthebloodandother
laboratory tests will be handled
ther eon an "at cost " ba.!:iL'i .
All of the information obtained
through th&lt;' screening will be
forwarded to the patient's physi ·
clan. Mrs. Thomas stn&gt;ssed I hat the
clinic is not intended to take the
place of regular medical checkups
by a personal physician, but is
designed to encourage residents to
seek medical attention for any
suspected problems.
As explained by Mrs. Thomas.
both floors of the county's multlpur·
pose building, including the Senior
Citizens Center, and offices and
examining rooms of the Meigs
County Health Department, the
Tuberculosis and Health offices.
and Woodland Center will be used
for the screening.
Residents will be screened for
problems with !heir vision. hearing,
speech, and teeth, they will be given
tuberculosis tests. checked for high
blood pressure, and have an
urinalysis.
They will also be
provided with a take-home hemoc·
cult test forrolo-rectalcancerwhich
will be returnf'd lalf'r forf'\·aluation.
Blood samples will be taken and
checked for 25 different bodily
functions in an effort to detect
mf'dlcal problf'ms such as diabet es.

anemia. high cholestProl levels.
liver and kidney problems .
Health information and counseling w ill be available to everyone.
Mrs. Thomas stressed that all
examinations will be given by
appoinlmPnl to bP made by telephoning 992-2161 . Only CJOO ap(Xlinl ·
ments will be made. Fortlloscwitha
monthly income under $44i for one
person , or $a90 for a couple. there
will bP no chargP. For those with an
income ahove those figun.'s, the re
will be a charge of$1i .
Emphasis of the screening clinic
Is early detection aimed at control ing and correcting chronic diseases.
Th&lt;' fed eral funding for the project
was made to the M eigs County
Council on Aging for health services
through the Meigs County Welfarf'
Depanment. The sreening clinic is
pan of an overall health progra m
\•.rhich includes services such as
assisting older persorts upon release
nut1ition
from a education,
hospital, helping
medicalstroke
and
victims or other physically impaired persons with therapy

-----LOOK AT
THESE
SPECIALS

MANY SPECIALS IN
113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2054

342 SECOND A

GALLIPOLIS, OH

446-2691

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
William C. Bariels of Stevensville.
Mich., formerly of Meigs County .
are announcing the engagemen t of
their daughter, Barbara Ann, to Dr.
James E . Brandy of St. Joseph .
Mich.
A May 26 wedding Is b&lt;'lng
planned.
Miss Bartels attended both Oak·
land and Andrews Universities m
Michigan where she majored in
rosiness administration. She Is
currently employed as an office
manager for Dr. Gary G. Sisson and
Dr. Dan L. Fonenbacher.
Brandy Is practicing chriopractlc
In St. Joseph and Is a member of the
L,lons Club. He graduated from tlle
National College of Chiropractic .
Mrs. Bartels Is tlle former Mary
Goodwin, daughter of Norma Good·
win , longt !me Pomeroy florist, who
now resides with her son, David
Goodwin In Pomeroy, Mrs. Bartels
rt'&lt;:ently retired as manager of a
children's clothing store and ladles
dl-ess shop In Michigan. Bartels
retired recently from Whirlpool
Corporation where he was employed 2:1 years. He Is the son ofMrs.
Helen Bartels, formerly of SyraCuse, now residing at Pinehurst
Nursing Home, Galllpolls, and the
late Emmet Bartels.

OLD PHOTOS
COPIED

Lr-~R.
L~

--------pH~O~AP~Y

FRAMES

40°/o OFF

SPRING \ALLEY t&gt;LAZ\
(;ALLUPOLIS, OHIO

Copy Negat1ve and l - 5x7
Re g

(614) 446-7494

LARGE SELECTION
U tu• lr ,.,,., /,· 0 n I v

1

Opc·n Tul's. thru Sat.
Ill Til 5
Til R on Thur-.

ART PRINTS

SPEC/At!!

Beautiful Reproductions
of original masterpieces.
More than 300 to choose
from 5"x7' to 30"x40"

Past customers. bring any
rece;pt from Lear Photography that has your name on
it and get an eXtra

~~~~ce
$} 00
Only
ANY 7 FOR

ss

ONE
WEEK
ONLY Ill

PASSPORT
PORTRAITS
REG 17.50

NOW

THE SALE PRICE
(), &lt;'

50

Second Pnn t. Same Negal1ve
REG . ' 4.00 NOW 12.00
BLACK AND WHITE ONLY

10°/o OFF

Each

18

V2 PRICE!

All FRAMES IN STOCK

(),,, II

lied.- 011 h.'

FOR 2

$500
,.,.j, ()nh·'

Call for an Appointment

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~

exercises.

ENTIRE STOCK LINEN LOOKS 1/3 OFF

The last multiphasic health
screening was held in 1977 when 58..1
persons went through the clinic .

• Suiting. Our fin est! 100% polyester. machine wash . 60 "
wide. Reg. $699 yd . . . . . . . . . . .

C:i~

.

. NOW $4.67 YD.

• Leprechaun. Great suiting we1ght . Poly11ayon.
machine wash, 45 " . Reg . $5.99 yd . .

.

NOW $3.99 YD.

• Canterbury. Po ly/rayon dress we1ghl. Mac hine

e
conne.'S oo

MON.-FRI. 9 to 5; SAT . 9 to 1
Gallipolis, Ohio - Phone 446-2206

FOR MOTHER OR FOR
THE SWEETHEART OF
YOUR CHOICE

Wh ite
Green
Pink
lavender
Kt. Blue
British Tan
Wine
Mousecrain

S('r\ '!('1'

We Are Celebrating
National Photography Week! !
May 1-5

Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Richmond

NOW

$2}00

Thf' .Job Bank 1~ opf'n Mnnda:,:
through Friday frum ~~ a _m un1il-1
lHn . Call l-l+i 7IXIO and " J)( •a k wi th
ttw .J ob Cuun..,tolor~ J bfJUt thJ.o., fn't'

Pa1d lor by Haml;n K1ng. 512 2nd Ave Ct~ll1poh s.. Oh

1• THE

wash, 45" wide. Reg . S499yd . .

NOW $3.33 YD.

• Handkerchief. Light polyl•ayon. mac h1ne wash. 45 ".

. .. NOW $1.911 ro $2.67 YD.

Reg . $299 to $399 yd .

ENTIRE STOCK SPORT KNITS 1/3 OFF
• T-shlrt prints It stripes. Machine wash
co~on.

60" wide . Reg . $4.99 yd

.

polyester~

. . . . . NOW $3.33 YD.

• Stretch terry. Cononlpolvester. mach1ne
wosh. 60" wide. Reg. $5.99yd.

C£arts

NOW $3.99 YD.

• Fashion solids. Poly/canon knits. Machine wash ,
60" . Reg S549&amp;$5.99yd.

shoe ~ore

THE ONE FOR FUN.

NOW$3.67&amp;$3.99YD.

ENTIRE STOCK BETTER DRESS &amp;
BLOUSE FABRICS 1/3 OFF
• CreRfl de chines, sotlns, solids, fancies. Mach1ne wa sh
poly, lrom 45" . Reg from $599 yd

BartelsBrandy

IT ON WIMZ&amp;S l

tor problem s in finding suita ble
ca ndidates to fill m any of these

Barbara Ann Bartels
Dr. James E. Brandy

Glassburns
to note
.
anniversary
wiJI celebratP their 62nd wedding

GA LLIPOLI S- As an employer,
vou rl'alize the lmportanc£' of hi ri ng
competent people to staff your
or ganiza tion . Often you will f'nroun ·

VOTE FOR THE MAN WHO CAN WIN IT!

REG. $26.00

Mr. and Mrs.

t; Job Bank .

QUALIFIED :
•Veteran
•1 7 Years Experience in Criminal Law
•Certified Public Accountant
•Master's Degree in Public Admin ist ration

r-;:=:=::=::=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;::;il

IWlph Craw•s and NPII Proc tor
wt•n· ma r rit.'ll un M ay~. 19.'Wby the
H.&lt;'l'. ,\ lonzu H. Stark. ThP)' haveone
tlaug htPr. Mrs. Donald tCaroly nl
'!110mas: four g-ra ndchldren, M rs .
Mark 'Melissa 1 Morris, Sea ttle.
Wash.; Mrs. Nicholas (Rebecca)
I!&lt; •pm . Shad&lt;'; Dan i&lt;'l Thomas and
( ;n•gll l"'\' Thomas, Pomeroy; and
twu gTf'LJI -g-randsons. Bra dll'~' and

CALLU'OLIS -

i l_l

TIONS AND ABILITY TO WIN THE PROSECUTOR'S
RACE IN THE FALL ELECTION .

Colors:
Red Canvas
Black Canvas
lilac Canvas
Pink Canvas
White Canvas

Hl\' Jl cd to Jltt•ntl .

Loi&gt;V&lt;'II Glassburn, 1154SecondAve,

l

HAMLIN KfNG HAS THE ENERGY. QUALIFICA-

Graves celebrate 50th anniVersary co~tact
l'l t'\1 !-:I {(I Y -

I

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- S-7

KING CAN WIN THIS FALL

Bookmobile schedules set 1n area
GALLIPOLIS- The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library
bookmobile will be at the following

.

t

•

Gallia County

. '!I tI

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

Mel/wraith,
Richmond trade
vows March 24

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mr.
l:lasU C r~means 11'C&lt;'ntl:v observed
their golden wedding anniversary
\'-'l lh a party at the homP of their
daught&lt;&gt;r. Mrs. Chari&lt;'S 1Linda 1

h,n·c

"'*"'

Saturday.
May 5th.

NOW FIIOM $3.911 YD.

ENTIRE STOCK EYELET
EMBROIDERIES 1/3 OFF
• Polyester/colton tancles&amp;all-overs. Mac h1ne wash.
45" . Reg. $4.99&amp; $5.99 yd. . . .

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

-·

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

. . NOW $3.33 &amp; $3.99 YD.

-·~

ENTIRE STOCK GABADREME'"
&amp; CADENCE®113 OFF

.
St. Hrs.:
Mon. &amp; Fri . til 8 P.M.
Tues. Wed . Thur.
&amp; Sat. til 5

• Perennial suiting favorites of polyester. Mach1ne
wash. 60 ... Reg. $4.99 &amp; $599 yd .. NOW $3.33 &amp; $3.99 YD.

ENTIRE STOCK
OF THESE NOTIONS 1/3 OFF

MAYO
MONUMENT CO.
Guaranteed Delivery by Memorial Day

• Choose from our regularly price d groups o 1ptns. knit
collars &amp; band1ngs, belllngs &amp; buckles
NOW t/J Off

ENTIRE STOCK

WISS~'

SCISSORS 1/3 OFF

• Contura-lite'•', dressmake r. need lecra t1
scissors and more .

Reg. $6.75 to $29..95
Now $4.50 ro $19. 95 ----:/~::J!C-.J::...~..--------1

5974

®

"Quality Higher But Prices Lower"

SELECT FROM LARGE DISPLAY
REASONABLE PRICES
MARKERS - MAUSOLEUMS · MONUMENTS
BRONZE MARKERS
ERECTED IN ANY CEMETERY

MONUMENT CLEANING
CEMETERY LmERING

Located on Stale Rt . 141 at Centenary, Ohio
21': Miles from Gallipolis, Ohio

Call 446-7017

PABRICS

OWned and oparoted b\1
FODI' •.Cemerl o! Amer rco . Inc

Silver Bridge Plaza

�,,

Page- 8-S-R'"""UfiAN D ffiiN ifUi'fCOMPAN Y'SApril,, ·~
BIG TOP

AND
HOT DOGS
SERVED
WHILE YOU'RE
SHOPPING

YOU

CAN

&lt;'

AND
\
HOT DOGS
SERVED
WHILE YOU'RE
SHOPPING

Wednesday, May 2nd
Thru Saturday, May 5th

YOU

CAN

9:00a.m. till ???

SAVE

SAVE

'l "' ,,.,.- ... ·.,

'

These Are Just A Few Buys
At The Big Top Tent Sale
And Storewide Sale!

30% 70%
10

AT THE BIG TOP AND
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

BEDROOM SUITES
from

3Q%to7Q%
AT THE BIG TOP AND
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

alter he hit a two-run homenm In the third Inning oil

.__ _,~-·

BROYHILL

OVER

I

_,.

l!

HOUSTON (AP) - The Atlanta
Braves said Saturday that an
arbitrator has lifted the one-month
suspension ot pitcher Pascual Perez
and ordered him reinstated Ia the
team's active roster.
~ Braves said the ruling came
!rom arbitrator Rlchard L Bloch,
who handles grievances as part of
baseball's collective bargalnirig
agreement with the union. A wrttten
decision will not be available until
next week.
"We obviously are happy to get
Pascual back earlier than ex-

40
BEDROOM
SUITES

IN

Complete
With Night Stand

STOCK

REGULAR PRICE

BIG TOP PRICE

sl,499.95

REGULAR
PRICE

Oakrun
Ame r1 cana styl ing , budget pr1ces. p l_us
qunl 1ty you have come to ex pec t I ro m Broyhill Mass1ve
1fi!Jie dresser an d c hes t prov 1d e sp ac 1ous storage for
yo ur most delic ate clc.: th1ng and teature SOI!d oak drawer
trorts and s tru c tural pan s w11h oak. veneered top s Th e
magnlf 1ce nt Am en ca na sty led bed al so teatures soli d
oak be d posts
Includes: Triple Dresser, Hutch Mirror,
Cannonball Bed and Chest.

sl ,OSO

$1,288°

0

....

LA·Z-DO'f'
_..

Night Stand

$799.95
Reclln•Rockgr' Cha1 r
R!!c lln•Way · Wall f'9C hncr
Rechnii-Rocker" Chair

RUTLAND FURNITURE
COMPANY TRUCK LOAD
BUYING POWER

BROYHILL
COMPLETE
BIG TOP PRICE

$799.95
Forest Pine:

ROLLS PRICES BACK!

Colonial decorato rs will love the elegant simplici ty of
South Bay _ Rugged yet warm and graceful de s igns
appeal to ! he masc uUne and feminine tast es in
decorating . A rich , warm map le bfOwn finish is enhanced
w1lh authentic colonial sty led hardware and high l ighted
w1th exqu1s 1te dentit moldings and embossed pila s ters
Includes: Triple Dresser, Hutch Mirror,

GET YOUR SHARE
OF THE HAUL
n9CIIna.Aocker' Ct1atr
R~lina-Way'· Wall R&amp;eUner 1

Chalrback Bed and Chest,

"YOU'LL SAVE"

Night Stand

Harbor Towne:

Bay Tree Pine:

Pine Valley:

COFFEE AND END TABLES .•• BROYHILL QUALITY ..• STARTING

Independence II:

'

peeled," John Mullen, AUanta 's
general manager, said In a statement Issued In Houston where the
Braves played the AstrosSaturday,
"Butwehavenofurlhercomme ntat
this timeandwW not until weseethe
arbitrator's wrttten decision ."
Perez, convicted recently in the
Dominican Republic of cocaine
possession, was suspended without
pay until May 16 by Commlssioner
Bowie Kuhn, retroactive to Apri13.
He also was placed on probation
through May 1'&gt;, J!m.
The Malar League Players Asso-

elation immediately filed a grievance protesting the suspension,
saying there was "no just cause" lor
the disciplinary action, The matter
went before an arbitrator following
preliminary hearings with baS&lt;&gt;ball's Player Relations Committee.
AI Thornwell , the Braves' executive vice president, said in Atlanta
that the team was notified ol the
decision by Kuhn's office Saturday
morning,
Thornwell said PPre:z, who
worked out In prison in the
Dominican Republic and has

six hits In 7 2-31nnlngs while walking
four and striking out seven , He was
helped by lhreedouble plays, Sutter
recorded his sixth save ,
The Cardinals jumped on Mont real starter Bryn Smith, 4-l , for a 3-{)
lead In the first , Lonnie Smith tripled
and, after Andy VanSlyke walked,
David Green hit a sacrlflce fly ,
Porter then homered .
Montreal cut the margin to :l-1 in
Its half of the first as Gary Carter' s
single scored, Pete Rose, who
walked and took second on a w1Jd
pitch by LaPoint
The Cardinals increased their
lead in the third on George
Hendrick's RBI single and in the
fifth on a single by Ken Oberkfell
that scored Van Slyke, who had
doubled. They added a run in the
ninth off Bob Jamps on Wille
McGee's triple and a doubiP by Van
Slyke.
Mets 4, Phil~ 3
NEW YORK !API - Ross Jones
doubled in the ninth to drive In a run
as thP New York Mets edged the
Philadelphia Phillies 4-3 Saturday ,
The Mets tied the score :l-3 in the
eighth on a two-out homer by Darryl
Strawberry off Phillles starte r
Charles Hudson.
Philadelphia relief ace AI Holland, 0-2, took over in the oint h and
Hubie Brooks singled. Then Jones
hammered his double. Winner Ed
Lynch, 2-0, pitched the final two
innings in relief of starter Ron
Darling.
Hudson had allowed only two hil s
since the second. The Ph lilies took a
1-0 lead In that Inning when Von
Hayes walked, stole second and
scored from there on Ivan DeJ esus'
infield hiL

The Ml'ts tied It In the second when
Strawberry walked, stole second ,
continued to third on an error and
scored on Mookle Wilson's single.
Philadelphia went ahead 3-1 in the
third, Juan Samuel singled, stole
second and scored on a single by Joe
Lefebvre, Glenn Wilson then hit
tripled to score Lefebvre,
The Met s scored a run in the third
without a hit. Hudson walked Wally
Backman and Oquendo, and Backman went to third on a fly ball by
Hernandez . George Fosler then hit a
pop-fly and Backman scored when
Samuel collided with first baseman
Len Matuszck, who made the catch
'
and knocked him down.

Derby trial winner
LOUISVlLLE , Ky. tAP) - Devll' s Bag prepped for the May 5
Kentucky Derby with a front running victory in lhe$!)4,500Derby
Trial Stakes Saturday on opening
day a t Churchlil Downs .
The 1983 2-year -old cha mpion will
now go Into next Saturday' s l y, -mile
Derby with two straight victoriesat seven furlongs, and a mile - but
without ever having won a race
around two turns.
Ridden by Eddie Maple, Devil' s
Bag finished 2V. -lengths in front of
Biloxi Indian after racing the mlle
on a fast track in 1: 35 :l-5 unde r 122
pounds.
The bay colt owned by James P ,
MU!s, who has been syndicated for
$36 mllhon, earned $35,425 and paid
$2.~. There was win betting only ,
Devil's Bag's victory was
achieved without the Hall of Fame
trainer Woody Stephens presentt

worked out on his own, is In shape to
pitch, and added that he likely wou ld
step straight into lhe team's
five-man pitching rotation.
"Heaven knows we need help,"
said Thornwell , referring to Atlanta's 8-11 record,
Perez was arrested in Santiago on
Jan. 9, convicted of cocaine possession In a Santiago cour1 March 23
and fined approximately $1,000, An
appellate court upheld the conviction on AprilS,

Tigers roll over Indians for 17th win
By HARRY ATKINS
AP Sporis Writer
DETROIT lAP) - Detrolt'sChet
Lemon and Lou Whitaker home red
to back the three-hit pitching of
unbeaten Jack Morris as the Tigers
beat Cleveland 6-2 Saturday, stop~
ping the Indians' winning streak al
five games and recording their 17th
trlumph In 19 games this season,
Morris, who struck out five and
walked three, Is 5-0, the best start in
his career, Hewas4-lln April ofl982 .
Last year, when Morris became the

Ttgprs' first 20-game winner in 10
years, he didn 't win his tourth game
until June3.
The Tigers, who saw their chance
to tie Oakland's 1981 malar-league
record or a 17-1 getaway dashed In a
19-lnning defeat Friday night.
jumped on Cif&gt;Veland 's Rick Be~
henna, Il-l , for a mn in thefirst inning
and led all the way ,
Whitaker singled and was forced
by Alan Trammell, who stolesecond
and scored on a s I n g I e by Darrell
Evans. Barbaro Gar bey and Lemon

But the Tigers put it away in their
half of the fourth , Lemon hit his
fow·th home run , a solo shot, into the
upper deck In right -center. Lowry
singled and Whitaker hit hls third
homer, a shot Into the upper deck In
right

singled In the Delruit second and
Dwight Lowry sacrificed, Both
runnl'rs scored on Trammell's
double lor a J.(J lead .
The Indians narrowed it to 3-2
without benefit of a hit In the fourth,
Tony Bernazard and Julio Franco
walked to start the rally and moved
up on a double steaL Bernazard
scored on a grounder by Mike
Hargrove and Franco came home
when Morris uncorked a wild pitch
while facing Brook Jacoby,

The Indians protested I hal Lowry
missed second while rounding the
bag but umpire Ken Kaiser said
shortstop Franco failed to Indicate
which runner he thought failed to
touch the base.

Panthers hope to end three-game losing spell
By 1be Associated Press
The defending United States
,. 'Oiball League champion Mlchigru Panthers, who have lost three in
a r.'W after six season-opening
victo. 1es, arrtve ln New Jersey
Sundb; still trying to figure out
what's nappened,
'The l Withers, tied with expansion
Houstor. for first place In the Central
Division, lake on the 7-2Generals at
Giants Sl &lt;dlum Sunday In what has
suddenly , ecome their most impor-

tan t gam&lt;' of the season.
It's also a big game for the
Generals, who barely eked out a
14-10 ttiumph over Pittsburgh last
week and are trying to remain a
game behind the Philadelphia Stars
In the Atlantic Division, 'The Stars
routed New Orleans 35-0 Frlday
night.
In other USFL games Sunday ,
Blrmlngham is at Denver in a battle
of diviSion leaders and Oakland Is at

ago, But while Coach Jim Stanley
says, "ldoubtwewould'velost three
straight with Carter," he adds:
"We've been our own worst
enemy.''
Meanwhile, Blrmingham quarU&gt;rback Cliff Stoudt will try to
continue In Denver the form that
saw him throw a league recordtying five touchdown passes in last
wee k's 41 -17 success ov er
Oklahoma.

Chicago, On Monday night, Los
Angeles Is at Houston,
Saturday night, Washington was
at Tampa Bay and San Antonio was
at Arizona .
In Friday games, Memphis beat
Pittsburgh 17-7 and Jacksonville
routed Oklahoma 34-6,
The Panthers' demise has coincided with the loss of wide receiver
Anthony Carter, their main deep
threat who broke his ann four weeks

EYE ON THE BALL- Jbnmy Connors keeps his eye on the ball as
he swings during his semi-final match against Jimmy Aria•. Saturday's
matches of the WCf Tennis Finals were played in nallas' Reunion
Arena. I i\P Laserphoto ),

National Football League draft slated Tuesday
By DAVE GOWBERG
AI&gt; Sporis nrtter
NEW YO~ ( (AP)- The National Football League
holds its ann 1al draft Tuesda:r, with a lot of the
suspense and' 1bout four dozen of the top prospects
already gone, ,
'lbere Is no , ·uestlon who will be the first pick wide reclever 1, 1ing Fryar of Nebraska has already
been signed by the New Engl&amp;' &lt;i Patriots, 1hey
acquired the top 'holce from the Cincinnati Bengals
after the BengaJ4 were unwilling to match the U.S,
Football League't bid for Brigham Young quarter' who signed with the los Angeles
back Steve Y
Express for $40
lion over 43 years,
F'l)'ar, conslde I a game-breaker In the James
Lorton.JOhn Jette n mold, might l)ave been the first
pick overaU In any ·ent But so might have Young, or
Helsman 1'roptzy nner Mike Rozier, who signed
With the Pittsburgh , 4au1Pr. :.t manunoth defensive
tackle Reggie Whl~' 'lOW ot the Memphis ShowOOats.
, In fact, acco
i to the arsessment of NFL
scoutlng combines, !dependent sources and profes"drattnlks," e USFL has picked ott about a
Ullrd of the potent, irst-round choices; a quarter ot

sional

•

Houston Astros' pitcher Bob Knepper, Murphy also
delivered a two-run blast In his next at-balln the filth
Inning of Saturday's game In the Astrodome, (AP
Laserphoto)'

HOUSTON (AP)- Dale Murphy
homered twice and Rick Camp and
Gene Garber combined on a
five-hitter Saturday to pace the
Atlanta Braves to a 5-3 victory over
the Houston Astros.
Atlanta starter Rick Camp, 2-{),
did not allow a hit until Kevin Bass
singled In the Houston sixth . Gene
Garber pitched theflnal22-31nnlngs
to earn the save,
Murphy followed a third-Inning
single by Claudell Washington with
his first homer He hit his second
homer oflloser Bob Knepper, 2-3, In
the fifth after a walk to Washington,
The Astros, held hitless through
five lnnJngs, scored their first two
runs in the seventh, Jerry Mumphrey and Denny Walling opened the
Inning with singles . Mumphrey took
third on Ray Knight's fly ball and
scored on Harry Spilman's single ,
Houston's second run scored when
Craig Reynolds greeted Garber
\\1th a sacrifice fly,
Atlanta scored Its last run in the
eighth off Vern Ruhle when Murphy
singled, stole second and scored on a
single by Terry Harper. The Astros
got a run in the eighth on a single by
Bass, Garber's balk and a pair of
groundouts, with Jose Cruz getting
theRBL
Cards 6, Expos I
MONTREAL (API - Darrell
Porter's two-run homer capped a
three-run first and the SL Louis
Cardinals defeated the Montreal
Expos 6-1 Saturday behind the
eight-hit pitching of Dave LaPoint
and Bruce Sutter.
LaPoint, 2-3, allowed one run and

Atlanta pitcher is reinstated Saturday

, ~" , I

BROYHILL
OAK 4 PIECE BEDROOM

BIG TOP PRICE

AIR MAIL DEUVERY - Ailanta Braves' Dale
Murphy (3) Is met by teanunate ClaudeU Washington

* RECLINERS * COFFEE AND END TABLES!

'Lenoir9-Iouse0''

29, 1984

Murphy homers twice
•
m 5-3 Atlanta victory

IT!

PO~

~\

~

April

DON'T
MISS

IT!

•

~imes- ientnut Section

EVERYTHING WILL BE ON SALE
'
"STOREWIDE" WITH ABSOLUTELY
NOTHING HELD BACK!

DON'T
MISS

•

ports

RETURNS!

BIGGEST TENT SALE THIS AREA
HAS EVER SEEN IS COMING
TO RUTLAND FURNITURE!

I

'

'

\

who pltk third. Houston could exchange places with
New York In return for other conside rations - as it
did last year when It traded the pick that eventually
became Eric Dickerson to the los Angeles Rams or It could take Stetnkuhier,
That would leave the Giants with thP alternative or
trading down and taking a Uneman with a later pick or
making a choice- the most Ukely would be Banks or
Maryland 's Boomer Eslason, the top-rated quarterback prospect
Among the other players expected to go high arP
wide receiver Kenny Jackson of Penn State, who may
be taken by the Philadelphia Eagles choosing fourth;
defensive linemen Rich Bryan of Oklahoma and Bill
Maas of Pitt, and defensive backs Mossy Cade of
Texas and Don Rogers of UCLA.
With Rozier gone, the top-rated running back Is
Stanford Jennings of Fumtan, considered a low
first-round-high second-round pick,
This may be the last year the NFL draft Is held so
late. Many coaches and genrai1J1811agers prefer the
late Aprll'i!llfly May draft becauae it allows !hem to
make better evaluations of prospects, but the USFL
raids have led to pressure to move It back to Feb, 1

the college players expected to make It In the NFL,
and about 90 who might have been among the 336
players drafted In Tuesday's 12 rounds.
That means that when representatives of the 28
teams convene at theOmni ParkHotelat8a.m . EST,
each choice will be even more important than It has
been In the past
"There are l3J guys with 'make It' grades left in the
draft right now, Without the USFL there would have
been 175," New York Giants Coach Bill Parcells said,
"But thtre are enough good players out there to have
a really good draft If you pick them right You just
have to pick right because the margin for error Is

greater."
F'l)'ar' s slgnlng lea\ es the Houston Oilers, who pick
second, as the draft's controlling team ,
Houston has been talking with at least three players
- Unehackers WUber Marshall of Florida and Carl
Banks of Michigan State and guard Dean Stetnkuhler,
a 267-poonder with speed and strength who was
Fryar's teammate at Nebraska,
Stetnkuhler, In fact, Ia considered the best available
player left and lli coveted by the llneman-poorGiants,

'

That change may come up for discussion at league
meetings In June, when the NFL will also conduct a
three-round draft of players who have signed with the
USFL That draft wllllncludeonly players In the class
of 1984 - last year's USFL signees were included In
the regular draft and those who weren't drafted are
tree agents who can sign with any NFL team ,
The Kansas Cltv Chiefs have the fifth pick of the
fi rst round, follo.;,ed by the San Diego Chargers,
Cincinnati Bengals, the Colts, Atlanta Falcons, New
York Jets, Chicago Bears. Green Bay Packers,
Minnesota VIkings, Buffalo Bills, New Orleans Saints,
Cincinnati (with a choice acquired from the Patriots
for the top pick) , St. Louis Cardinals, Cleveland
Browns, the Colts (a pick acquired from Denver In the
John Elway deal last year), Detroit Lions, los
Angeles Rams, Seattle Seahawks, Pittsburgh
Steelers, San Francisco 49ers, Dallas Cowboys,
Miami Dolphins, Washington Redsldns and the
Ben~als agaln with a pick acquired tram New
England, which got It from the los Angeles Raiders
as compensation for the Raiders' signing of Mike

Raynes.

�Times-Sentinel

1984

April 29, 1984

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

:.W ahama rally tops Ravenswood, I 0-8
Majors

delphia , m : Uttifo. Montreal. ..lkl

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l'htl&lt;ldl'i]!hl.l

usro Price" s stingy pitching and
three hom e runs to pound San
Francisco 9·3 F riday night.
Price, 2·1, scattered four hits over
the first seven innings, getting r elief
help from Tom H ume and Brad
Lesley, who r ecorded his second
save.
"'Other than a couple of games.

Draft sessions May 2, 3 for
Gallipolis summer programs

)-~r:- 11111

Sultda.\·, April :!'!
..._,.,._ . lr · r~'' ,rl :-.1iJ,.,au kt, .
Tut~,,- . Ma_
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'llfunrdrt) . Mit.~- :!
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'11 111, HJ~ n · .11 " ' "' . lr•J-....'1

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l.a.'ierphoto ).

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
Cl !\Cl N!\ATl i AP l Left ·
hander Joe Price figu res it' s time
the Cinc lnna ti Reds' pitcher s start
doing the ir fa ir share.
T he Reds, who wer e last in the
National League with a 4.87 team
earned nm average at her 19 games.

Yor k

" '· ~wsda,\- .
"-'

I(!

:ZI I'

!Pam b€fore, or J tl' m ov ing to a
differf'nl league.
D r a ft da tes and times arf': Pony
League, 6 p.m . May ,1: Pee Wee
League . 6 p.m . M ae· .1: Li ttle
LeaguP, 7 p.m . M a~' .1; r. irls J unior
League. 6 p.m . May 2: Girls &amp;&gt;nior
L eague. fi p.m Ma\ 2.
T -Eall player s do not a !tend a ny
draf t Sf&gt;Ss1on . T hl'_\' arC' placf'd on

team s

b~ · t hr

baseball supen.isor.

P layers att endi ng the draft are
r Pmi ndC'd to wea r play ing c lotlws
and bring their ba ll glove. Each
d r aft Sf'ss ion lasts OC&gt;tww n 30 a nd ,15
m in u tPs
I n r-ase of i nclement weat her , the
drafts w il l be hPid in th&lt;• CD C

ONDULINE. ROOFING Tm
WON'T GIVE IN TOTBE ELEMENTS
TBITDESTROYMEDL.
• Easy to install
• Won't rust or cor·
rode, ever
• Ideal for new
roofing
$4297
,!:nit

::::=

A cti v it y cenwr Gy m on tne Oates
and times list l'&lt;l above. Players
w ho a rr either r£' turning or a r e nev.·
" nd have not filled out a regist ra tion
for m are urged to do so by M ay I to
secure a r oster space. "Alter the
&lt;,l r aft sessions. players will only be
added on an as needed basis." " a
program spokesm an said.
Rcgtstered player s who are
eligible to be drafted but ca nnot
attend the dr aft for wha tever
reason will st ill be drafted by a
team .
For additiona l information, call
thP Gallipolis Parks and Recr eation
Department at 446-1789, extension

· \ "rll.•l''' Pv: ..r - '\,1nn :\--l, tH·um 1~n. \ "•md&lt;t

:\1oM&gt;! - r\,tndl '\urt• 17-1 . K a lh\
null hPr lJ&lt;ro
]lohn•.lln ·, :\--l ,t rk r•l - Rl•.., . ._ il • F'ldd &lt;, 1-19 , --1 12
\~r.ml hJrrrfl "l'h-rm.•'- - T H f' rf~d Sliva
.... Jil l

!~" · &lt;.;,

1- :rl\l. ,i l'd'-

• '-&gt;pill'- r &lt;ih\l'r·t,'(] -

~){j

.)r' nni ff'r

and Oester circled the bases on
Driessen's home run.
been . - - - - - - - - - - - -

7-13. '"Our pitching has
Inconsistent.
"" If we could get pitching like we
did the last two months of last
season, we'd be better right now."
Duane Walker and Dan Driessen
clubbed two-run homers off M ark
Gr ant in the right -hander's m ajor·
league debut. and Dave Concepcion
added a Jhree-run blast in the eighth
off r eliever Gary Lavelle. Giants
Manager Frank Robinson had a
c lubhouse meeting after the game,
and was left wondering w hat he has
to do to get more punch out of his
lineup.
'
""It looks like no m atter what
lineup we use, we can 't get the big
hits with men on base.'" RoiJlnson
said.

three safeties, M att Thompson two.
and VanMeter , Gress, Dawson,
Bash and Roush all with one hit
each. Ravenswood received two
hits each !rom Johnson and Lawson
while B urrows. Belue, Keffer and
Fletcher all had one each. Johnson,
Lawson and Seaver aU stroked
doubles for the visitor-s.
Bo Carter , the last of four
Ravenswood pitchers, w as tagged
with the mound setback . Pat Belue
started for the Red Devils followed
by John Mason and E d Keffer .
Matt Thompson got the sta rting
nod lor Waham a and worked five
Innings giv ing up seven runs {Only
two were earned) on six hits while
walking two. Troy Tucker hurled
the sixth frame allowi ng one run on
one hit with a strikeout and a base
on balls In notching his first va rsi ty
pitching victory.
Richie Clark c;&lt;me on to pitch the
final Inning to record his second
save in thre&lt;&gt; days and third of t he
year.

PH . 992-5101

LS27A Bush Hog
27" lot Splitter .. .. . $525
Bush Hog
72" Squealer ........ 1650
Bush Hog
TM5 Mower .... ...... $1,000
Model 3006 Bush Hog
Box Scraper ........... $575
2 Model 30 Bush Hog
6' Blades ...... ..... $300 ea ,

OXFORD. Ohio tAP I - M iami
1laskelball Coach Darrell Hedric
.has reslgned to take an adrnlnist ·
'rtlw job and som e m embers of the
·NCAA Tournament Redsldn.s team
·are threatening mutiny If assit.a nt
coach Jer ry Peirson doesn' t get the
"head coaching j ob.
.: " We feel If they go out side lor a
coach. som e of the players w il l
)eave," " said ail Mld·Arner lcan
Conference guard Ron Harper. "If
:r.tiey hire coach Peirson, nobody will
) eave. lfthey gooutside.chancesare
ffi-50 that I'll leave.""
·'Basically , I have the same

new

GALLI POLIS - Ga lli{Xlll.'l ' Blue
Angels nipped M Pigs 85-8214 in pr ep
girl s' track action here Thursda y.
In the boy s' competition, PI .
Pleasant edged Ga llipolis 9 2 '1,·86
with Me igs h avi ng 44 1~ a nd Buffa lo·

Put
nam tern
18. s involv0d in the gir ls'
Other
scorl
ngPt
were
Buffal
38
and
. Pleasa
nt o-Pu
:!O I;2 .! nam wi th
In the close girls' rnPPI , Ga ll ipolis
led Meigs by a half a point going
inlo th(' final ra ce. the 1.600 relay.
The Angels won by thrf'l' Inches to
capture the event. So close was the
fin al r ace that eac h t eam was given
thE' exact sam e clocking. but
Ga llipolis the points .

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 $econd Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 441·42'10
Home 446-4S 11
ITIIIII • • • •

Slate Ferm Mutual

Automobile lnaurw~Ce Companyliome OffiCe: Bloomington. !Hir'IOi:r~

At GalUpolls
Bo)"'' Team Swn.'!O
Point P l('a!k;l n l 911f1 . G i.!l l ipol b

Rl MPigs

48 l..l: B u ffalo-Putn a m 19

FIP.Id E venl"i
Polf' vaul! - 1. Howard

I G I , % : 2. .Ja ('kson
l Gl: 3. Ue. Niber t 1G1 and ThN~s IC\.
• Hl~ h Jump - 1. Barton 1PPI , ft.O; 2. RLffle
(PP ); 3. Uc, Howard (G ) and Eads I MI .
Lon~ Jump - 1. Close 1G 1;I).J ll!: 2. Ga rtx&gt;r

Dean Saf T Bilt Tires by Cooper

32 squa res of material currently in stock.

1CI : 3. Simpkins 1PP L
Shot put - 1. Huffman 1PP 1. 121 · 2 : 2.
Kauffer (PP); :t. McCabe I CI
• Discus -1. K autl'f&gt;r 1PPI . 121-7: 2. Mr Cahf'
[C. l: .1. Huffman IPPI.

CLOSEOUT ON

BAU.M LUMBER
986·3301
. CHESTER

DISCONTINUED TIRES

l l itni.\ --1 lfr

•
llwmtng Eve nt.&lt;~
, 2·m ile relay -1 . Meigs , 9:17.1: 2. Gel ll .; 3.
Buff.

(SUPPLY LIMITED)

.. OOyard highs - 1. fie, Ba n on 1PP1 a nd
~!fOe IPPJ; 3. Garber 1CaU1.

• 100 meters -

Alpha II Steel Radial

tG I
: Mile-- 1. Hennedy (M 1. 5: 01 .K: 2. Sim pki ns ·

Aty.
8 Pl65/8DR13 ............ ........, ... ..... 29.00
2 Pl85175Rl3 ........................ .. .... 30.00
4 P205175Rl4 .................. .. .... ...... 33.00
4 P215/75Rl5 ................. ....... ...... 36.00
4 P225175R15 .................. ........ .... 38.00
4 P235175Rl5 .............................. 40.00

' PPl: .1. Ead'I IM I.
• .WO relay - 1 PP. 47.2: 2. Meigs: 3. Buff.
~ 440 dash - I. ODS&lt;' (GI 52.1: 2. Rife I P P J; J.
$tmpldns I PPI.

~-

Motor Car Brokers
WE HAVE~ LARGE SELECTION OF
CONVERSION VANS IN STOCK &amp;
READY TO GOI NEW &amp; USED.

1981 SUBARU GL WAGON
5 speed, light brown with tan cloth &amp; vinyl interior , AM-FM radio, rea r
defogger , r adial t ires. Real Nice Clean, Locally Owned Ca r .

'4,90000

875RI6.5 8 Ply...,.................................. 73.00
950Rx16.S B Ply .•.................................. 80.00
•31xl0.50RK15 6 PlY·· ·~ ····· · ·· · ·· ····· · · · ··· · · ·· 75.,00

.

BILL'S BODY SHOP
•

992-5692 or 992-6565

DISHES

Fiberglas
Mesh
Aluminum
8 Ft. to 20 Ft.

2:4.1.6: 2. Ca c1y

1G 1:

1980 CHEVROLET CAMARO
Z-28
350
·
u1

HAS EXTENDED ITS HOURS
TO BETTER SERVE OUR
CUSTOMER NEEDS
r---------------------------------------,
I
SALES 8:00A.M. TO 7:00P.M. MON .. TUES . WED .. FRI.
:

I

1
I

I

I
I
1

8:00A.M . TO 5:00 P.M. THURSDAY
8:00A.M. TO 3:00 P.M . SATURDAY

SERVICE·. 8:00A.M.
8:00A.M. TO 5:00P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY
TO 12:00 NOON SATURDAY
PARTS·• 8:00A.M.
TO 5:00P.M . MONDAY-FRIDAY
8:00A.M. TO 3:00 P.M . SATURDAY

·~------------------------------ ------ --~

LIKE THIS ONE:
1984 FORD LTD-4 DOOR
FOR ONLY

440 nl!oy- I.

$969500

1984 FORD ESCORT
FOR ONLY $578500

E•enla

• 2·mlle retoy - 1. Galt. 11: 16; l Meigs.
• 110 lowt - !. Yost. 16.9; Sh«eiS (G) ; l

·

~'

54.3; 2. Galt .; 3. PP .

Charcoal gre y with red stripes and velour interior ,
engtne, a o.
trans ., air cond. , tilt wheel, cruise control. AM-F M 8 track, rear
defogger ' rear window louve rs a nd fa dory T-Top to let the sun in!

'7 ,20000

I-:-~==::::::;::;:;;;;:.;;;;=::;;:-.:::;:;:;;;;:;;;&amp;;;7,E~-=:'7.';"""-I
"

1982 CHEVROLET S-10 TRUCK
.Long red, Durango Package, light tan with grey vinyl interior, V-6
"eng .• 4 speed trans., PS, PB , air cond ., AM-FM B track , sliding rear
window, chrome bumpers, aluminum toppe-r and only 33,000 miles.
Nice Clean Truck!

90000

WE PROUDLY WELCOME TO OUR SALES STAFF FRANK GHEEN, A RESIDENT OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.
FRANK WAS ASSOCIATED WITH LARRY'S MOBILE
HOMES, WAS ASSISTANT MANAGER AT CITY LOAN
&amp; SAVINGS CO. OF POMEROY, AND ALSO WAS IN
AUTOMOBILE SALES AT KEITH GOBLE FORD AT
MIDDLEPORT. FRANK IS LOOKING FORWARD TO
SERVING HIS MANY FRIENDS IN THE AREA WITH
QUALITY USED CARS AND TRUCKS ALONG WITH
LEASING CARS AND RENTAL CARS.

OR

, Shot put - 1. Os bOrne tB ), 33~: 2 Owens
iGI: 3. SoulhWOrlh tM L
• Olscuo - I. Byrd (G) , 81·1; 2. Poner tPPI;
~, OsbOrne tBI.
,

'' 'd!l -"I. Yoai (Bl , 3:05.7; 2. BardlllUI tGii

II
1
I
I
I1

COME ON IN AND CHECK OUT OUR DEALS,

(G i: 3. Nee&lt;e i Mt.
• Long Jump - 1. Janey IG l. 16-3: 2. Hallox
)Ml : 3. Ue. Dalton tPP i and Swanz !MI.

Mne - 1. Carmen iGl 5:59.2; 2.8oonsue; 3.
·;Johnson tG) . .

Stop And Look!

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.

, MUe relay - 1. PP, 3: 40.8; 2. M('lgs: .l Gall.
Girl!!' Team Scofft
Gal11polls ~; Meigs 81"'1: BuHalo-Pu tnam
lf!: Point Pleasant :JJY,.
Field Event.
Hlgh Jump - 1. Boese (8\. 4-10; 2. Ca11er

Relay

blue interior, 6 cyl. eng ., auto. trans ., PS, PB , a1r c:ond ., AM rad1o,
turbine wheels, raised white leHer radial tires . Real Sharp Locally

TURNER'S SATELLITE
RECEIVER SYSTEMS

Kennedy !M&gt;

.,

1979 PL VMOUTH VOLARE
l door Sport Model with Ouster Package, white with blue stripes and

r~M~l
' =--1~.~Ca:·t~t.,~&lt;~:.14~-~7;~2~.:M:et:"'~·~lj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hurt :rt~c=rl:a'~

100 meters - 1. E ng lish (M ); 13.1; l Allen
~ G); 3. Turner IMI,
1110 relay - 1. Gall. 1: :14.9; 2, Metgs; J, P P .

273-3271

~

2· mllf'- 1. Tralnr r 1M 1, 1.1: 1 2. ~ : 2. Aoonsue
PPI. 1 Harmon tGl.

]dlller tM).

.Junction Rt. 88 and Rt. :!, Ravenswood; WV
.'
Open Monday thru Satlirday 8-~ '

PH. 446-0699

nJ _ 1 J anP' ' lli l. 2}1.0: 2. Tumr r 1M 1: J
English 1M1.

IG: a f oum tOO.

All Season Steel Radial

'8,20000

GALLIPOLIS &amp;
POMEROY

:t_ A nd P r ~o n 1MI .

l. Close I G ), 22:.9: 2. Riff&gt; 1PP1 : 3.
Simpkins IPPl .
• 2· mlle t.- 1. Kennedy 1Ml. 11 :09.9: 2. Adams

.

2 door, charcoal grey with contrasting cloth Interior •. vinyl top, lilt
wheel , cruise control, AM-FM stereo, sport wheels , radial tires .
Locally Owned, 1983 Cutlass trade-in .

Owned Trade-in!

~~~:~ ~~ _'shf't•ts 1c1. 525 : 2_Yost I B ); 1
~· - 1. Howard 1M 1.

1982 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

DRIVERS' EDUCATION
CLASSES
BEGINNING MAY 7th

, ZXl -

3lxl0.50x15
54.00
31xl0.50x15 6 Ply ........... ...................... 62 .00

3lx10.50-15 4 Ply .. ............................... 56.00
3hll.50-15 4 Ply ........... ............... ....... 60.50
3bll.50-15 6 Ply .. .:.................. ........... 66.00
33d2,50-15 6 Ply ....................... .. ......., 70.00
33d2.50-16.5 8 Ply .............................. 80.00

onP·t hirdnni ngs givi ng up six runs,
none of which wer e Pa rned run s,
had th ree str i ke ou ts and thr ee
wa lks. Jim Cotr lll a nd Scott
Cra\Vford cam e on in rPiief of Blain
as neither a llowed a ~i ng l e r un .
Winni ng pitcher w as Kelfor d,
who came on in relief of Kuhl aft er
lwo a nd one--th ird innings.
T he Big Blacks take the weekend
but re turn 10 the diam ond on
Monday when t hey host PAC.8 foe
Hurricane at 4: 30 p.m . in Harmon
Park. On Tui'Sday and Wed nesday
the locals travel to Huntington and
Hurrl canC' rP.s pectively. On T hu r sday the Big B tae ks host M ilton and
on Friday they ente rt ain Winfield.

prisons. A thletes don 't m ake deci·
slons for the athletic departm ent.
We have their best interests a t
heart,"' Shrider said.
As expected, Hedric r esigned
F riday after 14 seasons to become
associa te athletic director.
His 21&amp;-158 won-loss record ls the
wtnningestln Miami's history ,

Aa ttev JM '-

, 300 lows- 1. RlfOe IPPI 42.4; 2. Ba rton
i PP l; 3. Palin IM ).
£8) - 1. Watson (G) , 2:Cfl.5: 2.Sinclalr I MI ;

r~,~-~~~ !.~~~-~---··· ····

New Shipment light Truck Tires
Super Stinger Mud &amp; Snow

1. Clost&gt; 1G1. ll .S; 2. C.

Simpkins tPPI ; 3. tle. Rife tPPI and Ga rbE&gt;r

Skylark Steel Radial

Qty.
16 P185/ 75R13 ...... .............. ........,. 30.00
4 P185/75R14 ........ ., .., ............ .. ....., 33.00
2 P205/75R14 ....,, ..... ......................... 36.00
12 P215/75R14 ...... ,....,...................... .. 38.00
4 P225/ 75R14 ., ., ......, ....................... .. 40,00
9 P205/ 75R15 .............. ................... .. 37.00
17 P215/75R15 ....... ... ..................... .... 39.00
18 P225/75R15 ..., .. ...... .. ................... 42.00
6 P225/75R15 ., ........ .. .. ...................... 44.00

:l.

1

They'll probably tell you they like State Farm's unbeatable
combination of service , protection , and economy . Ask any
one of them , or give me a call.

}. ~f:J~.~~.~~~-~ - ~. ,825

feelings," said Ron Hunt er, another
sophom or e. "Coa ch Pe irson 's
coaching philosophies are no differ ·
en! than Coach Hedrlc. and we"vc
adapted to that. "
B ut A thletic Director Dick
Shr ider. a former basketball coach,
sa.id the selection will be m ade in
accordance with afflrma tlve action.
Applica tions will be taken until M ay
14 and a search committee will
inteJVlew the finalists by June], The
selection will be m ade then, said
Shrider .
''I'm hiring coaches. I'm not
hiring p layer s. Prisoner s don't run

Gallia girls win four-way
meet; Point boys triumph

Ever wonder
why so many
of your neighbors
insure their cars
with State farm?

0

the bottom half of the t hird as they
cam e up wit h four r uns. T hree
errors on the B ig Blacks, a walk and
a single accounted lor all l our runs
as Winfield took the lead for the first
time a t 6·5.
Winfield m anaged to hold PPHS
scoreless through l he final four
fr ames. L eading the offensive
attack for Point wer e Kevin Stone
wi t h two singl es and Tim Swisher
wi th a double. A lso getting hits worP
Herdman, Ba rnett&lt;' and &amp;&gt;on
Crawford.
T he leading hitt&lt;'r l or Winfield
was F r ampton with two safeties.
PPHS start er Riehle B lai n was
dealt the loss. Blain worked two and

.D ick Shrider says I'm the one
;hiring coaches., not the players

The 20-year -old Grant made a
lively first appearance, punctuated
by a couple of bench~learing
pit ches.
Grant hit Cincinnati second
baseman Ron Oester ,w lth a pitch to
sta rt the third, prompting an
exchange of words as both benches
cleared . No blows were exchanged,

110 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

l• lt &lt;l .tn j. jl,
Ll~&lt;lrl &lt;

T he Gener aIs collected lour hits.
I t was error s on the Big Blacks that
proved to he a big factor in the
·ou tcorn f:\.
T he Big Blacks got off loa quick
start a s they opened a 2·0 first
Inni ng lead . Dan·ell Herdm an
collected a one out single and Tim
SwLsher deli vered a run scor ing
:double. Bobby Barnette plated
Swisher f rom second with his RB I
·single.

we've been scor ing enough runs to
win,"' Price said of the Reds, now

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.
(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)

H 1'f'd

""'

fielder's choice by Chris Bash.
After Ravenswood failed to score
ln the sixth Waharna began Its
game wiMing six run rally by
sending 11 men to the plate ln the
Inning. Pethtel and Roush singled to
get things started before VanMeter
greeted the third Red Devil pitcher
of the game with an RBI single.
Following another pitching change
Gress reached base on an error and
after Thompson went down, swingIng Dawson and Ron Bradley both
walked to fill the bases.
Bash popped out f or the seeond
out of the Inning following by an
RBI base on balls to Troy Tucker.
Pethtel then doubled tor his second
hit of the inning to gtve Wahama a
10.7 lead.
Rav ensw ood added one run In the
fin al fram e and had t he go-ahead
run at the plate w hen Richie Clark
got Kevin Lawson to hit into a 6-4-3
double play to end the gam e.
The White Falcons out -hit the
visitors 1().9 with Pethtel owning

Richie Blain opened the second
i nning wi th a base-on-balls and
moved to third base on conseeutlve
wild pit ches. Guy M orrow's sacii·
flee Oy to left field scor ed B lain and
the Big B l acks opened up a 3.() lead.
Winfield narrowed the margin to
.3·2 In the boltom of the second.
when two errors on the Big B lacks'
short stop allowed men to reach
base a nd later score o n F r ampton's
single.
Point ·s final two runs cam e ln the
top half of the thir d. Winfield 's
star ting hurler K uhl Issued four
base-on-balls and K evin Stone's run
scorin g single plat ed two runs and
the loca ls held a 5·2 advantage.
The Gener als' big lnnin~ came in

overall .

24.

CO\IHID SO.
,.\ nn

Francisco Giants' first baseman Jack Oark (22) durlnglhe thlrdlnnlng
of their National League game Friday aftemoon In Cincinnati. (AP

Price gives up four hits, Reds win, 9-3

~·t'fl l

l ·o ,-Jo. .E IU ::'\( 'E
1\or-.t, .. '"· ... 1..1'1" y,..~
Sundlo,\ ' f\pril ~
''"' Yul k .rl llr:r-..1011
Wt•li-t....da,\- . \oil,., . :!
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TOO FAST F OR YOU -Cincinnati Reds' second baseman twn
o.,.tRr 116) dives back to first bast&gt; ahead of the belated tag of San

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L'\

II

WI NF"!El.D - Winfield handed
visiting Pt. Pleasant a 6-5 nonJpagur baseball set back here F ri ·
day aft ernoon.
T he loss dropped PPHS to B-7

t'\rc Hound

II

Senior outfielder M ike Petht el
was the leading hitter in the game
with three safeties In four tries to
dr1ve In two runs. Two of his hits
were two bagger s with his double In
the sixth dr1vlng in the game
winning runs. In Pethtel's last three
games he has hit .500 with two home
runs, two doubles, and a single with
seven R BI's to up the season
average from .238 to .322.
Ravenswood opened a 1.0 advantage In thesecond fr am ew hich they
upped to 3-0 wtth a pair of fourth
Inning tallies. Wahama cut the lead
to 3-1 tn their half of the fourth on a
single by T odd Gress and an RBI
single by Matt Daw son.
T he Red Devils upped their lead
to 7·1 with l our m ore r uns In the
fifth, thanks to three Falcon errors
In the Inning. The White Falcons
scored three times themselves ln
the fi fth on three straight wal ks to
M itch Roush, Donnie VanMeter
and Gress foll owed by a single by
M att Thompson and a bases loaded

C..J

Wrinfield hands Pt. Pleasant 6-5 defeat

NBA rPsult.."l

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Tunlfrl u l

By GARY ClARK
MASON - M ike Pethtel continued wtth his hot bat and the
· Wahama White Faicoru; rallied lor
six runs ln the bottom half of the
sixth Inning to score a come from
. behind 10.8 baseball victory Friday
over the ~lsit lng Ravenswood Red
·Devils,
· The dia mond triumph w as the
third consecuti ve win lnas a m any
·days lor the bend area learn .
· The Whit e Falcons' spring record
· now sta nds at 5-6.
: Ravenswood was clinging to a
: somew hat comfortable 7-4 lead
: going Into t he bottom hail of the
sixth Inni ng when the Falcons
• mounted t heir gam e winni ng r ally.
: Ironica lly It w as the Red Devils '
·lone error of thf' game which
." opened the gates for the bend area
.nine. WHS com mit ted six error s in
the cor.test that led to six unearned
Ra venswood r uns but the hot
hi tting by thE' locals enabled them to
overcomC' t hei r infetior defPnsive
play.

"""""·
.fil: Gwynn. s.n '"""· .m
Ray. Plttstwgn, .:&amp;; Lefeb\.'ft', Phlll

The Sunda y Times-Sentinel- Page

461

PAT HILL
FORD,
Inc.
, PH. 992-2196
s. Third Ave.

Middleport, OH.

Merrill, Jay and
n Evans
and Frank Gheen

Monday thru Friday 8 a.m.-8 u.rn.1
8 a.m.- 3

�Chi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

1984

Indiaris trip Tigers, 8-4, in 19 innings
By HERSCHEL NfiSENSON

AP Spol1s Writer
The Detroit Tigers may go on to
capture the Amertcan League
bunting, but thelr latest w1nning
streak came to an end thanks to the
Cleveland Indians' bunting.
A game which began Friday night
ended early Saturday some 5 hours
and 44 minutes Ia terwlth the Indians
beating a curfew by pushing across
lour runs In the 19th Inning to defeat
the Tigers 8-4 and prevent them
from equating the record 17-1
getaway of the l!fll Oakland
Athletics.
The fatal 19th began innocently
enough with a single by George
Vukovich . Ot is Nixon and Brett
Butler laid down consecutive sacri fice bunts and Glenn Abbot t. the
fourth Detroit pitcher . mishandled
both of them, loading the bases.
"A m ajor league baUplayer has to
make those two play s," Abbott said .
" We might still be out there
ot herwise. I j u st tried todo too much.
ThPre's no excuse for it .··
Tony Bemazard foliowed w ith a
sacrifice fly to deep right that Kirk
Gibson dropped lor the third
straight error, auowing Vukov ich to
score and reloading the bases. Two
outs later , Mike Hargrove doubled

home threee insurdllce runs to nail
down the Indian s' fifth consecutive

triumph and leave them five ga m~s
behind the ] (&gt;2 Tigers .
" It was a long day a t the office , bu t
it was worth it ," sa id c t..vc•land
M anager Pat CmTales. "We tried to
play the way we've been playing.
Our bunting cert ainly helped us 1the
Indians have hit only fiv e home
runs)."
In ot her AL games, the Oakland
A's downed the Minnesota Twins
5-3. the California Angels trounced
Detroit Tl~rrs' short.o;top A.lan Tram m eU
avoid.,. the liilidt' hy Clt'\'Pi and Indians' Pat Tahler and watches h l~i!i t hrow
eomph·h· a d ouhlt• play to first in t h t• t hird inning of Friday nig ht'"' game
at Tig•' r Stadium . H.on Ha...._..._,-'. w a...; out at first wit h the scon· t il·d at 3-:J.
( _-\1 1 I.&lt;L....:•rphol o ).

UOl'BLE PL"\' -

Dodgers take over
lead in NL West
,Jtllr\ NELSO!\
·\I' Sport., "Mtt"r

B~·

.Inaq u in .-\ ncl u jar . I hf' u n prT'CI I cta ·
bit' :--;1 I .oui_.o.., ( ·ardin.1l" p itchrr.
"iii 'J&gt; JM i'l 1&lt;1 thr pb tr for a fi ft h ·inn ing
:1 1-bar df:;ainst Vlont rr;ll 'A'f&gt;arlng a
lit! II' 1'.\l r a pmtr'Ct ion .
! k \\';Lc., cxpf'(' t ing a p itr h a t his
h('ad. and hr got i t from Stew•

Ro;.;n· .... thr E xpos· ri ght -handf'r
whP \\' ; !" rt1 1JiiaTing for a pit rh t wo
innmg' mrliPr that Andu jar had
ruckr&lt;i under Hr:can LIII IP's chin.
.. I wnr'f' an rar flap w h('n I w('n 1to
bar tlt&lt; '&lt;I U"' I kn&lt;w thp~ · might tr;·to
thn1\\. J t nw." Anduja r S&lt;J id . "and l
didn 'r \.•:ant rogf't hit in thf'('ar."
l{ogt•r"· first pitch to A nd ujar wa s
high and insidL'. and ,\mlujar had to
duck , tv.-&lt;:~:, Hl' hit thP nPx t pi trh
from Rog&lt;'r' dC&lt; •p into the 11'!1 -fif'ld
SPHIS for his first hmTH' r un in nt:'ar ly'
fOUl .\ 'l';l!·o..;

Th1' h1 HTll •r brukt' a 2 - ~ tiP a nd st•nt
C ~t'tJi n a ls tu .tn R-2 vic t o ry O\'f'l'

thf'

thf' 1·:.-.;po" Friday. In thf' tT'St of tlw
NJIIcm;ll l~'dgur•, Los Angd ps lx•at
S;.u1 I !11 •gn I 11in J ga m~ shortPned to
SC\'('n tnnin.f.!" b\· rain , A tla nt a s hut
our l lou.'i on 6-11. Phi ladd phi a lx•at
New Yo r k ~-:l . Cincinna ti clobbc•red
San 1-'ranc i"-&lt;'O ~-.1 a nd Pi ttsbu r gh
edg«l 01!&lt; ago .l2.
HogPrs wou ldn't say if he had
- thrown "' And uja r purposely , bu t
. i\nduja r " ' id his [&gt;it c h to Littlf' in the
· th ird\~ - ~ _...,

an

~cc id e n1.

Dodgers I, Padres 0
flick HonPycutt limited San Diego
:to just one hit in six innings , and
: &gt;;te\'P YmgPr hompr ed to enable the
· Dodgt&gt;rs to m ove in to first placC' in
: t he .' \L Wpst over the PadrE's. L os
Angl'lP~ has won six st raight to drop
San Diego out of first pl ace for the
(irst limP this sea9Jn .
After wa it ing ] hour, 49minu tPS in

: rain. thP ga me was called.

Th~ onl y hrt off Honevcutt .

4-0.

was Lu1s Sa lazar's bunt smgle in l hC'
fowth . Hon&lt;"ycutt faced just 19
b &lt;J ttl' rs. u np o\·e r thP m inimum . and
no P&lt;~dr~ hit th(• ball out of thC' infi eld.
Tim Lollar was the los..r d('s pit e
gi\·ing up just three hit s.

Braves 6, A.strus 0
Pete FalconP lost his no-hit bid
u ·it h hvo out in thP sevpnth inning,
finishing w it h a three-hitt er to shut
out theAstros. F alcone also had two
doubles, sro rE'd a run and drove in
two runs as hf' w on for the first t imC'
in four decisions.
Falcon&lt;'. w ho wa lked four and
&lt;..:truck out four , did not gi \'(' up a hi t
until Phil GarnPr's i nfield s in gle to
third Falcon&lt;" w rrrro 18 of th&lt;' fi rst
'20 tJa tt Prs. including 11 s tra ig ht in
On(., Sl l"{'t Ch

Phillies 8, M el• 3
Rookrr .Juan Sam uel singled to
start t hf' r &lt;1 lly and drove in two run s
w rth a dou ble as Philadelph ia sent l 1
mt' n to 1h f' pia te and scored six runs
in th&lt;' eighth in ning to beat New
Yor k.
Bill Campbel l. 2-0, pitched one
llit less innmg in l'f'lief of Johr
Denny. w ho was li fted for a pinch
hitter. Doug Sisk took the loss in
r&lt;'liPI of T im Leary . Red•9. Giants 3
Cincinnati got home runs from
Duane Walker, D an Dr iPSsen and
Dave ConCC'pclon to hand Sa n
Francisco it s founh straight loss.
Concepcion's three-run shot highlighted a ftve-run eighth in ning tha t
made the game a rout.
J O&lt;" Ptiee y ielded j ust l our hits in
sevpn innings beforP yielding to
Tom Hum e. B r ad Lesle:v got the
final fiw outs for his second save.
Pr ier• and G iants rooki&lt;" pit cher
Mark Grant got into a brush-bac k
war tha t caused two bench-dearing
incidents, neit her of w hich resu lted
in punches. G rant hit Ron Oester in
the third inn ing, and Price hit G r ant
in the tift h.

CLEVELN-&lt;D i AP l Th~
Cleveland Brow ns. in a trade wit h
the Los Ang&lt;"les Rams. have
regained thP second -round draft
pick they los t last year whm w ide
receiver Ron Brown chost&gt; to 1rain
for the Olympics ra ther than pla v in
the Na tiona l F oot bali League
The Browns on Friday dea lt thP
rights to npgot iate&gt;&lt;it h Brown to the
Rams, in exchange for the Rams'
S&lt;'COnd-round pick in Thesday's
NFL draft .
Brown, a 5-foot-ll, 190-poundcr
from Arizona State, was the
B""'n s' second-round choice last
year. but he decided to retain his
amateur standing so he could try out
for the C .S. Olympic team as a
sprinter
Tithe Brow ns had been unable to
sign him or trade hlm by Tuesday .
Bro"n wou ld have been eligibl e to
be picked aga in in this year's draft .
sa id Browns' spokPSman Kevin
Byrn e
Because of the t rade. however ,
the footba ll players' union has given
Brown a waiver to kf'f'll him out of

Hafl one shot lead
A.USTIJ\ , T&lt;'xas lAP ! - M iller
Barber and partner J ulius Bmus
grabbed a one-shot lea d alter th&lt;"
second round of the $500,00J Lilx•r ty
Mutua l Legends of GoU.
Barber, w ho has won ovt&gt;r $2
m illion playing golf, had six of his
team 's eight birdies in the best-ball
tourn ament Friday for a 62 and a
twe&gt;day total of 127.
Barber and Boros, who teamed
wit h Robert o DeVicenzo to win the
1979 Legends. are 13-undcr pa r on
thP 6,:M -yard Oni on Cr eek Country
Club course.
ThP final two rounds. scheduled
for today and Sunday , of the 72-hole
tournament w il l be nationally
reiPViscfl .
The tournament Is for cham pion
golfers at least 50-years-old, and the
winner s w111 split $100,00J.
BiUy Casper and Gay Brewer shot
a 63Friday to r ema in in second after
two rounds at 128.

$119° 0

.~d.Bea rned

run average.

M oor e capped a three-run second
inning off Shane Ra w ley wit h a
two- run single and tripled home two

runs off Bob Shirley In a
three-run tlfth.He also drove in a run
with a grounder In the eighth. Jim
Sundberg deUvered a run-scoring
double In the second Inning and a
two-run trtple In a three-run third as
the Brewers won lor the first time In
nine games at Yankee Stadium.
"Things are finally back to
normal," said Caldwell, who threw
only 109 pitches. "I'm keeping the
ball down, getting ahead of the
hitters, and getting the groundballs.
I love this ballpark. In my only
W-win year ( 22-9 In 1978) , I won my
20th game here on a shutout."

\Yinnlng streak. Gedman broke a 1-1
tie with his second-Inning homer and
ln the fourth, Easler and Gedman
homered on successive pitches.

r--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--

BE

HAILSAFE!
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Harwst Crop-Hail protection
from Continent.Jllnsurance.

Orioles 4, Rangers 3

A t thf'H wor, t, hil,f~rnrm' (Jncl~;&gt;~lrrl\ Jn

John Lowenstein rapped a runsearing single In the 11th Inning lor
the w inning run. Cal Rlpken Jr.
singled to open the llthandmoved to
second on a wild pitch by Dave
Tobik, who also wild-pitched home
the tying run ln the lOth Inning. After
throwing two balls to Eddie Murray.
Tobik issued an intentional walk to
the Baltimore first baseman. Lowenstein then singled on a 2-2 pitch
to score Rlp ken.
The Orioles trailed 2-l w hen Jim
Dwyer tied the score In the eight h
with a pinch-hit hom er. Gary
Ward 's RBI -slngle put the Rangers
in front in t he top of the lOth but
Ba 11 !more tied It in the bottom of the
inr.lng on Wayne Gross' single. an
error by Texas shortstop Curtis
WUker son on F1oyd Rayford 's
grounder that allowed p inch-runner
Todd Cruz to r each thirdandTobik's
first w ild pitch.
Red Sox 5, White Sox 3
R ich Gedman hit two home runs
and M ike Easier added another
while Dennis Ecker sley scattered 10
hits.The loss was the fourth straight
for the Whi te Sox. w ho have lost
seven of their last eight games and
are last in the AL West after winnlng
the division a year ago.
LaMarr Hoy t suffered his second
consecutive loss after a 15-garne

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'l'uur L oldpn H .Jr vl·~ r ro l'l('tJid'
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•PI'Lo J iemN~wm v ,11rl whPrl J l rop "

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For mo s t GM ca rs

SOFT MOVES

thr:- draft . Byrn e said.

" A few months ago, we showed
nut hi ng for the Ron Brown pick and
now wp've got our Sf'('ond round
bac k, " sa id Browns' Coach Sam
Rutigliano. " It' s a ; ·car late. but it' s
a lot bet IJ&gt;r than we ever expeNed ."
B r own had ex ~ interest in
playing for a West CoaSi ieam .
TI1e draft pick obta ined by
Clevel and is the 20th in the second
round and the 48th pick overa ll.
B rown was the 13th player chosen In
the second round last year.
The tra de and the Rams' signing
of Brown are subject to league
approval . Byrne said.
The trade, coupled w ith the
Browns' trade of wide r eceiver
Dave Logan to D&lt;-nver earlier this
week, gives Cleveland fi ve picks in
the f irst four r ounds of Tuesday' s
draft - O r!{' in the first round and nvo
each in th&lt;' second and fou rth
round s.
Cleveland 's third-rou nd pick belongs to Buffalo because of a
pf£'v ious t;·ade that brought l inebac ker Tom Cousinpau to the
Browns
Bro"'n was a defensive back at
A rizona State w ho w as converted t o
wide I'('('0ivpr latp in his college
ca r eer . He caught 17 passes as a

Sf'nior in 19R2.
" H e obviously has great. great
speed, " said Ra ms' Coach John
Robi nson . " The acq uisition of a
player wit h the potent ial of Ron
Brown ['('preSPnts anot her dy namic
m ove by Ram management. It' s
exciting to consider the possibilities
he w i U add to our offense."

By

G.H.
BASS

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DAY LEAGUES
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Junior League Wednesday
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14.95
W/rebuild e•ch ,:)
tor most domestic 4-6 W

49.95 For domes!ic

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Remanufactured

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8.50

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9.88 .

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with 2 BBL

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2 BBL .......

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an Clutches .

These and many other
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available at Nationwise

small block V8 '69·' 1

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ST-200

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..

Fred Lynn 's solo homer and Brian
Downing's three- run shot in the first
inning got the Angels started. With
two out In the first , Lynn's third
hom er gaw- the Angel s a 1-0 lead .
Singles by Doug DeCinces and
Reggie Jackson preceded Downing's fifth homer of the season.
Rookie Ron Romanick held Seattle
hit less until A.lv in Davis hit his six th
home r un with one out in the fourth .
Romanick went 7 1-3 innings before
gi v ing way to Luis Sanchez.
Mike Caldwell fired a five-hitter
and CharU e Moore drow in five r uns
to highlight a 16-hit M ilwaukee
att ack. CaldweU owns a 10-3 record
in Yankee Stadium and resumed hls
Y an kee-killing ways after going 0-3
aga inst New York last year with a

more

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Example:

RETAIL
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A.thletlcs 5, Twins S
Dwayne Murphy broke open a
d ose game with three-run homer In
the f11th Inning off Larry Pashnlck,
m aking his first start of the year.
Winner Steve M cCa tty, who had not
last ed more than six Innings In any
of his five previous starts this
season. aUowed nine hlts, Including
Randy Bush's leadoff homer In the
ninth, before B ill Caudill came on to
register his fourth save. The victory
lifted Oakland Into first pl ace In the
AL West. six percentage points
ahead of California.
A.ngels 9, Marinen; 3

Browns trade with
Rams, Brown returns

SPECIAL ON HOMELITE
GASOLINE TRIMMERS

RETAI L
1149.95

the Seattle Martners 9-3, the
MUwaukee Brewers sheUed the
New York Yankees 12-0, the
Baltimore Or ioles edged the Texas
Rangers 4-31n lllnnlngs, the Boston
Red Sox beat the Chicago White Sox
5-3 and the Toronto Blue Jays nipped
the Kansas City Royals l -0.

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�..

·~ Page

C6

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 29, 1984

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

April 29, !9841

KnlckB had dawned Detroit tz7.12J
host the Dlll1u Mavericlca today In
In overtime. "They went out
the tint game ~ their Western
swtnilng and IBiah Thomas' effort
Omference aemtfl!la1 series. In
In the fourth quarter was a
addltloll to theKntclrsandCeltlcs,
staggering punch to us."
·two other NBA playoff series wW
The victory enabled New York to begin Sunday- Phoenix Is at Utah
,wlntheNatlona!BasketbaiiAs.socl· lntheWestemCcnferenmandNew
atk&gt;n playotf series three games to Jersey Is at Mllwaukee In the other
twoandsendstheKntcksagalnstthe EastemConferencegame.
Celtlcs In an Eastern Conference
~wasproudest,ofcourse,of
semifinal serles that begins Sunday Kntcks forward Bernard King who
In Boston.
shook otrlheflu toscoreagame-htgh
The Los Angeles Lakers were to 44 points and set a National

Basketball Assoctatlcin scoring record for a five-game series.
King's 213 points eclipsed the old
recordllfl97setbyEtgtnBaylorfor
Los Angeles against Detroit In 1961.
King scored more than 40 points In
eachofthelastrourgames.Hehad
36 tn the opening gameoflhesertes.
The Kntcks took a 114-llllead
with 26 seconds remaining In
regulation on a short jumper by
King.

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio for the post of OSU's athletic onaflve-yearcontractwtthSMU,he
llstoffourorttvenamesofposslble
State University will have to iron out director.
told the newpaper he didn't believe
successors to Hindman. Hindman,
questions of pay and an unexpired
The C'.olumbus Cltlzen.Joumal thecontractwouldbeaproblem.
56, retires .lfter seven years as
contract if it hires Bob Hitch away reported today that IDtch Is rnak1ng
The meeting between Hitch, 44,
director ol one of the nation's largest
from his position as Southern mort' than $100,00J a year at SMU,
and part of the 11-member OSU
collegiate athletic programs.
Methodist University's a thletic although It a lso reported that Hitch
panel that tsscreentngaboutadozen
Hitch, long rumored as a possible
director.
refused to confirm the figure. OSU candidates took place Thursday In
successor for Hindman, was at·
hletlc director at the University of
Hitch . a fanner associate of Ohio Athletic Director Hugh Hindman, Phoenix, Ariz.
State University President Edward who retires June 30, makes $61,920.
The search committee ts to
Wyoming when Jennings was
search
Although
Hitch
has
two
years
left
recommend
to
Jennings
byMay15a
president
Jennings,
has
met
with
a
committeelnterviewlngcandldales .---_;;_ _ _ _ _...;:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;;...;:_;__;;_:.:.:;_....:...
_ _ _ there.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

POINTMAKER - Detroit Pistons' Bill Laimbeer (right) looks on
as New York Knicks' Bernard King slams the bailthrough the basket at
the end of the fourth quarter in Friday night's NBA playoff game at
Detcoit's Joe Louis Arena. King scored a game-high of« points to help
the Knicks take a iZi-123 \1dory in the playoff game. (i\P La.'\erphotol.

Toledo 4-3 winner in 12 innings
TOLEDO, Ohio !AP I - S t~ve
Lombardol2i's leadoff hom~r in the
12th Inning gave the Toledo Mud
He ns a 4-3 International League
victory baseball over 1he Maine
Guides Friday, snapping Maine's
six-game winning streak.
Lombardozzi entered thE• gamP
y,rith a .121 battingavE.•rage, and was
hitless in five previous Uips to the
plate.
Lombadnzzi made a sensa 1ionaJ
defensive play on Rodney Craig's
chopper in the top olthc 12th and his
throw barely beal the speedy Craig
to first base .
The Mud Hens lorgf'd a :l-0 lend on

innings of hitless relief to notch the
viciOI} . Elston. 1-1, took th&lt;' loss.

CAROLINA
LUMBER

TOLEDO. Ohio (AP 1 -The Flint
Genera ls will hoot the Toledo
Goaldiggl'rs at 7 p.m. Sunday In the
first game of the Int e rna tional
Hockey League Turner Cup c ham pionship series.
The tv.·o-t lme defending c hampion Goaldiggers. who finished in
fourth placP durtng the regular
season. made it to the final round of
the playoffs by defeating the
first place Fon Wayne Komets 1-0
Friday night to Y.1n their best-olS&lt;'ven semifinal series four games to
two .
Earii&lt;'r. the third-place Generals
ou sted the SI'COnd-place Milwaukee
Admirals in lour straight games.
The rest ol the schedule Cor the
Turner Cup finals is as follows:
Tuesda.v, May I, at Toledo, 7:30
p.m .: Saturday, Ma yo, at F lint. 7:30
p.m .; Wedn esday, May9. atTotedo.
7: 30 p m ; Sa turday , May 12, at
Flint, 7: :v p.m.. if necessary;
Sunda.v. May 13. at Toledo, 7 p.m ., if
necessary : Tues. , May 15, a t Flint , 7
p.m., if n('C('SS31).

PROCfORVILLE - Gallipolis
freshman Holly Carman set a new
Fairland Invitational mark In the
3,nl meter event with a 12:36.1
pertormance here Friday as Gallia
Academy High School' sBiue Angels
won the nine- team meet with 146
points.
Other GAHS firsts wert' recorded
by Jodi Adams In the400meterrace
(1: 02.8) and the 1,600 meter relay
squad (4: 26.5) . Me mbers of that
squad are Laura Amsbary, Jodi
Adams, Jolaine Bartlmus and Kim
J aney.
Three school m arks were broken
byJaneyinthelongjump; Amsbary
in the DJ meter hurdles and
Bartlmus In the 1,600 meter run.
Host Fairland, paced by Anita
Cook's four firsts and two meet
records, placed second with 120
points.
Cook finished wilh 32Y, points to
edge Chesapeake's Tammy Walls
for indlvlduai honors. Walls had30 Y,
points, a nd set one meet record.
Team results a nd indlvidual
results:
Fl&amp;lrland Girls lnvUatkma.l
Teams - Gallipolis 1-16, Fairla nd 120,
ChesaJ){'ak(l 116, South Po int -14 , Hurrica ne 2'1.
Portsmuulh East 24, Guya n V&lt;i llf'y 17,
Bart.Jw-svi ll(l 2, Buffalo·Wavnf' 1

F\cld Ennl~
Long jump - I. Cook 1F \. 17·711. mf'f't
record: 2. Jamie- 1G 1: 3. Arnsba ry ,&lt;___; 1.
Dlscus - l. f're(&gt;man IS Pl. tCfi-5: 2. Tav lor
I H I : .l Shaff£&gt;r IC\.

Sh01 put - 1. Akers 1C1, J6L~: ml'E't record :
2. Owrns 1G1 ; :t Pritchard 1C\' 1.
Hll{h jump - 1 Thompson 1F'1. -l· tn. 2
CariN (C.L 3_ Graham 1C 1

4' X 8'

TEXTURED
VERT. SIDING

but the lead was erased when the
Guides' Lorenzo Gra!' belted a
three-run homer in the s L' th
Rich Lysander, 2.D. pitched four

sheet

4' X 8' X

$4''

"I tee it up every week thinking I
can win," said Wadkins. winless in
10 years on the tour. "I've been out
there long enough and I know I'm
good enough to win a tournament ,
it's just a matter of getting it done."
Wadkins had five birdies and a
lone bogey lnFrlday's round but two
par-saving putts on Nos. 11 and 12
were the turning point, he said .
"1bat just seemed to take the
pressure off and I played well the
rest of the round," Wadkins said.

Local bowling
Skylne Bolo¥llnr I..Me8

Momlna; Glorleo
Aprll 17, 1!1114
Team

...._

Francis Flortst ..
Custom Print .

. 151
. 144

Simmons 0 \ds. Cadlll!c &amp;

..... ... ....... ... .. .. .. .128
ThP Fabric Shop .
. ... .107
Hnald's 011 &amp;: Gas Co...
. ... ... . JI8
Oleo .

Gallery HalT Art .......... .... ... .... ... .... ..... 92
High Individual game - Arlene Evans198;
CorkY Kennedy · 192; Dottie WUI and Jurtf&gt;

Lambert 191l

A Cbf'v. !Di; CUsrom Prtnt 854; FranciS
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Ponsmouth Eas1: 3. Galllpolls.
100 hurdl&lt;&gt;s - Cook WI , 15. &lt;1 : 2. Amsban&gt;
tG I; J. McDanl ~:"l tCl.
.
100- 1. Klngpry I F"l , 13. 1, 2. RoyCP (f'l ; 3.
Edwards t CI
fill !"(•la y -

-~

- -'

.. -

---..

-~

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page

"I feel like if I go In the top live, the
opportunity will be there," Barkley
said. "I feel llke It will be for the
best."
Players who sign wlthNBAteams
will not lose thelr Olympic ellgibll·
lty. Oiajuwon is not a U.S. citizen and
thus was ineligible lor the team.
Under the new clartttcatlon of an
amateur accepted by the lntema·
tiona! Olympic Committee, a player
may sign a professional contract,
have an agent and be Insured by the
professional club and still be
eligible.
Oiaj uwon denied a report in
Frtday's New York Post that he had
reached an agreement with the
Trail Bla2ers that would pay him
$1.2 mllllon a year_
The NBA had no comment on the
repon, which also said the Trail
Blazers had a contingency plan to
sign Georgetown 's Patrick Ewing,
another Hoot AU-America, In case
they lost the coin flip .
Ewing has said he would remain
in college and get his degree, but
Hoy as Coach .John Thompson said
earner this month that the star
center would keep his options open.
Undergraduates must declare
the mselves for the draft by May 5.
Harry Glickman, president of the
TraiiB!azers,deniedthePoststory,
saying in a sta tement :

Bla2ers bas made an otter to or been
In touch wtth Akeem O!ajuwon or
Patrick Ewing or their agents, If
they have one.
"We won't know any more about
our No. 1 draft pick until all
undergraduates declare on May 5.

7

LOGAN MONUMENT COMPANY, INC.
VINTON, OHIO

•

3:

1)11)

Cal llpolls.
1.600 - l Walls !Cl. 5: 39.5: 2. Bartl mus
tG!: .1. Carme-n I G).

400 Tt'lay - 1. South Point tGa nnon Ulks,
Harris, Jackson \, 54.6; 2. Ch&lt;'Sap(':J-1((\ 3.
Call!polls.

400-1. Adams tG !. 1:02.8; 2. J aney 1C 1, 3.
AIPxa nder 1H 1.
:m hurdlt&gt;S - I. Cook t Fl. 48.4. m('f&gt;t
N&gt;rord: 2. Amsbary IG: J. E lkins IGVI .
!0) - 1. Walls ICI . ~.9; 2. Bar11 mus tGI : :1.
lov(' 1PE1 .
:Jl:l - l Klni-{Pry 1F 1, 27.'1; 2. Jackson 1SP1:

We're Celebrating the Opening of Our Nel)vest
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1-64, Putnam Village.

.1_ Adatn.'i 1G I

.l.DJ - l Harmon IGL 12:.161. mPE-t
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UilJ rt'lay - 1. Galli po lls. 4: 2£.5: 1Amsha l) ' .

Adams, Barlimus. J a ncyf: 2. Chi"Sa ·

pc&gt;ake : :1. Fair land.

Local bowling

DOMIITIC
APPLICAT ION
DISCS

SkyUne Bowling UUM~
Morning Glorit"!!
April 10. 1984

Tf'tutl
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10:·

and there is the coin ruponMay
"When I decided it was time to
apply for hardship (and tum
professional ) and get the letter In !lie
mall, I got a little sad and 1wondenil
at the last second if I was doing Ute
rtght thing," said Barkley.

I

PLUs 1

bag

C7

A TOTAUY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

I Fairla nd 1D::tmln Cook

Ro:.•Ct'_ K lngt&gt;ry\, 1· 54_9; 2. South ~tnt :

NOW

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. ·-

By DICK JOYCE
AP Sports Writer
· Akeem Olajwon, Houston's Hoot
All-America, and rotund Charles
Barkley of Auburn, a standout In the
recent Olympic Basketball Trials,
announced Frlday they would pass
up their senior years in college and
make themselves avallable for the
June 19 National Basketball Associatlon draft.
Olajuwon, a Nlgertan who helped
the Cougars make the NCAA Final
Four the past three seasons, Is
expected to be the No. 1 c hoice
overall L1 the draft. Heaveraged16.1
points, 14.3 rebounds and blocked 89
shots thUs past season, the second
two figures the best in the nation.
With hts85dunks, hewas a m ajor
factor In the Cougars being dubbed
the Phi Slama Jama fraternity for
their dunking abWty.
The Portland Trail Blazers and
the Houston Rockets wtll flip a coin
May 10 for the right to the top pick .
"I've decided to enter thUs year's
draft and forgo my final year In
school," Olajuwon said at a news
conference in Houston. " I want to
e nd speculation on my future so 1
can concentrate on my studies."
Barkley, a 6-foot -6, 275-pounder
who Is one of ~ finalists for the
12-member Olympic team, sa id in
Auburn , Ala., that he expects to go

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Relaxed Wadkins
has lead in play
at Houston Open

..

II-RING KITS

CASH

WOODLAJ\US . Texas !API
- Bobby Wadk ins has tried a !most
everything to break int o the
winner's circle on the PGA Toureveryt hing except w lax .
" For 10 years I've been doing
nothing but liv ing and eating goll,"
Wadkins said . "Now I practice for
one hour (after a match) thPn my
wife and I try to get away from the
game lor awhile. We went to see
'Terms of E ndearment' last night.
She cried and I thought it was OK"
Wadkins turned in an Academy
Award-like perlormance of his own
on the golf course Friday with a
4-under-par 01 that gave him a
9-under-par 113 total and a two· shot
lead In the $500,00J Houston Open at
TheWoodlandsCountryC!ub's West

JUMP TO THE PROS - University of HOU'lton basketball star
Akeem Abdul Olajuwon announced that he would skip hts senior year
· wHh the Cougars to play pro basketball In the NBA at a campus news
conference Ftiday. Olajuwon played on three Float Four teams in his
college career. ( AP Laserphoto).

(:arman sets mark in girls
invitational at Fairland Friday

HE BEST SCANNE
ON WHEELS.

seven hits in the first fivf&gt; innings,

..

Houston ace will pass up senior year

Hitch, Southern Methodist AD, OSU prospect

Flint to host Toledo
in Turnt&gt;r Cup series

~

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

Knicks advance in NBA playoff series
By HARRY ATKINS
AP Sports Writer
DETROIT (AP) - Folks In the
Motor City don't often agree with
New York Coach Ruble Brown on
the subject of : .Is !&lt;nicks and their
Pistons. Thls ti oe. thOugh, there
was no denyb . · ·~~' obvtous truth of
hlsstatemen&lt;, .
"From my standpoint, and I
mean thUs with all sincerity, it's too
bad that someone had to lose,"
Brown said Frtday night after his

~

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Just south of the
Holiday Inn

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Store Hou11: MOA.·frl., al.m.•5 p;m.; $11., a1.m ••12 noon
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OPEN 7 DAIS

Mon.-Fri. 8-8

6

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c.;~'

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Bill KELLY
Manager

.

(

�1-------~ t"'.- -.-

Page

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

C-8

CANTON, Olllo (API - Don
Canham, athletic director at tile
University of Mlclllgan, lias termed
as ··ridiculous·· suggestions that tile
S&lt;"hool may be under investigation
fur violat ing NCAA rules In recruit ing Ohio high s&lt;: hool basketball star
Gary Grant.
Threp Ohio nPwspapers havP
reported that !he National Collegiate Athletic Asoocia!lon may be
investigating Grant's decision to
a !lend Michigan
Canham. however, said Friday he
knew nothing of any NCAA
in\'t_-,sl i.gation .

Lyne

" That's ridiclou s," he said from

Vegas.

anything to it.
"We hend over oackward not to
get Involved insomethlngllke!hat, "
he said. "We wouldn 't _cheat on a
recruiting case. I don't think
anybody would be dumb enough to
do it ."
Grant, a 6-foot-3 guard who
averaged 23.5 points per game in
leading McKinley to !he Ohio Class
AAA championship this season,
announced Tuesday he had signed a
letter of Intent to attend Michigan .
He llad also visited Ohio State,
Kentucky, Ulinois and Nevada-Las

said Thursday the NCAA was
lnvestigatlng the matter, particularly the possible Involvement of
Nate Huboard, uncle of former
McKinley and Mlclllgan star Phil
Hubbard . Pllll Hubbard now plays
for the Cleveland Cavaliers In the
National Basketball Association.
The story a lleged tllat Kentucky
had blown the whistle on Michigan.
"That Is not true," Hall said. "We
do not know anything about the
NCAA Investigating anyone."
The NCAA. as a matter of pollcy,
does not comment on possible

The Columbus Otlzen.Journal

Gallipolis Blue Angels score 12 in
fifth rung, down Portsmouth, 24-8
Gi\LLIPOLIS - Host Ga llipolis
e rupted for 12 runs mthe fifth inning
a nd handed vlsitlng Portsmouth a
24-8 non -IPague softball defl'a t on
M.-nwrial Field Friday evening .
The vietmy lmpmved Gallipolis'
S&lt;'ason-ma r k to 7-2 on the year, and

ave»ged a 12-11 setback at Portsmouth on April 12
Paula Russell was credited with
the victory . Renee Halley was
credited with a save. Martell no was
c harged with the defeat.
Danella Greene pacro GARS a t

Meigs girls win two more
softball games for 8-0 mark
HEMLOCK- ThPMt&gt;igs Marau Jp rettes rol l along wi1 h ! hP i l
5f'\ ·f'nth and f•igllth s trai g ht win~
ag ainst no losses v:ith an R-4 v.:in

t.w cr Logan Thursday and

22 -~

d

verdic t m·er miller Frid a~ in g-irls'
'i.O ftba !l ac tion .
Vleigs Vs. LoRan
Meigs. traUing :l-Oafter .:winnin g.

made th e bt&gt;st of 14 Lady Chieft a in
u:.:i! ks for the comeback win . Ea ch
!f' dm had fi\'f' hits . IJ3rb HJ tfirld
tlurlf'd for MPi gs pic kJ ng up h(~r
"('\'Pn l h win with fi \'e s trikPfluh &lt;I nd
tml~ ·
two hd sP ~1n halls . Logan
hu r ting fannPd onP and w~tkcd 1-1 .
Hittin g sa fPl _
\ · for MPi gs Wib
( 'arol Sml!h with two si ng lr.. , and
J ul 1r Roush. Rhonda Zirklr ;1nd
.ll)( l\' Millf'r rach "in ~ J rs onrP.
~! r igs

\'s.

~WPr

Coac h Jon t\rno1t' s unc!Pft\J if'd
CTP\.~ jumped thPir

n-n with

thPi r

TVC' rr·cord to

v.in ou ·-.r :V1i!lrr

Fricla_\ ·.
i\brauJPIPlh·~

dPntPc! lh4 '
pl.tl P w ir h 1:1 rum; i n t hf 'l r first 1ilrPI'
ttl bah to gr&lt;.~h a 15-4 lvad . M1 •ig...,
!},Jn\ll 'd IIUI r ) hib to thl'f'( ' f'or I hi '
Thr•

GAHS tennis team
defeats Jackson for
!"eventh win of year
.JACh'SO:\ - (~alli &lt;J Ac;_tdf·m~
H 1gt1 School's rrn nis !Pam du,\-n(od
.lttc kson -l -1. to imprm·t· it...., Sf'&lt;:t...,nn
rr'(·ord to 7 l Thursda _
, . l'\'f'nin g.

In s inglPS play. Paul Ma rl.:cnnc
d•'fm ted K,,, . Butts. !i-0 and li-fl: Kr•\
Carry down\&gt;d Phil Hughf's. 1~ : t &lt;Hl d
1) -.l a nd John Ov;c--n s bf&gt;a I h.J'\'

Lad:-.· Falcons
Debbir \VC'rry pacPd M eigs v.ith
lnw· s inglrs in fi \'P at bats w hl lr .Jodi
Harr ison and JOO~· Miller each had
a single and double . .Jenny Mea -

dows added two singles whllP Barb
Ha tflPld. Carol Smltll , a nd KarPn
MoldPn each singled once.
Harrison toed the mound for the
first time this year and wem thf'
route, striking out thr('(' a nd
wal king 14
T hP Ma ra ude rP1 tl'S r untinuP
tlw ir trail tv em unbPatPn sPason
Mond&lt;:t \ \dlC'n thry ta kp on NPison ·
, -i]]p York a t Meigs. Thl' girl s' clas s
:\A ' fX' tional draw is to IX' Jwld
1od a:· at Ironton.
R:v· innings :
Logan .
. .. JOl OXJ il-4 '1
Meigs .
.. ... ..... IJB lm x- H c&gt;
Lanning 'L P1. Cook !Sl. and
! l(&gt;inerm r1n Hatfield 1II'P 1 a nd
Mil lf'r
By· inni ngs:
Meigs
-1-17 021 ~ -22 15
MiiiPr
. ..101 .100 ~- 'I J

Harr ison t WP l and Mi llPr. 1Cook
' Lf' l and 1\'allacr .

tile plate with three hits in three
trips . Kim Polcyn had two hits In
four trips wltll five RBls. T. A.
Justice had three RBis. Halley also
had two hit• for the Gallians.
The wlnners collected 15 hits while
PHS managed but 11, tllree hy B.
Moore.
GAHS. 4-0 In Southeastern Ohio
League play, will play a twin blU at
Logan, beginningat4: llp .m. Logan
is defending leagu&lt;:&gt; champion.

c...... S.hodulo

Week ol Aprtl 18, 1184

~
- ~p~
Aprtl29 2-4 p.m. Open Recreation .......... .............. .... ..................... ~2t':. m~~:O
6-1 p.m. College Rem!ation ................. .......................6-8 P· ·

Aprtl

Ann Arbor. " I haven't heard a thing.
I'd be astounded If !here was

Investigations or ongoing Investigations untll tlley are concluded.

Stars blank
Breakers in
USFL battle
PHILADELPIDA (AP) - Quarterback Chuck Fuslna passed for
five touchdowns In leading the
Philadelphia Stars to a 35-0 victory
over the New Orleans Breakers In
United States Football League
action Friday night.
David Riley and Willie Collier
received two touchdown passes
each, and Steve Folsom scored tile
other TO.
The Stars, 9-l, scored their first
touchdown witll4: 28 gone In the first
quarter, when Fuslna tossed a
screen pass to Riley, who ran 47
yards Into the e nd zone. The
Breakers then drove from their
23-yard line to !he Stars' 14 belore
Garcia Lane Intercepted a Walton
pass In the end zone.
P hiladelphia made It 14-0 at 4: 12
Into !he second period on Fuslna 's
13-yard scoring pass to Rlley. The
Stars made It 21-0 when Fuslna
threw an 18-yard pass to Collier
midway throug h the second
quarter.

lett

Sf'Vf'n

ancl walkffi 10. Moyer fannPd

Sf'\'C'n and walk£&gt;41 eight tn his
r o u r f' -go i ng

pP rfor m a n Cf' for

Mlllcr.
Acree led :Yicigs in hitting with
two s ingles a nd a double to drive in
three r uns . Scott GhC&lt;'n added a
single a nd triple with another til=
runs battPd in while Thomas added
tv.·o sinj:!lr.s . Jay Carpent er a
do uble. a nd TrPv Cassell had a
single . Carpen ter also had lhJ1'e
ru n.s battf'd in .
"\\'e hit the ba ll but und&lt;'rrs ti -

............ .... Noon-1 p.m. f'ltness Swtrn
.. .............. Noon-1 p.m. Fttne~s ~m
6-8 p.m. Colleg• Swim

May 1 ~ p.m. College Recreation .......... ....
May 2 6-8 p.m. CoUege Recreatk&gt;n ..... ... .

May ~ 2-4 p.m. Open Recreation .....
May 6 2· 4 p.m . Open Recreation ..
. ...... ... .. . ..
8 p.m·. Redmen Basketball Scrimmage
ll ntrasquadl

... Noon-1 p.m. Fitness SWim
6-8 p.m. Ope!1 Swim
........... 2-t p.m. Ope!1 Swim
............ 2-4 p.m. Ope!1 Swim

.Jaycees Fishing Derby set May 6

for less
This sprin g you can get big cas h refunds from Scotts® on Super Turl
Bu tlder® as well as many other fine Scotts products. Just see us for detatls.

m dtch

Nothing else comes close to
Scotts quality.

- - - - - - ----· ·~:~.P!v~- ~~

--

The Maraud&lt;'rs opened tourna ment play Saturday In Athens
a gainst New Lexington. Monday,
Meigs hosts Nelsonvllle-York .
By Innings:
Meigs ........ ... .... 523 040-14 9 1
MiliPr ....... ........ 310 301-11 7 3
Burdette !WP I, Acree (5 1, Thorn"' [o l and Gheen . Moyer tLPI
a nd Carpenter.
( Callro afte r six Inni ngs due to
da r kness ).

REBATE OFFER ENDS
MAY 15, 1984

Spring Valley
529 JACKSON PIKE 4 'Y () W ~&lt;(..&lt;;;,.•)!
PHONE 446-4554

SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT
May 5 &amp; 6 - Game Days
ISO Per Team Plus 2 Balls

1984 PONTIAC 1000

A.S. A Rules Except that an ass1gned hitter may be used and
a batter receives two fouls on third strike.

SPONSOR TROPHY 1, 2. 3.4

VlRni 1{.-'.'.l.JALI .. Ohio tf\l'l
- Omar Londono rock Mons iC'u r
\, ,_..,t\· to 1:ictor;.· in thP fra turrd
~·ig hth race a1 Thist ledown on
Frid a~ · . touring thP six furlongs in

Only

and Shirts for 1st and 2nd Places
No open or A Teams Allowed

CALL DENNIS McKINNEY- 742 -2279

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Spice IT'Iumed $:1 for coming in

third
In thc third rae&lt;:&gt; lr if&lt;oc ta . thc
com bin ation of :1 2-\2 paid $1,7R0.3J
The crowd of .l$19 bPI $C&gt;l8, 179.

l

Mid-Ohio slats
Mid-()hio fonf• •n •rl(1'
Ba."ot·billl :o'tatistks

Apri l tl, I!W.-1
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11 1 ~
It 11"
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H1r• ( ; rand• ·
( lh1o r&gt;nmlnican
('f'd ;lrvillf'
.... &lt;l l ~ h
T llfm .
l', ·h ;Hl.O I

~H

11 11

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0 -4

0 ';

llateing .\vl'riU!:f' ! Min . '! a.l ·hul.,
" gam ~ Warn ha." playt'd 1

Tr am

1\B R H :\v .

(.. '""••phf&gt;nol 400 1
R. ViJtU !ODt
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K. KaJmonlkl I WI
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you~se lf a favor,
expe~ie nce the diffe~ence

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to judge the pe~fo~mance of a hearing
aid. Make your appo i ntment today .

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K. Beamtr (W) ..... .... ............ HI ZZ

~

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T. Ro.rcrs (U J ......... ......... .. .... If 4 ~
0 . l.ao; !W) ......
.. ....... 102 2ll :Jil
(,i. GuJIIIarno lOll 1
... H(l tl 2M
R. S..:her!(er (T J .................. HG IK 2!1
D. FbocM (M l ...... ................ 7~ IZ 211

.~7

~ ~l

*

·-

. - --

In a long day that Included two sessions with
Premier Zhao Zlyang; a meeting with Hu Yaobang,
general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party; a
speecll extolling the virtues of capltallsm, and a state
dinner In !he Great Hall of the People, Reagan
seemed to find a common tlle me- U.S. and Chinese
opposition to tbe Soviet Union - only to have !he plug
pulled on him .

City, Mo., said Saturday. "Aprll Is
the snowiest month In the rockies,
but this Is an lncredlble amount of
snow that they're getting."
Snow began to replace heat, rain
and tornadoes In western Minnesota
Saturday as the storm's center
moved up Into Canada. But even
willie tile snowfall decreased to the
west, travel was nearly impossible
from eastern Montana across
Wyoming and much of the Dakotas
as the wind whipped up ground
bUzzards.
The death toll from tornadoes,
high winds and funnel clouds since
Thursday night stood at 11 In
Oklahoma, two ln Mlnnesota and
three In Wisconsin, where a dozen
twisters touched down Friday.
National Guardsmen helped enforce a dusk-to-dawn curfew In
Morris, Okla., permitting no one to
enter the town of 1,300 where the
state highway patrol reported seven
people killed late Thursday.
Gov. George N lgh toured Morris
and other devastated towns and
declared tile wreckage "unreal and
unbelievable." State officials revised tile death toll as people once
belleved missing turned up, and
concluded that three were killed In
Terlton and one In Jennings.
Wisconsin's tornadoes were
spread throughout !he state, kUling
one woman In Waukesha County
west of Milwaukee, another ln
Winnebago County ln !he northeastern section and a man who owned a
resort lodge In Oneida County In the
north.

CHILLICOTHE (API -Ross County Common Pleas Court Judge
Nicholas Holmes says he doesn't know If attorneys can seat a "fair
and impar tial" ju ry for Donald Meeker's trial on charges of child
beating.
Jury selection is to begin Monday for Meeker, 39, who is charged
with felonious assault in the alleged beating of his 4-year-old
stepdaughter. Jackie Montgomery, between Feb. 6 and Feb. 12. He
has pleaded innocent.
The child is In fair condition at a Columbus hospital.
Citlng extensive media coverage of the case, defense attorney
Jolin B . Street has asked that the trial be moved. But Holmes said
Friday that It is Impossible to know If 12 jurors can be seated untU
!hey have been questioned.
Prosecutor Richard Ward said he expects few problems In seating
an unbiased jury.

PER MONTH

* 4-Bonnevilles
* 3-Grand Prix
* 3-Sunbird 2000's
* 2-6000's
* 2-Firebirds
* 3-Parisiennes
* 8-lOOO's

Bond set in killing

•

PORTSMOUTII tAP) - Bond was set at $50,00l Friday for a
Portsmouth pollee officer accused of kUling his former fattier -In-law.
Carl Loper, 37, was arrested Thursday night In tile slaying of
Woodrow Campbell, 63, and woundlngofCarnpbell'swife, Mary, 57,
at their Wesl Portsmoutll home. Loper was off duty when the alleged
crime occurred.
Sheriff's deputies said the shooting followed a domestic dispute at
the home.
Loper's ex-wife and her daughter were at the Campbell home at
the tlme. They were treated for shock . Mrs. Campbell remalns In fair
condition at a Portsrnoutll hospital.
Loper entered no plea and remained ln !he Scioto County Jall.

ODOT awards highway contracts

58 Extra Clean Used Cars

COLUMBUS 1AP) - The Ohio Department of Transportation has
awarded contracts worth $23,370,364 for 48 highway resurfacing,
b~ldge replacement, mowing and other projects statewide.
~ward olthe contracts followed an AprU 17 bid opening.
'!fhe most costly project was a $14.9milllon extension ofOhlo Route
5$1n Akron !rom just south o!l-76toThorntooStreet and construction
an lnterchange on 1-77 at Ohio 59.
'· ODOT's next bid opening Is set for May 1.

.:1541
.!WI
.'117

Corn, soybean stocks down

K. stdweU (M) .................... .. . 51 II 17 .333
B. Gun...- (MVNI ................ ... NI tA Zl .:ml
W. HutchJnAOO CMVNI ..
.81 A ~ .328

But the two nations agreed that both can benefit in
the development of their economic ties, and tlley
announced tllat Hu would visit the United States.
"Today, the peace of the world Is threatened by a
major power that Is focusing Its resources and
energies not on economic pmgress but , lnstead, on
military power." Reagan said ln a toast to Zhao at the
dinner.

Jane Ann Karr, M.A. . Audiologist, CCC·A.

A 'I 29, 1984

"To preserve the pea&lt;:'P and protect our own
sovereignty a nd independenCP, wr stand together in
opposing expansionism and hegemony," the president said In a reference to the Sov iets.
The Chlnese, ln an apparent sign of disapproval of
the president's harsh lan!-,'llage aoout thPir nor thern
neighbor, deleted from a delayed broadcast of a
speech Reagan gave earlier.

BADALINC. China !API
President RPagan Saturday walked
a top China 's Grea t Wall, one of the
man ·madc wonders of the world .
after mcctlng in Peking with Deng
Xlaoping, the leader most Jl•sponsible for for~&lt;ing improved U.SChinese relations .
The president's sight seeing out ing overshadowed, a t least tempor arily, a controversy n-sultin g from

Chinese censorshi p of Reagan· s
televis€'d address to the nation over

the govt&gt;rnment -opera ted n&lt;&gt;twork .
AJt hough White House officials
ex presSl'd regret that part of
Reagan '.;;; remark&lt;; Wf'Tl' cut. thr

pl'f'S1dent brushr'&lt;l a side the matter.
tPiling Amrrican rrponers. ·' You

fellows do it " II 1hc time."
Accompanied by his wilr Nancy.
Reagan rode iw his limo us inP
through 00 mill'S of China's countryside to SPt:' lht' Gn 'al WaU in thf'
mount ainous north . The famed
struct une. dating from ~tXJ years
beforP !he birt h of Christ. ex tends
tl&lt;'arly 2,:,oo miles.
"What can you say except it' s
awE"-inspi r ing," f {.cagan said _ " T o
think that it was built by h;md . It is
one o f the great wonder s of thr

world "
Despite strong wmds a nd c hilly
tem{X'ra tun's, Rragan worf' only a
husinPss suit JS hr climtx'd a

stairway tothr topofthr wal l. which
stands about 25 fPet high. meas ures
18 feet across at the top and is
marked by cas tlr ·llkr turr'l'ts. Mrs.
Reagan worP an ovrlT'oat and a

sca rf .
The Reagans, accompan ied by
FIRST TOURISTS - !'resident and Mrs.
Reagan arrive at the Great Wall on a siRhlseeing

tour in China Saturday afternoon. (AP Last-rphoto )

aidt's, wa lkl'&lt;.l about a qu&lt;:~r\ P r - mile
up &lt;:t sh;'(•p inc-lim~ and then stoppc&gt;d

and looked both north and souti1
down thP sw('('p of thr \alley .

•

family and friends who at te nded the private
interment Friday a t Holywood Cemetery in
Brookline. Mass.
Traces of coca ine and the pain killer Demerol werr
found in urine and blood samples taken from the hody
of the 28-year-old son of the la te Sen. RohPrt F .
Kennedy, sa id Jay Pintacuda, chie f chemisl with thr
Palm Beac h County sheriff' s crime lah. Tr·sts on
Thursday showed the coca ine found in lhP room was

Stored com totaled 121.7 million bushels , a 52 percent decrease
fmm last year. "Tota l stocks hav&lt;&gt; not been this low since 19!\8 when
corn stocks totaled ll3.1 million bu shels," the serv ice sa1d.
Soybean holdings Iota led 51 million bu shel,, :rz per('('nl below last
year.
Stored wheat totaled 28.3 million bushels, 32 perc-ent abovC' the
level of a ypar ago.

Pricing procedures approved
COLUMBUS (API -The Commodity Advisory Commission of
the Ohio AgricullUil' Department has approved procedures for
establishing price when a licensed g-rain elevator denies a farm&lt;'r
payment. the department sa id .
Under the procedure, the price for gra in depositro with a licensed
elevator under delayed price or bailment ag-reements will be the
average local gr a in price at the time the fanner's payment was
denied.
The price would be dete rmlnect oased on the da te the &lt;"levator
notified !he department or a creditor of its lnabUity to llonor a
settlement demand, the date of the e leva tor's inability to set tle
creditors' demands or the date the department took a dministra tive
or legal action .

Foreclosure ban draws fire
COLUMBUS (AP I - P roposa ls to bar financia l Institutions,
lncludlng lhe F a rmers Home Administration. from foreclosing on
llnanclally troubled farmers have sparked opposition from the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation.
The federation said Its board of trustees. which met Thursday,
considered asking !he national Fanners Home Administration to
place a mora torlum on farm foreclosures . But trustees said such a
request would conflict with exist lng bureau policy approved by
members.
Trustees said they oppose moratoriums of any kind on farm
foreclosures because tlley would mail£' It difficu lt for farmers to
secure operating funds.
"If lenders are placed under a moratorium, the cost of suc h a
program would have to be passed on to all other agricultural
borrowers of that particular fina ncial Institution," said David 0 .
Miller, farm bureau president .
In reaction, Larry Sheets, co-director of the Famlly Farm
Movement, said, "They (the OFBF) must be like a bunc h of
ostriches with their heads In !he sand thinking this thing's going togo

away."
He said fa!'ITIEirs In flnancla1 trouble need a moratorium to give

.314

A. Ondlna CMVN J .................. 78 14 2fi .342

Section

Reagan visits
Great Wall

"I can' t comment on thai right now." said Palm
Beach pollee Officer Ted Morris .
Officials wouldn't release any details of their pmix' ,
whlcll for the first time Friday was descrllx'&lt;l as a
crimlnallnvestlgatlon .
Meanwhile , Kennedy's mother. E thel. older
bmther Joseph Kennedy II. uncle Sen. Edward
Kennedy, a unt Jacqueline Kennedy Ona ssis and her
daughter, Caroline Kennedy, were among the 45

or:

.3.\1

'iimes- i"entnut

of " high - pUJit~·." F'int acuda said
F lorida ha'&gt; a lav.· allowing murd0r chargf's to lX'
fil&lt;'d aga inst drug suppliers whos(' sale ca u s~ an
ovcrdoSP dPath .

Palm Beach Poli('('

Sg-t.

H0nry Marchman rl'fused

10 confi rm or deny F'dda\ that au 1horilies Wf'i'('
lookin g for two Connect icut women who rf'port C'd l~·
WL'rP S{'('n with Kcnncd~· in Pa lm B('arh jus1 da_vs

bc fon• his death .

......---Ohio briefs:-----------, Mondale to refund
disputed donations
Judge considers change of venue
to delegate groups

1

R Phllllp11 I Wt ...................... 9! tJ 33 .347
T. T._.lor (ll(;j ........ ......... ..... 111

*
*
*
*
*
*

~

Authorities search for supplier of cocaine

I'

. .. 8.'1 2-1 2t .389
13 19 .B

o_Olin~ ((' J .......

$14 1 27

3-Rivieras
4-Park Avenues
9-LeSabres
6-Regals
12 -Skyhawks
2-Skylarks
2-Centurys

Choose from

.. ......... i!l 'm :12 ..U~
............. 5:1 1-1 21 .:!Hi

"This is one of tile biggest
s nowstorms to ever hit the U.S. In
, April ," forecas ter Nolan Duke of the
Severe Storms Cente r ln Kansas

*PLUS A LARGE INVENTORY
OF '84 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS

ThP win ncr rPtumed $19 . ~. $5.60

and S4 HO
Classica l Summer was second.
p.; y ing $.1.20 and $.1. while Silver

Tornado wreckage dotted the
na lion In a line from Oklahoma to
Wisconsin Sa turday In the aftermath of storms tllat killed a t least 16
people, willie ranchers In the Plalns
worried over huge livestock losses
1rom April's worst bUzzard In
.m emory.
· More of the tllunderstorms !hat
.earlier spewed hail and killer
:twisters rumbled over southern
llllnols, southwestern Indiana and
:northern Arkansas this morning,
'but tornado warnings were lifted as
;the air cooled. ,
But a bliz2artl raged on for the
third day In Nortll Dakota , leaving
4,00l people _witllout electricity as40
mpll winds and we t, heavy snow
·felled power lines. Bismarck had
14.9 inches of snow, a single-storm
record for Aprll, and Minot was
burled under rr Inches.
In Montana, where Red Lodge lay
under 55 inches of snow and sheriff's
d&lt;&gt;pulies brought food to s tranded
people in Broadus, rancher Jolin
Tlegen Jr. predicted he would lose 70
to 90 percent of his lambs. Wyoming
ranchers a lso reported heavy
losses.
"I've got sheep out there I haven' t
even seen since Tuesday." said
Tlegen. He said othe r ra nchers
feared even greater damage.

Sale price 15799 with only 1499 down, 48 months. Finance Charge 11465.95
Total payments 16780.96

l.ll

--

Tornadoes leave at
least 16 dead as
;:b lizzard hangs on

PALM BEACH, Fla. iAP) - Police are trying to
. track down the supplier of cocaine found In !he hotel
room wllere Da&gt;id Anthony Kennedy died and say
Kennedy's apparent drug-related death is the subject
. of a criminal Investigation.
But pollee would not say Friday whe tller they had a
particular suspect ln mlnd as they sought the source
of the 1.3 grams of L'OCaine found In Kennedy's suite at
· thP Brazilian Court Hotel.

A..S.A. Approved

Thisllt'down

- - . --

U.S.-China find foreign policy differences

By DANA l'JELilS

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Area .Jaycees hav•• schedu!L&lt;I their
:umual fishing dcrlly for May 6 at Bob !;vans Fanns pond, Rio
Grnnde.
ikb&lt;islrdtion will be held hetwL-en 12: :II and I p.m . Children up to
age 13 are eligible to enter. ,Judging will be lleld at 3 p.m.
PrUes wW he awarded for tile larg...t fish , the most fish captured
and the smallest fish . A free Honda puZ7Je will be offered to each
entrant in the derby.
In ca."' of rd.in, a makeup daw will he announced later.
For further lnfonnation, &lt;"Ontact Ke ith MWer, derby c hainnan, at
W&gt;-2905.
•

at Por1 smouth M ond a.v

-

State/ ational ·

~ated PJ/es8 Writer

In d oubl!•s pl&lt;t_v. Bruce O'RnurkP·

1,1'\A·is -Brad Richards tx•a t ~ haron
;-.. ') iarl h Angie She lt on. 2-li. a nd h-i .
C AHS ''-·iU pia~· '-' non -lf'agu1•

~--

.

F\ov-man. ~0 and 6-1 .

Tndd Jonesuow nedJanPWoll ••-.1 0 .
Ko nerchino, 6-2 a nd b-1. .John

. - .'

. PEKING (AP) - President Reagan and China's
senior leaders, seeking areas of agreement Frlday,
instead found ditterences over Taiwan, the CIAbacked mining of Nicaraguan harbors and the Middle
'East.
· And !he Chinese crossed up Reagan by heavlly
~ltlng !heir nationwide television broadcast of a
~h lie delivered. :

Get the

Tim Saunders.

Heating &amp; Cooling
*Commercial
*Residential
CALL 446-3217

~-

...........................,....................aooed

May 3 Clo8.ed .... .. ...... , ....... .
May 4 &amp;-8 p.m . Open Recreation .. ..

mated this Miller team. They hit
the ball better tha n we expected.
We scorro a lot of runs and had a lot
of fun ," commented Meigs coach

GERNI E'S

S

~6-8 p.m. CoO. Recreation ... ..................................... ~~:~: ~O:!s~:

Marauders outlast Miller
HEMLOCK - Meigs brokP a
four-game losing skid here Friday
with a 14-11 slugfest win over Miller
in pr&lt;'p boys' baseball action .
The wm enabled Meigs to retain
firs t place in the TVC at 5-1 while
supporting a 6-6 overa ll mark.
Miller. \l!in nPr s over Vinton Count y
earliC'r in thPWE"ek, are~- 7- 1 overall.
Chris Elurdelle was the winning
pitchPr hut nN'dro relief help from
.la mPs AcrC'C' and Dan Thomas in
thl' fifth Together, the fanned

....

, April 29, 19M

Pome10y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Vo.

Michigan AD says report 'ridiculous'

....... - ..... -·- -

' coLUMBUS (AP) - Com and soybean stocks as of Aprll1 were
down sharply compared to a year ago, the Ohio Crop Reporting
service said.

them time to reorganize tlleir finances and recover from bad

weather and a pc)or economy.

By JAMES ROWLE\'
Associated P~ Writer
Although Walter F. Monda lc will
rl'fu nu donations to delegate com mitte&lt;'s which are being dis banded.
[)(&gt;mcx.Ta tic rival Gar}' H art says
mon&lt;&gt;y the groups spent he lped the
f01mer vice pres ident win key
presidentia l piimaries.
Mondale announced Friday that
he would return some $.l)).o:xJ m
donat ions to indep&lt;'ndent politica l
act ion commit tees which s upported
his ca mpaign. I!e alsosa id he would
counl the $500,o:xJ s pent by the
groups against the$20.2mil lion legal
spending llmit for pre-convention
campa ignmg.
"ln retmspecl,
think the
committff's s hou ld not havf' bf'C'n

crea ted ," Mondalr sa id .
Hart, who complained to thc
Federa l Election Commission that
the \ 25 "autonomous" &lt;"ommit tccs
\iOla ted fedrral election la w. chal
lenged Monda!&lt;&gt; to show he is not
"tainted " by tics to specia llnterPst

Democrat ic

hopeful, applaudc'&lt;l

MondaJp' s d('Cision, but df'ma ndflrl
MondaiP gi\'f' ,lac kson ·· m~: sharf' of

thr

deleg ates

bought

ll\'

that

m on{~y.

.J ackson also arcuSf&gt;fl PrPsid('n1
Reagan and his wifC'. 1\'a ncy, of
"l'f'f'ding communist pa nd as" during 1hcir \'isi1 to Chin a whilf' man~
AmPrican s cont inur 10 go hungry.
"Mi-llnutrilion i ~ a crisis in our
na! ton whiC"h is growing f'\'£'1~ 1 da~ ·

~t' &lt;S II boiP,..t1uwn HI mo • lllt•lo'fo•nn&gt;
tho,r..

or ~~s ~roo o• .llloc.ll~
!a- to n-. Oemoo Moe eon~eo• ho••

Mondaic
Hart
Jackson

Othef

1.142 .8

635
182. 2

55

contributions.

Uncommrlted

The Colorado S&lt;'nator qucstioned
the va lidity of Mondale's primary
and victories ln such kf'~ states as
llllnois. PenJLwlva nia and New
York where the com mlllccs many financed by bi g labor unions
- helped Monda lo.
" It Is legitimate to ask whetll&lt;'r he
would have won those primaries
without that source of funds ," Hart
said . "What is too badllere is !ha t we
can't go back and rerun the
primaries under fair and even
ground rules .... Wha t I hope Is that
there'll be no more primaries after
today where independent commit·
tee lunds will be used to finance his
operation."
The Rev. Jesse Jackson. the third

To Nom1nate

1,967

Total Oetegates

3,933

264

DELEG !\TE COUNT- Thl•
is the current breakdown of the
presldt•ntial pre rerenc't' of dele-gates sclectc·d or ail&lt;M"alPd a.• of
Friday to the Demo&lt;:ratlc Con·
ventlon In San Francisco. The
"other" category includes th()S('
pledged to candidates who hav"
dropped out of the race and those
de legates pledged to favorite son
candidates. f 1\P La..'ie'l'hetu ). ·

�Times-Sentinel
3

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..... , _ 0 Wb&lt;dODO

001

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '

N.J r ,,.
r

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1 yr old m1xed breed dog ,
female Call446 2661 after
4

by Larry Wnght

PArt Beagle pupp•es. 2 mos

old Co li 446-3967

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Puppies 6 wks 'h shepherd
'h Husky Call 446 -3142

I )h

8 mo old black whtto fe
male dog shots. spaded
C&amp;ll 446-9676 or 446

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Mal e lnsh Setter very
frtendly , good wtth children ,
also. assorted colon ot
ktttens Metgs Co Human6
Soctetv . 992 -6505

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Pupptes

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304-675-6196

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Pupptes and ktttens

675 -7319

6 00

l..r~r~--------------------------· -52_1_0___________
6 pupptes, 402 Locust St ,
H enderso n . W Va
304

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mot her Elk
Hound Ph one 304 -675 -

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304 -675· 1965

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

I ftl r I

0

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1)• ,

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frve per cHnt

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PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

ten per cent of h•s b1d

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Jrtends neoghbors and lhe J
f S Canasta Cl ub foo the
1)eaut1ful !lowers cards and
•ostts Also a btg thanks To
Oo Vallee, Or Ber~och and
lhe Second and Fourth Flooo
West personnel lor the treat

Wtshes to express the1r smcere

apprecoatoon &amp; heartfell lhaolts
to their relatr~es . netghbors &amp;
tnends for the vtstts prayers
food. money phone calls
cards &amp; li1e heatrllful flowers
ond to those who hel~ed 1n any
,.,y for the acts of kmdness &amp;
CMtem durmg the tllness and
toss of our loved one

A specoal lhank·yoo to the
Em•gency Squad 0. R R
Pickens &amp; li1e many doctors &amp;

nurses. who gave her such wonderful lovtng care dunng her
stay at the hosprtal
We want to extend spectal

thanks lo a dear fnend, Oscar
Spencer of the Spencer Fu
(Jenl Home Belpre. Ohro for
loetprng us to fulfill her last r..
quest to come home from u-.
llospttal
We especoally thank Rev
Richard Rothmoch for hos tr..
quent vosrts and consclong
""'"'·Also our approcialron to
arpnost C.oald Powell for the
~~Utrtfful hymns, Armand rur
liy for ptayrng 'The LJst Date",
..,. of her favorite sooes. the
l!lllbearers &amp; the Elli111 Funeral
llomo for theor courtliS)' &amp;kind·
ness
lila) the J11t of knowing her
be 1 htlrt myour heart forever
God BlOss You All.
· Albert, Husbtnd, Pllly &amp;lily
JllcUns. dlutlrter &amp; son-ollllw; Nicloolo. lloollt &amp; ~.
llllnddlullltors: Brollltn. Sisl·
its &amp; fftecos &amp; Ntwplotws

, ., ,

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1.

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But now he s gone to hea -

ven
God called hrm home to

I

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Htm and Mom
Now two has gone home

To be woth hom
He was pro ud of all
He trus ted rn the Loo d
above
And loste ned lo Hos call
But tusl as he had gol us
grown

When ho s trrals began to
cease,

And now we could do
thongs for hrm,
God called hom home to

peace

So JUSt ftfteen years ago
you see
God took hom aWJy
But if we love the way he
taught
We'll meet agaon some day
Although he's gone and
we 're stoll here,
Forget htm, we woll never
For though hos face we cannot see.
Hts love woll last fooever.
SJdly mt ssed by wofe ,
children &amp; grandchildren

five per cent

1

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May 1 -4 , 1st house lincoln
Pike off Rt. 141 at Cente·
nary Baby clothea, furni·
ture. 1eans. Home lnter~or

Announcemenls

1

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W1\RHrN J "1 MI I H
D IHII l OR
I 1

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Announcem ents

614·446·0294

Paul"s Home V1deo located
406 2nd Ave . 1n P&amp;rtr:
Central Hotel VHS Betas
CEOs (d11cl Ren t movi018r
players. Sudden Impact &amp;

Cotumbus, Ohio

Apnl 13, 1 984
Conuae1 Soloo Logol
Copy No 84-406
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
FRG-OOOR 11681
SAG-DOOR (1491
II

3

SWEEPER and sewmg rna
chme repair
p&amp;rts , and
suppl1es
P1 ck up and
delivery , Oav1s Vacuum
Cleaner. one half m1le up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

29

r"

R1 ck Pears on Au ctioneer
Servrce Esta te Farm , An tique &amp; hqu1dat1on sales
l1 censed &amp; bond ed tn Oh1 o &amp;
wva 304 773 5785 or

Babystttar naeded m 0 J
Wh1te Rd area Call 446
7556 af ter 6PM
Rehable person with movmg
experrence to move household furntshmgs Ca ll 446-

8237

Need babysitter m Rodney II
at my ho me references Call

DC Cab Coli 446-1718

hf'

3 Announcements

PLAN TO ATIENO
GALLI A
HORSE AUCTION
Gallia Co. Faircrounds

Sat., May 5, 1984
5:30-6·30 P.ll. Used Tack
6:30-8:30 P.ll. New Totk
8:30 Horses &amp; Ponies
Phone 614-245-9527
--~-------

Cleland Greenhouse, flowen. flats or pots. hanging
baskets, veg&amp;table plants,
tomato plsnu , Geraldine
Cleland, Vme and Main St
Rac1ne

A uctiOn every Fn mght at
th e Hartford Communny
Center Tru ckloads of n ew
merchandise every week
Cons1g ments of new an d
u sed merchowd rse alway s
w elco m e R• chard Reynold s
Au c tiOn eer 304 275

3069

Nel(t sa le Mt Alto A uc ti on
M ay 5 , 1984 Emm a Bell
AuctiOneer
L1 c
429 84
Phone 304 -428 -8177
United M eth odist Church ,
P01nt Pleasant Wed . May

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for lete model
clean used cars
J1m Mink Chev Olds Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
Wanted to buy used coa l &amp;
wood heaters Swa m Furm ture, 446 -3159, 3rd
&amp;
Ollv'l St , Gallipolis. Oh
W&amp;nted to buy N ew. used &amp;
antique furmture W1ll buy 1
piece or complete house·
holds Al so co mplete Au ct1
oneermg serv1ce Call
Rodney Howery 614 -698·

7231

Buying daily gold, Stiver
COins. rtngi.J&amp;welry. sterlmg
ware, old coin s, large currency Top prices Ed Bur·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave

t · 304-882 ·

now has tor rent, video
pleyera end mo\/laa 992·

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Beds, Iron

Any dogs caught on Louie
Plant1 hrm on Eckard

wood. cupboards, cha1rs,
chaeta, baakata , d1ahes .
atone jara, antiQues. gold
and allver Write· M 0

County will be shot. Signed
Louie PLants

lnd1v1dual to sand hardwood
floor s Pl ease call 304 -675
7717 aft er 6 p m

3rd , 4th &amp; 5th

1158

Second Ave , 9·6
Yard Sale Georges Creek
Rd . from Rt 7 cross tracks.
1st road to r~ght Ant1quea,
books, c lothes. Iota of m11·
celleneous May 4 &amp;. 6 .

304 675 4374
576 -20 10

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

12

Situatron s
Wanted

FIRST TIME OFFERED
Nat1onal Corp . now appoint
mg distributors to aerv1ce a
network of e.utaltng buatnesses Wonderful 1ax shel·
ter. small t1me reqUirement
for unlimited profit poten t•al
Mtntmum capitol s 1 8,000 For detail a call
Charles Kennedy 1 -800·

241 · 2294

Own a beautiful ch1ldrens
shop Offenng the latest tn
fash1ons Health Tex. lzod,
Levi , Lee. Jordache, Ch1c,
Buster Brown and many
more Furn1ture and &amp;ccessones by Gerber end Nod · a
way $1 4 ,900 includes beg1nn1np
1n v entory -train 1n g -fll( turea
and grand openmg promo tions
Preatiage Fashtons

Mercer's R1verv1ew Per
sonal Care Home has vaca n
c 1es for el dt! rly pe rso ns
Betty Mercer owne r 3 04

773 -5882

Would love to C &lt;~re for 2 or 3
elderl y people In my home
ref , lots of T L C Ca ll after 6

p m 614 949 30 14

Have room board &amp; care f or
elderl y m Pomeroy Call

614-992 6022

Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
467111 or coli 8t4·992·
7780.

FIXED

RATES Below market ra1es
F11(ed con\/entlonal FHA
VA L ea der M o rtgage .
Athens colle ct 614 -692 -

23

Professional
Services

General Haulmg and Trash
removal Servtce Reliable
and dependable Call 446 3 169 betwf!en 9 and 5
Ket1h's Lawn Mowing &amp;
Trrmmmg Serv1co R eliable
and dependable Rea sons ·
ble ratu Ca ll 446 · 3159 or

256 6251

Roofing and guner work
metal work, h ouaepa1nttng ,
carpenter work E~~:c ref
Free es11mates Ca ll 446-

3171

Garages. patiOS, stdew&amp;lka.
basements block work
Reasonable priced 36 yrs
expenence Free estimates

Call 446-3394

Call 614-245 -509 6

Wanted to do babystt1tng 1n
Northup area C&amp;ll 446 -

6695

PIANO TUNING Lower
prtced regular tunings dlsco unts Ia Semor Cit1zens,
Churches 8r Schools Ward's

Keyboard, 304 675 -3B24

P1ano Tunmg and Repa1r
Brumcard1 Mu1ic Co , 446 0687 Skill and mtegnty our
trademark
Lane Dan1els,

614 -742·2951

8 &amp; M Patnting Re1 , lnd ,
Comm Free estimates. Call

THOMPSON BOOKKEEP·

Unwanted Fac1al or bodv
ha~r? Permanent , peinleu
removal by European Electronic Oepilator Mary 1s
cerflf1 ed tn thiS new compu tenzed dig1tal system Call

lodoy 614-992-6720 Top

of the Stairs, full serv1ce

salon
AMA.

approved

Business
Opportunity

I NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING C O racommenda
that you do buslnen with
people you know. and NOT
to tend money through the
mall until you have inveatlgated the offarrng .

lord. WV 304-882 -2831

l- - -.,.-:-----:;---;---Happv Ads

FDA Ito FCC

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
MOMMIE!

Doctor referr&amp;ls

Homes for Sale

Large 3 bdr. house for sale or
rent In Pl&amp;ntz Subdivision
No children , no pats Call

614 -245 -5281 ova's

Mtddlepor1 home. Jump mto
Sprmg Savingal Super spe ·
c1al low prices Call 614 ·

992 -6941

Spnng is here!! If you ' re
shopptng for a new home.let
N L Stevens 8r A180c1ates
help you with your tinanc 1ng. We have home mort ·
gages w1th as httle as a 6%
downpayment &amp;nd rates as
low as 10 60% Call Jeri

Allio today. 814-379-2789

Must Mil 82 .000 down take
over 8315 per mo pay·
ment Taxes &amp; insur•nce
included. Located Plantz
SubdiVIsion 3 bdr ranch ,
full baaement , carport,
woodburner. ci1y achoola

ERICA &amp;
ASHLEY BRYNN
7

Yard Sale

Help Wanted

III;=========~

SOLAR
SALES

OFFERING ....

(1) $20,800 guaranteed
(2)

min.
Auto Incentive Program
Well Qualified Leads
In-House Training
Vacation Program

By owner lOvely 2 bdr ..

(3)
(4)
(5)

home on waterfront, boat
ramp &amp; dock. cloae to town ,

LOOKING FOR ....

pricod U4.900 Will holp
finan ce. Coil 614-2118·
1216.

8UJid on your lot a new home
you afford . Over 1 100 sq.
ft ., 6 room•
bath, c•r~
peted. reedy to move Into.
f26,500 al10 GIIIIIIBI &amp;
baaament . Cell P8trlot

e.

Home BuUdoro 448-8038.
Will conakl.r mobile home
11 trade-ln.

992-2602

8

(1) Experience in Sales
(2) Good Attitude and
Appearance
Stable Background

(3)
(4) Dependable Car

Call

W.Va .
1-800-642-9014

Ohio Call .
1-800-624-8231

304-8711 -11047 ofter 6:00.
4

bedroom , new 11dlng,
firepl&amp;ce in remolded living

2330 l~ncoln Ava
304 -675 -3869

Phone

8 yr

old three bedroom
ranch , 6 mile1 from Holzer,

839.500 oo . 304 -676
7746

Public Sale

388-8249

AUCTION

good houM and

born. Coli 114-245-5281
IVI ' I ,

315 lota &amp; Acreage
6 lo11, Plantz Subdivision ,

$2,900 for oil Call 446
2967

Clearvtew Esta1e1 South of
Galltpoha. AI 7 Few re ·
main. bargain prices, muat

sell Call 446 -2974 or 446·
0766
66 acres M - L l ots of fire
wood, plenty of road fron
tage. some t1mber. ex hunt·

Call 614 -388-8159

mg

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

after 6 30
One half acre lot on M1tchelt
Road. Galhpoha. rur&amp;l w&amp;t er
and ctty sc ho o l s

Fully tur,,, .. hed AC 2 bdr ,
adu lt s only &lt;.;all 446-4110

304-675 ·

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailer s Call 304-773

5651

TRI - STATE MOBILE S13,000 00 30 4 -675 ·
HOMES USED· CARS . 3626
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES CALL 1 acre 84,000 or 1h acre w1ll
prov1de water and sewage
614 -446· 7672
84,000 off 51 At 150 on
NEW ANO USED MOBILE Floyd Clark Rd Bidwell
HOMES KESSEL"S QUAL Ohro Cell 1 · 304 -675·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES 1631
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS
FIT 36 PHONE 614 -446·
Rentals
7274

1985 12x60 mob1le home,
unturntshed. S3 ,900 Call

41

Very N1ce 2 bedroom mobile
home furn1shed . $175 plus
utlhte! &amp; depos1t No pets

Call 614-992 7479

2 bedroom tra1 ler, furmahed
on E M am St 10 Pomeroy
close to Kroger store Call
614 - 992 - 7314 or 992

6215

1 2.~e60 2 bedrooms. furmshed m Syracuse , $200
m o nth plus ut1l1t1es Also 3
trailer spaces t or rent Ca ll

Houses for Rent

446-1340

fully

underpmned

approK V2 acre. well graded
lol Prtce reduced Call 614
388 · 9967 after 5 JOPM
14:rr:70 Rosemont 2 bdr ,
1973 12x60 Oetroner 2
bdr , 1969 1 2x60 Raycraft
2 bdr Recond111oned l1ke
new Call 446 -0175

1976, 12x60, 2 bdr, exc
cond Completelv furmahed
All underp1nn1ng mcluded ,

85 ,600
6409

Call 614 -266 ·

614-992-7680

5 rm house 44 Oh\le St
Galhpolts lnqutre at 918
2nd Ave , Galhpoi1S, Oh1o

For rent w1th op tion to buy
121(65 two bedroom. all
elec mobile home settmg
on n1ce lot Read y to move
1nt o
5200 00 down
S1 85 00 per month 304·

3 bdr
ranch near R1o
Grande , $235 mo plus
securtty depos1t no pets

Cell 614 -245-5439

576 2711

2 story hou se 10 City $250
mo . depos1t. utJI Call 446
1434 or 446-2 192

2 bedroom trailer kitchen
furmshed, coup les one small
child accepted References

304 675 -1076

3 bdr d eluxe house, 2
ftreplac es, pool , garage Sell
or lease 2 bdr apt . kitchen
furnished Call676 5104or

675-6386

44

The little Kyger Congrega tional Chr~sttan Church IS
acceptmg btds on a mobile
home prevtouslv used &amp;s 11
p&amp;rsonage All f1eld btds
must be rece1ved by May 1st
af'd should be g1ven to the
proprietors of Sw1sher lm
plement located on At 7
The tra1ler can be v1ewed
Sat Apnl 28 between 12 00
&amp; 3 :00PM located on Little
Kyger Ad at the Church

3 bedroom hous e, recently
remodeled , S225 mth. plu s
utiliti es Deposit requ1red
Middleport 99 2 7607 af ter 5 p m

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(614) 446 -0551
Auctioneer: Myron "Bud" McGhee
App Auctioneer: Steve McGhee

church reserves 1he nght to
accept or refuse any or all
bid I

4338

We sell personal property and real estate throughout the
Mid OhiO Valley

upando. all dr&amp;pertes. kit chen appl . steps, underpin ning, carpeted throughout,
and central air cond in ·

popcorn popper toasters hatr dr., er, electr1c 1rons pun ch

bowl set smokrng pr pes
NOTE Thts IS only a partoalltstong mooe rtems are comtng
m each day Food served
Teoms Cash or check woth proper 10 Al l ttems must be
patd for before removong loom aoea .
SALE CONDUCTED BY·

THE McGHEE AUCTION CO.

.______. .;.,____-:-----------..1.1
-

446 -8038

Call

614 -367·0334

The

12x70 mobrte homo wrth

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , r l c l u d e d . Call 446 7761 or
614 -256·5569

ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 5
AT 10:00 A.M.

Locati oll : In Bidwell, Ohio, 3 blocks from
Grade School. Watch for Auction Signs.

ll STING IN PART · 2 nt ce dresse rs. 8 table lamps, me·
lal wardrobe, chesl, blankets. bedspreads. pad ded
cha n. elecl nc Ian, casse role, magazme racks, 2 radtos,
3 pte ce bedroom sut te. sp ttt oon, Hoover sweeper,
co rne r shelf hampe rs. quo its, 2 clocks, set coffee &amp;
end tab les. hvtn g room suole. sofa, recl mer rock er, 2
color TVs. large floor mode l stereo, blac k &amp; whtle TV ,
bookcase. sew tng mach me. L ptc tu res, eleclrtc manlel
clock rT]il ple hulch. bulle!, large wood dmette set. set
Wtlham Rogers st lverware metal kotchen cabmel, avo·
cado Frf€tdatre relrtgeralor, Kenmore wa sher &amp; dryer,
pols &amp; pan s. blender, lots of Tupperware. electnc
cooker. lois of dtshes &amp; coo kware , popcorn popper,
redwood pat10 set, ptano, 5 ptece Pau l Bunyon bed·
room sutle m excellen l condttton Don 'l mt ss thts SUite
If YOU red bedrOOm furntture
Terms Cash or Checks woth I.D
lunch Served
OW"ER, ESTATE OF EUNICE BELVILLE

S~AIN

AUCTION SERVICE
&amp; Associates
Case No. 17,495

UBLtC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1984
1
10:00 A.M.

PASOU~LE ElECTRICAL COMPANY and GALLIA REFRIG ·

ERAfl~ . INC are reducong then mventorv.
From llipolis. take Route 7 to Kanauga. Tuon roght on
Ferry ~ rttt. Watc~ for stans .
,
NEW ITEMS
Vent c;j,s, baromelrrc dampers, electnc heat tapes, Burndy
Hylugs !all stzes), scre w anchors (vanous sozes), TV antenna
parts, tpphance cords, electn c baseboard heaters. motor
swttohES, startong capacrtors. electrrcal bo m (a ll s~es), start
ers, coodUit flttmgs (all sozes). relngeratton copper f1tt1ngs !all
sllesl, tlllves. laucets. traps, llush valves, gnnding wheels all
stzes , blac~ piiSttc ptpe fittmgs, daory mtlker parts, brass com·
pressid1 fittings. gate valves, stop valves, refngeratton con ·
trois, ajpfoance controls, cotl cleaners, htgh pressure welded
pope f~ngs, ptpe hangers, weld flanges 2"·6"

USED IT~IIS
I each 2\\'18 , 4\\'x3' and I unspectfled
stze, 1q1 cooler. downspouts, Lenox gas luranc e, 2 each GE

52 50 5276 month. $100
deposl1 614 446 0116

121(60 2 bedrm mobile
home, wall cered for, good
con , 2 porches, ac . par11y
fum1shed. wa~her &amp; dryer.
good metal out bid . pr~ced
for qu1ck aala 8~500 Call

614-992-6328.

JACKSON ES TATES
APARTMENTS ! Equa l
Housmg Opportun1tyl hets
one and two bedrooms rent
startm g at $1 57 for one
bedroom and $193 per
month for two bedr oom
wrth 6200 depos1t loca ted
near Foodtand and Spring
Valley Pl aza pool and TV
ant Call 446 2745 or leave
m essage

CUSTOMIZED SIZES ALSO .A VAILABLE
CO MMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL
BOB GRIM - 446-7519
Also : Carport, Screen Enclosures. Canvas
Awnings &amp; Retractable &amp; Stationary.

$135 00 mo
3569

304 -675·

Excluded

SPRING SALE
PRICES SLASHED

GREEN THUMB

35-WEST
OPENS
FRIDAY , APRIL

Tax

Free Esttmates

USED TRACTORS
FORDS . 8N ; 800: 960 w/ ltne PT0: 3000 w/ PS;
ltne PTO

27

Veg Plants / Bedding Plants
S1 1\'et Queen SWeet Com-SAVE
Half Runner Beans- SAVE

FERGUSON: T030; T035 w/ ltne PTO: 1135-MF
240 Ooeel w/ ltne PTO .

Etc
Fertrl rzer 12 12 1116 24 24

JOHN DEERE: LA w/cu lttvat ors: 4010 Otesel.
450 C Crawler w/ wtnch .

34% Nitrogen
Straw Ltme
Pottery &amp; F1gurmes

FARMALL: Cub w/ culltvator : A w/c ulttvator ,
Fl4, H.

20-50% OFF PRICE
Si ll Decoration Flowers

614-446-4050

CASE. 580 C backhoe loader: 1150 8 dozer: forklift
6000 lb.: Bob Cat loader: storage trailers .

RUDY TO FIIIISII fBlliiE
CUSTOM FIIIISHIII
HAIID-CRAFTID ITEilS

Hay rakes. mowers. batlers, post drtver, disc 3/P
and wheel . plows 1·2·3-4 bottom. 5x16 semt
mount.
1980 r; , T. w/ topper, 1980 '!. T . 4 speed w/ PS;
1969 C50 flatbed: 1971 750 flatbed.

s1m.

.ao:.\.•
.ao

NEW

3/ P ttller 40" -52" -60"· 72': tobacco setters. Yorlt rakes;
box blades 4' 5W 6'- T plow 1·3 bottom: dtsc 3/P,5Y,,
6111 ft

!Sot GUllO Cllt1W AVPIUI
VIlMA. W. VA. UltS

Jim's Farm Equip. Center.

304-295 -5133

Rt. 35.

M o n , Thurs , Fn 10-8
Tues , Wed , Sat 10-5

Check The Rest-

W.
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -446-9777- 446· 2484

Buy From The best!!

E-Z-Chlor Canisters
'16 95 Regular p11&lt;e

The only pool cleaner
that sweeps and vacuums.

~' '?alaris.

Sl J 9 S Speoo l Prrce

"'t&gt;.

~Tabex
M ORE FUN L ESS WORK FOR POO L O WN ERS

C

S

WE

EP

sssooo

UN IT PUMP
BACK UP VALV[

Small eff1c1ency apart . cen
tralau &amp; he at , 1 professional
type gentleman only 446

Jnground Pools As Low As

$]995° 0

Garage apt
furm sh ed 3
roo m s &amp;. bath Washer &amp;
dryer Clean . no pet s. adult s
only Oep &amp; rot req Ca ll

(I'

'

446 -1519

House 2327 112 Lmcoln Ave

" .-v
•"'..

.
'

'-

~\

3 b dr unfurn garage apt ,
$250 plus depos1t
Ca ll

446 3786

2 bdr trailer fully furntshed
goo d loc at1on. sec dep req

Furn•shed eH1cu=r ncy. 607
2nd , Gall1polls
$ 145
Share bath. s1ngle
Ca ll
446 4416 after 7PM

Coli 446-8558

Furn1shed one BR . beaut1ful.
W / 0 A / C Adults only N o
S21 5 month plus
pe ts
electnc $200 depos1t Ref
Req Bulav1lle Road Call
Conme 446 -0088 after 4

pm

Furn1shed apt 1 bdr . near
HMC. $225 Utll1t1es pd ,
Adults Call 446 4416 after

7PM

GAll iPOLI S OH IO 45631

1·614-446 3051
0

Bvmgo•dn o!f Sal~, In&lt;

Furmshed M ob1l e H ome,
ce ntral art m1le b elow c1ty
overlookmg the nver One or
two adult s only 446 033B

1971 King 65x12 , 2 apen ment trailer Ideal for rent ing
Conta c t Hersh e l

BONANZA

McClure at 614-992-6900

til &amp; p .m . after !S p .m

call

614 -992 -3438.
1976 Kirkwood 14JC70, to tal electric, 3 bedrooms. 2

full both a. t9300 Coli 6 14
992 -7725
1978 Coachman 14x70. 3
bdr , 1 % baths, clean

&amp;9.000
3316

... the brand that makes the difference.
-~

-

• Lll~ Lr.J .I

Mobile home. 1 2JC60 Cham
p1on , nice carpeting , woo d
burner. drapes. dishwasher
extra n1ce and clean On
rent&amp;l lot close to Galhpohs
and Rt 36, Immediate pas

se11ion. t6.995 00
676· 3466

F&lt;IJM 1(0\J I &gt;'Mt"' ' S'O!.• ( t

Or nc r s /WAR EHOIJ &lt;; r ~.

Coil 614 -992

NECCHI EducatiOn Department placed orders anttctpattng
school orders. Due to budget cuts . these orders were not
sold. Neccht has released for sale to the public a limited
number of these HEAVY DUTY ALL METAL SPECIAL SEWING
MACHINES that sew on all fabrics Levi 's, canvas,
upholstery, nylon. stretch, vinyl, silk, AND EVEN SEW ON
LEATHER. These machines are new 1984 models. All carry
Necchi's 25 year warranty .

C~UFICHE S

304

1974 Kirkwood 12K60. to·
tal elec .• 2 bedroom , house
windows. new carpet A - 1

cond 304-675· 7328.

IF YOU'RE PLANNING A

1977 14JC70 Cameron
trailer . central a1r, underpmning , 2 bedrooms. 2 bath a.

FOR SALE OR RENT
14x70, 1979 Shannon &amp;II
alae , 3 bedroomt, partly
turn11hed mobile home,
12x28 built-on room with
coal or wood burner. EKe.
cond. underpinned, 3 nice
porches , wall water. utility
bulldmg, acre land. Jerrys
Run Road. Apple Grove.

Manufacturer's Suggested Price

NOW ONLY $198.00

Now is the lime to contact Umbauuh!

Limited Supply -- No Dealers Please

Our Fltld Rtprtuntallvt~ w1 11 providr "aluablt "No
Co1t-No obllg11ton" aSJidanu In lht plannm~ of yo ur
btuld•nQ to meet yo11r tlmt !Chtdlllt

SORRY, NO TRADE-INS OR LAYAWAYS

WRITE OR CALL COL LECT

BRING THIS AD

W.Vo 304-876·2366.

Raposaeaton. 2 bedroom
12x60 Madiaon mobile

UMBAUGH BUILDING CO., INC.

home •eoo 00 down 80
payment a of $137. 14 per

304-676-2711 .

33

Farms for Sale

IDNANZA
IUILDIIIGS

P 0 Bo x 7
Reno. Ohto 45773
(6 14) 373·0130

Pif'a~t ha~ f ~our n·prrH•nfalwr coff I am

barn. 70 ac. mora or le11.
rural w1ter. houll 1111 then
one yur old. 4 bedroom•.

intrrr\ltd m

0 Commercial

0 Horse

0 Farm Storage

0 ChUICh

Name
Address

Crrv

(1 DAY ONLY)
State Rt. 7, Gallipolis, OH.

Time: 11:00 AM. To 6:00 P.M.
SALE SPONSORED BY

0 Suburban Ga&lt;ag e

Phone

Date: Tuesday, May 1st
Place: Holiday Inn - Room A

- - - - - - - C u t Out - Mail Today--- - - - -

Form for nlo· •119 ,900·

llvtngroom, dining room,
fomlty room, kltchon, utlllly
room. 2 full blithe. II mi.
tram Rio Orondo ond 1 mi.
oH R1 . 36. Cell 814-248·
91170.

$599 95

BUILDING
FOR THIS YEAR

304-773-9 133

between Huntmgton and
Point Pleeaant on St. Rl. 2.

.. ~- .J. ~ - ·~-----....--~~~·~::-..::

Hou se for rent Henderson,
Newly remodeled , 3 br

1976 Skyline Mobile Home
12xS2. good cond1t1on

84500 Call 614-992 -6169
or 992 ·7667

SPRING SPECIAL

0338

742 2720

electncllurnaces, 6 each electric duel heaters. 2 each hang·
mg elittroc heaters, 10 each furnace blowers (some wtth mo lors), 80.000 botler, 2 pac~s 2 ton atr condot10n ers, fuel ool
furnade pumps and motors, atttc lans, tnple wall flttmgs 8"
and
4 each reg1sters and grolls. hot water wculatong
pum
MISC. ITEMS
3 Phas~motors ll HP, CBradtos, walkte talkres. busmess ra
dto • se end mobrle umts, S M C copoer, tools. 8' pop
coolel , 1967 Step Van, many more ~ems too numerous to
mentio 11
Cuh
PosHive 10 Required
Lunch Served
~ctoonttrs: Merlin WedemeYtr &amp; Don Smtih
614/245-5152
614/992-7301
N Respons ible for Accodonts or Loss of Propertv

I

3 bedroom, family room
basement . near schools and
hosp1tal Deposit and refer
enc e reqUir ed 304 -675

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

monlh. ALL STATE MDDU·
LAR HOMES, half way

I
I

992· 3590

12JC66 1971 mob1le home,
woodburner &amp; a c 614 -

Etectrof~l srgns-

J"·

Unfurmshed house , ha s
carpet and washer &amp; dry er

Apartment
for Rent

D-3

DO IT YOURSELF AND SAVE
8'x12' DELUXE PATIO COVERS ....... S389
10'x20' DELUXE PATIO COVERS •. •..• S522

Edward Martin, Executor of the Estate of Stella A.
Reid will accept sealed bids for the real estate
owned by decedent, to wit: Pt. of S Yo of City lot 74
(31'6"x173 '10") 233 Second Avenue, Galltpohs,
Ohio, until 12:00 noon, May I . 1984. Appraosed at
$25,000.00. Executor reserves nght to reject any
and all btds.
Prospective purchasers may onspect property on
Saturday, April 21 , and Salurday, Apnl 28. between
1:00 and 5·00 P M
All sealed bids shall be sent to Edward Marttn . Executor. Northup. Ohto 45655. or c/o Warren F
Sheets Co .. l P.A., 19locust Street. Galhpolts . Ohto
45631

2 Iota Grandvtew He1ghts

14x7Q, 3 bdr , 2 full baohs,

SAT., MAY 5, 1984

Q,.nde,

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge

PRIVATE SALE

142 acre farm near Rio

S6 , 995 00
3466

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1979

se t. se veral hand tools electnc lrollrng motor, oll1ce desk,
wro ught rron rar lrn g. 50 cup coffee maker gas range bo
wlmg ball w/carr ymg case atr compresso r 10 gallon m1 lk
cans school des k gas logs Scott lawn sp rea der
NEW ITEMS· eleclrrc ca n opener, T1 mex watches, Moster
Coffee telephones smo ke alarm s krlchen clocks hot arr

4 FAMILY YARD SALE
So Fourth St . Cheshtre
MAY 1 &amp; 2
Household items. cloth·
tng, toys , English saddle.
TVs, stereos. ftsh tanks

Coli 446· 8002

3 bdr, 2 full baths, Iorge 101.

v.

Au ioneer: Kenneth Swam

11

lincoln Ave , 8 1A
usumable loan ,

Ferma for Sale

1 bedroom home 1n MmersVIIIe by Bulk Plan t Total
e lectr~c Call61 4 992 7314
or 992 -6215

WE LOVE YOU

Real Eslale

Call 446· 2967

21

House and 3 lots for aale
Slidmg Creek Road Hart·

2805
percent

33

1982 Oakbrook furnished
mobile home . 14 f1 w1de 2
bdr . hke new S7,600 C&amp;ll

Coii614 -992 -7BB7 or 992 5354

304-666-2793 or 304 -895·
3951

windows, carpeted. plenty
of kitchen cabinets, 'A base·
ment wtth
atorage. carport w1th atorage. large lot,
storage buildtng Call 614-

lawn mower dr1ll press, pa1nt sp rayer, automollve tun e up

6 rooms &amp; bath. l&amp;rge
entrance way, pantry, lg
buement &amp; ante, f~replacea ,
f1ntshed floors . lg front
porch part1caltv lnsul&amp;tad .
Will sale on land contrac1

Homea for Sale

room $15,000 00 304 Seven room houae. 1 1/z bath.
675·6864.
3 bedroom that could be 5.
new ac, insulated. storm 1-4-roo_m
__h_o_u_o_o_c_o_r_n_o_r_l_o_t

Auctioneer's note · This IS a good place to buy your
flea markelttems. lots of used ttems as well as several new things. Be on time .
Garage door opener wlch ao n drove, maple BR furniture gas
powered law n edger barbecue grrlls lawn lurnrture, 8 pool
!abl e, 3 brcycles Krck and Go sc ooler, 2 new ttres, CBra diOs,
CB equrpment lou nge chaor, auto washer , lloor model
stereo 8 truck topper new ce oh ng lrghl s, goll push carts,

S32.900 Call 1-614 -6782613

Three bedroom brtck ranch.
21h beth, 2 car garage .
add -on wood stove in base ment. 12JC13 wood ttorege
bldg . 26K40 pole barn. frutl
trees. one acre 41h m1les
from New Haven on At 33

patio, a.c. te7,000. 814·
985-4201 .

Located at the Gallta Co . Fairgrounds.
For the Gallipolis Shrine Club

3 bedroom house in Pome·
roy. close to school &amp;
hoapital. carpeted, panaltng,
full basement, bu1lt m kit·
chen, FA gaa furnace, 1%
betha. utthly buildmg Call

304-675· 6668

31

10:00 A.M .

Call 614-985-4387

Profess 1onal Elec1rolysts
Chntc Probe Type ElectrolySIS

245-5152 -

Baum Addition . 3 bdrms.
2 % baths, ec , wood burning
fire place. 2 patios, woods , 2
acres, gas. TP w&amp;ter,
$67.600 Owner w1ll help
t1nance or will cons1der land
contract with $1500 down
&amp; payments of $650.00.

304-675-6643

Baum addition . 3 bedroom
brick. 1 V.:. baths, full bat&amp;·
ment. family room. cerport.

Not responstble for acctdent or loss of property

$69,900. Ca11446-1028

Three year old total electric
house. 3 bedroorna, fenced
tn back verd and deck
510 000 00 down aasume
8 % per cent loan pnced m
m1d 60 's Call after 6,

31

mutt 1111
3 bedroom, 11'1 ttory homo. Owner trenl1'trrld,
3 bodrm brick
ntwly Nmodaltd with btm. btauttful
home. lllreplaae. deok.
ohlakon ooop, r,nv ohtod, a. waoda. prtvaoy, sunehlne.
workohop .
.81 eor11 en.eoo . coli 114·892·
ftnood ln. Only eae .ooo. 8420.
Colli 14·112·2143 orovtn·
lnt 114-742-2218. Seven yur old home. three
Mlchaol
badroomt , garden spot .

From Gallipolis. take Rt. 141 to Rt. 775,
turn left. Follow signs .
Have somethmg ~ou want to sell? Bnng it to the
Patriot Auction Barn and we'll sell it for you
Constgnments accepted from I P.M. to 5 P.M.
on Saturday .
Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer

Pnce reduced for qu1ck sale I
560 Jay Dr . 3 bdr , tri-level,
for sale by owner, qu1et
neighborhood, Gall1pohs
City School. central air . gas
heat. large above ground
pools, attached double gar&amp;ge, large flat yard where
Blue Birds feed All th11 for

e225 00 down $225 00 per
month 304·676·271 1

Homaa for Sale

SALE EVERY SATURDAY 7 P.M.

Homes for Sale

TO BUY! II 1 4 ft w1de three
bedroom . bath and half.
mobile horne aittmg on nice
lot. ready to move mto

31

t--=--~-_.:_.:.J===&amp;=A:u:c:to:o:n==::.!32
Patriot Auction Barn

810 S Second St. Mlddlop·

5

near Holzer Hotpital,
829 .900 Term• tf needed

Financial

Moy 3rd Ito 41h. 9 to 5.

FOR RENT WITH OPTION

I NG M o nthly and Ouenerly
accounts welcome 428 Se'
co nd Ave Call 446 - 1136

18 W an ted to Do

Yard tale at Leona Stewart•.
Mulberry Heighll, Pomeroy.

6 rooms. basement , double
garage. 1 &amp; one-thud acre
lot. Rose H1IL Pomerov

Harper s Adult Care Home
has n vacancy tor anoth er
res 1dent elderly person Call

M en And Women 17- 62 .
trarn now fo r C1v1l Serv1ce
exams H1gh school n ecessary, posl110ns stan as high
as S10 21 hour • Postoff1ce
• CIAncal • Mec hamcs •
Inspec tors Keep present JOb
wh1le prepanng at home for
government exa m s Wnt e &amp;
Include phon e No to · 80 11:
5 00 m ca re of the G&amp;lhpohs
Oatly Tnb une 825 3rd
Ave Gall1polts Oh 45631

Pomeroy toff Butternut) .

22 Money to loan

614 25 6· 149 2 or 446
11 04

Schools
lnstructoon

Edwm Wonter- Auctioneer
Mtllwood. WV

501 -329 -8327

Would hke to bebys1t m my
home How e e~~:celle nt refer
ences Call 614 992 7038

15

6 family yard ule May 1at
through 1 300 Warzgall St .

614 -693- 3929 or 992 ·
5917

3051

W11l care for the elderly tn m y
home lot s of references
M en or wom en Call 614

4 family Yard Sale. May 1
and 2, be., de Sugar Run Mill
garages in Pomeroy Rain
cancel a.

mto cash 1n one day " fhe Au ction Way
Licensed and Bonded
In Oh1o and W ~a
Yembe• ()t WV Auctioneers Assn

31

$

Public Sale
8o Auction

Turn your personal property

21

HOM E LOANS

Homea for Sale

WINTER'S
AUCTION SERVICE
Sonce 1973
Now Booking Sales
For 1984

······ Pomiirov········

pon, April 30 through May
6 Bedding, linena. drapes.
clothing. diahea, Jewelry.
pens, small appliances, furniture. toolt. toya, m11c

Business
Opportunity

8

Olg1ntlc Yard Sale at Mary
Laynea realdence, Ch..hire.
Ohio Moy 1·2·3. Concel H
rains, from 9 til dark.

Tues. Wed 1st &amp; 2nd 3
m1les. 141 Centenary Town
House G1gant1c 6 Fam1\y
Beeuttful babya clothes. lee
1eans 811 IIZBS tOpl , bed
p1llow, d1shes. more

Lady to l1ve m 5 days a week

Middlepon, Oh 614 -992
3476

boord . cell
27t1

Muon

2485

Will do garden plow1n g in
R1o Gran de Centerville area

Brenda 's Boutique.297

Chapel Rood,

Tea c h e rs a nd coac h es
summer employment ,
$900 00 per m on th guaran
teed m co me World Book
and C h1ld C raft 304-882 ·

446 3672

Caah paid for fancy iron or
heavy iron bed1 $160 and
up for certain Meigs Co
stone jars Old time cup

3667.

4 1984 EOE

RUMMAGE SALE So Poul

Mean Street Band at Jonea
Bar. West Columbia, Friday
&amp; S•turday from 9 p .m . to 1
1 m Everyone welcome!

S Second St, Mlddlopon,

Pomeroy Health Care Center
IS now accepttng appltce
tto n s tor n urses a1des &amp;
orderhes El(penence pre
fered Appli ca tions ac
cepted Monday Fnday 8
a m -4 30 p m through M ay

304· 773 -9185

9

3 Fam1ly Garage Sale May

1984

304 -675 1293

,I

Public Notice

S"Jie&lt;i

Auct 1o n eve ry T u esday
n1ght Pt Pleasan t WVa
Au ct Lonm e Neal Youth
Center Bldg
Camden St

2nd 10 00 AM lo 2 00 PM

n r rrrr t! lr'lll , nd tt-- r r,!l, , r I

1

Publo c Sale
&amp; Au c toon

614 367 7101

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of h•s bid t

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ratsed f1ve ch tdre n.

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band lather and grand ·
lather WILL IE SHAFER ,
wh o passed away 15 years
ago on Aprrl 29 1969

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In lovmg Memory of hu s·

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CARD OF THANKS
- The Sue Goeglern Fam1ly

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ment and care I recetved dur -

mg my stay at Holzers A
i/try specoal thanks to the
Balha County Emergency
lledocal Seovoce for theor
ljooughtfulness
Oortha ( Oottoe) Adams

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color , brown co ll ar. last soon
at Clihon Reward 304 -

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1 Card of Thanks

The Gallla County Council
on Agmg ts accepting applicat ions for a part-ttme (20
hours -weeki position of
Congregate Meal• Manager·
Meals Transpor1er for Vin ton area Add1t1onal infor
mat1on may be obt111ned
from the Oh1o Bureau of
Employme n1 Servtces &amp;ndor Semor C1t1zens Center
The Galha County Council
on Agmg IS a private non·
profit corporation and en
equal opportunity employer
If Int erested tn an apphca ·
t1on. contact the lnforma
t1on and Referral off•ce,
Semor C1t1zens Center. 446 7000 Apphcauon must be
rece1ved by 4 OOPM . May 4,

667 3402

Los t at Me1gs Jumor H1gh
Sch ool Wedn esda y g1rl s
l1 g ht grey Jacket w1t h presc npt lon glasses tn pocket
Reward If found ca ll 614

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Found s1amese cat on Sno w ball H•ll m Syracuse Cal l

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Opentng Fie&amp; Market Two
free weekendt Aprtl 28· 29 .
May 6-B Free open air
spacea, parking. admiBSIOn
US 36, Frazier• Bottom ,
WVa . Don Frazier-Operator

Laborers for mowers 3 04

LOST 2 dogs, black male
Cocker Spantel
l tmps
Brown &amp; white male part
Beagle R10 Grande area
M1 ssmg smce 4 - 19 A e
ward Call 614 245 9591
or 614 24 5 -5353 e~~:t 32 4

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Walker Coon H ound
Northup-Ptnot area
Call

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446-3897

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lAG OOOR 1221
FRG-OOOR 11721
SRG-OOOR 11531
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Publrc Notoce

6

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Copy No 84 408
UNIT PRICE

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Apnl 13. 1984

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Columbus. Ohto

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ti•'ln'p&lt;&lt;l lil&lt; fll (_1ol, 1' 1
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Contrae1 Sales Legal

o f hts b1d

30 gal electnc water heater

f

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Public Notoce

Publoc Notice

Vicinity

304· 755 -2779

304 -

Beagle rabbrt dog 304 -773 -

I•

&amp;

Coli 614·367-0637

614-245 9421

.\

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614-2 45 -

446-4827

11 1 { l• I ' I'

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3 pupptes 1 male , 2 fem ale,
wtll be small dogs Call

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UNIT PRICE
CONTACT
RS98711 1

3 cu1e pupptes 4 mos old, V2
Border Colhe 'h German

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···· ··Gaiiijjoiis···· ·····

Mioc Oortge Sale APfll
30th 1hru Moy 4th. One milo
out Rt. 218 off Rt 7

3 Germ&amp;n Sheph&amp;rd pupa . 7

wko old Call 446-3839
0

Wanted Amblt1oua, tough
minded people who are
willmg to work hard tor an
excellent 1ncome Full or
p&amp;rt t1me Send reaume to
Box 400 in Care of the
Gallipolis Deily Tribune, 826
Thtrd Ave , Gallipolis, Oh

Pomtnoy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point PleaiCint, W. Va.

4 btdroj&gt;m homo. lull bott•
mont, 1 taro lot, Rt. U .
Chorlaoton Rood . 304·178·
4887 or 114-441·11711.

,_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Part t1me babysitter wanted
for 6 yr old In Addiaon area

Lo1oro

LEGAL
NOTIFICATION
Appr

Giveaway

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

Jill ll••••O•"
IQ - AIOBoo rJ,.o

11f~H~e~l~p~~~~="'

45631

A- CHolOt
II'!!

31

'{ard SaleS

M •-

Maaon County

Vp oo 1~-oo~o

Public Notoce

Columbus Oh10
Apn l 20 1984
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No 84-480

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Dorl1

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Coffee

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CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

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PLEASEIIII Lady otop stool·
lng wreath •nd flower~ off

NOTICE Any dogs found on
my property w1ll be shot due
to past destruct ion of prop·
erty Signed Charle1 RIHie

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Announcements

St:rVICI'S

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 67S-1333

April 29, 1984

April 29, 1984

Ohio-Point Pleasant W.

Vance-Leach Home Furnishings, Inc.
State _ _ _ _ _ l&lt;p

-~--~-~~- Co un~

-~

Logan,

Ohio

�-

D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Paga

44

61

61 Household Goods

64 Misc. Merchandise

BRIDGE

Furniahed apt for rent 3
rooma wtth pnvate beth. 1 at
floor . 846 2nd Ave .• Gall i·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12 ''- 22 '' 11ock&amp;d
In yard
HEAP vender ,
prompt dahvery 814-268-

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

polio. Coli 446-2216
Modern 1 bdr apt betwee n
town &amp; Holzer. Ideal for
~ngle peraon. qu1ottng set
ttng. • 1 66 mo plus utilities
sec depos1t
Cal l 446

2066

Apt

for rent downt own

ene mo

Call 446 9283

1 bedroom Apt $196 mo
1nclud1ng utlllttes Equal
Housmg Opportumtv Con1act Vtltage Man or Apts

614-992-7787
A1ve rs1de Apts Middlepo rt
Special rates fo r Semor
C1t1zens $130 EQual Ho u s
1ng Opportun111 es 614

992 7721
Apartment for re nt. 2 o r 3
bedroom. Middl e po rt Ca ll

614 -992 2 361
2509

or 992

APARTMENTS . m o bil e
homes. house s Pt Ple asant
and Gelhpolls 614 - 44 6

8221
TWIN RIVERS TOW ER
Apartments now ava1la ble t o
elderly &amp; d1sabled wrth a n
1ncome of l es s t han
$12 . 300 Rentm g for 3 0
percent of adjusted mcome
Phone 304 6 75 6 679
3 room and bath a pt Mt
Vernon Ave Sto\ote a nd re f
furn1shed E:~~c cond 30 4

675 -1962
3 bedroom duple x w1th full
basement, 2606 Mt Vern o n
Ave $275 mon t h w 1t h 1
year lease 304 675 -3030

or 675 -3431

45

Furnoshed Rooms

For rent Sleepmg Room s
and l1ght house keepm g
rooms Park Central Ho t e l

Coli 614-446 -0756
Sleepmg room $115 .
ti9S patd Share bath .
only Range &amp; refng
2nd A "We , Gallipoli s
446 -4416 after 7 PM

utlh ma le
919
Call

46 Space for Rent

3159
LAYNE'S FU RNI TURE
So fa chaH ro cker otto
man 3 ta bles (e xtra hea vy
by Fro nt1 er ) S6 85 Sofa
c ha1r and lovesea t $275
S ofas a nd c ha1r s pnced from
S2 85 to 5895 Ta bles. S45
and up t o S1 25 H1de -a
bedl'l $ 440 a nd up to
8526 Re clmers S 175 to
$37 5 lamps fr o m $ 28 to
S75 5 pc d1nettes from
S99 t o 435 7 pc $189
a nd u p Wo od table w1th s1x
c ha •r s S4 25 to $ 745 Desk
S1 10 u p to S2 25 Hutches,
S5 50 a nd up mapl e or pme
f1 n1s h Bunk bed co mplete
w1t h mattresses $250 en d
up t o S395
Baby beds,
$ 1 10 Mattr e sses or bo M
spn ngs full or twm , sse .
f1rm , S68 a nd 9 78 Q ueen
se ts. S 195 4 d r c hests .
S4 2 5 dr chests $54 Be d
frames. S20 a nd S25 , 10
g un
Gun cabt ne ts , 5350
Gas or e lec tn c ra nges $375
Ba by ma tt resses , S25 &amp;
S3 5 . bed fra mes S20 $25,
8c S30, k1ng fram e S50
Go o d s ele ction of bedroom
su 1t es
c edar c hests .
r oc k e rs, m e tal c ab1net s ,
s wtv e l roc ke rs
Used Furmt ure
Aefng e ra
to rs _ cha ~r s d rye rs a nd
TV s 3 m1les o ut Bul av1lle
Ad Open 9am t o 6pm . Mo n
t hru Fn Sa m to 5pm Sat

614 446 0322
TV &amp; Apph ances 6 2 7 Th~rd
Ave
Galhp ohs 614 -446
1699 Sp1 n w as he rs ga s &amp;
e l ec tri C d ryers
auto
wash e rs
ga s &amp; ele r: tn c
ra nges refr•ge ra t o rs TV
seiS

6245

&amp;

Budd o n vo ur lot a new ho me
vou aHo rd Over 1100 sq
ft . 6 room s &amp; bath, c ar
peted. readv to mo"We mto
126 500 also garages &amp;
ba se m e nt
Call Patr io t
Home BUJiden 446 -803 8
Will co ns1de r mo b1le h o m e
a s t rade -m

l1 l red &amp; b1 g re d s h aft d nv e
brus h c utt e rs tnmm e rs
30cc &amp; 4 0cc gas powe reC:
eng •n es
Pn ces f r om
S2 99 95 l e n N So n s Small
E ngmes C all 614 - 3 7 9
2

story

house

S13 ,0 0 0

1982 Dodgo Colt $4 200
3 16 S Mam St . Vtnt on, Oh

Call 614 388 9087
Tra1 le r wheel t n axle

Call

614 256 -657 4
Couch , m attress &amp; boK
s pnngs Call 446 0518
Comple1e h os pnal bed w1th
ra1 ls. ove r bed table an d

Ad 446 7398

Fam1ly of three dame s 3 br
house m c ountry w gard e n
space m Potnt Plea sant area

Call 304-675 6559 or 774

20 ga llon lo ng aquanum
Call 446 -6632
Platfo rm sc ales old c opper flald washer w1th tub res taurant pop c ool e r gas gntl
Call 446-2 088 aft e r 6

51 Household Goo ds
Two hvm g roo m s uite s @llC
cond , blond en d t abl es a nd
coffee table
304 6 7 5

4289
Used hvmg room s u1te ru s t
color, goodcond . S125 00

304 675 -6083
Country Oak Furntture. t a
bles . cha1rs, cupboard s d ry
ainks. p1e safes. lots of m1sc
Conkles At 7 Tuppe rs
Pfams Oh1o

2 pa lf new mate rmty pants
s1ze 16. c re am &amp; b ro wn
S5 00 e a c h Ca ll 614 9 92

55 24

5524

Aeclm er r. h;w S50

Mens

gnll clu bs 525 W u m&lt;&gt;n s
galt c lubs w1 t h ba g l• ke new
gr eat fo r beg mn er SSO
We stm g h ousc d1 shwas he r
S30 Arml ess ru s t velou r
co uc h loo se c us h1 ons S75

r. all 614 949-2741

Oh 446 -0840
M a yt ag

16 x6 w o o d storaq c buil d
mg Ca ll 446 7751 o r 6 14

25 6 6569

4
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•

AK 2
A K QG
AK I 4
10 7

Vulne ra ble Ne1Lher

Dealer SOuth
Wtst

Pass
Pass

North

2+
Pass

Ea i !

Pass

,.

South

3 NT

Pnss

Opemng lead +Q

By Oswald Ja coby
and James Jacob}
Tot.!Jy s h a nd fr o m
Wa tson s boo k 1s almost a
dupli cate of yesterdays One
diff erence 1s th at South ha s
twcn g1ven 23 pomls Instea d
nf vrste r da v s 2U Th e
ImpOrt an t d1fic re ncc IS tba t
Wes t ho lds thre e cl ub s
Instead of t¥o o and South

F1rewood for sale $20 00
p1ckup $30 00 delivered

304 675 - 2991 before
11 00 AM or after 6 00 PM
Wood cuner spec1al , Bar and
Cham lube, S3 89 gal
S 17 50 case S1ders EQutp
ment Co f304 - 675 7421
A D Smnh gas hot water
tank Permaglass I, 40 gal

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

wnnger w as he r

55 Buildong Supplies

50 s heets of T1 -11 wood
Sldmg Cell 614 -949 -2437
Now open for busmess
Mountatn S tat e Block, At
33 New Haven Complete
masonry s uppl1 e s 4 ". 8 ',
1 2 " block Deh"Wery serv•ce
Phone day 304 -882 2222
even.ng 882 -3239

56

Pets for Sale

S 100 fros t -fre e re fng era tor
S88 . GE h eavy duty w as he r
S 100, gas c lothe s d ry or
S65 , a utom at iC wa s he r &amp;
drye r S1 25 , 30 mc h e lectnc
ra nge 545_ GE re frt g erato r

$85

Ca ll 614 74 2 23 52

Gulbransen sp1net p1ano
exc cond . $1 . 200 304-

773-6783

Farm Equipment

0475

Real Estat e General

614 379 -2468
1 65 Massey Ferguson 130
Farmall w1th cult1vators
Harrow &amp; tobacco baler'
Call 446-7838 after 5PM

MF65 PS, LP, $1,80000
Ford 3000 gas, $4,500 00
Plows

S200 00 up

Ford

3000

d•esel. $4,500 00
$1 , 000 00

to

Judy Taylor Gr oo mmg Call

576-2606

California Ranch Brock 2200 sq It woth beautiful woodwork. large hvmg room woth foreplace. adjacent dmong
room. family room woth buolt -tn baobecue on stone wall,
2'1• ceram1c baths with glass showeo enclosure doors 3
spacoous bedrooms (one woth buolt-on desk/ cabo net area) .
all electnc kitchen woth new cabonets and formtea top
whiCh mcludes diShwasher diSposal and refrogeralor A
15x20 It patoo woth slate !tie and new alumtnum awnong
woth woought ~ron posts and laoge Warm Mornmg ga s gnll
A regulatoon badmmton court , 17x47 concrete sl ab. 1deal
for badmonton basketball. shuffle boaod . etc wtth large
outsode hght foo n1ght use. workshop and storage area on

7 yr old male Amazon
Parrot tame &amp; talks Bnghtly
colored . healthy , comes
w1th a very large cage

S600 Call 614 -388 -9989
Champ1on Reg Poodle 9
months oid Call 446-4434
3 yr old female Pomter good
hunter go od re ason for
selling Call 446-4472 be tween 5 &amp; 7

basement w1th metal B1lco donn; Anr.ln"l!d 11aran Cen -

tral a11 cond1toonmg Jhermopane wondows, 11" msulatoon
on ceilongs and 6" onsulatoon on oxtenor walls Carpetmg
throughout house "'cept one large bathooom. Gall opoliS
c1ty schools and excellent neighborhood whoch has Neoghborhood Watch . One of Spnng Valley's nocest homes

Baby rabbits. $1 00 each 1
full grown male. 1 full grown
female, $3 00 each Call

614-379-2216

Coli 446-2734 or 446-2206

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY- 2 :00 to 4:00P.M.

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL - Noce 4 bedroorn. 1'h batf1; wofeaprroved
kitchen, central a~r garage Best buy I've seen lm.t l tO me t h ~e .a rge
and location.
DIREcnONS: Take Rt. 160 from Gallipolis to At. 35 West. Go I
mile Wist pat Holza' Hospi!Jf to Pleasant Valley Estates.
lDc*l at
~ Dr.

m

BAIRD &amp; FULLER REALTY--446-7013

Real Estate General

~wf

M~GKEE
~

M. L. "Bud" McGHEE
Broker

Cheryl Lemley.

Meoes County Assoc~ate
Phone

Bush hog estate lawn
mower, 6ft . with 3 point
hitch, ex cond ., $600 Call

Wanted to leaae To bacco

equipment , 8 row boom
spray $650 One of the
largest setect1ons of f1eld
ready used equ1pment m
Southern Ohio Howe's
Farm Machtnory. At 124 &amp;
Mayhew Rd. Jackson, Oh
45640. 614·286·6944
1971 MF 136 gas, hka new.
with 7 ft New Hollnad
mower No
451 rear
mounted Wtll sell separately
by owner See next to
Methodist Church in Alfred
on St Rt 681

Call 304 675
1197 after 6 p m

71

14 9x28" tractor t ire mu st
be in good condnlon 304-

TOP C ASH paid for late
model used c ars
Smith
Buick - Po ntiac . 1911 Eas t ern Ave . Galllpohs Call

Autos for Sale

614-446-2282

63

Oh 614-286 5395 or 614 286 -1787
Case 310 front endlol'lder
dozer , 14,000 Call 614 -

256 1427
P1gs

$35 Call614-367 0624

Save from $640 to $82~

WORK
Jovoden's farm Equtpment ''
61.. 446 16 75

8 weeks good s tock.

Goata*young b1lhes for pets
or graztng Cell 614 367 -

0624
ers Call 614-388-8419

~-:~ '

2 Aeg1stered Jersey cows , 3
yrs old due 1n June Askmg
S1 .000 for both Call 614

Real Estate General

246 -9598

Canaday

1977 Pont1ac leMans 2 dr .
body good 76.000 miles.
V 8 301 . am rad1o. PS PB .

AC . 446 -1863

1981 Datsun 280-ZX turbo .
1 0 000 mtles mint cond .
Gr lux Coupe Call 446*
0648 after 6PM
1980 Bwck Regal Limited.
PS. PB. cru1se. AC tilt
wheel good t~res rear wm ·
dow defrost. good cond .

1982 Plvmouth Champ, ac
four speed, 10 700 m1le s .
37 mpg , ask1ng S4300 Call

614-992 -6236
1 981 Pont1ac Bonnevtlle
exc con Call 614 992
3348 after 6 p m
1969 Camero 360. 4 speed

$1,10000 304 6751600
ask for Jim l1velv
1962 Whtte Cad1llac con
vert1ble, all ongmaL O)(C

1976 Chavy Moon 4 cyl 4
spd . good body runs good .

cond 304-882 -3437

1 981 Dodge Omm e•ceflent
cond1t1on_ 59.000 m1les.
great MPG, stereo new
radials. 82 995 Call 698-

'81 Cohea Toyota GT , lift
back, AC, t1lt wheel, tinte d
glass AM -FM stero 36 .600
m1 304 -675 - 5149 a fter

8600 Coli 614-256-6248

for

sate.

assorted

D1ury goats Alpmes and
lomanchas
K1ds and
milkers Phone 304-675 -

5430

53.495 1981 2 d• Chevy
Chevette, auto , rad1o , sun roof. $3 195 1980 2 dr
Fa~rmont Ford , 4 cyl . auto ,
atr $2,896 , 1980 Renault
LeCar, 4 spd , AM FM , a~r ,
sunroof, $2.495 1979 Ply mouth Hor1zon, 4 dr, 4 spd ,
&amp;2 ,295 John's Auto Sales.
Butav1lle Ad , Galllpohs.
446 -4782 Open ttl dark
1976 Corvette, fac1ory
aluminum wheels, many eK tra s , low mileage Call 446

0498
64

Hay &amp; Grain

1974 Jeep PU. 4x4. $900 or
best oHer 1969 Camara .
$800 or best offer Call

Northup Kmg corn . alfalfa &amp;
grass seed other farm
seeds Call Vaughn Taylor
614-245-5064 or 614-245 5816 attar 8PM
Straw S 1 00 bale Cleamng
out barn . 300 bales F~r st
come basts 304 -675 3333

614-245 5096

1 972 Cad1lloc Coupe . full
power. chmate control. ste
reo dark blue eMcellent
cond11on Call 446 -05 77
1979 MG B convertible A 1
cond motor JUSt tuned up

Call614-245 -5294
73

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

cult1vator.
Garden seeds, plants, Ken nebec seed potatoes 8 8 60
Fertihzer. f1eld seeds Boso
Agn· Center, 446-2463

Volkswagen

for sale

1973 Ford LTD runs good,
fair cond Call 614 -367 -

7217

New truc k fenders &amp; doors
Chevy fenders $76 95
Chevy doors 8165 Fo rd
fe nders 875 Call 614-256

1260

1981 ChevyP1c kup. 19 32&amp;
1936 Ford Truc k 1977
Chevrolet Van 446 -3243
Wanted to bur good 1 1J~ or 2
ton lruck Flat bed pref erra

ble Call 446 -8034

675 -1285
'74 AMC Hornet, auto .
good r u nn1ng co nd ,

$500 00 304 676 1504
1970 Chev Impala , auto
transmiSSIOn , PS , 46 .000
actual mil e s
304 675

1978 GMC l,4 ton heavy
duty. 4 WO . auto _ g ood
cond S2 850 Call 446

8103

1980 Plymouth Arrown
p1 ckup &amp;Kcellent c ond1t1on
low m1les S3 500 Call
1973 V1 ton Chevy truck
350 engtne. w1th ong1nal
steel bed large mud flaps.
front steel mud guards .
am -f m rad1o , S600 992 -

6505
1979 4 wheel -dnve Ford
p1ckup, new t~res 8c nms.
ngh t s1de has be en wrec ked_
runs good , $1000 Call

614-742 2513

- - - - - - --

1969 International ruc kup .
45.000 m1les. good condttlon &amp;500. o r B 0 Cull

614 -742 -2836

1979 Merc ury Cougar XR7
PS PB. Alf c ond AM FM
stereo tope_ low m1leago.
exc cond 304 675 6586

1976 Chevy half ton tru c k

$1 500 00

68 Chevy half ton w1th
topper . good c ond
$750 00 Phone 304 -675 -

1974 Dodge Challenger
must see to appnc1ate . ask
1ng $2 400 00 make after

MF 40 gas,

S3 .200 00 Hay ra1ke N H

mower. $400 00 Used
Bush Hogs, $225 00 up
Phone 304-576 -2328 or

Real Estate General

742·3171

MMR 546 - NEW LISTING- Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy Extra
well-kept home, can be 3 or 4bedrooms, Kitchen has hand-crafted
birch cabonets full basement Lov~y wrap-around porch Sel~ klr
$32.500
MMR 547 - NEW LISTING - Th~ home IS like new' New wonng
and plumbing, new v1nyl ~d1ng, Anderson wondows, 2 mce
porches, 3 bedrooms, low utilitieS Good location m Moddleport on
Hamolton St llsk1ng $30,000
MMR 545 - NEW LISTING - In Dexter 3 bedrooms, 45'd00
lot, dug well Thos 15 a real handyman's speCial at $12,000
MMR 540 - Commeocoal buold1ng on St Rt 124 on Rutland
Oownstatrs " 211•60' woth bath Upsta11s os a 4 room and balh
apartment Selling pnce $10,900
IIMR 539 - Land contract aYaolable to qualified buyer. 10%
onterest oate. Th~ 2 story home has 4 bedrooms, formal donong
IMng room has 2 ~r~us lead-glass Windows. f!A ba!eme&lt;1t
Small yard with outbuoldong Located 1n l'oolemy, convenoent to
slioppong PRICE REDUCED 1D $16,000.

1979 Jeop CJ -6, 6 cyl , 3
s pd , loaded with e11tras

198 3 Honda V-65 Magna
1 .800 m1les. luggage rac k
back rest , mmt cond Call
446 -0648 afte r 5 PM

83, 000 Coli 446-0516
1983 Ford Ranger 4114 , V-61":
4000 mtles, new cond Call

446 0038
74

1979 Honda CB 650, wmd s hleld _ roll ba r c ruise mag
wh eels_ trunk low m1les
S1 ,295 Call 446 -4 205

Motorcycles

1980 Kawasaki l TO 1000
co n . 6000 males lots
of e xtras Call 614-992
e ~~: c

5747

78 Ford couner truck , verv
low m1leage . 5 on floor 30

576-2846

1981 650 custom Honda ,
2000 m1les exc ellent cond1t1on
Call after 6 p m

304 895 301 2

1982 Honda c ust om 900
Schaft dr~v e 1 1 000 m1le s

Shorp 304 67 5 2973

Real Estate General
8ro ker-Au ct1oneer

~wf

M~GKEE
'R,enl~

NEW LISTING - lflinersville
- Large 2 story house woth 4
bedrooms donong room. storage buoldmg, part basemen(
plus another house lh.at could
be a rental unit JUST
$1B,900 00
NEW LISTING- Letart Townshop - ~pprox 4 1/3 acres
buoldong or mobile home ~te
CJP water $7,000 00
MINI FARM - Garden area,
fruot trees. small barn and
approx 10 acres of ground m
Moddleport. 2-3 bedrooms, new
cabinets on the ~tchen ONLY
$2690000
FlAT'MlOOS - Really mce
ranch woth 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, big family room with
fireplac~ ublity, and garage
Noce lev~ one acre lot
$53,50000
RUTlAND - Newly reooodeted 2 bedroom home, nut
and cute. New carpeting,
panelon&amp; etc lnchrles washer,
dryer, range, refngeralor, and
d1sliwasher. Has a carport and
pabo $26,900 00
REALTORS
Henry Cleland, Jr
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 98S-4466

BMR 436 - EXCELLENT STARTER HOME wtlh 2 BRs LR DR
noce kttchen utility and new bathroom Ca rpeld throughout
Screenoo patoo, carpoot Large lot Call lor appotnlment
BMR 389 - OWNER SAYS SELL TODAY' Your family wtll en1oy
the room• ness of thiS house Indues 4 BRs 2 baths LR OR bwll '"
krtchcn Sotuated on laoge corner lol Close to town tn c1tv school
d15lnct !Green Elem ) Call to see th•s one'
BMR 444 NEW LISTING - POSSIBLE 8% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - Bnck &amp; frame 3 BR ranch style house Silualed
on 235 acres m/1 Includes liVIng toom. lg ealtn k1tchen, bath
ultlo ty room famtly ooom wolh wb fue~ace elertnc heat PosSible
1Q.3n assumphon Ca ll lor an appo1ntment

WE NEED LISTINGS
for Metgs Co LIStongs Call Cheoyl Lemley 742 3171

-W1Ihs L;;-d1ngllam
Realtor

•

a beet or a horse Far m fXJnd

lo1 water1ng ammals or f1shmg

I :30 to 4:00 P.M.

pr~ced

1n the $60s

STUTES REAL ESTATE- 446-4206

0r1

5 acres more or less w1!h awrox 3 ' ~&gt;

ba•hs fam1!y room d1mng room. mce modern ranch style home
w1th wood or coal burner Nat gas hoi water basement hea t m~ sys
!em modern step saver kitchen all wood ms1de tnm 1s oak has
"Malta · wood frame wmdows Must see th1s rnce la1ge home

Phone loday for showmg

[B
IIUUUI

Real Estate General

NEW liSTING - Brock 2
Ia moiy home 1'h baths tn
each N1ce carpelong, elec
heat One has l11eplace.
other a llue One acre near
WMPO $5B,OOO

A hall acre more or less w1th frUII trees plus a threr 1Jed1oom
home. llvmg room. k1tchen w1th bUill m cabmets utility room full

NEW liSTING- 2 bedroom
furno shed lraoler, balh, and
LP FA furnace Only $2 000
RACINE - Buy thos one and
entOY the fun of decoratong
to suol youoself Has lots of
paneling, new bath , carpetmg. new roof and beam ceolongs Only $23,000

$65.000 - fARA ESTATES - Bo level 4 bedrooms. lormal livtng
room and donmg room Large lamtly room 2 cao garage Deck from
krtchen Kyger Creek Schools
2 37 ACRES - Mooe or less Counlry stmosphere, only 4 miles
from tnwn Modern home 3 bedrooms. I 'I baths. 2 wb fireplaces,
hvtng room, tamtly room n e~y decorated kttchen Garage, 16x46
barn wrth large loll. stalls lor horses or cattle Cttv .,-hmk

I NCOIIE - Rel11ees can
supplement your oncoone on
these 4 rental unots on 2
level lots near Cardona! Just
$20,000

CITY PROPERTY - 2 slooy 3 bedoooms, largelot Excellent starter
or retirement home 3od Ave Pnced tn the 21Ys.

12 ACRES - Near the coal
mones woth 2 bedroom
ranch Full basemen!, furnace dnlled well plus other
bldgs Wanl $65,000

OUTSTANDING BUY - large ranch oome, 3 bedrooms. 2 bat~.
familY rm., cent "'· 2 car garage beautilul carpet Yoo'lllove this
home
#1252

POMEROY - 6 rm frame
woth furnace, bath , woodburner, full basement, OhiO
Power and mce lots

CHAMPAGNE TASTE - Very noce bock tn leo~et 4 bedrooms.. all
·carpeted. kitchen woth bao and donette, den, famoly room. oec room,
2 baths, 3 car garage, beautiful m-ground pool, 4 acres, city
schools, PD551ble loan assumptoon

lf0134

MINERSVILLE -Noceframe
home woth central heat,
bath, carpetong, lg fronl
porch and View of nYeo

COUNTRY LIVING - Noce remodeled home wrth 4 bedrooms,
bath with shower. carpeted 3 beauliful acres Kerr-Harnshurg Rd

t1479

FREE PARKING

7 ACRES - Large bnck and hame home, has new roof and
sJXIIlllng Large barn. Owner Will finance. City school distnct
Hl145

' ltOO,OOO
. $300,000

•

!192-3325

Housmg
Headquarter:,

',

8.6 ACRES - More or less, Kyger Creek dtStnct 12x65 Shull
mobile home. 3 bedrooms 2 extra mobtle home hooku ps Proced tn
the 20s
HOME. BUSINESS AND EXTRA BUILDING LOT or garden space,
all for under $20,000 Bu~ness was used as gas statoon and
groceoy Cozy 3 bedroom home
STATE RT 218 - 3 bed room home, 2 baths, kotchen formallivong
room domn11. lamoly room, I 920 sq It carport. covered pabo,
carpet and • Kimg doors ofl paho Stnrage butldmg, 15 cres more
or less coty schools lmmedtale possessoon
LOVELY 4 BEDROOM HOME IN CITY - First Avenue
2 ACRES M/t located on St Rl 35 Good buoldong sile Has a
mobile home hook-up Well water, also a water tap a.-.:I a storagf
bwldong City schools
POMEROY -ContemporarY
An acre of wooo·
land more or tes• ~\Ct t~,lO -·""'on thiS specoal one.
Pnced on the 50~ - " ""' nnancong
.
NEW LISTING - A-frame home ~tbng on 1!9 acres of partial
woodland Modem 3 bedroom. I ~ bath~ krtchen, livmg room.
Enclosed porch and II basemenL Pnced ooly $28.500 00

'""\)C£0

basement and garage that IS partoally converted tnto a den Uolin
1Shed room w1th a healolater f11eplace Ntee fenced tn yard Call lor
detaols
#491
INVESTMENT INCOME
Need a home, plus an mcome, who doesn't' We got tusl what you
need' Lovely modem stone home plus 10 oenlal motel umts '" ex
cellent condttion Completely furnoshed all you have to do IS move
on Approx Bacres and stocked pond Located on aStale Ht ghway
You can own your own buSiness Just call for more det;uls

#199
CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM
Ntee laoge lol I 00 It by 304 ft 12ft by 60It Pnce motxlehome'"
e:.:cellent condtbon 2 car garage, rural wa1er N1ce area close to

Galltpol15 Land. home, and garage allloo ooly $16,900 Let usshow
you thiS one now

lARGE STRUCTURE ALONG 41h AVE w1lh"

"~hi ol ;;;~,=~·

•

Pnce $30 000
•
lOCATE DONLY 1 BLOCK hom school and 'lloaled along a lree.
lined str eet lh1s 2 ~lOr' hOnl!' IS pn:•::,pntly arra nged lor 2

a partment~ howr•vt&gt;l can be convPrtPrl h;lr ~ In ~·noiP l.:~mllv .
res 1dem:e N•ce lo l Pr1ced 111 lhP m•d JO \
•

PRICEREDUCE Don th&gt;&lt; Zslmy federal bock home located along .

V1ne St G,1111poh~ 1 berl10oms ? baths cent a1r lormal dmmg •
e room li brary tamtl ~ 1m d~Xk s and manv more t~menrt1 es Call
. today lur an ,1ppotnlment
•

1•
•

I

ONLY I MINUTES BELOW GALLIPOliS on Oln Rl 7 4 Bedrm.
home w b !neplace I a lur nare lg kitchen !ull basement Good .

11ew ol 01110 R1vP r P11ce $37 500 00
• REMODELED 1-BEDRM HOME along 4ih Ave Acompact home.
• w1th man~ 1Pw featu res Ideal beg1 nrer or ret1rement t1ome Onl~.
. $2150000
•

11 ACRES cpprox I m1l!' fr om Clf)' lm11!\ nfy watrr lront~ on •
Neo~ h boohoo d Rd Buy """ lor $20.000 DO
•
151
ACRE
fARM
w•lh
n"e
house
and
equ•pmenl
shed
•
• $86 000 00
• PERFECT LOCATION lot lamtly 01 oeltrees 2 3 bedrooms acr055 •
•
•

. from new court house 2 lull haths 1 w b fi replace cent aH •
•
e netached gara ge partially lllliShed ba!&gt;emenl Pnce In 80 s

.ADDISON Ncar P0 3 bedroom ho"'' and 3lois l lol wtlh mol&gt;le.

PEACEFUL AREA

STATELY HOME - Sotbng on 656 acre ol woodland and I 6acres
nr/1 can also be purchased Only 2 mmules from city features a
forma! entry ltiJmg room and format rlm1n g room modern kitchen
cozy lamo~ ooom wb f11eplace, 3 bedooom 2 baths w1tf1 tub and
shower 2 car garage BW!\ onterest rate assumable to quahf100
buyeo Shown by appomtment
NEW LISTING - Owner wolllake a mobtle home on on trade
Modern 3 bedroom ranch noce famtly mom. 13x24 livong room
Modern eat on kitchen Coty schools P055oble klan assumption
Pnced only $33,900 00

•

Sc hool oJ~h1ch car. be u!Jiiled tm ~ r 1 1.!1P !amli y or 3 apa rtr1ents .

•

actes ltllable Barn and three (3) other slorage butldrO,;i Some
fencong on good shape Wood 01 coal stove loca•ed 111Moogan I wp
Real ntce home
#602
BRICK HOME - fULL BASEMENT
REDUCED TO $59 .900 00
For sale or trade. 3 lois 1n Chesh11 e. 7 rooms 3 l:&lt;&gt;drooms I ,

••

•

•
•
•

#586

4 YEAR OLD HOME 5 ACRES

•

I

•

TIRED Of CITY
Mmher Nature has provtded a perlect selttng wtl h1n a leN m1les ol
Galhpol•s yet '" the C!y School System Laoge hvtng room dtntng
room 2 full baths un1que ktlchen w1th plenty ol built •n cabtnets

3 bedrooms ra nr. h style

NEW LISTING - Beaubtul L shaped ranch ThiShome you would
be pmud to call home A very spaCious and liveable home
fealur~ng a formal enlij livmg room woth wb ftreplace. dtmng
room, large spaCIOUSlamtly room w1lh pabo doors, 4 bedrooms. 2
full baths, a complete and modern k1tchen ThiS " a veoy
economtcal oome to live tn Large garage woth lois of stooage space
and electnc door
Vel'/ well landscaped Pr~ced tn the 60's
Excellent klcabon
Coeek School llostnct Shown by appt

BUILDING ALONG 2ND AVENUE - 7 500 squoo e.

••
•?
••
••••
••
•

6 ROOMS .
DUTCH STYLE
CATHEDRAL CEILING
COUNTRY HOME
4 hedroo ms 2'7 baths lully Approxomalely 2 acres ul land,
2 bath s 3 bedrooms. ven~ea1
CQUlpped eat 10 krtchen. lor
mal d1nong room. fam1ly mom wood sKim ~ n1 ce mcx:lern step
w1th woodburner two C&lt;!r gar saver kotchen gas FA lu onace
age woth auto openeo Style large l1v1ng room Land has a
beauty charm and comfort spnng fishtng pond appleanu
- all descnbe thts home peach trees n1ce peaceful set
ltng Phone today
Pnced $74 900
#593
#322

OPEN HOUSE

TEAFOR-D

I

feet 1n bllllrlmR s1t uatr.d on a lot 'tilth 22 500 Sf1 feet PIPnt) of.

•

• par k.ng ' "'•'

home

Real Estate General

446-0008

Real Estate General

and convement work1ng ISland Front porch plus 2 pattOs 2 car
garage Lennox heat pump, wood burner and over 2 acres of land
call for personal showmg of thiS warm and 1nV11l 11g supe1 dean

388-8826

D3

BLACKBURN REALTY -

•

5 acres lrontm g on 2

HELEN,CALL
BRUCE
SUE MURPHY
MILTON ROUSH

room kitchen l am1! ~ room Add1t1onal leatures mcluae new
custom drapes carpeling. woodburnmg &lt;;1ovP deck tPnlral a1r
carpon and natural wood .ldtng loca ted on Debb~ D11ve
Call for an appoenlment

Steve McGhee
446-1155

H6141·992·332S

992-2259

OWNER HAS BEEN
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION' You II be well ~eased wtth lh.s 3 BR
ranch w1th approx 1700 sq It of ltv1ng space D1nmg roo m. hv1ng

Call 446-0552 Anyttme
Beth Null145 9507

446-4206

car Call 614-256 -9366

LOCATED ON ST AT 588 AT RODNEY
OWNER IS WILLING TO CARRY $40,000 at ilo_INIEREST
RATE fOR 20 YRS.- Monthly payments of ffl6.57, first
payment not due until January 1985. Great terms and an
exceptional home and busoness Completely refonoshed 3
laree bedrooms. 2 full baths. modern kotchen. mudroom
and pantry from kotchen. formal donong and IIYong room,
large family room woth WB foreplace buold1ng 24x36 plus
1~ It aOdillon on each sode for stooage Lot SIZe ~bXlll
City school distroct.

Ca11614 992-331 6

Real Estate General

ANYTIME

1979 Oldt Cutlass Supreme
Brougham. atr AM -FM ste reo, t1lt wheel PW. POL
48 ,000 actual m1les. new
rad1al t~res &amp; battery exc

Pnced "' the 50's

216 r 2nd St

POMEROY, 0.

good 5200 Call 614 992
399 2

REAL ESTATE

fl oors, 011 heat, centr al a1 r,

SUNDAY -

1980 Hartey Sportster blue
w1th black mag wheell one
o wner 6 000 m1les $ 2,600

1 978 Kawasa ki KE 100 ru ns

-p;;;;!!!!!!!~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~.\1 ~~ :voiF;c~h 4H46.;699
STUTES

tor

IIIRGIL B. SA

E. Moitnloola

52 .250 992 2381 or 992
2509

•w1lhs T leadmgham. Realtor Ph Hom e 446 · 9539
5

Rate approx
$9.000 00 down Monthly payment $491 06tnclud111g taxes &amp;Ins
Modern bnck home nestled 1n 3 acres Lots of pnvacy and
seclu510n 3 bedrooms ballt. complete k•tchen aod large eat1n g
area Large l1v1ng room w/ w b Ineptace Huge laundoy room Roorn

Virginia L Smith
Real Estate

Motorcy c le s

19 80 Kewuak1 1 3 00 S haft
d n ve 13 0 60 mdes Ve ry
goo d co nd1t1on C all 614 99 2 -7 110 after 5 p m

197 7 Honda Go ldw 1ng
Gl 1 0 0 0 . full dressed . new
a ce all t he e11 tras . ex co nd

1980 Yamaha 650 s pec1al
good cond1t1on . 4 _100
m1les. S 1 300 00 . 304

plus mpg $3 ,500 00 304
882 2894

HOSPITABLE' A RiAL FRONT PORCH. OPEN STAIRW~Y.
I
ROOM, DEN, EAT IN
SPACIOUS fORMAL LIVING
GARAGE APT WITH 3
KITCHEN, 3 BEDROOMS, 1~
BEDROOMS. RECREATION RM

roads Very lo• down pay
ment 9 5%onleoest See to
da y Excellent loc atiOn

74

Motorcycles

5304

pro ced below the maoket
Take advanla ge and buythts
lovely 4 bedroom oanch
Very large ltvon g room, carpet woodburmng ftreplace,
woth Bu ck slove hardwood
range

74

304 -773 SOB 1

8260 Call 614-256 -1755

counlry kot chen wtth bUtlt 1n

Motorcycles

Honda custom, eMC cond ,
low mileage S1.400 00

Real Estate General

RENT WITH
OPTION
TO BUY

74

1982 450

55 .000 $3 500 304 675
5306

304 -675 5306

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1980 Dodge D 50 PU, 4

3869

1980 Dodge Colt AS uc
cond
new rad1al t~res

73

spd redio $2 . 995 John 's
Auto Sales. Butav1lle Ad
Gallipohs. 446 -4782 Open
t1l dark

446 -0954

Goata

949 2502

Phone 304

82996 614-698 -6289

1974 Grand Pnx 400. A C.
PB , PS, after 5 call 304-

6 week old roosters for sale
36 cents each Call 614

International Hay Baler 420
&amp;. good co nd1t1on Lim e
s preader &amp; seeder C a ll
before 8 00 a m . &amp;. after

1981 Dodge Omnt, excel
lent condition, great mi leage, new rad1als, etereo,
69,000 miles Must se ll

1982 AMC Spmt, auto, a~r.
AM -FM . sunroof, $4,196
1982 2dr Che"Wy Chevette .
4 spd , AM - FM tape,

5624

440 John Deere With loader,

1978 Pont1ac Astra . runs
good. body rough , good
wortt car SEI60 Call 814
992- 2143 or evemgs at

5PM

Wh1te ducks
male &amp;
female, S15 Call614 992

v4ud~P~ Co.~~ado.y CReaQtoftt
25 ~ugt glheel, ~QQipoQl!'. ~~to

446 -3637

Autos for Sale

71

ohow oaddle. Call44-1830 ~ ~~=~==~===
or 446 -256-6486
72 Trucks for Sale

6269

ages Ca11614-992 5624

446-3636 @

1979 Thunderbird good
cond , low mileage 1978
Chryaler PW Hor~aman 'a

Jersey milk cow . very gen
tie, for sale 8400 Call

614-742-2814

Realtym.

Autos for Sale

85 ,500 Call 446 -4205

A I Springer Holstein heif -

~Whaalllanla

71

614-742 -2289. M•chael

1978 Ford Fairmont Future.
3 spd . AC . good cond .
82 000 or but offer Call

livestock

Registered Angus bulls 1 -3
yra. old, exc blood hnet
Slate Run Farms. Jeckaon .

shape Call 446 -4780

With

allotment

882 -3110

614-367 -7182
Holland tobacco setter
$300, Now Idea maneure
spreader like new $1,260,
Massey Ferguson lever d1sk
$660, single botton pull
plow $100. wheel dtsk
$600 -up Fertilize spreader
$360 . PTO Burr Mill $300.
Deere corn sheller $360.
firm hand gr1nder m1xer
$1.260. John Deere 2 &amp; 4
row corn planters. hav1ng

Tran sporlalion

Phone

Dragonwyn d C attery
Kennels AKC C how pup·
p1es. CFA Himalayan PerSian and S1amese k1ttens
Can 614-446 -3844 after 6

FOR SALE BY OWNER

82 Wanted to Buy

CUniNG OF THE GREEN

fhe Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-D-5

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Own er moved out of !own,

Corn planters New Ford 2
row, used 4 row MF Call

256. $1 ,400 00. Hay batler
N H 66 S600 00 New hay
tedder, S675 00 I D 611

Kennel s Pro fes s•on al All breed groommg
lndo or o utdoor boardmg fa CI IltJes Engl 1sh C ocker Spa mel puppJOS Call 614-388-

246 -6096

Troy- B1lt tillers Check our
spec1al pnce before you buy
any ttllers Swisher Implement Co St Rt 7 N. Gallipolls.OH Call 614 -446 -

&amp;700 00

8r~arpatch

Front end loader for Ford
tractor, S260 Call 614-

$1.600 00
576 -2147

Board •ng all bre eds Heated
1nd o o r outd oo r fa c ilitieS
AK C Dobe rman puppieS
S tud S e rv1ce Call61 4 -446 -

614 367-7220

Call 614-446-1675

Cub

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Livestock
61

April 29, 1984

8·00 p m 614 742 2337

HILLCREST KENNELS

7795

w-loadar, JO dozer, 2 Vermeer round balers, 120 MF
baler , Gravity wagons.
plows, corn planter, lime
spreader, diSC
We buy used equipment!

3 pomt &amp; P T 0 $2600 Call
614-843-5311 or 843 5494

537. Shelbyvolle, IN 46176

29, 1984

USED EQUIP!
246 Massey Ferg. 2-9N
Fordo, 4241H, 801 Ford, 60
Ferg, 135 MF. 160 MF

Wanted Responstble party
to take over low monthly
pavments on spmet p1ano
Can be seen locally Wrtte
Credit Manager- P 0 Boll

D1sc

S 100 fro s t -free refug era to r

Jividen '• Farm Equipment
614-448-187&amp;. Long tractora. Vermeer round baiera.
rtkee. teddter &amp; mowere a.
elao • complete line of billa
handling accea.l Tobacco
com apr~yera. tobacco Httere, wegont. rotery tlllera.
rotary cutters. bladea. cuhivaton, diiC , plowa, poll
drivers, plaatlc tenkt. wood
tpllttefl, gates , power
waahara. Wheel Horse Lawn
&amp; Garden Tractora. Gooaeneck treller And aee ua for a
complete line of pent &amp;
service I

6 HP Troybrlt t1ller. good

9790

Real Estate General

'-·

Farm Equipment

8150 Call 446 0974 or
446-1904

S50 00, 304 -675 -2031

LUM8EA Ro u gh cut oak
poplar , 2x4 2x6 2)(8. 1x4 .
h6 . 1x8, length available. 8
ft through 16 ft Hogg &amp;
Zuspan. 304 -773 -5554

lawn tra ct o r Sears 22 H P
3 6 1n cut 198 0 $500 C et tl
992 6 85 3 &lt;tfte r 5 p n1

446-0840

SOUTH

Ha rl ey Da v1 son e lac tn c n d
m g go lf ca rt Call 446 1 1 30

54 Mo sc M erc handtse

lawn mowers &amp; till e rs
Frank"s PAwn S ho p 430
Sec o nd Av e . Ga lltpohs Oh

• A8~

Te nm1te Backhoe End loader 304 576 -2010

Col e man Prcs 1de n1 1al e iAc t n c f urll'8 ncc $ 4 5 40 c han
net CB S45 Call614 992

Rifles s hot g un s 8c ha nd
gun s Frank 's PA w n Sho p
430 S econd Ave _G a lhpolt s

+ to

. 963

8 HP Wh eel Ho rs e e l ect r~ c
start 36 m mow er de ck .
S700 Le n N sons Sm all
Engm es Call 614 3 79
2827 N o Su nday call s

Hotp omt ref . wh1t e w1cker
sofa &amp; c ha~r stud ent desk
fo rm a l d m1n g ro o m ta ble &amp; 6
c ha~r s Ca ll 446 -8 2 37

8 H P Bole n garde n tractor
32 10 nulw•• r rler.k 550 0
l e n N sons Smnll E n~ m es
Call 6 14 379 2827
No
S und ay ca ll s

+ 64

• 10 8 4
+ QJ932

Ca11614-742 -2187

6808 Charleston

Merchandise

.QJI0 53

•1 n2

lea d 1n h1s band and starts
on clubs This t1me good old
We«:t follows w1th th e three
on the h rst round
South knows that thiS failure to start an echo shows
an odd number of clubs
Smce North holds the deuce
Wes t's three-spot has to be
hts lowest club Therefore
Ea st With superb confidence
m h1s partner, takes h1s ace
on the second dub lead and
leads a spade Not that an ythmg matters once East has
grabbed the second club
South can whistle Dlxte, go
to the telephone, or order a
sandwich to stall the play
a nd hur t h1s opponenl:i
concentr ation, but as long as
East holds on to daamonds
and West to hearts, south 1s
doomed to defeat
Watson doesn t wa s te
many words on this hand He
mc1udes 1t because most
players remember to echo
h1gh -low w1th. two but somehmes make a careless play
a nd start an echo w1th three
or f1v e
Not that any of you read e rs would do th1s All that
}OU have to re member IS to
s tart an echo w1th an even
number and to play low on
the first round with an odd
number

beds1de c ommode, ve ry mce ~~==========lr;;:;:::::;~::;::;:::::~
$250 Ve ry old dmmg roo m 1
table. 6 cha1rs. and a s 1de
54 Misc . Merchandise 57
Musical
board M1sc hou se hold
Instruments
nems and furmshmgs rea
so nably pncod For sale
Immediately Call696- 1144 Shrubs pruned. lawns re after 5PM
seeded retatnmg walls. For sale Spinet-console PI
s1dewalks pat1os. fill dirt. ano bargain Wanted Ae topsoll. bark mulch &amp; saw - spon11ble party to take over
6 ft meat case w1th co m
presse r o r trade for a glass dust . Contact Bruce Dev1 - low monthly payments on
s1on Ca11614- 256 -1427
sp1net piano. Can be seen
door refr1gertor
locallv Write Credit Man ~--One 7 p1 e ce wood group Remmington 1100 12 agor P 0 Box 637 Shelbyville, IN 46176
hv1ng room su1te for sale
gauge With 3 barrells, $425
brown. good cond . S 2 50
12 gauge single shot, S35
Whitney uprigh1 piano ,
Call 614 256 -6647

JD ~awn s w ee per . BJI cond ,
large type lawn roll e r Call
614 388 8159 after 5 30

5324

EAST

WEST

2827

Wash ers dryers rAfngera
tors range s Ska ggs Ap
pl1an ces, Upper Rn1 e r Rd
bes1de Stone Crest Mo tel

Wanted ho use to re nt ha ve
ch1ld and pet w1thm 20m1 of
Holzer Hasp Call 304 77 3

t B6 5
+ KQJO

5804
l 1mestone. fill dirt a nd top
so •l Ca ll 6 14 256 -1427

ttl i t

. 987

cut up s labs S1 5
p1c kup load Call 6 1 4 - 2 4 5 -

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e
Park. Route 33 No rt h of
Pomeroy large lots C a ll

47 Wanted to Rent

.,

F~rewo o d

GOOD USED APPLIA NC ES

G ood Used Ap plia nce S pe Cia l Ma yt ag aut o w a she r
S6 5 Speed Queen a ut o
w as he r S95 May tag wrm
ger w ash er $ 1 25 Side by
s• de re fr. ger at01 S 195. fros t
free harve st gold re fug erator
S150. lar ge c hes t free ze r
S 125 . couc hes &amp; c hau s 52 5
&amp; up unf1m shed c hes t o f
drawe rs $ 68 Skag gs Ap
pl1an ce s. 559 Uppe r R•ver

South wms lhe openmg
NORT H

C 1..1sto m Vnnn1t nfl e 2 25
wm Call 614 -2 45 5096

MOVING to 86 Burde tt e
Addn All merchan d ise mu s t
go Bulldmg fo r rent , H ug h
Bums 304 -675 651 2

.
~pril

a.

holds JUSt tw o of that key
SUit

Son Call 446 -7785

- - - --- - -

614 -446 -739 8

Giving accurate count

L1mes tone , Sand , Grawe!
De livered 1n Muo n , Met gs
Galha o r pick up at R1c h ard s

Trader space on Bula v1ll e Ad
Kyger Creek Schoo l D1 stn ct
Call 614 256 -1433

614 992 7479

. ..

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Plea10nt, W. Vo.

Apartment
for Rent

62 Ohve St. GallipWii:.Jil_w
&amp; used wood 8t coal stove•.
6 piec e w ood hving room
s uite with 6 mc h flat arm s
8 3 99. bunk beds c o m plete
w1th bunk1es S 199 2 p1ece
antron hv m groo m s u 1t es
$ 199, ant ron rechners S99 ,
other reclm ars S 80. maple
dmette sets $ 179. bo ll
spnngs &amp; mattres s twin o,.
full 81 00 set regular-firm
$120 . maple dmette cha1rs
836 . wash stands $34.
maple rockers S59 7 p1ec e
chro me dmette set S 149. 5
p1ece d1nett e set S99 used
bedro om su1tes refrigera tors ranges , ches t . dre ssers.
wn nger w ashe n . TV's dry ers. &amp; s hoes Cal l 6 14 44 6

.

#589

104 ACRE FARM
2 faom houses - one 6 rooms aod bath - one 3 rooms Wood
burner heater, 2 barns 1 chtcken houses cellao woth smoke house
above All moneral nghts go wtth sale Appro&lt; 60 acres ltllable and
44 acres pasture land Pnced lo sell at $49 900 Don't let lhts laom
get away
#594
1012 SQUARE FOOT BLOCK BUILDING
Many uses - used tn be a grocery stO&lt;e now made onto a 4room
plus bath oome fuel ~I heater, rural waler system plus drJIIed well
at I ycoon Lake
#592
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant klts N1ce SQe buoldong klts woth all ultlibes there Lot siZe
IOIB by 1712 Better get 'urn now
#456
I 57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS
t-ice home Centoal a11. rural water system, large famoly room.
26'x22 Garage, storage buildtng, storm wondows and doors Ntce
home See ot now
#570

home hookup lg nlPial blrlg w•lh I\\ a ca r garage Fenced yard •
• $29 000

.SWIMMING POOl w1th 3 bedrm home lg carrort famtly room •
•l•vong rm edapted lao wuorlbur net Madtson Ave $46 900 00 •

•
•

tUREKA" 2 bed rrn cott age 2 bath s located 10 [)o.,mtowll.
Eureka close to Galli polis clam stle Pnce only S?2 000 DO
•

I
I

j -4 HEDROOM HOME aton ~ r.artteld Ave Beaulilul v1ew oveolooks •
the Oho RIVer Owne1 Ntll sell lor $30 00000
•

• APPROX 1 ACRES Of lAND wtlhm the cr ty has beaultlul 3 •
b11ck home PtctuoeSQue v1ew oil he Oh•o Valley 3 • b •

1 bed om

fireplaces and outdoor hreplacf' gnll Step down hvmg 1m . •
• deroraled wtth soli d chetl'/ paneltng and tom Pegged oak lioor;
Lrbrary wtlh ad1om1ng solanum 21~ ba lh~ P11vale otf1ce otf master •
bP.drm Call Ken MorQan tor add1tlonal 1nlormat1on
•

1
I
•
•
•
.
•

OLDER BUT STATELY 3 hedroom home along Locust Sireel •
w1thm SjRhl ol WasllJngton School gar a ~f' 111 rear and plen!)' ol

space lot a gatnen Pr~ce 40s

e

STEP OUT !OUR BACK DOOR ONTO THE GOLF COURSE - Wr .
ha ve 3 two bedtoom apls too rent P11ce stms loom $1 75 per .
month Adults only no pel&gt;
•

•

RENT OR LEASE COMMERCIAL BUILDING along Cou rt Slteel •

•

across !rom c1ty

pa r km~

lot 1n downtown Gall1poi1S

•

•
•
•

NEW LISTING - 45 acre laom •n Guy an fwp 9 room home .
b/ lurnace lob bar n and oulbuoldongs 3000 lb lob Trace schools •
Pnce $45 000
150 YR OLD 2 STORY "fEDERAL' BRICK HOME. I mtle lrom .
• ctly Stluated on 1 acre ol land ctty waleo laoge rooms lois ol •
• character Also 2 adtoonong hutldtng lots Call lor more tnlormatton •
• NEW LISTING lmagone ottmg on your honl patto and watcht ng the .
beautolul Ohio How past 4 bedroom home wtlh 2 baths. neslloo tn •
• trees and wattmgfor your fam1ly 2 wbforeplaces one located on the
• comlorta~e sohd pone pan~ed den' Wrthtn ' , mtle hom ctty limots •
• Appro&lt; 3000 sq It 2 cao garage Pnced tn 90s
•
·•
•

NEW LISTING 15 acres olland neao Holzer Hospttal Spnn!if•eld.
Twp Topo level to rollong Beautilul vtew Developers welmme •

•
•
••
•
•••••••••••••••••••
•

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
WE NEED LISTINGS - LIST WITH US
',

I

• p , d t\

•

.t

:j ·lt

lnt

G ll l ljlt' l'~
I (166

:--. 1

•

�'

...

•,· '

.

.'

Page-0-6-The

.

j"}f}l)i.\flfi}n

Real Eltate General

Real Estate General

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Bric k home. 3 bedrooms, I v, bath large living room &amp; fam Ily room. w.b. firepla ce. all carpeted. Nice kitchen, cenlral
air , in-ground swimming pool 16x32. I acre lol overlooking Ohio River above Eureka Dam. Price Reduced to
$72. 500. Can
finance.
- 446 - 1171

CROWN CITY ... .Quiet area.

NEW
3 BEDROOM HOMES
FOR SALE
We Will Finance - Will Consider Trade-In

PH . 446-1157-

Three acres with 1 nicely
coostnJcted conrete block
home 26x30, 3 bedrooms.
one bath, 12xl5 living
room and 24x24 family
room. Partially carpeted.
fuel oil furnace with facili·
ties
for woodbumer.
12xl5 block st011ge building, 2())(30 block garage.
Rigllt off Rt. 248, country
setting, y, mile east of
Chester. Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE :
Down stairs equipped with
kitchen. liwing room .
din1ng room and den:
upstairs has two bed·
rooms and one bath:
house also has base ment. Lot size approK.
48'x308'. Needs work.
II interested contact
The Home National Bank
in Racine. 949 -2210.

BLACKBURN
REALTY
446-0008

AREYOU LOOKING FOR ABRICKHOME ?- Then COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL -

Tins n1ne

room ~NO stor,o· home featu res two ba ths. d1nmg
r(]um. ~. li c hen w1th new ca b1 r"1els. dishwasher.
carpet111 g, l1replace. lull basement gas heat. block
3 ca r ~at age, vmyl Sldmg Level lot wtth htghway

lionlagc on Upper Rt 7

FINANCING AVAILABLE - 5YR OLD SPLI T GOOD LIVING FOR SAlE' - 78 '. ams mi l
- Features 4 or 5 8Rs. 3 baiiiS. 30 II IlVIII~ I Ollf'iy brrck ;md frame ranch drsplays 2 ba t h~. 2
iam 1ly room&lt;&gt; 2 wb l1replaces. la 1ee ~r t c llfn BRs. 16x24 ~1 lchen w1lh washe '. dryer. double
area. 2 car ~arage. orw ol the Cllunty'&lt;&gt; over ~an ge. ~rin g OW d1spl Large l1v1ng room.
,
pools [?Ox501 anc true1v orolrss•onally artrh Cial hreplace Master ~droo m tS l6xl 8 Cellar
.amhca ped lot Loca ted Gn DPbb1e Dr vP 0\';ner houSl'. shed and 30x50 barn 44 acres of pa~ ure
w1th spnn p, and pond Located m Cheshtre Twp
says &gt;I'll
PRI CE DRASTICALLY REDUCED' OWNER SAYS
SEll THIS MONTH' - R1o-Cen1erpoml Rd (Cherry
f-M12Pl Appro~ 75 acres woodlann lronts 011 I BRAND NEW DUPLEX - G ~eati NVEST M ENT lor
ltle buyer' Located on Gillham School Rd £ach
ro..H1~.. count-.- watrr ;w;utflhlr ~2~0 rrr arrP
un1t ot1 ers 2 BRs. h&lt;lth irvmR room. knchen w1lh
:.tCl\1€ rp tr 1 ~ DW and d1spl laundry i;up,e carport.
LOTS Of POTENTIAL - GREEN TOWN SHIP 180 i!CH' farm located m Northup area 1wo storv cent! JI a1r an storage a1PiJ

A STYtE OF ITS OWN .... descnbes lh1s lovely whlt l'
briCk home With 3100 sq n. 3 or 4 bedrooms. 3
baths. 20x40 FR dmul!: room. k1tchen w1lh DW.

OWN YOUROWN CAMPSITE - In lhPWilderness
ol tr.e Wayne Nabonal ~ ores! J to 9 acre tracts of
woo,Jic~nd now avarlable. ad 10 1 1111r ~ tliou'::Wlnds of

acr E'S nl governmen~ land Publrc huntmg. !1shm g

and camp1ng peun1ned Pnc" slart at $3500 w1th
fmanCIOP, iiVillli! hiP

cl l&lt;&gt; pl m1crowavr and tra sh co mpa ctor. mtercom

i:Piltlal .-111.

2 ca r

~ar a ge.

ut11ity bid~ .. deck anrl a

?0&lt;70 pool Beau11lully la ndsca ped

THI S ONE HAS IT All' - Exce pt1onal home nea1
town leatureo;, 2 family rooms. one w1th large stone

COULDN 'T ASK FOR A BETIER LOCATION
Hand some Vtclona n homf' oHers 3 BRs. I •. b,lths.
laundry room. hvmg room. lam1ly room. carport.

unanachen garage. 16x32 lenced pool K1lchen
has range relr1g . [)V.J and d1sp . nat gas heat and
alum 51d1ng Locater1 at I he edge of town Call lor an
appomtmenl

BEEF CATTL£ COUNTRY - I 32 acrrs. moslly
clean h1!1 pasture. good lences. 11.. story home.
largf. barn. tobacco base. lronts on 3 wad s near

Mudsock Pnce red uced Ia $56 900

lrreplact! and paho doors. othr h&lt;\s a bar. 3 BRs.
nrrilm k1 tchen has cooktop. m1crowave. eye-level
oven DW. d1sp and 1ange 14x24 l1v1n~ 100m.
lhnctte. carpettnr. ami 2 L.dl garage

ADDI SON -DAVIS LANE - I '. ~orv Ira me home
lealures 3 BR' I ' baths k1tchen. LR Remodeled
New 1Psulat10n w1nng, plumbing. wmdows and
lurna-::e SKyh ghl'· m ~droo ms. pat1o doors,
~undeck. ca1pet 1 n ~ K.C :ichool D1stn ct

"'

~.-

__ ......

UniCtamblllhlle lOur Jurnbtll,

one leftef' 10 eiClh equw., to form
IOYr ordinary WOf'dl.

(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER:

!ram.• older home w1th &lt;Rvf'n rooms ;md bat11.
county water l6x60 concrete 51io corn cr1h
eQUiprnt!nt ~ ned . f'lr'khousr and bam On pavef1
road

'-'

... ·•· ....... - .......

'

..

,, ...

'

Ohi~Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~TIIATICfiA_IO _ _

~ ~ ~~·

FOR SALE

gara~t'

~

Ohio Point

Times-Sentinel

U1 1srnav be JUSt the onr Corwernen~l) iociltecJ rm R1
]~ Wr~t. tt1 1
&lt;. tlor~e off ers a large livmg roo'n cllf1111 )~
ruom. 3 bt'droo rns. laundry roo m. I batn s.
eQUI~!)Pd KIIC: hPn. CMpetmg. ::e ntra l a1r and a 2car

.. -. .

.- '

ULARR

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I LABAN I

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FOR SALE
2 BR 11nch In town. Gu

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tPORTIMj
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Answarhere

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Yeslefday

5

Now IIT&amp;ngl the drdld ...,... to
rorm the IUrpMt anNe~' , u auo·
goolodbyll\o--.

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Jumbles FORGO COVEY PYTHON ALKALI
Nlswer What the " love alfalf' ' she was carrying on
w ith al l tho se soldiers must h•'t'e bMn' Pl A T OO~ · I C"

446-2573-446-1171

II

Auto Par1s
&amp; Accessories

lziau motor to fit 1978
Chevy Luv truck. Phone

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes,
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 1 2 acres with stable, rail
fences, swimming pool. garageworkshop. Immediate possession.
Real Estate General

6222 .
14ft . self contained "Joy
Time '' camper. 6650 .00 .

I
I
I

30~· 675 · 2171 '

for commeroai use Will sell ali cr part dependl'lg on tlJyer

needs. 11.1 on Rl 160, I mie wesl ol fllzer Msprlal CAll us lor
ll'(Jfe 1nformatron

74.5 ACRE FARII
Thrs rs one that Will catch yoor eye. Eni(J'f a mce walk along the
creek. el~ore the caves. and lUSt enjoy the scenery m thtS
farm. TheJe are 6 ac1es of crop land, 15 ac. pasture and 52
acres 111 woodand, 1339 lb. tobacco base, aD mmerals
u1c!uded. There IS

446-4138.

MOBILE HOME - 1.03 AC. - Owner; aanslerred oul ol
ltMn Thts IS an attractive 2 bedroom 12,60 mobile home wrth
a detached garage, oovered patio and larRf! ftat yard wrth
garden area $16.500. New listing - OOn't wa1l
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIOII
11 you are looking t&gt;r space and l)'rvacv then calllfi to see tt11s
remodeled 2 OOdroom home near Rio Grande. 1 acre yeard
witt lots of room aroond yw. The OOU5e has basemEllt large
bedrooms. paneled. carpets are oew aod large kllchen
Galfipolis Clly Sci&gt;Jols $29.900

·NEW ON THE MARKET - EXCEPTIONAL
Situaled on 60 acre. Brick. 1!? story, 3 bedrooms,
bu1lt-1n kilchen, f11eplace and beamed rehng in liVing
room, garage. Pnvale seltlng. Oose lo Oay Elementary
School. Be the fir.;t to see this charmer. Pnced in the
low 50s.

.- anv oUidoor acbvibes Sl()' wliat )00 are tiling
and call us _Retreat delu~:e tt1ers al this and much more:·
custom bum llnck home wrth HW floors. beaUIJiul iv~g room
cethng, COl}' fireplace aod large deck

BROKER'S NO. I CHOICE - Because ol the qualilv
construcbon. extel111l locabon and lJIOO housekeep~ng. this
tv:tme rece1ves a ltl rahng from the broker. Attractive 3
bedroom tr1cK mcludes I YJ baths, Z c.er garage, super !\Ice
k~c hen , fireplace .tnd a large CDmet" lot There IS wall to wall
carpet. large ublrty room and brg area.

I
I

OON'~

THINKING Of BUILDING?
We howe 1ust 10\ed abnck ranch that• in 1mpecca ~e

oomlOOn. Home includes 3 BRs. spaCIOU'i eat-rn kitchen. 21h
baths. liY1ng 100m and fam1ly room. Over-sized 2 car garage.
lnteOOr is trimrrEd tn oak. House IS vel)' wen Insulated keeptng
Ills to a m1nimurn CIA and gas heat located ideally tn a

QUiet naghiJJrhJod ckise lo
Ps~ng $59.900.

everylh~ng

Landscaped

~1.

NEW USTING - BRICK ROAD - Frame and brick 3
bedroom ranch Space saver k1lchen and d1ning area,
living room. large lamtly room, bath, full basement 2
car garage All silualed on large lawn. Addison
Townsh1p.
#575

MDV£ UP ANOTCH - 1o lho m•ntenaoce lree lJick ranch.
Beautrlul home ~ns~e and llJl 3 BRs, ~rge deluxe eat-11
krtchefl wrth rok cal&gt;nen and double """'· 1~ b;rlli flus
snower 1n basementllmslled lami~ room wtttl FP, ~ing room
Wltt1 woodburner. 2 car garage, all (J1 2.3 acre lot twerloOklr\g
Rt. 14 l llJSI: mmutes from town. Owner NlkiOOS to sell crtrade.

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting . Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 yean experience,
specializing in built up roof .

Call 614-388-9857.
81

Home
Improvements

RINGLE 'S SERVICE expe-

STUCCO ond PLASTERING
- Commercial and residen -

Fetty Tree Trimming, atump
removal . Call 304 -675 -

1331 .

rienced roofing. including
hot tar application. carpen ter. electrician. muon. Call

304 -675 -2088 or 675 4560 .
GET

your carpet

SHIP

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal ,
furniture cleaning. free esti mates. 304-875 -2296 .

82

Starks Tree Trimming &amp;
Removal lawn mowing and
mai ntenance. landscapin g,
10 Pet . off all estimates .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614-446 -3888 or

84

avarlable. Close to town. Call for more mlormatiOn

Tlnee leviJ lots 1n Kenls
Add 1hon uf B1dwell Can be purcha~ed md1vr dual!y.
Call lnr r1r.tatl'1

CHARMER - Is the ooly way lo descnbe
1mmaculate 3 bedroom ranch. Fam1ly room.
fireplace. 2 car garage In-ground 16'x32' pool. Barn. 3
acres of ~nd fenced w1th prc01c area nex1 1o Raccoon
Creek. Oly Schools. Call loday lo look at lh1s finehome.
Reduced'
#520

anrl bath

Assumable low mterest loan.

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

som eth i n g ha u l ed

Le nr1ox Heating &amp; All Condi ti oning. Ali Ty pes l r1s ulal!on.
Electrical Wuing.

87

Scisso" - Fab&lt;i c Shop .

Upholstery

SHEET METAl WORK
We make custom duct
work. We Repair Fur naces and Heat Pump s.
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO.
6 14-446 -4066

TRI STAT E
UPHOL STERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave. , Ga llipoli s.
614-446 -7 83 3 or 6 14 -446 -

183 3.

256-1583
S EW IN G Ma chine rep a ir s.
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen

Call 446-8515
or 446-0445 lie

WAT ER SE RVICE

Call Jim Lanier, 304 -675 -

Ele ctrical work . all ph ases.
free estimates, rea!ioneble
rates. qualified Alectric ian .
Contact Ron Huffman , 614 ·

l

Real Estate General

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO .

7397.

4066

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating , Rt. 2 Neal Road.
Point Pteesant, W . Va . 304 675 -5420 . licensed and
Insured .

PH . 675 - 1604

1175 or614 -44 679 11 .

Pasquale Elect ri c Co all
phases of electric w ork . all
work guaranteed . Aeria l
tru c k r ent al 614 - 446 ·

lNG . Rt . 1 . Box 355 . Galli polis . Call 614 -367-0576 .

t-----------'---------SOLUTION

Pomeroy . 614 -99 2- 2284
Meig s Ele ct ri c Se rvi ce.
Steve Barnetl . Call 614 -

D. DAY REFRIGERATION
SALES - Professional ser ·
vice for appliances, heating .
cooling and electric _Sell and
install Amana. Gibson . Kit chen Aid . Residential. Com mercial. Industri a!. 304 675 - 48,9
o r

614 -388 -8274
D. DAY REFRIGERATION
SALES - Professional ser vice for .11ppliances. heat ing .
cooling and elec tric . S e ll a nd
install Amana . Gibson, Kit chen Aid. Residential, Com merc ial , Indu str ial . 3 04 675 - 4 8 1 9
o r

614 -388 -8274 .

50s
7 ACRES - Close to R10 Grande. Build losull yourself
Rural water available. Road fronta ge SL Rt 325 No
restrictions. $10.500.
#541

SUNDAY PUZZLER

OEENIE DRIVE - Take a look at lhiS well ma~nta~ned
b1-level. Can be 3 or 4bedrooms, Flonda room. 3 baths,
family room. den. kilchen w1lh range. dishwasher,
diSposal, fireplace. 2 car garage. Heat pump, central
"" Lawn landscaped. A ~t of home lor the money.

#577

AC ROSS
5 Gu1Cie
11 Se1ze tly
force
18 Gem
19 Pen

BARGAIN!tl- Owners would like a QUICk sale on this
1'o story home. K1tchen complete w1th range,
refngerator, dishwsher, family room or formal dining. 3
bedrooms, ba1h, utility. Attached garage. Storage
build1ng N1ce lawn Only $24.500

#562

LOAN ASSUMPTION - If you hke lhe county don'l
miss this n~e 3 bedroom ranch w~h 8 acres, more or
less. Attached 2 car garage, 2 oulb,·;ldmgs, 30'&lt;24' and
10'&lt;12', 8'x12' cellar w1lh wor!Jsl'&lt;lp overhead. rural
watPr. Cklse to Me1gs Mmes Pnced '" low 40s.
#527

20 Put on
one·s gu ard
2 1 Come in to
VICW

23 C ouple
2 4 Headgea r

NEW LISTING- EDGE OF TOWN- Neal and clean
describes this 2 or 3 bedroom home Situated ttr1 mce
corner lol. L1v1ng room. kilchen with range. lull
basemenl garage plus carport. Pnced m lhe 30s
#574

ONLY $16.000! - Can you believe you can sllll
purchase amce home lor th1s pr1ce'2 bedrooms. l1vmg
room, formal d1ntng, bath, k1lchen, enclosed Irani
porch. Basement. Slorage building. Call lor an
appomtment.

11496

26 Wh ee l

1racks
a bbr .
29 A1 1Qh1 S

30 MusiCal
InStrume nt
31 Hmdu
garmem

33 DISta n t
34 Goats

OUT RIGHT with an incredible buy. 4
bedrooms. story. Brick and vinyl 3 years ~d. House
has l 'h baths, fully carpeted, Buck stove, garage, rural
waler. outbuilding. Trees and lfiOre all siluated on I
acre on blacktop road. $45.000.
OON1 MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY to purchase aoome
of your own at a very good pnce. 3 bedroom ranch, 2
balhs, 2 k1lchens. fam1ly room. full divided basement
Garage. Basemen! can be used as renlal un~ lor e&lt;tra
income. localed edge of town. St. Rt 588. Priced 1n lhe
40s.
#531
PRICE REDUCED' - Take a ook at lh1s well
maintamed home. Immaculate inside and out.
Remodeled Sleel sidmg 3 bedrooms, nice ca~nets in
k~chen. large ltv1ng room, formal dinin~ bath, nalural
gas heat garage, oulbuildings..91 of an acre ~wn.
JUST LISTED - PRICED AT $43,000 AND
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - 3 bedroom b•levet
located all he edge of town. l}n~ng area, living room,
large famtly room. Garage. Nat gasforced a11 heal NICe
~wn. Need to sell to seltle estale.
H578

VERY TASTEFUL best describes this3 bedroom ranch
style home. Nice krtchen, bath, i~ng room, utility,
attached garage. Nalural gas heat cenlral air.
Shrubbery and chain link fence. One you must see to
appreciate. $49,900.

#568

RANCH STYLE - lmmed1ale possessm 3 bedroom,
family room livmg room large eal-1n k1tchen. large
patio, fireplace, cham link fence. House but~ '" 1973.
very good condition. Located off SL Rt 35. Owner
leaving area. Must ~1.
#497
COMPLETELY FURNISHED·- 2 bedroomframe home
ready for you to move 1n. Ea1·in kitchen, l1ving room,
bath, basemen\ melal storage building. listed 10 ~I al
$21 ,500. Call lor more delails.
#567
DON'1 HAVE MUCH EXTRA MONEY? - Nooody
seems to lhese days. Thafs why lh1s older 2 or 3
bedroom home ~ bn atlractive buy . Remodeled.
Aluminum siding. Can be purchased w1th ooe acre or
28 acres. ~accoort Township. Home and appro&lt;. 1
acre. $27,500.
#546
NEW USTING - 72 ACRE FARM - 3 bedroom
modern home. Home has been extensively remodeled.
Pole bam, workshop, crop land, tobacco base, pasture
and woods. Boroers Raccoon Creek Close to oounty
par~ Beautiful setting The time to buy ~ oow.

H566

TAKE NOTICE - Th1s 3 bedroom frame home has alot
lo offer for $28,000. living room, large kitchen, balh,
good carpet natural gas heat Unattached garage.
large lawn. Home is in excellent condition. located in
city.
#569
$18,500 IS THE ASKING PRICE of this 5 bedroom
older frame home. Partial basement Situated on I ~ ·
aCIIIS. 30'-&lt;40' barn. Cellar. Make an appoinbnent
today.

45 Ma li C~
46 Near

48 Pr o1ec t 1-..e

54 Conta1ners
55 Perve rt

57 Span1sh
1rt1e : abbr

PERRY TOWNSHIP - 140 acres of good farm land.
Appro&lt;. 60 acres tillable, resl pasture and woods 2
bedroom older home. l arge barn. Ga~age . Tobacco
base. 2 gas wei~. I productive ann free gas to home.
Located Cora Mill Road
#557
POSSIBlE LOAN ASSUMPTION - Th~ ranch style
home has 3 bedrooms, liv1ng room, n1ce s• e krtchen
and dining area. bath, v1nyl s1d1n&amp; Level lawn. Pnced at
$34,000.
#509
NEW LISTING - 42 ACRES - Hannan 1race Road.
Ohio l~JNnship. Mai n~ wooded _wilh PQSSlble
markelllble timber. Pnced al $16,000
#518
NEW HOME PLUS ACREAGE - Appro &lt;~mat~y I year

old brick and frame ~ -level. 3bedrooms, 2baths, 2 car
garage. Can be purchased w1th 4 _acres or 35 acres.
27M36 metal bu1ldin&amp; W1lh1n 9 m1les ollown. Take a
look today'
#502

NEW LISTING - HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP - 4
acres, more or less. House she1124'&lt;28'. 1.Jtnd partially
lllltlded. Appro&lt;. 2 miles from Vinton.
#572

EACH omqB IS INDRPENDBNTLYOWNEV AND OPEiATED.

.

.

.

.

~

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. . . . ..

.. ------~-----

96 Soan1sh

14 2 Faster
14 3 ScorCfH!d

dSV ICe
84 Carousal

85 lm1a 1es
8 7 Acl uar be mg

60 Sea eag le

61 Cry
6 2 Man·s n ame

6 4 Base b all
organrz atiOn : ao b r

65 Faero e

35 83.p1• Sm;JI

oasm
36 1n1e1&lt;&gt;
"!-7 Ra 1se Tt'f'

cv rnb a lc;

ii~JPn c,

dtJbr
t. I Na fl ve

144 Rh yth iT'
146 Chem1cal

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J

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cn mp u torld

9? Nrgh1 twd

93 Repul se
9S Scot!

151Wood-.,.
pla111s

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rl 9 rnfl•aa
50 lrO Q U Q I.-Jf l

nutt;
t 10 O ne -.,. ho
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112 Wa s aware
ol
Poem
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Poses l or

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l..l()dl.

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1111

~ SljUd l1dl'r J

2 Flock s

~ S L&lt;:J ~I S I1

3 Tal! e H! d
clo 1hs
&lt;1 Be fore
5 C'ec1ilter
a bbr
Fi Colorry nr

lo nd nes!'. o r1
56 Ca"'d le s

bee~

7 J'J UI!lE' ~
8 Godr1eso; n t
!leah ng
9 L atur
1;00llunCI1011
10 Recollec1
11 Se(I.IS or
s late

59 Pa ren 1
60 S 1l kw o r m
6 1 Symt·OI tnr
'Ill

63 '/ J iltlt'f()O

on AIJ0 1111-' ...-elfJI11

105 P ;:~r a dl!,e

101 ~;anal ea
1QQ RuqqP&lt;l
moun1 dln

c.r est
11 1 Cno&lt;;e
tarn1l·f
.-rea sur e
· 16 01nf·
18 L·xa1 10n

19 TJward
122

T1w
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1:::.:: Narn os
1!5 1'-'pmale
b o n o meo

tw at s

67 Kn10 Of

128 Gd11qes or

1•(pt' l !JtH
68 S l oom~.

A.ma~ n n

I )0 By Wd'y 0 1

1l 1F rUJ tp!

guv ern -

l0 RP"-CI"d

132 8ove

men!s

135 Hepa1r

alummu m
13 Cu unlr ¥ o t

i2 C ur·~urm•o
73 S w gn . .1

at Lev1

1011 1 a ward and
WI ttl n

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stopheles

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1 19 So be 1t1
120 SyfT1 b UI Ior
me th yl
12 1 Bod y o l
wa ter
123 No th1 ng
1::: 4 Jos1p Broz
12 5 Sec luded
.... a lley
126 Cr y o f sheep

lslanels

OL.rden

99 L8wered

ind1 FH1::&gt;

r' 1 Po11cern;p1
:; lar' g

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149 Bes1uwt;&gt;d
upon
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90 Emperors

118

53 Suit able

#550

33 Falls shOrt

79 A dd iti On-'ll
8 1 Beverag e
82 Clean 1ng

po 1n1

m easure

GRAB THE CAR KEYS' -Come see this Immaculate
and lastefully decorated bi-level. 3 bedrooms, 1!?
baths, living room, paho doors off dining area leading lo
covered deck, family room with fireplace. krtchen wrth
range. dishwasher. disposal, 2 car garage. Nice level
lawn. Pnced m the 50s

136 Qua l e
137 Stmp le
136 Moc ker•r
139 S'ymboiiOI

11 me
76 Ca lm

52 Compass

abbr

a tsease

dyspr OS il;m
140 Res cue
14 1 Hmd u

113
11 4
115
I 17

49 B l.ue

30 Hea llhy

q 4 C1 tr us tr u 11

73 One ol thr ee
7 4 Pe11 0dS Of

~11\ c h

51 Oan tSll

·· summer

dc1ty
lj I ~ICilmStliP

j1 CM 11

7 1 Hausenold
pel

47 Fru!lo f
1he pme

Frenc.h tor

90 Teuton1r.

134 Energy

&lt;;: tren g 1h
108 Gu nJu 's lugt•

41 Yo ung hOrse
4 2 Face o l

#530

1-------~----------------- --

from

13 3

25 M OC&lt;l w
;?7 M od el
lB Sto reh o u se

Hansen ·s

cloc k

40 Vap o r

C •YS4 Century 2! Real Est.at.e Corporation u tlust..8e for lhe NAF. Ill and,. - trademarks of Ct!ntury 21 Real l:'!.tat.e Corporation . Printed in U.S. A. Equal Housing Oppurtunlty (i)
1

13 2 P.a-..e

43 In musrc
high

36 Tall

38 Handles

NEW USTING - lET'S MOVE AND BUILD - Gel
your house plans logelher because here is 10 acres.
lfiOre or less, partially clea red, partially wooded, wa~ltng
lor your new home. Spong water. blacklop road.

131Dock

67 Bur y
69 S ut1 e1e1

97 War god
9 8 S tamp ul
approval
99 Pre l1x down
101 Ran ted
103 Everyone
t04 Co mposer
St ra\ll!lSky
105 Pu t lort•1

35 Cu rt1 -..a 1ea
rano

OWNER HAS REDUCED THIS SPRING VALLEY home
and would listen to any reasonable oHer. 3 bedroom
In-level. 2 baths, large bUI~-m k1lchen. lam1ly room w~h
fireplace. 2 car garage. Finanun g avarlable Pnced at
$59,900
#573

66 G r a11ng

27 Per annum

32 Em p loy

#482

m5

MAKE THIS YOUR NEW ADDRESS- 205 Kineon
OLive. Th1s ranch slyle home offers 3 bedrooms,
10x l0 dining room, a~chen, large li~ng room.
I
two storage rooms. attached garage,
r.arnr&gt;li'" and central air.

Ne ed

JIMS

AFFORDABLE CONVENIENCE - Wilhm walk1ng
distance to downtown shopprng area. 3 bedrooms,
living room. ~rge krtchen, bath, basemen( alummum
sidin~ natural ges heal 2 car garage. lArge flallawn.

#579

bath Doublew1de has. 3 BRs. k1tchen. lrvm g room

Gener al Hauling

James Boys Wat er Service .
Also pools filled . Ca ll 6 14 256 - 1141 or 6 14 -4 46 ·

614-446 -4477

#564

LOTS FOR SALE ' -

HEY MR. INVESTOR - You can move~ nlolh,son e
and pay your paymenls w1th the rent from lhe
- 62x00 all sleel
olher t-.o. Duplex. double w1de and fenced pool conslrucllon wrth fireproof 1nsulat1on. hasoverh ead
can be yow s. Rear duplex un1! 1:; aOsolutely lovely
crane. offi ce and halhs Formerly used lor lx&gt;at
R u~ 1c walls 3 BRs. laM. woodburner. beamed
sales and repa11. Localed across from ~ lver Bndge
ce1hngs, 3 8Rs ava tlable m front un1t w1lh k1tchen.
Plm w1lh access to the Oh1o RIVer. Polenlial
IN1 ng room. ch1mney lor woodburner. basement unlim1t~d

85

away or som ethin g m oved 7
We' ll do it . Call 446 -3 159
between 9 and 6 .

304 -576-201 0.

58 Lure

JUSTGREAT FOR A LOG HOME' - 12 acres more
or le::.s - appro~ 720ft road frontage. Rural water

446· 2642

576·28 97.

3802 .

CllY LOCATION - A good buy A good older home
w11h 3 bedrooms, hving room, d1n1ng room, lutchen,
bath, carpel. Vinyl sidin~ nat gas. utiltty area. garage
and spotless clean. Pnced at $25,500
#558

th ~

I
I

Services

2398 or 614-446 -2454.

Water wells commercial and
domestic, teat holes. pump
sales and service . 304 -895 -

#565

lrap~ng

and ffl iOY lt!e.

all o•lrn, $3,000.00. 304882-2326 .

691 Miller Dr i v e

JUST USTtD - COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE surrounds
this 3 bedroom mo~le homeklcaled ou I acre, moreor
less. Dug w~l. 1wo oulbUIIdings, small pond, lrUII trees,
strawbernes, grape arbor. Po"'ble owner linancing

WE FOUND PARADISE

amma! and hay bam lblock and heavy timber construction).
and 81 acres o1 good Iarmland. Golden opportumt) 10 rela&gt;

1976 20ft Start Craft travel
trailer, fully ..If contained ,

BORDMAN'S GOLF SHOP
Refi ni sh your Wood s
$15.00 each
Most Rubber Grips
Put On -$3. 50 each

bllil41n9S

Dotson 's Tree Service. Insured - Free Estimate . 304-

I Fr ag ment

also an ctder but liveable 3 bedroom OOme

overlooKing 11: m1 of Raccoon Creek and bottom land
COMPLETELY eQ UIPped WO&lt;Xlw&lt;t~ng shop, farm shed.

RON'S Television Service .
Speciali.zing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quaur. and
house calla. Call 304-676-

Basements. Footers. Co n crete w o rk , Ba c kh o e 's.
Dozer &amp; Oitc her, D u mp
truc ks . &amp; water -gas-sew erelectrical linea.

468-1666.

All kinds of furnace p1pes.
Call 614-256-1528

Nu-Prime r eplacem ent
windows
Storm w i ndows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; Vin'i'l
siding
Howmtt Patio Covers
Howmet screen room s
Mobile home awn i ngs
Aluminum util ttv

tlend . Oh.6 14-74 2-2903:

LOOKING FOR A NICE Bl·lEVEll - Then lake alook
at I hiS spaciOu&amp; hom€. 3 bedrooms. I ~ baths, k1tchen
equipped w1lh disposal. dishwasher and range Fam1ly
room. 2 car atlached garage Cenlral a11 Pnced 1n lhe

IrS GOT EVERYTHING - At an aliord able pnce_Altract1ve
!Rj room tn·levei v.n!J1 over 1350 sq. h. includes fir eplace 1n

if you entoY part ltm e farmtng, woodworking, hunting, ftsh1ng,

~thedrai

304-675-2881 '

FOR SALE

J .A .R .Construct ion Co .Au -

Abaten Home Improvement
Specialist . Homes . addi tion•. roofing, patio s, drywall. concrete, painting, all
types of remolding . 304-

A UTTIE SOMETHING EXTRA is found m thrs
comfortable brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, sunken liVIng
room. formal d1n1n&amp; 21h balhs. lam1ly room w~ h
fireplace, 2 car garage. Intercom, cenlral a1r. Dose fo
Rl 35 shopping area. Can be pu rchased with extra lot
#529

41111 leet ol Ji'Ved road lroolage and 400 feet gra\01 road
l r u n~ge One m~te oft Rt 7 Manv IXJS"bllmes. $41.500.

wnh

scotchguard -water e•triiiC ·
tion, deodorizers . FREE esti mates . Reasonable rates .

thing . 304-468 -1666.

Put Nuntber 1 to work for you:

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hv rm., woodburnet 1n large lam1ly room, d1mng room,
k1t chen. 217 bath s. cen ttal aH, 2 car garage and 11
ac. yard. As.umable mtg.

GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN .

Business Services

Excavating

Good -1 Exca va ting. base ment s, foot en, driveway s.
septic tanks, landacapi ng .
CaU any ti me 614 - 446 4637 , J ames l. Davison , J r .
owner .

Will haul sand. gravel. any -

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

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equ1pped

olone. Call614-367-0409 .

Remolding. siding. intertor
and exterior. teJCtured coat ing, eimulated brick and
ltuco. thermo replacement
w indow a. 304 - 676 ~ 1660.

Judy DeWitt, Reahor, 388-8155
J. Merrill Carter. Realtor. 379-2184
Becky lane, Associate, 446-0458
Catlly Pope, Associate, 379-2748
Margaret Bryant. Associate. 245-9277

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vinyl siding, roofing, room
addition, storm windows,

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698 -6553

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RIO CENTRES ESTATES - Beaublul WO&lt;Xled buold '"g lots
from 2 to S acre5 each Ideal location near coUege 1n ~
n!Sidenbal area. 16.BOII1o $11,1100. lAnd lays very good Lo~
of pnvacv County water available.

H &amp; S Home Improvements

Home
Improvements

446-6610

•:

VACANT lAND vtRV CLOSE 10 TOWN
2 tracts of land on M1ll C1eek !2 acres and 6 acres) Close to
town. Q)od D.nldmg srtes. Woo't last long. call lor Info

oxp . Call 814-388 -9862.

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jjiiiiiiii~!!~jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj~~~;;;;;;;;~;;~---~~jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjiiiiiliii~~;;;;;;~~;;............

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Hill VIEW HOME ~~ off 218 '" c1~ school&amp; 3 Bf!s. bal h.
12'x24' basemenl new porch lenglh oll'oose. 14'&gt;16' paoo,
~.-age btikling Over 1.5 ~ land. Pnced loell. Let us &amp;I&gt;Jwyoo
th• dean well kep 4 yr. old I&gt;Jrro. Pnced al $36,1100.

PAINTING- interior and ex terior. plumbing, roofing .
some remodeling . 20 yrs.

Gene Smith, 992 -6309.

Sun. 1 to 4. U.S. Rt. 50, tial, free estimates . Call
Coolville, Oh 614 -667 - 614-266-1182.
3388.

13 h . camper, $900. Call
between 6PM &amp; BPM only,

Home
lmprovementa

1974 Coachman , 20ft .
•2.100 . includes hitch .

Real Estate General

1:

11 ACRES MIL OF lAND ~eluding modern 5BR I&gt;Jme,large
bam, part·tlllE larmlng operatKlfl _Beautrful oome Ws land

daily 9 to 6 :30. Sat . 9 to 4,

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WE NEED LISTINGS BADLY

condition . •&amp;60 . Call 614-

cyclos $396. 1983 28 ft . Aah 51. Middlepon, 992Yellow1tone mini home with 11433.

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE, Open

1969 Jayco camper, sleeps
8 , good condition 992 -

IN REAL ESTATE
SALES IN GALLIA CO.

PUT A UTILE PAS! IN YOUR FUTURE

1

ll1::3~ft~~·: ~ca~mi;P"'.
900.only,
Call
5PM &amp; f 8PM

convenience Sun. 1 10 4 .

6,800 mi . It wa1 demo,
304·876-6462 .
loaded with roof air generator, running boarda, roof
WANT TO BUY Ford FMX rack and ladder, cere free
transmission for 1978 Ford awning1, 2 dr. refrigerator.
T-Bird . Call304-676-2047 . digital clock, TV antenna.
shades on all windows.
monitar pannal, Ford 460
engine, air. crulte, tift, AM78
Camping
FM stereo cattette with tall
for 628,900. Now through
Equipment
May 1 save up to e2,1500 on
all in stock motor homes and
Sh. slide in truck camper - travel trailer. U .S. Rt . 60,
•with 2 double beds. stove . Coolvme , Oh 814 -8873386.
refrigerator , furnace . con·
verter, never used . Call

For Sale
Owner
Phone 446-8221

Wiseman Real Estate Agency

Beautrtul res1dence and town bu1tt about 1818 has OOen well
mamta1ned and updated kl1 many, many more years of
comfortable IMng Beautiful hardwood floors and fireplaces
l4l bke these are hard to find anymore. HOmeIncludes 4 £h.
eat·m krtchffi. r11nmg room, llvme room. family room !rtting
room. formal er1trance. 2 baths and uhlrty Also 1ncluded is a
n1ce apr~rtment w1!h 2 Brs. IYtchen, bath and haloofl't New
gas turnace wrth central a1r Dry basement and attic slorage.
Corne&lt; ol Slate and 4111 $99.900

81

&amp; Campara

long, 1976 StarCraft tent •camper •1.296 . 11 ft. 1984 26 ft . travel trailer,
Nomad truck camper •sa&amp;. fully equiped, air, awning .
1976 380 Suzuki motor e7996 . Can be seen at 276

992-6384.

lltRH IN ~E USTING
1 6 roomhome wrth 2 car garage, aM hke new. 2.l0x4ll pool
only 3 vr old. e&gt;cel&lt;nt rondilion. 3. 1 ac.m/1levelland ill
good siMe of production. IJarns. over 1.000 lb. tobacco base.
Three acres '" all on Sp!ing Valley Dnve. Crown Cily_Priced al
$15.000

79 Motors Homes

$4,200. 197219ft. Golaga- ,9_9_2_-3
_9
_9_2_._ _ _ _ __

76

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BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES
Open
1o e:
30
Sat. 9 10
4. Dally
Now 9for
your

23V:! ft . American Traveler

Real Estate General

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79 Motors Homea
&amp; Campera

WV 304-422-8433 or 304- 1978 27 ft . ltalka molor
422·2367.
home f17 ,900. 1978 26ft.
Coachmen •&amp;.600. 1976 14 h . cemper. awning, good

FOR ALE BY OWNER
BRICK HOME: 3 bed·
rooms, I\\ bath, lg. liv·
ing room and family
room, WB fireplace. All
carpeted . Nice kitchen .
Central air. in-ground
swimminl pool 16x32.
One acre lot. Overlooking Ohio River above
Eureka Dam. Price reduced to $72,500. Can
help finance.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Correc t Craft &amp; Ski Supreme, family ski boats .
New &amp; used, Parkersburg .

heat, ctnlrtl tlr, nttrly
new clfptt over hardwoods, Anderson wood
windows. storms. h11vy
Insulation, 111111. uc.
cond. Owner may help fi nance. $35,900.
614-446-2357 or

tWUNSIE±
)

76

ANI Eetete General

The Sunday Times-Senti

Sou th

&lt;.il w
7:~

7! F:ec t• n t

15 Declares

78 Cln 11•

rna !t cr s

17 Ed 1to r
abb r

80
83
86

21 FaStid i OUSly

rasfe tul
22 Sea c o w
23 Separ a1e

86

35 Coni a.
gra toon
'4[• Ca rpenter s

G11e1

Amt:H 1ca
14 Co nl 1dencP.

16 !. egal

1)1 T m1d

mAtt :.u•f"
'/J1 1houl Pn C:
f qufll
Lu c k ~

number
Gastropod
m oll usk

89 Larnprevoo.

· 4 ~ Mu s1c as
WIIIIPn

· ...:; WP•qhl Ol
111 (11,1
' .1.: C u C&lt;l 3tl[)r

1·15 Symbol l o r
c enum
14 7 Tne&lt;e tore
1·18 M oun ra1n

1t:ltH

�P'ags • o.&amp;- The Sunday

April

Pome10y-Middlepo11 Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

Ti,_.S&amp;ntinel

29, 1984

French winners in anti-AIDS campaign
By JOHN~THOR DARLBURG
Awod•ted PreM Writer
PARJS (AP) - If the race to Dnd
the cause of AIDS Is lndeedover,asa
U.S. Cabinet secretary suggested
this week, It may have been won
more than a year ago here on Paris'
Left Bank, at a science Institute
where ''modesty Is one of the thlngs
we believe in."
The Pasteur Institute Is an
enclave shaded by chestnut trees
and ringed by a high Iron fence;
stone-and-brick buildings dating
from the tum of the century are
topped by a forest of chimneys .
Here three F'rench scientists
working on a Sffi,OOJ grant from
their government searched for a
cause for acquired Immune defl~
clency syndrome, an often-fatal
!allure of the body's mtural
defenses.
Working 19-hour days and draft·
lng a dozen technicians, researchers

and clinical phySicians !ortheef!ort,
the French trlo raced against
researchers in Amertca looking lor
the same thing.
By January 1983 the French
scientists had found a previously
unknown virus that could kill a type
ol blood cells vital for the body's
defenses against disease. It looked
like a possible AIDS agent. By May
1983 thelr results were published in
the American journal Science.
There was no fanfare.
This week, nearly a year alter the
F'rench research was published,
Amerlcansannouncedtheyalsohad
found a virus they believe to he the
cause of AIDS, and the Americans
said the two viruses are probably
Identical. This ttrne there was plenty
of fanfare.
"The probable cause of AIDS has
been found," Health and Human
Services Secretary Margaret
Heckler said at a Washington press
conference announcing the Ameri·

been the site of the F'rench research .
can finding. The research results
spokesWOman for the 96-year-old
A
appeared Friday in Science.
Pasteur
Institute said "modesty Is
"We've been talking for six
months, but only now, and beCause . one of the things we believe ln."
The Institute 's scientists have
our great Amertcan colleagues are
scored a strtng of medical and
saying the same thing, do people
scientific breakthroughs over the
finally believe us," said Dr. Luc
years.
Montagnler. one of the three French
Launched In 1888 with contrtbu~
scientists.
tlons from L&lt;&gt;uls Pasteur, the
"Why is there a ll the fanfare
inventor of the first vaoclne against
around the announcement In the
rabies, the Institute employs more
United States?" another of the
than 400 full· time researchers. Half
F'rench researchers, Jean -Oaude
of Its $44 rnllllon annual budget
Chermann, asked during an
comes from the f'rench govern·
Interview.
men!, with the rest coming from
The Americans say one reason Is
donations
and private sources.
that the F'rench results were
Durtng
ihe eentwy since Its
unexpected, preliminary and diffifounding,
Pasteur
researchers have
cult to Interpret. The French report
Identified
the
bacillus
canylng
said the new virus was found in only
bubonic plague, demonstrated the
one person. and as a result most
link between lice and typhus and
American scientists weren't ready
conducted pace-setting research on
to call the vlrus anything more than
viruses and bacteria. Eight of the
a possible candidate for an AIDS
institute's scientists have been
cause.
honored with the Nobel Prize.
But anotber reason may have

Koreans
pledge
•
secunty
for Pope

Features

11m.. - ••"ti".t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio ~ll try to cope
with its rapidly growing prtson popula tion ~th a $638
mUllan construction plan and better probation .
parole, and rehabili tation programs- not by turning
inmates loose as some states are doing.
The state has a prison population of 18,400 in a
systen'l, designed for 12,500, and officials of the
Rehab!lltations and Corrections Department say the
number wUI swell to 30,000 in the next decade.
A prtson expansion plan a lready under way, will
add 10,000 beds over roughly the same period of time,
department spokesman Jay Wuebbold said. "We
think we wUI be a ble to house the prisoners
adequately," he added.
Under a 19821aw, the governor is authorized to give
early releaSP to non-violent offenrters who meet

'

Ohio law has no automatic Irigger , but makes early
release discretionary on the part of the governor after
a screening process which would crcate and
perpetuate red tape, Wuebbold said. "The only ones
who could be released are I he ones who ar~ there for a
short time anyway," he said .
But Sen. Paul Pfeifer. R-Bucyrus. who sponsored
the early rcleasc amendment in a bill that S&lt;'t
mandatory, non-probatlonable sentences for certain

cenaln criterta. Gov. Richard Celeste Is said to
believe such a move would touch off a political
bombshell.
However. similar programs are being used in other
slates. such as Michigan a nd Dlinois, without creating
major problems. In Michigan, 2,ml inmates have
been freed early since 19SJ., and the reclvldism rate
has been only 6 percent.
Ohio officials point out tha t a uthority for early
releases In other states does not rest with the
governor.
Michigan law requires the rclease of inmates
convicted of lesser offenses when the population
reaches prison design capacity. Releases continue
until the popula tion reaches 95 percent of capacity .

New trial scheduled
in Von Bulow case
PROVIDENCE. R. I. tAPt Claus von Bulow says h~ ond his
daught er "cried a bil tog-et hpr"
after the Rhode Island Supreme
Court granted him a new tnal on
charges of twiee trying to kill his
wealthy wife with insulin injE'('tion.s .
The

court.

however, rcfuSC'd
Friday to acquit the New York

financier because !Is majotity
opinion ccncluded therP had bf'('n
sufficient evidence ror t hE' jmy To

find him guilty of trying to murdPr
Martha "Sunny" von Bulow
Von Bulow, interviN'E"d in hi ~
F!ftlt Avenue Manha ttan apartment
after the ('O UI1 announcc"ll its
decision, sa id he tmmediatei,·
telephonro his 17 ymr-ulddaught Pr.

Cu.sima. a studPnt at 8JLX)ks
AcadC'my in North Andover, Mass.
"Wr wt're both so relieved," von

Bulow, o7, told Ute _Providence
.Jourml. ''I'rn stunned. just very
gratefu l and very rclieved and can
only pray and hope that evel)'lhing
will tum out all r ight .··

Rhode Island Attorney General
l)('nnis J . Roberts II sharply
crlticizf'd th~ d!'Cision , saying It was
lxlsed on a technicality.
He said he would ask thee court to
rpview lt s decision. U the court
denies that req uest or upholds its
frndlng. Roberts said. he could
d~'C'ide either to t'f't.ry von Bulow, not
retry him. or ask the U.S. Suprcme
Cout1 to t"'f'\"iev.• lhe ca'if'.

Khadafy~s

hit squads
retreat after siege
By ED BlA,CHE
A.'&lt;'IOCiated P""'-' Writer

crowd of anti -Khadafy protesters,

LONDON tAP I -Libyan lcadr·r
Col. Moammar Khadafy rcportP&lt;ilv
told anti-dissident "hit squads" to Uc
low in Europe after a dea l ended an
Jl-day slegeofhisnation'scmbass) .
Tile Times of London . quoting
Libyan sources here. said KhadaJ\
ordered a tempora ry halt toattac·k-'
on hisopponen tsabroad. But LitJV on
radio vowed its " revolu tlona~&gt;
commlttees" will keep upattacks on
exiled dissident s.
The siege bt'gan April 17 aft&lt;•r a
gunman in the embassy fired int o a

ki lling a policewoman and wound ~
in~ 11 demonstrators. It ended
F riday when 30 Libyan diplomat s
and "r-pvolutionary students" inside
th&lt;&gt; building werc escorted ou tside
under tight SPrurity and flown back
to Libya .
1l1P Daily Mall reported today
tha t police nar rowed the list of
suspl'{'ls to two men inside the
building after seven hours of
fJUC'stioning t.hP Libyans un Friday

before thev left the country.

South Korcan
envoy
to the
Holy See,
confirmed
that
he had
relayed
the
Vatican rcports to Seoul but would
not discuss details.
"We arc prepared for any
event uality," Kim sald. "I am
convinced that our security SPrvices
are taking adequate precautions."
John Paul was shot and seriously
wounded a t theVattcanbya Turkish
gunman May 13, 1981. and narrowly
escaped injury when a deranged
Spanish priest lunged at him wlth a
bayonet exactly one year later In
f'atima , Portugal.
Dispatches from Seoul earlier this
week said President Chun Doohwan has ordered a full -scale
a nti -terrorism a lert and assigned
presidential guards to protect the
pontltf. Some 3,000 policemen reportedly have been brought to Seoul
from the provinces.
The intelligence reports indicated
that terror ist groups were trying to
enter South Koll.'a from neighboring
Japan, with possible assistance
from e lements close to Communist
North Korea, the Vatican source
said.
It was not clear why the groups
well.' reported to have picked South
Korea and not other stops on the
11-day trtp, which will take the pope
to Fairbanks, Alaska, Papua New
Guinea, the Solom on Islands and
Thailand.

~

Others Involved 1D the campaign solicitation are Mike
ADen, owner of The Bastille; Dan Davies, owner of
Paul Davies Jewelers; Jetf Smith, a vice president at
Ohio Valley Bank; Vance Johnson, owneroi.Johnson's
Supermarkets; and James Mullins, owner of

r--;:C:W'Ill::an:;:an:d:G:re~g:G:atre::U:,:manag::e:r:o:f:T:aro::G:rand::e:.:Bemadln::::e:'s:.:::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;.;,

TOMORROW IS THE FINAL DAY OF OUR
END OF THE MONTH SALE

Judging slated
POMEROY - The National
Grange Sewing Contest ~II be
judged when the Meigs County
Pomona Grange meets at 8 p.m.
f'riday at Hemlock Grange Hall
with members of Hemlock Grange
as hosts.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Marilyn Powell,
Racine; Enna Hendrix, Pomeroy;
Florence Reynolds, Middleport.
Dlscbarged Mary Smith,
Anthony rut!le.

'·
/
LOOKING FOR MORE GROWill - Tiffin
Unlvel'lllty President George Kldd talks about more
growth for the tiny busiltess coUege in northwt'St, Ohio,

where enroUment in the last thn.&gt;e year.; has surged

from :175 students to 622. ( AP Laserphoto).

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They will accommodate .1"Jtl. :1011. ami 2m prisonPrs.
respectively.

"Non£' of us k now how

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lt"s Thf' lf'SS·SOphistira Ted stuc.lrn r
1hal Tiff"in lJniver~itv S('('k S, K1dd
sa id, subscribing to r hf" "big fi sh in a
small pond" thenry. He S;Jid some
who e-nroll might l ~tck r.w:•rson&lt;Jl
ronhdC'n('(' 1o a11Pnd a IJ rgf'r school.
..; tuci Pnr s is tu
ThP aim of mosf TU _
get a job in thPirchos('n I iPid, usua II ~ ·
business or crimina l j uo; ti cC' . Full y
one-third of thpm ~ rc working bv th&lt;•
limPt hP~' graduate'. Mill ar said .
"An a\.\.fullot of roll&lt;•ges for year s
felt l hat Whi:ll They proriU f'N:"I WJS
graduales. What W(' reall\" produce
is €'duration. ·· hf' !'iJ id .

studf'n1

ma kes a choice of a school. Wha t we'
It}.! to do is i:x.'&lt;:'omc ont' of lhrf'f' or
four schools that thev cons ider.

the nonhwest Ohio business sc hool
total almost 100 percent . The men
behind the boom a re m nfiden I of
m ore growt h.
In a period when declining
enrollments were forecast lor
colleges. Tiffin University prcssed
into the market forstudC'ntswhohad
never heard of the city. let a lone a

One£' you've done tha t ~~ou 'n:' in The

96-year-old university carrying its
namP.
"So much was written in the piT'ss
I ha t I think th&lt;' Fourth Esta tes imply

ar-pa of study offered. Wit h that and
other data. Kidd and Milla r
la unched a new m a rketing cam paign , including literaturP on ad-

scared an awful lot of kids into going
to school tha t had never considered
going," sa id Millar. dean of enrol-

missions. campus life and curriculn .
Millar and others went on thr
road, "raising th£' fl ag" at co!!p-gt:'

lmen1 serv ices. "For tha t we owe

night s a nd knocking on doors of high
schoo l gu idancE' counselors. Requests for information jumped . and
so did enrollment.
Tiffin U. has brokl'n gr ou nd for its

ballgame ," Kidd said.
Early

su"'eys showPd the school

had a recognit ion problem .
One study a t area shopping malls
in 1981 showed that ha lt of the
respondents three mUes tram the
school had never heard of it . ut those

Kidd compares theTU phi lo,oph\
to industry
··u·~ often bf'f'n said t hf' r ail mads
fail('() in this cou ntry bfo&lt;'ausp 1hC'~ ·
didn 't rC' alize 1hl'\. v.:C'r(' in thC'
transportation b usinPss . ThP\.
thought thC'y \VP tl ' in til t' railro&lt;::~ d
businPss.'' hf' sa irl .
l\liillar addf'd: "ColiPJ2f' 1 ~ not an
C'nd point . I think v.'(' prnh~Jh\ _\
rPa lizf'd that hrn'carlif'r th c1n mo.'-1
sr-hoo!s.··
Kidd said a r hc'('k "-'·ith rc·C('Ill
graduatrs shrm·i'fl% JX'rC4'n1 work
mg in 1h('ir chosr-n fil ·Id s \\·it hin r htr'\,
months of gT&lt;"H.hw tion .
Tha t surcrss r&lt;.~t(' has .hr\Pf"(.l
Ti ffin gr ow . Whrn' $6,(0.1 once wa ~
thf' annual take tn contribution:, ,
fund-raisPrs in lht' last thn. 't' .\"('~lr~
ha\"C' brought in mot'L' thJn $1
mill ion . ha lf usr'fl lor thP new
dormitory and th r oth(' r hall h&lt;'Jng
hf'ld for lhf' sruclt'nt IT'f'l"f';llion
cpn tC'r and arquisilion ol" pi·i, ·a tc•
propPrty that still do rs tlw fi&gt;Ur· h!rtck
campus arra

w ho had, only 12 percPnt knPw on£'

tha t ra te, the university will havr

fir s1dormitory designed to anc hor a

1.000 st udents by 1989.
"lfs easier for us I han an Ohio
State to m a ke thl'Sl' big pcrcentag&lt;'
jumps, but you have to remember

ca mpus dcvelopm&lt;&gt;nl plan.
E:ven wit h a dormit ory. plans for OJ
rE'C'rPatiun building and hopes of
fi elding tf'ams in intrrrollf'giJtP
sport s, thf' school isn't growing too

we'w slarting from a much smaiiPr
base," sa id Kidd, un i\'Prsity

quickly. :vlrllar sa id .

prcs ident.
Kidd and Millar are familiar l'&lt;ith

"Most of thP studrnts who go to
sc hool in northwest Oh io grow up

Pastor firings at peak in Southern U.S.
By GEORGE W. CORNEll.

--

PQMfAOY OHIO

AP Religion Writer
When a Baptist congregation
doesn't like its pastor. it's free to firc
him . Indications are that such
oust!'rs are at an a li-time high these
days, and efforts are being stepped
up to mitiga te the problem - and
also thE' wounds It ca uses.
Dismissals, sometimes hitting
highly capable minis ters, have
Increased sharply in recent years,
says the Rev. Brooks f'a ulkncr of
Nashvllle, Tenn, supemsor of the
Southern Baptist career guidance
section .
He es tima tes 2,500 Southern
Baptists ministers on congrega tional staffs arcdismlssedannually.
That' s nearly 7 percent of the
denomination's 36,ml clergy serv·
ing rongrPgations.

Faulkner says c hurch members
"don't haVP the respect for ministe rs" tha t was accorded them in the

Nowadays,

he

them .

eapacil iPS, SC'f'k in g both to aUay

M ost denomin:Jl ions, Pit her
through arPa agPnl'ies or officPrs,

congrega tiona I conflict s or &lt;•asP the
scars if a fi ring occurs.

.:.~c ­

such as btshops or s uperintendents,

standing and

provide for 1hc ir mutual action with
congrega tions in placing or ll'mov-

A main issue in thPSe cases, hC'
said, revolves ar ound ··who is in
r h arg~?" with thP ministers in-

says,

ing l&lt;X'al pastors.
ThP swelling toll of dismissals
prompted last J unr's Southern
BaptL• t convention tourl'(e "positive
corrective mrasul'('s rc la tro to thi s
sens it ivP problem. "

volved being unable to "es tabl tsh hi s
leadership sa tisfactorily, to win
rcspect and establish all iPs with anv
degrep of strpng1 h "
·
Y c t "some of our most lv highly
re~arded ministf'rs " w ho Sf'C'm

Provlsions were rN'OmmendPd

··stmngl _v competen1 Pnd up being
forced to resign or voted out." hf'
said.

past when c lergym en

corded a special
deference.

Wf'IT'

"man.v

people are as academically tra ined
as their ministers" -even though
gmerall&gt;· not in thrology-and "say
·we' re as good as you are.'''
In any rase, lhP congregat iona l
impulse to fire is being exercised
with rising frequency, he said, a nd
programs are being developed
nationally a nd at s ta te and local
l&lt;&gt;vels to try to tPmper it.
Unlike most major Protest ant
denominations. Baptists uphold the
tull autonomy of IO&lt;'a l congrega tions, nol only in hlrtng or llrtng
ministers, but a lso In ord a ining

for " prevPntive a nd redemptive
support S&lt;'rvlces to ministers a nd
ehurc hes" in dis missa l caSl'S. a nd
Faulkner's office Is working to
ex tend Silch help.
Already , he said . 17 state conven tions have namf'd full -timPmlnis tcr
relations ccns ultant s, a nd 11 sta tes
have part -time offi ce rs in such

who visit . and this \.'." ill be th£' large." '
sc hool they'veC'vervis!lcd."

j OLJHeLp
R TAl.-· ~

L .

,,

kl LL PEOPL:

·-· .

Usua lly. he added. "thev're not
fired over any lofty ideal s" but
because of objections to persona l
traits or methods. with the blamr
put on "attitude rat her than
theo logy."

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Cardiologist uses alcohol problem to help ot~ers

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Factory Fresh
Just Arrived
8 In Stock
Sport Coupes, Berlinettas, Z-28's. All Colors, right equipment,
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HAVE GOTTEN OUR PRICES

WE WILL BEAT ANY DEAL!
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.
446-3672

1616 EASTERN
AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

CINCINNATI (API-G.Douglas
Talbott, o nce a promlnent cardiologist whose career was shattered by
a bout with a lcoholism, Is using his
Pxperlence to help other health
professionals over com e alcoholism
and drug abuse.
Talbott, a former Ohioan who
treats addicted physicians and other
health professionals in Georgia,
says one of the biggest challenges Is
convincing addicted doctors that
they have a problem . He refers to It
as the "M. Deity" syndrome "M.D.'' for short . It ts his name for
an attitude among physicians tha t
they know better and that addiction
could not happen to them.
" We do things to ourselves tha t we
would never do to patient s because
we have that 'M . Deity' attitude. We

have that God -l ike attitude, " Talbott said. He was Interviewed after
speaking in Clncin.na ti to a conference of drug-a buse ccunSPiors.
He founded and is dlll'('tor of
Ridgeview Institute, an Atlanta
facility which operates drug-and
alcohol ·a buse program s. Ta lbott Is
also program dil'E'('tor for the
Medical Association of Georgia's
Impaired Physicians Program.
Ta lbott. a recovered alcoholic,
also directed a fed e rally funded
program In Baltimore which
trea ted Skid Row drunks . The
defunct progra m also operated in
Seattle and Philadelphia.
"Recovery has to start with
abstinence. The primary symptom
of the disease Is the compulsion io
use," he said.

hPlping patie nts fight addiction
beCause it teaches the " I2 Steps"a lifestyle tha t embraces nonchemlcal coping procedures . Those
he lp the alcchol or drug a buser
handle stress without resort ing to
drugs . he said .
"Recovery is very dependent on
building a sPt of non-chemical
coping mechanisms. That' s what
recovery is all about ," he said.
Talbott was a successful Dayton.
Ohio, cardiologist In the 1960s - a nd
founde r o f Dayton's Cox Hea rt
Institute - when his alccholic
oblivion began. wrecking his career
and straining his marriage.
" Mine was a long a nd horrible
story. I was a disgrace to the
community a nd to my profession,"
he said .

Talbott rejects the not ion tha t the
alcohol or drug a buser Is addicted
because of unde rlying psychological problems. He said a n a buser is
born with the potential for addiction.
which he terms a "genetic
predisposition.··
To beCome add icted, the individual must have this predisposition
and must also abuse drugs, Talbott
said.
"There are millions of Arneric ans
who~~~ never know they havp the
d isease, beCause lor religious reasons, health reasons. they won't
a buse drugs, " he said. "Out of every
five people who use or a buse drugs,
one wUI develop the disease."
Talbott refers patients to AlcoholIcs Anonymous, which he lped him .
He said AA Is especlallv effective in

TAXES UNFAlli- The Rev. Maurice McCrackin, 7!\, pa.'&lt;lor of the
Community Church in Cincinnati, protests taxes a.• hr pkkrts oulsid&lt;• of
a Clnebmatl Post Office recently. McCrackin Ita.• not lilt '&lt;I an int'Otnt• ta.'
return since 1955. ( AP Laserphoto).

Veteran Cincinnati clergy continues fight for human rights
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Rev. dozens of times In protests for
MaurlceMcCrackln smlleswbenhe
human rights, c lvU rights, peace,
anti-nuclear
and anti~war moverecalls the embarassment of holst~
tng his ftrst picket sign to protest a
ments, a nd for not paying income
segregated music school In Cincln· taxes.
natlln 19!18.
"I haven't ltleda (tax) form since
"1 wasembarassed, but once I got 1955. I spent stx months In jail, but I
never pald," said McCracldn. He
that sign up II was an emancipation
tor me," said the white 78-year--old won't pay because the government
pastor of the Community Church of · uses the money ftlrwar, he says.
"A couple of ·men came around
CI!:ICinnatl , a congregation of about
from
!.hems about two years after I ·
~pmpll!, most of !hem black.
got out of prtson.J guess they just
~ then, be has been jailed

~

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manag£'able. They includP rrinh..·grC:lt ion C('nH:rs
where prisoners nearinp: n·ll'ast· c-an n'("(•iw·
counseling and o ther sen/ iCC' &lt;; nt'f'ded to smooth t hd 1
transit ion back into socif't).'.
Three CPOtPrS, COSting a total Of S:fr" mil\iDn, c.l rl'
planned in Cind nnal i. Cuyahoga County, a nd Tol&lt;&gt;do.

herr." he sa id . "We have student s

Plan egg hunt
MIDDLEPORT Plans for
staging their postponed mmmunity
Easter egg hunt this today at 2 p.m .
at Genera l Hartinger Park were
maole when Mlddleport -Pom&lt;'roy
Rotary Oub met f'riday night at
Heath United Methodist Church .
A record number of eggs, 1,231.
each with a cash or merchandise
prize, will be hidden for the hunt and
participants will be divided into
three age groups.
These include age one through
kindergarten, first, second and third
graders and founh. flfth and sixth
graders. There will be a gold egg
worth $25; a silver onP worth $10;
and a bronze egg worth $5.
The annual hunt was scheduled
for Easter Sunday but was post ·
paned until today due to rain .

severa l programs he sa id can h('}p kPC·p prisons

each other's style, hav ing served as
vlee presidents together a t MerPyhurst College in Erie. Pa. Kidd came
to Tiffi n thrPf'yearsagoand broug ht
MiJJar in a year la ter.

the press a grea t debt of grat itude."
The school's enrollment climbed
from 375 stude nts In the winter of
1981 to Its current 622. Millar said a t

.END OF THE MONTH SALE

As alternatives 10 rarly rrJcoasr . WupbOOld ciff'd

Tiffin University becoming
modern., fast growing facility

' ;. ; _t

ELBERFELDS

make room for the mort&gt; srrious and \ iO](·n !

offenders," Pfeiff&lt;&gt;r S&lt;Iid.

point of the ear ly release program. "or he !Celeste 1 is
just gun shy.''
He said the idea of putting early releaS&lt;' into a bill
w hich figu red to increase the prison population was to
weed out non-viol!?nt prisoners already in the systf'm .

Thref'-year enrollmen1 gains at

HEAD ABC DRIVE - SeleCted to lead the annual
Gallia County Area Business Campaign at Rio Grande
College are, from left, Donald Crance, president of
Conunerclal &amp; Savings Bank; Charles Adkins, chief
exeeuttveofficeratHo!zcrMedicaiCenter; Dr.Davtd

"Most of thE'Se prisoners arl' non-vioiPnt. and thc•y
committed crimes against property . Thev should
S(lfVC' some time. but thPn tht•y should bt• rPIPascod to

violen t crlrnes, sa id the admin istration missed the

By AlAN L. ADLER
Associated Press \\1riter
TIFF'IN , Ohio tAPl - Therc is
st ill a lot of work to be drme on their
master plan, but George Kidd and
John Millar are transforming
sleepy little Tiffin Univers ity into a
modern and gruwing small collegl'.

VATICAN CITY (API- Carlos.
the elusive Venezuelan killer. and
Turkey's neo-Nazl Grey Wolves are
among the international terrorists
who are reported to have made Pope
John Paul II their target when he
visits South Korea next week.
Vatican and diplomatic sources
reported F'riday they had received
reports compiled by U.S. and Italian
intelligence services which indi ca ted ma jor International terrorist
groups werc plotting to kill the pope
during a scheduled visit to South
Korea May J. 7.
The sources spoke on the condi·
tion they not be named.
Ambassador Kim Joa-soo. the

A 'I 29, 1984

Construction, rehabilitation programs answer
to rapid growing prison population problems

BySAMUF..LKOO
A.otioclated Pre&lt;is Writer
FACING SECOND TRIAL - Claus von Bulow, left, speaks ,.1th
reporters outside his New York apartment Friday alter the Rhode
Island Supreme Court grantPd him a m•w trial on charges he tried to
murder his heiress ~fe ~th insulin in.iections at their Newport, Rhode
Island home. The RhodP Island Supreme C&lt;Jurt ruled that the judge in
von Bulow's 1982 triaJ e rred in allo"·ing as evidence the result'! of tests
performed by the state on drugs and a needle fowtd in a black bag in von
Bulow's closet In the Newport home. (AP Laserpholo).

Section ~

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wanted to find out Ill was stUiofthe
same mind. Anyway, they haven'!
bothered me s ince," he said.
McCrackin was reared as a
Presbyterian in Monmouth, lU. His
brother and sister became medical
missionaries In Africa. He was
onlalned as a Presbytertan minister, but the Presbytery removed
him from his Cincinnati church In
1962 and nuUifted his onllnation In
I963.
"I was anembarassment to them. ~

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I was keeping the church from
gpttlngmoney,"hesays.Buthealso
saw that as another emancipation.
"I was freed from all tha t," he
said , referrtng to church duties,
meetings and gatherings.
About 80 memhers of St. Barnabas Chull.'h followed him when he
formed the community church.
McCrackin was ftghttng for
vot lngrights inthe Southlnthel950s
before there was a big movement.
He was jailed in Brownsv!UP, Tenn.,

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" I alwa~'S hopPd I woulddit'fora
cau se but I wou ld nf'ver kill for
on£'," hrs~ id .

m 1955 for " loitering ~th the
Intention to peep a nd spy," he said,

chuckling.
Though he has been b£'aten a nd
jailed, he remains resolute. "I never
cooperate w hen I'm c harged wit h
P•v;esting somet hing I think is
wrong," he said of the dozens of
times he has been carrted to jail or to
court, refu sing to walk.
McCrackin was gratified with the
a nt i-war and clvU right s movements of the 1~.

•

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McCrackin sa id he is bJITed from
visiting prisonrrs in OhiobecauSP h('

refusetl to tcstilv aga inst three men
who rsrapcd from Lucasvi lle In
1975.
The sta te charged the trio
kidnapped him and slole his car. He
said he invited them in to ea t and
loaned them tht• car. 'nt~)' left It for
himonaroad.jllrcntra lOhio . -

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�Pon ~eroy Mil'dlepolt Gallipolis. Ohio

Tm-Sentinel

•

Winew
By JOHN RICE

Exlenslon Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY -All 4-H and FFA
members de-siring to take market
hogs to this year's fair must bring
them to the fairgrounds on May 5.
The swine weigh-In will start at 9

a.m. and conclude at ll a.m.
Spring Seeding Alfalfa Alon&lt;' Tradiltonally alfalfa in Ohio ha s
been spring seeded with oats or
broadcast in ear ly spring into
winter wheat. Alfalfa vigor and
plant survival art&gt; often reduced

when seedings a re made into the
small grains. This is especially true
with tnda y's higher yielding wheal
and oats vartetles. This occurs
because of severe com petition
betwe&lt;'n th&lt;&gt; alfalfa and small grain
for light, moist urr. and soil nut rients. Also, the plant competition
increases the incidencE' of alfaJfa

seedling d ist&gt;ases. ThP s mall grain
is neit her a nursr nor a rom panion.
bur a significant competllor to the
establishment of alfalfa .
Alfa lfa producers acros~.; thl'

slated May 5
mldwPSt, including Ohio, are successfully spring seeding allalfa and
grasses without a small grain. It is
estimated 30 percent of the alfalfa
and grasses in Ohio are spring
seeded alone. Soil and air temperatures and soil moisture during April
are usually favorable for quick
germination and rapid seedling
growth of alfalfa. Controlling the
wlleds with herbicides and ellmi nating the competition from the
small grain permits the establishment of vigorous, productive alfalfa
stands during the seeding year.
The alfalfa may be harvested
approxiateiy 70-72 days followi ng
seeding or about OO&lt;i5 days after
emergence. Thls permits sf'edt ng
yt~ar har,;t&gt;Sls of two a nd somerimf'S thfff' cuttings in northern
Ohio and thr&lt;'e cuttings in southern
Ohio. The seeding year yield will
usually be three to four tons per
&lt;:J lTl'
This practice makl'S a
corn -alfalfa r rop sequencr possible
on many Ohio farms .

When selecti ng a field for alfalfa
ro nsidPr whether there is

St'l~din~.

any risk of herbicide carry-over
from the previous crop. Also
consider crop rotation as It Is
suggested allalla not Immediately
follow allalla In the crop sequence.
It alfalfa was grown In the fteid the
year previous to seeding, the vigor
of the new alfalla seedlngs, the
growth of the young plants and the
stand may be reduced.
Gardening - Those of you with
limited space for growing garden
vegetablf's will often m ake tom atoes your No. 1 choice. Then, lf there
is space left , perhaps som e lettuce,
radishes. peppers and beans will be
planted. Just so you get off to the
right start and don't m ake a
mistake the firs t thing, you do not
want to set out plants until the
danger of killing frost ts past. With
warm, sunshiny days, there Will be
a great temptation to plant those
fros t susc"Piible plants. In Ohio,
wait until after May 1 and size up
the situatio n then. Norm ally, you
should wail until about Mav 20

"*''

1984

April 29, 1984

RUTLAND
FURN-ITURE
COMPANY'S
BIG TOP TENT SAI.E

p&lt;.lssf'rl

pi;-JC'f' nn thf' ri\·pr
\~:i!hout d 1('(' \in g o ht~dm·s ~ . \\"c h,ui
no facilirit•~o, w P knc'w ut for offt•rin12

lllf'

lhi~

Hoi~· S:..~ c rificp

m a town whP r f'
.:til wrrr o ncf'. at
lf'JSI bnpt i7f'd

.......
~
. .

Cat hol ics ..
Thf'SP w o rd~ ollllllllllllll

.~

'

\.\'('rf' v.:rrrtPn about C3llipolb by 13ishop r·u:rn•rr
in thE' _v('ar 1:-4R a mi tht•y ~ urnrnar
izr the ('ar!~· strugglP ID c· stJblish
Catholoc ism in thf' Old F'rr rwh Cit~
T hf' first Sf'tti Pro;; had brought
with thPm in 1791'1 F d !h(-•r Dldi£•r. J
Bf'nE'dict i n&lt;' m onk whn w ; t ~ gi\'(•n
thr li t If' of \'ir;rr (;enr-ral Spil'i tuali
bu s by I1nmf'
Didirr rrm&lt;::~ i nC'd unh .1 ft-.v.- \t•;n "
and with hi s dl'p.::~rtun • rr unuld b(·
about 811 _v f'tl rs hr'f nn · ;l!Htl hr r prirs t
wou ld ha\"C' hi~ r f'&lt;.: id(•nC"P in

Ca lli polb .
SPvrr al itinrrJnt

prif'SI~

dicl

continuP ro \ "iSl! th(• town fnr SI' \ 'Pral
yC'ar s to cnnduct I)Jpti sm . In t h('
pa rl y 1&amp;~ in d snk~ uf ac riun ...,

!VI rs . .J ane &lt;10\'ac ht. Bishop Purcell
and D r . Crom Jp~· r1rrnngPd rn sf't
as ide l&lt;:~nd in thC' tm~:n for a
permanPnl place to conduct wor ·

shtp. At first lhC' old Episcopal
Church on Second twtwPf'n Court

and GrajX' was lookPd at, but bv the
time pnough morwv v.·as in hand ,

the owners had sold the church
bu ilding to a group tha t ma nufac ·
turf'd threshing m achines.

.. . \ Histor") of thP Staff' nf Oh io.
\ "(\lumc 1\' ...
'" In thf' IK"X)s m anv good Pr utf•st ·
ant:-. ;J Ssuc iated Cathol icism uith
lr bh turhuli ' llC'f' and c lannishnf's..".
cii C" ta tion by an absolutist POPf'.
ho"il illt\· fr, thP K ing Ja mf·~ n•rs ion
olthP Bib!(' in th&lt;&gt; publi c schools. an
i mmoral prif'st hood and corrupt
rx-11itic.., ..
Almost wN·k l_\ W &lt;l .~ Bi shop John
Pun:Pil unfair!\ critil'i1.1·'&lt;.! in the
m•wspapPrs of Ohio for his be-liefs .
particular\\ on thf' reorga nization
of th1' common sc hool system. A t
any rolf' t hC' Catholic commu nit y of
(; ;tlipulb cho:-,t' a difficult pPriod to
t'st ahlbh a [)('rmanf'n t chu rc h in
rnwn
·hUlW~ Haq w r , Uw t•ditur of the
(;;dliiMJiis .Journal. w rott• in 1853
that Bishop Purc·ell wal;j " thi s a rch
knaw• who kno ws Uttlf&gt; of our town.
T hat Gallipolis is n •tr og-rading is
not true and '' ju.•l w hat might he
("X pt'cted frn m one who hates
PVf'l"}thing Am eri&lt;.:an and lo\les
nothJng hut Jtonw." ( H arper) .
OnP thing in rhe f.wor of
Calli~li s C.Jtholics in 1R1J wa s that
m ~1n .v of thPm wf'rP CP1man a nd
t'a~iP r 10i f' r&lt;Jt£'d tw " n&lt;.l l i\·ps" t han
th(• I ri sh \\T' n' .
It was not until1R72that St. Louis
wa:-; ablf' tn support a rf'sident
pa stor l-Ip was Fat her L. P.
M cKif&gt;rnan who sprved two years
and duri ng his stay had drawn up
plans to Psta blish a Ca tholic
sf'm inary on top of the hi ll now
known as Mound H ili Cemetery
Th f' found &lt;J iion stonf\s were even
laid but soon Fa ther McKiernan
gaw up his dff'am and sold the land
to th&lt;' city of Gall ipolis for a

In 1&amp;'&gt;1 Bishop Purwli wrote of
Ga ll tpolis: " I t is retrograding In
pve ry srnse. ·'
"THE ONLY means of checking

cernell'r~· .

its downward cuur!'.P i~ to establi sh
in if a new nnd fnithfu l and r igor ous

church \\.'as serve-d by a r esident

Ca tholic colony:

thrs with God 's

blpssi ng we shall do. Madama

dcVacht. J Parista n lady, who has
l:x't:'n hf'rf' for f{) yt~ar~. has part ly
~ol d

a nd pan l:-.· donarf'd a lnt for a
C Jthnlic c hurch. A worthv Doctor
Cromle y. of no par1 icular r Piigion .
is kindl y l'XPrHng himsrlf to
procurC' subscripti ons for thP huild ·
in g of thp c hurch f-{ l-&gt; h&lt;iS airPady

rPCcived ·promi sf'S to pa y· to the
amount of $f.OO. The Archbishop, In
gra tit udf' for what F rance has done
for ctll our mi ssions. has promised
.S4W for the sam e object."
I t should ix' noted that when the
first Catholic Church was buill in
t&amp;'i.1 on Grape Street and named
after St . Loui s, the United States
was suffering throu gh a period of
suspicion of anything associ ated
wit h the Catholic church. The
so-called Know Nothing political
party made "hay" over this
antipathy to Rom e.
EUGENE ROSEJJdoM wrote In

BE'IWEEN 1872 and 1!m, the
priest for only 10 of those years.
UnuPr Fat her .1. B . 0Pink the firs t
parish school was est ablished, the
dates being about 1888 to 1892.
I n t hose yra rs w hen then• was no
priest in town, the c hurch was
served mostl y on weekdays hy
pri ests from Pomeroy, M inerton
and AlhPns . On Sundays the people
would gat her under t hP direction of
a layman to recite I he Rosary and
ot her prayer s.
In l!m Father L ucius Kessler
was appoint ed as parish priest and
hP rem ained som e 14 year s during
which time the Catholic church was
firmly established In town. II was in
19111 t hat St. L ouis Church proudly
opened Its new church a nd rectory
on State Street, thus beginning a
pertnd when the church has made a
slgntflcant impact on tbe Ute of the
Old F rench City.
AddreM your. !etten~ lo dames
Sands at Box 92, Cia,rbburg, Ohio

4311$.

I

"Th is is a promot ion lor the
C'f'meter:v. cPrtainly,'' McUanif'l

veterans .

f)'('(' s j)a('('.

hopc·s to givf' a wa.v CJtxJu 11m a yf'ar

Larry McDaniel, associotion
president . says U.S. military vete·
rans who want to be buried in the
E vergreen Memorial Cemetery
near Parkersburg will get a ftl'&lt;'
plot, no strings attached. He adds

"This is one of thOS&lt;' lypt•s of
promotions that b&lt;'ncfit s the com-

$2'.!o api C&lt;'c, hr said .

said. "But there's no gimmick: if
they 'rp a veteran . thC)' qualif)' for a

Grafton is full.
But McDaniel also admilsthat l he
cem ptery

hopPs to makP somP

· money off the offer.

\VEDl'\ESDA Y. \lAY 2:\B THRI :
SATURDAY. !\lAY 5TH. 19B·1

Nor ma l! ~·.

munity but benf'fits thP businPss as

thP plot s W(Ju ld cosr

What isn ' t _i ncludC'd in fh( · giv(•J·
a re lhf' co~t~ of digg-ing th{ '
gravP &lt;.Jn(l th£•aclua11Ju r ia I. 0 1 of.:.m.v
marker or toml1ston1 ·. Md&gt;&lt;.l nlf'l
SJid.
ThP a.;;sociat inn ·s p rf'~id('nf s&lt;.~ id
nt h!'r rf'ml 'h ·riPs h d \'l ' "i m il ar
oilers, and that om · in nt•arbv
Fk-I(Jn '. Ohio . h&lt;.1s ht'i 'n gh· m ~-: ; lwa~
pl ot s to vc r cran~ l or dhnul ;~ \ 'I 'JI ·

well."

\.\."&lt;JY

The monf'.V·making asPf'('t is that
the asscx'iLition hopt• ~o, tu sr• ll grav('
sitPs to the vf'lf'rJns' I'Picll iv Ps .

McDaniel sa td .
" lr a single vf'tf'r&lt;Jn "'"&lt;.tlk-&lt;&gt; tn and
savs, 'I w ant a spac&lt;',' lhC'y' ll get it. "
h&lt;• sditl "ThPn' v;on't bt-• an~ ·
prr·ssurc to sign up thPirgr ondmoth

TRADEaJPTOA
,UN BILTHOME ~

f

~,_.

'' ~-

·. .

·.-:.,.·.~ ....

because some years we get frost
that late.
Select and plant healthy trans·
plants of recommended varieti&lt;'s
and hy brids. Such varieties as
Burpee, Jet Star, Hei nz 1350,
Setmoff', Roma (a paste type) and
Better Boy are som e of the
recommended vari eties that have
VPrt iclliium wilt and fusarium wilt

- -·-

,.

A Gallipolis Dinry:

fly .J,\.\'IES .~l"' llS
Spet:iaJ Corn~ pundt• nt
(;,\I.L!POL!S - \\' p hoi'&lt;' nf'IW

f'r .. . or anvt hing likP that ··
The C~ ssociation has Sf'! a ~ ide ..U.U
plol." to accomocbtC&gt; Vf'h·rans ac
crp t mg the offer . McDani Pl said it

PARKERSBURG , W Va. (API
- The head of the E vergreen
Memorial Cemetery Association
has a grave offer for milit ary

that onP reason for t hp offer is tha t
the Veterans' National CrmPtery at

CONTINUED BUYS ON SUPER
LIVING ROOM FURNITURE ,

PEEPS,

Early Gallipolis saddened
passerby on Ohio River

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Poge- E-3

Veterans given grave offer

resista nce.
You'll probably want to stake or
cage your tomatoes. If staking, use
6- or 7-foot stakes and continually tle
the vines to the sta kes as they grow .
M ost gardeners prefer to sucker
the ir toma to v ines to avoid m asses
of branc hes and small tomatOPs.

THE PRESENT ST. L OUlS Cathoiir Church dates to 1908 when
Lucius Kessler wa.• pastor . Even though llw li N I ,.,Iller&lt;; in Galllpoil•
wert' predominantly C at holk, iCM-'a.i!i not until IH5:.1 that a Catholic church
wa.• built i n Gallipolis on land belonging lu Mrs. Jane DeVachl.
Howeve r, the d mrch did not have a r esid(•nt prit&gt;st until 187l when
Father L. f. Mc Klr rnan m ovf't:l to to wr1.

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

Irene Mossman
1M rs. Hom er) Br annon, is presi Paul' s

cousin ,

or LAV which was discovered by French Dr. Luc
Monlagtller in Paris. ( AP Laserpbolo) ,

BROYHILL
REGULAR PRICE

s2,50000

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biOO&lt;i scr('('ning l est for the m ysll'rious disease widPiy a\·ai! ahie

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mobile home in on trade wh e n yo u
purchas e a Unibilt hom e.
Stop By And See Our Mod e ls
Free Apprai s al s On Your Mob ile Home

and a bottom: A lymnphadenopatby associated virus

wilhin six m onths.
Offil'ia ls announcf'd earliC'r this
Wf'(lk that govf&gt;rnment· l'f'Sf:la 1"Che1·s

found
a , ·iru s that
proba
bly cauS&lt;'s
the
dPbilitaling
and
deadly
breakdow n of th r bod~· ·s immun£' systrm
known as acq uin'&lt;.l ilnmunC' dr ri ciency sy ndrome, or A IDS.
The officials made it clear that

Services Se&lt;•rel ary M argar et M.
HC'&lt;.·kler told a news briefing.
AIDS resu ll s in lhC'col!apS&lt;'olthe
immu nP system , which defm ds the
body against dismse. Vict ims
hecom r ~ u SCE'pt ihle to r ar e canCf' rs,
pnf'umonia and other infections that

for AIDS and ac knowledged tha t
any tff'a lmenl thai cvPnlually
result s from irlmt ificat ion of lhc
virus may com r too la tf&gt; for those
curr ently afniciPd w ith lh&lt;' dPad ly

T H E W1 NTER ed i tion ar gues
"wP nN..:&gt;d to let activE' teachers
know what being r0tired means." It
that

disease .

&amp; icnt isl s at l h&lt;' National lnsli ·
l utPs of H c&lt;J I!h, il'fl b)' Dr. Robert

also suggests tha t com m unity
participa tion com mittees should
f'ncourag£' reti red ed ucators to

Ga Uo

of

the

National

Can('('r

Inst itu te, were crPdited wit h isola! ·
lng the v i rus they call HTL V-~ and
dev ising a process to rout inely
.letect and grow it.
Hcall h officials sa id lh&lt;'ir Pv i·
denec that HTL V :&gt; is the link to
AIDS is so firm th at lh&lt;'y crnsider

identify com munity needs and then
help att ain the goa ts suggested .
THF. SPRING edition po int s out
that ORTA has 33,000 ·piu s
mem bers. of whom 6, 00J a re life
members. Albert Durose of Ga lli polis is a mPm bl&gt;r of the state board of

TWO I OCATION S

lead to disability and death

TO SERVE YOU

The ability to m ass-produce the
virus opens the door to developing a
vacclne to pr€'vent AI DS and also
has resulted in a t&lt;&gt;s l to dPI('('t
cvidPnC&lt;' of the virus in blood.

'. PcrJnr l :C', \/r,lnrl ':", ~ r · p r· t s
i-lomt f' l r-.;1 .,li lt W V;1
j1J ll -fi 7J .. :.: 2 &lt;1

former
Ga ll ia Countian. is a m em ber of the
Ross County Retired Teac hers
Association . His pict ure is in the
wint er edition of ORTA. and t he
writ eup read s that Davi d Jenkins
" and scrond wife Sena oper ates a

•Grand Ole Opry / Loretta Lynn Ranch
May 10-13 • July 5-8 • October 18-21
•Tulip Time • May 15 - 18
•Indy 500 • May 26-27
•Thousand Islands / French Canada
July 9 -16
•Gospel Sing • July 5 - 8
•Wisconsin Dells / Milwaukee • July 23 -28
•New England / Nova Scotia • July 29-August 13
•New Orleans / World's Fair • April 22-25
•Myrtle Beach • August 8-12
•Pennsylvania / Dutch Country • August 13 - 17
•Best of Kentucky • August 15- 18
ofthe
•
181

we nct'd that tltP cause of AIDS has
been found ," Heall h and Human

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years. and is a_n lnsura nCt" agent .
He has seven gr andchlldren and

E l~

OT,&lt;\8134

BROYHILL

farm in Ross County. I t r eads that
he is acti ve in church, teaching a
rnL•n 's class. was township clerk 16

'l ~JII I

1 , ·,'H• f )'on

360 SW NO AVE .

research .
"The NCI work provides t he pmof

3

.I

MOTORCOACH ,
TOURS

men t after onl)· thrc'&lt;" year s of

DAVI D JENKJNS, a

n·

S" ''"• • ~ • I ·• I '• ' • '· • •

the r rsu lts a rema rkabiP achiC'vr-

dirPCtors, representing District 7.

l i ll )i iM ;•I " ' i 'l 'l' l

D&amp;WHOMES

ii==================
=======:;i
1984

scil?ntists have• not d lscoveredn C'Ul"f'

County's l rPne Br annon

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I
'

IRENE BRANNON

-

ar£&gt; gC'arin g up prOOuc·
lion of th£&gt; virus that apJX~ars to
caust' AI DS in an effort to havP a

3 PIECE
BIG TOP
PRICE

tAP !

~arrhf'rs

BOTH TH E W1N TER and spring
editio ns of ORTA have front page
art ic les by the prPSidcnt. Ca illa

WH1L E WE'RE on the subject of
ret i red teachers. you should take
note that eight Gaiiia County
ex-tPachers will go to the Hocking
Va ilpy Motor Lndge in Nelsonville
M ay 10. Athens County t'l"llred
teac hers are. of course, the hosts ,
and I rene Bra nnon of Bidwell will
be one of the SjX'akers in her
capacity of state president. Otbers
from Ga lli a County will be M argueri te Hineman. K atherine Willi ams, Est ivaun Matthews, Elaine
Rouse, Bea ui ah Johnson, M ary
Walker, Marie E delblute and J en-

virus discovered this week are shown above. Top:
new fonn of a human T ..,.,u leukemia virus, or 1ITLV
which was discovered by t: .S. Dr. Rohert Gallo and
his team at the N ational Cancer Institute, a dlvison of

Wi\SH I ~GTON

dent of lhP Ohio Ret ired Teachers
Associat ion . Pa ul sent along two
copi&lt;'S of the retired teachers'
quarterly publtcation, ORTA, in its
371 h year.

two great -grandchldren. He has
published a book of poem s, " Wisps
of Hay."

the Nation lnslltutes of Health In Bethesda, Maryland

AIDS causes linked to virus

Brannon
leads state
•
•
organiZation
GA LI.I POL.I S - J. Paul Moss·
man lipped oi' Peeps off to
something PI'Pps should have
known 1\il bout being tipped That

AIDS VIRUS - Comho picture of the two AIDS

Jl

.

-

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�-

~-...

......

Poge-E-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel
W£ RESERVE
THE RIGHT TO

LIPOL

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AND CORRECT
'NY PRINTING
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I

PO EROY

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�-- -··--- .. ····- ·-·-

Pa¥e

~The Sunday Times-Sentinel

for three centuries. But in the last
decade, this corner of U.S. jurlspru
dence has been turned inside out.
largely under pressure from
women's groups .
state

has

madE'

major

changes in it s ra pe laws, according
to a 5().state study by The Associated
Press.
ThP changes are of both fo rm and
substance. transforming the legal
view

of rape

from

expff'ssion of sex

violPnt

i'l

to a sexua l

expn:'ssion of violenCP . Y ct rape law
today ff'mains an P motionaJI~ ·

charged and lega lly t roublesomc
issue in and out of court . not on l.v for

what it dee; but for what it ciO&lt;•sn't
do .
"The feeling is thaI now pro pic arc
more likely to talk a bout it and
repor1 it, " said Eunicv Raigradski. a
spokeswoman

for

the

i\a tional

Cen ter for Prevention a nd Control of
Rape . "But ra P&lt;' is still l[t&lt;&gt;atl)
underr l'por1ed . And therl' an• still
problems in the legal pr()('('ss with
conv icting \ictims rat llf'r than
rapists."
Man~· of t he nPw raj)f'

somPthing a bout what you think of
the motiv·c a nd the nature of the
offense ."
The npw laws try to resolve the
nagging age-()ld legal question:
What exactly is rape?
Cf'r1ainly if

is rape w hen a

stranger jumps out of a dark
doorwa;· and fort'es a woman to
han' int0rroursP at knifepoint . Rut
is it rap&lt;&gt; when a husband physically
fo rll'S his wife to ha\'r sex against
her will?
ln 24 stJ tes. that hu sband can lx•
charged with rape. according to the
AP survev . In !Ostateshecannot bP
charged, and in 16 stat es he can be

do !ht'

following :
-Establish "degrees" of WP&lt;' to
reflect more accura tely various
types of sexual assa utt and srt

corresponding penalties
-RewritP the language so it is
··nru trTT'fl" and no longpr lim its
rape to men·s attacks o n women .
- Wipe out requirl'mf'nt s th&lt;J t
womf'n prove t hp~· rf'!'l istNJ b\'

SC'paration or both .

ThP Npw· MPxicol'ourt of Appeal.&lt;
in FC'bma ry u phetd t hf' ron\· ict ion of
Duanp RrechPiSf'n in 1he&gt; ra pe of his
Bn:'CheiSf'n had mo\'f&gt;d out a

before the incident lie
appea led on the Rt·ou nds the law drd
not properly rlr fin e "livin g a par1 ."
The court sa id it CO\'f'red f'ven a
Wf'f' k

couple who liVf' undf'r th rsamr roof
bu t s lf&gt;('p in SC&gt;paratr bedrooms.

The " neutering" of rap&lt;&gt; laws has
gaw• auth ori tii'S J('('way to charge
m(•n with r aping mPn. women wi th

ot hf'r crime im·oJv ing v iolC'ncc or

Sole ly on "her word against his ...
-Allow fur husbands to be
charged with raping I hPir wiws .
-Impose to ug h er pri so n
sentences.

"shield"

Wf'rr• thinking . Unlike roblx&gt;r)·.
!her £:&gt; i.'-i no missing money . UnlikP
mun:kr, therr&gt; is nodPad body.

Consequently, rap&lt;&gt; law remained
rdalivPly s tagnant for decades.
Idaho's 1983 rape law rewrote bills

co nduct.

fromthrl89Js . South Carollna'sl977
mPf' law changed a law that had
il&lt;'&lt;'n bas icall;· unchangt'd since

Ra P&lt;' counselors and femin ists
sav wiping out lraditlooa l Jaw has
bePo a s tPp in the right di rect ion, but

1712. It wasn't unt il last year that
Kansas wip!'d out the "fighting
back'' requin:•mpnt: in Louis iana.
pm a lties an• s till IPss stringent for
rapists whosp viclimscanoot prov·e
they physically rt:•sistrd .
·nrc taws that ex ist an· aiml&gt;ci a t
baning the defense from pulling the
Woman "on tn'al" b;· prub 1'ng to
h~r past sexual conduct.
"In ot ht' r word s. a prostitute ca n
be raped. " sa id Norma Ca lwav··
Fagen. of t hC' Rape and Sexua l
Abuse CPntrr in Nashville. Tenn.
Connrct icut has a shield law that

man)' arc• disappointed that exceptions to shield laws st ill allow

aftN she initia lly testifi Pd on hrr
past SC&gt;x ual conduct.
- Kf'f'ps thf' df'fendant ·s cons I itu tional right s from bring violatPd bv

c., cluding Pvidence of prior S&lt;"x ua I

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,

dC'fPnsP a 1turney s to focus attention

on tht •victim' sbehavlorra therthan
thedf'fendant's.
"My vipw is that we still have
judges who don't recognizP the
c ri m~." said Peggy Spektor. head of
f'
.....,
li
a s tate- mane"" rape counse ·ng
program in Minnesota. She said her
orga nization had filed complaint s
agains t two judges for admitting
rv idf'nce of a wom an's past sexua l

Hear·lng ··s
Bel·lev·lng!
1f you think you need a hearing aid.

LIBERTY'S SCAFFOLDING KISEll - Scafloldlng rises to new
heights around the Statue of Uberty in New York Harbor, begin
blocldng the view of the landmark. 1be seaffoldlng Is the first step in a
reoovatlon project which will ~ve a new look to the landmark and
national symhol. (AP Laserphoto).

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Septem ber. 1984.

safely.

"In every open-heart surgery the
heart-lung machine Is used ... to take
over thl' work of the heart. In every
operation there comes a point where
they're taken off," she said. "In
some cases they cannot get the hear1
to start heating."
A cardiovascular team at Kett&lt;&gt;r·
ing Memorial Hospital Implanted
the artlflclal heart hall after doctors

Coursework will start in

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stru ctured so that all academ ic require m e nts can be completed w ith in 21 months, while the exec utive continues to
hand le his o r her professional responsibilities full -time .

tried to get the woman' s heart to
start beating regularly.
" II didn't appear it wasgolngtobe
anything but routine. II wasn't untll
they did the operation they saw it
{the assist device) was needed,"
Ms. Richwine said .
While the hearl heals, the assist
device takes over the function of the
heart 's left ventricle, which pumps
blood through the body.
Ms. Rlchwinesald thepatlent was
alert and Improving Wednesday,
although she remained in critical
but stabiP condition.
Over the next ft'W days, hospital
staff members will slow down the
machine to see how the patient's
heart Is working. The dt'Vice can be
used for up to four weeks.
"There have been about 60
patients across !hecountryonwhich
thiS procedure has been donP with a
50 percent success," Ms. Rlchwine
said.
In February, thPfederaiFood and
Dmg Administration approved the
procedure for use at Kettering hy
cardiovascular surgeon Dr. Hans
Zwart . The new precedure has
enhanced a n already-established
heart center, Ms. Rich will(' said.

e o ffered a t the Ohio University Lancaster Campus.
e designe d to be offered on one Friday and three Saturdays a

·.

e

·: o~oo
&lt;.l'f.
,.. . E.. M

So Mrs. Mehrling says an ailing
scheduled Sunday on her weekly

song" featurtng the word-play and
humor often associated with the
witty composer's work, said Mrs.
Mehrltng.
"Cole Porter always has that little
twist that makes you laugh like the
dickens," she said. "And when you
think of him being locked In a room,
and then he comes out with a
drinldng song, that's as funny as
anything."

rr;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

~~:nwcr~rni';;;~~ac:~~

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be termed the first public perfor-

m=~:!~~~t:~~~k and

1984 FLY AND CRUISE AWAY TOURS

Hanna gut Porter, already making a
name for himself as a composer but
still awaiting the fame brought by
his later strtng of hit shows, to come
to Clev!'land for the 1924 Yale event.
"They asked him If he would do a
song for the show and he flatly
refused ," Mrs. Mehrling said. "He
said , 'I'm out here on vaca tion.
Come on, guys.' "
"So they dragged him into a room
with a plano. and they locked the
door and had a servant ply him with
drinks untll he came out with the
song," she saicl .
It took the tunesmlth only Wor 30
minutes to bat out "Let' s Make It
Cleveland." a rouslug drinking song
cele brating Cleveland as "the
famous Forest City" where bootleggers wouldn't go begging and
"where they've got the ammunition

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to prohibit Prohibition.''
The song makes reference to
people being "wettah " In Marietta,
to wine In Akron being "sweet and
saccharine," to "beer being cooler
in Ashtabuler" and drink In Dayton
being "more stlmuiatin'."
But Cleveland gets top rating as a
city with real he-men (or "Y-A-L-E
men " ) who are "slicker al drinking
llquor than any men I know."
"It's a very typical CoiP Porter

Porter, who died In 1964, sang the
song at theY ale show here 60 years
agu this month and got a standing
ovation for It But Mrs. Mehrling
figures thai wasn't a truly public
performance since It was strictly for
Yale alumni.
And although Wick, a banking and
financial man who was also an
accomplished singer and dancer,
sang the song for years alter that,
presumably most of those performances were also for Yale-related
groups.

Open Dally 10 AM -9 PM;
Sunday 1 PM · 6 PM

1

mo nth . over three academic tenns of 11 weeks each, with a
five-wee k break between Thanksgiving and early January

_·_ ·:S:·Lt.l

song that Porter dashed ott- under
some duress- for11 YaleUnlversity
alumni show.
Porter, prolific author of
hundreds of songs for hit musicals
ranging from "Anything Goes" in
the 193Js to "Can-can" in the 195(1&lt;;,
wrote the soog at the behest of
Warren Coming Wick and Leonard
Hanna, two wealthy Clevelanders
and fellow Yale graduates.
Wick's account of the matter in a
book published the year before his
death In !Jl8Jat theageof95caught
!he Interest of Constance Mehrling,
a vocal music teacher from suburban Berea who has berome an
authorlty on unusual facets of
Cleveland's musical history .
And It led to her discovery that
although Porter himself destroyed
the song which he had been aU but
forced to wrtte for the 1924 alumni
show here. Yaleman Wick thought
so much of it that he kept singing it
for years and eventually wrote down
his rl'CUllectlons of the music for it.
Armed with thai Information ,
Mrs. Mehrling got permission last
fall from the Cole Porter Music and
Uterary Property Tmst In New
York - which had only the words to
the song - to make a new musical
aiTangement an~ give what she
descrlbes as Its first really public

perfonnance.

Heart machine
provides women
with new hope
DAYTON, Ohio !API - A
Springfield woman has becume the
first person In Ohio to test a heart
pump used for pa tients who
otherwise might not have another
chance.
"Now thai we've used this pump
we'vp become the flfth hear1 center
In the country to use It," said Anita
Rlchwinl'. a spokeswoman for
Kettering Medical Centf'r.
The "left ventricular assist device" was connected Monday after
the 59-year-()ld woman's heart
would not restart and contlnul'
beating reliably after open-heart
surgery, Ms. Richwine said.
"1bls Is a temporary device. A
paUent cannot be on this permanentlY," she said. "It will beusedonly
In cases where the patient cannot be
taken ott the heart-lung mach ine

sourw of sPmf'n, pregna ncy or
venf'rral diSf'asP.
- A !tacks the \·ic tim "s cr"('(\ihilit~ ·

ln a number of sta ll'S, the rapt• th£' thrPa1 ot \ 'iotence, is subj ('{·t ive.
it dcPf'nds not so much on what
happ••nPd . but wha t thepar1 ic ipants

Jaws no longer C'ont ain thP w ord
"rape." When "sexua l assault " was
substituted in Texa s last ~·ear, for
example, sponsor s suggr•str'() v ictims might be more likC'ly to rPport

fi./

twf'en the vrcllm and defendant .
-Shows thfodefPndantwasnot the

perhaps more than am

Ra(X'.

~·I

MOUNT VERNON TOURISTS - Tourists walk George Washlngtoo. 1be mansion and Its grounds
around outside the mansion on the grounds at Mount overl09)dng the Polomac River have been returned
Vl'mon which has undergone a live-year restoration aiHJcllfiely as'Possible to their appearwwe in 1799, the
financed by a private, SIO million capital ~=-/last yeiU' Washington Uved there. (AP Laserphoto ).
11oe mansion was the home ofthe first U.S.
I
·

has nt'ver

bars evconduct
idence of
a \'ic:tim
prior
srxuat
unless
the P\'s'idf'nCt'
dot's an~· or the following:
-R.a i sc~ thf' issue or consrnT by
showing prior sexual conduct IX'·

late com)JOiel' Cole Porter wrote&amp;!
years ago- and quickly foll!Ot -Is
being reviVed through efforts of a
local music historian. ,
It's titled "Let's Make It Cleveland," a Prohibition-era drinking

!

m
·

r·a ping mPn andwomcn wit h helping

blocking inquiries int o a \'iC'tim 's
past sexual exper ienc-C's.

- Remov(' requirPmf'nt s ! hal
w omen presem corroboratin g t'vidence ; cases can now be drddrd

and hearts -

By TIM CliRRAN
AW'ChJed P...,. Writer
CLEVELAND (AP)- A song the

r-

. '
,.

'"ct of love or a

strictly according to their actions.

Jiv·ing apar1 . haw fil ed for i&lt;:"ga l

provisions

"fighting back" phv·sicallv

11

been a forte of a legal system more
geared toward judging people

chargE&gt;d onl:v under C(&gt;rtain circum stances. such as if thr C'O upl£&gt; are

rru' n rape othf'r womC'n . Th at
d()('sn' t mean juriPS \\"ill convict
tht&gt;m .
In Hawaii, a mistrial w as dP·
clan""&gt;CI after a jury failt'Ci t o l'l'Jc h 3
Vf'rdict in a raJ.X• c&lt;JSP against J
woman accused of helpin g hPr
OOyirif&gt;nd assa ult a tourist in o hotPI.
'' \Vp did not see how a wom an f'ou ld
rape another woman." sa id a ju ror
\\.'ho asked for anon_
v mity .

- Include

minds -

\\.-iff'.
l aw~

bP eithC'r

violent fe lony I •'gal problems are
in dPCiding how theparticipantsfelt.
how forcefully they expr"PsS&lt;'d
themselves, how quickly they
recognized the others' wishes and
how they responded to those wishes.
In Mason. Mich .. seven young
men stood trial last month for
all&lt;:"gedly raping a Michigan State
University student . She ack nowl ·
edged shP had gone to a dorrnitor,·
room with the men "for a pa1ty."
She said she had nPw r wanted to
have sex but had been too frightened
to I'PSist or seek help
The juJY, however. apparently
beliPvrd the men' s c laims th at the
woman had had sex with them
wUiingly, and they were acquit led .
Looking so closely into people's

crime a sexual assault , you say

Since the earlv 1970s, almost
every

can

The Sunday

W . Va.

Historian revives old Cole Porter song

Rape involws .• physical acl tha t

thE' crimE&gt; if not faced wit h the
stigma oft he word " rape."
Leigh Beinen, a Iawver in the NPw
Jersey public defender's office who
has done studies on rape laws, said :
"It's an important philosophical
change in the law. When you call a

Oh~Paint

April29, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea~ant, W. Va.

America's rape laws
undergo drastic change
By Associated Pres.•
American rapt&gt; s tatutes. rootf\d in
English corrunon law . changed U!!Je

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�Page

E-8-- The Sunday Ti.,...Sentinel

April29, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh~Point Pleatant, W. Va.

Daughter's recovery strengthens belief against medicine
By TOM EBLEN
As!loclaled Preos Wrher
LAFOUEJ'TE, Tenn. (API Preacher Larry Hamilton says it
was faith - not court-ordered
medical treatment - that stopped
his daughter's bone cancer, and he
-.ishes doctors, judges and social
workers would leave his family
alone .
When a judgeorderedchemotherapy for 13-year-old Pamela Hamilton last September, she had a
rapidly growing tumor the slzf' of a
football in her left leg and IE'Ss than a
25 pc'fC{'nt chance of survival,
according to doctors .
Now hPrdoctorthinks the tumor is
just a lump of scar tissue thpslzf'ofa
baseball . Although It is too early to

pronouncr a curf'. Dr. Frank Haraf
says he can find no more signs of

evening was warm. and Pam soon
t.ook off a wig that resembled the
long, brown hair she los t.
Pam seemed little like the frail
child who could hardly sit up in court
last Sept.ember and told a judge she
was willing to diP "when thf' Lord
g&lt;&gt;ts ready for me." Shew as dressed
up, having been to Wednesday night
church sen~ce. and her crutches
werPiht'only obvious sign of illness.
She responded mostly "yPS" or
" no" to questions. but said shp was
hoping to return to school as an
eighth -gradpr m the fall . Her tathN
said she maintain•'(] a "B" avpragc
this year b.v s rud ying wll h a rounty
tearhPr who vis ited their home
twirP a week

Pam rec;elves Iter last chemotherapy treatment in September. Alter
that, Hamilton said he wants to be
lid of doctors. judges and state
social workers, whom he called "a
bunch of Nazis."
Although Hamilton's church,
which has nearly 4,&lt;XXJ members in
17 s tales. bans medicine. it allows
members to see doctors for such
things as broken bonPS.
Pam broke her leg last July, and a
doctor discovered a tiny tumor
while m{'nding thP bone.
When Hamilton didn 't take his
daughter to a canN'r specialist,
social workers took him to court . A
Juvenile Court 1udgedeclared Pam
a ncglPCted child , gave the state

temporary custody and ordered
medical treatment.
Chemotherapy began Sept. 22
aftpr thP state Court ol Appeals
rejected Hamilton's app!'aL The
state Supreme Court refused to hear
the case, and in January, Hamilton
quit f!ghtln){.
Hamilton said he was fired from
his job as a dispatcher lor a
KnoxviliP trucking company because of the controversy, and
hhasn't been able to find steady
work since.
"When I go to look lor a job and
people find out wha t who I am, they
pass me by ," he said. "Butl can live
wtth that. I don 't want any
sympathy."

Hamilton said he Isn't paid tor
preaching, but haS mlmaged to
support his wtfe, two sons and two
daughters. "God has taken care of
me," he said .
The church covered HamUton' s
legal expenses. And beea uS&lt;' Pam Is
legally a ward of the state, it has
covered ber medical bills.
HamUton fears the state will sue
him to try to recover the cost of
treatment. "But they ain't going to
do any more to me than God wtlllet
them," he said.
Hamiltol) s ued East Tennessee
Children's Hospital in Knoxvtlle for
$15,&lt;XXJ IJecause Pam slipped on hPr
crutchPs, leU and broke her cancerweakened leg while recplvlng

treatment there In November.
"l'mgoingtoget every dime I can
out ot them," he said. "I didn't ask
lor this.''
The taU, burly preacher said the
past nine months have only confirmed his beliefs about !he power of
faith and the !'VIIS of medicine. And
he said It haS brought his
closer to the church they love.
There were only three photo- ·
graphs displayed In the Hamlltons'
living room - two of Jesse PrattJr.,
the church's general overse&lt;&gt;r, and
one of Pratt's mother.
"There's more lovP in this church
than I've seen anywhere," HarnU·
ton said. "This Is the only church
that's being persecuted.

lamtJY

r---------------------------------------------------------------

cancer
"God does it a nd the doctors take
credit fo r tt.' ' Hamilton said in an
interviPW in lh&lt;' Jiving room of his
whitP-framr house. near this northeas t Te nnt&gt;SSPe C'Oa i iO" ·n .

Hamilt on is pastor of LaFollet te's
3!!-mPmbcr con~:n·gation of the
Chur\·h of God of thP Union
Asscmbi''· a fundamentalist sect
that believes in faith hea ling and
forbids taking any medlcinP.
Hamilton insisted it was fai th that
shrank his daughtPr's tumor. and
said a ll thr r llrmotherapy and
radiation did was "makf' her hair
fall out ...
A..s he spoke. Pam sa t nrartJy in an

eas_v chair. roughhousing \Vilh hPr

&amp;-month old ststcr. Oabrea

The

Chicago
now3rd

A Guide .to local
Television programming
April 29 thru May 5

WASHIN\.TON tAP i- lhirago.
Chicago, that toddlin ' town where an
itinerant songwriter was shocked to
a man dance with his wife , was

sef'

th&lt;' locale for another shocker a frw
days back.
The nation 's Sf'&lt;_-x&gt;nd largest city

home of AI Capone, the
Loop, the Cubs and Bears ard Whit0
Sox, the a tom bomb. Miracle Mile.
thP wor ld's ta llest bu ilding a nd Mrs.
O'Leary's celebra tPd r ow . qutrtl)'
slipped in to thml place on the U.S.
CPnsus Bureau 's list of largest
American eitiPs behind Los An ~
geles
It was close, but the
comput ers showed LA. won the
" We're No.2" tit le , after New York ,
with a popu lation of 3,022,&lt;XXl, an
advantage of atXJut 25.00! over the
Windy City.
"Hog Bu tcher for the World, Tool
Ma ker . Stacker of Wheat, Player
with R&lt;lilroads and the Nation's
Freight Ha ndler." r hapsodizPd the
poP! Carl Sandburg when 26,00l
boxcars ard 1.900passengertrainsa
day rumbled through Chicago a nd
SlilC&lt;' 1890,

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Nuestra Senora Re ina de los
Angelcs was just an oil spill on a
s iff'p~ Pacific beach waiting for
OW . Griffith to happen b\ wilh a
camera crev.:.
Sandburg. who was bum in
Galesburg. Ill .. on the other side of
thP state. also ca tted Chicago "this

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my city" and, in capit als again,

"City of the Big Shouldprs,"
probably in honor of George Halas'
Bears. who werr sent int o the game
with only one play from the bench ·
"C..et in thereard kli l somebody ."
The Indians had a word for It, too:
Chl'Cagou , which according to some
experts in abori ~nal ilnguistirs
means skunk . Others say wild o nion.
Anyhow, neither connotation had
anything to do with the Chicago
Union stockyards or Cook County
poli tics. whichalwayshadan aroma
all thPi r own.
Mrs . O'Leary's cow introduced
bovine urban renewal on Oct. 8, 1871,
kicking ovPr a kerosene lamp in a
sta ble on Dekoven Street on one of
the city's M ndi&lt;'S t days to Ignite a
fire that burned for more than 24
hours . destroyed 17,450 buildings
and wiped out 3~ squaremllesol the
downtown d istrict.
Chicago arose from tbe ashes -.oth
the world's first skyscraper, the cast
iron HomP Insurance Building put
up by architect William Le Baron
Jenney in 1884, lost the high rise
championship to New York a cou ple
of times and then forged into the lead
again in the last decade when the
Sears Tower outstretched Manhattan's World Trade Center towers.
Chicago helped la unch rival
L.A.'s movie biz with the "The St.
Valentine's Day Massacre," the
font of inspiration lor a u Prohibition
era gangster flicks, and by providing an e ndless cast of colorful
characters wtth names Ukc "Scarface," "GrPasy Thum b," "Cherry
Nose," "The Enforcer."
For years, Chicago was first in
steel and ore, first In grain, t1rst In
meat packing, first in plinting, first
In mail order sales, first in a tomic
research (the first atomic cha in
reaction took place Dec. 2, 1942, in a
squash court under the west stands
of Stagg Field at tile University of
Chicago), !lrst in
and air trafflc,
first In chewing gum, ftrst In the sile
of its CathoUc archdloceSe, first in
medical factlltles and last In the
National League.
.,

RESS AND
SPRING
SIZE

$9900

Empire
Savings
Time

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week 's guide."

CURIO CABINET
$179°0

Stalion listings
WSAZ
HBO

MAX
Clltl
ESPN
WTBS

S PC . OAK

WTVN

UPRI
SWEEPER

DINETTE SET
$23900

WTAP
WCHS
WPBY
WBNS
WOUB

:zo,..~oo

Huntington, WV
Home 8oJI Office

Cinemu
Chrlotian Notwrk
Sports Nelwoflo

Adamo. GA
Cotumbua, OH
Parkeraburg, wv
Charleston, WV
Huntington, WV
Columbus, OH

Athens, OH

WOWK Huntington, WV
WVAH

WATERBED

Hurricane, WV

COMPLETE

$24900 .
SEASONED - AI WI Aida, co-executive producer and creator of the CBS television oeries " The
Four Seasons," says there's a tremendous hunger In this country lor friendship. "It's a powerful
subject," says Aida, who s&amp;arred In the movie version. "No one gets enoogh nf 11 and nobody can
stlllld what they now have of II." (AP Llvterphoto ••

Hollywood
Pages 6, 7

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties .

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