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                  <text>Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Pome10y-Middleport,

Ohio

Friday, June IS, 1984

Ex-IU football player's widow files wrongful death suit
INDIANAPOLIS (API- Saying
she was "disillusioned" by police
and federal probes tllat found no
wrongdoing in the police-action
shooting of a former Indiana
University football piaye,, the
player's widow has filed a wrongfUl
death suit against the city of
Bloomington.
The suit, filed Thursday by
C'ynequa Smith of Gary and the
couple's 9-month-old daughter, Ambrosia, in U.S. District Court here,
se&lt;'ks $.1 million in the death of
former TU tackle Denver Smith, 24.
of Dayton. Ohio.
The suit alleges civil rights
violallons. improper use of deadly
force and general negligence by the
city of Bloomington, where four
whit&lt;' policemen shot and kliled
Smith. who was black, Sept. 12 in a
struggle along a city street.
A citizens' advisory group appointed by the Bloomington mayor

and a police review board both
concluded tllat the officers Involved
in the incident acted property under
the ctrcwnstances. The U.S. Justice
Department, which also studied the
case, found no evidence of civil
rights violations.
Investigators never learned of
any explanation for Smith's behavIor, and an autopsy failed to reveal

f Area deaths
Earl Denny Sr.

Earl Denny Sr., 85, Pomeroy.died
Thursday In Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born Jan. 7, 1899, In Longstreth, he
was the son of the Ia te Alonzo and
Nora Copas Denny.
He was also preceded In death by
his wife, Cora F. Smith Denny, In
1979.
He was a coal miner and a cab
driver.
Surviving are his son and a
daughter-In-law, Earl Jr. and Betty
Lou Denny of Middleport; a
grandson, Ronald Bruce Denny of
Middleport; and a sister, Mrs.
Mildred Tomlinson of Chlllicothe.
FUneral services will be held at
1: ~ p.m. Sunday in Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. Mark McClung officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2-4 and7·9
p.m . Satu rday .

Fair royalty forms
now available
Applicants for the Meigs County
Junior Fair King and Queen contest
may pick up applications at the
Meigs County I::xtension Office
Monday through Friday from 8: ~
a.m.to4 : ~p.m .

Pan iripa nts must be 16 years of
age as of .Jan. 1 of this year, not
married or been ma rried, nor have
oome a child.
Panicipants must also be enrolled in a youth organiza tion
exhibiting a t the fair such as 4-H.
FHA, F'FA. VlCA. Glri or Boy
Scout s.
Applications afl! due at the
ex tmsion office by July 6. inter' 'IEws wili be heldonFriday.Julyl3.
For additional information contact
the Meigs County Extension Office
a 1992-6696.

I

any physical cause.

times.

Pollee said they received a call
tllat Smith was threatening motor·
ists In the street with a tire tool.
When police confronted Smith near
a city maintenance garage, a
struggle during which he ripped a
policeman's gun trom Its holster,
but didn't shoot it, and also grabbed
an officer's nlghtstlck .
Smith continued to struggle as
police tried tocalmhim,andofficers
thentrledtosubdue himbystrlking
him with their nightsticks, police
reported. When he continued to

The suit charges that Smith was
"brutally and savagely beaten" by
the omcers In the Incident and was
subjected to "unlawful selzw'e and
confinement. "

Steven Sharpe, Randall Keller,
Richard Hunter and James Ratliff;
and the Bloomington Board of
Publlc Safety.
The case alsocltes lack of training
by the o!flcers involved In the

Besides the city, the suit also
names as defendants the Blooming·
ton Police Department, o!flcers

Lonery winners

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Hemlock Grange will sponsor a
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preparing wtitten charges. A series of hearings wPre
he ld by the board in mid-September, followed by a
fina l board vote to dismiss Mrs. Plummer.
Since the indictments were handed down. Mrs.
P lummer's defense has won two victories- a change
in judges a nd in the location of the trial.
In March, a motion filed by Hunt sought dismissal
of the theft in offi ce indictment and a change of venue,
citing newspaper coverage of his Mrs. Plummer's
activities Hunt claimed would jeopardize a fair trial
for his client in Gailla County.
Gailla Common Pleas Judge Richard C. Roderick
denied the former claim and said a location change
would be considered when attempts were made to
seat a jury.
Nearly a week later, Mrs. Plummer petitioned

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Roderick to step down from the case, claiming,
among other things , that political pressure would
prevent him from ruling fairly over a trial.
Roderick refused to remove himself from the case,
forcing Ohio Supreme Court Justice Frank Celebrezze to formally request Roderick to step down.
Roder ick bowed to Ceiebwae's request, and Hocklng
County Common Pleas Judge James E. Stilwell was
assigned in Roderick's place.
In May, despite vigorous opposition from Gailla
Prose&lt;'utor Joseph L. Cain, Stilwell recons idered
Hunt' s motion for a change of venue and ordered the
case transferred to Hocklng County.
Both prose&lt;'ution and defense have subpoenaed 60
witnesses each for the trial, which is expected to last
about a week .

Industrial production
up 0.4 percent in May

FCC regi stered. NoiiOJ coin or party line use Backup battery tiJ:tra ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

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" knowingly authorized or employed the authority and
influence of her office" to obtain contracts employing
Jeffrey Plummer as a part-time janitor in 1978 and
1979.
Represented by Columbus attorney Danie l M.
Hunt, Mrs. Plummer pleaded not guilty to both
indicirnenis at an an11ignment.
Mrs. Plummer came under fire when a state
review group's report, released in January 1983.
criticized her operation of the ooard, citing
"extravagance," and recommended her resignation
to resolve "program management problems"
between the board and the former G-J-M Comm unity
Mental Health Center.
Mrs. Plummer refused to resign , and after several
months , the board voted to dismiss her after

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By The Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Jury selection and a visit to
former Community Mental Health facilities in
Jackson are expected to dominate the first day of the
trial of Maxine Plummer Monday in Logan .
The former executive director of the Galiia·
Jackson-Meigs 648 Mental Health Board is charged
with theft In office and for a llegedly using her office to
influence a public contract.
Those charges were leveled against Mrs. Plummer
last December, three months after the 648 board
voted to dismiss her from the position she had held
since 1971.
The grand jury indictment a lleged Mrs. Plummer
authorized pay vouchers to her son, Jeffrey, from
January 19'78 until February 1900 for work "not
performed." The second indictment alleges that she

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Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, June 17, 1984

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Along the River ............... IH8
Business ........................... A-3
Deaths ............................. A-G
Edllorlals ......................... A·2
Fann ............................... C-8
Sports . "".""" ...... """ " .. C-1·5

Ohio weather:
•
warm arr,
scattered showers
--Page A-4--

Plummer trial set to begin Monday

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James J, Kilpatrick discusses the push for a
national drinking age-Page A-2

v.l. 19 No. 19

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and 21 and will cost $40.
The older chlldren'sciass is from
1-4 p.m. June 19,21 and28. The cost is

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lor qualified
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U:pJilghhlcl 19&amp;&amp;

The Junior League Golf League
will meet Monday for its initial
session a t 1 p.m. at theJaymarGcif'
Course.
The program is open to youngs·
ters from nine through 17. Free
golfing instruction will be provided.

Take the path
of lease
resistance.

tournament tab inside today

A UMW official says he welcomes women wanting
to join in running the union-Page D-1

Village Pharmacy

r~fl~gh~t~,~they=~u~it~lm~a=te=ly~sh=ot~hlm=:f:ou:r:__gr::_:an::ge~.----------~ning~:n:um:be~r~w:as~7886:~·

Golf meeting

Although the classes are sc he·
duied for the office in Gallipolis, if
e noug h c hildren pre-register
classes may be held in Pomeroy ,
said Barbara Kemper of the schwl.
'!bose interested may contact the
business office in Pomeroy or
Gallipolis. Oasses are limited to 10
to 12 students.

It's Coming To

CLEVELAND &lt;API The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Loitery's dally
game, ''TheNumber,"wasOO.
In the "Pick 4" game. played
Monday through Friday, the win-

Computer classes available
GradP school children will have
the opportunity to learn aoout
C'O mputers from the Gallipolis
Business College.
1\vo separa te classes will be held.
for children m grades 1-4 and for
those in grades :i-8.
ThP classes will introduce the
students to the computer and the
baste commanrls. ThP older students will bP taught mathematica l
equations to u.se on I hi&gt; computer.
The class for the primary grades
will be held 9 a.m. -12: ~p.m . June 19

Diles

Incident as a factor in Smith' sdeath.

VE1'ERAN ON THE JOB- Tom Harris, a Vietnam-€ra veteran, is the

t t':=be=

employed In GaDlaCowtty undertheEmergencyVete....,..Job
Act. Aulo Trim Center, GaDlpoils, will provide training lor
11an1s
a two-year period, nine month&lt;; ol which the employer wlli
receive a l!O pereent reimbursement on wages paid tAl Harris.

GALLIPOLIS The first
Vietnam-era vetera n to be employed in Galiia County under :he
Emergency Veterans' Job Trai m ng
Act started work last week.
Tom Harris. who served a, a
Marine from 1960 t hrough 1' JJ&gt;o.
began his new job with Auto Trim
Center in Gallipolis on Monday .
Established in 1~. the act
provides funds for the tra ining of
Korean Conflict a nd Vietnam-era
veterans.
During the training period. normally six to nine months. the
employer receives a 50 percent cash
reimbursement on wages paid to the
e ligible veteran- up to a maximum
of $10.000.
Harris says he was unemployed
for nearly a year prior to his
participation in the veterans' program . He worked as a foreman with
ACF Industries in Huntington,
W.Va ., unttill!llU , when he was laid
off.
He then was employed with the C
&amp; M Machin&lt;' shop in Piketon. but
was injured in an indu strial accident. After nearly a year layoff as a
result of that accident. he moved to
Sarasota, Fla ., where he worked as
a roofer. He retu rned to the GaUia
County area after being laid off from
tllat job.
Bureau of Labor Statis tics prove
that in periods of high unemployment, the jobless rate among
veterans remains far aoove that of
the general popu Ia lion.
During a recession , they tend to be
laid off first ; and, their layoffs
endure longer into the recovery
period.
Those layoffs arc primar ily due to
a lack of seniority. Their years of
active duty delay entry into the
clvlilan job market ands trip them of
the years of seniority gained by their
contemporaries.
The federal program under
Harris is being trained was initiated
out of a concern over that disparity
between veteran and non-veteran
unemployment ra tes.
In his current on-the-job setting.

Harris is tra ining lor work with
upholstery, body repair and au10
trim.
"The job market is pretty tou gh, "
he savs. " it seems to be getting
bettor. but it's still tough.
"Wit h all t he veterans I krowwho
are unPmployed," he adds, "I hope a
lot of rhem take advantage of this
program ... it provides training you
can take l!.ith you anywhere,"
Harris adds.
For an employer to take ad van ·
!age of the funding they need only
have a training program approved
by the Veterans Administration.
Once the program is a pproved the
employer can hire at a ny time.
Because funds are availa ble on a
first -come, first -serve basis, if an
employer anticipates hiring at a
later date, they should apply for
approval as soon as possible.
(Continued on page A-4)

Veterans registered
with local OBES
Gallia fAlllnty
Korean Conflict• ...... ............ 40
Vietnam-era•• ................... 429
Meigs County
Korean Conflict ................ N/ A
Vietnam-era ........ .... ........ . 180
•&amp;-Zl-50 through 1·31·55
"1!-i&gt;-64 through !i-7·75
VETS REGL'lTERED WITif

OBE"l - Acconllng to Tom
mute, veterans employment
representative for the GalliaMeigs area, there were &amp;19
Vielnam-€ra and Korean veterans registered with the Ohio
Bw-eau ol Employment Services
in both counties as of April of this
year. statistics show that neart,y
hall of all vete....,.. registered
"ith the local OBES senoed in the
two combat eras addressed by
the program. 1lle number of
· Korean Conflict veterans regl.,.
tered in Meigs County was
unavailable.

CourL upholds Robinson manslaughter conviction
ByKEVINKEUY
'11me!I-Ser&amp;lnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- On a split vote,
the Fourth District Courl of Appeals
has upheld a voluntary manslaugh·
ter conviction In Galila County
Common Pleas Courl.
Appeals Judges Homer E . "Pete"
Abele and EarlE. Stephenson voted
to let stand the ronv1ctlon o!Russell
Robinson, Rt. 1, Cheshire. Judge
Lawrence Grey dissented.
The 26-year-old Robinson was
found gullty ot tbe charge, reduced
from an original indictment of
munler, on AprU 8, 1982, following a
three-ilay trial.

He was cllarged In the shooting
death o1 Paul E. Spencer, 24, Rt. 1,
CheiJidte, on Jan. 27, 1982, during an
.argument between themselves at a

mobile horne on Buiaville-Addison
Road.
Robinson was sentenced to six to
25 years in the Mansfield R.eforma ·
tory by Judge Richard C. Roderick .
Galilpo)4 attorney Ronald R.
Calhoun, who represented Robin·
son, cited eight errors "Intentionally
conunltted by the state which had
the cumulative effect of creating an
unfair trial tor the defendant. "
All eight objections raised by
Calhoun were rejected by Abele and
Stephenson, while Grey supported
two of CalhOUn's contentions.
Specifically, the objections were:
- That Robinson's character was
damaged when prosecution witness
Gary Wolfe, an lnvestJgator for the
Meigs OJunty Sherltt's Depart· .
ment, said Robinson was oot a

"' truthful" person.
-Testimony by Clarence Hay·
man, the victim 's stepfather, was
" Irrelevant" and "prejudicial" be·
cause Hayman testified RDbinSOn
once produ~ a handgun to
Hayman and said hP krew how to
use it and "would use It If
necessary."
-Statements from arresting of·
fleers about Robinson confessing to
shooting Spencer when Robinson
had already admitted the deed.
- Not allowing defense counsel to
view a report by Bureau of Criminal
Investigation Agent Herman Henry
that Henry used in testimony.
- Allowing Prosecutor Joseph L.
Cain 1o tell jurors they were "part of
the chain In the prosecution of
cr1m1nals.',

-Presenting voluntary mansia ughter as a lesser c harge fo r the
jury's consideration.
-Failure of the court to instruct
the jury tha t Robinson had a r ight to
aim a handgun a t the victim when
Spencer approached Robinson with
a knife.
-Failure of the court not to find
for Robinson because of the abovementioned errors.
Abele and Stephenson said they
found no prejudicial elements in
either Wolfe's or Hayman's testlm·
ony or in those of the officers who
testified to Robinson's admission of
shooting Spencer. The judges ruled
tllat Henry did not use the repori
during testimony, but used It several
days before offering testimony.
(Continued on page A-4)

By The Associated Press
The Labor Department sa id
inflation held steady in May, with
food costs plunging at the steepest
rate in nearly two years and overall
wholesale prices frozen in place for a
second straight month.
In fact, overall prices actua lly
declined very slightly, officials said.
But the change was too small to
show up in the rounded-off official
figul'f's released in thedepartrnent' s
Producer Price Index for finished
goods.
Slow or no inflation could indicate
an economic slowdown since producers find it difficult to raise prices
when demand for goods slackens,
analysts said.
The Federal Reserve Board
reported that industria l produ ction
rose just 0.4 percent in May, the
smallest gain since last November.
The reports were hailed by the
Reagan administration and private
analysts as signs the recovery was
cooling to a more moderate pace.
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said tha t taken together.
the reports "provide a double shot of
confidence tha t the economy is not
overheating ."
"The PP1 is the temperatur·e
ga uge" for the economy. Dcnald
Ra tajC"Lak, directorofGeorgia Sta te
University's Economic Forecasting
Project, said of the Producer Price
Index . "The repons show the
economy is moving forwa rd but not
overheating ."
Amid

renewed

fears

economic s lowdown,

of

an

the stock

m arket ended its worst W€'€k in

more than four years with a broad
decline that depressed the Dew
Jones industrial average to a
15-month low.
The Dow Jones average of ~

~
~
111984

196!= 100
Seasonally Ad1us!ed F1~ures

SotUCfi ~ ~~ deral Resetvt~ Board

IND liSTRI!I L

PRODLf ·

TION - Production in the
nation 's factories and mines
roSI' just OA percent In Ma)·, the
smallest gain sin{·e No\'ember,

the Federal Reserve Board
reported Friday. Th&lt;• overall
May incrca...w, foUowing a 1.1
percent ad\'an~e in April. was
the smallf&gt;St sinct&gt; th~· 0.2 pen.·pnt
gain of ~"•;O,' t"mber. (AP

Laserphoto ).
in dustrial issues fell10.71 to l.ffiil.!()
on Friday. its lowest close s ince II
finished at ].(81.40 on Feb. 22. 1983.
For the week the widely watched
average was down 44.35 points- its
biggest weekly loss s ince it dropped
58.62 points Oct. 8-12. 1979, when the
Federal Reserve announced a
major shifl in is mon&lt;:'lan policy.
Friday's stock market drop came
as two governmPnt repons indi ca ted' that thP na tion's rf'd ·hol
economy was moUng off.

Drop in corporate tax
confuses state officials
By ROBERT E. Mil J ,ER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP) - It may
take several months for s ta te
officials to learn the cause of an
ex]li!Cted S143.1 million, or 19
percent. drop in corporAte tax
revenues during the fiscal year
ending June~. a state official says.
Deputy Tax Commissioner RI chard Levin and others said Friday
tha t the state's lag behind the
national economic rcrovery is one
factor.
But he also speculated that
companies are using tax credits
they gained from recession-rela ted
losses and said that Ohio's corpora·
lions recently received some adjustments in their tax liabilities.
Both Levin and Budget Director
Cristina Sale said the reasons were
oot clear except that Ohio, which
still has an unemployment rate of
10.2 percent compared with 7.4
percent nationally, simply has not
reaped the advantages of the
national recovery tllat most other
states have.
Levin pointed out that many
companies, which are a llowed to
pay their taxes In three payments-

in January, Mar·ch . and Ma~- - still
are sending in monp~·. ··.Junr i ~ a big

C'O llection mon th." he sa id . adding
that in ali, thrdrparrrncnt procrsscs
about100,00l corporate mums.
He said somf' corpora tion.or;, f'spcclally those in such indu"ries as
auto and steel. may ix' claiming
credits accrued by them in business
losses during the recent r('('('ssion.
"They can carry losses forw ard for
up to five year s." Levin said .
He also sa id that some mmpaniPS
may lx&gt; taking advantag&lt;• of
industrial tax breaks the statp
provides on the purchase of new
equlpment and machinery.
But Douglas Trail, spokesma n for
Ute Ohio Manufacturers Association , said he thinks the drop in
collections can be attributed aimost
entirely to the sluggishness of the
state's economy.
"I think the simple answer is that
they (state officials) just overesti·
mated. The economy in Ohio hasn't
snapped back as we a ll hoped it
would ," he said.
Trail said "I don't mean that as
pessimism. Our peopll' are optimistic . We still expect the times to get
better."

�~

""-

..

- ......

-

)
,

Comment

June 17, 1984

and perspective

The Sunday Ti,...Sentinel
Page-A-2
June 17, 1984

Stick of federal aid ______Ja_m:-:-es_J-:-.K:--il-:-pa-tr::---:ick.
Alb,

A Dlvlslon of

~m:9

~15

825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio
t 61f) 446-2342

Ill Coon St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1614) 992-21:111

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publi shPr
HOBART WILSON JR

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

E xecutive Editor

A MEMBER ul 'Ilw A..o;!I;OCiiltt'd Pn-s..". lnland DaDy Pre!is .-\."isoelaUon and tiM&gt;

t\nwrican

New~

Pub&amp;hers .-\..'tiOC I&amp;Uon.

lEITERS OF OPINION an&gt; wekomed. tht' y ~JUkl. ht&gt; I ~ thun 300woni'l lonli{. All
Wtten an&gt; !mhjt"Ctlo t"dltlng and must t.. !Mgnl"d with name, lldclreiN and telephone nun...
tHT . No Wl!llgned letters wiD be publlstwd.I.Rtten; AAould be ln good ta.'lte. addrftt.Singlssues. oot personalities.

WASHINGTON -The House of
Representatives last week approved a piece of legislation
intended to curb the evil of drunk
driving. The action came by a lusty
voice vote on an amendment to the
Surface Transportation Act of 1984.
If the story ended at that point.
perhaps everyone could applaud.
Who doesn't wan t to curb the evil of
drunk driving?
But stick around . The amendment would seek to establish a
uniform minimum age across the
nation for tbe purchase of alcoholic
tx&gt;verages . This wou ld tx&gt; accomplished by denying federal highway
aid to any state that failed or
refused to raise its legal drinking

~ON\E

age to 21. Onceagaln we witness tbe
truth of tbe maxim that federal aid
is inseparable from fedPral control.
Mind you. the arguments heand
on the floor of the House are
persuasive arguments. According
to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Adminlstratlon, drivers tx&gt;·
tween 18 and 20 arc twice as likely
as older drivers to tx&gt; Involved in
accidents related to alcohoL These
young people constitute only eight
percent of all drivers and are
responsible for only six percent of
miles driven, but they account for
17 percent of all drunk-driving
accidents. Last year about 4,CXXJ
teenagers died in collisions in which

Of US Ali?E QUITE CONCER~E~

O'IE~ YOUR FAILURE TO RECALL ANY~ING

Conciliatory or
tough or both?
When President Reagan speaks about the Soviet U nion, some observers
have a hard time figuring ou t whether he's 11)1ng to tx&gt; conciliatory, tough,
or both .
During his n&gt;eent trip to Europe, for example, the president made
speeches that seemed designed to reassure European allies who are jittery
about the Increasingly hostlle state of U.S.-Soviet relations. But the
speeches also contained some harsh r hetoric.
When he viSited the beaches of Normandy, France, on June 6, the 40th
anniversary of Dday, the president called for reconciliation with the Soviet
Union "so, together. we can lessen the risks of war, now and forever."
But, just three paragraphs earlier, he had gone out of his way to criticize
Moscow, saylng that nearly 40years after World War II, Soviet troops were
still ln Europe "uninvited. unwanted, unyielding .. . " while mentioning in
passing that the Soviets lost W million lives in that war.
He also urged Moscow to return to the nuclear arms bargaining table,
but complained tha t the Soviets "appear to have chosen to withdraw , and
to try to ac hieve their objective through propaganda, rather than
negot iations. "
While this may appear to be a contrad ictory approach, Richard Burt,
assistant secretary of state for European affairs, says it's simply part of
the administration's Soviet policy in which the desire to renew U.S.-Soviet
dialogue is just one component.
Burt said he doesn't tx&gt;lleve Reagan's harsh words affect the Kremlin,
partly because Moscow Itself is engaged in an "unremittlng propaganda
campaign ."
"That doesn't bother us," he said. "Weare big boys. We understand what
they are doing."
And Burt acknowledges that one of the reasons for Reagan's speeches in
Europe was to calm the fears of the allies.
He sald there was "much less understanding ln Europe about the policies
of Ronald Reagan than In the United States." so the trip gave him a chance
to show that he's " not sabre-rattier" or the "trigger-happy warmonger"
portrayed by some critics.
As for the So\1ets, Burt said, "I don't think they are going to be affected
by rhetoric."
The White House official said Reagan was not sure that the Soviets
"understand that we do not have aggressive Intentions toward them. He
feels there is a misapprehension on their pari." And Reagan would like to
convince them otherwise, but not at a U .S.-Soviet sununit.
"We would like to get that through to them, but that's not sufficient
reason for going to a summit," the official sa id.

a

Letter to the editor
Two sides to the issue
l'tlis i ~ an open letter to the vf:"'ry
loving and wrll -m ra ning folks \\'ho
df'cided to picket my sf'minar a nd
who a lso wrote a very ill -informed
Jolter to thr Sentinel on June 4. 19ll4.
I cou ld mak&lt;' this a v&lt;'ry long and
lrn~hy book, quoting many famou s
proplP who support and study what
1 do. Then you could make a Ji st of
quota tions from thos&lt;' who tx&gt;lieve
as you do. This discussion could go
on forev&lt;'r but the only thing w~
would really prow is that there are
two sidE'S to this issuP
On on{' side. your side. you
tx&gt;li&lt;'ve that the people of this
corilmunit y are so ignorant that
thf'y cannot makr valid decisions
on their own therefore you will
cC'nsor what thPy can hPar .
On the other side, mv side, 1 state
thar I respect this community and
it s · peop le. I lov~ sharing and
learning about llE'\4" things . r want 10
give pecple all of the information
thf'y possib J ~ · v.:ant so tha t they can
mak e educatrd. informed
decjsions.
When I approached all of you on
the: picket li ne I found your
pPrspective about what I was doing
to be very narrow but at the same
time you expressed a deep concern
for your communit y . During our
conversation. you condemned Ca tholics. Mormons. Witnesses, gen.,alogist s. Lutherans. magicians,
geneticists. psychologists. psyrhia trists, Niggers tyour word I. homosexuals and Jews. Don't these
categories of peoplE' also mak&lt;'-up
your community?
1 don't mind that you refused to
listrn to my explanation. that Is
your prlv1lege. Besides. my work
stands strongly on Its own merit.
My point ls, How can you put
yourself In the position to declde
what others can know ?
Sow can you declde that what I
do .Is against your religion If you
have no clear understanding of
what I do and are not Interested In
finding out anything about m y
"""arch or my teaching. All or the
quotes you litx&gt;rally espoused to the
Sentinel have absolutely nothing to
do with my work. That didn't

mattrr to ~' OU. You assumed. and
you ar tC'd . Not onf' of vour
mPmbC'rs had r\'rn bothPrC'd to
contact me. talk to me or ask onr
question about m~' work . You
condemned me without facts. You
pkkrtE'd without J)C'rmission. yf't
vou stated that the Mayor gave you
authoritv to b(&gt; on thC' sidC'walk . I s
that a li P? Are liPs Christian? You
delilx•ratP ly cn•atPd a false impression of what I am and what I
r{'pi"C'SPnt . Did it occur to you to
comr to thf' sourcp to c h~k it out
first" You did it ali in the name of
God. so you think that makl's it all
right. People far grPater tha n I,
have been persecuted bv well meaning dC'fenders of the public
int erest. The greatest. I tx&gt;lieve.
was Jesus. so I'm in extremely good
company·.
Y ou stated that your communit y
could not be blessed with the likes of
what I hav&lt;' to offer in its midst. I
suggPst that a community cannot
be blessed unless all of its people
arC' respected a s inteU igent human
belngs: capable ot kno"1ng th&lt;'
difference tx&gt;twE'(ln va lid information and pra ttle. If w hat I have to
offer Is not valid, it will taU by the
wayside and you have not hing to
fear. If It Is real, you have a great
deal to gain. I only ask that you tx&gt;
confident enough in your own
tx&gt;liefs that you don't need to tear
down somC'One else to makeyourselves feel tx&gt;tter.
If people can share Ideas. If
people can communlcat&lt;' through
honesty and a genuln" love of
sharing, then our world would
experience a greater harmony. If
we shut away anything not like
ourselves, then we have lost our
courage to work toward a better
world. It Is only through sharing all
that we are, all that we know and all
that we can be, that any good can
come from our tx&gt;lng created a
llvlng, creative, thinking human
race.
Sherry Edwards
Director
Esoteric Unlimited
Foundation
Albany, Ohio 45710

ABOUT TH~~~~IEFING MAlmAL,

c:::::__

the use of alcohol figured ; some of
those 4,00J could have been the
victims of grown-up drunks, but ln
most instances the teenagers them selves were responsible. Sponsors
of the age-21 amendment believe It
would save 1,250 lives annually.
Agains t those &lt;'Onslderations It
may seem a feeblP response to ralse
the tattered old banner of federal ism. I raise it anyhow. The doctrine
of federalism is one of the founda ·
tion stones on which our whole
structure of government rests. This
Is the doctrine, embedded In the
lOth Amendment . which teaches us
the value of diversity in political
experiment. Those political powers

IT APPEARS THIS t'EBA"Te:GATE'
~lNG IS NOT GOING "TT GO
AWA'( WITHOUT A fULL

II'NESTIGATION ...

1

'YOU I&lt;NOW WI-IAT THEY S'AY-THOSE
WHO FO~G€.1 THE LESSONS OF

THE PA~T A!&lt;:E DESiiNEt&gt; TO
REPEAl TI-\!;N\. • ·
~-~)lll

~eMEMSER HOW

WA"TEI&lt;GAIE

'5iA~E17 MUCH 11-\E SAME WAY ?

·c:

not delegated to the national
government by the Constitution,
nor prohibited by the Constitution to
the states, are reserved to the states
respectively - or to the people at
large.
Laws r elating to motor vehicles
and highways historically have
been among the fields of leg1slatlon
"reserved to tbe states respectively." By the same token. especially since the 21st amendment of
1933, laws relating to the use of
intoxicating liquors have been
wholly within the legislative powers
of the states.
My objection Is to the whole
insldlous business of conditioning
"federal aid" to theprecisetermsof
federal law. For one example, If the
sta tes do not comply with a
maximum speed limit of 55 miles
per hour, they stand to lose flve
percent of their federal ald. A
55-mile limit probably makes sense
on two-lane roads in congested
areas; it makes no sense on
superhighwa ys ln the West. The
states are heavily dependent upon
federal aid; about one-fourth of all
funds spent on highways in 1983
came from federal sources. Who
pays the piper, says the proverb,
ca lls the tune.
We see the stick of federal control
in ald to ed ucation. both at the
elementary and se&lt;'ondary level
and in the colleges as well. This was
the btg issue in FPbruary in the
Supreme Court's decision in the
case of Grove City College In
Pennsylvania. Th&lt;' court refused to
go along with th~ most extreme
advocates of federal control. Now a
move is underway in Congress to
deny federa l aid to any institution.
publie or privatP . that falls to

f'limina lf' the last vpstige of racial
or sr xual lmbalancl' in every one of
its program,;,; .

Killing goes on _________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_s'a_n
WASH1NGTO:'-J - The tumul t
and the shouting have died in El
Salvador. Now that the election is
over. the bi g-name journalists and
congressmen have departed. Onlv
th~ killing goes on .
A ft er its momC'nt in thr media
spotlight. E l Salvador has r!'turnf'd
to norm al. And "norma l" in El
Sa lvador is a conr1ition that most
AmPricans t'xJ)l•ril'nCP on!~' in thC'ir
wildest ni gh tmarl::'s.
My roving corTl•spondPnt, J on
LPE' Anderson. is one of the hand ful
of rf'{Xlrters who ha V(' st't'n what l ifp
is r!'a ltv Ilk~ for the wretched
p!'Ople of El Sa lvador since thl'
nf'wl y c\('Cted pn•sident. JosP Na{Xl·
IC'On DuartC"'. returned from hi s
pilg-rimagr to Washingt on.
El Sal vador is &lt;.1 dre;:u:.:. p&lt;.~infu l l\
impov C'rishrd pif'Cf' o f e&gt;arth .
abu sC'd h~· m ~ n &lt;.~ nd naturf' .
Monsoon-likC' downpours w ash
awa~ · 1hf' smokf' from the burning
fif'ld s. Thf' firrs arc not startPd b\·
rc b&lt;'ls rarTy.•ing out srorr hC'd -f'a rth

a!lacks - thi s is the pmsants '
traditional way of preparing the ir
fi elds for planting.
The land is bedeviil'&lt;l bv uppr es·
sive humidity and pelting rains. But
the moisture that enrichps the fields
also supports a n environmen t for
disea se. Even in the best of times.
life is harsh and oppressive. But
these are the worst of times. In a
land a I ready inured to calam it y. thr
civil war has brought a new horror
almost beyond endurance .
For many. life is killing . and
df'ath comes early . On thf' wa.v to
the tx&gt;ach near San Salvador, my
associate spotted a body by the
roadside. the badl y disfigured
r&lt;'mains of a young man. It looked
as if a machete had cut him down on&lt;' m ore death sq uad v ictim .
Anderson inq uired the next day at
the small town where the body had
been taken and l~arned that the
dead rna n had beC'n a t raffle
~Kciclrnt victim . That's w hat thl'

mavor and the polict&gt; chief said .
There had been no autopsy.
In the slum where the dead man
had lived, his wife, mother. brolhPr
and mist ress were engaged in a
macabre mourning ritual. No
authorities had bothered to talk to
the family . The presence of my
associate - a tall, blond, Spanishspeak ing Yankee - touched off a
fight tx&gt;twcen the widow and the
mist ress. He found himself medial ·
ing a dispute tx&gt;tween the two
women. who apparently sought to
get their point across to the first
outside to show up. They tx&gt;gan
biting, klcking and pulling each
other's hair. Whil&lt;' the neighbors
watched dispassionately. the rcluc
tant mediator learned what had
ca used the rucku s. The wldow
thought the mistress had tried to
cheat her out of the dead man 's
insurance.
So the day after the man had b\!f'n
killed, the women were fighting

viriously over his pitiful legacy. The
money would support whichever
woman won the right to the
insurancP.
Beyond t h~ relatively safe environs of the capi tal city. the reality of
El Salvador takes over quickly. An
hour east of the capital, just off the
Pan American highway, lies a
ghost town: T&lt;&gt;nancingo. When It
fell to thC' leftist rebels last fall, the
Salvadoran air force bombed It
liierally back to the stone age.
The o nce -picturesque town
sq uare is now a jung le of rubble.
hou sehold effects and fastsprouting weeds. Dismembered
plaster saints share the area
around th&lt;' bullet -pocked church
with cans of gasoline emblazoned
with the Stars and Str ipes and the
message, "A gift from the people of
thr United Stales ." Less than a year
ago, Tcnancingo was a model of
what U. S. aid could do to reclaim a
vlllag£' from the war zonr

Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolit, Ohi-'oint Pleasant, W. Va.

.----Local Briefs:---...
Cornett promoted to vice president
GALLIPOLIS - Appointment of John Cornett, president of
Galllpolis Parts Warehouse, as a vice president of Parts Inc., the
Memphis, Tenn.-based parent corporation of GPW.
The announcement was made by Jim Deering, Parts Inc.
president.
The rapidly growing distribution and store group now lncludes
centers in Gallipolis, Columbus and Nitro, W.Va., In addition to 52
Parts Plus stores in Ohio, West Vlrglnla and Kentucky.
In his new capacity, Cornett assumes greater responsibilty and
Involvement In setting Parts Inc. coporate goals.

Firms file incorporation papers
GALLIPOLIS - Three firms in Gallia County and one ln Meigs
County have IDed Incorporation papers with Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown· s office .
In Gallia, the ftrrns were B lack 's Advisory Services, Gallipolis,
with Bill A. Black, 529 Jackson Pike, as agent and Incorporator;
Contractural Anesthesia Services, Gall ipolis, lncoporated by Lynda
Fraley, with Warren F . Sheets, 19 Locust St., as agent; and
Wholesale Meats, Gallipolis, with Larry D. Pyles listed as
incorpora tor and David T. Evans, 417 Second Ave., as agent.
The Meigs business Incorporating Is Remington Inn, Pomeroy.
Incorporators are William C. Quickel, Hertx&gt;rt Carson and Shirley A.
QuickeL Shirley Quickel, 126 Main St .. Is agent.

Foodland stores awarded
MILTON, W.Va.- Cowen Foodland, owned by Marshall Grizzell,
won store of the year In Class A competition at the recent Foodland

store seminar.
Oak Hill Foodland, owned by Elliott Meadows, won the Class AA
competition. Outstanding retailer of the year awards went to Black's
Foodland, co-owned by Fred Black Sr. and Fred Black Jr, for a
single store. and to Shamrock and Smithers Foodlands, owned by
Jim Kelly, for the multiple store.

Occupational therapy added
PORTSMOUTH- Occupational therapy assisting technology has
been added to the curriculum for associ ate degrees at Sha"nee State
College.
The program Is tlle first of its kind in the area and iS designed to
meet the communlty's needs, based on a recent survey.
The survey, which studied seven Ohio counties, three in Kentucky
and one in West Virginia, and indicated at the timet hat occupational
therapists with associate degrees could work under a consultant.
Tom Foti, &gt;ice president of technical programs at the college,
predicted a numtx&gt;r of students would sign up for tile new program
when it begins operatlng ln fall quarter.

FATHER LIKE MYSELF COU LD
BELIEVE HE COULD MAKE A
BAG OF BONES LIKE YOU I NTO
A MARINE. DOYOULOVEME""
" Ypssir."
"GOOD . NOW HIT THE DECK
AND START DOING THE
PCSHCPS."
ll e stood over me. 1 collapsed
after 10.
" 1 THOUGHT YOC LOVED
ME." he shouted.
" 1 do. sir."
"HOW CAN YOU SAY YOU
LOVE ME WHEN YOU WON'T
GRANT ME A UTILE FAVOR
LIK E DOING oO PUSHUPS
IVHF.N I ASK YOU TO?"
" 1 don't know. sir," I mumbled
wilh my hf'ad ln thf' dirt.
"GET BACK I N LINE." hP said
in dtsgust.
It wasn't lh&lt;' first tim&lt;' I
disappointed him. It seems every
day I did something to upset our
father -son relatlonshlp. I wanted to
please him In th" worst way. but I
didn't know how. When 1 made my
bed In the morning. he tore it up and
threv. the sheets and blankets on
the fioor. When I tal ked in ranks he
made me scrub the head with my
toothbrush. And when he didn't like
the way I crawled on my stomach ln
the mud he made me march with a
full pack and rlfle around the
barracks all nlght long. Every time
he punished me for the slightest
Infraction he asked If I still loved
him, and I always sald I did.
On a 20-mlle hike we were given
one ca nteen of water to last us the
entire trip. I drank mine after 10
miles. Bonandl was very sympa·
thetlc and told me If he wasn't my
father he would g1ve me more. But
he loved me too much, and he would
rather have me faint than spoll me.
Then he kicked me In the pants.

"NOW GET MOVING. OR ELSE
I'LL KICK YOUR BUTT FOR
TilE NEXT 10 MILES."
&amp;mardi wok&lt;' me in the morning
and put me to bed at night. Th"n he
would inspect my rifle and m ake
me get ou t of bed and clean it again .
And so il went. The 10 \\'f'f'ks
sE'Cmed like 10 years tx&gt;cause
Ronardi neve-r left my side. Then

Wf' said goodby&lt;'. 1 vowed 1 would
forget him as soon as I left Parris
Isla nd.
That was ~2 years ago. Despite
my vow. every Fathf'r 's Doy I SE'&lt;'m
to rememtx&gt;r him . And what Is
really weird is thai w hen !look back
on the role he played in my life. 1
really do love him.

ATHENS- A special career counseling program for prospective
adult students is underway until Aug. 24 at Ohio Unlversity.
The program will help " non-traditional" studen ts explor&lt;' their
specific talents and interests, and then identify appropriate
educational or career directions.
Major components of the program will tx&gt; handled by Counseling
and Psychological Services, with assistance from the OU admissions
office and Adult Learning Services. When appropriate. rcferralswUl
be made to other resource personnel on campus, such as placement
and financial aid counselors and faculty memtx&gt;rs.
For more information, contact Dr. Michael Hanck at 594-6001
during the day or 593-8995 evenlngs and WE'&lt;'kends.

L.,'JTW

.L..£.~
.
. . -·

GALLIPOLIS - Shareholders of
Ohio ValleyBankhavebeenad\1sed
In a letter from Chairman or the
Board Morris E. Haskins and
President James L. Dailey that the
June 15 quarterly dividend of 58
cents per share has been raised to60
cents per share.
This marks the eighth consecu .
tive year the bank has Increased its
dividend, bank officials said.
With a total of 175,000 shares
outstanding, this will mean a total

CHIMNEY CLEANJNG -

Ace Chlmoey Sweep Co. has recently

the near future.

Chimney sweep service opens
chimney
cleaned
there
a help
new
business in
Cheshire
that iscan

yo~eAcechimneysweep co

ACP ChimnPv SwPPn at367-7871.

started recently by Janet Thomas.
At the present time, the company is
specializing In cleaning and inspect Ing chimneys.
In the near future, Thomas said
the company hopes to move into
other aspects of chimney maintenance and building . Thomas said
the company will also be selling
stoves, Inserts and other wood and
coal burtng accessories.
Thomas said the company will
brush your chimney and removing
all soot. Inserts will be removed,
cleaned, Inspected and replaced.
Stoves will tx&gt; cleaned and
Inspected.
The company uses the August
West dust collecting system. Thomas said this system Is guaranteed
to keep furniture and carpeting
clean and dust free.
All chimneys should be cleaned at
least once a year to help _prevent
fires Thomas said. If wood Is used,
the chimney should be cleaned at
least twice a year and more often lf
there is a heavy buildup or soot
For more lnformation. contact

Area personnel file

$416,500.
Since most of OVB's 623 shareholders live In the area, a great
portion oft his money will tx&gt; spent or
Invested locally, officials said.
OVB management also informed
its shareholders that the bank
remains In strong financial condi·
tlon, with healthy reserves in its
capital account.

CarlHorlcy

Leonard promotedby C&amp;SOE
COLUMBUS - Lon niP Leon ard
has bf&gt;en appoi nted Gallipolis area
manager of Columbus &amp; Southern

Columbus
Employ=s asst·gned to aenC'ra l
' ' ·b·1·
· ·
'
ill "
td·
off tce
responst 1 ltles w
prnv e
functional direction to the divisions.
which wt'll ha e d ' t spo 'b'l
·v
tree re
nst t ·
ity for customPr service activiti&lt;'S
Named to the genorai offt'c&lt;' T&amp;D
posts also eff~ 11·ve' Julv 2 arfl'
•
c•
.
•
'·
R h~ 1 E
W'h'tl
1 a tc h t0 Con Oud
·

Ohio E lectric Co.
The appointment. announced b\.•
AthC'ns Division Manager John R.
Wc•eks, is part of thE' second mat' or
Phase of an int ernal rrorga nlzation
of that compan'. ·.
•

- Wi lliam Follrod to division
m eter SUJX'rvisor.
- Carl Horky to division project
&amp; records coordinator. Horky, who
livps in Middleport. has bf&gt;en with
C&amp;SOE for 2'i years.
The At hens division serves customers In 10 southea st ern Ohio
coun t ies ond has offices In Athens.
Ga ll ipolis and W~llston.
Also as part of the second phase of
rPorganization. five employees
w err named to new posts in the
gC'neral office transmission and
distribu t ion departme nt in

A TOTALLY NEW DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

GALLIPOLIS
Patricia
Sprousc has joined the st aff of
Eva's Beauty Sa lon and Boutique, 2TI Second Ave.
A graduate of Buckeye Hills
Career Cent er. she has r&lt;'Ceived
a distlnction awand.
She can b(&gt; contacted
446-1209 for an appointment.

at

GALLIPOLIS - Gregory Michael Boone, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Boone, 114 Matx&gt;lene Drive,

Gregory M. Boone
deg-ree frum Wright State University School of Medicine during rf'Cent g-raduation cen•m onics in Davton .
A 1976 g-raduate of Galli a
Academy High School, Boone
rf'CC'ivcd his bachelor' s degree
frum Ohio Universit.v in 1981.
Boone will be pursuing a
residenc_v tralnlng program 1n
general surgery at Mount Carm el Medical CPnter. Columbus,
where hP resides with hi s wife.
the fmmer Kimtx&gt;rlv Henderson, and their son. Brian.

Mana~:Pr. r~~r~ec::e~t·v~ed~h~is~d~oc~t~o~ro~f~m~edi~·c~i~ne~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

struct
ion &amp;R.Maintenance
- John
Sandp rs to Engim'lf&gt;rin g Manager.
-Jon R. Holland toCommunications Superintendent.
- Gerald F . Condrea:v to M('ter
Superintendent.
J ohn C Wernf'r to Relay
Superin tendent.
C&amp;SOE's new general officedivision organization is designed to
be mar&lt;' compatible with th&lt;'
organiza ti on of othPr AmPrican
Electric Power affiliated compan ies. but recognizes the unique
char acteristics of the C&amp;SOF.

~""~~

CUSTOM
~\"-"~¢ FRAMING
C.~'&gt;:::&gt;\ \~~ AT REASONABLE PRICES
~t~~" TAWNEY STUDIOS
424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. OH .

WE STOCK NON-CLARE GLASS
AND FOME-COR BACKING

~~s~ys~t~em~·~;~~~~=;~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;I-I

was

In 1983 In 1985. he said. this figure Is
likely to increase to 1U7.4 percent.
Ohio's unemployment rate Is ·
likely to avera ge 10.3 percent this
year and 10 percent nf'xt year
compart'd to 12.6 percent In 1983.
The nationwide jobless r ate can tx&gt;
expected to average 7.5 percent in
19&amp;1 , compar ed to 9.6 percent In
19831. and 7.3 percent in 1985.
Disposable t after tax 1 income
per household in Ohio should
overage $3),500 in 1984, up 4.9
percent trom lost year. after
adjustin g for inflation. Carlson
said . In 1~83. aver age disposable
incom~ per household in Ohio is
likely to increa se 1.1 percent , after
adju sting for inflation , to $33,00J,

dividend payout of $105,000 for the
second quarter, or a projected
dividend payout for the year of

Lonnie A. Leonard

- rvi
.J9hn
supe
sor .KlinP to di\'ision sta1ion

begun operating In Gallia County and is available lor cleaning and

ha ve gained v.1dcspread consumf'r
acceptance and are facilitatin g
many housing transactions. the
expected rate increases during the
months ahead clearly will put a
damper on home sales and con ·
struction activity ," he said.
The economist said the employ
ment situation in Ohio ls expected to
improve this year. The number of
people employed in Ohio is likely to
Increase to 4.2 million this year.
compared to 4.1 million in 19R1 In
1985, this figure can be ~xpceted to
lncreas&lt;&gt; to 4.3 mlllion.
For the entire country , Carlson
expects the numtx&gt;r of employed
persons to increase to 1(1).1 milli on
this year . compared to 100.8 milli on

Denise Cobb
GALLIPOLIS - Denise Cobb
has graduated from the Great
Eastern location of the Ohio
State College of Bartx&gt;r Styling.
Columbus.
Skilled as a haircu lti ng specialist. she is also able to
periorm all mod~rn haircuts
and styles . permanent waves.
hair coloring. facials and scalp
treatment s.
A 1982 graduate of Meigs High
School, Cobb is employed as a
bartx&gt;r stylist at Mil'hal'l &amp;
Friends Hair Care Center. 145
Jackson Pike.

SUJX'f'Vi SOI' .

GALLIPOLIS- If you need your

"He says he's a friend from the pub in
Ballyporeen, Mr. President. "

expected to grow 39.1 percent this
year to 42,500 units, the wport said .
In 1985, an 18.2 percent decrease to
34,800 unJts Is expected .
. By comparison, a 7.1 percent
mcrease ln starts Is expected for the
nation as a whole thiS year. and a
17.6 percent decrease IS forecast for
198.'i.
Dr. Jack Carlson, the National
Association of Realtors executive
officer and chief economist. attrlb·
uted much of the expected slowdown In existing-home sales and
housing starts In 1985 to continued
high mortgage lnterest rates, which
are not expected to fall this year or
next.
"While adjustable-rate mortgage
(ARMs), which carry lower lnllla l
Interest rates than fixed-rate loans,

OVB quarterly share
dividend hiked 2 cents

withholds
C&amp;SOE
forLeonard
2R yearshas
and been
curTE'ntly
thf'
PJsition of direc tor of opl'rations Calli poli s. He lives in Gallipolis.
\o\'wk s na nwd ~ve n other em pl oyf'f's to new posts in the At hens
d i \·ision. Pfff'Cti\·e July' 2. The
rmp loyE'C's and t hf'ir nC'w (X) Sts arP :
.Jam&lt;'s B. Hend erson of
N£'1sonvil !C' to division tra nsmission
&amp; distribution super i nt endent.
- Robet1 !JyNs of Jackson to
\Vrllston arra manager.
- Roger Butterbaugh to division
r ngineeting supervisor.
- Iva n Martin to division linf'

lnspectlonservice.OwnerJanetThomasexpecl•roexpandtheser\iceln

Berry's World

WASHINGTON Existinghome sales, Including single-family
homes. condominiums and cooperatlves in Ohio, are expected to
Increase 31.9 percent this year to
155,300 units and decrease 6.8
percent In 1985 to 144,800 units,
according to the National Assoclalion of Realtors' latest state-bystate "Outlook for the Economy
and Real Estate."
"This would compare with a
prt'dicted 8.1 percent increase In
1984 resale activity nationwide and
a 12.8 percent decrease forecast for
1985," said Toledo realtor Walter J .
DeGroft, Jr., president of the 32,000
member Ohio Association of
Realtors.
Housing starts in Ohlo can b(&gt;

FORT WORTH. Texas- Tandy Corp. said consolidated sales for
May were $nl.797.00J, an increase of 6 percent over May 1983 sales
of $189,685.00J.
Tandy's Radio Shack division recorded a 1 percmt gain to
$154,543,00J during May 1984 from $153.687.00J in May 1983.
This year's May sales of Radio Shack stores in existence more
than a year were PVen with sa les of the prior year.

Happy Father's Day______Ar_tB_u_ch_wa_ld
ThC'rC' a JT' fathers e:tnd fath('r·
fi gures. SomPiinws thr f&lt;.~tht-r ·
figu res pi a :.' more of a part in your
l ife than y our father. My father was
a good man and a kind man and a
funny m a n. My father -figure was
somethih g else again .
He wa s a Marine Corps Drill
Instruc tor named Petr &amp;mardi.
We first m et at Parris I sland al4
o'clock in the morning. I was still in
civilian clothes lined up with a
group of other you ng men who wC'rC'
thrown togC'ther by.· patriotism . duty
and the m ovif'. "To the Shores of
Tripi&gt;IL"
Bonandi stopped in front of m~.
" WHO IS YOUR FA THF.R" "
I told him. " ,Joseph Buchwald of
Queens. New York ...
"NO. HE ISN'T. 1 AM YOUR
FATHER . AND I WILL BE YOUR
FATHER FOR THE NEXT 10
WEEKS. IS THAT CLEAR?"
"Yes, father." 1 sa ld.
"NOT FATHER - SIR YOU
WILL CALL ME SIR AND ONLY
SIR DO YOU LOVE YOUR
FATHER?"
"Yesslr."
"THEN YOU'RE GOING TO
LOVE ME. BECAUSE I'M GOING
TO LOVE YOU LIKE NO FA ·
THER HAS EVER LOVED A SON .
IS THAT CLEAR?"
"Yesslr ."
"HOW MANY PUSHUPS DID
YOU FATHER HAVE YOU DO
EACH DAY?"
"None, str.'·
"WELL, I'M GOING TO MAKE
YOU DO 50 PUSHUPS A DAY . DO
YOU KNOW WHY?"
"No, sir."
"BECAUSE THAT IS WHAT A
FATHER IS FOR. TO MAKE HIS
SON INTO A MAN. YOU'RE A
MISERABLE EXCUSE FOR A
PHYSICAL SPEOMEN. ONLY A

Housing start increases expected in '84

Tandy Corp. sales relea-;ed

Career counseling program created

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

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A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Low
Temoeralures

WEATIIER FORECAST
The National Weather Service
predicts showers Sunday lor sections of castem Montana, Wyoming,
North and South Dakota. Showe,.; are al'" loreca.a for Tennessee,
Kentucky, and sections of West Virginia, Alabama, Mlssl.,.lppl,
North CaroUna, Virginia. ( AP Laserphoto ).

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY TifROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Wamt with a chance of showers and thunderstorms Monday and
Wednesday . Falr and warm Tuesday. Highs through the period from
the mld ~ to the lower 90s. Lows from between 65 and 70 Monday
and Tuesday to between 60 and 61i Wednesday.

Warm air, showers in forecast
By The Associated Press
Wamt alr ""th scattered showers and thunderstonns will be the
main weather features lor the next lew days.
National Weather Service radar indicated that some showers
fanned in Ohio after midnight, but those showers were scattered. No
rain was reported at any of the main weather stations. The chance of
rain or thunderstorms will increase Saturday night and Sunday.
High pressure that was providing some protection from rainy
weather is pulling away from Ohio toward the East Coast. Once the
high pressure moves off the East Coast, the air now will shift to the
southeast and south, allowing warmer, moist air into the state.
Temperatures a t 5 a.m. were mostly in the mld 50s to mid 60s.
However, it was as cool as 49 degrees at Youngstown. The warmest
spot at 5 a.m. was Cincinnati with 67 degrees. Lows Saturday night
will range from the mid 60s to the lower 70s. Sunday's highs wiil be in
the OOs.
It appears that temperatures will be very warm from Sunday
through Wednesday. :-lo cold fronts will be moving across O hio and
the air now will continue from the south during tha t time. Humidity
will increase a nd there will be some showers or thunderstorms just
about every day.

Ohio agricultural advisory
By The Associated Press
Showers and thunderstorms may become more numerous
Saturday night and Sunday as the wamt front moves across the
sta te. Rainfall of a quarter -inch to a half-inch through Sunday should
be typical, adding needed moisture to topsoil without causing serious
disruption to field work. Growth condit ions will remain good through
the middle of next week. Temperatw-es will continue above normal
and there will be more chances for scattered precipitation Monday
and Wednesday.
Although precipitat ion ma y not bl• widespread. vegetable a nd fruit
b'l'Owers will need to remain alert to problems with fungal and
bac teria l infections. Afternoon reiativP humidity is likely to remain
above 50 percent for the next two or three days. though periods of
s unshine w ill be available to he lp dry foliage.
The combination of winds and high temperatures will limit
application of most chemicals to the morning or evening hours.
Although rain will be sca ttered. thl' coverage of precipitation
Saturday night a nd Sunday will be enough to warrant delay of new
hay cuttings.

(Continued from page A1)

----

The court a lso fe lt the JUry could
"reasonably" find Robinson guilty
of voluntary manslaughter.
Abele and Stephenson said they
found no error in Ca in 's clos ing
argument to the jury. and a dded
that no a uthority existed for the
court to otter a specia lized ins truction to the jury on self-&lt;lefense.
In his dissent. Grey felt a new trial
should be ordered because of
Wolfe's test imony and thP prosecutor linking the jury to the prosecu tJon process.
GrPy said felt "th e probable
impact of a police otficpr testifying
that his investigat ions have shown
defendant to be a liar. is clearly
prejudicia l ..

pJ ~W

CENTER CUT

OUND
STEAK

PORK
CHOPS

$ 99

POUND

A 11

POUND

BONELESS

Sl~(;( . f:

judge also believed an
"exhortation to the jury to bccomP
pa rt of the law enlorcem('nt team. is
prejudicial error."

$
HOMEMADE

LEAN &amp; JUICY

CHICKEN
SALAD LB.

.-------------1

CUBE
STEAK

LB.

to beat the heat.

POUND

ENGLISH
ROAST LB.

PORK
CHOPS

LB.

$239

FRESH

heart failure , she sa id . His wife wa s

$}29

ADDING TO 'l1IE COMFORT -

COIICI'I!te tables with enclles have been added to tloe

SPARE
RIBS LB.

London Pool at Symcuse. Two of them are topped
wltb umbrellas. Enjoying the new tables at the pool
Friday were, from left, KeDy Smlth, Naoml London,

49

Plus Deposit

8-16 OZ.
BOTTLES

HEINER'S
HAMBURGER OR
HOT DOG

BUNS

¢

¢

T hr· Su nd.n Trm f'~ '&gt;f' nl l llr' l 11 rll not
1)1' I I ''!Jflll"'l l) ]p frH ,Hh d Ill" I' p ,t \ ITII'rl I"
m.Hk h~· l".tr"Ti r•r ...

Four new

HOlLYWOOD

PEPSI
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

12 CT.

BIG ROLL

Onl.~·

'.

a:ll'

RANKlES

.'VI:\ II . :oil HSl "Rif"Titl .;;,j .o.,

pool manager George Holman, Lori Crow, Lesley
Carr and MeglUI Kom In addition to the tables lUid
benches, 10 henches have been added. The benches
were made by vocational students at 1\leigs High
School through the efforts of ,John Bentley.

·Maine woman's heroism
·.draws praise from Reagan
movie star b?fo re thi s."

By JERRY HARKAVY

Reagan said he had read abnut

A.otioclated Press Writer
PORTLAND, Maine 1APl
Cynthia Nevers may have talked
President Reagan out of hPiping to
pay her hospital bill for an injUiy
sustained while saving a falling
baby. But the 27-year-old Portland
.woman is looking f01ward to
: )'ecelving Reagan's autograph.
: • In a surpri&lt;;e telephone call
· Friday night from Camp David. the
preside nt praised Mrs. Neve rs for
her quick action in catching the
17-month-oid glrl as she tumbled
from a neighbor's second-floor
balcony.
Mrs. Nevers told Reagan that his
offer to he lp with her hospita l bill
was "not necessary ." But . sh&lt;'
added, "You can send me your
autograph. You know, you were a

Mrs. r\cvcrs' hC&gt;roism in a front-

page Associated Press story and
pic't nff' in F riday 's R.JltimorP
Ev·ening Sun.
Wid&lt;'-&lt;'Ved and hands trPmbltng.
Mrs. NPvws picked up the phone in
thC' living room of hPr SC'C'O nd -fl oor
tPnrmcnt and h£' J 1·d the voi('(.' on t hP

ot her e nd sav·. " He llo . T his ts Ronald

Rl'agan."
" I can't bPiiPH' 1his," s hl' n .'plit'd .
her voice shaking. "Sir, I had no idm
so many pmplP would hmr about
this, espPc ially you."
Thl' presidl'nt told Mrs. N&lt;•v·prs ht •
was concerned that shP had no
hea lth ins uran cP to cover
e mergency room tr-eatment for a
severed tendon in hr r hand. Thr
injury caml' as shP va ultl'Cl a

chain-imk fence to r each thE' baby
ear~ c r this We&lt;'k.
She had bolted from her porrh
across the street as th(' baby was
abo ut to tumble from th(' ba tron"·
a nd a matiman yelled. "get thr
baby." She grabbed the c hild bv the
a nns just as she began to fall
She told the president that she
paid the hospit a l $5. whi ch was a ll
swhat
he could
altord.
but had
the total
btll would
be . no idea
"A gr mt many people feel a littlltaller and a little prouder beca use of
\\."hal .vou \:f' done," hf' sa id, before

inquiring about thP hospita l c ha rge.
" I'm quite sure that there arc a lot

Six mo11th ...

who would likl' to hdp out." the
p!t'Sidcnt S&lt;Jid. bdorP offer ing a
dona tion of his own.

PKG.

MAXWELL HOUSE

nath" :tnd :-iun!la v
\f _.\ 11. s"t .BS( "UIPTI.O'\:S
~:!

W+ '('k!&gt;

:.!ti

\\' l'f'k~

s~~ ~-1
$:1~ 1 1:?

t:\ \\'1 •Pks

$U ',+;

ltale"' Oulsldt• Ohio
Wr-f'ks
$~/ 1 HI I
:?+i WI'Pk s
. $:t i :! II
UWPf'k S .
$1i+)!l
:i~

~ffl®lffD®~o@Jill

EGGS

ooz.

79¢

ARGO

VALLEY BELL
ASST. FLAVORS

DOD

DRINKS

GAL.

99¢

29 OZ CAN

SLICED
PEACHES

Thu.rs da.y
'111m- 'I Pm

2 ~T
Sl E

93¢

12

oz.

CAN
WILSON

EVAP.
MILK

13 OZ. CANS

2/$1

CALIFORNIA
LONG WHITE

$219 ~~~8

$189

69¢

YELLOW

COOKING
ONIONS
¢ 3LB.

79

..

colleaguf's.
If HanSC'n 's appeals fail and hf' io.;
imprisoned. he could sTill SPivr hi s
House term from bchincl hars un lpss
the HouSC' vo tC'd to ex!)f'l him. saicl
Stf-'Ven R. Ross. genf'ral munSf'l tn

the House clf' rk
ThC' last

time a

membe r o l

Congress was expelled was in l&amp;ii

other transactions . somf' of which

GALLIA COUNTY

before long, hr was named musical
dirC'Ctor of NBC's \VE'stern div ision.

VOLUNTEER
EMERGENCY SQUAD
NOW OFFERING

FREE
AMBULANCE SERVICE

8 A.M. til 12 MIDNIGHT
24 HOUR SERVICE
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

446-8322

Brown, " which was m ade in to an

MGM film. and for " He ro's Love. "
another Broadway hit.
Born in Mason City. Iowa. on May
lH. 1902. Willson was the "Music
Man" personified.
He was an accomplished nuteand
picro io playPr even before gradual ·
ing from Mason City High School.
He later studied at New York's
Damrosch Institute of Musical Arts
and under the tu telage of Parisian
flut ist GcorgP Ba rre rc.
Willson periormed John Philip

This is all
you wear!
The

Audiotone iNSID ER

has the adva ntages you want in a hearing aid ; small size, com fortable fit, and the perfoomance you need to help impro'"
your hearing quality . Come in and we' ll show you the ma ny

Ga ia County

adva ntages the IN S IDER has to offer.

Volunteer
Emergency Squad
NOW OFFERING

IN OUR 35TH YEAR THE ONLY HEARING AID
SERVICE YOU WILL EVER NEED . HOME APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE .

FREE
Ambulance Serv ice

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

8 A.M . til 12 Midnight

444 W.
Athen s, OH. 45701

24 Hour Service
Saturday &amp; Sunday
446-8322

Union

St .. P.O. Box 511

Tel. 594-35 71

l-============J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
"Open to The Public"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Route 7

"Across from Ke ntucky Fried Chicken "

SPECIALS GOOD
JUNE 18 thru 23

Reg. 1229.95

AT LEAST

Levfs

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GAL.

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TOILET R~k~. $179
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.

FRESH
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19¢

LB.

3 PC.

4 PC.

SCOT

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

POTATOES
llV 1 1?1'1

SUGAR FREE

KOOL
AID

IE'f'. which conclud('(l Friday that hf'
should b&lt;' disriplinPd b.v hts Houst•

OLYMPIC
CELEBRATION

COFFEEis oz. $1 89 KRAFT QT. JAR
MATE JAR
Mayonnaise

ff€Jnrr f

His convict Jon tri ggerPd a HOUSi'
rul£' ca lling for a prPliminary·
mqui.ry· by lhC' HousC' et hies co mmit ·

LEVI'S

•

RLY ALLISON 'S

THORNTON
EX. LARGE

BE A WINNER!

TREET

10 OZ .
JAR

o&amp;11~~~

Meade .Jr ., Cart McAff'f' and Odt'll
Rogers.

$}8995

ARMOUR

INSTANT
COFFEE

ln :o. ldf' Ohio

Hunt to Mrs . HanSPn ; a nd$1.1'\,fXll in
persona l loans to the congrPssmon
from t h ref' Virginia mPn - John

ly rics for "The Unsinkable Moilv

of your fellow cit izPns in this countt)

$".!ti I'll
~1 \ ()(I

\,I"'.H

Han.r.;en that wa s guarantf'f'd by
Hunt; a $!.1,00.1 personal loan [rom.

He was convicted April 2 of
omitting mention of loans. profits
from thcsateof silvercontractsand

It took him !rom 1950 to 1957 years tha t encompassed 38 row rites
-to completp the book, mu sic and
lyrics to "The Music Man."
But thP efforts ev·entuallv earned
him a litany of awards. including the
1958 New York Critic 's award for
best mus ical. coupled wi th a
Crammv· for best album.

with him when he died .

HONEY
LOAF LB.

i-.. d\"d ll. rll lo•

Hansen was conv icted of om it ti.ng:

from his disclosure forms an $87,475profit that his wile. Connie. mad&lt;·:
trading silver futures with Hunt's
help; a $50.(Xll bank loan to Mrs.

least five months in prison.

man sai d. He was 82.

who asked not to be identified .
He died at 8: 30p.m. of apparent

SUPERIOR

I II' I "'' I \ ' !1 ' 1'

~elson

Bunker Hunt.

rently, on each of the four count s of
fil ing fa lse financial disclos un•
statement.s to the House for 1978
through 1981.
Hansen may be paroled after at

Sousa's solo flu tist, and later playc-'Cl
~&gt;i th the Npw York Philharmonic.
In 1929. hts int erests turned to
composing and conducting, and

obstruction. said thf'spokes\voman.

POTATO
SALAD LB.

SUPERIOR

SCOT
TOWELS

involved Texas billionaire

months in prison, to run concur-

SANTA MON ICA. Calif. tAP! Mered ith Willson. the composer
whose Broadway smash "The
Music Man" set generations of IO&lt;'s
tapping to "76 Trombones," died
Friday night. a hospita l spokeswoWillson was adm itted toSt. John' s
Hospital a week ago for an intPst mal

LB

LOIN &amp; END

('OI'Y

simple reprimand to form al cen·
sure to expulsion, the harshest step
the House could take.
Hansen is the first elected public
official to be c harged under the 1978
Ethics in Government Act, which

requires virtually au major government officials to make annual
disclosures of their financial holdings, liabilities and transactions,
including gifis,loans and profits for
themselves and members of their
irrunediate familv .
Several Republican National
Committee member s from
Hansen 's home state said hi s
sentencing - and especially the
House ethics committee's plans to
recommend punishment - may
seriously jeopardize Hansen 's reelection chances in November.
U.S. District Judge Joyce Hens
Green sentenced Hansen to flvetol5

'Music Man' creator dead at82

)

BONELESS

$1 w
S-.1 ,1\U

col01iul seven-term congressman.
Possible pen a it ies range from a

Willson also wrotE' the music and

COLE
SLAW

:\r . ' '.lll'-l'l" rprrnn ... h\ m :ril v•·rmrrrr•d

Onr•

visited the pool. There have been more than 300
children and adults daily using the pool in an attempt

FRESH

:;u l"1·nts

Sun da.v

What fun It is. Pictured are
swlmmenlas they enjoyed the water at London Pool
: bt Syracuse on Friday. On 'Thursday, over 400 people

$

•

POUND

rnu-.:

I 11 I 'I\\ lh 1'1 IH •r I ' !ll !i llll Lll

ByTOMSEPPY
A!IIOCiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON lAP) - Rep.
George V. Hansen, Rldaho. was
sentenced to up w 15 months and
fined the maximum $40,00J Friday
for failing to report $333,978 in loans
and other transactions on four
consecutive financial disclosure
statements.
" ... Wedon'l intend to pay it." said
Hansen after his sentencing. "We
don't Intend to go to jail. We pian to
appeal and we intend to win ."
A short time earlier, the House
Committee on Standards of Official
Conduct a nnounced it would hold a
hearing June 20 to determine what
punishme nt it will recommend that
Ihe House impose on Hansen . 53, a

T-BONE
STEAK

CHUCK
ROAST

1~117 :•

Onr• M rrnrl1

.

89

REG. OR DIET

OnP \' 1'1'1-i

Prison term, fine· levelled
against Idaho congressman

BEAT THE IIEt\T -

\.1!-·mhr ·r Tht· "" -'rK'iat!'rl rrr, . . In
land D. trl\ f!r f''s As soc iation and nw
,\ nwr •l·: rlr \ p w sp:r pn Pubtt;,hr·r .., 1' ~
~l lt " i ; rri"n . '\dtr onal /H.lvt•rti s ing Hr•
prr• ... t•nJ.rti\'1' Rr;rnh;rm . 17 17 Wf'o;t
\rn1· ~1111 ' H ilad . Sui!f' ~04 . i)f' trnit ,

·nw

PMio

BONE-IN

rhe Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-A-5.

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

We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To Limit Prices

A Mnltim••dla Nl'w.;;pap••r
i 'uhli~hf'd t•uc h Su nduy. ~~:1 Thi rcl
''l"f'OUf' . b\ ' lhf' Q hi n Y &lt;t ll f'V Publi sh
in'-! Comp.!n~
M ulti mPdia . i nt" "ip
co ncl (!;! ~~ pn•-lagf' paid ;It (;,rllipl,ti ...
Ohr o 1:)1;:\1 Y.:nte r f'd a ... ~f'co nrl I' Ia ... ...
m ;rilr ng marrrr vt P om r• r m ·, O hw.
Po"! Of fi CI'

Conviction.. ~-----------------Cunt inuf'd from

Price• good thru June 23rd

GO 10 CHURCH [V[RV SUNDAY

S l ' RSl " RII'TIO~

~

""- 17, 1914

. OUI lOWN"S fiNESf SUPII MAIItU

n w 5:!5-IIOO

R,\TES
Ry C 1rrir·r or :\1otor Unuh ·

..

·-·-- ~ -- ~--

CLOSED SjJJIDAYS

12 OZ . PKG .

Mt l ' htl:dll

-------

COliPONS

Lottery winning
numbers : 652,0255
CLEVELAJ\D iAP) The
winning number drawn Friday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game. "The Number," was 652. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
numb&lt;'r was fl2i5.
The iott.cry reported earnings of
$877.762.50 from the wagering on
"The Number."

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

STORE HOURS:
I!F(A;'(M;'ijPi~1Mon.·Thur,. 9 Jlnftil10 po ·
AND WIC
fri.·Sat9 am til 10 pm

Veteran...
recommends Tom White, veterans
employment representatlve for the
Gallla·Metgs area.
Speaking as a small business
operator, Auto Trim Shop owner
CharlesConleycaDstheprogram "a
good deal all-around.''
"For the small business, It makes
employees more affordable," he
says. "Sometimes you need hel·
p ... you know you need help ... butyou
just can' t make the commltment.
This program makes it possible."
White explains tha t over 3,500
occupations are covered by the
program - everything from retail·
ing to computer technology. Even
though the program is national in
scope, funds are available to most
employers regardless of size.
In addition to the 50 percent
savlngs in wages durtngthl'traln!ng
period, employers may receive a 50
percent tax credit on first year
wages up to $6,00J - excluding
wages paid during the training
period . The first $6,00J in second
year wages m ay be eligible for a 25
percent tax credit.
White urges employers to inquire
at the local Job Service office to
discuss the possibility of occupations in the ir business being eligible
for training funds.
He says paperwork has been he ld
to a minimum . Three forms, which
the Job Service will help prepare,
are a Uthat is necessary to apply for
approval of a training program
"Once the training progra m is
approved, Job Service can assist the
employer in locating eligible veterans to interview as potent ial
candidates for training ," White
explains.
"The training is done on the job
just as an employee hired by normal
methods would be trained but at half
the cost to the employer." he
concludes.

.........

June 17, 1914

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

,__-·Weather:----.

-~

ADJUSTABLE

WRENCH
SET

STOP IN AND REGISTER - NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY - LEVI'S SUMMER OLYMPIC
GIVE-AWAY- WINNERS WILL BE NOTIFIED
This Olympic
Special Good
June 18 thru Aug. 12

$995

PANASONIC AM/ FM
CASSETTE RECORDER
OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAYS 'TIL 8 P.M.

~81.'9$ 7 29 5

LAMP SET
LAWN
RAKES
5 PC. DELUXE

FILE SET

PANASONIC

MICROWAVE OVEN
With Turntable

Reg 18.99

6

$ 99

STEREO
HEADPHONES

~ll95$6 9 5

�I

Page- A-6--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

l~l\IUWY-

n-..

:11.

Manon G Fran ·
p,)mcrO\ . ctif'd Friday· in

\'t'l•·r.m-.; .\lPmt)nal Hospital.
l''m lpnl :1. l ~ . in West
t ,11urnht.L '-lm of the lJ il' GrorgP P .
lt_u,:enn~Ul

.tnd \l.t\ H

F r ancis. hf'
\\d'- d tullllf't C'nlployr&gt;t' o f c\ppal ht.m I &gt;p\1. {'!'Co ,_wd ~~ cu~10dian :.1 t

d(

\\ c~ll.lnld

f ligh ~: huol.

Hl' was a

\\drld \\ 'ar II :\nn_
, \f'tPran .
:.:.u rYinng ,Jn• 1\\ &lt;J ... jqpr ·~. l'vl.r~ .
I. .l.t \1 .t:-.o n &gt;I t f' hJrlt'st on . \\' \'&lt;-~ ..
md \L1 r a· t~ r&lt; WL ' ls uf P o mrroy ;
-.!. '\ ( ' J,I[
;.,:: ,indL'hiJdrPn &lt;illd S f('J_)l;l .uHh ht ldn·n : .tnd "f'\'r·r:ll ni ( '('f'S
. IJIC] 'H'PIH'H"

l'un• ·•\d

\\'tU ht' hrld at:.!

'-t ·tYH ' '"

11 rn \ I• ,nd,l'. tn 1-"ugl{'so ng FunPral
J] ,Jtll • ·. \J.t ,nn \\tlh _-\ 1 IL1rhon
, d: w1 c~lln)-..: H1m.ll w11! hf · m Sun l Tf'~ !
\lilllilli.d l'c1r·k. Pomr Pl t'&lt;:hanl
l "nt·n&lt;L" m.l _\ l'. ill .11 ThC' fu npr·a l
h&lt;IIJ1t · 1i tl nl ~ -~.1n1! ~ ~~ p.rn f(XlJ\ .

Or&lt;~(;,

Hart

.\l.\.t..:.(1\- (l r.t (;Ltd~" lb ;·t.

dH-d

Ld.trl

J.' r icLI\

7X.

l { iplp ~ ·

111

1\\ \· .1 1 (·,m· Inn

lkJJ"Tl

I.

( )l, j

]'--In\

l.(·ti r1.

tn

daughter of the late Frank and
Sarah Burrts Marr. she was a
m £'mber of Letart Asbury United
Methodist Chu['('h .
She was also prP&lt;.1'ded in death by
her husband, Geo rg~ William
McKinley Hart, in 1978.

Surdving arc sever al nieces and
n&lt;•phews.
FunNal services will be held al l !
a m Monday in Letart A sbury
Uni ted Methodis t Churrh. with thf'
Ri&gt;v. Rex Young offiriating. Burial
will be in F:vPrgr&lt;'('n Cemetery .
Fticnds may call at Foglesong
Funera l Home. Mason. after :l p.m .
today .
Thl' bodv will be takl'n to the
c hurch om• hour prior to thP
'-,('1\ " i C'('~-

'\t&gt;tt it&gt; Qut't.'n
CAL U POLIS - PaUbearf'rs for
thdu nrral of ~r t l!rQu('('n, 82, Rt. l ,
\on hup. who died Thursday. will bP
:vl dtthrw Qu,&gt;en. Greg Queen.
1\'ti\11&lt;' Qu('('n. Michael Cnroc.
llnan Queen and Jeff Queen.
Fun0ral services will be held at I
p.m rudav in Macedonia Commun·
irv· Church. Arrangemmt s a t'!' by
1\'illis Funl'ral Home.

Ohio escapees caught
1.. \ f ~\ ;( 1 1-·l:
,~111•

\fl 1 -

, ·-...t".tpt '\1 t:·()r.l

,Jll

F 11Ur nlf ' n

{)hi O ("OJTP('

;1111' \~ !.11 :11':, "• 1.t' t'r c!ITl ''-,f ('(j)l( ']'( '

1" I h

I

il.t r::: t'd ~~o·t rtl

rwu count .-; of

In ("IJnll('{']jon Wilh cl
h1 1 'd f.i :n .11 .1 -. hD[J pin ~ C'l'n II' I". po licr

l JU l ':_! ].Ji"\

C.,,t:• t

v.·pr(• Ban"\"
'.:rnp;.;rm .! 1. ! il'r lx •rt 1-'i,~-; ht • r. 22:
{ r !'L:.l!
P ! '\'HII!d .'- . :..!1: ;mel Flinl
\1 • ( ·ulluugh. !.! . . dlof whom walk1&gt;d
. t.\. t\ fPml 1\trhfi nder:-. .• 1 h.JII w ;1~
h· 1"-f':r: !.1rn.t Ohio
l·'1 ·id J_'1

\n1·'-.J1 -,:j

Th&lt;&gt; four were being held at
P"t hfindN, after bu rglary convic·
tions. according to l.argo police
spokeswoman Wendy Howe.
:vi s. Howe sa id the m en fled to
Florida on Tuesda y in a car stolPn
lrom a Lima shopping center and
,pent some time " touting" the
Ta mpa Bay area before their anest
in the Largo Plaza shopping center.
Simpson . Fisher. Reynolds and
:v!cCullough were all chargf'd with
Twu rount s&lt;- ~ burglary

:~~dav

,\

Jail

" ' 'i",t 1•ncv \~; ~,..., gi\f·n tu d Ca llipo li.-,
' )\, i ll Jo'r ·1d . I _
\ () fl .I l h, II g(' nf" indf'(·(• nt

r•xhaust: Jamc•s E. La nsfo rd , :~'i. Rt.
2. \ 'in tun. fOJieiiPd $W tond for
f~1ilun•tu stop a t astop sih1J1;

lArry J .

;r t~l -d,t \ dt ·i\·t ·l- ·'- !icvns.· S U S ]Jt' n ~ ion
:uttiiX nmnlhs probation fur OWl. A
h ·I I &lt;~I f'{'ll rcr l"ha tW' c~g-ain s t SulJ ins

Hill, :10, R I. :l, Ga llipolis. f01iei ted $40
ilond for failure to obey a t raffic
control dev icC'; Tina L Ca lloway . 2:J,
l:ll' SPcond Av&lt;' .. was fined $11 for
s[X'C&lt;ling .
Foticit ing tond for spePdingwere
C~nc H. Mills, 47. Versailles, $36;
Gary R. rUvely, 29, Claypool, lnd.
$.'18: Jimmy L. Woodard . 48,
Columbus. t.18: WeslPy L. Emerson.
-12. Water loo. Iowa. $39: Richard L.
Hada baugh, :&gt;1 . Laurelville. $.39;
Da n R. R ice. 29. Rt. :l. ChesapmkP.

H "I "- di:-.llli .\~i 'ti.

$:1!-l

1 '.\~"W ,'-. LJI"I' .

l-" 1n1,j :-:\:.!")'(1 in ,·onrlt '&lt;'fion wi Th !h('
( ~arnP s , l2.

ch.tt l.: t ' w,t:-; Jto tx·rt \\

PI I ~ (·h. IT ham _.\ n ·
In olh t' r J C1Jon. the C(lUJ1 dis
rnJ"''f'{ l a mt·n: H"!nJ-; f'harg f"' against
t ;1+ ·nn Simpki n...;. ~i19 ~o nd A\ 'P
i·:ug£&gt;nt • M. Sullins. 37 . 39~

IA•C rand&lt;' Blvd .. was fined $nl.
'-.t 'lilt 'nl '( 'll 10 I hI n .• dil_\ ·s in j &lt;:J il, gi\'('D

In 1raffic C" d ." i'S, Car! 1.. C 11Jlx' , 21.
1{1 J.l,\"illon·W()()(j, \Lts fin0d$11for
111 1 'I))IT. IIiil··.., li cf'n.'-;4 • an d $111 tor
--.pt·n:ling . l&lt;lmt'r D Skiclmorr. ~"":.fl,
-,-J..J l. u k:--.on I 'ik(•. !oliPih'CJ $-UJ OOnd
!•11 .tn..,:t !P u ·l1icl1' . ~1nd s:-111 lxmd tor
~ ~ ·]ill]!'· [ql;lf )IJ!l

t t; t!J.

!J

~1.

,l;l("k.•-;on ,
tl,l 11 'll1 '&lt; I ~~~ tx Jnd f"ur irn propt•r Jan( '
,r..,,~~,,
\\ liil t · ,1 no child f'I''-.IL! inl
I !Llll:l' \\, 1..._ d i~rrtlS.'&gt;I 'd; ,)uJm f)

!...: •·JT\

'\riJTtJ.

:\ .

!r•ri•·Jit~ l

]/-1.

-~ 111

l· .&lt; lgf'fllUrl \

J) J-j\·t•,

1-xmd fnr f. ul un· tu

· IJ ·-pl,l'. t\\rl li&lt;·cn .... t •pi.Jtt· ~; l .i ncl.r H.
"-) · , .\IIP'I L'··
II. Ht. 1. (' ht •:-.h in•,
11 11 11·~ 11~ I S.\j l 1-:M mtl for [, ·1 1 1J! t ., ·nIt ·r;
i {•l l)l rr 1.. \ li . ., tnt 'l". J l. 1{1
l,
(' J,, ... hil t '. fl lti••P t'(!S-lllhnndltJrloud

J&lt;'rvd H . SPss, 58. Cinci nna ti. $.39:
IsraC' l L azarus, 71, Cincirma ti, $40;

Ravmond D. Mt&gt;ek, 03. Johnstown,
$.UI: Warden K. Miller, 45, HiUiard,
$.111: Robin L. Norw U, 24. Poi nt
Pleasant . $40: Richard E . Epper·
son. :ll, "athalir. \'a., $11.
M ildn"&lt;l T . !::vans, 4H, R t. ~.
Gallipol is. $41: Ga ry S. Carson. :n.
S.igtnaw , Mic h .. $42: Rooney D .
Collagen. .U. Frazeysburg, Pa.,$42:
.Junior E . Sm all , 61. Welch, W .Va.
$.!L; Eug&lt;'n ta P Herold, 82 , Col urn ·
hus. $1.1 ; Michae l J . l&lt;eas. 36,
W : HTt:'n. $4.3; .J amPs W. Morehead .
:11'\. C uilford. Ind .. $4:\; Paul E . Byu s,
.I~. Ca lli poli s. $46: .Joseph A. Hu rst .
~:\. M iddll't own, $74: Will iom R
1-' it'('ffian, J:l, Elr'llev ille, lll, $.'\1 .

[ouples file for marriage
l •.\ l .1.! I l( II _J.c. .; - T ht · follm\·ing
nl, lll"l.t)-!t' lin.' n:-.t'"
rt11" p; 1" t lP ·d.: 1n r :.tll!d Ct iU/1! _
\

I t)liid ~ ·"- fjjp(j fr 11

V\ . r ~nlltn ___~~_l:l' 2 \ 'int' S1.,
C"l f •l'k . .lfld .l;tllf'lh' R .
\-"1.1 1·1_\ ·n . ~~ I . 10 \-1111 ( ·rn: ·k f1oad . 1-L IX
";1 1'\l' ll

l;I"I X "! "I"\

I

ll i!J hJ\( 'f•

l ~l t " h{ln\

.- \

IX. W . .
\\"l ll'k f •r. anrl

:Vl ou nt.

l~irl'.\&lt;'ll. ( "ll!l .... !JlJ&lt; "IJ·:J Jl

I . 1~1 \ .. Sp rill l':l' t. 17 J.l.i,(l2 l&lt;lls fl ' rn
\ \1 . i ll tl1 J/1H '

.'vlwh,fl'l I&lt; \,., il lt· . .~1 . XliO
!·:.t ... tl'rrl , \ \ f '. 1u;d minf'r . ontl
flri _.., ( lll L1.J Stan lt·\. "2-!. l&lt;t 1. \' ini on,
'-"'

.t!l n ·:--.~.

.John 1-: .l,1nH'"- .11 · . :!li. Oak Hi ll.

STOP

AND

7

"'

~

,_.

......

-~

,.-

"

&lt;

..

~-~------- "'-"~

•

tP;rcher. and FIPth A. Sa lisburv , 21,
Ht 2. Patriot. unemployf'd.
L. Bruce Gilrnorr. 22. Ht. 1.
l'hpshirc. security guard. and Cat hy
,\ . Bay lor . 22. Charleston. W.Va ..
lrga l secretary .
Brent A. Clark. 23. Z75 V, Jackson
Pi kt ·. auto parts, and Ronda S. Sim,,
Magnolia Drive. cashier.
TPrry J. Jones, 21, Rt. 2, Crown
Cit y, truck dtiver, and Shell ey R.
Woodyard. 17, Rt. 2. Crown City ,
unf'mploved .
.James F . Swan n. 20, Rt. 2.
Ga llipoli s. un employed. and
Avonda I&lt; White. 1&lt;. Ht. 2,
CaUipolis. student.

n. m

REGISTER

FOR

S25°0 Worth of Groceries

RIO GRANDE - A m Pmber ol the Rio Grande CoUeg&lt;&gt; and
Community College has been appointed superint endent of I he Roane
County, W.Va. school system .
Oftlcla!s say associate professor Jerry Dal&lt;&gt; Jones resigned his
position In the school of education to take thP posll lon. Jon£&gt;S had been
an Instructor at the college for fiv e years.

Merchants to meet
GALLIPOLIS- The GaUipolls Retail Merchants A ssocial lon will
IJ)€el Tuesday Jun&lt;&gt; I~ a t the Down Under Restaurant.
The merchants arc to discuss promullons , a boat raeing updat&lt;&gt;,
the WSAZ-TV July 4th salu te, the downtown cleiill-up project and
membershlp according to presldenl T ommie Vaughan.
The meeting wiU b&lt;&gt;gtn at noon.

decision.
The U.S Department of Justice
and the Cincinnati Lodge of the
Fraternal Order of Police have
asked Rubin to reconsider his April
11 approval of the layoffs of
Cincinnati police officers. The
layoffs were aimed at maintaini ng
minority staffing percentages.
"The court did nut have to rule on
this case,·· saidJonJan, former head
of thl' "ational Urban League,
speaking Friday at a black achiev C'r sdinner in Cincinnati. ''Thcrpwas
probably a middle ground between
seniority and affirmative action .
111P cout1 chose not to take it. The
cou11 ha s added confusion to th e
alrmdy murky ground of affirm ! ivc
action law. "
Jo rdan said the new decision was
" not sw!'f'ping. nor final. and not the
death of affirmativc action.
" It is a significan setback to
affirmativr action. It crPates a
climate in this country w her e
employer s feel they don't havp to
abide by affirmative action laws,
wher &lt;' businessmen feel they done'!
have to hire blacks and women and
other minorit ies, " Jordan said.
FOP attorney Donald Hardin sa id
he' s confident the group w ill w in
reinstatement of the officers laid off
this year in budget cu tbacks.
Alphonse Gerhard stein. one of the

MO'fORIST INJURED - A Meigs Coonty woman
escaped serious Injury Friday night when she lost
control ol her car on Ohio 124 at Minersville. Wanda
M. Donaldson, 45, lit. I, Portland, was treated and
released at Veterans Memorial Hospital lor bruises
foUowlng the 10: ill p.m. accident. The Gallla-Melgs
post ol the state highway patrol ,;aid Donaldson was

GALLIPOLIS -A Gallla County
man is listed in critical condition at
Cabell -Huntington H ospital In Hun
lington, W.Va .. after falling off a
pick·up truck Friday.
Officia ls sa id Michael Camden,
21 , Bidwell, suffet1'd head injuries
when he fell off the truck, driven by
Larry W. Camden, 31, Rt.1,BidweU.
The Gallia-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol said the pick ·upwas
wcsttound on Ohio554, with Michael
Camden standing on the back
bumper holding down trash, when
he r eportedly fell from the vehicle at
1: 4() p.m .
He was first taken to Holzer
Medical Center and then translcr rcd to CabeU-Huntington .
Three peop le were treated and
released from Holzer Medica l
Center after an acctdent Friday
afternoo n.
Hospital officials sa id .John H .
Beaver. 44. and his son Jason
Beaver. R, both of Eureka Star
Rout e. w ere lreated for bruises
while BeavPr 's wifP Caroly n,41, was
1rea ted for cut s.
Pa trol officia ls said Beaver's
vehicle and a car driven by Diana L.
M cGuire. 23, Rt.1, CrownCity,were
northtound on Ohio 218. McGuire
repot1edly slowed and the patrol
said Beaver struck McGuire's car in
the r ear.
Bot h cars recPivc"&lt;l heavy damage
and Beaver was ci ted by the patrol
for assured clear distance in the3: 30
p.m. accident.
Four people escaped serious
injury in a three-car accident at the

"Because there were not enoug h

bla ck policmen on the streets, we
had a constanl shootout betwP('n
blacks and policemen," said B lack ·
well . "! just hope we arc not
rf'turning to that. "

Emergency runs
POMEROY - Six calls \\WI'
answered by local units Friday, thP
Meigs Cou nty E mergency M edical
SeJVices report s.
A t 9:30a .m ., M iddleport went to
an auto accident a! sta te routes? and
124. and took Clifford Plants to
Veterans Memorial Hospi tal: Racme al 10:58 a. m .. went to the fire
station for Tim Moreland. taken to
VrtC'rans MPmorial; Pomeroy a t
1: .10p.m . went lo:104SptingAve .. for
Rus~ll . to

GALLIPOLL&lt;; - There wer e 25 accidents resulting in . injuries to
two people on C"llipolis strP&lt;'I S do ting May acrording to ftgures
released by Gallipolis City PolicP.
Five of thf' aeridPnts took plaCi• at intPrsections while sev&lt;'n
occurrf'd on prival &lt;' property officials said. Eleven citalions were
issu&lt;'&lt;i as thl• resull of the accidents .
PoliCl' arrested 45 peopi&lt;' in crimtnal cast•s while 101 prople wen•
arrested in traffic caSI'S. Thlrlff&gt;n prop!&lt;' wen' aiTPSI&lt;"&lt;l for DWl ,
depat1ll1Pnt officials said .
!Cighty·nine complaints werf' filed with thPd&lt; •partment in May and

the patrol for !allure to control. (Times.sentinel photo
by Katie Crow).

ial: Racine at 3: 42p.m to Va lley
Bf'i l Road for E rnest Brewer. to
Veterans Mf'morial: Middleport at
9 p.m . to Locus t StrE'f't for Mabel
Kes tC' r son . to VP tf'rans Me m oria l;
and Syracuse a t 10:l1 p.m . to 124 for
Wanda Donaldson. taken to Ve terans Memoriaf from the scene of an
aulo acc ident.

Veterans Memorial
Admlttf'd - VIcky Slack. Middleport: Edith T eafonJ. Pomeroy :
Ernest Brewer. Racine: E sta
RusseU, Pomeroy: Mabel KPster ·
son. M iddleport.
Discharged - Wesley Manley .
Robin Riffle. Ber1h a Russell. V icky
Slack .

inter section of Ohio 7 and Ohio 124 in
Mei£S County F'ridav.
The patrol sa id cars driven by
Charles A . Campbell , 65, Rt. I,
Straitsville, and Gene C. Gr abiec.
33. 254 Jackson Pike. w er e north·
bound on 7 while a car driven by
Cilfford C. Plants,61. Pomeroy, was
southtound on 7.
Plants was unable to stop for a
vehicle ahead of him slowing to turn
onto 124 and went left of center.
stliklng the vehicles driven by
Campbell and Grabiec. the pa trot
said.
Susie B. Campbell, 60, and M orris
F . Blazer, 57, Rt. 1. Bidwell,
passengers in Campbell 's vehicle,
were trea led and released al
Veterans M emorial Hoopital for
sprains , hospital officials said.
Plants was treated and released
at Veterans for cuts and a
passenger, Alice M. Plants, was
treated and r eleased for scrapes and
bruises.
The cars driven by Campbell and . - - - - - - - - - - - - Grabiec received moderate damage in the 9:25a.m. accident, while
DIAMOND RING
the Plants car w as heavily damaged, the patrol said . P lants wa s
PECIALS
ci ted by the patrol for assured clear
distance.
A Williamstown. W.Va. man
escaped injury when his car ran into
a guardrail after he reportedly fell
asleep a t the wheel SatunJ ay
morning.
Patrol officials said Thomas A .
v,
Riffle, 35. w aswesttoundon0hio124
$900 Value
S489
at 6:30a .m ., when he feU asleep. The
patrol said his car went off the left

~

ala1ms

w er e answerC'd.

The department wrott&gt; li!(! parking rtck&lt;'IS in Mavin addition to :11
parking v iolation tickf'ts according lo dPpartml'nt . ftgun•s.

POMEROY - Pumf'ruy' s watl'r and Sl&gt;wag!' rall•s will b&lt;•
incrPased ;)() tx•rrl'nt, beginning with tht• July statemmts
ThC' r a iPS WPI "f ' I'I'('Uffinlf'Oded by thl • SI(J It-' a uditor 's Offil'fii U kt~•p
thf' Boord of Publie Affairs within Its budgt•l , said Pat Thuma, clPrk
tor thP Wi:i tf'r company .
W iJ tr·r ratP!S arf': mt"IPrfld S£&gt;rVi('(&gt; for tht~ first 2,10) gallons or le~ s
- :I,'Y a month : I hi' nex1 :l,llXJ gallons- :16 ct&gt;nt s per 11MJ ga llons; nPx t
10,101 gallons - : ~1 cenls per ItO gallons: next 15,UU gallons - :!fl
cen ts per llkl gallons: owr :tl,tOJ ga llons - I Hcents pt•r 1110 gallons.
Thf' minirnWTJ chargt' ~ for m C'h•rPd Sf'rvices 1.'-.t-'\\'agf') dn· :
lhrough ha lt-inch and tivt• ·('ight~ of clrl int'h Jll(&gt;tf'r - :t.~) a mon rh ;
thm•·lou t1h' ot an inch mt'l&lt;'r - $1:\ a month; ! ·inch mt'l cr- $:ll .:!f l a
month; 11.:! ·inch ffil •tf•r - $.1:! .:!1 a m onth; 2-inc·h mr!(-&gt;r - $~H.tiU ...
month ; -1-inc·h mt'h'r - $17~. K.1 a month; f&gt;·ineh mt'll'l"- $:J.'J7 .~ a
month.

l'f'nni.~

Twomen wet'P arrestedFridayby
police .
Being held in the Gall la County

SAVE ON FINE KELVINATOR
REFRIGERATORS AND FREEZERS
AT RIDENOUR'S TV &amp; APPLIANCE
16 cu. FT. REFRIGERATOR

ONLY

$525° 0

WT.

Is cu FT. REFRIGERATOR

$598° 0 wr.

JUNE 15TH WINNER: Sylvia Blake of Pomeroy

15.6 DEEP

ONLY

CHEST FREEZER

$J98°

0

Hot Exactly as Shown

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
CHESTER

WASHINGTON IAPI-'!'IV?man
who spearheaded· a driv&lt;' to raise
Ohio's drinking age to ~1 is
convinced that the state Legislature
will be forced to address the issue,
possibly by the tody' s next session.
" I 'm pretty sure It won'l come
about in this session of the
Legislature," thl' Rev. Duane
Somerville said in a telephone
intervlf'W from Columbus . "(Bun
with the next Legislature, I'm sure

thPn• will be that lund of
legis Ia tlon."
Last week, Trans(Xlr1ation &amp;&gt;erPtary E llzabeth Dole said tha t in an
elfort to reduce traffic deaths, the
Reagan administration now SUJT
(XJI1s legislation to trtm federal
highway aid to states tha1don'1 raise
their minimum drinking age to2l.
Some slates in nren1 years have
to
reswre !he oncebegun
rornmonplacc minimum drinking

Missing gold search continues
MINERVA, Ohio !API - Ewry
yf'ar, wa rm wea ther brings a new
't out uf gold fpwr to this cornmunil y
l o miles east of Canton.
Sina&gt; 1752, the legend has be&lt;·n
maint ained that an eslimated $4
mill ion in gold was buried nca r herP
hv French soldiPrs &lt;'scaping from
tht • l.lritL• h. RPsidl•nt s and visirurs
still hunt for it on balmy days.
Thf' town of 4,10J Cl'il'bratr-d th&lt;•
rumors and thf' fruitless Sl'ar-eh last

w&lt;'Pkmd wllh a Lust F tPnrh I:Oid
Festival.
Aceonling ru legPnd, Frenc h

soldi Prs wpn • rPtUinin g to Fort
Duqupsne. whPr"P Pitt sburgh now
stands, whPn a dust cloud in the
distanc&lt;• w arned of the "pproach of
Briti sh soldiPr s.
ThP Frt•nch comma nder sup·
posedly told some at his m en to bury
tht' gold in a spot that lhPY could hnd

again, so they chose a site
sunounded by large !ref'S and ftvP
springs .
In the 2:!2 years since then.
searchers havP t't:'(XlrtPdly dug up
lantaUzlng dues, inducting French
gun barrels and unifmm buttons.
Many of the trfl asure hunt r·r~
com" to th&lt;• fatm of Elson Robbins,
which tits lh&lt;' description ot thes ite .
'l'h• •y a l'l' undeterred by th&lt;' fact that
Rilhbins ' fa ther Sp&lt;'nl a litetlmr·
r omhing thP property for the cache
Whf&gt;r P thP gold camt' from is a~
ffiUCh in QU('Stion as where it w ent .

No one knows for surf' how !hP
ttl'asw·p was amassed , but the
leg&lt;'nd sa ys II was accumulated by
Christopher Cis! , a man sent by
I k'Drgc Washington as an Pmissary
lu thl' Indian ltibes of thP Ohio

Vallt•y.

ATHENS, Ohio !APr - A n
A1hm s County jury F riday con
vich&gt;d l'harlo11 c&gt; Dodson of volun tat y m onslaughlcr, denying h&lt;'r
claims that she slabbed hPr hu shand
in ~(' lf ·d('f(•nSP .
HOWPVPI' , lhf' jury refu~ to
c·tmvirt !Vlrs Dodson, 1"3 on d
murdPr chargt• in thr Nov_ 17kiHing .
1

.. I ft&gt;d t.J gn•a t in j usticl' ha:-, ht'f:~n
d o nt • to rnP a nd m y chi!tirr n . l c·amt ·
l• ·n· to tt'llthf' truth and WI' told tht'
wllol t· trulh, Mrs. ~on li!kllht·
1

'

t·ourt
Sht • was St'nll'nt•('(i to six to :.!~
Vt·a r~ in tht' Ohio HPtonna tory tor

WorTH'II in M a rysvme by Afhi'rl!'!
Count y Common Pl&lt;'a S Judgt•
Willi am !lowland.
l 11"0st&gt;cutors say shf• will hP
dlgiblf' for pawh.• in just over fou r
yPar s.
Mrs. Dodson testified that hPihu sband, Thomas , had regularly
tX'a l h&lt;•r and the chtldrP n Sht' said
~ht · tuok thP kitrhrn knift&gt; he WCJS
s t&lt;.rhbr&gt;d w ilh into thPir ht&gt;Oroom
during an aq.,rumt&gt;nt In caS&lt;· ht'
atlac·kt'Ci hf'r
Thf• prost'('Uiion claimPd ~hf'
plannt"&lt;l 1hP al't before• h&lt;'l' husb;,nd
rPturnt'ft homt&gt; thill night.

ag&lt;· or 21 aftPr studl!'s showed !hat
drunken dr iving among lff'n-ager'
contributed signlllcamly to highPr
highway deaths. Twenty thf('('
states currently have mininnum
drinking age. of 21.
But Mrs. Dole 'aid tlw m om Pn ·
tum to Increase the drinking age ha'
slowed, with lY states this y&lt;•ar
r ej ecting attempts to increase their
legal drinking ages to 21 .
Observers say th&lt;&gt; admlmst r a
'tton's switch on the issuP probably
guaranlePS that some form ol
legislation innposing sanctions wlll
pass Congr&lt;:'ss and be signf'd into
law I his election year.
In Ohio, the legal drinking agP tor
beer Is 19. Last November, a ballot
Initiative pushed by SomPtv Ulc that
would have r aised thP drinking agP
to 21 was defeatl'd .
SomPrvillt'. dirn·lur u! the Ohio
Council on Aleohol ProbiPtm, sa id
his ballot is.'!i Ul' was takPn down by
thr othPr two dl'fcatr'&lt;i iss ues. Ohio
has a histt•ry of· its ballot issuf's tx&gt;in g
approvf'd or df'ff'ii! ed togPt hC'r, ht·
sa id

PEPSI COLA

8

16 OZ .
BTLS .

$}49
Plus T.H
&amp; Oepo ~ t l

GALLIPOLIS
ICE HOUSE
709 l si Ave
Gal ll polts
Phon e 44b 1862

rr:============!===========:: ;
IT SURE IS HOTt
AND SO ARE OUR SPECIALS!
WOMEN 'S

SUMMER
SANDALS
SAVE $500

Off CHILDREN 'S TENNIS SHOES

WOMEN'S 'SUMMER DRESS SHOES
NOW SAVE

20°/o-30%-40°/o

Off Reg Price

SUMMER HANDBAGS ........ NOW 20% ott Reg Ptt ce
MEN'S SHOES ..~~-~-g~-~~.~ ....... ......... .. .Now 115.00
MEN'S TE~NIS .~~.E..~~~~r. ................... Now 115.00
SAVE NOW!
SIORI HOUR S
MON &amp; ffl l
I It 8

lUI S WED lHtJAS
&amp;SAT lit~

VISA•

C!arl's

lhOB IIDrl

OO WNTOWN G AlliP OLIS

MIDDLEPORT- A tPnnb instt1Jctor is n"-d&lt;'&lt;i at tht· ! ;.&gt;nNal
ll at1ingPrl'ark in M iddlPport .
Anyon£&gt; who would b(l w ilhng to prov idt· LnslllJ&lt; 'IIo n 1s askt-'&lt;1 to
contact Bob Johnson.
Abo, groups wishing to havP " pi ('nic an • to c.mtM·t .lohnson in
r( •gard to tht&gt; sh£&gt;11Pr hou.st·
SoMball tPams wishing Ill havf' tou m d mPnh a net .m~~ o m • wishing to
join 1:1 summmPr baskPt hilll IPI.Ibl"Uf' shou!rl obo c·ont cH·t Johnson . His
phon(' numht•r is ~2-liW.·n

SY HAl'l J S~ - P1·rson~ intt ·n·~fl&gt;d in &lt;-'" Lid\'al\ t"t'd lltt' :--,uving d Od
WiJ h ' l" ~th't)' eo ur ~ lo hi · gi VI 'n ut tht • London Pool an• iJ~kf'd to
('nntact !~ · siva Canguly dt !~2 - 71 Wt nr !'.t"..! ~f!Ut.

v, Ct .
$700 Va lue

-Page - A-7

instructor needed

GALLIPO L IS - A car driven byu
Gallia Count y man r eceived light
damage in a hit -skip accident
Frid ay l)lght . according to the
GallipolisCity Police .
Officials sa id Archie A. Starrher
Jr.,
Rt . 2. GaUipolis, was
nort htoun d on Eastern Avenue
w hen he began lo make a right tum
into a drive a t 2145 Eastern Ave.
Police said an unknown car Uied
to pass Starcher on his right side.
leaving tlw pavement. The rlghl
front com er ofStarcher'scarstruck
!he unknown vehicle in its left side,
police said. The unknown car
continued around Starcher and was
last seen northbound on Ohio 7,
v.rit nesses said.
Starcher's car received light
dam age in the 6:52 p .m . accident .
Two people escaped injury in an
acc ident on SPcond Avenue Friday.
Police said cars driven by
Amanda L. Russell , ~. Rt. 2,
Gall ipolis, and Eugene Bare. 54, Rt .
2, Gallipolis, were southtound on
SPcond Avenue when Bare stopped
in traffic. R ussell could not stop in
time, striking Bare's car in the rear
at 3: O:l p.m ., police said.
No damage w as reported toeither

Jail on a warrant from Huron
County Juvenile Court is James
EdwanJ HaU, 22, R t. 1, Vinton. Hall
is scheduled for anaignment in
Ga llipolis Municipal Court Mond ay
on a charge of DWl .
Arthur Ray Petrie, 703 Third
Ave., was c harged with parole
violation. He w as released Saturday
pending a m eeting with parole
officials.
Issued a summons to appear in
municipal court on a shoplifting
charge was Teresa June Amos , ~.
Rt. 1, Cheshire. Amos is charged
with allegedly taking a blouse. shirt
and shorts from Murphy Mart .
Cited by police was .James W .
Siders, 22, 170.1 Chestnut St. , failure
tD yield from a stop sign.

fame&gt; ·~nllnel

Legislature may face drinking age issue

Jury convicts Athens woman

Water, sewage rates hiked

Safety course planned

car.

RIDENOUR'S

side of the road and into a guardrail .
Riffle's ca r w as moderatPly dam ·
aged in the accident.
A Meigs County man was citf'd by
the patrol for no drivers license and
failu re to control following a Friday
accident near Rutland .
Kenneth R. McKnight, 18, Rt. 1,
Middleport, was northtound on
Rutland Township Rood 58 when he
lost control of his vehicle and
cr ashed into a utility pole, the patrol
said.
M cKnight then conlinued on.
Jccordlng to the patroL McKnighl's
car received moderate damage in
the 1: 05 p.m. accident.
The patrol said Alex E. Birchfield,
:16, Ru Hand. was northtound on Ohio
682 at 5: 10a.m . Friday when a deer
ran in front of his car. Thepatrol said
there was light damage to Birchfield's car and the deer was not
killed.

Police investigate accidents

:n

Veterans M em or -

985-3307

Monthly police activities listed

Area accidents injure seven people

Tenn .. which was the basis of the
Suprcm~ Court decision.
Cinc innati city attorneys sa id they
don' t plan to become involved in the
case at th is time.
The Cincinnat i affirmativf'action
hiring plan was crea lf'd in 1979 to
deal with host ility between polilcc
and the black comm unity. There
had been fatal shootings of thrt:&gt;P
white police officers and three black
men in separate incidents .
Cincinnati City Counc ilman
J.l&lt;enneth Blackwell said he feared
a return of hostility between police
and the black community.

Esta

~~w~~w~~~~~t~~~~'
puDed back across the road, went
the left side,
went over a guanlrail and down an embankment. The
vehicle I~ hit a tree and overturned. Donaldson's
vehicle received heavy damage and she was cited by

fhe

Ohto- Point Pleasant , W. \/a.

RGC-CC staffer resigns

ONLY

992-6910

1984

Local Briefs:·---.

JUNE 23RD

Ohio
Valley
Bulk
Food
514 East Main
Pomeroy

11, 1984

CINCINNATI I API- Civil rights
leader Vernon Jordan assailed the
U.S. Supreme Court's rutin~ that
seniority, not affirmative action
gains. must prevail in city layoffs.
Meanwhile, U.S. District Judge
Carl Rubin indicatedF'riday that the
layoffs of 42 Cincinnati police
officers might be resolved by next
week in ligh t of the high court ·s

TO BE GIVEN AWAY
ON SATURDAY

MUST BE OVER 18 TO REGISTER

June

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Court
decision
attacked

lawy f'rs IT'presenting minorit~· of ·
ficers. sa id he has strong ev idence to
show that the Cincinnati case is not
similar to the sit uation in Memphis.

l\1an gets jail time
r •. I I. I.IJ'rl l.l ~ -

&gt;-

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

Area deaths
\! arion G. Francis

•

$450

Photo pil·lmp
JJ()MI ·]{ t lY

-

.~luted

l '&lt;•lor phoTo::, ot l ht • l!ll&lt;r! Mt&gt;ig:--, High S('houl

grdduating 1·!as.o; n'&lt;·t ·tvmg t h1 •1r f1iploma ~ h&lt;l\ "t • d rri\ t t1 dnd ma y bt'
pwkt'(l up ul tht ' hi gh _
-,('honl rmm H a .m . to J p .rn , Mond ii.'~-' through
Fridi.i _
\ , l 1 rindpa l .lanu~-"' Mt!h ·r t~nnounct·~

l Ct
$1100 Value

Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary me()t.'i

S849

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
414 Second Ave.

MIDDLEPOBT - t 'l ub pro)f't..' b w t·n· dbcu ~~'(! o~t .tn opt •n
mu•ting of tht· Mic1ctlttHlfl 11 nllh 'r0\· ltota ry I 'lu b l·'ntla\" nig ht at
Ht•&lt;..t! h Un!lt'Ci Ml'!hudbt ( 'hun ·h .
Vi&lt;'f' l 1 rt'~ ldt•n l Hill Franeb Wds in l"har gt • d lld dtnnt•r wa ~ !'l('t\1t'f1

Gallipol is. OH

hv womt•n ot tht· l"hUr&lt;"h

r - - - - - - - - - - - - L L- - - -- - - ' - - - - -

ATTENTION!

City :;chool board met'ling

The Hassel Is Over, No Need To Go Elsewhere
We will Custom Make Trophies, Plaques
Small Signs . Name Tags . Belt Buckles .
If We Don 't Have It, We Will Get It

I ;ALLIPOLL'&gt; - Tlw Calllpolb l ·uy Board ot F:du , a!ion will hold
it' monthly m«•ting al Clay ElPmPntary ar 7 :v1p.m. Wt"&lt;lnPsda y
Ttw board will conduct its summ('r month mt&gt;t•lings at sehoo l ~
throughout lh&lt;' district. The July mf'f'ting wtl l ht' at Rio Lranr1e
Elf'mentary, and thP Augu ."lt sl'ssiun w ill tk' hPid ;_H ( ; n&gt;t'n
E lemml ary
Thf' board rPgu larly mt•t•l!, tlll Thl' third Wt'ftllt&gt;~a.v of t'&lt;.l{' h m nmh

MIDDLEPORT PLASTIC ARTS

50 RIV ER VI EW DR

MIDDLEPORT
6t 4 ·992 · 6 1 28
BOB &amp; JEAN GILMORE . OWNERS

MOTORCOACH TOURS

CARPET FOR LESS
DIRECT MILl BUYING AND LOW OVERHEAD
COMBINE TO GIVE LOW PRICES. WE ALSO
HAVE EXPERT INST ALLA liON AND ONE OF
THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF CARPET IN
THE AREA. CALl TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATES, IT COULD SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF
DOUARS.

ODDS &amp; ENDS
CARPET SHOP
Business Route 7, Middleport

992-6173

Hours: 10 A.M . to 5 P.M.

GOSPEL SING
JULY 5-8, 1984
4 DAYS. 3 NIGHTS
TOUR TENNESSEE &amp; the
SMOKtE MOUNTAINS

COPPER CANYON
Round Trip

•
'
'

'

JULY 21-28, 1984
REDUCED!!
NEW ENGLAND I
NOVA SCOTIA
JULY 29-AUG. 13, 1984
16 DAYS-15 NIGHTS

1 ,000 ISLAND &amp;

FRENCH CANADA
JULY 9-16, 1984
8 DAYS- 7 NIGHTS

NASHVILLE
JULY 19-22, 1984
01

OCT . 18-21.1 1984
4 DAYS - 3 niGHTS

MYRTLE BEACH
AUGUST 8-12, 1984
5 DAYS - 4 NIGHTS

. I
t

.•
·-·

360 Second Avenue
Phone 446-0699

And today, when getting ahead takes more than ('V('r
before, you need a bank that shares this attitude. You nt ·t ·d
Central Trust. Because we make your
money work harder than ever before.
For you,your family and your business.
}om the people at Central Trust.
"'
People with .the.insight, detennination
and the dedication to h~lp you ge~
B&gt;A ~ ~~
~~~1"' ahead: filld getting ahead ts
rtl ~ I
Yolfr rlnmll'illl (
;·;::. ~. ;;;,1&lt; what tts all about.

THE
CEN'l'RAI
TRUST
!'11/r I

�:

l

-'!0'; II;

,-

-

....

-

-

-

·-

. ... -

, '!l , .. ......

June 17, 1984

theri er

Agent
Orange
document
released

1rimes- ientin.el

Section[ID
Sunday

~·
::::.::•

MONTHLY VIS ITOR
Thi.r l.JJasa
ApsOJ named Ginger
visited Pinecre.11 N uning
Home for pet therapy
day recent6'· Here,Nancy
Mae Murray. talk.r to
Ginger holding her pau ·,
while lvlaril)'n Smith of
the Animal Welfare
League holds her up
u·tthin reach. Animals

•

make a 1'1Jtl each month

,..0 :;:; •

to see 1he patients and let
them touch, hold and talk
to them.

By E. O'NEIL ROBINSON
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. iAPlAn enterprbing :11oru;anto Co.
offici al suggested during the Vietna m War that the company sell
chemicals that would destroy Southmst Asian rice crops.
J .D. Koch made the proposal in a
1966 memorandum that is among
S('Vl'rai hundred rages of company
document s recently unsealed by a
federal judge. The papers are
evidPnce in a civil suit filed against
Monsanto by 170current and former
employees who say their health was
damagt &lt;l by handling dangerous
r hPmica l.t.; aT The company's N itro
plan t
A Monsanto spokpsman at the
company's Dayton, Ohio, offices
dfflini?d to discuss the m em or an·
dum and sa id Koch no lo nger
workC'd tht&gt;re.
Koch's mPmorandum was tilled
" f)pfollant Money from Arm y." In
addition to s uggC'sll.ng sa le of
r irr -killing chemicals. it also proposed usc ol Agen t Orange to
defoliate 1hC' Vie tnamese countryside and suggpsted the war would
takC' ··an intC'resting turn" as a
result.
ThP war did in fact take the tum
Koch specula ted about, and by 1968
the milit ary w as spraying chemical
defolian ts on the lush jungli'S of
Vietnam to cut d0"-11 on V iet Cong
opPra tions
Among the defoliants was Agent
Orang£:', which contained dioxin,
and w hich has ix'en blamed by
V ietnam vetera ns groups for bir th
d~ frc". ra nC&lt;'r and a host of other
maladies afflict ing so ldif'rs who
handled the m a ter ia l
In the Apr il 1966 mrmo, Koch
\ \!TOll' that he had vis ilC'd A1n 1y U .
Col. Louts Klink~r and two 1'('sea rchrr~ from thC'Arrny Research
Office in i\rlington. Va. T he trip w as
intended to produC&lt;' ideas on how
Monsanto could m akr morf' money
off thl' war pffort .
"Thr purpose of thP v isit was to
S('(' how we could get m Ol'(' Anny
funds for further defoliant work,
presumably from a source other
than Ft. Detrick ," Koch wrote. At
the t1111r. officials in Ft. Detrick
wPrl' in charge of acquiring chemical.s for USl' in Asia .
"Two possibilities werC' dis&lt;· usSC'd . One was Monsanto Com p;my's rirr s t~rila nts. developed
&lt;•ntirt'l:&lt;--' on proprietary· money,"
Koch wrote. " The other possibility
was that we m ight wish to state thai
on(' of our fast ionic ammonium
trx:iidrs coupled w ith a herbicide like
2.4 D 1Agr•nt Orangt• 1 would give
fus t~r k nock -out . plus long - t~rm
elfret.
" If '"'' sold thi s to the Army
fli'search OffiCP
it is at least
fX!Sstbl~ tha t we could gel an order
[Dr t•nough of the iodide for a fi eld
tp;:;;t. If !hr fi eld test WPff' SUCl'l'SSfu)
th is mig ht bf'c-omf' the nf'w Anny
ddoliant and thC' war could lakf' a
nPw and int f' rf'stLng tum ."
Accord ing to coon documents,
thP lldmsr DPpariment boug ht
morf' than lK . ~ mil lion pound." of 1hc
defoliant from eight soppli&lt;ers in
1 ~167. wit h thr larges t share of thE
pur&lt;' hast'S com ing from Dow Chemica! . Monsant o wa s SC'C'ond
In 1 ~. Monsanto sold thp
militarv 7 million pounds of the
ddollant. S&lt;'Cond to Dow's 8.4
mill ion pounds. Thtrd on the list thai
w·ar \vas Hl'fC'UI~ Corp . wll h sa les
of lY million rnu nd;:;;

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Something to love.· pets give patients
much for a small investment of time
By LEE ANN WELCH

'ffiEI\iTOI", N.J . tAP t -

Fiw
inmates cscaped from Trenton
Staw Prison this mornin g, and two
wf'rr im m C'Cl iately recaptured
within SPVPrul biO&lt;'ks of the
maximum-S('(' urily faci lity, author 11 if'S sa id .
The prisoners, who were working
in t hr prison kitchen and were
wearing whit e uniforms. Wf're SC'C'n
from a guard tower running away
fmm the pri!'On. located in thecity's
South Ward ~boot 8: 45 a.m .. said a
radio dispat ch&lt;'r who declined to
givp his name.
Trenton poli('(' Sgt. Richard ShUck
sa id authorities believe the men
were unarmed and thethreeat large
were still on foot.
" They' d have to be co nsidered
dangerous because they're in the
state prison," he said.
" We hea rd they went o ut the gate
as a truck was coming In," Stuck
said . "That' s what we heard . We
can't confirm tha t."
The prison Is the site of New
Jersey's death row, but Stucksald lt
was unlikely death row lrunates
would work In the prison ldtchen .
Deta ils about the prisoners were not
immedlately avallable.

Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Life in a
nursing care farili ty can be a
lonely experience, but at least
once a month , residents at n.-vo
nursing homes in Gall ia County
have visitors - furry vi sitors.
Pet Therapy is a program in
which animals are taken to
nursing homes for the residents
to hug, pet , talk to and love, and
m embers of t he Gallia County
Animal Welfare League take
their personal animals to P iner est and Scenic Hills monthly .
On the second Monday of each
month, patients at Scenic Hills
have the visitors, while they
travel to Pincrest the last
Tuesday of the month . Matilyn
Smith of the Animal Welfa re
League said residents of the two
facilities look forward to the

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RESPONsmn..rrv - Leaning N'Sponslbility is part ofthe residential
pet therapy program at Middleton Estales. H ere, Homer Bell grooms

Those in the homes at'('
allowed to hold and pet the
animals. and most rPCOun t
stori~s of the days when t hey
lived independently and had
dogs or cats .
They a r e anxious to tell you

about those anima ls - their
names and special trait s that
made them so loveable.
Mrs. Smith sa id the program
has done som e pa tient s a lot of
good. MC'mbPrs oft he Pinecrest
staff have told her a t least one
pat.lcnt w ho was unresponsive to
rvery1 hing and everyone untll
about three months ago during
the pets' visit. Now, the patient

smiles and is amious to visit
with the dogs tak en lo th~
faci li ty.
ThiS is not the only account of
such a behaviora l change, Mrs.
Smith sa id. There are others,
like one- man wh o does not
speak, but holds the dogs and
tells them " I lovP you," in his
own soundless mann('r.
'' I don't know w ho gets more
oul of this progrum. thcpa ti~nts.
the dogs or us," she sa id .
" It's such a good feeling w hpn
you IC'ave. they 1patients) have
so many swries to telL "
There are only a few - M rs.
Smith and four ot hers. Judy and
Ga ry Taylor. Ka thy Heink~ and
Darlene Brovm - who go on 1he

monthly visit to the nu rsing
homes. M any more are needed,
she said .
The patients SC'C'm anxious to
have the dogs around. and last
mont h, there was only onr
animal to go around - a L hasa
Apsos namro Ginger . which
belongs to Mrs. Smith .
GInger was in high demand
tha t day. most of the patients
wanted to spend r ime with her.
and som e w ished aloud they
cou ld keep her forever .
Mrs. Smith said she had heard
and read much about pet
thera py , and to ld members of
the animal welfare league this
would be somNhing good to
start.
The program has been going
on aOOut 1~~ yrars, Mrs. Smith
sa id , and a tota l of 11 dogs and a
ca t have teen involved everything from a fiv e-pound
Yorkshir e tenier to a 50-pou nd
German
Shepard, a lthough
most times Poodles make the
round of patient rooms.
The rooms seeed to brighten
as Mrs. Smith took Ginger in to
see patients last month . The

resident s were morC' t han wil·
ling to talk, and eager to hold the
long-hatred animal
Almost all commented on the
soft fur and her large eyes. One
woman sa id 1he dog's eyes we-J'('
"as blg as moons."'
Several patients were bllnd,
and touched t he dog to get an
idea of what she lookr&lt;l Ilk~.
They thought she had an extra
ear from the topknot of fur on
her head . and descritx-'tl the
animal wlth great c larity .
One patient followed M rs.
Sm ith down the hallwa,·, still
talking about how well she liked
dogs, and wis hed she could have
Gi nger. So m any memories and
sto ries wcf&lt;' shared b)' the
r esidents with Mrs. Smi th
A few minutes and a litt le love
goes a long way. and thl' animals
\.vill be back again thi.s month .

Photos bJ

I.F..E .- \l'i:\ WELCH

Prineess during his day to he responsible for her welfare. The progr-.un
at Middleton has the oolmaJ Bvlng In the facility wlth the residents, Md
they have a regular schedule lor her care.

Resident program
teaches sharing

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June 17, 1984

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By LEE ANN "ELCH
Tbnes-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Having a pet can mean higher self esteem. and
residents of Middleton Estates in Galllpolls are discowrlng that for
themselves.
Middleton Estates is a group home for approximately 35 senior
citizens w ho have been institutlonali7.ed t he majority of their lives,
many for epilepsy. While they were younger, not much was known of
epilepsy, its cause and treatment , and t hose suffer ing from it were
placed In Galllpolls Developmental Center.
Pet therapy has been found to help r aise self image and teach a
number of va lues, such as caring, sharing and responsibility, and
according to Susan Clark, service provider at Middleton. that is
exactly what has been happening since Christmas, when they began
the program.
Begun when residents of the homes wanted to k eep the dogs which
were wandering around the grounds, they now have a schedule for
care of "Princess" the part labrador who lives in one of the
chahUeau-styled homes.
The residents in the program take turns seeing to Prtncess' needs
daily - feeding, gettingfl'('sh water, bathing and taking her on w alks.
" It's been good for everybody," Ms. Clark said. It has taught them
1res idents) many things . "Th e res idents realize they are r esponsible .
for the animal."
They have also learned to share, she said. The dog has a schedule,
and mie person has charge of her for the day, alternating between the
five w ho participate In the residential pet therapy program .
There Is also a fish tank In the chateau. It belongs to one woman, but
everyone likes to watch and helps keep In shape.
Princess has m ade an outward difference In at least one resident,
Ms. Clark sald. One woman there formerly dldn't careabou t herself,
seeming with an attitude of " well, I'm here and not going anywhere. "
Ms . Clark said the dog has helped. Now the resident cares about
something and someone - herself - and It has made an outward
change In her appeearance.
Everyone needs someone to love, and pet therapy ls becoming a
more and more popular treatment for the handicapped.

FOR A Ul'l1.E WHILE - Julie McGhee, a resident of Pinecrest
Nursing Home, holds Ginger for a Utile while, teUing Marilyn Smith how
fond she Is of "doggies." Monthly, Mrs.Smithandothermembers of the

GaDla County Animal WeHare League lake their personal pets to

Pinecrest and Scenic Hills to vlslllbe patients. Mrs. Smlth said she's not
sure who gets more out of the ~It, the patients, lbe animals or the

owners.

�. ·-- _ ... _ .. _____ ..... .....

Page .B-2- The Sunday Timft-Sentinel

~-..\

June 17, 1984

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

Nn,t
17, 1984
.

Beat of the Bend

Katiels korner

Golf can be big money

Heritage Weekend set for area

By IV\TIE CROW
By BOB HOEFLICH
'flmes..Seotinel S&amp;aff
Then&gt;'s big
to be made on
the golf course
and like with all
other s ports, you
undoubted ly,
have to start
young .

That brings up
thP formation of the Youth fJ..Jft•• ~
League at the Jaymar Golf Course
with the initial session at 1 p.m .
Monday . Young people between
nine a nd 17 arc invited to meet with
Bill Childs to discuss the program .
There will be free ins truction.
Many of you may want to
remember Lee Rudisill, well known
Pomeroy resident.
Lee will be ma rking his 87th
birthday at his home, 1(ll Legion
Terrace, Wednesday. Lee has been
vpry ill and is confined to his home.
Congratulations to Dorihy Dow·
nie, who marked a birthday
anniversary , Friday and to Paul
Simon who observed his birthday
Sa turda y. I believe someone said
both were 39 and holding .
Phillip and E ileen Bauer, for ·
merly of MPigs County where he
worked wit h the Farm Bun&gt;au, are
observing their 50th wedding anni ·
versa f)' Sunday with an open house
at a Marion church . Their home
address is 482 Kennsington P la ce,
Marion.
Francis Florist has received
word of a double honor from the
F'TD Assn.
First, the shop has been awarded
the Silver Anniversary Awa rd of
Excellence for 25 years of service
and design excellence With ITD.
The special award is being en·
graved and wil l be presentro
Tuesday by an F'TD represent a tive.
According to the F'TD, Francis
F lorist is the oldest memberofF'TD
mthe arm.
. The second honor is that Francis

Florist has been chosen to be the
!lrst Meigs County florist to go on
the Mercury Network Line. This is
a: computer opera ted system of

Tlme&amp;&amp;!ntlnel S&amp;aff

sending and receiving orders anywhere In the FlD system. The
computer terminal has been
shipped and will be installed Within
a week.

The Bend Area Merchants Association, the
Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Com·
merce and the
Meigs County
Histortcal Society
are beefing up
plans for a whale of a
on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, June
22, 23 and 24.

Aaron Kelton has responded well
to his recent heart surgery and he
and Iris. former residents of both
Pomeroy and Middleport. will be
observing their 50th wedding annl·
versary next Sunday. Tilelr ad·
dress is Route 2. Box 379, Quinton.
Va.

The following poem by Lavina C.
Brannon, Reedsville, tells of the
problem of the Joppa Church ...
For 88 years Joppa Church has
s tood in this place;
As a beckoning symbol of God 's
mercy and grace;
Many times In the past , friends
have come to thP rescue;
The most we can say is "'May God
bless you."
Now, the wee chlldren need a
room of their own:
Where they can learn, sing and be
happy. until they're more grown:
We have sand and gravel to stan
the foundation;
And just 40 dollars-- need more
explanation? ''
Has our need reached your
heart• May we hear from you?,
Mrs. Brannon asks.

RUTLAND - ThechlldrenofMr.
and Mrs. Dennis E . Searles will host
an open house in honor of their
parents' 50th wedding anniversary.
The celebration will be held from 2
to 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 21. at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Searles. Route
1, Rulland. Relatives and friend s
are Invited to call durtng the open
house hours.
Mr. and Mrs. Searles were
married on June 25 at Point

CELEBRATING 25TH ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Clagg will celebrate their anniversary ,June 21. The Claggs have a son,
E ddie, at home. Mr. and Mrs. Clagg were married at Banis Baptist by
Rev. Alfred Holley. She is the fonner Jessie Weeks.

Madhu Malhotra, a staff member
of the Pomeroy Public Library, will
present a children's program a t the
Middleport Library on Wednesday
a t 2 p.m. A native of Agra, India,
Mrs. Malhotra will be sharing the
dress, foods and folklore of her
native country which s hould make
for an Interesting presentation.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel staff
:our contratulalions to the
rryembers of the
Chester Garden
Club on their su·
po:r ior rat ing on
yearbook from
the Ohio Associa·
liOn of Garden
Clubs.
:Betty Dean was chairman of thc
yearbook committee, and the su·
perior was a "'first" for the c lub.
The commentary which cam e with
the award congratulated tht' cl ub
rr(embers on their wide var iety of
projec ts, their conserva tion progr..arn, and their flower show
activ ities.

will meet
GALLIPOLJ S - The Ga ll ipolis
Ar'f'a Ostomy Croup will have their
regu lar monthly meeting on Thu rs day eve ning . .June 21, at 7 p.m . in
the French ~ Room at Hol zer
Mroical Center.
A special program presented by
two local pharmacists is entitled
" Medicines, Vitamins and the
Ostomate ... The two pharm acists
who will br speakin g to the group
all' Bria n Sml!h and Bob Pegg.
For any additional informa tion
co ntact Ba rba ra McK e lvey. R. N ..
a t 44fi.5246. or Phyll is Brown. R .N..
a t 446·5&lt;Yl5 .

We've got some good news and
some bad news today .. ...
For the good news, J ohn R ie&lt;&gt;,
extension agent , tells us that
intef'liews are beginning for a new
county hom e economics agent.
We've missed Dale Stoll who left in
December and are e nthusiastic
aOOut someone new coming in .
And the bad news .....
Watch out or the Japanese
beetles will get ya•
Reuter Laboratories of Washing·
ron, D.C. advise that we can expect
the beet le problem to be severe this
summer. The Infesta tion began In
Ma y in the southern portions of the
country and are on the move nor1h .
They attack trees, roses, garden
plants and other vegetation during
the surruner and will spawn larvae
willch is expected to do major
damage since they feed on the roots
a! vegetation. They can actually cut
off root growth beneath the sod .
Milky spore is the answer, we' re
told, and If you don' I know a bou 1
that better contact Rice at the
Me igs Extension Office.

And this word for area cheerlPad ·
ing squads ..
The Southern High School cheerleaders are sponsoring a gymnas·
tics clin ic. open to both junior high
and high school cheerleading
squads. It will be held July 23-26 a t
Southern High and Rich Mathias, a
former Penn Sta te gymnasist a nd
owner and instructor of Charleston
School of Gymna stics. wi.ll be the
Instructor .
Registrat ion deadline is .June .10 .
If you want to know morP. just
contact Mickey Hoback, 949-2422.

V. LeroJ' and Jo);ce Ann Sauters

Sauters planning open house
POMEROY - V. Leroy and
Joyce Ann Sa uters, Pomeroy, wil l
observe the ir 25th wedding a nnivC'r·
ary with an open house at their
RDut e 3 home, on June 24 from 1 t o ~
p.m .
The observance is being hosted by
lh!'ir children and their families ,
Char les and Dianna Vandevander,
Pomeroy: Timot hy and Me li ssa
Sauters and thetr twin daught ers,
Amanda

and

Andr ea.

Texas; Joy, Cheri and Patrick. a t
home.
Mr. an d Mrs. Sauters were
married on .June 20, 1959 a t the
House of Prayer in Chester. Native
Meigs Countians, they are active
members of tc Unitro Pentecostal
Church of Middleport.
Frie nds a nd relatives of the
couple are cordially invited to attend
the observance.

Joshua.

Shark a puzzler to scientists
WAJKIKI, Hawaii 1AP I - A
lHoot. I,f,')().pound shark rPCCntl.\ ·
ca ptun:d off the coast of Hawali is a
new br0C'd of sha rk. and sciC'ntists
wonder how Ihe btg- fi sh had &lt;'SCajX'd
discovery

c-nonnous mouth, huge lips a nd 236
IC'&lt;'t h , t11 eshark isoneofonly three of
the .1"..0 shark species that feed on
plankt on.

l.tving in depths of ROO to l ,500 fee t.
thl' s hark ts too big to he caugh t in

/ It greater ri.rk

Nice things arP being plan ned for

traw ling nrts and, with a densit y./

the Meigs County Jaycee Women 's
day camp . .July 10, ll and 12 a t
General Har tinger Park in
Middleport .
It's for low Income or disadvan!aged chlldren, grades two through
six, and a variety of fun and
learrilng activities have been
planned . There is no fee and lunch
will be provided . It 's the responsl·
bility of the parents, however, to get
their kids to and from the park.
Chlidren must be registered to
a ttend. That's done by picking up
one of Ihe forms from a m er e han t In
Pomeroy, Middleport or Rutland.
or by writing Marla Gimes, 12-D
Railroad Street, Middlepor1 . for
one. The deadline is July I.
It 's a new venture for the Jay(."('('

equa l ro se.1 water, it has eluded
sonar detection, acmrding- to rna rine biologist L&lt;'ighton Ta ylor, who
is head of the Waikiki Aq uarium .
Nicknamed "mcgamouth " for its

The• Am erica n Cancer Society
• dvises women with persona l or
famify histories of breast cancer to
consult their physicians about the
need ofmorefrequentexaminaUons
before the age of 50.

Women and they're enthused about
reaching out to the many boys a nd
girls who need thi s ki nd of summer

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

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
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Pomeroy
Phone 992-2284
Singer Approved Dealer

GALLIPOLIS

360 Second Ave .•446-0699

. i19.20

ION. &amp; fit .
·m 1

fU[S .·WID. -rHURS
&amp; SAT. 'Ill 5

Reg. 19.00
Cut 3.80

,, 5.20

A small reception was held
following the ceremony at the
church. The cake was topped with
two doves and refreshments we re
made by the Women's group of the
church, and the cake by Carol Lutz
of Circlev ille. Therewasalso a small
reception was also given a l the home
of the groom's parents . A larger
picnic reception is planned July 14in
Wellston at Lake Alma.
The couple resides at 320 N.
Virginia Lee Rd., Columbus , Ohio.
The bride is a graduate of GaUia
Academy High School a nd Colum bus Business University. She at·
tended Rio Grande College and
Community College and Hocking
Technic al College . She is a member
of the Order ol the Eastern Star and
Is a secretary with Manpower in
Cdumbus.
The groom is a graduate of Logan
E lm Hi gh School in Circleville a nd
served in the U.S. Navy. He
attended HockingTechnicai College
and attends Columbus T echnical
Institute. He is a m ember of the
Masons in Wilkesville and the Order
of the East em Star in Circleville. He
is a comba 1 e ngineer with the
National Guard.

ATHE NS - Botany , che mistry.
meteorology, a nd physics : sounds
like a class schedule for college
students, r ight? Wrong.
· These su bjects, as well as many
others. will be offered from June 24
io July 7 at Ohio University as part
of ""The Olympics for the Scienllft·
cally Incl ined ," a program for
~udents in grades slx to 11 .
Participants wlll be able to use
hhe resources of Alden Library , the
romputercenter. science . e ngi neer·
ing and me di cal laboratories, as
well as the other faclllll es a t Ohio
University.
The "Summer Trial s" will pro·
Vjde Individu a l and s m all group

Shirley Wolfe .. Durst"

Chapel Hill Church of Christ ·:

TO OUR STAFF
SHIRLEY IS A 1971 GRADUATE OF
MARIETTA BEAUTY COLLEGE

Bui••Uie Road • P . 0 . 8o1 .101

GalUpola, Oblo 45631
Wrchtnci•J :
llllle ~ H~

1:01p.lll .

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.... ......

' 'M,_.,. F,.,.

DtJbo • WJI::H
11:551 •• .

''TlMIIMt A....tn'' • W'llWI·T\' U • S.111111y , 7:Jil .

.

....

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- ~ --- "14

Also On Staff. Cindy Cross who specializes in French Braiding, and Cathy Jo
· Lipscomb, both graduates of Marietta
Beauty College.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Open Mon.-Sat. 9:00 To 5:00
Thursday Evenings By Appointment

Run Road n'C'Pnl ly. It was earH e~

reported that Bill\· Wells was the
winnf'r .

Shawnee Pumps

OFF

50% OFF
Second Ave .
La fayette Ma II
r;allipolis. 0 .

Open Dat ly 10-9;
Sunday 1·6

il

Save•3
Save

2997
•

~~~~
897
•
11.97

0ur
Re g .
39.97

' lnc lude5 2 p 111o wca~es

Save•J

10.97

Sizzler Smoker Grill

Reinforced Garden Hose

20" Recoil·start Mower

With titt. away hood,
19x19" grid, 2 wh ee ls.

Durable radial knit vinyl
garden hOse . 50'xY."" size .

Side· discharge : throttl e
control on handle. Briggs
8&lt; Stratton 3·HP engine.

Mlr May varv

4.97
SuperQiuel!l
Permanent .
clear; .1 oz. •

I

·2.00
Your Net Cost

Aflet Reba te

2.97

Reoo te litn11 80 to m11 -, ~tipulol ion

Super Poly® Waxes
Prolecl And Polish
16-oz." liquid, 14·0Z." •
paste or 18.oz.' • spray.
12·oz: Poly Wash®.,. 1.77
·nm. '' Netwt

;

703 Full Set · . ... 15 ,9 7
704 Queen Set ·. :22 .97
705 King Set· . ... :26 .97

POMEROY, OH.

Welcomes

Eric Sim ofChcsterw as winner in
the ju niordinsion mud pit contest at
the Mus&lt;'ular Dystrophy Assocla '
lion trail bik&lt; · poker nm held a t th&amp;
American Lt•giu n f ann on Bailey.

The :wo
Shoe Cafe

on

Ohio RivN He ritagP. The boat will
a lso be available for public touring
There ;;ill bP activities on the
upper parking lot Sa turday afternoon following the arrival of

PH. 992-3233

·,

-----.
. . ·I
..

50°/o

The Adventure Ga llcy will rem a in throughout lhP weekend to

Instruction on how to usr a
computer a.s a research tool and
also some technical w ritin ~ skill s
a nd public spea ki ng s ki lls to he lp
prepan&gt; them for fu ture participa·
tion In the Ann ua l Junior Scienrf'
and Humanities Symposium .
Dr . Ray Skinner. Professor at
Ohio U niversity and Jerry .Jividen.
TAG Coordinator, Hudson School.
are serving as co-dirE-Ctor s for the
program . The registration deadline
has been extended to June 20. For
more information and an applica ·
tlon form. writ e to the Work shop
Office . Memo r ial Audi tor iu m,
Athens. Ohi o 4o702-2971l: or call
(6141 594-ffi.11

118 E. MAIN ST.

Correa ion

20 TO

22
vari ous information

A request has been made for
replacement blood for Wendel
Frecker, Racine. Donors may
donate in his name at the next
Bloodmobile which will be held on
June 20.

BASS

HAIR ARTS

For Free Bible Corres,.,U1U:e Courae Write ...

S..U1 E•t11hl1:
Wonlllp t:IO

Saturday, June 23, the flatboat,
Advenhure Galley II will a rrive in
Pomeroy at a pproximately 3 p.m.
The Adventure Gall ey will be at
RDush's landing in Racine on June

present

All in all It sounds ilke things wUl
really be hurruning.

carpenter
work Leo
benchStory
donated
by 1r:~~~~:;:;;;:::;;,:;;:::;;,;;=;;;,:;;;;::;:~;=;;:;;;
life member,
which
forms the background for the room .
To be displayed with the work
benc h will be aU kinds of wood
working and coopering tools. in the
same room will be displayed

LLERV

names wr1tten tn heaven!

S.11d1r MOIHII :

At the suggestion of C. E. Blakes·
lee the weekend will be known as
Heritage Weekend .
Starting off activltles will be
Heritage Day Sales on Friday and
Saturday by members of the Bend
Area Merchants Association.
Members will obse!'le the event
with old fashioned dress a nd
decora ted windows.
The merchants will start decorat ing windows on Monday. Interested
merchants are to contact Joe Clark
at 992-2(]5:1 or Sandy Iannarelli at
992-7606.

Adventure Galley II, In fact the miners tools use by Meigs County
entire weekend.
men when they tolled long hours
One of the Nents Saturday underground. frequently working
afternoon will be "Sweet Mountain In a kneeling position.
Sounds." featwingJennlferSheets,
From 1::Jl p.m. to 3 p.m . "Sweet
Roger and Mary GUmore and Tim Moutaln Sound" will again be
featured.
Glaze.
The Ubrary team of Vada
The chamber is organizing Hazelton. Sherri Hart and Margames lor Sunday at 3 p.m. lor both
adults and chlldren. A dance Is garet Parker have reorganized the
planned lor Saturday from 8p.m. to library which will certainly be an
addition.
11 p.m.
The museum will be a lso be open
Special events at the Me igs on Saturday bur m ost of the
County Museum will be on Sund ay activities will occur on Sunday .
from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
th
s d
Oh yes, at e museum on un ay
Sunday events Include a audoslide show showing Meigs County Ohio RoUing Hills Dairy Goat Club
will have homemade ba ked items
Productl·on of Rr'vers, Roads and
such as bread, pies and cakes which
Rails, a new display room of old will availble by the piece or for sale
time carpentry a nd mining tools, a 10 take home.

Science Olympics set
by Ohio University

A Message From Tlw Bible ...
THE CHURCH OF THE FIRSTBORN
Wilham B. K ughn
_"To th e general assembly and church of the fintborn, which are
wnt ten m heaven. and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of ftut
men made perfect" (Heb. 12:231.
"Firstborn""means "first to beget·· So that we may understand the
meanrng ol the word '"firstborn, •· let us observe the way it is used in
regard to Chrrst:
I. In reference . to ~reation, He is called "the firstborn of every
creature (a ll creatron) (Col. 1: 15). When we consider His eternal
r elationship with God (being the image of the invisible God), He is the
F.~stborn ~ef&lt;ne aU creation. as all&lt;reation was first begotten (made to
extst) by Hrm (Jno . 1:3; Reb . 1:2).
2. Concerning Hio birth, it was the first of it• kind. He was the first
to have been born of a virgin without the &lt;oncurrence of man (lsa. 7:14;
Mt. 1:18-20).
3. In ~~gard to His resurrectl~n, He was. "the firstborn among many
brethren _IRm, 8:291 . Chnst berng the Ftratborn before all creation
and the Ftratborn from the dead. has all preeminence. and has become
"the head of the body, the church"" (Col. 1:18). Christ the Firstborn.
has established His church , so the phrase '"the church ~!the firstborn"
refers to the members olthe chun:h ol Christ on earth with Christ the
Firatborn, bein!) the head , The members ol the chur~h (all Christians)
were begotten 'with tM word of truth ••according to the will of God so
that they "should be ~. kind of fi,~stfruits of_his creatur~s" (Jas . 1:18).
Th ey we r e among the 'firstborn m that therr entrance rnto the &lt;hurch
was by way of a spiritu~l birth . In baptism , they obeyed the form ol
doctrme, the death. burral, and resurrection ol the Lord (Rm . 6:3-51.
and were added to the body (church) of Christ, and united with the
head of the church. the Firstborn. The head being the Firstborn and
members of the body (ehur.h) by way ol spiritual birth are firstborn
the Hebrew writer speaks of the church as the "'church o' t •e'
firstborn. ••
' "
The early Christians, to whom James was writing were amon the
Jirstjruits itl'iven the spiritual birth) of a great
(the churt~l of
people whrch would follow, and were representatives of the
consecration of the entire harvest of Christians to follow throughout all
ages.
Members ?f the churc~ toda)', having ~en begotten by the word ol
truth, accordmg to the wrll of God. and giVen the spiritual birth are
called "the church of the fiTstborn." Members having been born ~gain
mto the church, have a holy, pure, and honorable relationship with God
and Chris_t and are among the firstborn . The ""fir~tborn" have their

t:JO
Wof'llllp II:JO

STORE HOURS

OFF

TO 4-H MEMBERS

· ·~

R)g. 124.00
'Cut 4.80

Escorted down the aisle by her
father, the bride wore a lull lenght
apricot formal with lace from the
neckline to the elbow. She also wore
a white brimmed hat with silk
flowers and carried a bouquet of
}!lellow roses, daisies and baby 's
11reath.
Matron of honor was Mary Ann
Beman·Nethlng, stster of the bride
from fulvenna, Ohio. Whe wore a
sj&gt;rtngdresswith matching vest a nd
Carried a single red rose.
Best man was Michael A.
Williams , CirclE'Ville.

115 W. 2nd

.... s...,.

1

groom.

To Finish The
Project Easier

body

AS LITTLE AS S118 MONTHLY
Maria

CIRCLEVll..LE . Ohio - JaneL.
Beman became the bride of Dennis
W. Hall In a Feb. 18 ceremony a t
Circleville Presbyterian Church.
The bride is the da ughter of Luther
M. Beman and the late Donna D.
Beman of Rio Grande. The groom is
the son ol WlUlam C . and Shirley B.
Hall , 208lChippewa Dr ., Circ leville.
The bride Is also the granddaught er
of Mary D. Denney. Wellston.
The double-ring ceremony was
officiated by the Rev . William
Campbell, and music was provided
by Darrell Hall, brother of the

FABRIC

LOOKING FOR

A ROAD MAP?
®HAS THEM!!!!

Maid of honor was Ke lly Nibe rt .
Kyger Creek .
The bes l ma n was Bi ll Benn~tt.
The bride is a gradua l ~ of Poin t
P leasant High School and Gallipolis
Business Coll ege with a degree in
accounting. She is employed a t Rite
Aid in the Silver Bridge P laza .
Elliott is a gradua te of Pom t
Pleasant Hi gh Sc hool a nd is
e mployed by the Ohio Va lley
Publishing Company. Gallipolis .

Jane L. Beman becomes bride of
Dennis W. Hall in Circleville

LARGE
SELECTION OF

r--------------1

given awa y by her mot her.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Grovle Mae Taylor of Point Plea·
sa nt announces the m arriage of her
daughter, Darle ne. to Henry '"Bo"
Elliott, son of He nry and Bertha
Elliott, also of Point Pleasant.
The couple exchanged weddl ng
vows Saturday, April 21. at the ir
horne in Gallipolis. The ceremony
was performed by Rev. Alfred
Holley.
The bride wore a white lac!' gown
with a train and carried a bouqu et
of blue and while flow ers. She was

group

Gosh ~ In this hea t you can' t even
depend upon yo ur five day deodor ant pad. Maybe no one will notice if
you keep smiling .....

Belated birthday congratula lions
to William Fred Sm ith Sr., of
Bradbury. He was 84 on ThUJ&gt;;day,
and adding to his day was a card
from President and Mrs . Reagan.

Pleasant. W. Va . by Justice of the
Peace Fred Slllfflet. They have lived
in Rutland s ince. .
Mr. and Mrs. Searles have three
sons. Kenneth E. Searles, Robert L.
Searles, and Ronald E. Searles, all
of Rulland. They also have a .
daughter-in-law. Edith Searles, 11
grandc hldren and 14 great·
grandchildren .

Ostomy

The building fund committee for
the new Scipio Township Volunteer
F ire Department reports that
llilngs are getting off the ground
and committee members ex tend a
big thanks for yow· support.

will get you!

Darlene Taylor weds Bo Elliott
in Pt. Pleasant ceremony

Searles will note anniversary

Community Corner

~eetles

Mr. and Mrs . Henry 'Bo' Elliott

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis E. Searles

The Sunday Times·Sehlinei- Page-B-3

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

wosn notsoown

Ch oose
Pink Or Gray

~

Twin

" Alumni Stripe" Sheet Sets
3-pc. sheet set inc ludes 1
1101, 1 lilted sheel . 1 p illOW·
case. Polyester /cotton .

�-.

- - -. "t,; ... -

- . .-:-.-

Ohio Paint l!lea~ar~t, W. Va.

JIIM 1. 7, I

-Kimberly Northup, Mark D. Groves trade vows
&lt;;RO\"E CITY - Grove Cltv
Church of the Nazarene provided
the setting for t he Saturday, Aprll28
wedding of Kimberly S. No rth up
and Mark D. Groves. The F.cv. C.
1\'illiam Groves, father of the
groom . offici &lt;Hf'd the ceremony.
The bride is the daught er of Mr.
~tnd Mr~ . Ga ry :--.l'orthup of GrovP
CiT\ . T hP groom i!:i thf' son of Rev .

and Mrs. C. WUIIam Groves. aiM of
Grove City .
Music was provided b)' Larry and
Phyllis Richards , who are song
evangelists and the groom's
godparents.

The bride was escorted by her
father am} wore a gown of white
satin with a Victorian neckline and
long fitted sleevt&gt;S. The sheer yoke
was embroidered with shlftll lace
and the fitted bodice was enhanced
'Wilh a lencon lace and seed pearls .

Gulden Buckeye
Gtrd applications
taken june 20

The A -line skin was appllqued with
a shl ffll motif and alencon lace. The
hf'mline was trimmed with m atc h·
ing lace and fell to a cathedral train
that was enhanced with shiftlllace
cutouts. A matching headpiece was
also worn. The bride's bouquet was
ffiGidP or ivy, stephanotis, statice,
lavcnder silk roses, orchids and
baby's brea th .

CRO'NN CITY - Golden Buck·
eye Card applications wiU be taken
at Gatewa y Market, June ~. 10: 30
a.m to .3:30 p.m . Anyone wishing to
apply must l&gt;.&gt; an0hio residcnt .6:\or
older with proof of age or a
permanently disabled, over 18
resiedent They must also show
proof of disabilitv.

The groom worE" a white sat in
tuxedo w i I h Ia ils.

Vergie Roberts, Ga Uia County
Liaison w ith theOhioCommissionof
Aging, added those applying can
bring a valid state's drivers license
0r birth certifica!!' for proof of age.

Kathy Northup. sister or the
bride, was maid of honor. Angela
De Coy, Kabl e Brockmeyer,
Tammy Grubb. Taml Groves,
cousin of the groom, and Amy

Southern, cousin oftlle groom, were
bridesmaidS.
Mark Farr was best man . Duane
Hlll. Richard Jackson, Rich Cole,
Tim Groves, cousin of the groom,
and Paul Groves. brother of the
groom, were groomsmen.
Rlngbearer was Mic haei Burns.
cousin of the brlde. Flowerglrl was
Jon'Drea Bianu.
Ushers were Don McNeal, Donald DeCoy, cousin of the bride.
Kenny Gamer. and Sid Hill.
A reception foll owing the ceremony was held at the church. The
cake was three-tiered with a
lavender fountain and sUk lavender
roses with baby's breath In between
each layer . On top were a handblown glass heart with two bells and
two doves and at the bottom In front
of t he cake was a bride and groom
figurine.
The couple r esides in Grove City,
Ohio.
The bride Is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Northup of
Gallipolis and M r. and Mrs. Odls
Burris of Grove City.
The groom Is the grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Bradshaw of
Dayton and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Groves of West Lafayette, Ohio.

COLLECTION

We're Clearing the Shelves
HOURS 9 A.M. TILL &amp; P.M MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

-.. Aowm•---c •MD-Lo-.ol ""
'-"'u....: • ..._,. c..

MIKEV

Mr. and Mrs. Mark D. Grot·es

E-621416

Leann Davis weds Tony Ray ]ewell in ceremony

.

)
I ',

;

.

A. .

Mr. and Mr.r. Tony Ray }ewell
'

Rainmaker' at Marshall
: HUNTINGTON, W.Va . - "The
RainmakPr, "a romantic comedy by
N. Richard Nash. begins Ma n;hall

Oniveritv Thcatf'r's summrr sesSlon in Old Main Auditorium , .Junr
21 to 23.
: Thf' cast of communit y' rPsid( •nt s
and uni\·rrsitv sludrm .c; incl udr s
ac10r ~ I.A.'hn an"' fa miliar to audiPn ·
c£&gt;5 . Cra ig Johnson. a graduatC' of
Mar s h~.ll\' s

fhf'at rf' progra m . p l ay· ~
lh&lt;' tille role of Bill Starbuck. the
rainmakf'r
. Johnson. a former winner of thP
Clav f()n Pa gf" Av·:arrt for f'xcrllr ncr
irl thf'a1re at Marsha ll . has bef'n
nbtifif'd that he has been ac&lt;'&lt;'pled
11\ Ac tors' TlwatrP of Louis,·iiie at
the end of the summer whPn he w ill
beg in a ni nf' -month intrrn
pjogram .
· Thf' rrn tral ff'malf' r olf'. Lizzir
CurrY. is portrJ yf'd hv Barb&lt;.n J

Brandt, a junior majoring in
thpatrc from Barbours vil le. Miss
Bra ndt has previously appea red at
M arshall in productions of "The
Miser." "Stage Door ," and "A
Hatful of Ra in."
Tiw ot her central characters the Curry Family - include Steve
Hall as thdather. H . C. Curry. Hall,
who ra m r to Hunt ington from San
Clemen te. Ca li f . has appea red In
numerous pl ays OOth at M arsh all
ond at Community Players .

POMEROY - Trinity Church of
Pomeroy was the setting for the
Aprll 15 wedding of Leann Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. DP!marG.
Davis. LangsvU!e. and DPSN Tony
Ray Jewell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond F . Jewell. Pomeroy.
The Rev. W.H. Perrin performed
the double ring ceremony at 3: 30 in
the afternoon following a program
of music by organist, ~!ph Werry.
The church was decorated with
two nine-branch candelabra and
palms with vases of pink and white
spider mwns and theunlty candle.
Pink bows marked the family pews.
Given in marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by hpr
father, the bride wore a gown of
sa tin fashioned with a basque bodice
and Juliet sleeves trinuned with
alencon lace and simulated pearls.
Uluslon net front and back with
Schiffll embroidery and a chapel
train.
Her derby hat was accented with
an Uluslon veil and blusher, and she
wore a gold heart shaped necklace
with rub)', a gift of the groom. Her
gift to hinn was an engraved gold
identification bracelet. She carried
a bouquet of burgundy roses and
pink and mauve miniature carna·
tlons with lace and ribbons falling
into lovers• knots.
Tanya Stobart. Middleport, was
maid of honor and wore a burgundy
gown of taffeta brocade. The
bridesmaids were Sandy Napper.
LangsvU!e. sister ol the brlde, in a
matching gown of frost rose. and
Joyce Stewart, Middleport, in a
mauve gown.
They carried bouquets of pink and

burgundy flowers. Leanna Jo Davis
and Mandy Napper of LangsvUie
were the flower girls and wore pink
gowns with white lace overlay
accented with pink ribbons . They
carried baskets of pink and white
carnations and baby's breath.
Sp. 5 Frank Martin. Fayettevllle.
N.C. was best man. and the ushers
were DP!mar Davis Jr.. LangsvU!e,
brother of the bride, and Randy
Jewell, Pomeroy, brother of the
groom.
The bride's mother wore a dusty
fOS£' sheer organza and Mrs. Jewell
was in a mauve sheer polyester
chiffon, both withmatchingaccessories and burgundy and pink mlnia ture mum silk corsages.
Mrs. Roger Black, Rutland,
reg'stered the guests. Mrs. JOSPph
Quidgeon, Mrs. Wilbur Perrin, Mrs.
Donald Hauck, and Miss Mary
Vlrg1nia Riebel presided at the
refreshment table which featured a
three-- tiered wedding cake flanked
by crystal candelabra with pink
tapers.
Immediately following the wedding the couple lett for Norfolk
where they reside. Jewell is serving
with the U.S. Navy stationed In
Norfolk, Va. aboard the U.S.S.
Shenandoah. Both are graduates of
Meigs High School.
Out-{)f-lown guests attending
were Mr. and Mrs . Thomas Petty,
Petty,Cheryl
Mrs. and
Mable
Mrs.
Lori,
Art,Perry,
Mrs. Betty
Linda Da\1s. Trena and Tonuny,
Mike Crockett and Gary Crockett,
Giles, W.Va .; Tara Davis. David
Harlow. Ohley, W.Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Davis, Dobson, N.C.;

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Currence,
Winston Salem, N.C.; Mrs. Frank
Martin , Fayetteville, N.C.: Wendy
Prov ance. Boston . Mass. ; Mr. and
Mrs. K enneth Roush, Janet. Lois,
BPtty, Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Roush and Matthew, Morrall; Mr.
and Mrs. JosephQuigronand Brian.
Bradenton. Fla.: M rs. Marcia
Brecht, Karen and Cynthia, Findlay: Mr. and Mr. Charles Fridley,
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin T oWilSPnd,
Westerville; Mrs. Stanley Kilner
and Susan, Columbus: Mrs. M eade
Kayser. Mrs. Greg Gilders, Guysvllle. and M rs. DorisGildes, Athens.

The Pre cia w , Moments dol ls
ore th e mos t personal e11p res·
s1ons o f th e spi 11t o f thi s trea s ur~d

is

these subjects their s pecial
li fe·

He!lid and hands !Ut

made of po rce lain and de co ·
rated with the futu res that
ma ke P1ecious
M omen/.5
figurines unique. The dolls
vary in h eight fr om twelve to
sixtee n inche s.

We invite you to Yrsit us 11 nd

se e the m in person.

You don't have toU vp uncter a r ock

EVERYTHING

moderation and using sunscreen
with PABA cand help prevent skin
cancer and prematureagingofskin.

.--------------1

Ill THE
STORE

'HONE 675 -2303

2501 Jackson Ave.
Pleasant. W. Va.

GOES!

~-

PHONE 446 -6620

364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. Ohio
PHONE 384· 2 I 74

Milton. W. Yo.
PHONE

110 West 1nd St.

716 N. Second A,..

Wellston. Ohio

Middtepon. Ohio

' '' "· .. ........ · ~ .. ,_...,. "" ~ o. ... ...
.... . ~~ .. '" ~ · ·•4 .. ~ -

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

~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;~~~;;~~~~~!

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R.C. COlA

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Coupon E&gt;pires 6/ 24/ 84
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I $1.00 OFF
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ONE CARTON OF

CIGARETIES
limil 4
Plus Dep .

In Stock

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lI Sl.QO
OFF : l
ONE CARTON OF
l
lIll mitCHEWING
TOBACCO I l
4
Plus
I I
1
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BONUS BREAD I

3 $} 00
16 OZ.
LOAVES

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$14 9

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Building Everywhere

Eac h

to escape skin cancer. Sunbathing in

I

Linibilt Homes

co ll ~c t i o n .

c rll ft ed with a love a nd warmth
thllt shin e thro ugh and gi11e

Easy does tt

l.;i••;;••;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;~iQ~;;;;;d"L;;:;;;:~

Local theatre patrons ca n pur·
chasf' s£&gt;ason tickets for the three
!:iummPr plays : ''The Rainmaker,"
.Junl' 21-2.1; " Ci ngprbread Lady,"
Julv 'i· 7. and "Same Time, Next
Ye ar." .Jul y 19-21, for $9. Season
tickets a rC' presently on sa le at t he
Box Office, Old Main 23B, or they
may be ordered by call ing 696-2306.

COLLECTIBLE
DOLLS

l3LB
1 BAG

1

89¢

limlt4

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L--~IL~e!~.iR!.E.!, __

by Vtcky Vaughn

The Hln" look for Juniors

---

J l-- _C_!;}.!!,P.!,JI!~'!!!_- -1

�Pz 1 1

B6

June 17, 1984

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.---People in the news
Ewoks on television rhis fall
tau.

announced Friday.
Lucas created the "Star Wars" trtlogy and the "Indiana Jones"
epics. Last year's "Return of the Jedl" ranks third In
time theater
rentals, behind "E.T." and "Star Wars."
During the news conference to anoounce ABC's upcoming movies
and miniseries, the Lucas tum received an unusual Introduction.
After several loud knocks at the door, In came a 4-foot Ewok, who
skipped to the podium and shook hands with several ABC executives,
Including Brandon Stoddard, president of ABC Motion Pictures. and
Christy Welker, ABC's vice president for miniseries.

au·

Pauling rerurns just to remember
CONDON, Ore. (AP) -Nobel laureate Linus Pauling, who lived
here In the early 1910;, has returned each of the past two summers
" just to see what I could remember."
"The schools in Condon and Ponland were really excellent, as I
think back on mv earlv education " he said. " I realize how good the
teachers were a~d ho;:., good the ~hools were."
Pauling, 83, moved w ith his family to Condon at age 3 or 4, so his
father could run a drug store.
There were cowboys on Condon's streets then, Pauling told The
East Oregonian In a r ecent telephone interview from his home in Big
Sur, Calif.
His father' s store had a machine that piqued Pauling's scientific
mind.
"It was a machine you cranked to produce electrici ty. A person
could hold on to two handles, and someone would crank it and give
him a shock."
Pauling won the Nobel in chemistry in 1954 for his work on the
nature of matter. In 1958, Pauling presented a petition, signed by
scientists from 44 countries, to the United Na tions to ban atomic
bomb testing. For his efforts, Pauling was awarded the peace prize
in 1962.

Father Mahre's unfinished business
Y AKJMA, Wash. (API - Dave M ahre, father of Olympic skiing
medalists Phil and Steve Mahre, Sllys he's returning to the world 's
ta llest mountain, w here he has "a lillie bit of unfinished business."
The e lder Mahre. 56, was standing with climbers Jim Wickwire
and Marty Hoey at Mount Everest's26,7@fout level in 1982when Ms.
Hoey slipped and fell 6.&lt;XXl feet into the Gr eat Couloir. The team
failed to make the summit aft er Ms. Hoey's death.
" In anything, you always look ahead to next time." Mahre said
Thursday. "But in this instance there was a little bit of unfinished
business.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

The Sunday

FatherJs Day founding has cities in feud
By JruBT J. REPANSHEK

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The cuddly bear-like creatureS who
belped defeat tile forces of evU In George Lucas' "RetumoftheJedl"
will make their television debut this
"The Ewok Movie" wUI be Lucas' first made-for-TV movie, ABC

June 17, 1984

of tile holiday.

.&amp;-od•!ec! p._ Writer
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (API -

As

sons and daughters prepare to oonor
tatbers across the land on Sunday,
this small c!fy Ls staking claim to
having laid the groundwork of the
tradition, no matter what the
national Father's Day Committee
says.
"It was originated by Mrs. John
Bruce Dodd In Spokane, Wash., In
1910," Ted Kaufman, chairman of
the nonprofit committee, rattled off
when asked about the origin of the
holiday.
Kaubnan saW It is possible that
Fainnont held a celebration in 100l,
as local officials claim, but that
doesn't make Falnnont the "home"

Health

"Obvloualy It they did have an
observance they did nothing to
exlend Its llortrons,'' he saW from

hlB New York City omce.
The Central United Methodist
Church in Fairmont bas been
maldng a belated attempt to extend
those hol1zons In tile past several
months, Issuing a stream of news
releases stating that the first
Father's Day observance was held

In Fainnont on July 5, 1903.
On Sunday, Fainnont will celebrate with road signs declaring the
city as the homeofFather'sDay and
a plaquewiU bededlcatedat the site
of the first observance.
There's tittle doubt tha t the West

B12 important

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I was
hospital ized last year for pernicious
anemia and am very interested in
any information I can read on the
subject. I'm taking folic acid ,
TriHemic 600 ta blets and every two
months I get vitamin B·12 shots.
My condition has improved to the
point that I don't feel so weak aU the
time. 1 have also started to eat liver
and more m eats, fruit s and
vegetables.
DEAR READER You're
certainly getting all the medicines
you should need to hel p you recover
from your anemia. Folic acid is
important in folic acid deficiencies
but it can't replace B-12 for a B-12
deficiency. It's a mistake to take
folic acid and not B-12 because you
can develop prob~·essive spinal cord
damage without the B -12.

Liver is an excellent source of
B-12. Your own liver is the chief
place B-12 is stored in your body.
That a nd its Iron cont ent make liver
an important anti-anemia food. One
of the early experiment s demonstra ted that pa tients who had

pernicious anemia and ate large
amounts of raw liver cou ld be
helped. After that patients started
get ting liver shots and finally when
B·12 was ava!l able, B-12 shots
replaced the liver shots.
Sa lads with leafy vegetables
provide a good source of folic acid.
As the anemia is corr ected a
person regains strength and r ecov-

ers from symptoms suc h as nausea
and other digesti ve complaints.
Vitamin B'12 is impor ta nt for mor e
than just an 8'llemia. A B-12
deficiency can ca use mental confu·
sion tha t can be mistaken for
senility.
I've discussed these problem s In
the H ealth Letter SR-15, Vitamin
B·l 2 and Folic Acid Deficiency

Anemias. which I'm sendlng you.
Others who want this issue can send
75 cents with a long stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it to me
in care of thts newspaper, P.O . Box

~55~::~~oCityStation,NewYork,
DEAR DR. LAMB Our
29-year-old son has been told he has
farmer's lung. He has had allergies
to dust, grass, grain mill dust , etc.,
since hts teenage years. He had
allergy desensitization shots but
discontinued them. He decided to
see 1t he needed them again and
went to a different allergist. At that
time he had a sore throat and
tightness in the chest and a cough.
She told him that a blood test
showed he had "farmer's lung."
She gave him corticosteroids and
other mediclne~. He has not m.Jssed
any days of work.
DEAR READER- It's one form
of hypersensitiv i ty pneumonHis.
T hat means It is a form of
infla mmation of the lungs on an
a llergic basis. The common cause

is from inhala Uon of fungus spores.
but insect particles and substances
from plant and animal sources that
arc inhaled can be the cause. You
can inhaJe if from molding hay.
These same fungi can also be in
warm water in air conditioning and
heating systems and circul ated
through the system into homes and
commercial buildings.
The treatment you mentioned is
correct . The only point 1would raise
is that it's best for him to arrange
his work to minimize inhalation of
any of these particles. A moist face
mask mig ht be advlsa ble while in
situations where offending dust
m ay be In the air.

Vlrglnla obserVance preceded the
one in Spokane, saldR.obertMotfett,
a spokesman for the local Father's
Day Conunittee. But he also
acknowledged that Fairmont had
nothing to do with the declaration of
a national holiday.
"There's really not much question
that there was an observation held
here before anyone In Spokane went
aboutit,"lte said. The WestVlrginla
Commission on Archives and History and a national greeting card
eompany have confirmed the date,
he said.
" That first observation of Fa!.her's Day was not, by itself, what
became the national observance of
Father'sDay,"Moffettsaid. "All we
are cl aiming is that the first
Father's Day observance was held
in Fairmont. "
Fainnont's claim centers around
Mrs. Charles Clayton, who lobbied

tile eoJ18rePI!Dn of tile WUllaml

Memorial combined Metbodlst and
Eptscopal church ID hooor fatben
arter Mother's Day was celebrated
1n nearby Gratton.

"It seems

tllat spurred her

Interest In It," Motrett said.
But unllke Fairmont, Grafton bas
effectively promoted Itself as tile
"home" or tile hollday.
Lora Stan, president of tile
Poetry Scribes of Spokane, of which
the late Sonora Smart Dodd was a
member, said she'd never heard of
Fairmont's competing claim unW
this past week.
"We've always given Mrs. Dodd
the credit," she said.
KautmansaldltwasthroughMrs.
Dodd's efforts that Congress In 19'72
- 57 years after of!!cial ~
ration of Mother's Day- declared
the third Sunday In June to be
Father's Day.

re:~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;,i
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It seems As iI
There Are As

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-

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B0 0 kS

Publish ed Each
Year As There
p 1
Are eo p e
Wh 0 171.'\Teed
Th em

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.•.

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
Barbara A. Rogers

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JUNE 23, 1984

RogersHarrison
HILLBORO, Ohio - Col. and
Mrs. Raben Conant Rogers , Flying
R Ranch, Hillsboro. Ohio, announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Barbara Austin Rogers. to David
Stahley H arrison of Vienna. Va.
M iss Rogers is a graduate of Ohio
State Unive r sity with a Bachelor of
F ine Arts deg-ree. majoring in
Pottery.

....

' ·', "'""" '' '''"''I' ··~
,.•.,' "~
,, '""'' '~~~
&gt;&lt;•II· ,,.,,..
•I'•, "0 \II """ M"I"'

State U(livc rs ity where he r eceived
his deg-r"" in Electrical Engi neering. His grandparent s arr Mrs.
Mervin Harrison and Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Powell of Gallipolis.

Rife- Davis
MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for the open church
wedding of Carla R. Rife and Martin
IV. Davis, on Saturday, June 23, at
the Dexter Chu rch of Christ.
Miss Rife is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William B. Rife, Leading
Cr""k. Middleport, and Davis is the
son of Mrs. Frances L. Davis,
Middlepon , an d the late Harold G.
Davis.
Music will begin at 3 p.m. and
fo llowing the wedding, a reception
will be held in the church social
room . All family and friends of the
couple arc inv ited to attend .

The Alcove
Gallipolis, Ohio

-IZU.~~••••••~•·•~0
MONDAY THRU SATU RDAY

-

LB

LB.

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

GRADE A HOlE

Chicken • • • • • • • • • • •
Ground Beef • • • • •
LB.

Wieners ... ••••••••• 99¢
12 Oz . Pkg .

LB.

Cut &amp; Wrapped

Beef Loin ·

LB.

Cube Steak • • • • •
LB.

,

Round Steak

89
$1

1

Bacon •••••••••••• ••

BUCKET
SUMMER FASHION PRINTS Troplcals &amp;
m o rel CoHan &amp; po ly/rayon. machine wash .
45 " Reg . from $3.49 yd NOW FROM $2 .44 YD.

$ 09

COlUMBIA

WHOLE

OPLN EACH EVEN ING Til. BOO

USDA CHOICE

Chuck Roast .. L!·.

!Ia rrison graduated from Ohio

Thr~ ,., dw diC't mncepr wirh rhc untqul', ~nl'nu ftGl lly·b.~ ~'_5•·
rion rh~n lltl unl' dicr c:.~ n work for l'Vl'f)' l::..x.l)'· The pbn 1denuf.es
d 1
y11Ur hody r~rll.:~. ,tnd txpL1111s how c;Kh rd;ues ro the un e~ yi~g
I"X)( Iy chc 1111 .., 1ry. By u~ 1 11 g ~ 1 s 1mp lc dK-'Cklr"r ;1nd rhe J.COl mp:Jnymg .•l ·
luslr;ttit1 fl ". re;Klc r-. ~.:; tn identify rhetr own !)'pes. and choose rhe d1er
pbn rh.u·.., rt_ght f11r rhem
.
In . 1 d.!~r1• •n ro rhc h,i'iir dicr. fnnd lisr" . and an explan~lii(Hl of rhe
rtJic c:Kh t()o.._\ pl.ty" 111 wc1p:ht loss. this bonk gives reade~ a s~b l
st r, lte~'Y f()1- ·r he l.i'&gt;t fi\'L' pounds." But mt ~ ~ im1x)rr:mt . wtrh rhe ltfetime "wc1 ~ ilt 111.11111vmntc" dit•t. Or. Abrav,lll('l shows reader.; how
to ke-ep d'lc-1 1 1o k·.d \Vt'I,C.ht widltlut s.taificinp: ple:tsu re or nurririon.
\X' ith tht" rdt·.tst' •tl Dr t\brannc l'&lt;i lb (f y-T rpe Drel. mdlil)ns of
n· ~l d&lt;·r'i will he.: .~ l·ttll l ,l!. Rody-Tnx· sll' nder . .md stJymg (hat way!

42 Court St.

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

.$199

ENTIRE STOCK CALICOS A great \/Orlely ol
panerns &amp; colors. 100% c oHon, machine
wash. 45" Reg . $3.99 yd . NOW S2.79YD

Puma ® Invader'"
Leather court shoe.
Men's s1zes 6Yz-12
SPECIAL

Pony® Pro Bowl '"
Nylon mesh and leather
turf shoe.
Men's stzes 6Yz-12
SPECIAL

CRAFT NOTIONS Patches, appliques. croH
needl es. orda cloth , embroidery hoops &amp;
floss. From our reg. price group. NOW 30"/a OFF

ENTIRE STOCK BETTER DRESS &amp; BLOUSE
FABRICS 100% polyester, machine washable,
from 45 ". Reg. from $5.99 yd . NOW FROM $4.49 YO.
ENTIRE STOCK PELLON" &amp; STACY INTERFACINGS Sew-ins &amp; lusibles in many weights.
Stock up on our reg. price group. NOW 25% OFF
ENTIRE STOCK ELAmCS Convenient ilem
to hove on hand. Reg. price group sold prepac kaged or by !he yard . NOW 25% OFF

Convene® Acadia'"
Nylon and suede jogger
Women 's s1zes to 10
SPECIAL

Nlke® Rio'"
Nylon and suede JOgger
Women's sizes to 10
SPECIAL

SUMMER SPORT KNITS Stretch terry, solids,
jersey prints &amp; stripes. Machine wash poly I
coHon, 60" Reg . $4.99 to $5.99 yd
NOW $2.49 TO $2.99 YD.
PUCKERS &amp; SHEERS Polylcollon p rints lor
tops, children's weor. Machine wash. 45"
wide. Reg . lrom $2.99 yd. NOW FROM $1.49 YD
SUPER SUMMER PRINTS Lightweight prints.
Machine wash polylcoHon, 45" . Reg. S249 1o
$3.29 yd . NON $1.24 TO $1.64 YD.
KNIT COLLARS &amp; BAN DINGS Choose from
on assortment of solids &amp; stripes tor shirts.
Save holt off reg. price. NOW 50% OFF

S18. '

ENTIRE STOCK LINEN LOOKS Suit, dress,
blouse weights. Machine wash poly/rayon.
from 45" . Reg. from $3 .99 yd. NOW FROM $2 39 YD .
KNIT FAVORITES Crepe stitch, interlock,
Ponte. 100% poly, machine wash. 60 ". Reg .
$2.9910 $4.49yd . NOW $1 .79IO $2.69 YD .
EYELET EMBROIDERIES Poly/calion oil-overs
&amp;. fancies. Machine wash. 45" . Reg . $4.99 &amp;
5.99yd. NOW $2.99&amp;. $3.59YD.

Take advantage of our brandname sale.
You'll come out a winner. Discover
Murphy's Mart shoe department. your
smartest step to saving s.
Sale ends 6/23/84

MART
600 Sil"'r Bridge Plaza

ALL SUMMER SPORTSWEAR Sheeting, twill,
sai lcloth, Trigger" poplin. KeHieclolh' ' Machine
wash poly/calion. 45" . Reg. $3.49 to $3.99 yd
NONS2.79TOS3.19YD.
'
KLEINERT'S"' DRESS SHIELDS For comlort·
able protection on hot summer days. Our
reg. price group of sew-ins &amp; pin-Ins.
NON20% OFF
SPECIAL ORDER DECORATOR FABRICS
Choose from our huge selection of reg. price
swotchbook d ecorator fabrics. NON 20% OFF

St. Rte. 7

Goodnite
Smith
.GA I.I.IPOLIS - Mr. a nd Mrs.
Blain Wallace of Gal lipolis and Mr.
afld Mrs. Ha rr:·l Goodnile of Poi nt
Pleasant , W.Va., announce the
el,lgagemC'nt and forthcoming mar·
riage of their daught er . .Judy Kaye
Goodnite, to Martin R. Smit h Jr. ,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Ray
smith of NitriS~

SELECT GROUP OF FABRICS lr NOnONS
A super 110lue on this special group lor sportswear. kids' wear, crafts &amp; more .

Plus many unadtiwf~Hd IIJHIC/a/a.

rABRICI.·
a:-.c. 01\d O~Oie&gt;a t&gt;y

fOOI,.Centot•u.&gt;l ""-~o IN:

: ·Smr th gradua ted from Nitro High
School , Marshall U niversity 1.11th a
BA in Poli tica l Scienc and Econom and from Washington and Lee
·~ hool of Law. He is an associate
With Clark and Thompson Legal
Corporation in Charleston.

rnc

Potatoes .... ••••••
10 Lb. Bag

BROUGHTON'S

2°/o Milk • • • • • • • • • • •

Plastic Gallon

BROUGHTON 'S
SUNBEAM WHITE

Bread

16 Oz. Loaf

• • • • • • • •• • ••

VIETTI HOTDOG
:K.yger Creek pool
..available for parties
: : : CHESH1RE- The Galila County
:.Local Board of Education has
:announeed the availability of the
:sWimming pool located at Kyger
·Creek High School to the public for
: ~tivate swim parties.
: , The pool may be rented to private
·aroups and organizations on Mon: ~ay, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday
: ahd Sundays from 7 to 9 p.m .
·,; For additional information conava ilability and rates,
:·¢0ntact Jake Bapst at 367-73TI or
367·7378. between 110011 and 6 p.m.

'cernlng

Gallrpolrs. OH

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

:: The open -church wedding will
take place at 1: 30 p.m . on Aug. 18,
',\ljt h music beginning at 1 p.m . at
Trinity United Methodist Church in
Point Pleasant , W.Va .
' Miss Goodnite gradua ted from
Ppint Pleasa nt High School and
Marshall Uni versi ty with aBBA in
Finance. ShP is employed by City
National Bank in Charleston.

16.

4Q%0FF

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

judy KaJ•e Goodnite

Sauce

oz.
• • •• • • ••• •••

PRE-SWEETENED

KOOL-AID
#8A6Wf- 075 =8

Q~art

10
Conntster

$149

limit One per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
i
June 23. 1984

10

$1
3/

Fruit Punch .. ~·:~~".
JELLO

4/S1 Pudding

ELF VINEGAR
White or
Cider

$}49
Gal.

limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell 's
Offer Expires June 23, 1984

49
Pops l2Ct$1

NESTEA INSTANT TEA

$1. 99
limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires June 23. 1984

•••••• •••••

COTTONEllE

TOILET TISSUE
6 Roll
Family Pak

$1 39

lrmit One Per Cu stomer
Good Only At Powell 's
Offer Ewes June 23. 1984

••
•..
•

••

••
••

••

�Page

~8- The Sunday Time5-Sentinel

Calendar
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The GaUla
County Historical Society will
meet Sunday, 2::.! p.m. at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.
Winners of history day w1ll have
the program. Board of Trustees
w1ll meet at 1 p.m .
BIDWELL The Grubb
Family w1ll s ing at Springfield
Baptist Church Sunday. 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
Earl Hinkle wUI speak at Okey
Chapel Sunday, 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
Paul Martin will speak at Good
Hope Baptist Church Sunday. 7
p.m .
LOWER PLAJNS - Hymn
sing and praise se!''ice a t Zion
Freewill Baptist Church, SR 682.
Lower Plains, Sunday a t 2 p.m
HYSELL RUN - Third an·
nual homecoming of Hysell Run
holiness Church, SR 124. Sunday.
Sunday School at 9: ~ a.m.
followed by worship s!'rvicc.
Lunch served at 12:.10 p.m.
Afternoon servcies at 2 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT- Heath Uni·
led Methodist Women w1ll hold
their annual picnic Monday at 6
p.m . at the home of Betty Fultz.
Persons to being a covered dish.
All women of the church are
invited. Juanita Bachtel will be in
charge of devotions.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary, Unit 602 w1ll
meet Monday at 7:~p. m. at the
hall . Potluck refreshments will
be served.

HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonville Chapter 255, Order of
the Eastern Star. will meet at
the home of Pauline Atkins,
Monday.

TIIESDAY
WALNUT RIDGE - There
\\'ill be Bible Study Tue sday, 7: ~
p.m . at Walnut Ridge Church
\\'ith the Rev. Earl Hinkle.
Public Is invited.
GALLIPOLIS Lafayette
White Shrine w1ll m eet Tuesday ,
7: ~ p.m . at the Gallipoll.s
Masonic Temple.
GAJ.LTPOLIS - Ame rican Le·
gion Auxiliary will meet Tues·
day, 7:30p. m ., at the post home
on Bob McConnick Road .
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipo-

MONDAY

IL' Area Ctu·istian Women'sCiub

POMEROY The M£"ns'
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet
Monday at 7:~ p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ.

will mL&gt;et Tuesday, noon a t
Shelt erhouS&lt;' 2 in 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Pa rk . A carpool will form a t the
city park a t 11 a. m . to go to
Mclntyrc.

Happenings
Bible School

Ready ro parenr

Rl.ITLAND - Bible school a t
the Rutland Church of th&lt;'
Nazarene w1ll be he ld Monda y
through Friday wit h classes
from 6:30 to 9 p.m .
Fern Grimm, director. a n·
nounced the themE'. "Choices
and the Bible." The daiiv
schedule provides time for
crafts and recreation as w&lt;'il as
learning experiences "'11 h the
Bible.
Teachers are Ta mmy Black,
three year olds; Marlene Bar·
rett, four and five year olds; Je!f
Carson, primary ; Sharon Black.
middiers; Sharon Barr, juniors,
and Gloria Grate, young teens.
The public is invited to
participate and further intorma·
tion may be obtained by calling
742-2'..m.

Ice cream social
An i('(' cream
social will be he ld by the Lad tC'S
Auxiliary of the Bashan Volunteer Fire Department on Friday
evening, June 22. It had earlier
been announced for Augu sl.
Members of the Au.,lliary arP
currentiy soliciting in the community for dona tions of money
"'ith which to purchaSl' the
ingredients.

BASHAN -

Gospel sing
GALLIPOLIS -

ThP Farm

M uS('um w ill sponsor a Gosp&lt;"l

Stng
p .m .

toda~·

IX'g-inning at

u :,

The Narrow Wa~· Sin gers will
be thf' first gmup to sin g
F ollowin g \A-il l t:lt" Mr. and Mrs

Harold Clark. Clark ptavs a
five-string ban jo. a nd !V1 rs. Cla rk
plays a guit ar.
The public is im·itr'&lt; J to bring

lawn c ha irs and s il in thr shadr
and listen to afternoon of gosp&lt;'l
music.
The museum is l0f'atf'f1 four
miles north of Point Plf'asant.
just off Rout e 62 . ThC'rf' is nn

admiss ion rharg('.

GALUPOLIS - Preparation
for Parenthood classes will be
given bv Hoi?.er C!inci Mondays
and Tuesdays, June 17 and 18 to
July 23 and 24. 7 to 9 p.m . in the
clinic classroom . Fee is $40, a nd
upon class complet ion, the fa ·
ther wiU be able to attend thP
delivety of the child.
For information and registra·
lion. contact Karen Wamsley,
44~5278 or Becky Saunders,
44~2!m.

Breastfeeding class
GALLIPOLIS - Prepa ration
for Breastfeeding will be taught
by Holzer Clinic, J une 23, 7 to 9
p.m. in the clinic classroom. Fee
is $7, and the class is taugllt by a
rPgistcred nurse. Subjects in·
e lude preparing the breas ts a nd
other information for those who
deliver by Cesarean Section.

For

informatio n,

contact

Karen

Wa m s ley, 446-5278 or
13ecky Sa unders, 446-2509.

Budget hearing
POMEROY - The Orange
T ownship Trustees w ill hold a
public budget hcaring onJuly2at
8 p.m . a t the home of the clerk,
Nina Robinson .
!\.II c it izens, and especially
senior c itizens, arp invited to
attend and provide the township
with written and oral conunents
conceming thP proposed budget
and the use of rPvenue s haring
fund s.

Bible School

Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Actlvtt1es for
the week of June 18-22 at the Senior
Citizens Center loca ted at 220
Jackson Pike are a s follows:
Monday. June \ 8 - Ceramics
Class, 9: ~a.m .- noon: Chorus, 1 -~
p.m .
Tuesday. June 19 - S T.O.P .
Class. 10: 30 a.m .: Physica l Fitness ,
11:15a m.
Wednesday. June til - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m .: Card Games.
1·3 p.m .;

American

Liter ature

Class, 1·2 p.m .
Thursda y, June 21 -B ible Stud y.
11 a.m. -noon: Vinton Crafts. 1-2
p.m .; Board of Tru stees Meeting .
1:30 p.m .: CHEAO Nutri tion Edu·
cation. 1 3 p.m.

Pub!irh or perirh
BLOOMINGTON. Ind . tAP&gt; - A
historian a t the U nivNs it ~ of
Indiana has sugges ted that Galilm
was ca ught up in the " publi sh or
perish " syndrome of m any mod,.m ·
day scholars.
Richard Westfa ll says the famous
astronomer , who had been ap·
pointed to the court of the Grand
Duke of Tuscany beca us&lt;' of his
dlscoveri&lt;'s of moons c irc ling .!up·
Iter. wa s under prcssuf&lt;' to prudul'P

Not that beneficial
By the Editors
of Con•urner Reports
"Anti -gravity hoot s" tha t a llow
you to hang upside down while
exercising are supposed to relieve

bac k problems. But you may want
to think twice before you try them .
The boots, also known as " inversion
exercise" equipment. are intended

to dl·•comprPss your spinal disks
a nd s tre tch your back muscles.
However. Cons umer Reports'
medical consulta nt s say that there
is no conclusivP Pvidence that such

equipmPnt is beneficial for minor
back ailments. In fa ct, you may be
just wasting your money if you buy
them for tha t purpose.
Stretching the spine and its
supJXlrting musculature requires
more force than any form of
traction. Th£&gt; medical consultants
explain that traction is used mainly
to l'nforce bed nes t or to immobilize
a n injured pa n of the l:iodv . They
add that decompression of the
spinal dis ks occ urs nat urally during
slr&lt;'p.
In the medical consultants' view,

the only device capab le of decom ·
prf'ssing the spine is thC' rack- a
mediPva l ins trument of torture that
achirvf'd some prominence during
the Span ish Inquisition . .
Anti ~ gravity boots ca m&lt;' on thP
market before fed!'ral laws rE'gu ·
lated medical dr viccs. The boots'
safety for treat ing back ailmC'nt s
has not been P~tablished .
According to Consumer Re(X)rts'
mPdical cons ult an ts. large in·
creases in press ure in t he brain and
evP do occur in thf' upside- dmvn

GALLIPOLIS -June 1 began the
summer schedule for the Bossard
Library Bookmobi te. The new
schcdui P offers :!.8 pf'I'CC'nl mor('
Sf&gt;rvicP time and providc&gt;s stops in
every tovm shi p i n Ga llia Countv.
The S€'rv ice sc hC'du lf' a lso provides
longe-r stops to a Ilo w m ore time for
pa trons. SomP loc&lt;Jtons havr been
changed to pruvidr more centra l izE'&lt;..! seni ce. Thr Oookmohile schf'-

dul&lt;" for the W('('k of .Ju ne lR to 22 is
as foll ows :
Mondav - F.wtng-ton, 11·11 .40

a.m.:

11 · ~ :)

Vinton .

a. m .·l2:30

p. m .: Morga n C'P nt&lt;"r. 12:45-l::lO
p.m.; Lunc h Brea k, 1.1().2 p.m .:
Kyger, 2: JC,.;! p.m. : Cheshire . .1: ~~
·1: 1c p.m. : Addi son, t::l0-5: 15 p.m .
TuPsda\· Rod ney Villag&lt;'.
11 -11 : "" a.m .: Calli a Metro Est ·
a res. noon-12:4o p.m: Kerr. 1-1:45
p.m .; Bidwe ll . 1:&gt;fl.:! pm.: Bula·
\ille . .1: 1:&gt;·4 p.m : Supper Break ,

more.
Consequently, according to Westfall, Ga lll eo ru s hed to announce that
Venu s we nt through dist inct phaSC"S
- crescent to half to full disk under observation from Eart h. The
con('('pt was used to pmve that the
earth and planrt s rE'volve around
thrsun.

OZARKS
8 DAYS - 7 NIGHTS
OCTOBER 20-27, 1984

Meigs County
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center. Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the follow·
lng activities lor the week of June 18
10 22:
Mond ay - Blood Pressure
Checks will be given from 9: 30 to
noon; Phys ical Fitness. 11 :45 a. m .;
Square Dance. 1·3 p.m .
Tuesday - Phys ical Fitness,
11: 45 a.m.; Chorus Practice, 1·2
p.m.; monthly Council on Aging
board meeting, 1 p.m.
Wednesday - Social Sec urity
Representative. 10 a.m.-12: 30 p.m. ;
Black Lung Representative, 10
a.m.~l2:30 p.m .; Bingo, 11 a. m .;
Physica l Fitness, ·11: 45 a. m .; Bo·
wling, l : 30 p.ro.
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.-2
p.m .; Hea lth Education progra m
sponsored by CHEAO atlO: ~a.m .,

down cake.

Thursday - Porcupine meat ·
ba lls. mashjf!l potatoes . tossed
salad. gel atin wlth fruit .
Friday - Cre am ed baked
chicken, sweet potatoes, pear wit h

cheese,

binhday ca ke a nd ice

cream.

446-9510

SUPER, SUPER
SALE
TEN FOOT DISH
KLM RECEIVER
AMPLICA LNA

grow new hair.

MaiP·pa ttern baldness. which
affects millions of men. is in herited .
a nd heredi ty is a formidable foe.
The medica l consultants say that
the only effect ive "rE'medy" for
bal dness Is a hair transplant , in
which sca lp •·plugs" a re removed
from hairy areas and transferred to
bare regions.
!For a specia l reprint of Consumers U nion' s evaluation of acne
treatme nts send $1 for each copy to
CONSUMERS, P .O. Box &lt;Wl. Radio
Citv Station, New York . N .Y. l0019.
Be. sure to ask n:,r the reprint on
ac m~·

FINANCING
AND
SERVICING
AVAILABLE

~

ODDS &amp; ENDS SHOP

MIDDLEPORT

992-6173

trea tment s.)

4 - 4 ::~1

p.m .: Georges Cr E'&lt;'k. 4:45·

5: 30 p.m.: Kanauga 5th Avenue,
5: 40-6: 10 p.m.: K&amp;K. 6:20-6:50 p.m.
Wednesday - Bane's, 11 ~ 11 : 15
a.m.: Harrison Towns house. 11 : 30·
12:15 p.m. ; Swain's Store. 12: 45·
1:30 p.m.: Crown Citv, 1:45-2:30
p.m.: Shaffer's 2: 45·.1 p~m .; Supper
Break, :l-:!:30 p.m .; Ohio Towns·
ho use, .1 : 4o·4 : ~ p.m .: Eureka ,
4:45-5: 30 p.m .
Thursday - Northup, 11-11 :40
a. m .; Centenary Gra nge, 11 :50
a.m. -12: 35 p.m .: Rodney.l2: 50-l : 3.1
p.m.: Perry Townhous&lt;', 2:05-2: 50
p.m.: Patriot. 3-3:3.1 p.m .: Supper
Break. 3: 4o·4: 1o p.m .: Cadmus,
4: l:i-4: 4o p.m .; Gallia, 5-6 p.m.;
Centerpoint . 6: l5-6: 30 p.m .: Center·
ville. 6:40-7: 10 p.m .
Friday- Assorted Senior Citize n
individual service.

Chandra KeKar, M.D.
of Radiotherapy, Inc.
OF PARKERSBURG

ANNOUNCES
The Associaton of

SRINI VASAN, M.D.
For The Practice of

Radiation Oncology
Effective July 1, 1984
800 GARFIELD AVE.

PARKERSBURG. W. VA.

PH. (304) 424-2744

~1
~

BEST OF THE WEST
AUG . 18-SEPT. 1, 1984

15 DAYS - 14 NIGHTS

•

1984 LOUISIANA WORLD
EXPOSITION &amp;
THE GREAT SMOKIES

OCT. 7-14, 1984
ONE WEEK

NEW ENGLAND
SEPT. 9-10, 1984

each meal. Meals subject to change
without notice.

program \\'ill be on medication and
he alth .
Friday - Quarterly Birthday
Party, seniors with birthdays In
April, May and June will be
honored - there will be e ntertain·
ment before dinner with a group of
musicians from the RacinePortland area playing for the party .
The Senior Nutrition Program
lunch menu for the week is:
Monday - Cube steak. caull ·
flower, oven browned potatoes,
fruit.
Tuesday- Ham loaf, peas, kra ut
salad, rice a nd raisin pudding.
Wedn esda y Roast beef,
m ashed potatO!'s and gravy, lima
beans and corn. pineapple upside

position. These abnormal pressures, especially when prolonged,
m ay be hazardous.
Monday thru Friday
REMEDIES TO overcome bald·
9 AM to 9 PM
ness are even less effective than the
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
supposed benefits you'd receive
from the "anti-gravity" boots, In
WilL ~ ii'I;QA l tl. tt 10fl
II.N APP01hi 1M(N T
the opinion of Consumer Reports'
medical consultants. And some
so-called baldnPss cures defy
reason.
A middle- aged m an who is
A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN "
gradually losing his hair asked
about the effectiveness of dietary
supplements suc h as gelatin or kelp t-------------------~-'------­
tabiets as hair-restoring agents. He
reported tha t a company In his area
charges $3liO for a month's supply of
shampoo and conditioner that the
user ts s upposed to rub Into his
scalp.
ThP m edica l consultants say tha t
there's no credible evidence that
a ny nutrition supplement or sham·
poo can e ither prevent hair loss or

Bookmobile routes set

MOTORCOACH TOURS

LAND OF THE

Friday, June 22- Art Class, 1·3
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1·3 p.m .;
Evening Activities, 6-10 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
m il serve the folloo1ng menus:
Monday- Macaroni a nd cheese,
broccoli, beets, a pplesa uce. bread ,
butter, milk.
Tuesday - Sausage patty , boiled
potato, apple rings, de\1l's food
cake with Icing.
Wednesday Roast turkey ,
dressing, ca rrots. pears, pudding,
hot roll . butter.
Thursday - Fish , corn a nd lima
beans, sca lloped potate&lt;es, peaches,
bread, !&gt;utter.
Friday - Ha mburger patty with
green beans, rice, pineapple upside
down cake, bread. butter.
Choice of beverage served wlth

From Consumer Reports

CHESHIRE -Vacation Bible
school wil l be held at the Poplar
J{idgc Freewill Baptist Chu rc h
June 25 through June 30.
11ten• will be c lasses for a ll
ages. Those necdlng t ransporta·
Uon arc to ra il 367.(1169 or
742 ~2220. A 1.\'irnPr roast wili be
h!'ld for!Jowing the program on
.rune .10.

PENNSYLVANIA
DUTCH COUNTRY
AUG. 13-17, 1984
5 DAYS - 4 NIGHTS

17, 1984

Senior citizens schedule activity

Group to meet
POMJtROY Thr Mens·
Fellowship of the Meigs Coun ty
Churches of Christ will m('('t
Monday, June 18, at 7:30 p .m .. at
the Zion Church of Christ.

June

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

HONOLULU
OCT. 24-31, 1984
WITH LAS VEGAS
OPTION

360 Second Avenue
Phone 446-0699

STILL HAS THE BEST
BARGAINS AROUND
*Living Room Suite *Bedroom Suites
*Dining Room Suites *Recliners
*Sleep Sofas *Etc.
COME IN AND SEE IF YOU CAN
MAKE YOUR OWN ·DEAL!

NO REASONABLE OFFER
REFUSED

Sports

'mimes- itntitut

Section

June 17, 1984

International
disabled meet
opens today
'

UNIONDALE. N.Y. iAP) - The
third Interna tiona I Games for the
Disabled, hosted by the United
States for the first time, gets under
way Sundaywtth Preside nt Reagan
delivering the keynote address at
the new $ll·mllllon Mitche l Field
Athletic Complex.
Gov. Marlo Cuomo of New York
will also speak during the ceremo·
nies that will be preceded by a
parade of the 55 nat ions which have
entered more than 1.~ athletes
who are blind . amputees or cerebral
palsied .
The Soviet Union and Cuba have
boycotted thP competition which
concludes June 29, but the Peoples
Republic of China is entered along
with such Eastl'rn bloc countries as
Bulgaria, E ast Germany, Roma·
rila, Hungary and Poland.
The games have been hPid every
four years s ince 1976, usually in the
country which hosts the regular
Olympics. Toronto was the sitP for
the first competition, and when
Russia refused in 1~. Holla nd
assumed the role of host.
The atheletes will be classified

according to disahllty a nd will
compete in track and field, basketbail, swimming, weightlfltlng,
wrestling, fencing, table tennis,
lawn bowling, wheelchair soccer,
goalball and volleyball.
Competition will be held in 20
sports overall a t Mitchel Field ,
Nassau Coliseum, Hofstra Univer·
s ity and Nassau ConmunityCollege.
Janet Rowley of Everett. Mass .. a
24-year old vocational counselor
who is legally blind, holds four world
records in fie ld events - 5-feet , I
inch In the high jump, 28 feet In the
shotput , !()in the discus, and84 in the
javelin. Since 19TI, she has won 24
gold medals in the high jump.
Arnie Boldt, a 26-year old Cana·
dian whose right leg was amputated
whpn he was 3 because of a fanning
accident. is a two-time defender in
both the long jump and high jump.
Now a r&lt;'Sident of Vancouver.
Brit ish Columbia. hP won hi s first
pair of meda ls in Toronto and
repeated four years ago in Hoiland.
Lars-Goran N iisson of Sweden Is a
blind long jumper, whUP Kim Y oon
Pae of South Korea is a defender in
archery.

McEnroe wins
semifinal match
LONDON !API - Top-seeded
.John McEnroe and giant -killer Leif
Shiras won thPir semifina l matches
in the $203,0XI Queen's Club grass
co urt te nni s c hampionships
Saturday.
McEnroe cruised to a 6-2 . li-2
triumph over arch-rival Jimmy
Corutors and will face Shiras, of
Milwaukee, in Sunday's final.
Shiras. who upset F renc h Open
c hampion Ivan Lend! in the opening
round, eliminated Rodney Harmon
of Richmond, Va .. 6-3. 6-4 in a
one-hour, !&amp;.minute semifinal.
McEnroe, in top form at this key
Wimbledon wa rmup tourney.
needed just 64 minutes to collect his
fifth straight victory over Corutors.
It was the seventh time in seven tries
that McEnroehasreachedth&lt;'finals
here.
ThedefendingWJmbiedonchamp
broke Connors' very first serv ice
game- after Corutors had been up
4().~- and that set the to ne for the
match.
Corutors only threate ned Mc E n·
roe's serve once, whe n he had a
break point in the third game oft he
second set. But McEnroe forced
Corutors to hit a backhand wide. a nd
he finished the game offfrom deuce

wi th an overhead winner and his
e ight ace of the match .
That gave Mcl::nroe a 3-11 second ·
set lead and hi s fifth s tra ight game.
A below- par Corutors won hi s two
remaining service games. but he
couldn't hold off the 25-year~old New
Yorker's service.
"Overall. I think that was the best
matc h !'vp played so far in this
tournament, " McEnre&lt;e said. " I put
a lot of pressure on Jimmy, a nd
perhaps he wasn' t expecting that
much on grass. "
Although Corutors didn't seem a t
his best, he said he "gave it 100
per"Cent of what I had tuday ...
· unlike McEruue's, Connors'
route to the semifinals had been a
grueling one. featuring long contests
with fellow Americans Steve Den·
ton and Tim Mayotte, hot h of which
went to9-7 in the third set .
With Wimbledon due to stan a
week from Monday, Corutors sa id,
" I could use a few days off to get
away from tennis a ltogethe r and
take things a little bit easy."
Asked by reporters a bout his tift h
s traight defeat at the han ds of
McEnrOE', he told newsmen .
"Maybe you're coun ti ng, but I'm
not ."

-.• .

,,. ,,

.

........

""·BLAS11NG LEE -

Lee Trevino blasts from the trap by the first
green Satunlay at Winged Foot Golf Club in ~tamaroneek, N.Y. as he

t!m&gt;.
Lewis, a 22-year-old from Willing·

boro. N.J .. is trying to match the
accomplis hment of Owens, w inner
of gold meda ls in the !()().meterdas h,
200-meter dash. 4&lt;XJ.meter relay a nd
long jump in the 1936 Olympics.
Lel.\'is has been ra nked No. 1in the
world in the lOOforthreeconsecutlve
years, he led a 1·2-3 U.S. sweep in last
year's World Championships and he
owns the second -fastest c locking
ever at sea level. 9.!17 seconds.
In the 200, he is the American
record hoidPr at 19.75, the best ever
at sea level. a nd Is ranked second in
the world .
In the long jump, he also has been
ranked No. 1 in the world for thre&lt;'
stra ight years, owns the longest
jump ever at sea level, 28 feet. lOY,
Inches- both indoors and outdoors
-led a l -2·3 U.S. sweep at the World
Championships, and is unbeaten in
34 straight competitions .
And in the relay, he anchored the
U.S. team to a world record 37.86
c lo c king
In the World
Championships.
But with all the drama and hype
surrounding him, Lewis remains
remarkably cool and confident. He
shrugs off comments that if he does
not win four golds, he would be a
!allure.
"No one Is a failure If he works
hard at what he does," Lewis said.
"A person IS only a failure lf he is
lazy. People expect certain things
from certain people. From me, they
expect four gold medals. I don't
bellevelnfailing. ldon'tworry about ·

that."

and b'2 others went into the third day of U.S. Open competition. Trevino
siuocl at 143, three over, going in. ( AP I..aserphoto) .

Irwin, Zoeller tie for U.S. Open lead
By the Associated Press
MAMARONECK. N.Y. !API
F uzzy Zoe!IN putted one in on the
12th hole to sha tter Ha le Jn4·in 's for
lead of the U.S. Open at Winged F oot
Golf Club here la te Saturday
afternoon. only to ha ve Irwin tiewith
him on the 17th hole.
Zoelle r had t railed Irwin from the
beginning of the thi rd da y of th&lt;'
tournament.

Both Irwin and Zoeller were
3-under-par go in g into the JRt h hole .
Gregory Norma n was in third and
Jim T horpe fou rth to finish the day's
competition.
But after taking the lead on
F r iday, Itwin said iw'd take what
the fickle beas t Winged Foot would
give him .
He's hoping it will be a third U.S.
Open Golf Championship. and hi s
SPCOnd herr .
" I suf&lt;' don 't f('('i Like l'm go ingout
and bea ting Winged Foot to dmth ,"
Irwin said.

On Friday, however, lrv.rin and
1979 Master s champion F uzzy
Zoeller beat W inged Foot where it
had be&lt;.•n toughest - on thdina lfou r
holes. Sometimes ca lled the "Fear·

Track hopefuls
• •
•
participate In
Olympic tryouts
By BERT ROSEN'i'HAL
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Carl
Lewis began a quest that he hopes
will carry him to four Olympic gold
medals Saturday in the operil ng
session of the U.S. Olympic track
and field trials.
The meet will detennine the
American team that will participate
in the Games for the first time s ince
1976 - a team 1.\'ith the possibility of
reaping the biggest gold medal
harvest in U .S. history.
The most golds ever won by aU .S.
track and field team in Olympic
history were 17, in the 1932Gamesat
Los Angeles - also the site of this
year's Trials and th!syear'sGames.
With the Soviet-led boycott stripping the 1984 Games of such world
track and field powers as the Soviet
Union, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Cuba, the Urilted
States has a chan('(' of capturing 18
gold medals In the Games, which
begin July 28.
The Americans are anxious to get
back lnt6 Olympic competition,
after having missed the l!Bl
Moocow Games because of a
boycOtt ordered by then-President
Jimmy Carter.
The leader of the American
contingent IS the ebullient Lewis,
considered the finest American
track and field athlete since the late
Jesse OWens competed during the

••

,..
I

somr Four, " they arP all par-4s a nd
mcasu!l' 417,452, 444 a nd 448 yards.

irwin parred No.15 , thenstarieda
string of three birdies that gave him
a :!2 on the back nin&lt;'. 68 fo r the dav
a nd 4-under-pa r 136 for two munds.
That was one stroke better than
f'lxoller. "' ho shot a Winged Foot ~
U.S. O}X'n r""ord 66 for 137 . Six
playNS wer&lt;' under par after two
round s on a course that has nevC&gt;r
~ielded a par-tota l to a major
tournamcn1 winner.

1\vo s hot s bac k a t 138 WE're
Australian GrPg Norman and David
Ca nipe. a mini-tour player from
Orlando, Pia. First-rou nd c:o ~ leader
Jim TI10rpeand Cur1 isStrangewere
three bat:k. and Fred Couples shot
par - 140.
Zocll&lt;'r'S second-ro und scon· w as
4-undc r -par a nd inc luded two bir~
dif'S on Pc1rh nine - onf' of them on
No. 16 - without a bogPy . ThfCf'
players- Sam Snead, Bob Rosbu rg
a nd Hu bert Green - have shot li7s
here in U.S. Open play.
" I f('('! rPallv special because I
bmt a grPat golf cours&lt;'," Zoeller
said ... Anytimr you can go out a nd
bea t par on a goll c:o urw like this in

.'.....~ ·y
. ··· ~.•
fl '

#'

an Open champtonsmp. ,,. , tt'ally
something.''
lrv.rin missed onJy two

fairw&lt;.~ :vs

and one grE'&lt;'n on the ti,~lJ. yard ,
par~ 70 WC'St course at Winged Foot
Golf Club.
"Par wins a lot or Opens," !twin
satd. "To be fou r undN is a bonu s .
but there arc two days lef1.
" I don't think4-under-paris going
to ou tdi stance any bodv. b)' an.\ ·
mrans.··

Irwin . Thorpe. Green and Mike
Dona ld a ll sta ned the d a )' lied for
the lead at 68 Thorpe s hot 71 .
bogey ing Nos. 15 a nd 18; Gr('('n shot
75-143, and Donald faltpred to 78-146
Norma n, ewn-par Thursday.
shot 68 with a birdie on 17. Canipe ,
one bac k a fter the first round, shot
69. a nd hP also had a birdiP on 17.
Strang&lt;' shot par -70 to go with hi'
opening fi9.
Wh&lt;'n lr&gt;~•in won the 1971 0 }X' n
herC' With a 7 -0VC' I' ?irl, onJ;w· Sf'\'('n
golfers had 1R-holr scores iX'ttPr
than par. This tim&lt;'. Winged Foot
yie ld&lt;&gt;d U sub- par rounds Thursday
and six mol'&lt;' on Friday . despite
playi ng toughe r.
l!wtn and Thorpe, one of thP few
iJiack piayc'r S on the PGA Tour.

'

agr&lt;'l'&lt;l tha t thP wind a nd pin
placem ent s had !X'('n a t least
paniall)' rPspons&gt;l:ile for maki ng
F riday tougher. The r a in also
stopped. and that increased the
speed of the gTPf'n s.
· ·Ea rl~· on. there \.~: a ..;; a coo l hr'f'E'ZL'
blowing at us on thf' fii 'SII'our holes.··
Liwin said . "Then the pin localions
made- it a strok r nr tv.·o morf'

difficult ..
Thorpe was short of lh&lt;' grP&lt;'n on
both of his back side bogi'\ 'S
" Th&lt;' course plaved a lot longN
today," h&lt;' said "And with the pin
plcK't•m(•nt s. it was tough to gf't thf'
ball closr. ThP \\'ind wa~ a lso a
fa ctor. ..
Zo.ollcr . .r2. joking wit h spectators
and kidding U.S. Golf Associ ation
offic ra ls about pi n placements,
btrdicd the sixth a nd SI'Vcnth holes
for a 33 on the front nine. Hr bird ied
the par-J lOt h. and. on lh . he hit hts
approach

within

two

fC'e t

and

bi rdied for a noth&lt;'r :\1.
Canipe. "ho pla\ed pa11s ol fou r
years on !h&lt;• PGA Tour but lost his
card each timt•. wa!-.onPundrrat thP
turn and pan-ed each hoiP un til the
17th. w hen h&lt;' hit a 7·iron to 12 feet
&lt;:tnd sa nk thr birdir putt .

,

'

t:.;,

I

HEAT WINNER - Carl Lewis (387) heads over the finish fine
ahead of Stanley Blalock to win his heat Ill the men's 100 meters

qualifying race Saturday during the U.S. Ol)mplc Track and Field
Trials In Los Angeles. ( AP Laserphoto) .

�lfage

C2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 17, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea111nt, W. Va.

Ohio Paint Plea111nt, W. Va.

LeMans
•
runntng
underway

SUDDEN EXIT - Roberto Duran goes Dying through ropes after
being hit by a Rurry of Thomas Hearns punches during the first round of
their World Boxing CouncU super welterweight championship fight
Friday night in Las Vegas. Heams won with a TKO when the light was
stopped In the second round. ( i\P Lase'l'hoto ).

Oldest harness racer
• •
•
remamtng
active
FLORENCE. Ky. iAP)- Elmer
Conrad, at 81, only drives 8 or 10
races a year anymore but he's still
active In harness racing.
"! get wore out and somet imes
think I might quit," said Conrad,
beljeved to be the oldest active
l!amess driver In North America.
" Bin as long as I can get along as
well as I do now , r ucontinue to fool
with t he horses ."
~nrad, who has eight horses at
Latonia Race Course for the curren
ruimess meeting, says, "You never

get too old and know so much that
you can't learn something new
every day," he said.
The native of Corydon, Ind.,
start.ed racing a t age 32.
"All the old fellows I started with
back In the 193lsareeitherretlredor
gone," he said. ''I'm the oldest man
thai act ually races horses
anymore."
The United States Trotting Asso·
elation c redits him with 2'28 career
victories and $235,975 In purse
winnings .

Riverfest activities
slated for Friday
· RACINE- An old·time riverfest
will compliment the Friday, June
z;l. visit of thP Adventure Galley II
f!at boat at Roush Landing, off

Farm :'vtuseum orga nization, songs
by the "Vuices of Liberty,. group,
siting mu sic groups and from 8-9
p.m. an old-time mu~ic sing-along.

Rouff' 124. t:wrween Syracuse and

A historira l dr£&gt;Ss-up contest is
also being conducted with prizes of
$20. $10 a nd $5 to be presented to

Ra ti nC'
:

Ac ti v iti~ .

including tours of the

flatboat, will be!(ln at 5 p.m . with
tb" Star Spangled Banner being
rl)aved bv the Sout hern High School
~nd

and sung by Janice L avender.

· Adventu w Ga lley rr. enrout e
&lt;fPwn the Ohio River to New
Orlea ns as Cinci nnati's pntry in the

1984 World 's F'air, is stopping off at
sCheduled com munities a long th~
~a~ .

: Th~

flatboat . complete

with

&amp;hibits. will dra m a tiz£' t he river
hf ritagr to Cincinnati and th&lt;'
mttion. according to Cincinnati's
"'Red iscovering America .. Cha ir ~

man Va ughan
: After bei ng
Wor ld·s Fair.
ckmatf'd to thfo

P Wendl a nd
on dlspl av a t th~
the flatboa t will be

City of Cincinn a ti to
ti&gt;comP a pPr·ma nent display at

tJ:tat

cll~/s

rivrrtront.

· In addition to being docked a t
Roush Landing on June 22. under
sponsorship of a committ t?f' rPpres-

t'rlting the villages of Racine a nd
sYraCUSE' a nd \'JfiOUS bUSin PSSC'S

ahrl organizations. thP n atboa t will
srop-ovf'r in Pomeroy on ..funP21-24
with thP Pomrroy Chamber or
Commf'rce and Meigs Cou nty
fii storira l Societv as host s. The
rlatboat \.Vi ii comr downri vPr to
R.Jus h Landin g afte r stopping at
J1avf' nswood June 21.
· Thr nv£'riest IYJX' ev{' nl at Rou sh
La ndin g will include co ncerts by

tbe Soulht•rn High band . under the
d1r£'Ction of John Van RN&gt;th. from
s, ts to S: 4S and 6: 30 to 7 p.m
follow('(! by a talk on ri ver heri tage
o,y Wa lden Roush of Point P leasa nt ,
rr~sldent of the Mason Countv

those judged to have th~ best
Pioneer Days. Civil War Days. \.ay
90s. up to 1920's a tt ire.
Serving as general cha irman for
the Adventu!l' Ga lley Jl fl a tboat
VJsit at Roush Landing is E. A.
Wingett with F'ran k Clela nd and
co -ch a irman a nd lrP asu r er

By PAUL TREU'l11ARDT
As.oclalro Press Writer
LE MANS, Prance (AP )- There
were to be two less cars and no clear
favorite In the 52nd running of the24
hours of Le Mans.
In past races, 55 cars we nt to the
starting line of the world's most
famous endura nce. This year,
however, the factory Porsche team
stayed away in protest against rules
changes. Theil' were 16 private
Porsches 956or 962 racers scheduled
to start today's !'dltion.
The field was led by two Lancias,
bul they have yet tobeatPorsches at
Le Mans. And all eyes were on the
return of Jaguar, in the form of the
two V~12 cars of American Bob
Tullius' Group 44 Inc. They are the
first works·suppor ted cars for 27
years, thefirstJaguarsfor20years,
and renew a special page In Le Mans
history.
Jaguars won five times hell' in the
1950s, with 1957 seeing a sweep of the
first four places.
But Thllius says candidiy that "it
will be a ma jor miracle if we win .
This is a learning year ...
The Porsche factory pullout
meant six·time winner Jacky Ickx
of Belgium and his partner in three
of those victories, Britain's Derek
Bell, were a bsent.
The tabbing of a favor ite thus
became a tough chorse.
Porsches have a vast numerical
superiority, but their eni(lnes have
proved fragile this year a nd
aerodynamic changes have not
favored them here. Drivers report
them unstable on three~mllr Mul ·
sanne straight .
At the top of the Porsche list were
the team of France's Henri Pesca ·
roio, a three-time winner here, a nd
German Klaus Ludwig , who shared
one victory with the American
Whlltlng!on brothers.

Friday night. "I can see h!m now
shaking like a leaf."
But for Duran the magic that
spWTed his most recent comeback
may be over, although In typical
Duran fashion beretusedtoadmltlt.
" I don't know, I haven't made a
deelslon yet," said Duran, who
turned 33today. "Idon'tfeel too good
right now."
Hearns had predicted before the
scheduled 12-round bout that he
would knock Duran out In the second
round to rel&lt;lln his World Boxing
Council super welteiWelght crown.
That prediction not only dldn 't slt
well with Duran, but was scoffed at
by his handlers, among others, who
pointed out that Duran had never
been knocked out In his 81-bout
professional career.
"You thought I was crazy, huh?"
Hearns told the media after the
fight. "I felt I rouid box him a round
and then start unloading."

J.·f .m,um:tE?iJ;r

Rick Mahler, right, puts out charging Dave Parker of
the Clndnnatl Reds at first hase Friday. Mahler took

CINCINNATI (AP)-Clncinnati
Reds President Bob Howsam says
he was disappointed he was unable
to make any more trades before the
F'riday midnight deadline in which
he swapped pitcher Bruce Bell'nvi
to the New York Mets for three
minor league players.
The Reds also recalled pitchPr
Charlie Puleo from the irCiassAAA
affiliate al Wichita.
"Yes, I'm disappointed I would

• 14 HP
• Full Size Garden Tractor

• Cast Iron Lined Engine
• Heavy Duty Construction
• Optlonel Attachments
• 42" Mower

have liked ro have done much more

SPECIAL!

but I cou ldn 't," said Howsam,

$2 795

the throw from first baseman Gerald Perry in fourth
inning at 1\tlanta Fulton County Stadium. ( AP
Laserphoto).

adding tha t he'd contacted all 25
major league teams.
"I would have liked to have been
moll' successful but, you never
know. Sometimes the groundwork
you lay in a situation like this may
pay off down the road," Howsam
said .
Berenyi look a look a t the list of
players involved in the trade and
sa id only: "This is ridiculous."
Puleo, 2 ~5. has not completed a
game in nine mi nor league starts

and has an 8 26 earned run average.

He starts today.
Berenyi, 3-7with a 6.00ERA , gave
up nine hits and seven runs Thesdav
in the Reds's loss ID the Astros ,;-t
Allanta .
The Reds got Ed Williams, 19, a
third baseman at Columbia In the
Class A Atlanta League. He was the
Mets' No. 1 draft choice In 1983; Jay
Tibbs, 22, a righthand pitcher with
the Class AAA Tidewater team with
a 3·5 record a nd 5.23 ERA; and,
lefthand pitcher Matt Bullinger, 2·I,
2.92 ERA with 3 saves at Jackson In
the Texas League

ODNR studies perch size limits

WITi-f MOWER
Regular 53,495
With Mower

CHUCK COLLIER SERVICE STORE
Gallipolis,

262 Third Ave .
PH. 446-33 14

Oh.

COLUMBUS, Ohio iAPt- Ohio
Division of Wildlife officials arcn ·t
saying if they will recommend
rt'!lucing the size limit on yellow
perch from 8\'2 to 8 inches for
commercial fi shermen on Lake
Erie.
About 30 people showed up for a
public hearing on the issue F'riday.
Max Duckworih, c hief of the
division, said he will study the

matter before making any rccom ·
mcndations to the Wildlife Counc il ,
which meets July 5 in Columbus.
Commcrctal fishermen test lfi&lt;'d
in favor of reducing the size of perch
ta ken !rom Lake Erie. Sport
fi sherme n spoke aga inst it during
the hearing at Don Scott F'ield .
Mike Metcalf of the F'ish Produr~
rrs Association sa id thE'rP is no

biological reason for maintaining

the larger size limit .
·· It will not hurt thr resource," he
said . "We ma y only take 25,00J
pounds of perch per year now while
two to four million pounds a re taken
annually by sport fishermen. "
" There is not enough meal on a n
BY,· inc h perch for it to be saleable
commercially," said Frank La·
weeki, pll'sident of the Lake Erie
Sport F'ishing Association.

By JONATHAN vrrn
Neoofeted Press Writer
The last time it happened the
names were Gentry, Seaver and
Koosman, and Walt Terrell had just
celebrated his 12th birthday.
Terrell, !&gt;-6, combined with Jesse
Orosco Friday night 1o shut out the
St. Louis Cardinals 5-0 and give the
New York Mets three straight
shutouts for the first tlmeslnceMay
ofl971l.
Wednesday, Ed Lynch and Doug
Sisk shut out the Pirates 2.0, and
Thursday Ron Darling blanked the
Cardinals 6.o.
The five New York pitchers have
given up a total of 11 hits over the
three games. The Mets won their
lOth In 12 games Friday and took
over first place In the National
League East with the victory.
"Do you think we're bona fide?"
Mets Manager Dave Johnson asked
rhetorically. "We've played good
ball basically all year. We'regetting
ID know each other."
"Tonight wasn 't a great pitching
performance, my mechanics were
fouled up, " said Terrell. "But 1
thought I threw the ball well, a nd 1

shot two outs later.
Wilson made it 4-0 in the fifth,
singling home Wally Backman, who
had doubled. Jooe Oquendo singled
horne Brooks an Inning later.
Expos I, PlratesO
Dan Schat:z.eder, making his first
start In almost a year, held
Pittsburgh to five hits over seven
innings and singled home the
game'sonly run In Montreal.
Tim Wallach opened the semnd
against Jose DeLeon. 34, wit h a
double and Jim Wohlford followed
with a walk. One out later,
Schatzeder blooped a single Into left
field to score Wallach .
Schatzeder, 2·2, walked three
batters and struck out two before
being lifted for a pinch hitter in thr
seventh. Bob James picked up his
first save.
Braves 6, Reds I
Rick Mahler hurled a thn'e·h.itter
and had three hits of his own,
including a two-run double, as
Atlanta won for the eighth consecu·
live time over the Reds a nd lifted
their advantage to 10~1 in thPs~ason
&lt;;pries between the two teams .
It was alsothefifthv ictoryma row

had good stuff. They only hit two Oy
balls ."
In other National League games,
P hiladelphia beat Chicago 5-2,
Montreal downed Pittsburgh 1.0.
Atlanta defeated Cincinnati 6·1,
Houston edged Los Angeles 3-2, a nd

for Ma hler, 5-J, who raised his
baiting average to .450-9 for 20on the season.
Phlllles 5, Cubs 2
lvanDcJesus'twrrru n slnglewith
thP bases loaded and thP scoff' !it'd
2·2 in the fourth inning propelled the
Phillies to a win over DeJesus'
former club.
"I always liked playing in
Chicago,"DeJrsussaid "Ihavelots
of friends here a nd I try a little
harde r.··
Charles Hudson , 74, allowed four

SanDiegonippedSanFrancisco3~2.

TheCardinalscontlnued ashutout
streak of their own. They have not
scored a run lntheirlastfourhome
games and now have been shut out
10 times this year, the most in the
NL.
St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog
couldn' t say where the runs have
gone. "Every night we see another
Waiter Johnson , don't we 7 " he said.
"We had our chances."
Keith Hernandez, with his fourth
homer of the year, a nd Hubie
Brooks, with his seventh, teed off In
the fourth Inning on St. Louis starter
Joaquin Anduj ar, J0-6.

Astros 3, Dodgers 2

Padres 3, Giants 2

Graig Nettles slammed a twrrruii
homer and Ed Whitson won his fifth
consecut ive game as the Padres
won for the 16th t lmr in their last 20
games.
Nett les' homer, his ninth, came
off Jeff Robinson. 3-7, a nd was his
fourth i.n his last five games.

r;:==========::;
DR IVERS
EOUCATIQN

CLASSES BEGIN
SOON ....
CAll
~
'Cl:t)'
FOR MORE INFORMATION

CALL
614-446-0699

Mookie Wilson opened the fourth
with a bunt s ingle and He rnandez
stroked his homer Into the right -field
seats off Andujar, who pitched six
mnings. Brooks followed with his

OPENING AUGUST 1984
TENNIS - RACQUETBALL
Family .. . ... .. .................... ... ... ...... 1 150.00
Individual. .......................... ......... . 100.00
Junior ( Under 18) ....... ...... ... .. .. ...... 60.00
Corporate Rates Available
TENNIS-RACQUETBALL RATES PER HOUR

THE OPENING OF OUR

Wingett a nd .John VanReeth
ConcPssions co-chairmen arf'
Harry Willford and Tom Diddle,
rPprC'SPnting thf' Racine Amprican
Legion Post. A chicke n ba r becue is
tenta tive!&gt;· plann&lt;'d at the rlverfest

Mon .~ fr t.

T

7:00 a.m.· 5:00 o. m.

112.00

Sat. -Sun.
1 14.00

JR

700 a m.· 5:00p .m.

10.00

14 .00

T

5:00p .m.· II 00 p.m.

14.00

1400

RB

7: 00 a m . ~ 5 : 00 p.m.

RB

5:00 p.m.· IIOO p.m.

7. 00
9 00

9.00
9 00

Ct)Urt ltmes

sile with the Amf'rican Legion
A u x ili a~' of th f' Racine Post in
charge. T hC' Racine Junior Firemen wi!l sell other refreshment s.

Re served Ttme For Wtnle r Season
Begins Sep t. 23rd an d End s May 4th

PHONE

446-4905

The Sy racuse Vulunt£&gt;er Fire
Depart me nt will be in charge or

NAUTILUS

parking and a 50 cents per ca rload
charge will be the only admission
fee. Syracuse and Raci ne Emer-

ANNUAL RATE S

gency Squads will also be on the
grounds a nd the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department will handle
traffic at t he entrance of t he Roush

Individual

grounds maintenance comm it tw.
Financial sponsor s for the flat - •

FEA TURIN G

Family . .

NAUTILU S

1

Individual

SAUNAS

160.00
..... .. .......... ...... . . . . . . 99 .00
.

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

1

Corporate Rates Available
Special Discounts To Tennis- Racquetball
Club Me mbers

A new community service available 24 hours
a day,

.......

QUARTERLY RATES
RACQUETBALL

446-BANK

boat visit include JD Drtlllng
Compa ny a nd Home National Bank
of Racine and Syracuse.
The public wtll be able lo tour the
natboat until da r k Friday and
Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon.
Those a ttending all' Invited to
bring la wn chairs

.

INDOOR TE NNIS

dial

La nding road.
Syracuse Council man Oris HubIJard is serving as c hairman of the

375.00
........ .... .. ......... .. ... .......... 225.00

Family .... ...... .. ... ..

For the current
Time-Weather-Temperature

7 days a week. Brought to you by:

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THE BEST BODY MEN IN THE AREA
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Call Bill Welsh, Body Shop Manager, For An Appointment

DFamily Naultlu s - Annual
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Requested Reserved Court Time: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- --

GALLIPOLIS RACQUET CLUB
710 First Avenue

P.O. Box 756
Gallipolis , Ohio

•

. .

Pinch hitter Phil Garner's on~
single brought home Terry Puhl
with the winning run In the bottom of
the ninth for Houston's fifth win !JI.
six outings.
·
Bill Dawley , 44, picked up the:
victory after pitching the final two
innings. Ora l Hershiser, 2·3, took the
Joss although the winning hit came
off Pat Zachry .
Puhl opened the ninth with a
single to right. After an ou ~ Carlos
Diaz came In to pitch and walked
pinch hitter Denny Walling. Dodger
Manager Tom Lasorda then
brought in the rlght ·handed Zacnr;:
to face the right ~ handed Garner.· · :-

r.:_hi:::·ts~o:.:_v~er~ei~g:ht~mn:::·~m:::·~gs::_:to~g::a~i~n~th~e~~:::G::a::ll:ip:o::li=s=&amp;=Po=m=e=r=oy=A=re=a=~

PROUDLY
ANNOUNCES

Ml'mbers of thfl program com mil tee are Pa ul Roush. Ma xine

·.·

victory. Al Holland came on to piU!U·
the ninth and gained his Hth sav~: -

ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP FEES

and Polcyn and Kelly Brownell had
a double play. Wendy Smith was on
the mound for the Racers, while
Lisa Hauldren handled pitching
duties for the looers.
Bill Evans' home run, double and
two singles pushed the Dcxlgers
ahead of Rio Grande for a 17-12 win
In pony league play. Lee Combs
contributed two triples, a double and
a single lor the winners, with Jason
Thomas on the mound lor the
winners.
,In the girls sonball league, the
Kevin Terry scored two singles
Racers nipped the Phlllles, 1J.7.
and a double for Rio. Lance Taylor
Cindy Byrd slammed in a oome run
was pitcher.
and single, Brooke Miller had a
The Kool Kats blanked the
dOuble and a single, Molly O'Rourke
Pa nthers, 21·1, with Missy Buch
three singles, Tabby Drummond a pltchlngfor the winners and Atha on
t\IJuble and Sarah Todd a single and
the mound for the looers. In scoring,
a double. Angle Brannon contrib- · Rona Rader had two triples and
uted a double to the winners.
Shannon Bush had two hits lor the
· For the Phllltes , Kim Polcyn had a the winners. Riehle led In scoring lor ·
double, Melody Wickline a trlple, the Panthe rs.
I

HAS IBM COVERED- Atlanta Braves' pitcher

Berenyi swapped., Puleo recalled

~

Now Save!

. GALLIPOLIS - Jason Brown's
four singles a nd a triple. coupled
With two triples, two doubles and a
sfngle, helped the Jayhawks to a
2$.12 defeat of the Robins In PeeWee
league action Fridday night.
· Ryan Rose contributed a triple
and two singles for the winners .
8t1an Hurt had two triples and two
singles for the Robins. assisted by a
dOuble and single from Chris
Barnes.

'

moved away on the ropes, Hearns
threw out the left and caught Duran
with his best punch of the light, a
bruising right that jer ked Duran
uprightbeforehefell!acefirstonthe
canvas and referee Carlos Padilla
stopped the fight.
"It was a sneaky right hand,"
Hearns said of the knockout punch.
"He was looking for the left jab and It
wasn't there. The right was."
The knockout was the first for
Hearns in almost two years, and
may have stopped speculation that
he could not knock out opponents In
the higher weight class like he had In
stopping 28 of his first l:J opponents
as a welterweight.
"It was very Important lor me to
win by a knockout," Hearns said. " I
was fighting a legend, the greatest
fighter in the ring today. "
Hearns picked up $1.8 millionthe same as Duran- for the fight,
which drew 14,824 fans to an ou !door
stadium at Caesars Palace.

ONE WEEK
ONLY
JUNE 18th THRU
JUNE 23rd

Summer league results

'

Itdldn'teventakethatlong.After
a cautiouS lirsttwomlnutesthatsaw
both lighters trying to feel each
other out, 'H earns suddenly shot out
a left jab and followed it wlh a
crushing right to Duran's head that
put the Panamanian on the canvas.
Duran, 154, was up at the count of
five, but Hearns m oved in and
pinned Duran on the ropes where he
unleashed a series of combinations
thatputhlmdownforasecondtime.
The bell sounded as Duran
struggled to his feet, but he was so
dazed he staggered toward a neutral
corner before his handlers broug ht
him back to his stool.
Duran drew upon his vast rtng
savvy to open the second round with
a combination that Hearns said
later "made me stop a minute and
think about what I was doing."
But Hearns, 153 14, regrouped and
again began throwingrombinatlons
to Duran 's head as Duran struggled
to sl&lt;ly upright. Then, as Duran

C~.

T
Orosco win Mets'
shutout; Braves blank Reds

He8rns' thoughts turning to Hagler bout
By'l1MDAHLBEIW
APSports Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)
'lbomas Hearns, reborn as the "Hit
Man" following a devasl&lt;ltlng
second-round knockout of Roberto
Duran, hadn't even stepped out of
lhertngheforehisthoughtsturnedto
a light against middleweight cham~
pion Marvelous Marvin Hagler.
"Marvin Hagler knows what's
happening, he knows we're com·
ing," Hearns said after stopping
Duran at 1: f!1 of the second round

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page

45631

�Page

C4

June 17, 1914

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Angels' bullpen
keeping ex-Red
manager happy

Ohio Derby
•
• • •
wtnner optimistic
By CHUCK MELVIN
1\P Spons Writer
NORTii RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
- After winning the Ohio Derby
with a 91·1 longshot in 1976, Dianne
Carpenter feels pretty good aoout
going into today's50thrunningofthe
ra&lt;Y as the owner and trainer of a 4·1
pick .
"My horse has got a lot of speed,"
said Carpenter, whose Biloxi Indian
is picked in the race program to
finish fourth , behind At The 'I'hreshold (2·1), Delta Trace (7·21 and
Dear Rick 14·11.
In 1976, Carpenter's Return of a
Native became, at the tlnne. the
longest shot to ever win the Ohio
Derby. Special Honor Ia te r grabtx&gt;d
that record, winning at odds of
nearly !OJ.l in 1978.
"I went back to Keystone last
week, and they still talk about that
horse (Return of a Native),"
Carpenter said. "He had never run
the mile and one-eighth before. He
had been sprinting."
Blloxl I ndlan won '!likely s neak up
on Thistledown wagerers this year,
however. The big horse finished
second to Devil' s Bag in the Derby
Trial at Churchill Downs.
Carpenter says she believes her
horse will be in the thick of things as
long as he can keep his mind on his
work.
"My horse. when he gets to the

front , gets to looking around and
loafing around ," she said. In a
workout Wednesday, she said, he
raced down the stretch while staring
at the empty Thistledown stands.
With the quality of horses In this
race, however, Carpenter might not
want jockey Sam Maple holding
Biloxi Indian too farolfthe pace.
"There's a lot of speed here,"
Carpenter said. "Delta Trace has a
nice post position lor his speed. I
think the early pace Is going to be
fast."
She said the seven-horse field
should prevent her horse from
running Into any traffic problems on
the track, such as those Biloxi Indian
encountered on the way to a
12th-place finish in the Kentucky
Derby.
" In the Kentucky Derby, there
were20 horses. That was the biggest
traffic jam you've ever seen," she
said.
BUoxJ Indian also made the
mistake In that race of staying too
c lose to theearty pace. He moved up
to third early before falling off
during the second half of the race.
"I knew going into that race I
didn't want him up that c lose,"
Carpenter said.
Also running in Saturday 's race
for 3-year-old thoroughbreds will be
Gallant Hour. listed at 8-1. and
Perf('('t Player and S.S. Hot Sauce,
ooth a tl0-1.

.,.

..

JOINS 'l'OURNAMENT - Baseball great Jim Bunning will he one of
lhe guests at lhe Dave Diles·Appalachia Golf 'l'oumarnent at Mason
JWJe 21, and will also attend the Hillbilly Supper at Royal Oak Park.

Jim Bunning on Diles
tournament guest list
POV!EROY - One of baseball's
ali -time pitching greats wil l make
his first appcoaranr e in the sixth
annual Dave Diles Appa lachian
golf tournament.

Jim Bunning. the only man to

Inkster holds lead
in Mayflower Classic
By HANK WWENKRON
1\P Sports Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (API - Juli
Inkster, needing only a filth place
finish here to set a Ladies Profes·
stional Golf Association record for
rookie earnings, held a one-stroke
lead after Friday's second round of
the $250,!XXJ Mayflower Classic.
Inkster, 23, followed her opening
round 67 with a !-under 71 for a 138
alter .16 holes at the Country Club of
lncllanapolls.
Donna H . White, who began the
day tied with lnkste~ a nd Jo Ann
Washam, was second at 139 after
leading earlier in the day.
Japan's Ayako Okamoto had the
day's best round at 67 to move into
third with a 4-under 140. Shew as tied
with rookie Mary Beth Zirruner·
man, who shot her second consecu ·
live 70.
Zimmerman. who joined the tour
at the sarne tlnne as Inkster last
August, was lied for the lead _.;th
five holes to go. But she had two
consecu tlve bogeys.
"I got a Iitle too excited," she said,
" and made a couple of stupid
bogeys."
Two pros who won Indiana
amateur championships moved mt o

author no-hiltrrs in both thP
America n and National leagues .

will a tt end both the hillbilly supper
on June 20 at Royal Oak Park. and
the golf outmg .June 21 at R iverside
Golf Club in Mason.

contention with impressive second
rounds.
Lori Garbacz, who won the
Indiana women's amateur cham-

pionship in 1978 while living in South
Bend. shot a 68 and was one of five
players at 141. She was tied with
Beth Solomon of Middletown. So·
loman made a late charge, but
faltered with bogeys on her final two
holes togo to3-underfor the day and
the tournament.
Rookie Amy Benz. AtsukoHikage
of Japan and veteran Judy Clark
alsc w ere at 141.
" It =ms like I hit my irons a little
c loser yesterday than I did today,"
said Inkster. who is closing in on
goals she set at thP stan of the year.
The San Jose State grad, currently fourth on the tour money list ,
wanted to win a t least two
tournaments this year, finish in the
top 15 on the money list and be
selected rookie of t he year.
She's shoot ing for her second
victory this year here and needs to
earn only $10.280to top the tourmark
for rookie earnings SPI by Nancy
Lopez In 1978. She has until Aug. 5 to
top the figure of $161,235 - an
achievement that makes her an
overwhelming

favoritP

for

thC'

rookie award.

SEOAL coaches, principals
vote to admit Marietta and
Warren Local into league
ATHENS - For the first timl'
si nce 1969 the Sout heastern Ohio
Athlf'tic Leaguf' \\'ill preSPnl a nrw

grographica l reg1o n.
This became official Frida)' when
officials of the SEOAL accepted the
withdrawal of Ironton High School
from the leaguf' and votPd unanim ously to aCC'l'pt Marietta and

Warren L()(·a l into lhP 59-ycarold
league.
MPPting a 1 Alhens High School .
principa ls and athleti c dirff'tOr'"l
from At hens. Ga llipolis. Ironton .
Jackson. Loga n, Marte"a, and

Warren Loca l transacted leagup
buslness and elf'C'ted new officers.
Robert Bevins, principal of Jat·k ·
son High School. was elect ed
presldmt. succeeding Dr . Jar lvn
Osborne of Logan.
Dick HallPr. athlf'tlc director at
Jackson. was elected secretary·.
replacing Tom Jenkins of Jackson.
It was noted that Ironton will
remain in the SEOAL through the
1984-8.'; school year, and be replaced
by Martella for the 1985-86 school
year.
Warren Local, located In Wa ·
shlngton Counly. will join the
league for the 1986-87 school year.
bringing league membership to six
schools .
Friday's action thus ass ures the
SEOAL of a solid six-team structure following two years of specula·
tlon that the conference might
dissolve.
For over 50 years. the SEOAL
operated wtth eight teams. but the
departure of Wellston In I~
trtggered concern throughout the

Wellston a nd Meigs a re both
members of the Tri· Valley Confer·
f'nre. whllr Waverly now competes
in the Southern Ohio Conference.
The withdrawal of Iront on from
the league places the a nnual
SEOAL·OVC AU-Star basketball
games In jeopardy, as the games
have h&lt;'Pn staged in the fHS spot1s
cen ter slnCi' their lncep1lon five
years ago .

On June 27, athletic directors
from Athens. Gallipolis. Jackson,
Logan. Marietta, and Warren Local
will m!'('t to draw up league
sc hedultos for 1985-86 and 1986-87

B unning shot to famf" first with

th&lt;• Detroit TigNs and pitched hi s
first no-hitt er for the Drtrolt team

Later. when pitching !or the
Philadelphia Phillles. he pitched his
second no-hit mastcrpil'&lt;'C.
He's a surf'· fire bPI for Baseba ll's
Hall of Fame at f:oopPrsr own and
sincP his retirement from the
ga me. has !:){'en heavily involvC'd in

Kentucky politics.
He's been a membf'r of that

st a te'~

lrgislativro bocly, and rf'·
CPnlly ran forgov£&gt;rnor of K entucky
a~ thr Republ ic n Party nominee.
".Jim and I !irst got together
whPn he was coming up with the

Tigers and I was an Associated
Press spor1s eclitor in Detroit," said
tourn(;lment hos t Di les. ''Hp'soneof

the most articu late and brightesr
a thlete§. I've ever met. and perhaps
the most ou tstanding family man
1'vr mf't in all my years in sp:&gt;rt s.
Wf' re thr il\Pd that hf' is joining us
for this evem ."
B unning also is a most ca pablf'

golfer and savs he's looking for ward to the c halle nge of the
Rivrrside c-oursp when" the 18- holr
('Vl:'nl gPts underway wit h a shotgun

startat!O a. m onJune2l.Tlme for
the supper is fi p.m. the previous
evening at Royal Oak Par k. Some
spots a rr- o[)l'n a t $1:10 fo r d in nPr for
two a nd golf.

Olympic funds shortfall false
By NORM CLARKE
AP Sports Writer
LOS MGELES iAPI - Chief
Olympics organiz.er Peter Ueber
roth labeled as "ridiculous ... ermncous" a repon this week that the
LAOOC stands to lose $95 million in
revenues as a result of the Soviet
boycott of the Sumrner Games.
After an interview with foreign
jowll3lists by satellite telecast ,
Ueberroth, the president of the Los
Angeles Olympic Organizing Com
mlttee, said there would be a "tiny"
surplus for the Games. His comment came in response to a repon
from San Bernardino earlier in the
week that an LAOOC security
negotiator had told county sheriff
representa tives there that the
LAOOC has no money left to pay
more than $50.!XXJ for the county's
Olympic security costs.
The negotia tor rcponedly said the
commlttff' stands lo lose $90 million

to $95 million in revenu es because of
the Soviet boycott.
!Jeputy Chief Keith Larson, lhe
San Bernardino Counry sheriff's
=u rity commander at the Olympic
shooting events at Prado Regional
Park near Chino, reiterated Friday
that the statement had been made
by Malvin Wessell , the LAOOC's
secu rity chief for the Prado site. He
rcpot1ed that Wessell made the
point shortly after the Soviets
annou need their boycott May 8.
An LAOOC press ol'ficer, however. who checked with Wessell,
said the security officer denied
saying anything of the kind, a nd
Ueberroth said the figure for
projected los t revenue due to the
boycott "isn't close" to the real
figure.
"I don't know whal it Is,"
Ueberroth said of the projected loss.
" It' s certainly nowhere near those
kinds of figures."

Fiberglas
Mesh
Aluminum

mixed doubles competition.
All players should repon to
Forest Mullins · coun on Herkie
A\'Pnuf' ,10 minutes prior to their

'cheduled match time
Entry fPe is $10 per team and a
new ca n of tennis balls. A total of 75
teams arf' Pntered in the thrt"C'
divisions.
The tournament will bf'gin TuPS ·
day with ptimarily mixed doubles
and run l'very night this week. then
concl uding on Sunday, stan ing at l
p.m. with the cha mpionship
matchC's.

Fans arf' inviled to attend and
suppot1 the tournament and its
players. Here is a li st of the pairings
for Tuesday and Wednesday:
Tuettdu.v
Mind Ooubll'!'
3::!(lp.m .

Kcu-t'n Farhus-.Jim Osbl.wm• 1:\ 1 v~ . r:torb
;1nd B rc~ck H our hins: HtT'tl F.plin~ · Karf'n

Smith " -~ - Anl!a -Topl''·l\f'll\· Cnunl!i: &amp;x·k\
Mullins -Bill r.ra.v \'S_ .1 . F' _ YnunJi!·Viddl'
Bic klr: Scort F:plln~ · N&lt;Jnrv Mullins vs . Tam ' &lt;~
Saltlr1 -.iamf'S Mul lins · Prank .JohnstOn

vua

ana

uave

Alsu

OPENING SALE

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614·992-9932

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6:15p.m.
Barb and Allen Whit(' vs. Lan~ f't&gt;rTV" ·Trov

BPnnington: AngiP Kln~ ·Tom Unc!coO.. vS.
flonna and Bill Nf'aSl': Narx'V ~mlftl - FUck.
C'lo.ak \'S .Jf'an Whitnt"v -Ed ~franko: Barb
and MiiN' F.plinf:; vs_ Rhonda Wood-Donnlt&gt;
Hf'ndrkk.'i: Jac klf' Knlght-Stf'vf' Mullin.'\ vs..
Ann Ep lln g-Mikr Coonrn: Sarah Cllnf'·Brf'nl
.Johnson \'S. Wanda Fk'nnln~on - Sonny
Mullins.
II p.ln.
Ev~·lvn and Manll('l Casanova v s. mane

La14·son -Rirk Crow: BPckv and .Jim Andforson
''s. Marv loi:'Sl•r-MikP Corm&gt;ft : Dav(&gt; and
Shirl1 -y Wirth YS. J on and Juv Bt&gt;n11£'V.
·
Men',. Duu~
·
~p.m.

Boh Rtrnnf'man-. lim Mon1son \ ' S _ Sonny
Multins.-T'm\' Br-nnln~on; l.am· EllioTt For~! Muillns vs . .101' Matthf&gt;Ws-HPTman

Kob:&gt;·
i: :II
.Ja!'Tl('S

~t . m.

Mulnrt" -Br£'11

EpUn.r vs. Mlkr

Coon('n-.Jtm Osborn(\ 1.J 1. Brrnt SaundersDoug Cowlf"S -AIIrn WhiTP- Vall('(' Johnson. Ed
Sofranko-Carl Hoffman vs. Mike MUSJn"ilV('Phll Sl;mlf'Y. Davf' Wirth-Frank Johnsron vs.
S!f&gt;\P Mullins -Naw Tbomas. r3) . Davf'

Cannan-l.of'Of' Johnson vs. Brad Johnston ·
~ ~~ Hanington . Dtm C'nrbln-Mark Johnson
V'i . Rick Tmrh-Churk J ohnson

&amp;:t., p .m .
Bill Eachus -J i m Elliott ""- .1. F . YOI.tn~ ­
Rf'ad Blalnr. Brian Mabf'-Krvtn Thunpson
v'i.•Jack Cartv-Mikr Comrtt. Jack F"owk&gt;rDaV(• Crow vs.'Pa ul MacKrnzlf'-Kt-ll:v Counts.
Rick Crow·Jon Bc-nlly \15. Bn"nt JohMon·Rkk
Cloak. Dwight HIII-Donnl£' lit'ndlick.S vs.
Manu('l Casanova-E. S. Vllk&gt;nU€'\'a.
Wonwn's Doubiel;
A p.m
B&lt;lrb WhltP-Mick('V Johnson vs. Kart'n

F'rv-Dian(' Lawson. ·
i 1 Ofooot('S SIPf'ld('d tt'am .

r--------------------------

You can buy a riding monr that cut. your
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it all! Ariens 1~ hp and new 10 Pip front..nglfttl
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with Ariena exclusl~e "fle• .. N-Fioat Plus"
mower deck . Ariens ·Yard Trac:tor1 mow
smoothly over all types of turf, without harmful
lawn scalping.

An oplionol 36" two-tloge Sno-Thro •ttachmont hooka up quickly ond 111ily and 11
ideal tor Iough anow -~~ jobs. And I aturdy .
42" lront blade and Arlena corry-oil trailer aro
aloo avalllblo, ao well 11 a number ol behind attachments.

Arlena YTt t:le and YT1032 Yard Tm:toro
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614-992·9932

RIO GRANDE-- Rto Grande
Coiieg\' 8!ld Commwdty College's
head basketbaD coach John La~ hal 8 111l0unced three additions to this year's Redman squad.
Doug Fogt of Anna, Ronn Rtttlnger
of ChWicothe and Jeff Shaw of
Wuhlngton Coon House will join
the team that Lawhorn predicts
"wW be the best In the last few

years."

· Fogt, a 6'9" center from Anna
· High School, led his team to the
district Hnals. He averaged 22
points and 12 re~unds per game.

He was selectro to play In the

North-South All-Star game.
Rlttlnger, 6'6", played at Chill! ·
cothe High School where he led his
team in seortng. He was district
player of the AAA and third team
All -State.
Shaw, 6'2", comes from Washing·
ton Cour1 House High School where
he averaged 21 points per game. He
was named South Central Ohio
League's "Player of the Year" In
both basketball and baseball.
Lawhorn believes these additions
will round out an already solld
team.
Based on his record at Rlo
Grande College and Community
College, his optimistic prediction
means another good year for
Redmen basketball. Lawhorn's
teams have won 96 games, placing
him second on the school's list of

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY.

1983-84 club finished 28-41; 'econd iJl
the Mid-Ohio Conference.
Only the 39.0 championship team
of 1952 won more games In the
college's history.

wtnnlngest coaches. Art Lanham ,
who coached at the college from
1960 until 1!81, Is the all-tlnne
wtnnlngest basketball coach wtth a
record of 267-192. Rio Grande's

Pacific Univel'8ity names coaches

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page-CS

Lyne Center schedule
Pool

Dale - Gymaaolum
June 11 CIOSE"d

.. 1-3 p.m . Open Su'lm
&amp;S p.m . Open Swim
.. Noon·l p. m. Fitness Sw1m
1-3 p m_Open S\4-im
~p. m. Fn&gt;f' E nterpl"i.'.e

June 18 Closed ..

6-R p .m . Open Swim

FOREST GROVE, One. (AP) Pacl1lc University has announced
the hiring of new men's and
women's basketball coaches, one of
them from Ohio.
Robert R. Bonn, an assistant
basketball coach at Western New
Mexico University, will head the
men's program and will be an
assistant coach in football.
Monica G. Mlze, now a coach at
RioGrandeCoUegeandCommunlty
College In Ohio, will head the
women's basketball and track
programs.

Both will be assistant professors
of physical education and health.
Bonn replaces Gary Meggelln.
who resigned. Mlze replaces Chad
Yowell, who has become dean of
students at Pacific.
Bonn has been at Western New
Mexico since 1~. The team was
J3.J last season In 'the Rocky
Mountain Athletic Conference and
21-8 overall.
Pacific is a member of the
Northwest Conference and the
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics .

Noon-! p.m . F'l1nes s Swim
I·J p.m . Oprn Sw1m
4-) p.m . F're&lt;' Entrrprise
6-8 p m. Open Sv.im
Noon-I p.m. Ftmess Swim
1-3 p m . Open Swim
4-~ : )) p.m. Fn&gt;t' Enterpri-.e
6--fl p m . OpPn Swlm
.. Noun-l p.m Fitrv:-s s Sw1 m
1-3 p m OJX&gt;n Sv.im

June t9 CIOSl."d .

June a! Cl&lt;B'd ..

Jun!! 21 Ci&lt;.R"d ..

and 0 .0 Mclnt yrt' Pa rk
6-8 p.m . Open ~wim
. .... Noon-I p.m. Fitness Sw1m

Junr 22 6-8 p.m. Open Rec .

l .1 p .m. Open
tl-R p.m. ()pen
1-3 p.m . Ope&gt;n
. J.J p .m . Opt-•n
6-8 p.m . 0pE"n

Julll' 23 1-J p.m. O!X'n Rec
.June 24 Cl&lt;:&amp;&gt;d . .

SwLm
Swim

S""irn
Sv.ir11

Swim

TOM HYSELL

Hysell ·named
top coach
.second year
•
•
m
succession
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. For the second consecutive year,
the Miami Herald and the Fon
Lauderdale News /Sun-Sentinel
have selected 'l'om Hysell as
Broward County's high school
baseball Coach-of-the-Year.
·Hysell has just completed his
fourth year as Head Baseball Coach
at Coconut Creek High School
which Is 4AAAA with an enrollment
ol2,600.
Hysell was selected by area
sportswrttl'n and tiM' county's 25
high school head baseball coaches.
A 1970 graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, Hysell coached for five
years at football-power Sandusky
High School where he served as an
assistant In football and baseball
before moving to South Florida.
He Is thesonofMr .andMrs. H. T.
Hysell of Addison .

Quaker State
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limit 12

Reds slate
tryout camp
for Tuesday
LANCASTER - The Cincinnati
Reds wW be conducting a tryout
camp Tuesday, June 19th at the
Lancaster High School baseball
l!eld In Lancaster. The camp is
scheduled to begin at 10 a.m.
The camp Is open tn all boys from
16 to 22 years of age with high school
sophomores and juniors urged to
attend.
All American Legion players are
required to bring wrttten permission from their post commander or
their Legion coach to tryout.
All eligible players need to bring
their own uniform, glaove and
shoes. All other equipment wW be
furnished by the Reds. Each player
wW also be responsible lor any
traveling and Uvlng expense unless
signed to a contract.
The ny oot camp will be
conducted by Reds scouting super·
visor Gene Bennett. Scouts Tenj'
Fanner, Fred Hayes, Hugh Jen·
ntngs, BW Slack, Dave Bennett, Don
Moyer and Eugene Leedy wW be
assisting Bennett.
The Reds say several players in
the major leagues today were first
spotted at similar ny oot camps and
any boy seriously lnterestro In
playing professional baseball
should make every elfon to attend
!he camp.

sgc

Engine
Stands

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Reg 9 95 &amp; 11 49 8otn tor most
Oomeshc ilf'ld omporl car~ and lrghl

lor

Reg. 3.94 &amp; 4 49

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Twin·
Ide 1Winlde, rlrtvm by Herb Coven
Jr., llrOirJe her ownlll8SOO record In

....•

Alliance
Camshaft
Reg . 79 95

Eagle
Headers
Reg . 59.95

Eagle

Scioto Downs

Socket
Set
Reg. 7.95 SAE or Metri c

Save 35¢

54.88

54.88

142lor~.

Pace at Scioto Dc:Mins.
Fl1aly'1 crowd of 5,'156 bel

Reg. 1.54

Reg. t .49

POINT PLEASANI'- A softball
toumameDt will be held In Point
Pleasant on June 23-24, sponsored
by Wilcoxen's.
Entry tee will be $'70 and 2
softballs.
First prize will be T·shlrts and
shorts while the I'UIIIlei'S-Up will
recetve T ·shlrts. Four sponsored
~hies wW also he given out.
For rilore Information call 675-

wiMing Friday night's $9,001 second leg ot the Three Diamonds

STP Oil Treatment

sse
STP Power Steering Fluid

Toumament slated

4.88
Chieftain 40 Piece

Reg. 139

STP Gas Treatment

and some Fords

OISIU, 0.
SERVICE STATION

Carman;

S!PVf" Safford 141.

.

Moonlight Madness-Grand Opening Sale

POMEROY. OH .

again fE:&gt;Gitures mt:&gt;n's. women's and

vs .

EvPns-F"orest Mullins vs. Jan and

FRONT·
Rl --- ARE

FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1984-6 P.M. TIL MIDNIGHT

FARM CITY INC.

Rick Cloak.
Six dillerent pr1vate courts will
be used for this year's event which

Bostrr

R~f'marv

NOT ALL

8 Ft. to 20 Ft.

GRAND
POMEROY. OH .

according to tournament director

Jolv nn

DISHES

FARM CITY
FARM CITY INC.

July 17, 1982.
"I! we'd needed him, we were
going to use him," sald McNamara.
;t'here was no need after center·
fielder Gary PettiS ran down JuUo
Franco's bases-loaded liner Into
light-center to end the game.
"It was seary when he !Irst hit It,
but after It was all over It felt &amp;ODd,"
Pettis said of Franco'ssllclngdrlve.
"When a ball goes that way, you
know It's going to curve away from
you. He hltltlusthardenoughfDI'me
to catch it."
The Indians hit plenty of hard
balls, collecting a total r111 singles
off Zahn. But they lacked the hits
with men on base.
"They're a good hitting club
against me," said Zahn, S-3.
"They're patient and don't try othlt
the hall oot of the park. I did exactly
what they wantro me to do by
getting behind on the count to so
many batters. "
Zahn had a 22-lttnlng scoreless
streak end when the Indians finally
converted an opportunity In the
eighth. Singles by Tony Bernazard,
Brett Butler and Franco loaded the
bases and Mike Hargrove's
grounder and Andre Thornton's
sacrtflce fly drove in the runs.

Announce pairings for third
annunalcancertournament
GALLIPOLIS - The third an·
nual WJEH-WYPC Cancer Society
Tennis Tournament will begin play
Tuesday evening in Gallipolis

Poi11111VY Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Paint Pleasant, W.Va.

Three more recruits join Rio cage squad

TURNER'S SATELLITE
RECEIVER SYSTEMS
....-....992-5692 or 992 -6565..-...

s&lt;'asons.

jiJ'ea.

Following the 1~-83 season, both
Meigs and Waverly withdrew from
the league. reducing membership
to five schools.

,,
'II:··'

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - In
another season, Uke 1983, California
Manager John McNamara
mlght've been tempted to allow his
starter to decide his own late.
But In this season, the Angels'
bullpen has become a source of true
reltef, so when left-bander Geoff
Zahn surrendered a pair of ninth·
Inning leadoff singles, McNamara
waved for Luis Sanchez.
Sanchez promptly closed out a 5-2
triumph over the Cleveland Indians
which gave the Angels a four-game
American League Western Division
lead. their biggest margin of the
season.
"Zahn had done his job by keeping
us in the ganne for eight innings,"
said McNamara. "There was no
sense In leaving him oot there.
"We've got people in the bullpen
for the late shift. And they've been
doing the job."
It has jeen quite a while since an
Angel manager could utter such
things. But the save was Sanchez'
seventh of the season, matching his
1983 total.
Warming up behind him was Don
Aase, who had been activated
Wednesday night but hasn't pitched
since suffering an elbow Injury on

·• Jurw 17, 1984

From
F•om

10.95 New WI-'
Cylinders

446-3807

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK

�Times-Sentinel

Page- C-6-The

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

June 17 1984

W. Va.

Petrified dead body found in 1883 in Cheshire tunnel
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS In 1883 all
business In the hamlet or Cheshire

was suspended. The cause was not
a war, nor was it

but

was the report or

a discovery of an
underground pas·

s•ge that led
from Watson ' s
Grove near Cheshi re to Eight
Mile Island on the West Virginia
sidP of th£&gt; Ohio Rivf'r. Arra ngemC'nt s wrre made to PxplorP thi s
" w onderful passageway" and mu ·

seum officia ls wcrr cont actf'd to
romf' to this Ohio Ri ver v illagp to
view a petrifi ed human body found
in the tunnel.
Thf' C hPsh ire rC'portPr fo r the
Gallipoli s Journal wrote:
" Yest e rda~' afternoon a grntlr
man of our village was restin g aflf'r
a hunt in Watson' s grove. \\'hrn hC'
felt a cold currrnt of air coming
from a holr lx'twf'e n thP roots of a
largl.' uak by w hich hf' \\'as sitting .
After s~vrm l ftllilr allempts to
discovrr thf' sou r er of the curr ent

II ITFRF \L~'i I'
T .m

llrazil art• numerou.• . and Gallipolis' Max

-. Ltnd' in t'ronl of om• of UM"m durinJ{ hi~ .Jum•

I ll '.\

trip to South

\ n w ri Ll

Max Tawney tells of trip to
South America"s Brazil
1\.1 .\1 .\X

'1'\\\:'\t~ Y

I .. \

I .!.II)() I.IS - I !11·'. ·t 'I' I h(J ught
'• \• •Ui d he ll .t \dlllc to .mot her

lt'l "l~n I'IIU nl r\ ·

]11'-:.-,

Hul

un tJl "''mr·rtmP

l nt·rtd rd

.t

m im'

in

in

I 'llr-.hu n.: h ~ - .illt·d m•· c~nd . L.... kf'd tnf'
h••·'· I 'l.t•uld li kt' tn g11 !! 1 Sou t h
i · ,t d lll!l l

fl ••H':l\. ] Jll'-1 r i'!U r n r'd

nr fi\'f' tons. In 1983 the y min(&gt;d closE'
10 :)2 tons. The&gt;~· s a~' b~· 1986 it w ill IX'
1hf ' sf'coml largpst gold producing
c o untr~ · in thf' world. If so. thrir
S~J.()ll.fXMlOCII drbl will vanish.
P ['()plP arC' flockin g to Porto Velho.
.--md all a long the Madri r a tin•r
hoping to strikf' it rich. and m anv

I ;, 1\ ..... I" ' ~~· .t p ' I" I ("IIU I d !. I kf' t hi"
tn n \!·. 111 • ·nd h ;1 d '.\1111 ; 1 rrip
thr•H JL: li . . . d•· c.. tr ·•m ~li .-.. t· ( .~ mp;m~·

do.
Then • arP mosrl~· tw n rlassrs of
\)('Opl f' in 8r3 zi1. which ~l rP wc•alth)'
.1nd poor Cr imP is bad thPrC' ..\'ou
" hould not walk 1hr s tr('('t s aftPr
dark . T hf&gt;n' is --HI to ~~) IX'IT ('nt
il litPra c\·. Kinr t~ IX ' l'&lt;'!'nl of 1hP
E3ra zillan _., an' Cattwli(' . Soc·C:rr is
thPi r spor t. I saw a ,l:;i:lmf' onP
Su nda.\ ·. an&lt;i thf'y go r' ra 7~· . just a-.
wf' dn af foo tball g ames , only·

and c·,ultl n1•1 u-. 1· 11 ~., wh;~t l g~l\'r

\ \ 'O J' &lt;;('.

J! ;· -, ,ud tl 1tu • pnC'f'

\In', ,

! t • •t

,iJJ ,, ll i lllld I t ·t msi rlc- J·
11 ·I -.. ,~td '- L•r 1 t.d h.m.: .. tnd •.1.·hf'n hf'
lr1i·! 11 ' 1 ', J .\ IJ U]d 11••1 IU I' Il it down .
ir: I tl· · I r·,ul d not •.Ln hom (• nnd
t·,t' ]{1'!1 11• \ {•1!'1'11 1·.., Ci HJc\ 11&lt;~ 1 dogs
11. . 1'-

•t rl hdtt ' l.

&lt;i! H l ( 'l l.tllll · ll!J i li ' !·.., Llnlii U'- C h ~H ' ·
[}I .

h1m 11 ,~ ... rn•m• ·\ 111

h1~

p&lt; l( 'kl ·t

Tlw ~ i g ilt.'\ to Sff' in Rio an• Sug3r

I p. 11 ~ ~· d n1 \ h.tJ.;" :1nd H' d" nff t(J
~.w y , Ji ·k wtl •· l'l ' I ~XJa r d t• d ; l V.:.ui r
1-r~ .tnd in Hl h0uro;; ll ~lndc&gt;d in Ri o de
.l.tn l 'i 11 1. H r. ! ~'II, 11 hi ( h is I),!M'IO mi If's

y.,. ~

Hr .: 1/il

i~..:

th l'
l. u ·.:i''- 1 .nHl 111 1.'" 1 pr,p ul() u:-. ('O Unlr\'
in '-'••utll .\nH ·rw; r ,\rnon g th f'
n.:lf]( ,;,-.. l•i 1l1•· \\·r •rld il t &lt;•nk,..; fi fTh in
"Ill' . llu l r··l.!hl~ l 111 rx•p ul .: ltrnn It h3 ~
1 . · ~~ ~ n . 11 1•o.. " ' ('ll, tstll ni' on th e
.'\tL1n 1 1r 111 • ·.1n .111d l1111df •r r.. f'\T'J)
~ •ulh
\111 1'!\t , \11 I'OU ntr _
\ f'.'\ ('(' p!
fl lilll

'-•' '·'·

Loaf )llount ain . thr Staturof Chtisl.
\\'h ich is almost ns largf' as fhr
Stat uP of Libforl y, Copacabana and
l ptl nf'ma hf'&lt;:Jf'hf's a nd thP bathing
t.lC'au rirs in th t•tr bl kini s.

All tno soon v.·(· had to pack and
](•a w • old R io. hut I sun• hupi..• sornl'
da Y I l 'J n rpturn and lif' in l h0 sand
n n Copacabo na tX'ach and wa trh

rhe girh _
go bv.

, - ~ .11 ']'l!uri . . t:-.
lt() rn .: Iii 11\'i 'J' thr·

print in the
i\nlholoi:Y."

al At he ns.

A RELI GIOUS p"rm

IITIII ~ n

b.\

Mrs. Ermi.l L.\ 'ons of Callipolis has
tx&gt;&lt;&gt;n accrptffl b~· t hP Amer i c a n
POC'tr y Associat ion to br publ ished
ln it s for thcomi ng OOok. "Am C' r ican
POPtry A ntholog-y .'' Tht• Assm·ia ·
tion con gTa! ul&lt;.~t c&gt;d Mrs. L ,\'ons on
a ccppt&lt;.~ncro of
thr pocm. &lt;lnrJ
sta ted :

I HOPE '1'11.-'\T you will enjoy

th~

privileg-t•, re&lt;"ognition, and satisfaelion of st~· ing- your (' r rativP work in

DELUXE

American

I

i 1•&lt;t t i't·!llU I'it •:--o !h(' f'i ' \H'r f'
lnlllll/-:l'iln h f n iln E urO]lf'
H l; \ Jillil i ' 1,, . , , J lr1 r.' l.ll \ r•: •r.., man \'
l.q J. Ill' '".,,, .• r,mi nc i n . I ..,,1w
m.•n ' t lli.m t ·o...·· J•u•n wlwrP Thl'

ALL

B ~AI&lt;I5

\\.1 \ i''-il!

MASTER
CYLINDER

WHEEL
SEALS

NEW DISC
BRAKE ROTOR

r....ooufoctured

Jllt ludi n~..:

Autullon

Nos . 4000, 40UI ,
6014

II

\\
..II..

TUNE-UP KITS
CONVENTIONAL
IGNITION IITS

\''
II
...

Motorcraft
SPARK PLUGS
NON

R £~ 1 STOR

IIICIUDING

•I'Otrm
•IOTOI

•COIIDENSlR

LAST WEDNESDAY'S Ga llipoli s Da i l; Tribune had a photograph
of A m old "Red" Auer bacha !trr his
Boston Ccltics had w on l hr N . B. A.
c ha mpi onship - thr l ~th lca guC'
till!' fur l hl' Cpil il's. Red 1\uprbach
wa s ~c hPclu l rd to l:x· !hP s(X'akcr for
the R io Gran de Co llege Redmen a
frw )'(•ars back. but, lor some
n·ason, H.C'd \\'as unable to kf'ep his
appo in t mr nt at f ht- at hlptic banquPt
of ! h (' R PdmC'n.

THIS OLD Bi\UN in Cheshi"' 1over the top of which one can see the : ~
steeple of the Baptl• t l' hurch) may w eU have heen standing bt 1883.

VALVE
LIRERS

When, for OIIC Of the f&lt;•W times in the history Of this village, husbtess llle
wa~ suspended. CalL~ of the suspt~nsion: reported disco\'ery of an
underground pas.sagew ay !rom Cheshil'\' to Eighl Mile I sland In the
OWo Uiver_

t.om

34

fl ESISTOR

T""P

PCV VALVE

POWER
STEERING
FLUID
-rJ~

4.49

QUART
SIZE

SEALER

"""'

sears

125

REGULAR

&amp;

•

T i\ Kl NC HIS PLACE on shor t
nnt icc wa s Bob Ff'IIC'r. R io Crandr
Collf'gf' hJ d somr high-powpred
cf'lc britics back in those da ys ~ As
'A'f'll as produci ng sornl' celebrities
i1 splf - f3pvo Fra ncis and Newt
Oli vf'r. for instancr.

~·2~.~

, - - - - - -- - - - -- - - - - -,,

:S689

t.~B!Er

AUTOMOTIVE BUYS
DRESS-UP WITH

LANDAU
WHEELS

v•• "'

•BULLSEYE

12~.~

WINDSHIElD
REPAIR lilT " '"

49~~9 ...,__..__

Sears Best highway radial s
·'
·SAV E 'h onour Sport r ad ia l
!ires . 155 Rt 2
• Bolh ttres h ave a 50.000 mil e
w earou t warranty

~ ~ ~ ~ur" "~-g-

T""P_vo..
uR_c_Ho_lc_E

INSTANT
SPARE

39.99

Seals, and

E-Z HITCH

TIRE W EAROUT WARRANTY. L 1m1ted warra nty aga •ns t t1r e
wearou t. For the speci f •e d m1le s . Sears w•ll rep lace the l ire o r
g •ve a ref und ch arging only for the m &lt;les used

inflates
flat tires .

NO S 53 4 0
53 41
53 4 2

SAVE

15

INTERPART

AIR

Av lr•nol•~r-

EACH

Lift Top ••

rM

SUN
ROOF

p, od•~ 1•,

FREON

15"• 30 "

Be Prepared
corry an
lns fon1 Spore

99~

•SMOKE
TINTED

FIRST 1

with ,

NON RESISTOR 6H
RESISTOR 94C

64 SPOKE
WIRE WHEEL
COVERS

ElY REPAIR KIT

ANY IN STOCK

radial. Pl55/80Rl3
• ll' s Ou r Lowes ! Prices Ever or( '

SALE PRICES

DELUXE

•BUMPER IEPAII
KIT -BMK · I
•PERFECT MATCH
VINYl UPHOIST ·

SM 27985

S M 76058

LIMIT 16 PLUGS
AT SALE PRICE

IIPAIRIIIn

Road Hand ler(li&lt;
:
28 .99 radial tires
CUT 1/3 to 1/2:
..•
• SAVE on th e Gas Saver

I'

PER PLUG AHtR MANUf . RE&amp;b. TE
WITH PURCHASE Of 4. 0 or a PtUG':i

CUSTOM WIRE

Sn~n"Q Fluod

REGULAR 19"

\ JO]X'Oplf' ,

I.~P

in Hi()_ Thf'
compc~m t•vc n p. ud I ill i' !; 1xi fJ rf's_ l
had ;1 hn ·, J1hLtki ng roorn OW'r look·
firlf'c.; J

TOTAL TUNE-UP PARTS

SEALED BEAM
HEADLAMPS

@ Weatn&amp;flouse

pr·1 rl. 1\ . ,JIIIr •ur"- . h&lt;•tr·IJ 'Ut!l1t in onr
1hi '

YOUR CHOICE
GTX lOW/40
GTX 20W/50

fOUR CHOICE
lOW/30
10W40

PRICED WITH EWIANGI'

~\&lt;'Ill -.lJ I JI ' I 1110...1 1'1. 1"-\ : tiH H ' !nf'ii i S

of

CASTROL

QUAKER STATE

50

1111.., \'·· ' " ,, dr:tf'm t rip all

C11nlr•' 1'1 111c ..,

MONTH
REG .

MOI'ITH
REG .

r·nuntrirs

1'1!1 .., ~ - ,,nl p ; J n \ \ W&lt;'nf

ENG I!'lEERED
FOR
SMA LLER CARS

40

0

" l}t ". Jk '-'p. ull'-..11
l hr • '.\'. 1\

SUPER
BLEND

fo r ~ yC'a r s.

'

l o~r;(_:_' I,I L' f ' lfl f-:1.1 111 J&lt;., fl () f'fU [,' lJ('S(':

!' 1• 1 11 1

MoloiCIBfl Tested Tough BATTERIES

ARIIOR MOST U.S. PASSENGER CARS

Poetry

I~·

,1nd

GTX

OR

INTERNAL ENGINE PARTS

BATHTUB WALL KIT

'''' .\1 rir· ;~ Thi'n in 1h(• 1Xth

.111 ·ll lli'l ~..;,,ulll \nli'l j(', Jfl

REG
32 99

MAINTENANCE FREE

~

11!\:. !1 hi ' I I U ~ ht i:·H' I milli o n ~ of

.., ~, ," • ,.._ t r•

DISC BRAKE
PADS

THE POEM is cn tillrd. " Help me
through the day , L ord:· M rs . L yons
ha s !)(o(' n t:n employt?E' of thi s
nP v.' s parx~r

F: r{IC . JF: ~ N I N GS. a summPr
in tf'rn with fhf' news st aff of t lw
C a lli \)Oli s nf'wspapt'l' in 1~Kt plans
to d o so m r ff('('·lnnrP w rit ing for
Scripps-1-! ow;-Jrrl na ti ona l nf'W 'i srr·
\'icE', and hP acid s: "and wor ld
tPnnis possibi:'&gt;'· · Eric's at Ohio U .

IONDED

3989

John Friedman joins news
staff of Gallipolis paper
By ,J. Si\MlJE~ PEEPS
GALLIPOLI S- John Fri&lt;'&lt;lman .
a 198.1 Marshall Un ivt:rsltv journalis m gr adua tl'. has joim&gt;d tht: nPw s
sta ff of t hr Ga lli polis paper . T h('
date hf' startf'rl was M a:v· '}q _

50,000 MILE RATED PADS &amp; SHOES

2ro;:

.\ u~ t r; ili ,l

J'•• J' IJL;,I .I H"d' ,,\.f 'l Hr :a; t; in the
]1, 1 ) , ..r Hun j)I•Plli. JI•1l h \ mosl l\
I· 1) :, 11]'. l .. llt·[ Ill !lit • l ~M N J&lt;., l(l l!ltMl&lt;.,

f'· 11

•.:

And so the story of this wonderfuL ~
discoverv has soon circulated · ..
lhrough~ut this community of
people and one telephone. The first:::
telephone was insta lled that same~·
Wff'k. Business people closed up so; :
that they might be listed among thE" :
explorers.
..
After sever al days of build-up the. ·
lwosom e w ho had made the-:
"discuverv" had to shamefacedly : :
admit that they werP the pPrp!'tra -.
IO!'S of a grand hoax on the folks Of
Cheshire. TherP was no passage· ;
way: no grand rrnt ra l ch amber: no.;
1
fossil s.
~
The town did no! becom t? famous~:
except to it s own sons an d '-4
"
daughters.
Box 9'Z. Clarksburg, Ohio 43115ts :-.
the address of James Sands.
·'

BillE SYSTEM .PARTS

f&lt;orn

CONTURA By Benson

!. 1&lt; I. JI IJ II \IUI ! 'tlr ,n\tl !l ll nl . I I Tli0!-.1

•r •n! nJt •nr t' \ t ·r ·pr

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

"NEW"

\\ &gt;tid l•'r th ~ ·tr \ d('&lt;Jilr•n
] -:! 1.' \ l he!" ,1 \&gt;-1pUL1I i• 1n Cif 1:-..r' !()
1 :tl r!lilll li ll "' w l11r h i!'l prTI'i 'nl ;n· r
Ull• !llpi••\ J•d Tlw l)l 'l 1plt · d l ( ' (J
i '' . • .,

ThPv concluded th•t Jhey were
thPn under the Ohio River .
Pchilied corpse
'Just at !hill pmn t one or the
grntlf'me n stumbled and fell over
an objf'Ct whic h upon rlosp exam ination provPd to bfo thr J)E'trified

ln t he open grove."

'' e're out to earn
.
,,,
your buszness.

PI lCD

'" IISII¥1 TIIIIIGIIl TO

'

t)I·. •••J •t \lltlm • ••lthf'
••• rTIHH.;

lanterns.
"After descending nearly 100 feel
through the narrow way, apparently dug out of the clay by human
agency . they cam!' to a largE' cavity
walled in on both sidE'S by rock and
extending as far as they could see In
on(' dir&lt;"Ci ion w hich they supposed
to be east, the other end or the
original ca vlly bPing closed by rock
iu ' l beyond the fool of the passagew a y th r oug h wh ich th ey
dPscendrd."
This chamber varied In height
fmm five to 10 feet and in wldth
from two to 20 feel. The pair
proceeded al ong the passageway
for what they assumed was about a
half of a miiP whf'n:
- "They were arrested by the
sound of wa ter rushing over their
heads ...

inlo lhe centr•l chambPr: "Both
lanlerns were blown out by a
sudden gale or .-1nd and they wE're
In tolal darkness."
·.
The pair lelt their way along the ,
walls but apparently had taken a .
wrong turn and ended up under the
slreets of Cheshi re:
"While hearing the voices of
people above. all allempts to make:.
themselves heard were in vain." : ~
Right outlet
•
"Once more lhey r etraced thl'ir~ :
steps and ga ining the centr:.J;:
chamber were fort unate enough to:.
find the righ t outlet and were soon::

body of a human being. Horrified at
their discovery. they delermlned to
beat a hasty retreat. "
After going back several steps.
their courage returned and !hey
became more determined !han
ever to try to reach the oilier end if
there was another end to the tunnel.
"Soon they found themselves in a
chamber nearly lJ feet high. over
which the water rushed .-i lh
deafening roar."
In this grand central chamber
were all kinds of stal actites and
stalagmites, Continuing on out of
the cent ral chambPr they came to a
place in the passageway covered
111lh a huge rock. Here they noticed
sunli ght f rom I he other side of this
boulder_ With great effort they were
able to dislodge a few sma ll rocks
and slid around l he boulder which
blocked I heir path.
Slow ascent
From here the passagewa y
narrowed co nsiderably both In
height and In wldth . A.s they
cr awled along, they noticed they
were slowly ascending and indeed
did Pventually come to the olhPr
end or !his "wonderful pass•ge way.·· That is to say one man made
it ; th e other one became stuck a nd
it was necessary to rptrace thPir
sleps. The thinner of t he pair
reported lo his rotund mate tha t the
passageway Indeed ended at Eig ht
Mile Island.
When the explorws came back

••

( l11i•· .1nd Ft 'ULtC]I J!' :\lm n.:...t ;Ill of
P. 1 ,1/11 1·, ·-••UIIl PI ltl f' f'&lt;j Ui1lor
Th• ·\ ·.•:t'll' h. t \'im: .:nllumn 111 Ri o
\~ · IJ, .. ·,
'.\, lo.. Ui l 'l l '. l h•· rnoo., f
\\1 •: • ·

b)· probing v.ith long sl ic k s . th £'
grntlrman procur(&gt;d an ax. and
wit h thC' as sistancf' of a nC'ig hOOr,
undE'rtook to solve the m yst Pry .
lit! It' drPam ing that hrw ould make
our villa gf' famous. "

Passageway rold
II sa&gt;ms thai the pair removed
several roots and found a passageway leading down and to the east,
but after descending a lew feet
found that they were in the dark .
Whar is more : it was cold. So they
returned hom e for their coats and

)\ ()! ( •l c;

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i~1 r~-:~ · \\·a \'f' S r-o m lll g up on r hr whi t r
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'

�Page C-8-The Sunday

June 17, 1984

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

Tim-Sentinel

It's time to watch out
for those summer pests!
By BRYSON R. CARTEJc
Extensloo Agenl
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GaWa County
l, ALLIPOLLS- Two of our more

common and serious lawn pests are
the sod webworm and the chinch
bugs. Both should ha ve laid eggs by
now ond their young should begin
feed ing and causing damag&lt;' the
nexTcouple of weeks _

Turf s hould be examined periodi·
cally- now by parting the grass in a
gTOO\'E' to observe either adult

chinch bugs or larv al sud we[).
worms. FPeding damage will begin
In show up in late Junr through

Jul v. August and September.
It sod webworms or chinch bugs

arr found apply Dursban, Sevin,
Diazinon. Aspon, Ethion, Fie am W,

Turcam or ot hers. Follow label
dirfftioins.
New Tick Repellent
lor Clothing Treatment
AvaUahle Now
One of the best ways to keep ticks
off vourseif is to either avoid going
into tick tl'rritory or usP a good
repellent.
Permanone Tick Repellent is
probablv one of tlw best on the
m a rket for that job. It contains
Prrmethrln which is a third
gf'nf'ration pyrrthroid { synthetic
pyT'('t hrin 1
The rC'pellen t is used onJy on the
clothing and not on the skin. It

withstands

two~ thrw

was hings and

: .................................................................................................................J.une.-.17._1.984~·~

Multi-County Vegetable Tour,
Tuesday. June 19, at 6:30 p.m.
Charles and Jeff Harris Farm.
Portland, Ohio. The Harrlses have
an extensive operation. They grow

many acres of tomatoes, sweet
corn. peppers. cucumbers. and
cabbage . In the fall they produce
pumpkins, squash, gourds and
Indian corn. Recently they have
moved into some sma ll fruits. They
strawberries and have planted
some raspberries . They have also
developed an impressive market.
They grow and market many types
of flowers and retail many
container-grown plants. William M.
Brooks, Extension Horticulturist,
Vegetable Production, a nd Mack
Reidel. F:xtension Plant Pathologist. will be on ha nd to answer any
questions that growers may have.
Chem ica l company representa·
tives wUI also be there. Refresh·
ments will be served. John Rice
says Gallia County farmers are
wei rome.

vegetable tour at the

Charles and .J eff Harris Farm at
Portla nd . starti ng at 6:30p.m. The
HarrisPs ha vf' an f'xtens iv(' vt.•ge1able o[X'ration They l'fOW many

acrrs

or

tomat0£'s, sweet corn.

peppers. cucumbers and cabbage.
In the fal l the&gt; proclucr pumpkins.
squas h. gourds a nd lndi an corn
RN:.'f&gt;nfly they have m oved Into
somf' sma ll fruit s. They ha vp fi vr
JtTP S of pick -your-own strawber-

ries and hav('
ras pt&gt;erri rs

pl a nted

some

William Brooks . Extension Hor1i ·
cu lt urist, Vegetable Production .

and Mack Reidrl, Extension Plant
Pathologist . will bt' on hand to
a nswrr an~·/ qurstions that growers
rna .' · haw• ChPmiral company
r('prC'SPntativPs will also be there.
Helrf'shmf' nts will be Sf'n •ed .
P~1 .v i n g Wages to Spouse Has

SI:•\Pra l Ekm--fit s -

You may be

missin g ou t on somf' tax rf'latcd
bf'nPfit s if you'r p no! paying your
spou o..; r for work pertormed on the
farm . TruC'. ifvou filpa joint federal
inco mf' tax rPtum thc&gt;rf' is no
saving. sincf' combinPd l:'aml:'d
inromf' rC'mains thf' sa mr . But in
&lt;..iOmC' slatf'-s ~~ ou ran ~avr on state
inr omf' tax .

Also. having an incomC' makes
1our Wife eligible for an lndi\1dual
Retirement .\ccount ti RAt of her
r,v.·n. othrr than a spousa l TRA . Of
courSf' . "hf' is alrf'ady eligiblE' if shf'
wnrk s part limf' off thr fann . If shr
Parn~ J1 ll'ast $2.fKX1 annually. OOth
of vou can pu t aside $2.001 of C'arned

inrnmf• annual!~· in an IRA. And
thi s a mount can be deducted from
combinf'd incomP on a joint rPturn .
L: nlftss your farm is incorpor ated
()r you ha vp a formal husband-wlfr

panncr ship . thr wages paid to \'OUr
'-"'i ff' nrf'

not

subj('('t

to social

Japan eecond to
Russia in buying
of U. S. wheat
WASHINGTON !API - The
Soviet Union was the top foreign
market for U.S. wheat ln the 1983-84
wheat marketing year which ended
on May 31. But who was the No. 2
market• It was Japan, says the
Agriculture Department.
A weekly export report showed
Thursday that wheat shipments to
the Soviet Union totaled about 4.14
million metric tons. Japan followed
with nearly 3.44 million tons . China
was third with 2.92 million tons.
Others ranked ln the top lOiorelgn
markets Included: Brazil. 2.25
million tons; South Korea, 2.00
million; Morocco, 1.69 million;
Nigeria , 1.63 million; Egypt, 1.];
million; Iraq, 1.26 million; and
Indla,1.17 million.
A metric ton Is about 2,205 pounds
and Is equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat.
In all, U.S. wheat exports totaled
35.5 rnUllon tons last marke?f.!
year, down from 3B.2 million !~
~and 47.1 million ln 1981-82. .
. ' 'I

'

•

securi ty tax. So you ma y be able to
reduCi' your own income and the
amount of socia l sflf'urity you'll
have to pay on your o"'T1 selfemployment earn ings tprovided
your Parnings do not exceed

$37,800i . Remem!Jt'r, though, this
ma y reducf' soc ial sec uri t y

ONE BY ONE - Betsy Burke, left, and her sister Cheryl dutlfuUy
sUp onion starts one by one btlo the slots of a planter as the two girls help
their neighhor, Paul Bntno plant his onion crop near North Rid Keville.

your wifE'. In turn. thi s allows you !o
~Y for health insurancP on your
wir~·s

family, which includes you.
Remember. though, if yo u have

uther employees. you must Include

them in the plan .
Starting A Business In Yuur
Home - A seri es of 10 fact sheets
have been produced regarding
starting and conductin g a small

business in the home. Titles
Include: "Sta rting a Business in
Your Home - Is II For You•";
"Some Pros a nd Cons of Having a
Business In Your Home··: "Re~
cords and Record Keepin g": "LJ .
crnses. Permits and ?..oning":
"Insurance"; "Sources of Assist -

anCi'"; "Taxes- Sta te a nd Local";
"Taxes - Federal"; ··Marketing
a nd Adverti sing" ; and "Pricing. "
TheSl' fact sheets are available
throug h our office.
Recent Questions. - Q. My
maple trees are dropping new, fully
matured l~avcs. Is this a serious
probiem 7 A. Maple leaf drop can be
due to mjury by gall fon-ners ,
anthracnoSP infection and In some

cases. petiole clippers. Usually
maple trees retain enough leaves
and / or regrow nf"w leaves so that
no control measures art' necessary.

Q. Can I use the same spray for
controlling scab on ornamental
cra bapp\es as on apple trees• A.
Yes. currently the commonly used
fungicides for this purpose are
capt an and benlate

Ohio. The girls had been working aU day, riding the planter puUed
behind Bruno's tractor. Bruno Is planting 250,000 onions on the nine
acres he !arms southwest ol Cleveland. (AP Laserphoto).

Cattle producers taking 'wait-and-see' attitude
By DON KENDAlL
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department's latest
feedlot surveys Indicate that many
cattle producers are holding off to
see H markets improve and how 1984
graln crops shape up.
As of June 1, the department said
last week. thenumberofcattlebeing
fed for the consumer market ln the
seven major beef states totaled 7.32
million head, down fractionally
from 7.33 million on hand a year ago
and 1 percent below than two years
ago.
The downturn came after several
months of the overall sevE-n-stale
inventory being above year-earlier

bPneflts.
As long as your wife is a bona fide

employee, you can pay her health
insurancr covera gE' - the- cost Is
deductible to you a nd tax-free to

. legal residents Is no satisfactory tradeoff.

The legalization program - which will be voted
upon by the House on Tuesday - Is so narrowly
drawn that relatively few of the estimated 6.3 million
HispanicS who might qualify will apply, the Hispanic
leaders said.
Ms. Gonzales deplored Thursday's 22S-172 vote to
establish a huge "guest worker" program that would
bring tens of thousands of foreigners Into this country
to harvest perishable crops. She said It conveyed the
message to the hemisphere's workers: "Come here,
work and get out."
The Hispanic representatives said the bill's
amnesty feature - offering legalization to illegal
Immigrants now leadbtg Shadowy, underground

Fanners must idle
30 percent of
wheat base to
qualify for
price benefits
WASHINGTON I AP)- Farmers
will have to idle 30 percent of their
1985 wheat base bt order to qualify
for federal price support benefits,
the same as they did for this year's
harvest.
The program, announced Friday
by Agriculture Secretary John R
Block, will Include a 20 percent
acreage reduction plus 10 percent
for which farmers will get cash
government payments. A similar
feature was in the 1984 program.
But there wlli he no PIK program
next year. unlike the 1984 program
which offered farmers an opportunIty to divert an additlonallO percent
to 20 percent of their wheat land In
return for "payment -in-kind"
benefits.
Also, Block said, wheat farmers
under the 1985 program W1ll not be
aUowed to harvest hay from
"acreage conservation reserve"
land taken tram production.
"However, the acreage may be
grazed except during thE' six
principal growbtg months as desig nated" by state officials of the
USDA's Agricultural StabUizatlon
and Conservation Service, he said.

levels. Although four sta tes showed
increases, the June 1 taUy was down
agaln in Colorado, Iowa and
Nebraska.
A spokesman for the depart ~
ment's Statistical Reporting Service said the Iowa feedlot inventory
was the smallest In many years but
could not say exactly how long.Also,
Kansas feedlots topped Nebraska's
on June 1, a departure from the
usual pattern .
Marketbtgs of ··ted" cattle in May
total .'d 1.64 million head, a 4 percent
Increase from las t year and 16
percent more than In May 1982, the
report said.
The placement of new cattle and
calves in feedlots last month was
reported a t 1.8miliion head, down 2
percent from May1983and3percent
fewer than two years ago.
Feedlot btventories as of June lin
the seven states, which account for
about three-fourths of the nation's
beef, and their percentages of a year
earlier. Included :

Arizona, 360,CXXl head on June 1
and 101 percent of a year earlier;
California, 558,CXXl and 112; Colorado, 820,001 and 93; Iowa , 740,001
and 69; Kansas. 1,390,001 and 109;
Nebraska, 1,380,CXXl and 86; and
Texas. 2.mo.ooo and 125.
The department's Economic Research Serv,ice said in a new outlook
report this week that ca ttle producers have been plagued by severe
weahter problems since last
s ummer , including persistent
drought conditions ln western
Texas, Arizona and New Mexico.
"Even though beef production has
remained above a year ago during
the second quat1er, prices of Choice
(grade) steers and retail beef have
been relatively stable since February," the report said.
"Packer demand for fed cattle
has been strong, preventing a
bottleneck of over- finished
animals."
The report said that as beef and
other red meat production declines

below year-earlier levels during the
second half of 1984, cattle prices
"will probably be sustained" at near
the current level.
"As a result, fed cattle slaughter
probably will decline this faD,
eontrlbutlng to lower beef supplies
during the second half," the report
said.
Market prices of Choice steers at
Omaha, Neb., are forecast to
average $li6 or $67 per hundred·
weight thJs spring and then possibly
creep up to $66 or $70 ln the thJrd
quarter, according to USDA economists. Fourth quarter markets
could average $63 to $ffi per
hundredweight.
A major question is what feed
costs may be by next faU.lf the corn
crop, just barely in the ground, gets
normal weather and produces good
yields, feed prices could ease
significantly. On the other hand,
summer drought - as It did In 1983
- could throw another monkey
wrench In the works .

The Weather Is Hot,
But the Deals are even Hotter
at lim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile

McGovern 'surprised'
by Sen. Hart's showing
~

CLEVELAND (APl - (;('f)rge S.
McGovern, the former senator who
was the Democratic nombtee for
president in 1912, said he won 't seek
l'e-€1ection to the Senate.
"! don't have any plan or any
probability of running for the Senate
agaln," the former South Dakota
senator told a City Club audience
Friday. "I'm living In Washlnglon
almost full -time now and its unlikely
that I'll go back toSouthDakotafora

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
Reagan Adrnlnlstratlon Is stepping
up coal technolcigy and acid raln
research and opposes legislation
calling for additional controls on
coal burners at this time to curb the
acid raln, says U.S. Energy Secretary Donald Paul Hodel.

senate race.''

Hodel, speaklng Friday to the
Ohio Mlnbtg and Reclamation
Association, said the acid raln
problem needs more study because
emissions of sulfur dioxide believed to cause acid rabt - have
diminished slnce the late 1970s as a
result of the Clean Air Act, and
continued to decrease last year.

~

"We must have more scientific
information before deciding to
launch the country on an expensive
and potentially divisiVE' control
program," Hodel said.
He was referring, he said, to
federal bills which could cost many
millions of dollars for added controls
and could cost some regions more
than others.
Hodel said theadmlnlstratlonhas
doubled Its budget for acid raln and
related research to $127 million,
nearly $60mllllonofwhich Is control
technology research ln the Department of Energy.
"The president has doubled
expenditures on trying to flnd out
what the problem Is ... sothatwecan
know that when we spend money as
a nation for a particular form of
cleanup, we know that we are on the
right track."
At a news conference, Hodel was
asked If Ohio and other coalproducing states which get blamed
for acid rain can do anythbtg other
than wait for the research.
"We ll,! thlnkthatwhat'shappenlng ... we are spending a significant
amount of research dollars on trying
to find ways to clean up and burn,
C\eanly, high-sulfur coaL So I thbtk
that It Is a double-edged sword . I
thlnk we are working at both e nds of
the equation."

NEW TRUCKS-35 IN STOCK
NEW CHEVROLETS-40 IN STOCK
NEW OLDSMOBILES-20 IN STOCK
20 MORE DUE IN SOON

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BAUM LUMBER

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ONE-TIME CANDIDATE - Fonner South
Dakota Sen. George McGovern gestures during an
address before the City Cluh in Cleveland on Friday.
McGovern, 61 , said he might nol have become a
candidate for the Democratic nomination this year If

he had thought Gary Hart would become such a
strong candidate. llart was McGovern's campaign
manager when he ran lor president In t972. 1AI'
LaserphoiA&gt;).

U.S. withdraws loan to Argentina
WASHINGTON iAP ) - The U.S.
government , disappointed by Argentina 's tack of progress ln
resolving its btternational debt
problems, is withdrawing an American conunitment to help out with a
$.:nJ million short-term loan.
Officials left the door open Friday
Cor reinstatement of the loan
commitment, which Argentina had
been counting on to repay Latin
American neighbors who had
helped Argentbta past an Interestpayment crisis at the end of March .
However, at least officially, the
commitment announced by the
Treasury Deparlment on March 30
expired at midnight.

COLUMf?US, Ohio (AP) - A Columbus couple is seeking $1
million ln damages from the maker of a cradle hasket for the death of
their Infant.
Dennis and Sandy MuUoy filed the lawsuit against Longaberger
Inc . of Dresden.
The MuUoy' s :15-day-oid adopted child, Michael, died AprU 22. The
MuUoys brought Michael home from the hnspital AprU 12 and placed
him in the cradle basket, where he spent moot of his time until his
death.
Dr. Robert Adrlon, Franklin County coroner, has said the Infant's
death was caused by a reaction tram the stain used on the basket.
;t..ongaberger officials could not be reached for comment Friday
night .
In Washington, the Consumer Product Safety Commission said it
Is still running tests on the Longaberger basket and thai results may
he avatlable W!thlng a week.

Mother pleads to manslaughter

WITH 42 IN . MOWER

McGovern. 61. who was defeated
In 1972 by Richard Nixon, says he
only joined six other Democratic
presidential contenders this year
because he didn't think Colorado
Sen. Gary Hart would do well in the
race.
"! frankly didn't think he had a
chance at the nomination. The
chances are I wouldn't have come
Into the race if! had thought he had ,"
said McGovern, who earlier this
week endorsed Walter Mondale.

McGovern said that when he
joined the other candidates seeking
the nombtation , it was thought to be
a two-man race between Mondale
and Ohio ~n. John Glenn.
"Not that !Hart's t views were
necessarily closer to mine than
some of the other candidates, but I
did have a personal relationship
based on the fact that he had been
my campaign manager In '72,"
McGovern said.
"It would have been difficult for
me to come Into the race aga inst him
If I had thought he had any chance at
all of emerging as a sertous
contender for the nomination .''

McGovern said the Democratic
nominE'€ will face an uphill battle in
trying to defeat President Reagan .
"It's always difficult to defeat an
incumbent pres ident." McGovern
said. "But as Pr.,;ident Reagan
himself proved four years ago. it can
be done."

UMW official says
women are 'welcome'

$1 million sought in infant death

WOHIHJISIGTIIOO l ·ftfD

$214900

illegallmmlgrant who has been In this country almost
continuously since 1982 to become a pennanent
resident, ultimately eligible for citizenship, if he ar
she has earned a llvbtg, Is ln good health and has not
been ln serious troubleW1th the law while llvbtg ln the
United States.
The Senate-passed version of the same bill sets up
stiffer terms. A person here slnce 1977 could become a
permanent resident; one here slnce 1900 could
become a temporary resident and late r apply for
pennanent residence.
The INS has estimated that 2.9 million people would
be eligible for legalization under the House bill and 1.6
mllllon under the Senate bill.

The money was meant to be a
"bridge loan" to tide Argentina over
until it could arrange a larger,
longer-term loan from the Interna ·
tiona! Monetary Fund. However,
Argentine officials have been un able to reach such an agreement
W1th the IMF.
Argentina owes about $44 billion to
foreign governments and private
btstitutions, Including many U.S.
banks, and has been having
Increasing difficulty making Inter·
est payments on the loans.
Economy Minister Bernardo
Grlnspun said Friday night he Is not
surprised by the Reagan adm ini s~
!ration's decision not to extend its

guarantee over repaymen t of a 300
mllllon doUar loan to Argentina.
Gr!nspun said at a news conference that his country will negotiate
"in good faith" with the four Latin
American nations that made the
loan- Brazil. Venezuela, Co lombia
and Mexico - as the deadline for
repayment approaches. He said the
deadline is June 29.
Argentina told the IMF In a letter
this week they were reluctant to put
Into effect the budget austerity
mea.sures the lending agency was
asking. There has been no official
word whether the IMF W1ll go along
with Argentina's murh ~modifled
economic-adjustment proposal.

CHARLES1DN, W.Va . lAP) United Mlne Workers Vice President Cecil Roberts says he would
welcome any women who want to
join him In leading the union.
"It would please usa great deal to
see women running for office at !he
district level and even the Internatio nal level," Roberts said .
Roberts said no female miner
currently holds a district · level jotJ in
the UMW. although many have local
union posts.
He made his remarks at a news
conference about the Sixth National
Conference of Women Miners,
scheduled for next week in
Charleston.
Robens, who i;; scheduled to
deliver the keynote speech at the
conference, read a statement from
UMW Rresident R ichard Trumka
in which he said, "The United Mine
Workers of America has endorsed
the SLxth National Conference of
Women Miners not only as a
demonstration of solidarity with our
union sisters, but as another vehicle

through which the problems of

women

miners

can

bP

full y

addressed ."
The con f prenc c' s cochairwomen. Edith Stith of Poca'
hont.as, Va .. and Sandy Dorsey of
Martbts Fen:~. Ohio, flanked Roberts as he made his e ndorsement of
the female miner's goals .
They said nex I week's conference
would take up such issues as sexual
harassment. how to cope W1th
unemployment, and the need for
increased mat ern it y- paternit~·
leave for miners.

Mrs . Dorsey sa id the women fell
that sexual harassment was prevalent in every mining job held by
women. She said s he had Pven seen

mine forem en initiate acts of
harassment that were then "picked
upon by the m a iP miners.··

RobC'rts said coal companies have
a long history of condoning harassment of minority groups ln their·
employ. He said the companies do it
in order to keep the work force
divided and thereby'. weaker.

r-------News b r i e f s : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

Quality. At an affordable pnce.

ONLY

existences -Is so narrowly drawn that only a relative
handful of those ellglble to apply would qualify.
Arnoldo Torres, executive director of the League ol
United Latin American Citizens, said 2.2 million of 6
million Illegal aUens lMng In the United States would
be eligible to apply for legalization, but he estimated
that 5 percent of them - llO,CXXl people in aU actually would apply.
He and Ms. Gonzales said mnst illegal aUens would
be reluctant to apply out of concern they would be
deported lf they faDed to qualify for legalization.
In sharp contrast, the Immigration and Naturalization Service estimates 00 percent of those who apply
will be able to meet the conditions for legalization.
The proposal before the House would allow any

Hodel says
more acid
·rain study
necessary

have five acres of pick-your..ov.-11

Vegetable tour slated
at Portland Tuesday
mulli - count~ ·

; ' WASHINGTON (AP) - Hispanic leaders say they
tian to picket this swruner's political conventions to
feU both parties thatSpanlsh-speaklngAmerlcansare
' atlronted by "racist" sentiment expressed ln an
'lmmtgratton control bill before the House of
}'!epresentatives.
· At a news conference, Helen Gonzales of the
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund caUed the measure "the worst, most nativist,
most racist piece o! lmmlgrljtion legislation" slnce
the Chinese Exclusion Acts of the 1800s.
"Nativism" Is the practice of favoring na~
citizens over lmmlgrants.
__ The Hispanic spokesmen'18ldthe bill's offer to let
illegallmmlgrants livbtg bt the United States become

ExtPnsion Office.

County Uf{ent 's corner

Meigs County
Extension Agenl
POMEROY -O n Tuesday even
ing . June 19. the re will bP a

Jlispanics plan convention protests against hill

In Ohio the distributors are: (11
Southern MUI Creek Products,
Cleveland, OH, 216-481-8404, 12
Hillside Brush and Chemical, Cincinnati, OH, 513-751-4100.
For more information on biology
and control of ticks, obtain a copy of
the Home, Yard and Garden Fact
Sheet HYG 2073-84, Ticks and
Spotted Fever In Ohio from the

d()('Sn't plastici.z(' \ ·in y l ma terial.

B.v .fOHN C. RICE

~m.. -~••m..aSection~

;S tate/ ational

Agriculture and our community

Selection -

Service

ALL HERE AT

PUle~

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.

1616 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, OH.

CHILL!CarHE, Ohio. (AP) - A teen-age mother charged with
klllbtg her newborn babY In January has pleaded guilty to a reduced
charge of abortion manslaughter.
Sharon Ater of Clarksburg orlglnaUy was charged W1th
aggravated murder bt the Infant's stabbing death ln January.
Ross County Prosecutor RJchard Ward said be agreed to the lesser
charge, a first degree felony, because the facts of the case would
have been difficult to prove "W1th any degree of certainty."
Sentencing Is scheduled lor July 20.

Student granted early release
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - An early release from prison has been
granted to a Hocking Technical CoUege student convicted o!
aggravated vehicular bomlclde ln the death of another student last
November.
John Atkinson of Kettering was granted shock probation alter
serving about two months of a 1~ -to-'llve-year sentence at the Ohio
State Reformatory. Darlene DUler, Columbus Grove, was killed
when Atkinson's car was Involved ln a head-on colllslon In

Nelsonville.
Athens County Common Pleas Judge William Rowland suspended
the rest of Atkinson's sentence and placed him on five years·
probation. He a lso ordered Atkinson to e nroU in an alcohol
awarenesss program .
Prosecutor Mike Wa rd opposed the s hock probation . saying
Atkbtscn had not been in ja ti long enough.

Teacher indicted on sex charges
CAMBRIDGE , Ohio (AP I -A second-grade teacher a t Gartield
E lementary School has been indicted on nine counts of gross 9"xuai
imposition, Guernsey County Prosecutor Jim Scott says .
Rober! Gambino, 29, allegedly committed gross sexual imposition
W1th nine students, the Indictment said.
Gambino Is free on$20,&lt;XXJ bond and is to be arraigned Wednesday.
The school board has suspended Gambino, who taught in thp
district for six years, pending official termination prooeedings. The
board decided to take the action after crlmbtal chargers were filed ,
said Superintendent Louts Cardamone.

Fire chief denies responsibility
RACINE , Wis. tAP) -A fire chief~ys his department "cannot
assume responsibility" for the death from breathing problems of a
woman who was advised by a fire dispatcher to breathe Into a paper
bag.
Dispatcher George Giese made an "understandable" judgment
error and won't be disciplined for not sending an amruiance right
away to Rena DeLacy, said Chief Ronald Chiapete.
Ms. DeLacy's brother, Joseph Harris, agreed Giese made an
honest mistake, but disputed that the department cannot assume
responsibility.
Attorney Adrian P. Schoone sald he will file a claim for the
maximum aUowable $50,CXXl on behalf of Ms. DeLacy's family .

Opponents to appeal ruling
PROVIDENCE, R.l . (AP) -Opponents of. lormerMayorVlncent
A. Cianci Jr. say they'll appeal a ruling allow1nghlm torunagalnfor

the job he was fot'Ci'd to leave after being conviC'lPd of a fPiony.
Cianci. given a suspended sentenCP for assaulting a man he
bclleved was having an affair with his estrangf'd wife. L' a candidate
In next month's eleclion to fill the remaining 2Y, years of his term .
Under s tate law, a felon does not lose his right to run for office
unless he serves ttme In prison. the state Board of E lections ruled
Thursday .
An attorney for a Cianci opponent, Dr. Mel\':&gt;'11 M. Geich. sald h~'ll
appeal to the Rhode Island Supreme Court or back to the city Board
or Canvassers.

MX passes flight test
WASHINGTON (API -The controversial MX missilP seared its
fifth successful test flight in a row, sending six una rmed warheads
into a target area in the mid-Pacific from the California coast, the Air
Force announcf'd .
Friday's test came one da y after the Senate narrowty approved
continued production of the new, multiple-warhead lnlercontinental
baUlstlc missile, which is to be instaUed at fixed launch bases in
Wyomlng and Nebraska starting In 1~ .
Maj. Ron Rand said a new Mark 21 model MX warhead . icsted
Friday for the first time, trave led 4,100 miles .
When deployed, the tour-stage ICBM. designed to carr;· up to 10
warheads agabtst separate targets, will be fired from underground
silos now holding earlier-generation Minuteman missiles at Francis
Warren Air Force Base, on both sides of the Wyoming-Nebraska
border.
The Reagan administration wants to deploy 100 MX missiles.

Airport funds approved
DES PLAINES, Ill. (AP) AUocatlons of $64S,&lt;XXJ for
improvements at two Ohio airports were announced this week by the
Great Lakes regional office of the Federal Aviation Adrnlnlstration.
The agency proposes to spend sro:J,OOO for land acquisition and
repairs at Lorain County Regional Airport ln Elyria .
It also wants to spend ~.600 for a master planning study at
WUlard Airport.

�Pag•

0-2-The Sunday T1mes-Sentinel
2

Pubhc Not1ce

June

In Memoroam

9

Perhaps you sent a lowely
card or maybe you were JUSt
a phone call away Maybe
you sent a lovely spray or

NOnCE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAnON
Columbus Oh.,

maybe your thoughts
wete w th &amp;'a that day The
1ood that was Mnt was a big
part too but moat of all the
love and prayers you showed
fUit

8 1984

Contract Sales legel
Copy No 84-721
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
SR OOOR(96)

ftlled our hearts Thank you
evervone our love Bt praye s
are w th you a I Thank you
Or Mark Wa ker Or Evans
The nurses at Hotze ICU &amp;
Chu ch of God m Rutland
Thank you very much from
1he Vance Fam ly

d

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sew ng ma
ch ne
epa r
parts
and
supp es
P clc up and
del very Dav s Vacuum

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE
Beds
ron
wood cupboards cha rs
chests baskets diShes
stone rers ant1ques gold
and s lver Wr te M 0
M ller Rt 2 Pomeroy Oh o

45769 or coli 614 992
7760

Buy ng daly gold s lve
co na ngs ewelry start ng
wa e old co ns arge cur
ency Top pr ces Ed Bur
kett B• ber Shop 2nd Ave

Mddleport Oh 614992
3476

Cash pa d to fancy ron or
hea\fY ron bed~ $160 and
up fo certa n Me gs Co
stone Ja s 0 d t me cup
boo d
c all 1 304 882

2711

Employmenl

Services
11

8

$75

and

$7 500 00

8 ngo games at Cha leston
C w c Cente June 27th Call

304 346 7542

Goveaway

Help Wanted

Homemakers Dream
No
exper ence needed to ea n
25% comm ss on demon
stratmg n h ends homes
You control hours and tn
come Absolutely no nwest
ment Also book ng part es
Call 446 1270 or wr te Toy
Plan
Johnstown
PA

15904

1- - - - - -- -- Offset P essman wanted
due to expans on The per
son we want must be
exper enced preferab yon a
Web Offset P ess We p nt a
h gh qual ty da ly newspape
and numerous othe tems
many n full co or All epl es
w II be held n conf dence
Send esume a M C Car
The Mar etta T mes P 0 Bo.:
5 Maret a OH 45750
We are a equa opponun ty
employe

Gall1pohs
&amp; VICinity

Pomeroy
Middleport

Fraz ers Bottom Flea
Ma ket
Ever',! weekend
U S 35 Fraz ers Botto m
WVa 25082 Dealers Wei
come
Don Frazer

Operato 304 755 2779

Gove nment Jobs S16 559
S50 553 yea Now H ng
You a ea Call 1 805 687

6000 Ext R 9805

efe

als

614 742 2445

G ve awav 1 wh te fema e
cat Call 614 992 6250

NOT CE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OH 0
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Oh o
June 1 1984
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No 84 686

UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT

843 5345

Real Estate
31

To g ve awav Found small
black and tan m ~~:ed breed
female
Call 304 895

Announcements
2

In Memoroam

memo y of Joseph E
B sse I th nk ng &amp; m ss ng
you on Fathe s Day Sadly
m ssed by w fe &amp; ch ld en
In

In memo•)' of Lushtf A Evans
8 20 1871!-6 20 1969 &amp; Eelwon Mayo 1897 1981 Todoy we
pause to honor the precous me-

LOST on R 588 between
M tchell Ad &amp; Fa f e d
Van co R d sma red too boK
w th va ous tools
Ca I
446 0471 Rewa d

lost Black glasses w th
b ack case lost n Pome ov
Tuesday around Nelson &amp;
Brogan Wa no
Cal 614

992 3150

lost baseball g ove on f eld
beh nd Sal sbu y grade
school
Pease ca 1 992

6250

B ue luggage conta n ng n
fan1 clo h ng n ga bag bag
ost on At 35 app ox 12
m les f om town
ewa d
Phone 304 968 3794

8

Fam ly

Auct on every Tuesday
n ght Pt P easant WVa
Auct lonn e Neal Youth
Conte Bldg
Camden St

In lovong memory of E
Mauroce (D1ck1e Paynes
b rthday June 16

Publoc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

614 367 7101

12

S tuatoons
Wanted

446 1615
1244

a v11cancy to an
elderly person n Ha nes
Board ng Home Pomeroy

Call 992 6022

Denny s Au a Pant ng gua
enteed pant ng at easona
ble
ates Co I s on wo k
we corned 14 yrs e.:pe
ence 614 843 5468

Lawn Mow ng &amp; T mm ng
Rei able and dependab e
Reasonable ates Ca 6 4

256 6251 after 5 30
Roofing and gutte wo k
meta wo k housepa nt ng
carpenter work E:.c
ef
Free est mates Call 446

tobacco

614 256 1528

Call

Th ouKh wh ch ea h must go
alofle

Auct on every f
n ght a
the Hartford Commun ty
Conte Truckloads of new
marchand se every week
Cons gments of new and
used marchand se always
we come R chard Reyno ds
Auct oneer 304 275

We turned to h1m so
many limes
For comfort and adv ce
And when we needed help
We never had to ask h m
tw1ce
He shared '" all our ups
and downs
And helped us see them
through
He made the good t1mes
better
W1th the thmgs he
would say and do
Avanelle and Fam1ly
P S If you have a father
please tell h m you love
h1m while he s stoll atove
whoch •• d1dn t do often
enou&amp;h

A

act ve small home sma
ya d at a smal p ce M dd e

614 992 6941

Two sto y 7 oom house
bath sc eened poh ca po 1
on 4 ac es 5 m sou heast
Oak H I OH oH S R 279

S15 000
6173
4 BR

Call 614 682

3069

Country Aquar um Fathers
Dlly Spec1al All aquar um &amp;
pumps on spec al Coral &amp;
shells
off Talk ng cat f sh
$2 59 Platys S1
Black
mollys $1 F.fllncy T a I g p
pes
$2 50
plus much
more nea Bradfords t ee
farm 992 6644

n k tchP.n
v ooms
also
1 6x32
ng ound
heated pool a I on a one ac e
fenced lot many other ex
tras
F nanc ng ava abe

Auct on Mt A to Thursday
June 21 7 00 PM Cons gn
mont accepted Emma Bell
Auct oneer 429 84

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cesh for late model
clean used cars
J1m M nk Chev Olds Inc
B II Gene Johnson

446 3672

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swa n Furn

lure

446 3159

01 ve St

3rd

Galhpohs Oh

Water wells dr lied &amp;. ser
v ced Free est mates Call

614 992 5006or814 742
3147

F1n a n e~a l

21

Busoness
0 pportumty

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
USHING CO recommends
that you do bus ness w 1h
people you ltnow and NOT
to send money through the
ma I until you have nves11
gated the offe ng
Sell steel b01ldengs Steel
8u ldmg De•lership Small
to b g prof t potent el big
demand st•rter le1ds fu
n shed Some arees taken

&amp; Call to quollfy 13031769
3200 oxt 2401

Call 81 4 992 7034 davo

1 BR Apt
furnished
n cely 11 00 mo alto wdl
pay woman to stay 5 days a
week not much work. re
qu red must be able to drive

Apt

44

304 586 3572

5047

1 bedroom Apt *196 mo
mcludmg u11l t es Equal
Hous1ng Opponunny Con
tact VIllage Manor Apts

loft 12x52&amp; 12•44szeo 2

bedroom turn ahed Clo11ng

Phone 304 576 2320

34

Busoness
Buoldongs

Bu ld ng to sale m Rutland
30x60 block bu ldmg w th
estrooms &amp; newer fur
nance located on SR 124
has s x tenths of an acre
Call John S Evans Pastor
Church of God Rutland at

614 742 2060

4
ac e lo
estnced 2 2
m le from Gall po s &amp;
Ho zer
Reduced to

&amp;10 600 Call446 3465

Fo sale o
ade 2
bed
oo m a I mode n house w th
bath attached ga age v nyl
steel alumn Se I o trade fo
ate mode 2 o 3 bed oom
tale and land 304 882

Surveyed lot w th water &amp;
electr c hookups approx 2
a n qu et subd v son near
Rodney 2 m from Holzer
Med cal Center Cal 446

1380

3590

for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
TV MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST GALLI POLS
AT 35 PHONE 614 446
7274
1979 3 bd mob e home on
ac e lot wei shaded
Must se I both togethe Cal

6143889957

baths

1 Ox 50 t a lor on large
wooded lot 7 m los below
Galltpo s on Racoon

&amp;10 995 304 675 6448

Rentals
41

Houses for Rant

3 bd house de uxe central
ar pooletc Ca116755104
0

675 5386

on

1972 12 )( 65 flam ngo e.:
cond to S6500 Call 614

379 2314

8 X 32 T a e 2 BR new
pa n
ew ca pet dea fo
campste Call 614446

9283

1976 Buvv ew 14 X 70

M ob e Home Detro te
12X60 AC
2 porches
unde p nn ng fuel o I bare!\
S5 500 good co nd Call

614 256 1317

6 rooms basement doub e
garage 1 &amp; one th d acre
l ot
Rose H II Pome oy

4134

Rutland
10 rooms on
47x150 lot Nonh Mam
$4995 Needswork butlots
of poSib nes Call 216
394 6741 orwme8o:.723

Pomeroy OH 46769 Is 8th

house from corner of Salem
on wests de Make an offer
Ru1t1c H lis Syracuse 3
bedroom famtly room cen
tral a~r cham lmk fence

buoldong $32 000
4 992 2621 or 304
197

Street 304 773 51 15
Modern 3 b house full
basement garage cent al
a heat pump fenced yard
144 Englsh Ad Pt Plea
sant
S375 mon h plus
damage depos t 304 675

7789 or 304 675 7467 of
ter 5 p m and weekends

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr traHe fully fu n shed
good ocat10n sec dep req

1973 Sa on 12.:65 2 BR
many e.11 as
e.11c cond
F ench C v B oke age Se
v ce Call 446 9340

Clos ng Out Tro ler Rental
Bus ness Had 22 ONLY 6
LEFT
S zes 10x50 8.
12:.52 2 bedroom fur
n shed A comfortable home
fo a low Pr ce Brown s
T a ler P&amp;rk
M nersv lie

Oh o Ca ll614 992 3324

For sale by owne C arence
H I mmed a e possess on
p ce negot able or owner
w I help f nance B level n
Rus1 c H lis Sy acuse Oh o
2 full baths 3 bedrooms
fam ly room w th f eplace
1p al ste rcase I v ng oom
d n ng room k tchen w th
d shweshe &amp; garbage d s
posal
c ha n 1 nk fence
16x12 barn fo
sto age
nsu ated Call 614 247

1310 Oho

Cell 446 8558

SchuH 50 h Ann versarv re
bate S1 000
rebate any
Schult pu chased th ough
June 30 F ench C tv Mob le
Hom es Call 446 9340

Near Rae ne n country 3 1
acres w th 14x 70 mob le
homa 2 bedroom 2 bath
contra a r porches &amp; 12x 16
barn Ca I after 6 00 p m

614 843 5240

Fo
ule
1969 12x60
Schultz mob le home Com
plate y fu n shed nclud ng
ac washe drye
m cro
wave S. 60 ft wooden

po.ch Call 614 992 2889

1971 12x68 Rtz Craft
Royale w th 6x12 expando
gas heat good cond1t10n
F~rst $5000 buys W lkea

vole Cal 614 669 5101

Tra ler on large wooded lot

BOAT RAMP

and dock

space C 1111 6 8 even ngs
304 675 6448 Terms
1981 Hollypark
14x70
exc
con d
12x8 deck
unde penn ng and large
room a r cond
ncluded

304 896 3896 or 896
3600

614 992 7787

R1ver11de Apt11
Spec1al rates
Cnuena $130
ng Opportun

Mob le home fum shed AC
deal fo
1 or 2 men
beaut ful verv ew fosters
T a er Pa It Ca11446 1602

for rent Henderson

Hous ng Opportunity) hat
one and two bedroom• rent
starting at 1157 for one
bedroom and $193 per
month for two bedroom
w1th 1200 deposit located
near Foodl•nd and Spr1ng
Valley Plaza pool and TV
ant Call 446 2746 or le1ve
message

3 bdr unfurn garage apt
plus

deposrt

446 3786
Furn ahed apt 919 2nd
Galhpoh1 $176 Men only

Call 446 4416 efter ?PM

1 &amp; 2 bed oom furn1shed

Newly remodeled 2 bdr
equ pped kitchen central
a1
$250 821 V2 Second
Ave Galhpohs Call 446

2168

Furmshed 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments M ddleport
Adu ts no pets secur ty
deposit Call 614 992

2 BR AC close to hasp tal

1 2x60 2 bedroom mob le
home panty turn shed Ra
c ne area Call 614 992

5858

2 bedroom mob le home
adults only For sele or rent

Call 614 992 2598

2 bedroom t1111iler k1tchen
turn shed couple one small
child ac;:cepted 304 676

1076

44

Apartment
for Rent

TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Apartments now avadable to
elderly 81 d sabled with an
ncome of lesa than
812 300 Rentmg for 30
percent of ad1us1ed ncome

Phone 304 676 6679

N1ce 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurn shed ap•rtmenu

304 876 2218 before 6
pm

a1 15

SIHJ»ng room
Ave

992 5621

T 11ler lot on Upper Rt 7

$66 mo 367 0232 or 446
4265
814 367 7438

APARTMENTS
mob e
homes houses Pt Pleasant
and Gall pols 614 446

C ty Cell 614 256 6520

Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Lo ge lots Call

614 992 7479

Warehouse or storeroom
26x75
for turn ture
lumber roof ng msulat on
panehng
equ pment o
other use Call 1 614 486

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

2 bdr unfurn shed extra
n ce 2 m1 out on At 688
$200 mo adults only Call

Extra f• m full s ze mattress
and box spr ngs very clean

446 2300
Deluxe one bedroom apl
Gall pol s garage no pels
no ch ldren reference awa I
able June 16 Cal 614 256

1529

R1o Granda College
Roo Grande Ohoo 45674
Roo Garode Col ege and Commun ty Co ege nvotes etlers ol appl
catoon tor the pos~oon of Sec~elary to Ihe Pres dent ot the Colleges
Appo ntment far thos post on os effect~• July I 1984 Qual toea
1ons nclude monomum of hogh schoo e&lt;loocat on o oqu valent
with advanced seuetanal traon ng beyond h gh school preferred
three years seaelaroal exper eno:o typong sk lis ol 70 to 7S w p m
shorthalld sk lis of 90 wp m excellent wntlen and vernal commu
n cahon stu b prof c ent n lhe use o1 standard off ce mach nes
wrth w&lt;Xd proces ng des rable Report ng dorectly lo the Pres dent
of the College the S.C elaoy s esponsoboll es nclutle typtnt f
ng. answenng phone p epanng reports ass st ng n lhe noanagement o1 the off ce budge! schedul ng meet ngs and other dutoes as
ass gned by ltoe Pres dent Successful apphcant must be capable of
complet ng lhe assogned dut es wrth mno mal superv son Salary
ange $4 80to SS 50 per hour Insured benef~s begm mmedoately
Applocatoons "'"be acceptod throuKh June 22 1984 at the Off ceof
Pe~onnel Allen Hall RoGande Co lege Ro Grande Ohoo 4~674
A

840 00 304 675 4072

Ref ge ator
stove table
and che rs Mtsc 304 895

3885

3 tables sofa and cha r
v ctor an sty e 3 yrs old

304 675 7746

SECRETARY TO THE
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

£qu~ Opp

304

Co eRe
~

p uy~:

ASSISTANT/ASSOCIATE
PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS

R1o Grande College and Commumty College
R10 Grande Oh10 45674
R1o Grande College and Commumty mvrtes letters of application and nommat10n f01 the posrt on of Ass1stan
t/Assoc11te Professor Econom1cs Appomtment for th1s
pos1t1on s effective September 24 1984 (Fall Quarter)
Th1s IS a nme month tenure track academic contract
Quahf1cat10ns 1nclude Ph D 1n Econom1cs/Busmess
INI!h teach1ng expenence m h1gher educat1on des1rable
Reportmg directly to the Dean of the Bus ness Management School the Ass1stant/Assoc•ate Professors res
pons1blhlles mclude teachmg undergraduate courses 1n
Econom1cs F1nance and StatiStics w1th a nonnal course
load of 42 45 quarter hours of nstruct1on per academ1c
year adv smg students seJV ng on college comm1ttees
and other such dut1es ass1gned by the Dean of the
School Send letter of mterest resume mcludmgthree re
ferences before the apphcat1on deadline of June 30 1984
to Off1ce of Personnel Box 969 R1o Grande College R1o
Grande Ohio 45674

INSTRUCTOR OF EDUCATION
Rto Grande College and Commumty College
R10 Grande Oh1o 45674
R1o Grande College and Commumty InVItes letters of ap
phcallon and nom•nat1on for the pos1t1on of Instructor of
Educat1on Appomtment for th1s pos1t1on 1s effect1ve
September 24 1984 (Fall Quarter) T111s IS a n ne-month
tenure track academ1c contract Quahf1cat10ns 1nclude
Masters Degree requ red w1th Ph D preferred valid
elementa.y educatiOn teachmg certificate and a m1m
mum of three years teachmg expenern:e m a K 8 char
tered or approved school system Reportmg directly to
the Assoc11te Dean of the School of Educat1on Health &amp;
Phys1cal Educat1on the Instructors respons1b m1es m
elude teaching underprduate courses m education m
cludmg mathematic and sc1ence methods courses With a
normal course load of 42 45 quarter hours per academ1c
year th1s pos1t10n 1s responsible for teachmg the early
childhood program supeiVISIRg student teachers adv1s
mg students serv1ng college commtltees and other such
duties assigned by tile Assoc1ate Dean of the School Sa
lal)' s commensurate With educatiOn and expenence lac
tors Send letter of Interest resume 1neludmg tllree refer
ence and off1c1al college transcnpts before the apphca
t1on deadline of July 6 1984 to Off1ce of Personnel Box
969 RIO Grande College R1o Grande Oh10 45674

INSTRUCTOR OF HEALTH &amp;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION

R1o Grande College and Commumty College
R1o Grande Oh1o 45674
Rio Grande College and Commun ty 1nv1tes letteJS of appli
cat10n and nom1nat1on for the posrt100 of Instructor Health
&amp; Physical Education Appointment for thiS posrtoon 1s ef
fect1ve September 24 1984 (Fall Quarte1) Th1s IS a none
month tenure track academ1c contract Qualif1cat10ns n
elude Ph D preferred •rth Masters DeiUee 1n Phys cal
Education acceptable tuch1ng and coaching expenence n
h1gher education desllllble Report1ng directly to the Assoc1
ate Oean of the School of Education Health &amp; PhySial Edu
cat1on the Instructors ~pons1b1litles mcude teachmg un
dergraduate courses 1n heaHh and physical educat1on n
eluding School Health SeiVICBS Com100mty Healtll and Phy
s1al Educrt1on Methods for ElementaJY Educat1on and
AdaptatiYe Phys11l Education courses for exceptional stu
dents; coachln&amp;IIMS athletics both volleyball an !flick ad
vts1ng students SIIIVmg on college comm1ttees and other
such dutiiS assigned by the Assoc1ate Dean of the School
Salary IS commenSIIrate With education and expen~ lac
tors Send IIIIer of 1ntenst, mume oncludmg three refer
ences alii officii! collece transcnpts before tile appll~t1011
deadlme July 6 1984 to Office of Personnel Box 969 R1o
Grande Collep RIO Gfllrlde Ol11o 45674

1 oak buffet 1 oak chest of
drewe s 1 60 vr old table
s x cha s Val ey V ew Apt
435
A o G ande after

4 OOPM

Freezer Wards frost free 20
cu ft upngh1 Ca
446

3229

Wood

Pony cart dnv ng h1rness
br dal &amp; I nea pony saddle

/

/,

&amp;

Coal

Stove

20 gallon f ah acquar um

Clothes ne posts heavy
duty lawn
k ds sw ng
frames all types Sch 40

10 gallon aqua um w th
ace &amp;. f sh Also used bed &amp;
ma1ress Call 614 388

Moneta c hest type f eeze
exc work ngcond S100o
best offe
Call 44 6 81 14
anyt me

54 M1sc Merchandose

dtng mower 6

John Deere

hp 304 675 2359 alter
5 30

5804

9787

Real Estate General

Desk 211 6 n by 5ft by2
ft 6 nches h gh 5 d awe
w th cha
l ke new P ced
r ght Cal o see George
Hobstet er 216 Mulbe ry
Ave Pome oy Oh o 614

TO SELL

SERVICE STAT ION
&amp; GENERAL STORE

992 7763

Maytag washe &amp; dye Call
614 992 5357 afte 6 p m

tD

Rem ngton 700 Bd Varmn
25 06 1 5 power J Unertl

8 pod
4103

~

rc..
Cl ,..

t£.A

0

OS

La etta s Guns

one

6144461822

304 675

Gal pol s

800 am

K ng wood &amp; coal burne

S150 4000BTUAC $100

10 HP Seas d ng lawn
mowe 36 nch cut $460
HP e ect c d I SSO Call

614 949 2749

Very good busmess located on busy h1ghway
8UIIdmg 56x36 w th 2 bay s sa les &amp; stock
rooms Selling top product s Don t answer thiS
ad unless senously mtere sted
Wnte Box 1000 c/ o GallipOli S Da1ly T11bune
825 Third Ave Gall1pohs Oh 45631

Sp ash nlo summer at ~~0 Jay 0 ve Ou I !eve home w th
33 by 18 pool can be you sal our loss We pa d $62 800 You
pay $59 000 Anew ob takes us away om Gal pols The ga
den s panted L1 ge flat ot Ce a a gas heat 28 by II pa
o wth gas gr These a e JUSt a lew o he featu es of h s 3
bed oom home Cal 446 1028 to see th s ho me

614 446 7398

8

Why pay more Trade Center
Fu n tu e Outlet
R1
7
Kanauga Oh Open 9 7PM
Freezer
Upnght

23 cu
$200

$SAVE$

DENTAL CENTER

ft G bson
Cal 614

sq yd Call 614 992 6173

Refuge ator
AMC Avo
cado side by s de 22 cu ft

1200 Call614 992 2740

5 ptece bedrm su1t

cost
$1200 newwl sac fcefor
$600
1 Norge upr ght
freezer $1 50 1 Hotpo nt
d shwasher same as new
$200 1 10 n elect Home
hte cha nsaw
$35 Call

614 985 4322
Custom draper as
m n
venet an bl nds Roman
woven wood shades wert
Samples and
eel bl nds
est mates n your home P

A Sayre 304 458 1078

3159

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

JUNE 23 1984
1 00 PM

ON DENTURES
SAVE

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 01 veSt Gall pols New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stowes
6 p ece wood I v ng room
su te w th 6 nch flet a ms
9399 bunk beds compte e
w th bunk es $199 2 p ece
ant on I v ng oom su tes
$199 antron rec ners $99
othe
eel ners sao maple
d neue sets $179 bo.11
spr ngs &amp; matt ass w n o
fu I $100 set regula f m
$120 maple d nette cha rs
S35
wash stands $34
maple rockers $59 7 p ece
chrome dnette set 5149 5
p ece d nette set 599 used
bedroom su tes refr ge a
to s ranges chest dressers
wr nger washe s TV s d y
ers S. shoes Cal 61 4 446

AUCTION

AT THE

DURING JUNE &amp; JULY
Carpet for rentals for $3 99

1 120

ON A SET OF OUR
VERY BEST DENTURES
SAVE $60 PER DENTURE
PHONE 304 372 3222
R B SMITH
RIPLEY W VA

8

Publ c Sale
&amp; Auct on

located at J s Mm Mart at Rodney Oh1o Three store
auction of 1tems no longer needed- all1tems are 1n
work1ng order
10 fl da y case w comp eso 14 fl p odu ce case w com
pe o

e con a ned 8 tt

ee e se I conla ned 7

t

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

e nea vy duly meal band saw e ec c lende

po
a e b ead he ma p a oven I0 l 3 h p mea
e m
he v o nmo de tl e
o omp e o
ob od by hepe e odee ceo eeg nde odpo c
10

m n on
Sel ng p operty o Pt Pleasant Ut op n Enlerp ses Not
respons bl e for ace dents or loss of proeprty
AUCTIONEER-LONNIE NEAL-614 367 7101
Plenty of Shade T ees
Nole Fo nfo call ea ly of the mo n ng fyou are look ng
for h s type of mere hand se Th sos a good t me to buy

to everyone

Have someth ng you want lo sel Br ng I to the Pal ol
Auct on Ba n and we I sell t fo you Cons gnments ac
cepted from I 00 ~ 00 p m on Salu day
MARLIN WEDEMEYER AUCTIONEER

RUlE V.. MANELY
Executm

June 23 1984-12 00 Noon
Location Dry R dge Rd n Greenfield Twp From Gal
polos take St Route 141 to St Route 233 go ap
prox 2 / m1 turn left on Chealwood Wagoner then
to Dry Rodge then left Watch fo s1gns
There s only one ader sed tern However othe chatte s

SUPDO I s on

0

bed ne w b , ~

0

on

ESTATE OF KAY SMART
George Kuhns

Adm n st ato

Gall a County P obate Case# 17 869
Attorney
D Dean Evans
Sale Conducted By The
McGHEE AUCTION COL
16141 446 0522- P 0 Box 191 Gall ool s Oh 4~631
Auctooneer Myron Bud McGhee
App Auct onee Sieve McGhee
Terms On truck $~00 00 cash o cert f ed check day ol
sale Balance w th transfer of t tie
Other !ems cash o check w thp ope I D day of sale No
terns to be removed unt pa d for

Lee Johnson
Auctioneer
L censed &amp; Bonded m Ohoo and West V rgon a 29 84
Crown C1ty Oh10 - 256 6740
oss of properly

AUCTION
KROGER SUPERMARKET
WITH DEll
Located 13 Acme Street-Manetta

REAL ESTATE AUCTION
BY

SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
THURSDAY JUNE 21 1984-12 00 Noon
Property opened for mspectton at 10 30 a m
Located 1n Vmton County on County Road 9 Take St
Rt 124 West of Wilkesville turn n'ht on County
Road 9 Approximately 1V. m1le on nght or County
Road 10 South from St Rt 346 and left on County
Road 9 S1gns posted day of sale
74 ACRES m/L 2 story frame house 7 rooms w1th
bath 2 bams-2 small bu1ldmgs
DEED DESCRIPTION The East one half ol the Northwest
quarter of Sectoon 17 Townsh p 8 Range 16 except that
port on of sa 1d real estate wh ch Ia Is w th n the boundaroes
of a 42 acre tract out of the Northwest co ne of saod North
west quarter sad 42 acre tract runn ng 100 rods East and
West and 67 ods North and South and conta n ng after sad
exceptoon 74 61 acres more o less
Save and except the efrom the No 4 4A claron or mes
tone coal and conveyed to Oh o Power Company by deed
dated August 8 1962 recorded Vo ume 100 Page 313 of the
Deed Records of Vnton County Oh1o together w th certa n
deep mm n~ roghts granted by sa d deed
TERMS M1mmum 10% down day of sale Cash or certof1ed
check PossesSion at closm&amp;
Sale subJtCt to conftrmaiiOn by SBA

JAN GETTLES REALTY

THIS TUESDAY June 19 10 00 AM

(Inspection Mon June 18 11 AM 2 PM
ULTRA MODERN DEll EQUIPMENT 16 Hu ssma nn Se I
Gonia ned De Cape 8 H Sel Conta ned Cheese Ca e
6x10 Schmdt Wak n Cooe 6 xl0 Sch md Wak n
F eeze Ty e Self Conla ed 0 D Reta de 8 Hussman
Stea m Tab e Ane s P oo e Fe de Pool e Ba becue Kng
Wa m ng Oven GE Con eel on Oven PH! P es u e ye
Mu 1 Deck Ov en Ane Donu F ye H g Vo u e Do u
Cases SS Wok Tabes Hobart M" 3 Comp S S Sn k a d
moe
MEAT &amp; PRODUCT ROOM EQUIPMENT 8 o 3334 Moe
Saw Be ke S ce Be ke Cube Hoba t 3000 Supe Wap
pe w Auto Label er &amp; Sea e Hoba t Mea M I SS Snksand
Nume ous Ca ts and Conveyo s elc
REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT 20 F ed ck Up gh Gass
Doo Ice C eam Freezes 14 x20 Schm dl Wa k n f ee e
14 x20 Schm dl Wa k n Coo e 20 x20 Sci n od Wa k
Cooer 1Dx20 Sch mdt Wa k n Coole Fred ch P oduce
Cases Fred ch Da y Case F ed ch Mu Deck Mea
Cases Fr edr ch Mu I Deck Froz en Food Ca se F ed ch Dou
ble S ded Self Serve F ozen Food Case Hussmann Up gh
Ju ce Case and 4 S gle P ep Room Cool ng Co s
STOREFRONT FIXTURES App ox 700 Sng e &amp; Do he
Sded 0 x e C a~ She v ng (Be gel 36 B ead She v nR 30
Wne Dsplay Seve a TEC D g1ta Cash Reg ste s Am sec
Mon ey Guard Sa e Checkout Lanes F be g ass Dspays and
much mo e for a comp e e superma ke

DOCK AREA EQUIPMENT General Hydraulocs Salvage
Baler Yale Power Jack (2) Pallet Jacks 32 Pallet Racks
lockers Bug L &amp;hts Conveyor Desks etc
NOTE Thos equopment IS only app1ox B years old
TERMS Cash or check w/1 D
3 day removal
GARTH SEMPLE &amp; ASSOCIATES INC
AUCTIONEERS
Cmcmnato 0
5131732 6595

em

oo num P ou

o mr

TERMS Cash
lun ch w be se ved
BARRY CASTO A o ney Adm n s ato
MARY KESlER Adm n st a x

THURSDAY JUNE 21 1984
6 00 PM

HOUSEHOLD C u h make no bed and cha l en h B W
po abe IV 3 p he y bed oom sule map e o nd abe
w h 6 ha
f g da e ef ge a o Sun ay gas an ge two

AUCTION

po

ESTATE AUCTION

SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1984
10:00 AM.

ea

n

omp e so m s d spay ack 5 unc on a Sweda ash e
g

Thos s the estate of 0 A Boston located on 4th
Street n Rae ne OhiO Watch for s gn on St Rt 338

flower box refr gerato d ne e set 2 telephone
stand s table w 6 chars and bullel goss p bench
electr c sew ng mach new/char 2-3 pc bed oo
su tes b eak asl set platform ocker 2 bookca ses
gl de po ch lu n tu e steamer t unk rock ng cha
ant que ado 2 w cker rockers on bed che v p Iter
handmade cab net aulomat c washe &amp; d1yer can
nmg ars 2 wardrobes cream se parato wr nge
washer linen old desk ant qu e ecord cab net m sc
amps pots pans d shes and ol her k tchen tern s
couch &amp; chaor 3 tel ev s1ons clock ots ol books and
other m scellaneous and collec tor tern s
Te1ms Cash

ANTIQUES - CO LEC TIBLES
HOUSEH OLD MI SCEL ANEOU S

a n quart a d
ew n he bo:. i'lt c u o m s
e
nd e pa a st g othe tern s oo nume ou to

From Galhpohs take Route 141 turn left onto Route 775
Turn ght onto Patnot Cadmus road Watch for s gns
Partoal Sale lor June 23 1984
Shetland pony saddle and br die many lems of nt e est

could be p esent at sale t me
1983 r0 d 50 4 4 6 y nde 8

603 South Second St Mason W Va
SATURDAY JUNE 30 1984- 10 00 A M

en o e 10 p oduce case w conp es o sma l
deep r ee e Gondna she v ng ke new I h p el ge a o

ESTATE AUCTION
Located at 1709 Jefferson Avenue Pomt
Pleasant W Va the personal property of
the late Ada Herold Will be offered at public
auction
3 pc cher v bed oom su te 2 ceda chest s w eke

ESTATE AUCTION
Personal Property ol Ot s &amp; Opal R ce bo h de
ceased woll be off ered for sale at

ee e

245 5152 - 388 8249

15 East ASt Wellston Ohto 45692
Ja01ce L Gettles Broker
James Gettles Auctioneer
Phone 384 2301 - 384 2053

Bu I on your o a new home
you can affo d ove 1 1 00
sq ft 6 ms &amp; bath ce
peted ready to mowe nto
S2 6 500 A so ga ages &amp;
Call Patr ot

F ewood cut up slabs $1 5
p ckup load Call 614 245

p pe 304 675 3677

Good select on of bedroom 1-=-========:-r:::::::::::::-:::::::::::::::-j1 0 00 pm 7 days weekly
su tes
ceda
chests I
M
h d
New Rem ngton 30 30 am
Sh ubs pruned
awn re
ockers meta cab nets
54 M1sc Merchandise 54 MISC
ere an ISe mun ton 2 boxes 40rounds seeded retam ng walls
sw vel rocke s
S1 5 00 All stan less 22 s dewa ks pat os f 11 d rt
au o target p stols w th 6 n topso I bark mulch &amp; saw
Plas
c
c
s
eros
sta
e
ap
Used Furn ture
Chars
Knauff F rewood A educed
and 8 n barre I length regu
dust Contact 8 uce Dav
p oved plast c sept c anks
dryers and TV s 3m les out
p ces 1hru Ju y 31 s Have
Ia $269 loretta s $240
son Cal614 2561427
p ast c cu ve t metal cui
Bulav1l e Rd Open 9am to
you own seasoned wood
nc udes 100 ca tr dges
verts RON EVANS ENTER
6pm Mon thru Fr1 9am 10
th s w nte 614 256 6245
8 ngham 22 a I steel auto
PRISES Jackson Oh 614
6pm Sat
fie vent lated sleeve over
286
5930
614 446 0322
l mestone Sand Grave
ba re I carb10e ength 50
De ve ad n Mason Me gs
round magaz ne reg $239
TV 8. Appl ences 627 Th rd
Ga a or p ck up at A chards
new $180 ncudes 100
Ave
Gall pols 614 446
&amp; Son Call 446 7785
ca
dges Also have S &amp;
1699 Spm washers gas S.
W 44 mag $360 Rugar Queen s ze h d a bed sofa
elect c drye s
auto
S an ess Red Hawk 44 mag Call 446 2177
washers
gas &amp; e ectr c
S340 We a e a c a~s three
ranges ref gerators TV
deale law enforcem ent or Murray garden acto w th
sets
nd v dual Call us on your mow ng deck &amp; snow b ade
class th ee wants
Call 446 3875
GOOD USED AI&gt;PLIANCES
Used lawn mowe s sweep
e s Repa s on mowe s
Washe s dryers refr gera
tors ranges Skaggs Ap
sweepe s chan saws and
8
Publoc Sale
m sc B &amp; S F x
pi ances Upper Rver Rd
Shop
bes de Stone Crest Motel
304 675 6512
&amp; Auctoon

245 5032

8

Coli 446 3732

875 00 Odessev II Rela I A I for $85 Cel 614 388
new 9179 00 sell $76 00 8280
Cal 614 446 9584

ta 435 7 pc 8189

&amp; 830 kng fame $50

Unfurn shed 2 bdr 1n Crown

8221

675 1962 or 675 4560

Cal

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

3437 or 446 311 1

AI new 3 room bath apt
Close to Pleasant Va lev
Hosp Pr wate qu et 304

$99

and up Wood tab e With s x
cha ra 8425 to $745 Desk
$110 up to 8225 Hutches
IS 560 end up maple or pme
fimsh Bunk bed complete
w1th mattresses 8260 and
up to $396
Baby beds
$110 Mattresses or box
sprngs full o twn $58
f rm $68 and S 78 Queen
sets $195 4 dr chests
$42 5 dr chests $54 Bed
frames $20 and $25 1 0
gun
Gun cab nets $350
Gas or electnc rangea $375
Baby matt esses $25 &amp;
935 bed f ames $20 S25

6653

4 rooms 8t bath unfurn shed
pat
ut1l ttes pa d adults
on y no pets Call 446

304 675 1386

8285 to $896 Tables 145

46 Space for Rant

Coffee lab e stereo stereo
d neue table Call614 266

6417

and up to 8125 H de a
beds $440 and up 10
8626 Reel nan S176 to
IS37&amp; lamps from $28 to
IS 75 6 pc d nenes from

Call

446 4416 otto 7 PM

ent

One bedroom turn shed apt
Pt Pit Very clean n co
Audhs only no pets Phone

u111

Gall pol s

54 Mosc MerchandiSe 54 M1sc Merchandise 54 Mosc Marchand se

LAYNE S FURNITURE

t •• pa d Share bath male
only Range 8. refr g 919
2nd

The Sunday T1mes Senltnei-Page-0-3

by Lsrry Wright

KIT N CARLYLE ®

Sofa cha~r rocker ono
man 3 tables (extra heavy
by Front er) $885 Sofa
chair and loveseat $276
Sofas end cha1r1 pr cad from

Call 614 446 0756

3874
Apartment n Pomeroy 3
rooms &amp; bath Call 614

51 Household Goods

For rent Sleep ng Rooms
and hght house keep ng
rooms Park Central Hotel

Tra ler space for rent

2 bdr mob le home at
Evergreen Cal 446 7032

Coli 61 4 388 9760

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galhpohs Oh1o-Polnt Pleasant W Va

Cell

992 7721
opts Cell 614 992 5434 or
992 5914 or 304 882
2566

June 17 1984
46 Furntshed Rooms

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol

S260
Mtddleport
for Sen or
Equal Hous
1 as 614

Apartment
for Rent

304 875 1972

R G ande Co ege and Comm

675 6425

32 Mobole Homes

RMS
bath
atove
utfr1gar1tor all utd t es n
c uded adults only no pets

You Bener Hurry for a
comfortable mobile home at
1 low pr ce H•d 22 onty 3

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

New I st ng mov ng need to
se I 3 bed oom 2 full baths
Meadowbrook addn B pe
cent assumable loan lots of
extras p ced 60s 304

a.

3

Call 446 2583

$225 00 down S225 00 pa

7 oom house 4 lots on Rt
62 ce nte of E eanor P ced
for qu ck sale by owne

my car Call614 4481414

614 992 7871 even nga

month 304 576 271 1

Call 304 773

Call 614 949 2641

Call Rey614 446 3109
- - - - - -- -- -lc

TO BUY 14 ft w de three
bed oom bath and ha f
mob e home s1ttmg on n ce
ot ready to move nto

arge ea

Ia ge I v ng &amp; fam

fam ly
oom w th wood
bu ner S ngle car garage on
8 flat acres w th stocked
pond C ty wate n A ar. ne

Bass p aye wants JOb w 1h
well establ shed country
square dance or polka band

e32 900

out rentals Brown 1 Trader
Park M nersv1lle Oh 614

Ref g stove CA WB good
cond Cal 614 446 1506

8 vrs old 3 bedrm 2 baths

And he e s a gh we an not

Fathers Day Tnbute
to our Dad and Grand
dad - Chauncey E
Hamson

446

$32 900 Cal 1 614 678
2513

he oad

ne ghborhood

mcludes ntw refr g r•nge
washer &amp; dryer f1n1nc1ng
available with low down
paymen110 quahfied partiea

House for ent

$59 500
5877

plow

n gh

Reduced 2 to y 3 bd
2 ca ga age fenced ya d
sep&lt;! ate ent ance 1 5 V n
ton Ga po s 446 2081
n ghts S 29 900

po

18 Wanted to Do

WI

BR
age
Vn
Call

House for Sa e by owner 4
BR house on lowe R ve
Ad 3 m les south of town
Woodbu n ng f eplace ga
age basement new fu
nace and oof ave aok ng
the Oh o R ve Call day me

The e s an open gate a he
end o

Reduced 2 story 3
fenced ya d 2 car ga
5
sepa ate ent ance
ton G ps S29 900

446 2081 n ghts

3171

es o1 you ltoat susta n us
S.Cu e n the knowledge you re
esl ng wth God Vada Mayo &amp;

IIIOf

675 292 t

lost and Found

lost blond cocker span el
answers to name of Sp ke
ch ld s pe
n town of
Pomeroy Cal 992 2181
ask fo Mark

Con nuPCI on page D 8

6 3 665 1232

3510

6

Homes for Sale

One ac e lot w th Ia ge
n g ound poo to n I ner
and part a y f n shed base
m ent Fo nfo mat on ca I
Baby s tte wanted for 2 yea
o d boy G ee Road Area
References equ red 304

VICintty

Seven vear old home three
bedrooms garden spot
2605 L nco n Ave 8 pet
assumable loan 304 675

part

K ttens &amp; cats tog ve awav
Pearl Hawthorne Cal 614

&amp;

FOR RENT WITH OPTION

PIANO TUN NG lowe
pr ced
egular tun ngs
d scounts to Sen o C t zens
Chu ches &amp; Schools Wa d s

border coli e &amp; pa t aus al
an shepha d fema e dog
spayed Ca afte 5 p m

'
Pubhc Notoce

Pt Pleasant

Like new 3 bdrm sectional
home on beaUtiful !~.~acre lot
in Arbaugh •dd tion
Tuppers Pie na excellent

Ya d Salti 2312 Mad son
992 3324
Ave Fr and Sat from 9 00
Ya d Sale Kaneuga 429 4th t 1 6 00
ave
Gall pols
Mens &amp; ~;.;,.;;_:..:.__ _ _ _ _ _-11982 Clayton 14x70 2
Womens Ch drens c othes
bedroom
2 baths d 1
10 25 50 cents
$1 00
hwasher stereo cad ngfan
smal applances S1 00 Call
HornEts for Sale
f~replace m crowave can
614 446 9584
Sat 16
tral a.r concrete steps and
Wed 20
underpenn ng $1 5 600 00
~=========~ Owne t ansferred muat sell I rm 304 773 6550
r 21
home fam yroomhas20ft
Busmess
of w ndows for pastoral 1980 Hollv Park 14x70 2
Opportunoty
v ew f n shed double ga
bedroom 1 Vi baths total
age f ep ace arge porch
e ectr1c central a r cond
SNAP ON TOOLS Into
40 h deck woods p vacy
d shwashar porch wnh
ested 1n owmng your own
nea
Royal Oak Park
awnmg underpenn ng stor
&amp;63 900 Call 614 992 age bu ld ng 304 6 75
bus ness and be ng nde
pendent1 Ex It ng dealer
5420
2604
sh p ava fable n Me g and
Gall a Count es No fee
7 Room house
aundry
Inventory nvestment re
room 4 bed ms F f1h St
33
Farms for Sale
qu red Buy back guarantee
Syracuse Can be seen at
Above average ncome
0 s Hubba d es Ca I 992
Small farm (18 26 acres) n
Complete company tra n ng
2239
Portland Oh10 bordered by
Call Vern Roe 1 BOO 582
Oh o R1ve S. h ghwav No
7497
or Gene Sch oer
Baum Add 1 on 3 bed oom
bu d1ngs some trees Vt
1 614 687 4708
bnck 1
bath full base
mmeral r ghts Fa1r martcet
men1 tam ly oom carport
pr ce $40 000 For 1nfor
pat o a c
S57 000 Ca I mat on w 1e 8 Graham
22 Money to Loan
614 985 4201
4616 Emerald Nacog
doches Texas 75961
Pomeroy 3 bedrooms 1
HOME LOANS FIXED bath all ut I t1es ac car PI ny WV 260 acre work ng
peted nsu ated emodeled farm w1th n co 3 bedroom
RATES Below market a1es
ns de ca pot basement
F xed convent ona FHA
home Cal for mo e deta•ls
Cal 614 992 2602
VA leade
Mortgage
345 5095 ERA Mallory
Athens collect 614 592
Group Assoc
For sale
a n ce home on
3051
Mulbe y He ghts Pomeroy
Ashton area 5
ecrea 2
Oh o See John Keck
houses
2 barns 2 car
23 Professional
garage pond S56 000 00

Kevboe d 304 675 3824

7 Gorman Sheppa d type
pupp es 6 male 1 fema e
Can see both pa ants In
qu re at 244 Sycamo e St
M ddleport

Monday &amp; Tuesday at De
long res on SR 143 1m le
off RT 7 Sofa typewnter
tape recorder Jeans m11c

24 Set ups 614 775 4988

614 742 2951

good home

VtCinlty

n ghts

P a no Tun ng and Repa r
8 un card Mus c Co 446
0687 Sk II and nteg ty our
tradema k
Lane Dan e s

to

&amp;

Flea Market Sternwhee er
Regatta r verfront Ports
mouth Oh10 June 22 23

Serv ces

Free

Apartment
for Rant

44

for Sale

614 446 0294

Call lucas Taus end T ave
today e.servat ons 1 m ted
on follow ng tr ps Altant c
C ty june 21 th u 2 3
Op yland July 13 h u 15
Worlds Fa Ju y 13 thru 18
and Aug 10 th u 1 5 Myrtle
Beach J ly 13 th u 16
C nc nnat Reds vs l A Aug
3 thru 5
2 n ghts 3
games
Also B g B ngo at
Cherokee N C July 6 th u

32 Mob1le Homes

Wanted To Buy

Cleane
one half m le up
Geo ges Creek Rd
Ca I

f1

17 1984

Oh1o--Po1nt Pleasant W Va

ng e bed che 1 o d awe po ch sw ng I owe and
an u ~s nen e e b ank ets m sc po s pan s d she
e ec ew ng mach ne en d tabl es amp and k chen abe

ANT QUE o COLLECTIBLE ITEMS Wood ocke s squa e
l and o an p oppe wa sh bo er tan e n washboa {1 s and
a ew d she
M SCELLANEOUS 14 H '' en on ad de pu h ga den

pow wood too h
m s hand a d ga den oo
w ee ba ow
GLADYS SHIELDS Powe of Allorney
The P operty Is Fo Sale See Gladys
Thee w II be some terns from
w II be sold also

t~e

and

PUBLIC
AUCTION
MOBILE HOME-AUTO
FARM MACHINERY - GARDEN TRACTOR
Date Sat June 23 1984
AT 10 00 AM
Lo cat ion 6 mole s we st of Ja kson Oh o on th e Ap
pla choan Hoghway lu n lef on CR 20
Mr &amp; M s Be a d Dean w II be mov ng out of state
and woll offe for sale the foll ow ng tern s
MOBILE HOME 197 4 I ? 60 3
peP -v wa r &amp; r1
u
g and o
AUTOMOBILE 9 8 C

Hayman Esta e w~ ch

CASH

Po s I ve D
DAN SMITH - Aucl onee
949 2033 or 992 7301

of P operty

Not

m
ow •

ANTIQUE AUCTION

JUNE 23 1984-9 00 AM
Due to park1ng the follow ng 1tems nclud ng old
collectible Brass School Bells w II be held at the A
K McClung home 1n Hartford W Va
3 u e e gh be a ge wa u d op ea abe 3 p e e
wa u bed oom u e che y ches oak s ag g ass cab ne
oa ~

wooden ce bo e ma ny o d h c ~o y baske s 6 o d ce
c earn cha
oak H bov La k
esk e~ ce e \ cup
boa c1 p r a e o r1 o nrl oak ab es p ess back cha
a d ode s c de p ess {n ce) ve y unusua de sk many
ani oue s one a gold en oak 4 h gh slack on bookcase
step ba ck CUD boa d Ia wa cupboa d se pen ne desk
app e DEE e beveled m a s o &lt;~ws p n I ve oo bo ~es
ova unk age No 3d nn e hel 17 sec on w ought on
len e o d v..a h lan d bean pots many sad on so e
u n da chu n bu e s ches wa nut wa sh stand o d
woo den p a es I o good too ake
hovels pOl'. mil v
au
~
eo d dy e box gu a k a y o ke s e

bu

ny

rn

lun h Se ved
Te ms Cash o chec k w p ope I 0

MUSTARDS AUCTION SERVICE
JACKSON OHIO

286 5868 - 286 1229

l ccnsed &amp; Bonded S ate or Oh o

74

Motorcycles

NEW YAMAHA MOTORCYCLE SALE

earn e e o d egg ba ke bu e mod s o g na a n
va ga s p k &amp; g een dep es on u d eds o p e e o o d
g wa e
3 o d wa h and 4 eg 1 d t~we o d ba e s ch na ab
ne o d Hob a o ee
nde
a \ o d n e t~mp
on
bed H wooden bed many b ue b own and wh le c ocks
on ~ e e b aad axe o d advert se men an que I aps

sledge ham me ms ham me s hate he s o d RR anl e ns
w e sl elch e od ca b de lamps many o d Ime c ocks og
o gs d op r onl de k n ce oak slan ds oo box wlh shamp
e ed ds old green a s o d books o d eco ds old me
scoop ad b ass wash boa ds o n p ante s Hoose cab

ne shoe asp co n g nder p mI ve wood ake h gh wa
nut d esse

e~

n eo d me ho box OK yokes shevel d e5

e H va nu bed o d 1 me mea bo&gt; w lh slant I d casl
mowe eals ased paneled p m ve cupboa ds ha t ee
w h ds a ge ant qu e t ap 3 od I me p e sale s 5app ebut
e kelt e 2 • t ng de sks
Owners Name Withheld Due to Vandalism
ABSOLUTE AUCTION EVERYTHING SELlS
AUCTIONEERS DAN SMITH - PHONE 949 2033
I 0 (Mac) (McCOY- PHONE 985 3944
Ha~ford W Va s located 3 m les north of the Pomeroy
Oh Mason W Va brodce Route 62 &amp; 33 Watch for
sogns
Auct oneer s Note Approximately 50 poeces of large fur
noture on th s sale 2% oH the total sale woll go to the Wa
hama H gh School Band'

1982 XV750 VRAGO
wa 1 9
NOW 1539
(P ce nc udes $300 FR[[ Yamaha Acces o es
1982 MKBOJ MINI BIKE
w, 39
NOW 639
Creal for lhe k ds summe fun
1982 Xl550RJ VISION STREH
wa 13 9
NOW I 699
(Includes 1300 Facto y Rebate I
1981 XJ650U TURBO
wa ' m
Now 2899
Wh Fa cto y Fa ng
Was J J9
1983 CJ750K MAXIM
Now l 699
34 cyl s "'
l .la 6 9
1983 XJ750K
Now l 899
Mdmght Ma1 mSpec Ed t on
1982 XV920 RJ Sport V raga
Wa
9
Now l 679
1983 SECA 900 Supe St eet
lfas l l79
Now 3179
1982 SECA 750
lfa 379
Now 2 529
Street Candy red
1983 ~50 HERITAGE Streel
w., 2199
Now I 766
(12 Month no moleage l mI warrant on a sl eel b kes)

ATHENS SPORTS CYCLES INC

20 W S mson Ave

PH 5911691

A hon OH

e

�.

Page-~ The

Times-Sentinel

Ohio

~. -

June 17 1984

June 17 1984

W. Va.

Point

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Real Estate General

54 Misc . Merchandise 58

BRIDGE

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

2 1 room air conditioners

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

5000 BTU ' s S75 each Call

614 ·992 ·5498
Sears wallling -jogging e• c erciser . welded steel frame .
tubular steel front and side
' rails , S65 00 Ca11304-675-

4302

55 Building Supplies
LUMBER -R o ugh cut, oak ,

poplar .

2~t4 ,

2x6 . 21c8. 1 .11.4,

1x6. h:B . length available. 8
ft thro u gh 16 ft Hogg &amp;

Fruits &amp; Vegetables, clean
Strawberries. pick your own
9 - 8 . Sorry no checks . We
accept food stamps, peas
are reedy 40c lb . t9 .00
bushel Happy Hollow Fruit
Farm , Gallipolis Ferry 304·

56

WV.

576 ~ 2026

KENNELS

Boa rcllng a ll breeds Heat ed
i nd oor - ou td oor facllttJes .
AKC D ob e rman pupp1es :
Stud Serv1ce Ca ll614 -446 -

614· 367 7220 .

plants -2;

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

• 9

EAST
tK9 7&gt;!
• J 10 8 3

• J 6 fl 2
+J 98 7 1

+10

.QJ 10

• 101 i

••

5 hp rotortiller, Sears b rand.
5spd . used 1 season . Call

614

245 ~ 9212 .

+

Vulnerable. East-West
Dealer South
Wnt

Nortb

t;a11

Pass

l•

Pus

Pa55
Pass
Pa!'ls

4+

Pus
Pns
Pus

~•

6.

goine set?

The answer was to lead a
club to the ace and a club

,.

Soutll

341
it
64
Pus

toward the K ~ Q . If EaJt
ruffed, he would ruf! a looer
and South would win the

rest. East did best by

dis~

cardinK a spade as South
won the king. Declarer led to1

the diamond king in dumQlyl
lead another club to the
queen. Once again it would
to

do East no good to ruff so he 1
threw another spade South
won the club queen and
ruffed the club five in

Openmg lead: •Q
By Oswald Jacohy
and James Jacoby

Whether

The purest mettlod of bid·

North-South almost reached
whal would llave been a
poor grand slam contract.
Nof"lh llad the final dec asion.
He knew his partner was
tnlerested in the grand . but
pe nghtly womed that his

East

K~Q

71

57

Musical

$650. Call
992 · 2488 .

256 · 1528 .
Blo nde Wuliller sp•net pi ·
an o . $600 . C11 tl 446 -0254
Ona Upright ptano for sale.

$400 Call

614 · 446 ~ 4807

Spinet Piano. e~~:celltmt con ·
dition . $500 Call .after 5

p m 614 · 949 · 2677
Repo ssessed K•mball Con·
sole piano. low monthly
payments. Dan Fe..guson
MuSic . Rt . 60. Ceredo W

v.

304 ·45 3·1 153

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

You pick 75
cent s or we p1ck S 1.00 per
Qt
2 mtlos back of New
Haven . WV of Umon Camp
Ground. No Sunday p1ck1ng
~trawberries .

Call 304

882 ~ 2237

Strawbernes . Taylor's Berry
Patch
8 AM · 8PM . Mon. ·
9at . Call 446· 8692 or 614 ·
~45 · 9557

Strawberr ies Pi ck your own
C11 tl Cl8ude Wtnters. 6, 4·

245 ·5121

Reg. Po lled Hereford bull 3
yrs . old. $ 750 . Call 446 -

0212

Reg polled H ereford bull. 2
yrs old. S600 . Cell 614 -

256· 6043 .
Quail Ch•cks wil t be awaila ble June 20 through June 24
at '6 price at LaBonte Quail
Fa rm . 36,60 Bashan Ad .,
long botlom , For informat ion. call 614 -985 -4345

Reg Quarter mare with colt .
2 year old Aqha mare .
Reasonable . 594· 5816 ut

167 days. 614 ·992 · 7300
evemngs .

JAm StrawbP.rrtes 1 000
quarts of good jam berrie s
6 0 ce nts per quart Pt ck your
own , 2 miles back of New
Haven at Union Camp
G round
C l al 304 - 882 ·

2237

Grttenbrier Stables now
boarding horses . 304 -676 -

6799

Greenbrier Stables, we buy ,
sell or trade horses . 304 -

675 · 6799

topper. 304 ~ 675 · 1386 .

73

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
For

tobacco

sale

9x 100. Call

bed .

Trucks for Sale

s to

1983

P.u .. 4 spd . 4

1982 510 P.U. 4spd.6 cyl.
AM

FM , vinyl cover bed

$5696 . 1981 Chevy Luv.
4spd.4 cyl. AM FM. tapa.
vinyl cover bed $3695.
John's Auto Sales Bulaville

1- - - - - - - - - TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac , 1911 Eastern Ava .. Gallipolis Call
614 ~ 446 · 2282 .

1963 Ford Fatrlane 4 dr ..
200 6 cylinder. auto ,
65 . 000 miles. new paint .

Call after 8 OOPM.
458· 1874.

304-

V ~ B,

headers,

white spoke wheels, sharp,

82800 . Call
1300.

614 ~ 446 ~

54 Misc. Merchandise

1981 Z28 Camero. blue &amp;
367 ~ 7242 .

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix ,
lots of extras, $6300. Call

1-=::-----:---:----:::-71
Autos for Sale

614 ~ 446 ~

Sell or Trade, 1977 Jeep

sitver. 20.000 miles. 86600.
Call614 ~ 367 ~ 0221 or 614·

614 · 379 ~ 2314.

1978 VW

0 iesel.

Rabbit

good cond . $2200. Call
614 · 446~0989
1979 MG8 Convartible A· t
condition .

Call

614-246-

6294 .

FREEZER
BEEF
SALE
$1.19 Lb.

AC . PS. P8. radio. 47.800

CUT &amp;

miles . Call 614-446-2510
after 6pm .

WRAPPED

1979 Dodge Omni. 4 spd.

1976 Toronado; good cond.

I=:========
54
Coli

446 ~ 2647

Misc. Merchandise

LOREN NOLAN

388-9676

1981 Chevette one owner,
exc . conditton. 82,999 firm .

Call 614·256· 6200 .
1981 Chewemlt Corvette
black with red interior .
33.000 dry miles . Showro om cond Call 446 -0648
after 5
1978 Mercury Cougar
loaded, new tires, $2 ,800,
negotiable . Call 446-0269

or 446 ·9513 .
1978 Chevy Impala AC .
62 .000 miles, $2 , 300 . Call

448·0963 .
For

sale

POOLS PLUS
675-1388
Rt. 2, just past

Krodel Park

SALE 5 DAYS ONLY 6/18 TO 6/23

Buy $50 of store merchandise, get
10% off already low prices on chemica Is. 20% off floats &amp; toys.

trade , 978
Thunderbird. 63,000 miles
will trade for truck good

We don ' t have all our paneling up yet, but we have our prices down .

OPENING SPECIALS: AMT all stainless .22 auto pistol. an exact copy of Rugers famous
Mark 2 (Ru~ers patenl ran oul) With some destrable leatures added: Pachmayr grips, Can jar
tngger. adjustable rear s1ght. lasl shot hold open. regular price $269. LORETTA'S
S240 includes 100 rounds of CCT long rifle cartridges.
ALSO : Bingham PPS~ 50 .22 cal. auto loading nfle. 50 round Thompson type drum magazine.
ventilated barrel sleeve, looks like the famous Russian PPSh of World War 2 fame, regular
$229. LORETTA ' S s 185 includes 100 rounds of CCT long rifle cartridges.
Pnces good as long as supply lasts. We have
an ell!ensive line of S&amp;W Ruger and Colt
hand guns and Miles at equal savinp. We are
also a Class 3 dealer and will hm NFArtems
in 1he next,.,. weelts. These will be available
lo law enforcement and individuals oo
Extro
limrtod lay~away bas~ (90 days). Wo are
Cllpe
avatlable at 440-1822 from Bl.m. to 10 p.m.
AvoHoblo.
7

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301
44

Apartment
for Rent

POINT PLEASANT, WV

ARMY. ALLYOUCAN

256-15 52 Eve .

.

1-- - - - - - - - 304~882~3184

1979 Chevy Beau ville van
304~ 675~ 7746 .

26,500 miles.
1423

304 ~ 675 ·

1=:::::=::::::=====:.

PRICE REDUCED TO $25,9()()130 ACReS, MORE OR
HARRISON TOWNSHIP - I% story home offers 3 BRs,
bath, dining. living rm.. kilchen wrth range, alum. siding,
24x60 bam. mobile home hookup and approx. 1100 lb.

Real Estate General

A-ONE
REAL ESTATE
220 WASHINGTON ST. Price reduced lor qu rck sa le .
4 BR, 1\\ bat h. den. lire
place , .9 acre, low 30 s

For Sale By Owner

3 BR HOUSE - Bea uttlul
v1ew of the riv er. leon. W.Va.

Phone 446-8221

RT.2 - 4 BR house , pa
neled , carpeled . pa110 .

Four Bedroom brick home with Chandler
kitchen. custom drapes, plush carpet, attached 2 car garage, situated on 12 acres
with stable. rail fences. swimming pool, garage-workshop. 8111% assumable mortgage.
lmmedidate possession .

304~675~5l04
or 304~ 675~ 5386

Carol Yeager . Broker
Howard Yeager Ill. Salesman

PRICE REDUCED - On this beautiful , 3 bedroom
ranch home. Aquality bui ll home. feature s large living
room. dmm g room , modern kttchen , 2 lull baths, full
basement, carporl and outstde storage building,
sttuated on 2 acres. 1ust outstde of Rulland Only

Real Estate General

FARM OR INVESTMENT
&amp; BUILDING LOTS

RIVER BEND PLACE
NEW HAVEN, WV

Housing for the Elderly, dlublod and tr.n~
dlc.roppocl. Rent !1 30 percent of ldluslod Income
to quallllod ten1nts with on Income of Ius tllan
S12,300 per yoar.

All UTILITIES INCLUDED IN RENT
Call Either Number:

Twin Riven Tower, Point Pleasant, WV
675-6679

River Bend Place, New Haven, WV
··2-3121
OFFICE HOURS: 9·5
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY.
LIMITED NUMBER OF APARTMENTS
AVAILABLE FOR PEISONS BETWEEN
AGE 40 D 62.

BLACKBURN REALTY -

446-0008

Real Estate General

~".

···--=-

••
•

HOBSTETTER REALTY

Velma

130 ACRES l mrle hom Oh10
River. f eat ures hou se. huge
dulch style barn . e.cellenl
lake site. crop land. pasture.
and woods Owner says
"MAKE OFFER ON All OR
PART". Priced lo se ll as a
farm

Associate

l'h STORY HOME PLUS 6'h ACRES, M OR L
8 rooms. 4 bedrooms. 1 bath plusshower 111 basement. Rural water
sys1em. garage All1n good condtiiDrl 61\ acres Mil l ots ol space.
You can buy lhiS home and acre s lor only $32.900.00 r10w.

11606
I '!, STORY HOME PlUS 1 ACRE MOR L
7 rooms. l 'h story older style home. 3 bedrooms, lull basement

ACRE . 1969 MARRIOTT HOME
Screened rn tront porch. 2 bath&gt; 2 bedrooms. IZ"x W mobrle
home. sett1 n~ on approx •, ae~e of land 8uill ·1n cat- nets. gas
ran ge. rural water system. luel ~~ forced itH twnacr All ol !hrs lo1
only $6.000 00

POMEROY - 2 nrce build·
ing lots on Wright St. Waler
&amp; sewer. $5.000.00 eac h.

U) 4111 AVE. - Ve ~ ~ rn·IO., localm Remodeled 4bedroom home.
Includes alum Sld•ng. ! am~v room. gas fn eplace. dtmng room nat. gas heat
• {h1 ghest $lOl L basement detached garaRe plus a la1ge fenced backymi.

I
1

Buyer ProteclKin for 1 year $49.900

(614) 385 ~ 7419
Collect Calls Accepted

~

•

pnce

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
Ph. 446-3643
,_

TENDER LOVING CARE - ThiS sphl level ho me ts 111 excellenl
condthon Has 3 bedrooms. masler very large. I'' belhs. fully
carpeled. palru and carport Large level lol P11ced very reasonable
#2499

••••••••••
•
. "'
•

0.

#1584

· COUNTRY LIVING - Nrce remodeled home wrth ~ bedrooms.
bath wtlh shower. carpeled 3 beaulrlul ac res Kerr·Harrtsburg Rd .
#1479

II•

PEACEFUl LIVING - 24 acres ot woodsand pasture. large ranch.
3 years old, wdh alumrnum srdrn~ 3 bedrooms. eat tn ktlchen. I
balhs. lull basement. bam Kyger Cree~ schools
m5s

992 ~ 22S9

INVESTORS -Very good 95 acres close to lown tevello rollin&amp;
wooded Sties, mce development land
#2190

NEW KITCHEN - Middleport
- 2 bedroom home wtth a
new breaklast nook. new
krtchen, new ulrl!ty and a mce
yard $27,500 00
REMARKABLE HOME IN MID~
DLEPORT Seven room
home on a large double kll
Three bedrooms, equrpped
k~che n . and a part basemen!
Nice and neat and owners
wanls an oiler Asktn g
$36.50000

•600

VACATION CAMP BY BLUE LAKE
Owner tmanctng. sundeck rural water. Sf'OtiCsystem clectnc Buv
tl w1lh carnpmg lra1ler or w1thout, concrrtf' p;3d Great F1shmg' Bu\

------.---

E . Ma .,,L.:,:I;i ia~

-

TO HOSPITAL - Ntce 4 bedroom ranch, l 'h baths. wile
approved kdchen. central atl. g"age It you need a large home at a
bargatn p11ce. ca lllm a showtng loday 1hrs won·l las1 ~ ng al thts

and move r1ght m

•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•

e

•
e

e

GREAT LOCATION NEARGOlf COURSE GROCERY. CLINIC NICE
3 BEDROOM. 2 BATH HOME. EA11N WCHEN 1\l SO HAS COlY
DINING NOOK lOW GAS BUDG£1 $37 900

e
•

LAND LOIS OF LAND' ON MT ZION RD JU SI OFf Rl 35 NEAR
HOllE R HOSPITAL APPROX I'Xl ACRES SO ME fARM LAND.
BEA UTIFUl BUILDING SITES DON f MISS 1HISOPPOR1UNifY If
YOU ARE LOOKING FOR INV ESTMENT PROPERTY

St., Gallipolis

PH. 446-1066

'

Oh.

•

I

JUST USTEO' $4g900 KiG ER CREEK AREA- CLEAN AS API N
ANO BEAUTIFUllY DECORA TED. 3 BEDROOMS I ' RAlHS VERY
NI CE KITCHEN. DIN ING AREA. WOOD CABINFlS SNACK BAR
fRON1 LAWN HAS LOV(l Y VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA
An ACHED GARAGE SPACI OUS lAWN

ESTABliSHED BAR - DOWNIOWN ARlA I ARGL SEAliNG CAPACITY
WIIH SPACl i Ofi EXPANSION SEl UP lOR EASYOPERATION M00£RN
EQUIPMENl II YOU 4HI IOOKIN[, FOR A GOOD BUSINESS BEITER
HURRY lf"S PRICl D 10 SEll '
GROCERY / SfRVICE SIATION / CARRIOUT - RIGH1 COMAINA
liON fOR UNLIMilE O GROWTH AMPI E PARKING liVING
QUARTERS ON PREMI SES HI GH 1RAFFIC ARl A OWNfR Wll L
OPEN BOOKS TO SFRIOUS BUYER

hv m ~

N•n• 3 IY'I1rnom

rourn Jnd hall1 N1 r' It•'

....

-~--

llC•Ilh' l &lt;
th'·· • :

·~1 ~ thl

h\ ,., ,,, • ·

trees Pr1ced onl y $!7000

:

Vac;wt r;wd LU(..Jit'C 111 C··riii'II I IV Ho~
poss1ble bu1 1d nr; &lt;;Iif'', ![,uri,. w;Hcr dll ·l Iii !tl+' ll ~~ 1.1(11'

• 6.7 ACRES -

•

· · · ~ · •. 11 •

•

• STATELY HOME - S1n111~ on 656 .tC II' t1' wtH1·1 1.trl: l .H ... ! : 1 , •·· :
• mIf can also b!:' purchased On I~ 7 1!111•11'· '• " 1\ l1 1' ,•
• formal entry hv1ng room ancl lmm,tl.\111• n 1,1 •n1 '' lo, l•'!l • ·, ,, ' •
• cozy lilm1ly room WBftrfplaCt' ) AR ( r,l ll' ,., 1' U ,m, ' '11 ,·,··r •
• 2 rar ~:arilgl' B·~n 1nterest 1alt' ,,. .1n1 1!1•• · :u ,o~ ••n ~. 1··· •
• Show n h1· appolntm('n\
•

•

•

B EAUTIFU l l ~SHAPED RANCH
GS ee formal
entry. bvrnR room w~! h

.

"'....

- 4 II'·,,.,. '"'"" ·, ,,,.
•
wh !111 nlrr,, ,(,;1 r:, · ,.,.1 , •
• s paCioU~ fam1ly 100111 wr pa!ICJ cl oo" 4 H• .· :.d' !kl'" , ,'' ,"•'1· •
. , and morlr.rn k1!Ct1en Th1s ISa vPr\ ,y nnol~l·, ' l"j1J 11• , ., . 1 •
e Large ga1age w•th lots o! sto~~~r \ P&lt;itt· ,l 'lt11'i•'tlt•r l 'tl' ·,, ,.• •
• Very wel l landscaped Pr1 cerl•n 1lit' ftO -, I ; 1•·lh·'ll! 1: 1 JL, 1&lt; ·, 1··I •
• Crepk School D1 ~tr1rt Shown tw i\IJ['l(lllltrnt'llt
•

3:
w

:

"'1.!)

...z

X: A STYLE OF ITS OWN:...describes this lov~y whrte
"' brick home wilh 3100 SQ. n. 3 or 4 bedrooms, 3
~ balhs, 20x4{) FR. dtmng room, kitchen wtlh OW,
!!! dis~ .. microwave and trash oompactor, tnlercom.
-' cenlral air, 2 car garage, uhltty bldg., deck and a
J 20x70 pool. Beautifully landscaped.

ADDISON·OAVIS lANE - 1\\ story Ira me rome
leatures 3 BR~ 1'·1 balhs. ktlchen. LR. .Remodeled
New insulatiOn. winn~ plumt;ng, wmdows and
lurnace. SKylighls '" bedrooms. pabo doors.
sundeck, carpeling. KC School District

Ill

z GUY AN

TOWNSHIP - 10!! acres more or t.,.;
; located soulh of Mercetvllle. Approx. 20 A. bllable.
Cl balance woods, tobacco base. Owner Will help

lOTS FOR SAL£! - Three level lots rn Kents•
Addtbon of Bidwell Can be purchased tndtVIdually.
Call lor details.

"'I·
a rnance.

\

modern kl!chrn

[ rlRP (11 r•t)·

•

•

General

Res

NEW LISTING -

••

• :
MINUTES FROM TOWN - N•f" ~· tw•d r{~·lll hft'J1•· rr' ~3 r&gt;: 1 Mf"t' • ·
&lt;;paCious k•tc~en ut•l1 ty 100m Cil rrxJr1 nwt.t ', lo • w• lrlJIII1111, •
re!r1gcra tm ~tov ~&gt; ,tn[ i oven Onlv $2"J QilO
•

•

2 STORY HOME ON EKTRA LARGE L01 - 3 BEDROOMS LG
LIVINGRM . EAT·IN 1\JTCHEN. GOOD BARN, CHICKENHOU SE ANO
SPACE FOR A GARDEN. GOOD BUY AT $35 000

~ 1. 900.00

BlACKBURN REALTY - - 446-0008

••

BREATHTAKIN G SffiiN G rn tire mrrlll ol 20 '"'P' oiiJPJ ui rlul •
buddmg woodland P10V1d•n1( pr1,.ill y ,Ht.1 ~rr!IIIPI II"' Ort"' .t 'lPW •
contemporar,· pa o;o;1vP so1.1r Ctld,lr horm' Qurlln, '• J'U' \ Mid •
eru:rgy sav•n g featur es M'"' all wr a ~rN' n~ n ' ,·or,·t~)U :lCWIP •
f eaturmg a sola num w1lh hot 1uh wr aPD''d t)~ d la r;'!' f•!kn 1t'' 'nill •
hv•nQdnd drmng room Wlltr alr•um d(Y.W ;tnd hrlr , 'fll•· flo1n r11 A •
largr lam1IV room w1th i!lr•urn door' mt~·~lv! ·.run .. l•w[lldtP il\11 •
qua rry slonr liOOIS A. mO&lt;Iern com~.JI~h' kilt h,,,, driLl a l.n e.1 ~lasl •
nooK w1th obi1QUI' wml1 uw· lo Ci11Ch lhl ' \.'1P'(I 7 ~]· Win~ tJo 11 \' 3 •
bed rooms wr!t 1!ht· masiPr SUIII-' lrdlur •' l,' .II i•.'tf" 1no1 Ill 1 pa 110 •
ar ea I ;wndrv and mucJr oo m Unlrnl ~ 1 11'1' !M \1 n I" ' 2 u r .-~r ,l ,1 f' •
VegeL~ble garden anrJ dwarf !rlJII li t''" hinl'lll lit'~ dll ' ! IJ(I e
numcrou :, to l1st Sho wn liv dfl \XJifll'' lf'fll
e

e
e

w
w

tUITOt

••
•

••

Q

Am

•
•

e call torlay

w

YOU'll MAKE A SPlASH WITH THIS Oim - Th~ tome has one
allhe nicest pools 111 lhe area and 011el 3,000 SQ. ft. ol li~ng area. 4
or 5 BRs, 3 balhs, 30 ft. lR, 2 famtly rooms, 2 woodburning
fireplaces, larif k~chen and dining area. 2 car garage. Located on
Debby Onve.

••

fu \l !1me on thP nw kt&gt;t Prnv lown'ihiP
acre tarm App1 o ~ 40 :,errs l•ll~b t" liillam P lld~-l ulf ~nd wood s
e Largr 4 UPd room 'H111t' two h~· 11 c. fnJ1 rl •i k 'ttH1 rotkllCO biN' •
e r!lld ma ny more tea1lH!", fur mon: ~·x.'ul !h· !I(" ' ' 'Mm g1w u&lt;- a

Q

REALTORS
Henry Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Tumer 992-5692
lear~ Trussell 949·2660
Jo Hill 985-4466

•

e NEW LISTING -

z

$39,900.00.

••

••e

SPACE FOR AGARDEN PlUS A SUMMER KITCHEN INBASEMENT FOR
CANNING - WfH MAINl AINfO 3 B£0ROOM 1 HA IH RANCH
BI AUIII UI WALLPAPER IN MOSI ROOMS GAS HIAI CI.NTRAI AIR
t:ONIJ NICE BACK YARD IUS! LIS! ED Ar $41000 SUPlRlOCAT IONON
ROUIE 188 JUST MINUTES FROM CllY

Real Estate General

BEAUTIFUL REBUILT HOME
- large hvtng room, 2 large
bedrooms. and a guesl room
Cenlral a1r, basement dec~
large palto, and a garage Frurt
trees and a garden space.
Home is tn great condttion.

446 ·2707 [venrngs 446 ·803 2 Eventn gs •

NEARLY COMPLETED - 3 BFDRODM l OG HOME AfiACHED
GARAGE. BlAUIII Ul COUNlRY S[11 1NG KYC [ R CREEK
SCHOOLS OWNER HAS PRICED fOR QUI CK SAl f

POMEROY - large 6 room
house, with a huge lrvtng room.
2 beatrtlful ltreplaces. ongtnal
woodwork, and a huge storage
buildtng and garage J u~

tll

•
••
••
••
••

1968 TOPPER MOBILE HOME - I Ul l Y CARPEl EO EXCE Pl
BATH KITCHEN HAS RA NGE AND Rf f RIG CEN AIR COND .
NAlU RAL GAS HEAl I ACR E LEVEL LOl KYGER CRE EK AREA
$20 000

••••••••••••••••••

NEW LISTING - SIRACUSE
- Abeaulrlul sphl·enlry home
wtlh 2·3 bedrooms. new
k!chen lhal " equrpped wrlh
range, refngerator. dishwasher.
and dtsposal. Carport and a
nrce s11e lot. Just $44.900.00.

•ru•J~tu SE.OOO- NEW LOW PRICE $70.000 - 4 BEDROOM.
2 BA1H RANCH . HUGE FAMILY ROOM Wll H fiREPLACE. FORMAL
LIVIN GAND DINING ROOM BREAKFAST AREA OFF KI TCHEN 2
CAR GARAGE. 16&lt;32 IN GROUNO POOl DON1 MI SS QUI ON
TH IS HOME 11 IS GOING 10 SEll '

WOOD REALTY, INC.
32 Locust

Assoc

A5SOC

• basement. fam•ly 100m. ~ .t c h N' tl;\' :1· DO' al r,Jn,w ~-'1 lr ~ t(l rpp e
rrt -tr ee?cr. mCf~lv lrmdsca ped lol 01\ ;1Pr' N&lt;H ll rt old (..-~11 !orla} 1
: !or more •nlorrnilllon
8

WE JUST LISTED A SUPER NICE 3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME Wlr H
EXPA NDOINIHl KYGERCREEK ARlA NICF lf"Vll tOT IRff GAS HEAl
$28 000

.NEW LISTING - Comlortable 3 bedroom home localed
aMatn St. Vtnlon 43 ft by 200 ft. ~I Wllh 3 oulbuildinllS. Buy now
Wlor $20.000

446 ·4206

:

~

Ca1hy Clark Burden e •

E• t rrt10 nal tn rnr II r ,tl•·r! ~ ~ ! arc1 l ~t e
• featu res lr~rgP mastPr bed10orr bf! ·;J~ 1 a\ 1 nou ~ I hi Ppi.KP , 'ul 1 •

lOW DOWN PAYMENT. OWNER FINANCING
Are you loo kmg lor a 2 bedroom home overlookmg the Oh•o R•ver
w1th lrttle mamtenance Begrnn er home or ret1remcn! home We
have 1t

8 ACRE S
Wilhrn 10 11''" \ . ' dnve to downtown Gal ltpoh s Ctty School Sys
tern. Has l .~vKup for mobile home GaU 1a Rural Wa1er, electr 1c and
sepbc lank Ntghl hgl1l on pole 200 h. lronlage 011 Graltam School
Rd Ttmber Buildrng sttes. Call now
#477

•

Sonseerhay
!Sonn y) Garne ~

• PRICE REDUCED -

o5R4

6.95 ACRES VACANT AND OFF RT. 35
Rolling land - Beside old US. Hr ghway 35 In an aree Ihal " de·
veloprng lasl R1 35. srort distance wesl ol Gallrpohs Gel rl now
#544

Sonme l. Stule ~
Re altor

•
••

••
•

K£RR BETHEL ROAD - SPACIOUS DOUBI E 'N 'D! 3 R[DilOOMI 7
BAI HS IIHA PFD l iV ING ROOM WITH NICE DINING AR LA MOSI IY
CARPEifll •, ACRfiOI NICE COUNIRYSEntNf. JUSI liSILD' $3~ 100

#260

8

e

one acre all usable land. Rural water system, one bath Everythmg
tn good condttion . Slorage butldtng, garage Bu) IhiS home im only
$29.900 00 now
#505

lj,

MONTGOMERY
REALTY

' OVERLOOK THIS - BE S1 BUI IN THE CITY' HOMEPL US
INCOME' TH IS Ol DlR HOME HAS BEAU11fUL WOODWORK.
AMPLE STORAGE. AN D A VERY LI VABLE FLOOR PL AN fORMAl
LIVING AND DINING ROOMS. DEN. EAIIN KIICHFN AND
POWDER ROOM ON f iRST flOOR ON THE SECOND li~ ERF ARE
TWO LARGE BEDROOMS A SMALLER CHILD"S ROOM ANDBAfH
PLUS LG ATTIC FOR STORAGE BASEMEN1. fHONI AND BACK
PORCHE S. PLUS A 3 BEDROOM CARAGE AP1 WIIH r .~MII Y
ROOM 2 CAR GARAGE All FOR $69.000

HOME - 2 ACRES IN THE COUNTRY
7 room house wtlh 3 or poss1ble 4 bedrooms, krtchen wdh butll·m
cabmets. storm wmdows and doors Large bwldtng. approx
32'•60', located on Slale Ht ghway Call lor your appornl menl now.
#364

REDUCEO FOR QUICK SALE - 124.900
In Galhpol~. Walk to shop downlown. 6 rooms. 3 bedroo ms. lull
basement, n1ce large front jX)rch No upkeep N1ce large shade
trees. Low ta~C.es Home you should check on
#530
MULTI PURPOSE PROPERTY
located on Ohto Rl7 near Gallrpolrs Walk rn cooler drs play ca ht ·
nets. thret: rental mohtte homes - 1ncome now $660 per month
Could be 6 room bnck home plu s 2 room -; lor bus1ness ~ wha
te ver you have 1n m1nd. Flower shup, small grocery store carry -out.
etc. Lots of uses Phone for appo1ntm ent to SPe Li ve 1n oa li - bu ·
Sine&gt;~ tn other part Renl mobrle homes r.reat opportunrly
#580

ATTENTION BUILDERS
Th1s property has been su b·
divided tnlo I acre - I 0
acre sttes, can be sold tndt·
Vldually l eax waler o bla~n ~
able, priced tow, poss tbl e
excellent term s Th1s IS an
excellent buy lor erlher farm
or developmenl

POME'ROY,

2 ACRES PLUS
5'h ACRES
NICE COUNTRY HOME
14x7!1 PATRIOT HOME
Large 12 room remodeled
All usable land. 3 bedrooms.
home, 6 bedrooms, 2 baths
bat h. storm doors and wm·
w~h modern kitchen. Home co·
dows. N1ce, IUS! l1ke new
vered w~h carefree alurn. ~d·
modern Ktlchen wtth butll1n
ing. Thermopane wtndows 2 cabmets, . gas range and
sundecks, fuel oil FA furna oe
refngerator . rural water system.
with a woodburner insert 4 car
Nr ce storage burldrng, all
garage and numerous storage
rnmeral nghts RO. Must~ th1s
bldgs. 2.093 acre&amp; R~hng level
sel up.
land. Areal Country Centleman
11601
Home. Phone now'
#578
BEEF AND GRAIN FARM
One ol Gallia County's hnest. 171 acres. mor e or less ol level to
gently rollmg land. 800, ltllable. lronta ge on 3 ro ads. all mrnetal
nghts mcluded 6(h 70' barn. eqwpmenl sheri&lt;::. corn cnbs.
remodeled larm house rn good conddron Much more detarls Call
now
#603

30 A. MIL. QUALITY HOME &amp; BARN
Top quallly 9 room house wtlh 7 rooms carpeled. 4 bedrooms.
balh, and lull basemenl plus 3 car garage Good barn appro•
30'x40' plus chiCken house appro&gt;. 12'x 10'. Appro• 10 acres ttlla·
ble and 20 acres pasture wrth large pond Beauhlul localton wrlh 17
mile lronlage oo blacklop Stale Htghway
m8

$43,000 .

$AVE ON USED TRACTORS
1983 16 HP Twin Allis Chalmers
w/42 in. mower
1979 12 hp Wheelhorse w/42 in. mower
1979 10 hp Wheelhorse w/42 in. mower
1975 10 hp Wheelhorse w/42 in. mower
10 HP Massey Ferguson
w/42 in. Mower &amp; Snow Blade

MAKE US AN OFFER' OUT Of TOWN OWNER NEEDS TO SEll
DRASTICALLY! - 3 B R~ 7 batn·. cumwlt&gt;l~-'l'i equ•r !iltCtlen
dmette. tam•ly 10om rec roorn laund r·,- ro0m 2 lnep!aces gas
heat. cent a1r. 2 car ~ar age IOL.-:11+-'d at &gt;:&gt;C~e of 10(111 Pnct reducf&gt;fl
lo $5 3000

u4ud/!(&gt;y Ca11aday CReaQ tohl
. 2S 5:£ocugt gt~eet gQQQipoQir . &lt;9~io

Real Estate General

TWIN RIVERS TOWER

ln today's Army, there are literally hundreds of skills to choose from .
And tf you stgn up under our Delayed Entry Program.you can do the choosing.
Of cou~. whether you choose surveying or air traffic control. you
must qualify And you may have to wait a bi1 for an opening in the skill training
of your chmce BU11f you qualify, we wtll guarantee your choice up to IWelve
months in advance.
For achance to serve your count:ry land tram for the skill of your ch01ce).
visit your local Army Recruiter. Or call Army Opportunities,

446-3159 Days

BEDRCIONIS, central air, vmyl wallpaper. car~
pet lhroughout, well insulaled. new paint. attached
garage, gas outdoor gnll , awnmgs . many extras .
Phone 446-2583 'til 5:00P .M.

Real Estate General

LET US PAY THE BILLS!

SKILL

(614) 464-3563
(614) 881-5784

1 978 Chevy window van

Closed Thursdays
or

cond . Call 614 ·256 ·6216.

KENNETH SWAIN

Real Estate General

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1982 Chevy Van loaded,
trailer pkg, 350 engine,

446 ~ 4699 .

Transporlalion

Call:

1- - - - - - - - - -

72

re1ail 83026 . Call614 ~ 388 ~
9905 .

fiald. 304· 675 ·5579 .

LORETTA'S GUNS &amp; CURIOS

992-7113

1 978 Chevy Scottsdale. 1!..
ton, 4x4, extra clean, h eavy
duty , auto trana, PS , PB,
360 Y· 8, AM radio , sliding
rear windo w. 8ft . alumn

firm .

CJ6, 304,

JUST OPENING TODAY

GET

condition .
304 · 675 ~

304 ~ 676 · 6288 .

1979 Ford Courier XLT
sports package. PB. rack-inpenning steering,new tires,
auto . transmission, 4 cyl, 32
mpg, selling price t2496.

256 ·9364.

Reg full blooded Arabian
stallion. 5 yra . old. purebred.
bull Simmental Call 614 367-0493 after 6PM

81 . 600 . 00 .
2195 .

loaded in uc. cond, $5,200

Rd .Gallipolis.
4782 .-

cattle . 8ft . homemade metal
p1p e cow rack . Call 614 -

614· 388 ·8824

1977 Chev. truck . 1fz t on, 6
cyl, std s hift , PS. spok e

PriJt, PS, PB, AC , cruise
control, V8 - 301, black .

81000 . Call 614 · 446 ·
0193 .

614 ~ 388 · 9792 .

Reg . Polled hereford bull &amp;

Sell or trade 1 8 H P 6 speed
garden tr ac tor 3 pt . hitch .
Too big for my yard War ranty good til 5 -1 -87 . Call

Coll614 ~ 669 · 6101 .

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Contact

'78 two door Pontiac Grand 1:-:=~:---:----­

Will cut and bale hey. terms.

Call

Instruments
Black Angu s bull Call 6,4-

1973 KW 290 Cummins,
RTO 9613. SOHD . RTE
380. priced to sell Wilkes·

0.5

MERCERVILLE
AREA

$75,000

MMR 537 - Lovely 3 bedroom. tolal electnc ranch rome. New
carpet throughout Matntenance lree outstde. garage and niCe lot
Selo lor $36.500
MMR 543 - Main St in Rutland - This home wou~ make a
mce sta rte. home. 2 bfdrooms. total electnc. large 12'x24' decll
ltke new At an allordable $25.000
MMR 546 - Well kept 3 or 4 bedroom home. Handcraftd btrch
krtchen cabinets. lormal dimng room. lull basement. Large
wrap-around porch Low uhl~es l ocaled on Mulbetry tn Pomeroy.
Ask1ng $32.500.
MMR 539 - 10""' land contract avat labl e to qualrlted buyer. 4
bedrooms. formal dtmng room. lrvrng room has lead glass wtndows.
Small yard Walkrng dtstance lo ~ores and shopptng East Main 1n
Pomeroy PRICE REDUCED lo $18,000
MMR 547 - New atumtnum srdrn&amp; Anderson Windows. new
plumbing and wrnng are 1us1 a lew ol the amemtres ol thts lovely 3
bed room home located on Hamrnon St. tn Mtddleport Call lor your
appt A real buy al $30.000.

1984 Chevy 510, 4 wheel

, 974 Ford Comet 2dr,6 cyl.
64,000 act.miles, ex. cond.

2125 .

614-

304 · 773 ·

Ronnie Skeens

Good mixed hay. 81 .25 in

manor.

1975 Dodge % ton truck VB
good tires r. bod~ . must
aale. call 992 -6886 .

dirve.

1973 VW Super Beetle good

Round bailed he~ in the field .
Cell Coleman ' s at 6,4-742-

5 yr old Sorrell Quarter
horse m ar e. 2 yrs. Equas·
trian tra1n •ng . Mendeth

'R,eaf**

614 ~ 992 · 3921 .

cyi,AM,FM.Iike new 85996

304 · 576 ~ 2606 .

Livestock

83 . 600 . 00
5944 .

Autos for Sale

Ford 2 .000 d1esel Massey
Ferguson 65 . 4 11 . Hico
bushhog $340. 5 ft . HICO
bushhog $350 . 304 -576-

63

miles, 4 new tires. exc con d.

Ford lJ. T .• super cab
pickup . $660. 246 -9441 .

Hay &amp; Grain

M~GHEE

•soo. Will consider 1andem

wheels . Good

l1ro«er
Cheryl Lemley,
Meip County Associato
Phone 742~ 3171

Times-Sentinei- Page-

HOUSE &amp; LOT
FOR SALE

For Sale by Owner
3 bedroom farm
house with barn.
60 acres.

M. L "Bud" McGHEE

cond. $4 ,500 .00 . 1979 A - 1 condition.Call 614 Chrysler LeBaron, 32.000 245 ·6294 .

(NI!:WSPAPI!:R ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

1 2 mo o ld Reg P11 Bull Call

2 Beagles, 1 male 2 % years
o ld 1 female 3 years old .
Both very good hunters Will
sell toget her only S 150 00
both . 304 -675 -6145

1978 lincoln Cont . Town
Car, fully powered, e~~:.c .

depriving defender East of
the ability to trump a club
honor.

514 ·742 · 2038 or 742 · Mower conditiond hay for cond ., serious inquires only.
sale . $1 .25 bale in field . Call446·1608 .
2521
446 · 3929 or 266·6233 . 1- - - - - - - - - -

2328 or

$1 . 260 . 00 . 304·675 ·
6761 .

of club!! twice , thereby

8 wk ol d Beagle pups. S25
a a Ca ll 61 4 · 256-9352 .

675· 2288

' 73 Volkeawagen . good
body and tires . Runs wall.

r~=::;::=:=-::===-,;:~=::;::=====:l1974

64

~wt·

aion . recently rebuilt , p .a.

ville.

304 ~ 675 · 1145 .

trumped or not, he made
only one trump trick. South
had brought i.n his slam con·
tract by leading toward the

REAL ESTATE

Mustang Grande •. IJCie trailer on trade. Call

1979 Mercury Capri. 6 c~l . ,
AM -FM cassette. AC . auto,
radial tires. 83,000.00 firm .

over- 1

New H o lland 850 large
round bailer &amp; hay rake Call

Full blooded black poodle
pu pptes. 9 weeks old. 304 -

p.b, new flet bed, winch ,

new 28 MPG. Call614~992~
6810.

dummy .

61 4· 388 ·9790

614· 446 ·32 49

36.000 miles. nice car. 1
owner. Cell 814-245· 9493

1982 Cavalier. auto .. p .a..
a .c .• a .m . f.m .. rear defogger. 20.000 mtles. like

was there any way to avotd

dmg slams ts by cue-btddmg.

Call 614 ~ 388 · 9081 or 388
8230

cab. automatic, transmit·

7412 after 6 p.m .

were not splitting favorably.

" AKQ42
• • Q!
KQI l

Tractor . model B with culti vators . Call 614- 25 6 -6417 .

1974 F ord Dump Truck
30,000 act . m1les. JO 350
dozer. 6 way blade &amp;. hoe.

4dr. pa,pb.oc,ot.

all ofloro . Coli 61 4 ~ 992 ~

neW!. There was 1 loser in
trumps and certainly a posSible club loser. lf clubs

Farm Equipment

130 Farmall tractor with
cultivators. exc . cond . &amp;
tobacco baler . Ca ll 446 -

306.

V~8.

Real Estate General

Trucks for Sale

1973 Dodgo D· 200 club

, 979 Chevy Caprice Cl...
sic, 2 dr. ac. pa. V· 8 engine.
body good condi1ion. axe .
performance. Will consider

12 tricks.
He won the ace of spades
and played the ace and kina
of hearts. West sbowed out
on tbe !le&lt;OIId roond, discardin! 1 club. This wu bad

72

1977 Chevy Melibu Cl111ic

302. auto.. good on gas.
$1400. Call446 ~ 1326 .

Rood eooup trump support
to rWt 10inJI aU tbe way. As
it happened, South had to

exerciJO all hi.s skill to make

• A62
WEST

p,,_,

9790
Professional All Breed Ooy
Obedienc e Train1ng I ndivid ual &amp; classes available Cal l

t-IW4

• 7 6fl
Kt 7

9x 100

beds . Call 61 4· 388 9792.

7838 af1er 5PM .

Briarpatch Kennels Profes sional All - breed grooming
Indoor -ou td oo r boarding f ac ilities . P1 ck up and delivery
serv•ce English Cocker Spa n•el pupptes . Call 614 -388 -

NORTH

• 8 6..,

59 For Sale or Trade

7795
Judy Taylor Groommg Ca ll

three small beartJ were oot

SOUTH

Toba cco

Autos for Sale

1972

+

Strawberries Pick 1 flat free
for each 2 flau you pick ; 25
lb . minimum . Happy Hollow
Fruit Farm , Gallipolis Ferry.

Pets f or Sale

HilL C REST

East gets to ruff air

576 ·2026 .

Zusp an. 304 -773 5554 .
N ow o pen for busmess .
Mountam State Block . At .
33 . New Haven Complete
maso my supplies . 4 " B".
12 " block . Oelrvery serv1ce .
Ph one day 304 -882 -2222 .
e .... enmg 882 -3239

71

The

W. Va.

Ill
Z BRAND NEW OUPLEX -

Great INVESTMENT lor
oA the buyer! Located on Graham School Road. Each
12 un~ often 2 Brs. balll, INing room. liitchen With
stOIIIl. refri&amp;.. OW and dlspl , laundr}, large carport
Cj!Oiral air and storage area.

3!

!

N·~w LISTINGS

LOTS OF POTENTIAL - GREEN TOWNSHIP lBO acre !arm located in Northup area Two story
lrame older home with seven rooms and bath.
county wale., 161160 ooncrete ~lo. corn cnb,
equipment shed, mdkhouse and barn. On paved
road.

COMMERCIAl BUIUiiNG - 62x80 all s1eel
construction with ltreproolrnsulaiiOn. has ove•head
crane office and baths F0111'erty used tor boat
sales and repair. localed across lrom ~lver Bnd ge
Plaza wrth access to the OhiO Rtvet. Polenltal
unltmiled
FHA~VA SPECIAl - 3 bedrooms. marnlenance
lree home. (Vetera ns. no down payment). lfHA
buye~ appro•. $1. 250 down). located m Rodney
Vtllage II
REDUCEO TO $.49,500 - COULDN1 ASK FOR A
BmER LOCATION! - Handsome Vrctonan home
offers 3 BRs. I\\ balhs. laundry room. hvmg room,
family room, carport, unattached garage 16x32
lenced pool. Krtchen has range, rein~ . OW and
displ. Nat gas heat and alum sidtng.localcd al the
edge ol town. Call tor an appointment

CHESHIRE AREA - ROUSH lANE - Very
attractt~P 3 BR ranch offers equtpped kllchen.
L-shaped llvrng room and drnrn g room w/fuepl nc:e
1'7 balh,, lull basement w/ woodburnmg ' love ,
14 x21 garage. carpelmg Call lor an appom1menl
OHIO RIVER LOIS FOR SALE - located 3 mrles
below Eureka Dam Ideal lor camprng. butldtng or
mobtle homes.

RAN NY
BLACKBURN
446-0008

NEEDED ... NEW LISTINGS NEEDED ... NEW LISTINGS NEEDED ... NEW LISTINGS NEEDED ... NEW LISTINGS NEEDED ...

z

•
•

•

••

"' ••

1.!)

z

91

bath. complete k1trhen and :argr r~lm~· ,I f ('~ L.H ~r l•vm, 1(1()"11
w1tl1 wb f11eplace Hugr laundr,· room Room k·r '"llt&gt;t'' 1H • ~. 1:"'

e

Q

w

Q

w

Ill

z

"'

1.!)

z

"'::::;

•

•

Farm pond !or walc11ng anmra t~ or 1hlr1n1· rnnt! ,,. 'ht ~,,,,

CITY PROPERTY -

•

•

2 &gt;lDrl 3 Ill&lt; It• '"' I "''"•"'r ·i·' '''' ,, •

retirement home 3rcl Ave Pncr d 111 !hr ,'0·

8.6 ACRES M/ l - Ky ge1 Crepk r11str1fl J(, h~ ~ttull l'lt l)jll'
home. 3 bedrooms. 2 extra mobtlr homr hOn~l rfi&lt;. Pn, t"tllll l llf'

... ••
"'... • 2~.
!Z •ee AllHOME.
BUSIN ESS AND EXTRA BUILDIN G LOT or
for unde1 $20.000 Bus1ness was
as

...

NEW

•

•

111 1,1h · ,'PIII,II }90D0 il•w.• e
Monthly payment $491 06 •nrlu r1 1 1l~' lin•''- ,1 'lil r1 • M1 rJ ,·r· · t11•, ~ e
home nes!led rn 3ac re s Lois o! pr1v r~c 1' ..t rnl '"''flu ,,(II' .J IJ,•tl 111 11 11' •

ASSUMABLE LOAN -

u~eo

ga~dr r '1\11

LOVELY

e

•

•

•
r •

~~s :.tiltlon nnn •

groc ery Cozy 3 bedrOOm home

•• 4
•• 2
••
A~FRAME

•

•

••
•
localed on St. Rt 35 Good bu rldmg sllc Hos a e

BEDROOM HOME IN CITY -

lr"t Avrr.ur

ACRES MI L mobi le home hooKup Well wate1. (llso a wa!er !ap and
bu1ld1ng City schools.

s! ora~r

e
•

HOME • ttmg on 69 acre ol partral woodland Mode1r1 3 :
•
• basement Pnced only $28. 500

•

• bedroom. 1'&gt;:&gt; baths. krt chen. hvmg room Enclosed por rh flnrt

~

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

~

�1}.6-The

Page

74

Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Paint Pleasant,

Motorcycles

74

Motorcycles

74

* * * *

74

ew:c . cond .. 5 .000 miles.
$2,000.0 0 304-675- 5486
ah e r s·oo.

Harley Davidson motorcv·
cl~ . pan head eng i ne
&amp;1900 . Call 614 992
6846

197 4 Tnumph Bonneville.
hard ta11 . S450 Sell or trade.
I 614-949-2162

1976 Kuulta Stree t Bike,
3400 miles, price 52 25 Call
614-388 -9696

198 2 Honda V-45 Sabre,

NEW HARLEY-DAVIDSON
SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE

Motorcycles

Motorcycles

74

1977 Honda CR 125 Elolnore. Call 614-256 - 1778

eve.
1981 Yamaha GT 80 street
&amp; dirt b1ke, only 280 m1les.
includes helmet with visor .
exc. cond. Call 446- 1304
aher 6PM .
1983 V 66 Mogna ; 2866
miles he . cond . Call 4460061 .

1984 lll-1000 cc,

.. !ow 13, 891

Was 14,795 ........ .

1981 fXR-1340 cc, Was 16.795 ............ .
1984 flH -1340 cc, Was 18,380 .. .

...« 15.995

1984 fLH Sptcsal , 1340 cc, Was 18,980 .. ...

.Now 17.980
... Now 16.784

1984 flB-1340 cc l ow R1dt1, Was '7.863 .....

. Now 17.163

[!OlE. All Prrces Include Frerghl &amp;Sef·Up)

ATHENS SPORT CYCLES, INC.
Athens, OH.

W. St1mson Ave.

PH.

1 979 Kawasaki KZ 750 wtth
faring &amp; radio . eJtcellent
condition . Asktng $1200.
Call 614-992 -3530 after
5 ·30 p m

Now17.683

1984 FXR0-1340 cc 01sc Glide. Was 18,483

AnENTION FIRST TIME HOME OWNERS!!! Attractive
3 bedroom ranch on the edge of town. liv1ng room,
kitchen, bath , cathedral ceslings. carport . gas heat.
city water. Nice shady lawn. All this for $21.900!

B

-1692

H a rt e\1

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

75

Real Estate General

Motorcycles

ft .' with

Ves pa motor scoote• less

19 Y2 ft Aristocraft fiberglala boat.inboard ·outboard

than 10 0 mil es . F1 r s t
$425 00 304-6 75 -4454

wi'h trailer
64?2

1981 VamBha Special II.
maroon, mag wheelt. new
tirea. battery, nice, 5,000
mile a. $1 . 200 00 . 304 ·
675-2540 .

1980 Kawas aki 1000 lTD ,
excellent c ondition. 7 .000
miles. new tuneup extras
82300. or best offer Call
614-992 -6747
1979 KOX 400. runs gOod .
Call 614-992 -3846

75

Call 614-266-

Correct Crah &amp; Ski Suprttme. family ski boats.
N~ &amp; used. Parkersburg,
WY 304· 422 -8433 or 304422· 2367

Boats and
Motors for Sale

7~ '

Auto ~~rts
· . &amp; Accessories

16 h inboard wtth 1 17
o verdrtve, V-drive. 2 propellers , 427 Che vy e ngine .
This boat will run a ll day OJl
14 gall o ns of gas: picks up
six s kiers o ut of water easily .
runs 60 mph wtth power
props &amp; 80 Wtth speed
props. 1974 mod e l S3000
includes tratler &amp; new bat tery . Call 614-446-1822
after dark

2 Cra•ger 14" rims and tirus .
Ca11'614-256- 1528
TwO 8ft . p•ckup toppers. 1
alum , 1 fiberglass. Russell
Young , West Columbia .

78

Camping
Equipment

167. days . 614 -992 -7300.
evemngs

446-6610

198 3 H o nda Sh rt dow 750
c ond
3000
m1le. he lmet &amp; acce ss on e s
$2 , 450
Call 614 - 379 2802

&amp; Campers
BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open
daily 9 to 6 30, Sat . 9 to 4,
Closed Sunday U.S . Rt 50.
Coolville . Oh 614 667
3386

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

Put NtJ•nber 1 to work foryouT;

Motorcycles

1--- -------1979 Skylark tnvel trailet
16 % foot . tandttm aJtle Self
contamed. Care free awn·
ing . Exc. condition . Call
614- 992-5170
1977 Yellowstone 28 '
Camper $2, 600. firm Catl
614- 992 -6159 .
1971 Scotty Camper. hardtop. sleeps 6, self contained.
good cond. $800 00 304675-61'15 after 5 PM .

35h. camptng trailer, AC ,
ne~ stove. ne~ shower.
P811o screened m Can be
seen at Hidden lakes, Pomeroy. Ohio 304-675 -1413.

1972 22ft Holiday camper:
self- contained . Call 304 675-1423.

81

81

Home
Improvements

byHentiAmoldandBob lee

81

Ho m e
Improvem ent s

Unscramble tnece fOl.lr Jumbles.
one ~en.er to each square, to form

viny l siding, roofing , room
additio n, st orm windows .

&amp;tone Ca ll 614 -367-0409
or 614 -367-7244

I TABB&lt;tj
I I

Plumb1 ng a nd
21 1 S1 xt h St .
Point Pl ea sa nt , W Va 304 ·
675-54 20 lt c e ns ed and
SHUL AW ' S

I I I

RON 'S Telev1s 1on Sen11ce .
Speciatiztng m Zen1th and
Motorola . Quazar . and
house ca ll s C All 3 04 576 2398 or 614-446 · 2454

)

83

IONNACY±

I I K )
r]

GET your ca rp e t S HI P
SHAPE W ITH C APTIAN
STEAMER . Water rem ova l.
furntture cleanmg. fre e e s t• ·
mate s 304 -675 -2295

WA'TCHING 'THE I&lt;'EST

s epti c ta nk s. lands cap •ng
Call a nyt •me 6 14 -446 4637 , J ames l Oavtson , Jr
owne r

DO 'TH I'5 .

ZULZEG

Now arrange lhe Circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer. as sug

1

geslt'ld by the above cartoon

Pnntenswerhere :

Excavating

G ood - 1 Excavatt ng , basement s. fo oters . dri vew ays,

OF THE WOR:LD

rn

u (

X r 1"

(Answers Monda~ )

Lennox Heat mg &amp; Atr Cond1
tronrng All Types Insulati on
£1ectnca! Wtr mg
Ca ll 446- 85 t 5
or 44 6-0 44 5 lie

Alum m u m ut tltty

butld tn gs
691 Mtlle r O nve
446 2642
Free Est 1m a t es

Rea l Est ate Gen e ral

J A A Co nstru ct io n Co Au
tlan d , O h 6 14 742 290J .
B8 seme nt s, Foote rs. Con
c r e t e wor k . Ba ckh oe 's.
D oze r &amp; O tt c h e r . Dump
tru c k s. &amp; w at er· gas · sewer
el ect n eal ltnes

estimates Call c ollect 1 614-237 -0486, 9 am to 5
p . m Roger s Bas e ment
Waterproofing .
Remod eling. s1d1ng. int enor
end extertor. te)ltured coat mg . stmulated bnck and

84
81

Home
Improvements

Fetty Tree Tnmmmg. stump
re moval Ca11 304 -675
1331 .

Coli 614-388-9857

All bwldtng and remolding .

RINGLE'S SERVICE e•pe-

PAINTING intcrror and ex

lnterror-Exte nor

roofmg. elec hica l. etc Ex peuen ced and a ffordabl e

rtenced roofmg, mclud1ng
hot tar applicatiOn , c arpen ter. electucum , mu.on Call

roof1ng .

AND MAX

Water wells co mmerc ial an d
I Jumbles THINK MERGE INNATE GOITER
I
domest1c. test holes . pump
Yesterday 5 AI"Swer Th e doc tor deCI d e d lo " pract1 ce .. me d 1c1n e I Co n•l•u clron Eqo••pm enl
sales tmd serv1c e 3 04 · 895 un! 11he got ___ tT RI GHT
D1tch W1t c h u sed Tr en c her
-3_8_0_2_ _ _ _ __ ___ I . I . . . - - - - - - - - - - ' T " - - - - - - - - - - - 1 with backh o e Oay t1m e ca ll
1•
614 · 44 3 9 751 or614 -592
BASEMENT W ATE A 568 5 aft er 5 p m

stucco , thermo replacement
wmdow s 304-675 -1560

some remodeling 20 yrs
e xp. Call614- 388 · 9652

How m e t Pa t 10 c overs
How me t &amp;cree n room s
M ob11e nome a wnmgs

ELLIOTT CO

HA~D P'ART OF
f'EIN6 f'~OKE IS

THE

wtndows
Storm w1 ndows &amp; doo r s
Al u m1n um &amp; vt nVI

Si ding

RUSS

tion, deodorizers . FA EE eni·
mates. Reasona ble rat es .
Gene Smrth. 992 630 9

r

Bill's

N u P r 1m e repl acement

6 14-446 - 4066

m sured

scotchguard -wet e r e•trac -

?"

REFRI GERATION CO .

Hea t i n ~ .

.GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN .

tf'~ IMPROVEAfENTS

SHEET METAL WORK
We make cust om duct
work . We Repa sr Fur naces and He at Pu mps.
GALLIA

tour ordinary wor&lt;ls

H &amp;. S Home Improvemen ts

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout ·
mg Now insta llmg rubber
roofs 30 years exper~en c e .
specializing in bUilt up roof.

plumbtng.

The Sunday Tim es-Sentin ei - Poge- 1}.7

\1j'}\1~ \li)'il ~THATSCRAMBL£0 WORD GAM£

~ ~ ~~ ·

referen c es furnt sh e d . Free

Home
Improvements

terior.

W. Vo.

PROOFING Uncond1t1onal
lifetime gu arante e
l oca l

Services

Real Estate General

304-67 5 -2440

C on cret e

3 04 675 - 2088
4560

o r 675 ·

Real Estate General

82

PRICE RE DU CED TO $67.500' OWNER TRANSFER RE D TO
MICH IGAN MU ST SE LL THI S MONTH ' Tins allraclsve home
loca ted on Debby Drrve fea tu res 17 00 sq II of ltvtng
space 3 BR s 2 bath s c1 rn1ng toom ltvmg roo m, k1tchen

Elec trical
&amp; Refrsgerati o n

Plumbing

and fam1ly ro om New cust on 1 drape s car pet1ng wood -

&amp; Heating
C ARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
C o r Fourth and Pine

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446 · 3888
614-446-4477

burn sng stove deck and ce nt ral an BLA CKBUR N REALTY
- 44 6 0008

SE WING Ma c hm e repa 1r s.
serv1 ce A u thonzed S 1n ge r
Sales &amp; S erv 1ce S h arp e n
Sc is s or s F a br.c S h op .
Po m eroy 614 9 92 · 2 28 4

or

JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING Rt 1. BoJt 355 . Gall•polis Call 614 -367-0576

85

SOLUTION

General H au lrn g

James Buy s W at er Servi ce
Also poo l s fi lled Call 6 14

2 5 6 - 1141 O f 6 1 4 - 4 4 6
1175 or 61 4 44 6 79 11
John son W a t e r S e rv1ce Call

614 -2 56 1743or614 2 5 6
1120

SMAtl ACREAGE - Pnce reduced 57 acre; more or
less Has large barn rn good condrbon Some other
amen1!1es 1nclude county water. free gas. crop area,
passure and woods Pnce ss nght $27.000 Cheshrre
Townshrp

GOTTA GO ...

Camper; good cond .. sleeps
six, gas stove. Ice box Cell
614-388- 9618

79 Motors Homes

Judy DeWitt. Realtor. 388-8155
J. Merrill Cartl!f, Realtor, 379-2184
Becky Lane. Associate, 446-0458
Cathy Pope, Assocsate, 379-2748
Margaret Bl)'llnt. Associate. 245-9277

1980 Honda 750 SS 1400
mtl es C a ll evenm gs S1400
304-675 -7138

Perry 21 ft .. sleeps sht. very
nrco. Coli 614-266· 6472

truck camper Self
contarned
S650 or beat
offer Call 594 -5816 ext

Sp o r t st e r .

sh o wr oo m

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1 5 ft

m a ny new parts 304 675 ·
2508

74

Boats and
Motors for Sale

C hri s Crah cabin cruiser . 36
40 ft . trailer .
S 11 . 000. Coli 304-675 1731 aher 6pm

1980 XR 250 Honda 1980
Kawasaki 12 5 . 304-6753993 .

Real Estate General

Real Estate General
1 9 73

June 17, 1984

1978

.. Now 17.480

1983 fll-1340 cc, Was 17,884 ......

20

Kawasaki KZ -200.
6.400 miles. s660 Coli
614- 992 -6954 .

June 17, 1984

W. Va.

JIMS WATER SE RVI CE
Call J1m Lan1 cr . 304 675 ·
7397

~582

87

U phofst ery

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - lhrs 3 bedroom ranch

REDUCED TO $69.000 - Bea ulrful Ohro Rrver "'"
lnground pool wrth dt=&gt;ckmg all aroun d 1 977 acre
taw11 ~ IJ!:'droom:. krtchen complete. dmmg room
llvmg room fult lrnrshed basement wet bar. lamdy

Wrlh Irani and re ar ra c&lt;s. tra der
hrl ch. elec stan and shaft jnve
Was '1.769
Now 1 1,669

room utrllty room 3 baths garage patiO. oHrce room

The All !ew 1985 Motor-4
4 Wlleeler
iow at the sntroductory pnce of
Only 1
(Reg. 11.939)

baths. den. formal rlmtnr, cuslom made cabmels Ill
kttchen. lam1ly room cedll l l1ned walk-tn closet. 2
frreplaces. anrc fan Natural gas heat 2 car garage

t

BUY 1 -

bedroom brrck ranch style home w1th

rots ol cab1net space. modern. well constructed
M&lt;~ nl e n&lt;~nce

lree lrv1ng

#608

·~·-~

JUST LISTED BARGAIN' -1 968 12 ~ b1 60h mobrle

MINI FARM - OWNER WANTS A FAST SALE' - 12
acres more 01 less wrlh 14 H by 70 H 198 1 Wrndsor

home wit h J6 acre lol Home has 2 bedrooms 2 baths
hvtnR room krtchen. ranl!r and relngeratm l m p10v ~:d

mobtle home New lence OOm pond tobacco base
g.:~ r d~n atea Call today!

lot wrth rura l water. septrc tank elt&gt;Cinc. drrv eway

11609

Arfrtrson Townshrp locatron
~610

SERENE AND PRIVATE - Thrs ra nch

sty~

home rs

located m Add1son Town shrp and surroundr c1 hy

acres room
.
barn. machmery shed and other uulbUIIdmgs Tobacco
base Approx 35 acres level crop land Thf' rP. SI rs
pasture amJ wouds Perr v fownshtP. Gclhpolts school

, ystem Blacktop road St Rt 325
#549

CLAY TOWNSHIP - 128 acre lar m lurmerly u'Jed "
darry Qu ality bUi ll home .,.,tth lull base ment. 2 bedroom

apart me nt tnchKled Large barn loal1ng shed tobacco
ba':&gt;l::' '&gt;llo 2 ponds G1vr uo; n call tor more dela1ls

Ph . 592-1692

#556

,., ACRE LOT wrll1 o 197 1 2 BR mo brte home. garage.
·sep11c tank rural water lnclucled are the stove
refrrRerator. 2 au con ditioners, wa sher and dryer

Located ar McCully Road Pnced al $1 5.000
#584
RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIAL - fake your prck
wrth thrs I 58 acres Upper Rt 710cdli0n frontage on

JUST liSTED personl!l

~ e ms

STATE ROUTE 160 -

Ta ~e

)nur

and you're read y tu move 1nlo lh1s

completely lurnrshed 14'x70' Holly Park molllle home
formal dmmg, 11,., baths, central

a~r.

35'xl 2' covered

potch 24'x24 garage Srlualed on 2 acres. pa~~ally
wooded Take a look al thrs one toda y
#591

house 2 large barns. adequate water supply Approx
30 acres crop land 100 acres P&lt;JSture 36 acres wood~

lobacco base Some good wrldhle orea Blacktop 10ad

#580

Phone

PRICE REDUCED' -

NEW li ST ING -

Re mo

deled 111 5td P ami out 6 rm
one lloo r homr cook and
bake un rt.;, LMrJ f'l rrJ g panel
1n g. full h(lsrnrnt il nrl l ~ ·pp

40 ACRES LOCATED AT VINTON - Land rs wooded

lake a too&lt; at thrs well

ma1nlamed home lmmaculatr 1ns1de and o\11
Remodeled Steel stdmg 3 bedroom:. ntce cabmets m
~1tc hen large li\11np, room formal d1mng. bath. natural
ga• heal garage oulb01ldmgs 91 of an acre lawn
# ~5

•

$34,000

br~ s ement.

wrlh gar age Only I I 7 500
7

room&lt;; n11cro wav e rP irip,P r
alor . coo ~ and bakP unrt s
dbl gartlge on IP, l e v ~&gt; l lot

GRAB THE CAR KEYS• - Come see lhrs rmmaculale
and tastefully decorated In level 3 bedrooms. I 'h
baths lrvmg room pat1o doors oHdmmgarea leadmgto
covered deck. lam1ly toom w1th hrrplnce krt chen Wllh
range dr s~ wa sher dt~ pos a l 2 car ga rage N1ce leYel
lawn Pnced m lhr JO ~

#550

Ju st $27.500
SWIM POOL - Nrc e 3 bed
room s modern krtc he n ca r
pt&gt; lr ng ful l base ment new

dbl
gar ar,e
sc hool s

and

near

18 ACRES - Has drrll ed
well bo llom la nd trees 5
rm house etc Asktnp, on ly
$12.000
RIVERFRONT - Lot 68 x
93 Good 8 rm home wood

LOAN ASSUMPTION - GREAT TERMS 1 - Home
pnced al $32 000 loan bat,nce approx $24 900, 9 1%
APR. monthly payment $261 snctuues 1a. es and
rnsurance Very mer wtl h '2 bedrooms. bath lrvmg
room wrt~ hreplace k1tchen dmrng room. lui
basement Gas heat Un&lt;1t1ached ga r a ~e

#534
WARM AND INVITING THROUGHOUT ex plarns l~s 3
bedroom ranch Lrvrng room dm1ng and krtchen
combrner1. b&lt;1!h. utrlrty room I car garage.
ma1ntenance lree mce stze end lot Pnced tn mtd 30s

and centr al heal
$37,500

Askrng

BEAUTY SHOP - Art equrp
men! goes Own your own
busr ness. busldsng and lot
for only $14.000

Housing
HeadquaFters

JACKSON COUNTY - 105 acre far m 2 story ~d er
home. 3 bedrooms, bath, krtchen wrth burN-mran~ afll
oven. drshwasher. llvrng room Barns. cel lar ard cellar
house

FRAME 1 STORY -

Thrs solr d otdrr home has 4

bedrooms, lrv1ng room. lam1ly room. dtnlnR room.

krtchen. bath NICe lawn 4 lots total Garage, carporl.
cellar house. storage burldrng Warbng Ia be cared lor
#539

tl i 9R4 Ct&gt;ntu rv ! I fWill F.11ti1 lf ( nrporanon iL"~

ll 1 •~ t.Poe

#570
1 BEDROOM FRAME - 3 year o~ ranch wsth approx
1 acre lawn Amenr~es rncludefull balh, k1tchen. drnrng
room l1vrng room, front porch, ~sdm g jjass doors. oh
dtnrng area Pos...:;tble loan assumption w1th !ow mterest

rate
ROOM TO ROAM and oo as you ~ease With lhrs37 acre
parcel Older house. not h vea~e Well Whrle Oak Road
Owner wrll h~ p wrlh part ul linancrng
#587
JUST LISTED - 2 ACRES PLUS NEW HOME - Buy
now and have your cho1ces ol trnr shmg touches 1800
sq H ol liVI ng space 2 baths, for mal drmn ~ oak
cabmets Ill krtchen. large lrv111g room ut1lrty Fm1shed

and ready lor you al $58 900

#599

#515

burnm g lrreplace lamrly rm

#536

PRICED AT $43,000 ANO IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
- 3 bedroom bl·level located at the edge of town
Dmmg area, hvmg room. large lamtly room Garage Nat

gas forced arr heal Nrce lawn Need Ia sell to settle
estate
#578

#514

BUILDING LOT - LANO CONTRACT -

6 2 acres.

Rural water availabl e The terms are selling pnce

$5,500; $2.000 down paymenl 11 w, APR years
nel!)trable
#589
YOUR CHOICE -Buy llirs rarsed ra nch home wrth 3 6
acres or 8 acres

3 bedrooms. 117 baths. lull basement

wsth 24x24 famrly room and stone fireplace, u!1hly
soom. workshop, outbusldrn&amp; rxmd and new fence w~h
8 acres FHA assumable loan
#551
NEW LISTING - RIO GRANDE AREA - Perfect lor
the small famrly 2 bedroom home wslh 9 acre. more or
less. w1th garden and lrurt trees Storage buddrng.
Prrced at $37.000

#585

f?r tht• NAf' &lt;I&gt; l!.ml "' -

t l ademarks of Cemury

:! I Real J:~ tatP ( 'orpor a11on l'nnLPd 11· l S &lt;\ U]ual H ou ~ m~ (lppurtun 1ry G)

EACH OFFICE IS INDI:PENDE~TLYOWNED MDC 'PEKATEO.

Cc n t Jg1ou~.

34 Sou Thern

blackb ir d

35 Prec1ous

stone
36 Falls beh1nrt
37 H aw &lt;luan

9E

~o Sped
4 2 Mour n lui

reduced to $42 000 00
DON'T OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN rn Eureka 11 2 bedrm ho me wrt~
2 halhs and lots of room lor e&gt; pansson Located fUSI oHRt 7. nea. .
dam Pnce $22.000 00
•

J4
used tor 3 or 4 bed rms and wtt hm walktnF; d1stance tram most alii
servrces On $30.000 00
I

• 2-STORY "FEDERAL" BRICK HOME app•ox 2 mrles from Clly.
e lrmrls 3 bcdrms formal drnrng rm 2 wb frreplaces wrth "Honey
Bee' ovens Lg famrly or 1'1 rm , srtuated on approx 1acre of land.•
• buv or ren tll

C!rl1Cii&gt;

•

•

-J
I
1
I
SITUATED NEAR RADIO STATION - 3 Bed rrn home. lamslv rm, I
attached garage. approx 2 acres very pnvate. ho .vever tess ' han l I ·
A FINE DUTCH COLONIAL HOME srtuated rn Galli pol• across lrom
new court oouse 2-3 bedrms . formal drnmg rm . 2 full baths, part
Imbed basement I w b fireplace. parkrng &amp; garage '" rear
Prrced rn 80's

mtle from cny lim1ts Also a beauhlul ln·groun{!
Pr~ced rn 50's

SWlmmme pool

.

•

• LARGE STRUCTURE ALONG 4th AVE. wrlhrn •Rhl ol Wasl 'one
• School, wh~h can be rrtrtrzed !01 • ngle lamrly 01 3 apartments.
Pnce $30,000
·

1

I .

.REMODELED 2-BEDRM HOME along 41h Ave A compacl home

ewrth many new leatures Ideal beginner or retirement home Only •

es21. 5oooo
.•
.151 ACRE FARM wrlh mce house and equspmenl shea • •
~$86.000 00
•
•ADDISON: Near PO 3 bedroom house and ] tots I lot wrth motxle •
•home hookup Lg metal bldg. wrth lwo car garage Fenced yard.
.$29000
•
• APPROX 1 ACRES Of LAND wrth1n lhe crty, has beautrful 3.
bedrm. brrck home. Picturesque ~ew of the Ohso Valley 3 w b.•
• f1replaces and outdoor frreplace - gnll Step-down ls~ng rm.,
• decoraled wrth solid cherry pa~eh n g and lnm Pegged oak ftoors •
Lrbrary wrth ad101n1ng solanum 2'n baths Pnvate office off master.
• bedrm Call Ken Morgan lor addsbonal rnlormahon
•
•
STEP OUT YOUR BACK OOOR ONTO THE GOLF COURSE - We
.have one, 2 bedroom apt lor rent Pnce $1 75 per month AduNs.

.

.~~ -

1 NEW LISTING

15 acres of land near H~zer Hospstal. Spnngheld.
• Twp Topo· level to rollrng Beautsful vrew Developers welcome.

•
•

I

APART~ E NTS FOR RENT
NEED USTINGS - UST WITH US
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1', J;JSIP 8 101
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UC\.,. ·~

I.! hil l'

•

r'l

., I'••

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11 6 Herald1y

mammal

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1!: I Brt'.Jt1

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55 Oan.sh

tG. lUI bearmg

'-, H•.,r"'
'• 1,1 ""

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4 7 Tu1n s 1nstde
oul

wantmg to l1ve 1n a nrce ne1ghOOrhood and close to serv1ces andt

~· ' ( '
! i 'j 1': I

Y'h•ody

~ilk

•

IJS vegeli'!hte

\EO Bm&lt;l'i

S1Qfl 1 1

S ! [u ropean

101 :;J p il &lt;l l ol
Greece

-1' f l ~t tJ

Fl [ r '• t 1!.

10~ Cho~&lt;:es t

~0

r1

\"16 Cruc 1l1 lt

PI Jill

\03 Seed
10 1 D ~st r!' ss

ConS(llril(~

0'] Trdy

0.:0 f v.JI •eli
1 ,-,e-1,r"i

.!

Cor•rr'•l'l
11l ilv

ChOII

Cr1 ng e

'-!I Prtc her s

1:J8 Stumtwr
1~9

~!I'

t hro"ql

W&lt;~ n

44 Nudge

49

~.

\J()

OIIICiill 5

43 'N u1ble

can

ol

scd1m en t
99 P a rt n l
tu cc
tOO 1•bel an
Qdzelle
102 Co tleg ~--'

38 Wo1 m

I'IOod hurner lenceti yrm1 ilncf rn ground sw1mmmg pool Pncel

Dl2pOS I\

95 Caud al
appen dage

J9 Plod

150 rluwPr
15/ [nql• ,I
cu unh

154

Cl 1SC350

I 12 C .11mt&gt;d
I 1·1 Perm1'

•

fi replace, 2 car garage, large covered pat1o II space
mobtle home park 27 acres Gtve a call for more
rntormallon today

911

len er

adapted Iori

I)

CCiJ:JC 1
S m.:~ l l er

Urr der
ot olan t

SE&gt;ap0rt
14 7 81rd',
hom r·s
14'1 G1 •'t·k 1••11, r

92

54 Larn o·s per
name

PERFECT STARTER - Pnced at $39,500 Rustrc slyle

Pnced to sell at $16 500

c arpo~

14 5 11a I&lt;H•

:THIS HOME NEEDS A UTILE 'l L.c.", however. lhe locahon •
.:ood wrll ollsel anv expend•tures A pertect home for someone

#586

krtchen, lrv1ng room. bath. 2 porches, mce srze lot

eel

33 Hebrew

88 TrJns.qre s

Hurt
gwund p art

lloQ ,,•

··"''"

141

89 N 1 mbu~
90 NauiiCJ I

Q:-

J, Li!rt;q•,

D e r~&lt;J t'd

86 Nau a te
SIOnS

92

~

trom

cr11ltl ren

'"l)d"'•'

Narr ow o;tr~o

tlurd Pn
1,13

Mf' d 111

Jb

ot

I'I H' CI S

9S SrT' J II

I 1 1 0C()o1J1~

•
•

3-LEVEL HOME. MOBILE HOME PARK PLUS
ACREAGE - Good locatron Home featu rrng 3,
bedrooms. formal drnsn&amp; lamsly room. 2 baths.

139

Pa n ner

79 Ors tmc110n

ermmes

•
•

open slarrway 10 balcony and 2nd bedroom Lrvrng
room. dmrng 10om. ks\chen, bath wrth ulrlrty am
#561
VINTON VILLAGE - 3 bedroom lrame home wsth

i8

"'rorerty
q I M US ICa l
rr 1&lt;; \t urne nt

1 U1.Jt N

Posses ~

1·11 Con tend
142 Beas t or

26 M olh ! 1ea
30 1 rcllnq '&gt;
32 Teut o•11 C
derr y

I

2 bedrooms hv111g room wtlh open beam cetl1ng and

SMALL - Bul near ly one
rt cre 4 r m ~ bath coat lur

Remodeled

3 BEDROOM FRAME RANCH - Just oil Rt 218
E.:ll
1n k1tchen. tamtly room two baths 2 car

already done New k1tchen. new bath. lovely f1reptace

but st1ll work Ia be done I acre wrlh rural waler and
seplrc lank Prrced at $19000
#552

PRICE RE DUCEO on thrs Mergs County kll Excellenl
busldrng srte Baum Addrtron Water lap rncluded
Ressdenlral only

Nte e ca rpe!Lng equ rp ped
kr tch en. cen tral h!'al on I 3
acres. t1bl P,&lt;H ilp,r Only

NI CE

#547

fmrshed basement Pnced rn the 50s

NEW liSTING - One ttoor
S rms lull basement home

and lu ll

Tsllable acreage on lop Nu ledse

;parCIOIJS roomS, some remodelrn g

garage Rur al water Centr al aH Vm yl Siding. Full

lol on Hr' h St $35 000

nace

lias mmeral rtRhts. creek ru ns through \he property

1J6

gJ m es
Ell\ S tronq

WI CL! I h

• 3 BEDRM. HOME - Ranch style, lg

•

77 Lrber;J tc

hat .,.. Om&lt;1 1

82 Se1 of

24 Pass ageway
25 Transqress
26 Vap1d

I

.A HANDY. DANDY LOCATION along Ga rt~eld Ave Horne

l x\ra home sties Rea dy to sell Call now

1-(614) · 992 · 3325

Lots of storage Auto garage door

2

•
•
•

IJ:,~ r

sentence

amend s

I
Lower 1

111 ~ \1ument

16 Ana lyze a::;

Ga lil ee
23 Ma k. e

•

I:JJ Mu s 1c al

76 S1lo&lt;;wo rm

90 1\e rn at

&lt;.~Jnn,

2'ol r•h;t, ..,rr,

0111:(!

an ~rna l s

.

u~,~r

;

wOOd
140 In a dd1\1 o n

2 1 Lasso

• Rrver Rd $81 000 00
NEW LISTING - J n eu rr •·,;;;g;~ ;,ih nrce garden area Pn •
•
• serVICe alley In rear car &amp;
.$38.500 00
•
• APPROX 1 1/ l ACRES wrthrn City hmrls. zones com mercral, alongl
• Sl Rt 7 Pncc red uced Ia $25 000 00

•

169 ACRES MORE OR LESS - Srx room remodeled

216E 2ndSt

-

1 trr eplace w basement

#588

VIRGIL B. SR .

mrnded
per son

ENJOY THE PRIVACY ~ livrng on your own 2'' acre ·spread" 41
bedrm~ lg hvrng rm w/ wb It replace, formal d1nmg rm . modern
f krtchen wst h bsra~lasl bar 13'x36 recreation area ws\h WB

2 bedroom home Mobrle home I'Cio~up Look1ng
tor ~ n rnv estmenP G1ve us a Cilll on thts one

TEAFORD

t l Nar row-

•1 f

hotdwg

74 Bur•c wtrg

22 Telr arch ol

•

fi VCI

Real Estate General

op 1n 1o n s

IJ~ lllOSl:'

1er~d

pr ofe ssed

I

e apporratrnenttt

#597

nap
72 Encoun

11

ln c ~ penSIJE

6 Ser or

l [w/l~replce). 2 car ga,ge and work area 2 baths Call for an

hf'dr ooms 2 bat h~ K1n g automatiC wood burner dr1ller1
well 30'd0' barn ;;II IUS! watl1n g lor ~·ou

20 W Slrmson Ave
Alhen~ , Oh.

I

and co mtortabiP lireplace Formal dmmg and l1 vtng rm .•

NEW LISTING - HAVE IT ALL - 38 acre larm plus
14·, 70' mobrte home cosnplelely lurnrshed. 3

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES, INC.

A CROSS

NESTLED IN TREES and only 'I mrle below Gallspol1s along Lowere
tRrvct Rd . 4 bedrm ho me wrlh a beautsful solid psne paneled den.

#559

l9851ri -1-150 Irs-Mota
for the "fast at Heart"

• room library, lam11y rm deck s arK! many more amentbes
•
f today los an appornlmenl
.NEW LISTING - C omfo ~a bl e 3 bedroom home localed alan.
Marn St Vrnton 43 x200· lot wrth 3 outburldrngs Buy now fore
• $20 000
.BEAUTIFUL BRICK 3 BEDRM. HOME wsth2 1h acre; 7yrs old.IUsl.
eoH Brdweii-Rodney Rd Elec heal pump, hreplace, cent vacuum
. syslem $70,00000
·
•
COMMERCIAL BUILDING m Vrnton. has 2 apls wrlh potenbal for.
• rentrng 3 unrts Pnce reduced to $30.000 00
l3 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RD. - 2 wslh Raccoon Creek frontage,.
1 lot w~h elec and sepuc lank Ready lor your motxle home •
f$ 5,00000 &amp; $7.50000 each
•

I

rngrou nd pool Approx II acres

COMING lOON

SUNDAY PU ZZLER

PRICE REDUCED on thrs 2 story Federal
oome locatled along •
Vme SL Galh~JVIrs 3 bedrooms. 21\ baths, cent a11. format
•

I

woods 3 bedrooms 2 full baths, krlchen w1!h drnmg
area lar!e lrv1n1 roo m wslh lrr epl ace oatro lovely

1.877

••

Don't mrss lhrs buy

Cheshrre Townshrp 3
ap pr o~ 5 acres
of land, pasture and woods Home ss only 5 years old
NEW LISTING - GOOD

TRISTATE
UPHOL STERY SHOP
116 3 Sec Ave . Ga ll1p oll s
614 · 446 783 3 o r 6 1tl 44 6
1833

REDUCED $10.000 - OWNER NEEDS TO SELL NOW1
- Roule 35 West localron 3 bedroom lrr -level 1''

#538

YAMAHA 215
DE lUXE Wrth lronl and rear sus
pensmn. elec slarl. shah drrveand
much more
Was ' 1.799
Now 11.669

INTRODUCING ...

PRICED REDUCED AND EASY TERMS' - Pr~ced at
o11ly $29,900. 3 bedroom s ranch wslh anachcd
Cilrport L1vrng room bath, ultl1ty, kitchen and dm mg
area I, ac re lawn Rectntly pamt ed and new ca rpet

NEW '84

NEW '85 YAMAHAULER 200
Same as '84 empt st has the regu·
as 5 speeds for.ard plus reverse
Was 11.869
Now $1.769

sty! P. home rs lookm g fnr a new ow ner Lrvm g room
Otn111g room lam1lv roam. k1lchen. lurnace room
Forced au 011 lurnace. also woodbur ner Barn tobacco
base 6 acres $25 000
#537

&lt;1• t1CI('
~~ 1 ~·&gt;'rnhnl

ln r

COli' 0

£- \

10.1 •.

I'&gt;'

:,llfl qod

1'l- p, '!.11n1n(]
r·

�Pass

D-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

June 17, 1984

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

Features

Turnaround seen
by Robbins &amp;
Myers officials
DAYTON -

Robbins &amp; Myers

Inc . continued to build turnaround
m om entum wil h lncrf'asC'd profit s
fo r the third q uanrr a nd first mne

months of fi sca l 19i!l
For the th r!'&lt;' months e nded Ma)
31, Robbtn• &amp; Mvrrs had net
income of $1 m ill ion. or .t-::1 cent s pc&gt;r
share, on sa ll--s of $43.2 million.

J

substantial improvPm Pnt O\'C'I' fi s-

cal 1983 third qua t1er lusSl's of $1.6
mUiion o r 67 cents pc·r ~harf' on
sa les of $42 .4 m illion.
For the fi rst nine mon ths of fiscal
1984, Robbins &amp; Myf'r s had nf' t
lncomP of $2 millio n. or R1 Cf'nts. pPr
shaT'(' on sa lf"s of $1:!0 m i llion
compared "-i lh lossf's of ,'iiJ 9 m!l1on

or $1 .64 p&lt;&gt;r share on sa les of $122
million for the compa ra ble p&lt;'l'i&lt;xt
in 1983.
Backlogs a t the r nd of the th ird
quarter were $50.9 million. up fmm
$36.8 million a war c•a r lier a nd $-!9.6
million at thl' l'nd of the s('('ond
qua rte r .
Fred G. Wa ll. presi dmt a nd r hie f
executive officf', r sa id t h ~ll "JII
three of the compa ny's OJX' rati ng
divisions w erf' prufi tabl(' and
achieved gains ovf'r both thr th ird

qua rter of 198.3 a nd

th~

first two

quartprs of the cu rr r nt fi scal Vf'&lt;:tr "
He said tha t "thr ga ins con tin ur
to reflect a morf' than two vf'a r
corporate-widf' program of reor ganizing and downsizing lhf' com pany' s operations. rPdu c ing ovf'rhead and rcdir('('tin g mMk rring
thrust s into nr w und grov.:ing
a reas ." Hr not('(! th at " th•' assf't
reductions and profit s a Iso st rPng thent'd the comp Jn~· ·s ba lanr f'
shet&gt;t eon si d 0rabl y i n rrcf' nt
m onths." He s ta tl&gt;d "&lt;JII short trrm

bank debt had b&lt;'Pn r·~pa id for th&lt;'
firs t t ime sincp 1979."
The Robbins &amp; M\WS l'hi Pf
exff'utive officC'r sa id th;1t th t'
company's ''rf's ult ~ fur thf' first
ninr m onth.'i o f 19&amp;1 Jugur wPI I fo r
thf' year as a whol p . WI' fPf' l the•
compan y and its O!)('r a t ing di\'·
i sions w ill coni inuf' to bf&gt;1wfi t from a
gro"''i ng ('{'Onom y .·'
Wall said t hf' Fluids H ~1 ndlin g
Division had ri sing sa les in both thC'
industrial and oil fi eld sr&lt;:tors of it s
business and ac hif'vf'd J C'OtTf'S ·
(X&gt;nding gain in operating incom r in
compar\son to r(-sult s for thf' t hird
quartPr la st yra r.
"Result s in thr di v ision 's inclustrial sPctur WPH' spur ]"('(j h\· sa]('-; in
Ca nada and a 20 pC'rrr nt inrrr:Jsf' in
thP sa IPs of n•p&lt;.~ i r pari s.·· sc1id \\' ;Jil

,.. . . . .. ··•

- __...

G allipolis a rea no lo n ~r r h ; l \ "f' 10
hun t. gues.s, or wo ndc• r ~ txJut thf'
current tim£' , Wf'&lt;:.~ t hPr. ~ ~ nd tf' m !Jf'!'

a tuw Thanks to C&amp;S lli nk. til(•
Ga llipoli s commu ni! _
\ ca n now
obtain thf' curr f' nt w t..,;Jtht· l· fon•cast. in addition to th&lt;' timt· and
tempera turP by· dialin g -~ i-i - RA t\' 1..:

(226.1 r.
"We r f'al izf'ti I he· nc...•d for our
communit y to ha\.:p .1 loeali t.Pd
time. wr alhf'r, t:l nd t£' m Pf're1lu rf'
servlcf' in Callipolt" and surrou nd
ing arf'a s bt.'Ca usf' th(•s£' vari&lt;.t b lP~
a ft PCI thf' li vf's of f'\.'PryonP," s~d d
Rober t Hcnnf'sy·. as . . ls l ant deC'
pres ld~nt

of C&amp;S fla nk

"Th i'

service wi ll tx&gt; &lt;l\'ai l] 11lf' to r; tllf'r-.;
24 hours a da_v. ~·\·f' n da _
\ ·;., ; 1 wf'l'k ."

Henn!'Sy addro .
Locatl&gt;d dirPctl ~ · nn C&amp;:!-; H;1 nk 's
premises, thf• nt •w cli ~ita!l _v O[X'r
a ted Timr-Wl•a t hP r -'['P mpC'r a r u IT'
(TWTI systf'm pn l\'idf's t hrcnrrrr l
lime (acc uratf• to lhf' nrarf's t
minutPL currf' nl lf'rnJ)('r:IIUJl' w e
cura tP to lhf' nf';trf'st liPJ...'TI 'f'l, a nd
th e G a ll ipol i..., o~ n•a Wf'Jt hPr
fo rf'C as !
Wea ther inform ati on is supvliPd
from thP Nati ona l w(~at hf' r Sf'r Vi('('
and hou rl .v Wf'a t hr r obsC'rV&lt;.J 1ion s
from thP FC'df' r a l Aviati on Admini s·
tration . F'orf'C'as ts arf' u!X!8. tr'd a
min imum of two tim('S a da y b.v a

staff of drgrPerl mr tm rolog-ists
from The Audic hron r n.'s wrathrr
centrr locatf'd in i\tl anta , c;a.
Aud!c hron m a nufarturPs thf' new

digiTal syst~m .
"The dr grff of accurarv of lhc
setvlce Is rem arkable." sa id Hen·
nesy. " The time Is announr ro to the
nearest minut(', but in ta rt. thf'

I'QUlpment is op&lt;&gt;ratln g to a to lr r-

Shoemaker
released
COLUMBUS. Ohio IAPt - Lt .
Gov. My rl H. Shoema ke r was
released on Saturday from Rivers ide Hospllal. wher~ ht• had been a
pallent since June 8.
111E' 71-year-old lieutenan t gol'rrnor had surge ry to res rri r l thP
growth of pros laic cancer.

. _,..

In the division's oll field sector.
"busi ness is up s ubstantially for
both t h•• new a nd expanding line of
down-hole pumps a nd for 'the
M o:'-'no m otor component for din~c­
tiona l drilling f'C!Uipment. ''

Wa ll sa id the Motor and Control

Section ~

June 17, 1984

RUTLAND - Localed In
Weslem Meigs County, the
village was originally seWed by
pioneers from Vennont and
Massaclrusetl!i In 1799. The
village - whose name derives
from two New England lowJL'i lnoorporaled In 1913, eslabll&lt;iblng ltself as a C('Jiter of fllftlling
and coal mining. As of 1980,
census officials report, Ru·
Uand's population was 666.

S_vstf' m s D ivision " had a strong
qua rt er in orders . shipments and
pro fit a hi l it ~· - both in compari son

to I hP thi rd qua n er of last year a nd
thP sPCOnd quarter of 1984. The
division's Electro-Craft Corp . is
benC'fit ing both fro m the improvem em s in the gener al C'COnomy and
thP unit's continued penetration of
fa ctor:.· automat ion a pplica tions.

"Thl' thrust in factory automat

ion is basPd on an expa nd ing lin&lt;' of

prod uc ts s pt'dfica lly designed to
mwt thr df'm a nding conditions of

indus I ria l dut .v a nd the dPve lopmcnt of m rH ket ing and di stribu t ion
cha nnr! s to serve thi s grov.-ing
market ·

\\' all said the Comfort Condition·
mg Oi\·ision "continu es to benefit

from il.., I\\ 'O ~'car reorga niza tion
program w ith risin g O!X"ra ting
pmfits. dPsp il, ~ ct d C"C'Iin£' in sa les
dUC' to markf'l m aturity and (h('
lung -t rrm m ii rkct tr r nd tow ard
lowrr pricr-d im portf'd Cf'iling fa n
produ cts.
" T hf' di\·ision's break -even point

has been redu ced to a third of what
it w as t\vo years ago . enabling thP
di v ision tu DJ)(' ratr profltabl~· at
muc h lowPr ~a lps lew •ls. In addi tion . im·pnt oriPs and n:'Crlva blrs
are dow n subs tantially, as afC' thr
wor ki ng ra pit al and fixf'd asse t ~
nt't"'dC'd to DPf'r a tP lh l' businC"Ss.''
Wa ll sa id .
"A" pL! rt of a npw markptin g
progra m aimf"d a t broadening it s
custom £'r base. !hC' division intrucl uc-f'd ;_t new low profi!C' criling fan
w hich r£' pt' PSf' nt s th r Hunter
hranrfs fi rst entr).· into lhC' lower
pri c0-point L.Jn markC'I ." 1-fp sa id
tT'('f'ption to the new prcxluct has

bem strnng Wall noled that thr
division \\-·as al so bcnf' filing from it s
increasC'd s&lt;J lrs to m ass mPr c h an·
disPrs and w as r ondur ling m u lti ·
storC' IC'S is with a number of largr
nat ional chain s.
Robbins &amp; Myr r&lt;; Inc is a
diversifif'd ind ustri al and consumer
good s ma nufa cturing compa ny
\dth plan ts in thP Uni!Pd State's and
Ca naJa. Thf' compan).''s product
li nt..,s includf' ceiling fans. r lec tric
motor s and con trols. and industrial
pumps.

Time, weather number
available at C &amp; S
GALLIPOLIS- RPside nts nf thc

'tm.... - lttidiittl

anrf' ot on£' S('('Ond J)f'r mont h."
U p -to- r hf'·minui C' IC' m!)('ra t ures
a rf' possihlf' hN.' ausC' of CJbl(' links
!11 &lt;I n f'l retroni c thf' rmom f' l('l" on I hf'
l1ank huildi ng wi t h lhf' r('{'Ordln g
~1pp a ratu ~ T hC' lhf'rmomrt Pr Sf'nds
; 1 signa l 1nlo thr ma chinf'. wh ic h
trip &lt;.; lhf' tf' m!)f'ra!UI'C' drvir f'. pul l ing thP !'f'('nrd i ng on linf' .
.Janf' Barbr is th C' voir r on th e
nf'w TWT Sf'rYirf' . .lanC' is onC'of thf'
rhrP(' primar y profrss ional voices

hra rd b.'' millions througl1out the
wo rld .
Pio n('('r s and invC'ntors of thP
lf'lf' phonf' timr ] nnou nC'f'mr nt sysTf'm s. 1\uc!ic hro n also m a nu f acrun.&gt;s rhr svstf' m usro b~' thr U.S.
\'a ti o nal Rurf'au of Sta nd~lrds a nd
ttw Cana d ian Dominion Obs('rva
J() t'\' , whi c h broa dcast stand a rd
tirnr signals and provicl(' the
p rimal~- audibiC' timf' referPnC'P for
thf' \t\'C' str rn J-lf'misphC'rf'.

SAFE S11JDENTS REalGNIZED- Several members oltheSAFE
(Student Ambassadors for Free Enterprise) program at the Emerson
E. Evans Sehool of Business Management were recognized for
Individual achievements. Members of the program are, from left, front
row, t\lan Terry, Jackson: Robert Fri&lt;;by, Wellston; Debbie Tufts,
Portsmouth; Sandy Mershon, Rio Grande, and Unda Lester, Rio
Grande; semnd row, from ieh, lllark RIHe, Dayton; Dawn Swingle,

WeUston; Brad Johnson, Jackson; Bert Colvin, GaiUpolis; Ted Combs,
Chagrin Falls; and Allen Azar, uttle Hocking. Swingle woo the Wall
Street Joumal Award for· outstanding academic achievment, while
Ginger Bouts of Oak Hill won outstanding marketing student award.
Marilyn Souders of Wellston won the outstanding accounting student
awanl, and the dean's awanl was given to i\zar and Combs.

Village View: Rutland

Yesterday and today,
a center of farming
and coal mining

•
•
Business consolidation pace conttnutng
By,JAMEi F. PELTZ
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP)
The
consolida tion of U.S. bus iness con·
linues a t a br isk pace , although
obsetvcrs say one contributor to the
merger fever could dissipate a s the
year ruUs on .
The contributor In question is the
leve raged buyout, whe re a small
gruu ~ of investors - often including
U1e ta rget company' s m a nagers acquires a company and takes it
private using largely borrowed
fu nds. The idea is to pa y back the
loans wilh money generated by the
acquired company' s op&lt;&gt;rations or

the sale of its assets.
The nwnberofleveraged buyouts
doubled in the first quarter com·
pared with a year earlie r. to 19from
e ight, according to W.T. Grimm &amp;
Co., a Chicago fitm thai tracks
m erger s and acquisitions.

Twe lve of those 19 transactions
were valued at more than $100
million, for a total of $.35 billion - a
tour-fold increase from a year
earlier .

Overall, corporate m erger activity in the firs! quarter climbed 31
percent from a year earlier, to 710
drals from 540, Grimm said this pa st
week.

Stock rally predicted

111E'value of all thedealsforwhich
prices were disclosed shot up 245
percent to a record$48.3 billion from
$14 billion in the first qua rte ro!l983
However, the dollar value would
have been unchanged had It not been
for four mergers involving energy
companies. which alone accounted
for $34 .2 billion, or 71 percent, of rhe
first -quarter deals .
Two of those acquisitions were the
largest in U.S. corporate historyStandard Oil Co. ofCallfomia 's$13.3
billion purchaSP of Gulf Corp. a nd

Texaco Inc.'s $10.1 billion buyout of
Getty Oil Co.
Part of the upswing in merge&lt;rs
over the past 18 months reflects a
stronger !'COnomy, which allowed
companies to tap the ir own lmprov·
ingcash positions to buy other fitms,
and an availabilityoffinanclngfrom
banks and other outside sources.

NOW RENTING
VHS MOVIES

Public Notice

By LARRY EWING

counties.

Times-Sentinel StaH

The name of Rutland was given to both the small
village and Its surrounding township. In 1913, L'le
village Incorporated. !'Stablishing itself as a centerof
farmlng and coal mining. Those two industries
remain a staple of the area's economy.
According to the county's history book, published in
1979, Rutland was known, during the late llros by at
least two nicknamE'S- "The Corner" and "The Hub. "
In 1915, the Rutland Joint High School was
constructed. The building, while vacant, stUI stands .
It was abandoned for educational purposes In the late
1900s, with the Incorporation of the Meigs County
school system.
Loca ted next to the old high school is the Rutland
Civic Center. The building, which once served as a
gymnasium, was deeded to the village and renovated
for ·civic fu net ions in the early 1980s.
The village's park spreads out behind the civic
center.
In addition to hosting civic affairs - dances,
banquets, concerts - the center also houses the
village's government office and the Rutland EMS.
The facility, explains Mayor John Miller, is heated
by gas derived from a village-owned well.
Early this century, the village was the home of the
Rutland Golf Course. Since dissolved, the course ran
through what is tcxlay the city park and the football
field .
Rutland Township can boast participation in the
first " improved" road in Meigs County. In the first
quarter of the century, the slate agreed to finance the
road if the township would pay a sha re of the cost . The
township did and the r!'Sult is Ohio 124.
Road maintenance continues to be an Important
aspect of the area's governmental concern as Mayor
MUter lists street paving as the village 's "number one
priority."
For the future, Miller sees the upgrading of
Rutland's water system as a major goal .
The mayor points to the recent establishment of a
number of small shops and bus inesses as an
indication of the area's renewed growth .
Earlier this month, thevUlageentered into contract
wtth Angel Communications of Portsmouth for the
installation of a cable-TV system .
Construction on the system is expected to begin
wtthin a month, wtth comple tion tentatively
scheduled by the end of s ummer.

RlJlLAND - The village of Rutland derives its
name from two New England towns - Rutland. Vt.
and Rutland , Mass. Located in WI'S tern Meigs
County, the 'illage was originally settled by pioneers
'from those two s!Jltes in 1799.
According to the "Meigs County, Ohio History
Book," the first settlemenT was made by Brewster
Higley near the mouth of Leading Creek.
In 1812, by act of the iegisiatw-e of the new Slate of
Ohio, the few residents were given power to organize
a township out of what was then a part of Gallia
County. Meigs County was formed later, in June 1819,
from parts of Gallla, Athens and Washington

!Continued from PagP 0 ·21
Il l' 1 011'-;l d Pr • d ()11 lh•
[llf

ol

1•. 1' ·,

rnt.rr lrnr,11n 1 [)" !
Pans 1 thru 25

NEW YORK iAPI Wall
Streeters are offtoanea rlystart th is
year talking up lhe chances fo r a
good old -fashioned "s umme r
rally. "
The idea that stock prices can be
relied on to risf' every yea r during
the sununer months may be&gt;

grounded more 1ll my th !han fact.
But it 's some thing ntce to think
a bout a t a time when a lot of
inves tors could

U Sl'

some

ch('('ring

up .
"Nf'arly summf'r1imf'. and a
hrokf'r's life ain't f'asy,'' sa id .Jay

Donnaruma . an analyst at C. L.King
&amp; Associates . wilh no apologi es to
George Gershwin . "S toc ks aren't
jumping and the bond markr t has
died ."
Actually , anal)'sts a t Wright
Investors Sc tvice In Bridgeport,
Conn .. pointed out. there is some
sta tistica l support for the hope of a
summer rally.

"The period from the e nd of May
through the Pnd of August has
traditionally been the st rongest
three-month ppriod of the year for
stock ~rices," they said.
" End-of-Ma y to e nd -of-August
increases in the stock ma rke t have
been posted mor&lt;' Ihan fiOp&lt;&gt;rcent of
the time during the 20th century, for
a n average gain of 3.2 percent ln

e lf'&lt;'tion years. the inc reases have
averaged 6.7 p&lt;&gt;rcent."
t:lf&gt;spite that past record, Wright
says, It is "doubtful that the stock
market Is about to make a decisive
move higher any time soon.'' The
firm riled uncertainty about the
nation's economy and federal
budget deficit and said stocks still
ar£'

no bargain.

Man y marke t participan ts
SE'C'med to share !hose feelings in the
past week as they watc hed the Dow
J ones average of 30 industrials sink
below 1.100 to new 15-month lows.
The widely recognized average of30
blue chips tumbled 44.35 10 1,006.90.
OthPr readings for the week
showed the New York Stock
Excha nge composite index down
j.JGat 86.1 7, andtheAmerlcanStock
Exchange market va lue index 1.01
lower at 199.18.
Big Board volume averaged 77.16
million shares a day, against 83
million the week before.
"The inv!'Stmenl markets ha ve a
grpat deal to swallow thi s summe r ,
much of il nor very palatable," said
Greg Smith a t Prudential-Bache
~uritiPS .

il.rn. ·r•.
('. r l r, r
'v1• ·,rJ•, H d V " t n·~

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1«",

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rn •tl o' )1rri r1orl&lt; l r •n l''':i. ll
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o~ rn(• u n t

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Of hiS bid. l"&gt;u ! ,,.
I'"'•·~~" l rl ty

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i'r)•1d ' o11 ten

•nr11,-.

I'() 0'\, l 'rll

,nd •i ll 14 dl ' n1 1

per cent of his bid.

il ,Jy, lbl r· ! ' th ~' D •r r ·r ! •J I
j \ ,. j r j, I
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l nl " '~' lnr ( 11J,) " ' ' ,d &lt;•l ll
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r.n l rlt• rn th' 0.-.u .lli ' ''' 11 1t
f r .ln&lt;;pr&gt;ll(ll rn n ,l•l !"\ 'Ill' 11 ll •r , , 11

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WARRf N .I

SMtiH

D l l~ft

IOH

We've Got
"All the Right Moves"

ELLIOTT'S

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
hi ll!' 10 17
r-------------1'-------------

The Federal Reserve. he noted.
" has done a very delicate balancing
act so far between being the lender
oflasl resort and fighting inflation."

OW mGH SCHOOL- In 1915, the Rutland
High School was coMtructed. The building, whlle
vacant, still stands. It was abandoned for educational
purposes in the late 1900s, with the Incorporation of the
Meigs County school system.

·,

VULAGE VIEWS - A blcen·
wnnial memorial, above, stands
oo the vDiage's mlni·park. II ''
dedicated: "In memory of thos&lt;•
who served and gave their lives
for our country." Located nex I to
the old high school is the Rutland
Civic Center. The huildin,;, leh,

which once served as a ~·Ina­
slum, was deeded lo the villaRe

1984 B~ick Park A venues

and renovated for civic fundion~

4 to Choose From

•

"Last of the Big Luxury Cars"
'85 models on display
See Harland Wood, Bob Brickles, Jim Cochran
or Greg Smith

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
1ST FLOOR

in the early 198Qs. Tire villaR~·,
main park spreads out behind
the civic center.

�Page

E-2-The Sut .day Timi!S-Sentinel

Junll 17, 1984

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio ":'' Plecnant, W. Va.

; ~Ohio

Poll' gives residents a feel of how
the state campares to national mood

CINCIN NATI (AP) -Four times
a yPar, the Institute for Polley
Research gets on the telephone to
see what Ohioans think about what's
gomg on in their state and country.
For the past 2 ~ years, the
institute at the Universltv of
Cincinnati has been ga~ging
Ohioans' fwlings about evel)'thing
from politics to the death pena lty .
The res ults, reported twice a
month a s the "Ohio Poll ," give
Ohioans a feel for how their s tate
compares to others and the national
mood . lt a lso puts Ohio in the
company of states with polls,
according to institute director AI
Tuchfa rlx&gt;r, an assoc ia te professor
of political -;c ience.
"There's a trend toward sta te
polls," said Tuchfarlx&gt;r, who has
I(Uld&lt;'d the institute 's gro~N1h from
an internal service group in the
ear ly 1970s to a wide- m nging
research group. About 30 states
havp TPgularly produced polls. In
Ohio, UC's institu te ts the only entit y
to regularly gaugepu blicsent iment,
according to Tuchfarber. ThP
University of Akron a nd the Akron
B&lt;&gt;acon .Journal coll abora tp on the
only othf'r SPmi -rPgu lar surveys of
Ohioans. he sa id .
" But a s rar as wc• re awarr·.
there' s nobody e!Si' who does it on a
regular year-in, yea r-out basls," he
sa id .
Fund&lt;'d primarily by the umver·
s ity, Ohio Poll s urveys are made
four times a year, v.ith Ohioans
questioned on a variety of topics .
Results a!1' released over the next
few months, Tuchfarber said .
It 's not surprising tha t there
aren't more groups doing sta tewide
polls, Tuchfarber said. One poll
costs about $15,!XXJ, with about $3,00J
of tha t in long-dista nce telephone
charges, he said.
" It' s a hard business to c rack
into, " Tuchfarlx&gt;r sa id.

Tuchfarber and the Institute
started the poll In the earl,y 19711;,
when he was a part·tlme graduate
student at UC. He set up a
behavortal sciences laboratory In
1971 primarily to provide consulting
services for students and faculty . By
1973, the group was doing more
surveys and outside work, evolving
In to a research Institute. It was
expanded and renamed In 198L
"We've just lx&gt;en gradually
building our survey capabilities and
other capabilities - evalua tion
research, regional econonnlcs, his·
tory of communities and neighbor·
hoods, different things," he said.
"Really, the Ohio Poll lsasmaUpart
of our total survey effort. It
represents no more than 25 percent
of our total survey effort."
The Institute has diversified Into
jobs for private and publicorganiza·
!ions as well as the university. For
example, the staff of about 70 Is
currently doing TPsearch on Cincin·
na ti public schools, Queen Cily
Metro, and the l!HJ census results

for southwest Ohlo.
"We're constantly doing new and
cill!erent sorts of work, solt'snotas If
we're always doing straight political
stuff or straight public policy stuff.
There's a tremendousdiverslty,"he
said.
"We've done work for literally
hundreds of different groups - the
c ity or Oncinnatl, the state of Ohio,
the health department, the economlc development department,
the consumer council , Procter &amp;
Gamble, the Community Chest, the
Red Cross, Blue Cross-Blue Shield,
Wa rner Amex. There's almost no
sector of the economy or the
community that we haven't he lped
wlth some survey we've done or
some research project that we've
done."
About 00 percent of the institute
funding Is from grants and contracts
for ouislde work. Tuchfarlx&gt;r be·
lleves the Institute has developed a
reputation for delivering solid
TPsearch on time, makinglteasle rto
get outside jobs. It Is trying to

expand Its base statewide, and
hopes for a good national reputatlon
In live to 10 years.
The most rewarding part of the
work forTuchfarlx&gt;r Is the chance to
~lp shape decisions.
"It's very diverse, It's cha!Jeng.
lng, and It has a potential of making
a real cill!erence to what happens In
a community or In a state," he said.
"In other words, we have the ability
by doing this work to help the
decision-makers In the declslon·
making process.
"We don't think that surveys
makedecisions. Wedon'tthlnkthat
surveys provide leadership. Politi·
clans and businessmen and other
Individuals in our society m ake
decisions and they lead .
" But surveys and the other kinds
of research that we do provide
frequently the information they
need to help make those decisions
a nd to help lead. So we set' ourselves
as an Integral part of the decisionmaking process, bu t not as decision·
makers ourselves."

By DIANE 1\1. BALK

A.!JsociaiAld Press Wr!Wr

nJ&gt;!I.I

l. '

.'Vi,~·~.
;&gt;

.

ON POlLS - AI Tuchfarber, director of the Institute for Polley
Research at the Unlver..lty of Cincinnati, makes a point during an
interview last week In his office at the university . ( AP Laserphoto).

Oh1o has a lot for you to do and see. And the best part is. you do n't have to go Jar to have fun You II

m ents wert' set ar $~a month in a

information. reservatio ns. directions. current weather conditions. for anythin g you need to know

!~liS.

An antenupt ia l agreement is a
contract in which the part ies in a
fort h-coming marriagP d ivulge
tllcir assets to mch other a nd agree
on the divis ion of all property in the
evmt they should get a divorce.
Such contracts normally involve
partners who have lx-cn m arried
pn:oviously, as was thP rasf' wit h
Gross and his fiance .
At the time of their marriage in
1968, Gross listed asset s of $~.00J .
But during the years of their
marriage, which en ded in divorce in
1982, those assets grew to $B million.
Gross, who owns sever a I Pepsi·
Cola bottling franchises , was shown
in court rPC'Ords to haw• an annual
gross income of abou t $2JO,l0l.
He sought to enforce in Franklin
County Common P it'a s Court the
agreeme nt which said that if
awarded alimo ny bv a court, Mrs.
Gross would n •cei\T• o m aximum of

$200 a rnonlh fur !0 vcars . The
agn,.,ment alw g a n' h!'r all
rPsident ial

fumj shi ngs

and

an

a utumoi:&gt;ilf' .
The Fra nklin Countv court held
that thr £J ntenup1ial a g-rf'f'ment was
valid and f'nfo rc eablf'. How£'v('r , thC'
lOth Di s trict Oh io Court of Appeals
rt'vl•r'SE'd tha t finding o n ,:;munds
tllat the contrac t could not be
pnforced b&lt;&gt;ca u"' one of the marriagE' part ne-rs was found a t fault i.n
the divorce proceedings.
In the proceedings, Gross had
heen found RtJilty of gross negl€&lt;:t .
But the Suprpme Court , in
reversing the appea ls court, he ld
that marital misconduct such as
neglect does not void an agreemen I
unless it is a part of the agreeme nt.
Associa te .Justice Robert E .
Holmes , writing the opinion which
otherwise upheld thPcontract, c ited
what h&lt;" caUf'd a dra m atic Increase
in Mr. Gross' Income during the
marriage.
In part. the dec ision sa id "under
the facts here, In light of the law
pronounced in thls opin ion. we find
the provisions for maintenance
wlthln this agreement unconsclonat&gt;le as a matter of law and voidable
by Mrs. Gross."
The decision ret urned the case to
common pleas court for f\Jrth!'r
deli berations wlth regard to the
amount of the support payments.

Check the guide and plan to ge t away soon. And remember to phone first before you leave. for

ATIRACTIONS/
AMUSEMENTS
Zoos &amp; Theme Parka
An1mal Cracker Park
logan 16141 3~5 3940
Columbus ZOO
Powell !6 14 1889 947 1
Paradtse Lake Famtl y
Entertamment Park
Cambndgc 1614 1432 3007
Ttmber Run Arc h e ~ Park
Alexan dna 16 1•1) 9 4 4261
Wyd1u.Ju1 Lake Amusemen t Pari&lt;.
Puwell! 614 1889 .9283
Museums
Ath ens Coun ~ Museum
Athens 16141 9362 16
B~ l mont County Museum
BarneS\..'ille 1614) 425 -2926
Cambridge G lass Mu !&gt;eum
Cambndge (614 ! 432 -3045
Ce nter of SctenrP &amp; Indu stry
Columbus (614) 22H -6:J&amp;l
Coloma! Inn Museum
O.d Wo&gt;hmglon lb i 414K9 -:,123
De ntal Mu seum
B•tnbndge 1614 1634 2228
o,....~e n ha rt PapeTVJe1gh t &amp; Glass
Mu!*' um
Cambndge !614 i 4J2 2626
Fayette Count y Museum
Washm~ton Court Hou~
!614 13 5.2953
Fr~ nkli n House Museum
(hillimthe (6141772 -1936
Fru nkh n Pa rk Conservi'ltoj'
Columbu; 16141 222 744
Gnadenhu tt en Museu m
Gnaden hutten i614i 254 -4143
Guern ~ ey Count\.' Museum
C•mbndge 161 11.132 2959
Jdpdnew Edu ca non Cen ter
Westerville (6 14) HR2 2&lt;)64
,)f'lff'r'Mln Co unt y
H1s tori rnl Muse un1
~1 f'u b enVJIIe (614 1 ~H 3 1J3J
John'&gt;Dn Humnckhouse Muse um
C0shor ton thl4) b2l -H710
Kelt on House
Columbus lbl 4! 464-2022
Nanonal He1se~ Glass Museum
Newatk t61 41 45 2932
Natmnal Road- Zane G ray
Museum
Norwtch 16141 872 3143
Oh1o Historical Cen ter
Col umbus 16141466-1500
Oh1o R a il we~y Muse um
Worthington ~614) H85-734S
O h1o River Muse um
Monena t6141373 -3750
Old Temperance House Museum
Newcomer5town 1614) 498-7152
Pa rif:. Museum &amp; Dai7c Museum
Chi! iccthe 1614) 472- 933
Robbins Hunter Muse um
Granville t6141 587 .0430
Ross County Historical Museum
Ch11liccthe 16141 772 -1936
Sherwood-Davidson House
Museu m
Newark 16141 345 1898

Slate Run l1ving Histoncal Farm
Ashville 161418331880
Stenge l-True Museum Marion
!6141 387 6140
The Wagnall s Memori al
Lithopolis (614 :, 837-4765
Webb Housf' Muse um
Newa rk ih l4) 345-t-!S40
Wyandot Popcorn Museum
Manon !614 1387 8196
Hi1toric Sites
Adena State Memorial
ChilliCothe !6141772 l oOO
Buckeye Furnace
Wellston !6141384 3537
Cam pu s Martius Museum
Manena 161413733750
Dr Increase M a th ~!Vv· !l Hous.e
Za nesville (6141 454 -9500
18 10 Hou sf'
Portsmout h lb l 41 3S4-.SH.S l
Fhnt Rid ge
Glenford !6141787 -2476
Friends Meeting House
Mt P1cas.&gt;nl 16141769 -7576
The Georgtan
Lancaster !614 1654 9923
Hanby HouS{'
Westerville (614 J 891 -69RO
Hardi ng House
M,rion !61 41 JH79630
Moundbu1lders State Memorial
Newo rk !61 41 344-1920
Mound Cit y Grou p Nan
Monument
Chillicothe 16111 7i 4 11 25
Old Toll House
Za ne;ville 16141 452 4420
Our House Stdte M(:!'mondl
Ga![;polt&gt; 1614 1446-0586
Sherman House
Lancaster (61 4 ) 6tP ·SI:l91
Reitored Communities
German Vi llage
Columbus 1614122 t -8888
Historic Roscoe Vi lla~
Coshoc ton {614 162 -IJJJO
O h1o Village
Columbus !6141466-1500
Natura l Wonders
O lentangy Jndian Cawms
Delaware !6141548-7917
Perkins Obse rva~
Delaware 1614) · · -1257
Toun
lmfl:rial Glass Co rporation
Be lai•e !6141676-3511
Mariettl.l State NursetZ
Morieno !6141 373 · 74
Mosser Glass
Cambridge 1614) 439-1827
Nelson McCoy Po&lt;1ery
Roseville 16141653-0620
Ohio State Uniwrsi~ Tours
Columbus 1614142 -0428
Ohio Universi~ Ca"!J4s Tours
Athens t6141 94-51 4
Robinson Ransbottom Pottery
Roseville 16141697 -7355

State Cap11ol
Columbus 16141 466 -2125

&amp; Breweries
Anheuser-Bu-.ch
Columbu s 1614) 888 -6644
ex1 270
Granvtlle Vineyard
Granville 16 14) 5R7 0112
Hou se of Wines
Manena 16141373-W%
The Louis Jmdra Wi ne~
Jackson 15131 286 -657
Wya ndolle W1n ~ C~lla r. Inc
Gahan na !61414763624
Winerle~

Train &amp; Boat Rides
Bu ckeye Cen tra l Sce n1 c Rat lroad
Newark lbl41 345 -9757
Hoc king Vall ey Sce ni c Ra ilway
Nelsonville 16141 753 953 1
The Lorena Sternwheeler
Zanes ville (614) 454 -6851
Monticello 1l CMal Baal Ride
Coshoc ton (61 41 622 -34I S
V~ lley Gem Stemwh eeler
Mariett a (b\ 4) :HJ-7R62

OUTDOORS
State Parks
Alum Creek Stnle Park
De laware (614 ) .S48 -4631
A W Manon StJie Park
Ctrcleville i6 141 474 3oR6
Barkcamp State Pa rk
Belmont 1614i 484 1064
Blue Ruck State Pa rk
Blue Roc k !6141 674 4794
Buckeye La ke State Pa 1k
Millersport 161 41467-2690
Burr Oa k State Pa rk
Glouster 16141 767 -1.'&gt;70
Deer Creek State Park
Mt Srerhng 16141869-31 24
Delaware State Par k
Delaware !6141369 2761
For ked Ru n State Par k
Chtllicothe !6 141773-2726
Hoc k1ng Hills State Par k
Logan 1614 138!&gt;-6841
Jackso n Lake State Park
Oak Hill 16!4 1682-6!97
Je ff erson Lake State Park
Richmond 1614) 765-4459
lake Alma State Park
Wellston 16141384-4474
lake Hobi. Stat e Park
Zaleski I 14)596-5253
Lake L~an State Park
Logan I 14) 385-3444
Lake White State Park
Waverly 16t4) 947-4059
Madison lake Slole Pork
London 1614!852-2919
Muskingum River Parkway
State Pa rk
Zanesville 16141452-3820
Pike Lake Stale Pork
Bainbridge 16141493-2212
Salt Fork Stole Pllrk
Cambridge 1614) 439-3521

Sooto Trail State Park
Ch,(IICoth e 161 4! 66.3 212.'&gt;
Shawnee Staw Park
Portsmout h (614) 858-lJ Shl
Stro unds Run State Park
Athens (6 14 1592 2302
Tar Hollow State Pa rk
Laur~lvi!le 1014 ) 887-481R
Wol! Run Sta te Park
Caldwell 16 141732-SO:ts

State Forests
Rl ue Rock Sra te Forest
BluP Rock !6 14 ) 674 -4794
Dean State Fo re~ !
Pedro 16141 532 -722H
Fernwood Sta te Forest
Bloom ingdale t614 i 264 56 71
Harriso n Sta te Forest
Bloomingdale 16141 264 567 1
Hoc king State Fowst
Rockbridge 16141 385-4402
Shade Ri wr State Fore st
Reedsville (6 14 ) :378-6ll b
Shawnee Sta te Forest
Po rtsmout h lb l4 ) .'!SK-42111
T,u Hollow Sta te Forest
Londonderry !6 14 1fl87 481R
Za leski State Fores t
Za leskt 16141 596-5781
Parks
Aushn LJke
Toronto 1 614~ 544 -5SbH
Batte lh: Ri ve rlr ont P&lt;"lrk
Columbus 16141222-7520
~llevue City Pa rk
Steubenville 16141283-6126
Dar~ Wi ldlife Area
As ley I 141 869 -2365
Bi~ Island Wildlife Area
As ley t6141 64R -772J
Bob Evans Farm
Rto Gran de (614) 245 -S30 5
Bnnkhaven Wildlife Area
Columbus 16t4J265-704 4
Clenden16 La k~ Park
Freeport I 14165\l -369 1
The Dilweor; Arbore tum
Newark
16141 :l2:J2355 •323-2990
Delaware Wildli fe A r,~a
1\shley 16141 747 -29!9
Fernwood Forest
Steubenville t61412fA·564 1
Friends hip Pa rk
Steubenville 16141 733 7473
Glasshouse Works
Stewart 1614) 662 -2142
Griggs Dam Park
Columbus {614 ) 222-75,20
Hammertown Lake
Jackson t614) 286-2201

BiJ,

H oc ki n~ Vall~unting

Preserve

Loga n 61 41
-6473
Beany Pork
Steubenville 16141282-4561
Columbus Metro Parks
Columbus (614!891-0700
Killdeer Plains Wildlife Area
Harpster 1614)496-2254

Leesv1lle Lake Park
Bowerston [bl4l269 .S:nl
Li cking County Park
Granvi lle 1: 6 l'1 ~ 587 2535
Woodbury Wildlife Area
Warsaw 16141824 32 11
lloover Reservoir Park
Columbus 1614 ) 222 7520
Kokosmg Wildlife ArPn
Ashley !h l4 1o4R-772:l
La ke Park
Coshoc ton !614! 622 7 5 ~ H
La ke Vesu vi us Recrea tion Area Wayne Naoonal Forest
l1onton 1614!532 3223
Mohtcan Wilderness
Glen mont 16141599-6741
Park of Roses
Columbus i614) 222 -7447
Pie dmont L~ kf' Por k
rwf'por t (h i416StLl7:t5
Salt Fork Wildlife Arei"l
Combndge !6141 4H9-502 1
Wahkl'cna Na ture Preserve
Sugar Grow 161!} ) 716 -8675
Waterloo Expenmcnt Stat!On
Nl'W Marshfie ld 1614 ) 644 -274S
WtJyn e Ndtional Forest
AIhens 1614 1592 6644
Fishing and Boating
Blarkhand Go~w~ Ca noe L1very
Newark !6141 63-1(){)()
Clow·s Marina
13owl!rs1on (614) 269 -5371
Deer Creek Marini'!
Mt StPrling (h \4 ) R69 -4543
Hocking Vall ey Ca noe L1very
Logan 16141 385 -8685
La ke Katharine State Nature
Preserve
Jackson 1614!286-2487
Lake Snowden
Alban y 16141 698-6373
Ohio Powe r Recree. tion Area
McConne lsville (61 4 l % 2 4525
Ptedmont Lake Man nJ
Freeport 16t4i 658-3735
Raccoon C ree k Canoe Livery
Rio Grande (614!2455304
Tappan Marina
Scio 16141269-203 1
Wills Creek Lnke
Cos hocton 1614! 343-6647
Zanesville Sta te Nurser4
Zonesvill e !614)4539 72
Horses &amp; Riding
Badlands Stables
John stown 161 41927 6654
Circle K Ranch
Ctrc leville (6141 474 -37 11
Flyiny, N Ranch Riding Stable
Rock ridge 16t4J969-2912
Salt Fork Ridinf Stable
Lore City 1614 489 -5018

Co lumbus Motor Speedway

Columbus !6141 491 -1047
Darby Downs
Grove City 1614!875-3434
~atto nal Rood Go Kart Trac k
Cambndge !61 41432 3441
Sc1oto Duwm
Co lumbu~ (614 ) 491 -2515
Three K1vers Ca noe L1very &amp;
Go Kart Track
Cos hoc ton 1614 ) 622-4000

ARTS

to use multi-layer gloves.
So, the mllitary Is exploring
voioe-controlled systems as possible
alternatives to reading dials and
flipping switches ."We're trying to
develop the technology or the
systems that allow - In our case a
pUot - to talk to his system rather
than to switch switches or push
buttons or things like that," said
James McDowell, a project manager in lab's flight control divlslon.
A voice-controlled system "gives
the pilot an alternative ," said
Werkowltz. "lt'snotgolngtoreplace
other controls." His department
works with a system being tested In
an experimental F ·16 jet fighter at
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
McDowell is working with a
system aimed at voice-directed
radio control in larger planes, such
as cargo or transport craft. "Voice

CINCINNATI lAP)
Like
thousands of other youngsters in the
late 1940s, J erry RDbinsonspenta lot
of hou rs drinking pop a nd yelling a t
sports events in Cincinnati Gardens.
" I grew up here," Robinson said.
"I was 16 or 17 years old when the
building opened, and from that
moment anything that went on here ,
I was here for it."
That part oflife hasn't c hanged for
RDI:&gt;inson, who at age5l spendseven
m ore time at the 37-year-old orick
arena RtJiding its rpv ival.
A real estate developer, Rot&gt;inson
bought the arena in suburban
Cinclnnal t five years ago, looking to
gut it for warphouse space. T he
virtually n('\\/ Riverfront Coliseum
had replaced the Gardens as the
city' s No. 1 a r&lt;&gt;na , leaving the old
arena with little intcCPst and
apparently no futu re.
Instead. throug h aggressive mar
keting , interior redesign and a
growing attrac tiveness as a
medlum -sizl'd arena , the GardPns
once again rocks wi th th&lt;' sou nds of
events. And Robinso n is upbeat
about the trend continuing.
"We're growing, that 's a U l can
tell you," he said, s it! ing in his
cluttered Gardens office. " !
wouldn't like to indica te we 're
makin~ a lot of money, a nd l
wouldn't indicate we 're losing a lot
of money. But the t rend is very
positive and forward .. .
"I think there's a lot of love for the
Gardens in this community. And I
suspect a lot of people are happy to
see it back in the ma instream ."
The rebirth stancd a lmos t t&gt;y

accident, RDbinson said. His Kenko
Corp. bought the building and land
for $8Z'i,!XXlln 1969, Inte nding to turn
it into a storage place, not a
showplace.
''With the Gardens came 15 acres
of prime parking lots, the arena a nd
the annex building," Robinson said.
"I originally bought It as a real
esta te development project, prim ·
arlly fo r industrial, commercial ,
manufact uring, storage or what
have you.

"In the course of owning it and
looking about for opportunities to
develop it, we had occasiona l
rpquests to use it as an arena. We did
a couple of things in the arena vein
and somehow or at her got hooked on
the da rn t&gt;usiness.
"£l&lt;&gt;forp we knew it , we were into
show biz and facility oper ation. It
was a pure accident , a lthoug h I
really wonder down deep if there
wasn't a subconsc ious thought in
that direction."
The Gardens had at least one
major asset. RDblnson soon discovered. Unlike the larger Coliseum
on the Ohlo River, the 11 .IXX&gt;-seat
Gardens can a ttract shows aimed at
smaUer audiences.

Looking south to Louisville, he
found that three facilities Freedom Ha 1J, Louisville Gardens
and the Palace Theatre - coexisted
successfully.
"Most shows like to play to a
relatively fuU building," he said . "So
3,l0l people sitting in Freedom Hall
would be a disaster. Three-thousand
people sitting in Lou is ville Gardens,
that's about ha lf the building; it
looks respecta bl e. The customers
feel OK ahout it , and the act feels OK
about it "

Museums &amp; Galleries
Artreach Ga llery
Columbus 16141 461 -W86
Charles Foley Gal lej'
Columbus !6141 25 7921
Columbus Museum of Art
Columbuo !614) 221-6801
Cultural Arts Cen te r
Columbu s 1614) 222-7047
R1verby
Gallipolis 16141446 -3B34
Ruthve n Gallery
Lmc.aster (614) 651 -066.1
So uth ern Oh1 o Museu m &amp;
Cultural Center
Pa.tsmoulh 1614 1354 -5629
Zancsvt lle Art Center
Zones V1lle !6141452 0741
Music
Columbu ~

S6•mphur1y Orches tr~
Columbus I 14) 224 52~ 1
Mus1c 1n the Air
Columbus lh14 ) 22 1-2000
0p€ ra Colum bus
Columbu s 16141 461 -0022
Possu m Run Mustc Pllrk
Groveport 16141HJ7-4282
Theatn
Cambndge Perlormmg Arb
Cen ter
Combndg&lt;' !hl4 1432 79SH
l 1ck.ng County Plavers
Newark !0141 345 7385
Th e Livmg Word Outdoor Dram;l
Cambndge 16141439 2761
O hio Stall:' Umvers•j Theatre
Columbus \6 14) 42 -2295
O hio Theatre
Columbu ; 16 141469-0939
Pa lace Theatre
Columbu s 16141 469 9R!&gt;O
Palace Theatre
Manon 16141383 2101
P\a~ers Theatre of Col umbu s
Coumbus 16141224-083 1
Show boat Becky Thatcher
Theatre
Manena 161 41373-6033
·· r ecumse h·· &amp; ··shenandoah ""
O utdoor Dramas
Chillicothe 161 4177S 0700

Sporta

Dance

The Centrum Skating
Columbus 1614) 461-6466
Columbus Clif.Ji:rs Base ball
Columbus (6 )457-5256

Ballet Metropolitan
Columbus 16141 224-1672
Dancentral
Columbus 16141224-8103

recognition In terms of flying an
aircraft Is very, very, very new. lt' s
not going on much anywhere,"
McDowell said, adding that the
Navy, NASA, and the Army are also
testing voice recognition.
" 1 can't say voiCe wtiJ do
something In the world in years to
come because I'm not sure how it
w1ll tum out. If we can get systems
that w1ll fly In the air, that will
withstand the noise and the vibra·
tion and the other harsh environment In the aircraft, then It has
potentially a big impact on aircraft

or any kind or system, any kind of
control where humans are Involved.
We're looking at thealrcratt sideofit
because It has a lot of interest," he
said.
McDowell 's division has been
working with a C-135C transport
plane assigned to Andrews Air
Force Base in Maryland . The voice
board was bought commerclally
and modified for plane and lab use.
"I've lx&gt;en very impressed and
very surprised what we've used has
lasted as long as It has and worked as

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- ·E-3

well as It has. It Is a demonstration
system . It's not an operational
systl'myet," he said.
" It's slow. lt'seasler right now for
the pilot to tune it by hand than itisto
talk to It. But It gets the concept
across. There's certainly a desire, I
think ... to fly a plane by voice, but
that's a very emotional isSue. It 's
going to take a long time."
There's also a lot of Interest
commercially in voice cont rol
systems, with one potential use
being faster Inventory and quality
control, McDowPII said. He hopes

the next step for hls department will
be a more sophisticated system,
perhaps with more than one
frequency , whichnnlght beoperated
by more than one person at a time
and would retain its memory even If
turned off.· Meanwhile , Werkowitz
expects a contract announcement
soon for the second phase of the F ·l6
voice testing.
ln the first phase, the pilot would
give a voice command and a
"recognizer" would print back the
command to verify rff'£l'ipt .

18111

Cincinnati Gardens
again rock with
sounds of events
By JOE KAY

fi nd m any events a nd attractio ns in yo ur area listed in this ha ndy trave l g uide .

mvolvcs a s~ca ll ed ant enuptial
agreement between Thomas R.
Gross of Columbus and Ida Jane
Gross . prior to their marriage in

FAIRBORN, Ohio (API -When
pilots talk to their planes in the
future, the planes may talk back .
1\vo researchers are testing such
vol=ntrolled systems a t Wright·
Patterson Air Force Base.
"Pilots have a lot more todo these
days, " says Eric We rkowitz, a
project engineer for crew systems
development in the aeronautical
systems division's fli ght dynamics
lab. "We've given him more to do
and Jess time to do it in," he sal d.
Pilots today face an array of
switches and dials, with morp than a
dozen just on the throttle · and
sidestick , Werkowitz said . Pilot
work lx&gt;comes more difficult, he
added, if the pilot is dressed in a
protective uniform to avert possible
effects of chernlcal warfare, a nd has

Associared Press Writer

COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP) -·A
millionaire whose alimony pay·

lower cour1 an unusua l case that

Pvmeroy-Middlepart-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Researchers test voice-activated plane controls

Millionaire's $200
alimony payments,
unconscionable,
says high court
prr'-m arital contract ~:: 1968 may
have to shell ou t con.siderably more
to his former wife.
The Ohio Supreme Court sa id as
much last wcek in returning to a

June 17, 1984

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ST. U.WUHCEIUW"Y-IhoSSYOAQU:Z

Aug . iY - SCpt. 2 - Bill Eshenaur from Gallipolis M/1.. hOsts thts
tour that tra~ls from ttlls ar~a by motorcoech to Montrat to

Reg. 59.95
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Include ~ Festtn du Govemeur In the Old Fort on tM lk: Ste.

Standard
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Helene: In tt"M!': St. UI"M"tncc: Rtwr. Rewtry , music, tood end drink
abound tn the': 17th century etmotpl\r:rt wtw:rc: dlnnt:r Is Kr·
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bdo,_ boarding tM ship for sewn days of relexetlon , bautlfut
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�Page

E-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

June 17, 1984

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

June 17, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, t11io

•

·F ilm crew VIews production as homecoming
COLUMBUS, Otuo tAP! - The
decision to film the mO\·ie "Hean
and Soul " in Ohio has meant a

hom('('Oming for some forn1er
Ohioans among the cas t and crew.
11lf' moY ie. a OOut twn-agr rs

growing up in a small town In the
mid-1950s. is being filmed at
Neisonville and ln Canal Winchester, south of Colwnbus.
For some cast and crew
members, the location shooting has

meant sentimental trips to places
they used to Uve; for others, II has
meant weekend visits to familles
and friends they haven't seen
recenlly.
Sam Manners, llne producer for
the movie, is a Cleveland native who
worked on and off the air for radio
station WJW before he moved to
California. He married a Clevelander, Joyce Germalne Williams,
and moved west in 1946 to study at
UCLA.
Manner s, 63, said his contract
v.1th ~th Century-Fox includes
traveling privileges for tus wife and
children. His children; ali now
grown, are in the movie business,
but the assignment here gave
MannE-rs and tus wife an opportunity for a nostalgic trip to Cleveland .
" l knew from the minute l was old
enough to ttunkaboutit that all I ever
wanted was to work in films," he
said while overseeing a drivP-in
mov ie scene shot here this month. "I
won my first aud ition In Cleveland
when I was 12 or 13 years old, and
I've never had any ideas about
another career in life."
Yudl Bennett lived in Dayton
during hE'r hlgh school years in the
mld-19ffis while hE'r father, a rabbi,
served a synagogue there. She is
first ass !stan t director on the movie,
a job w hich makes her "50 percent
general and 50 percent cheerleader.
I handle the schedules, the specs,
coordinate everything and keep the
set running."
Ms. Bennett, :W, took a break from
tEaching in Vermont one summer t o
work on a fea ture film wtuch was
never released. A year later, she
decided to try thE' movie business,
quit teactung in 1974 and moved to
New York for a film job. She moved
to Ca lifornia a y&lt;'ar ago.
"Th.ls pictu re brings back a lot of
memories for me," she said. "It 's
set in a small town, and I lived in a
small town In Vermont when a
movie compa ny came to to·.vn and 1
was swept up by it all .
"I know au the (movie craft)
union contracts on t\\.•o coasts. You
have to know all the ruiPS as well as
what the prioritiE-s and the needs are
of the different departments."
Noel B lack . writer and producer
of "Hearl and Soul," also has a
Dayton background . Though born in
Chicago. he lived his high school
years ln Dayton before going away
to the University of Chlcago and

UCLA for his education.
Colwnbus teen-ager Lisa Mayes
isastand-lnforKeUyPreston, oneof
the stars of "Heart and SouL" Miss
Mayes, 16, played a student In a
classroom scene for "Teachers:·
another movie filmed here last
Winter. She wants to study law, but
sayssheisthlnk!ngoftaklngamlnor
In acting when she gets to college.
Dennis O'Connell, 22, of Akron.
and Darren Ewing, 19, of Cleveland,
both have wanted to act all their
llves. Assigned roles as well-to-do
troublemakE-rs, thetwotalkfreelyof
their ambitions but neither feels
certain that this is a "big chance" at
stardom.
Though O'Connell has been acting
more than a decade, this is hls first
film , and he sees it as a major step in
the business .
"But w hether it'sa break to move
on to othE'r things, I ean 't judge that
now. not knowing the Impact tllls
film will have," he said .
He had three auditions beforE'
being chosen for the role. When the
work ends about July 1 he'll go back
to Akron, "but how long I stay
depends on the work."
Ewing lives in the ClE-veland

suburh or Bay Village, but has spent
much of the past 10 years ln
California working in television and
commercials . His father spent
many years with the National
Broadcasting Co. radio division. and
acting, Ewing says, "Is ln the
blood.. .. I'd like to make t.his a
living."
Both talk of the hard work of
acting and the hoursofconcentrated
reading required of a film script.
"When I first read It, I thought
they were paying a lot of money for
nothing,'' said Ewing. ''Then I found
out in the first scene that it's very
hard work. After I kept my jaws

M0\1E PRODUCER- Sam Manners, 63, a producer oft he movie,
"Ht•art and Soul," talk.• with another fUm ''"'"Utlve durtng filming of a
s&lt;:t&gt;nt&gt; at a drivf'-in movi£' in Culurnbu'i . 1\'l;um t•rs, a Cleveland native, io;;
ju.""t ont• nf man~· JWrsorLo; in\·ulvt•d in making tht• rnovtt" who are from
Ohio . (:\I' Li.L"iPrphoto) .

locked in one expression for eight
hours, I knew II was hard work."
Both agreed that "people won't
pay to see Dennis and DaJTell In a
movie: they pay to see us playing a
role."
Byron Eugene Ashbrook, a second cousin of the late U.S. Rep.
John Ashbrook of Johnstown, is one
of the sound men on the " Heart and
Soul" set and traces his Ohlo roots
tlu-ough at least five generations.
"John (Ashbrook) was my father's first cousin," he explained.
" My father's family was from
Granville. and tus father was from
Johnstown."

MAIL REGISTRATION FORM TO :
GALLIPOLIS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
P.O . BOX 466
GALLIPOLIS, OH . 45631

REGISTRATION FORM
FOR

Gallia County's 4th of July Parade
(DEADLINE FOR REGISTRATION IS JUNE 23,1984,)

LINE UP BEGINS AT 8:30A.M.
PARADE THEME
"THE YEAR OF THE VOLUNTEER"

Tile 1984 Wolld"s Fair

PARADE MARSHALL: JAMES WILLIAMS
CHAIRMAN : MATIHEW R. WILLIS
MASTER OF CEREMONIES : MYRON "BUD" McGHEE

JULY 8- 1 S- Amtrak
AUG. 5- 12- Motorcoach
SEPT . 9· 22 - Motorcoach
OCT . 7·14-World's Fair &amp;
Smokies
NOV. 6-9 - Air Tour

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Ca ll about spec 1al tour
pac kages at attr act ive rates.

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SEND ALL ENTRIES TO :
GALLIPOLIS AREA JAYCEES
ATTENTION : MATT WILLIS
P.O . BOX 60
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO 45631

360 Second Avenue
Galli
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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

CLEVELAND (AP) - A m el lowed Dennis J. Kuclnich is quietly
aiming his 17-year political career at
the future, where he hoP"" to take on
social Issues wlth a nev. [&gt;hilosophy
of "using politics to heal. "
Six years ago, then-Mayor Kucinlch found the Cleveland summer
politlcaliy hot. In 1he first year of tus
two-year term, he narrowly beat a
recall election. He was 31 then, but
looked a lot younger, and by his own
admission tus style was brash.
In August 1978, his political fate
was In the hands of Cleveland
voters. som e of w hom accused him
of misfeasance in office. Kuclnlch,
who called hlmsell a "populist"
Democrat, won the recall election
by 341 votes among Ul,&amp;l1 voles
cast , one of the closest city-w ide
elections in Cleveland's history.
Before his term was up, hcbal tJed
City Council to stop the proposed
sale of the city-run Municipa l Light
plant to Investor-owned Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co .. and the
city defaulted on loans from six
banks.
He tried for re-election in 1979, but
lost to Republican George V.
Volnovlch, who Is still mayor.
Then followed four years of
recluslveness, Interrupted by an
unsuccessful race for Ohio secretary of state In 1982.
Kuclnich is now back at City Hall
as councilman for the largely wtu te.
ethnic Ward 12, where he was
elected last summer.
At 37, he still has a boyish
appearance.
But he says his politics have
changed dramatically from the
roughneck sty le that characterized
his term as mayor. He says he is
comfortable in the polltlcal arena
and that there is a new political
campaign on his horizon.
"I'm working now at exploring
another dimension of politics that
goes beyond the give-and-take that
we see In city government,"

Kuclnich says. "It's a kind of politics
in a socia l context that has the
capacity to inspire people and has as
itsexponentsGan&lt;lhJ, Walesa, King ,
Mother Teresa and John Paul II people whoworkedorareworkingin
a very political capacity and yE'I are
uslngtheir skills to heaL That' swhat
I want to do.
"I would exjli'Ct that this profoundly different approach that I am
developing is going to find expres·
ston in v.1der forwnsingovernment,
and maybe in the not -too-distan t
future."
During an interview in the City
Council chamber, he would not say
what office hewillseek next, but said
he will release his first book to
coincide with his next campaign. He
wrote most of the book, tE-ntatively
named "City Life," between 1979
and 1983, when he was not holding
public office.
It's autobiographical , about 700
pages, with details about his term as
mayor, he said.
" It's done. and I have no question
about it being published ," he said.
" It's a matter of pu tting it in
combination with a number of other
activities .... It will be published ln
connection with m y next campaign.
"I'd rather release it in the context
of a new statem ent, which is what
another campaign would be."
Recently, some residents of his
ward began a sit-in at a !ire sta tion
closed by Voinovlch. Kucinich
backed the protest Voinovich
retused to reopen the station, and
some protesters began a campaign
to recall him.
They abandoned the recall effort
after The (Oeveland) Plain Dealer
published a letter from Kuclnlch·ln
which he urged cooperation Instead
of confrontation.
"That letter, I suppose, was the
culmina tion of a lot of thought and
was also a statement of a perspec·
tlve that will find Its way Into action
as I move on and up in politics,"
Kucinlch said.

.
..

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GALLIPOLIS
GaiUpolls, Ohio 45831

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Kucinich aims political
career toward future

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Limited warranties on power train and outer
body rust-through lor 5 years or 50,000 miles,
whichever comeslirsl. Deductible applies.
hcludes leases . Ask far details .

AIMING FOR THE FUTURE - Cl eveland City Councilman
Dennis Kucinlsh, right, admil.s he has meUowed since his stormy tenn
as Mayor of Cleveland six years ago. Kucinich, who narrowly won a
re-caJI election by asmnt 341 votes in 1978, plans to take on social issues
with his new philosophy of "using pofitics to heal." Kucinich Is shown
talldng with a resident of his ward, Stanley Sitosky, during his council
&lt;&gt; campaign last summer. (AP Laserpholo) .

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COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Mter the recession and we felt we had to
two years at recession, things seem
work at mlnlmums.
to be looking up In the Rustbelt.
" We felt we had to compete In the
Sales, profits and employment world marketplace. You can't just
are rlslng In the Industrial crescent
look only at the United Stales
!rom western New York and
anymore .''
Pennsylvania through Ohio and
Vedder's Ohlo University colother Great Lakes states. But
league, economics professor Raj in·
experls caution that the blaCk Ink
darK. Koshal, says Ohio lndustrles,
may mask a more Important trend
using outmoded equipment and too
- employment, whleh, like profits,
much energy, can trace their
fell sharply, is making only a modest
decline to the early 1970s energy
crlsls. Since then, the gap has
recovery.
Manufacturing employment bot·
widened consistently between the
tamed out at just above 1 mllllon In
nation's per capita Income and what
April 1983, and has cllinnbed only by
an average Ohioan makes, even
about 70,00J a year later.
though energy prices have declined.
Executives say that's because
Raj indar predicted industiy will
businesses stopped the gushing red
return to Otuo's transportation
ink with a tournlquE't fashioned from
system and skilled labor force. But
layoffs and plant closings. Even if
he said the strong dollar overseas
companies were to go on a hlrtng
and hlgh Interest rates now are
binge, there aren't as many jobs to
stumbling blockS. He saJd few
!Ill anymore. E ven with the oosiness
mactunes produce enough to cover
upturn, companies aren't rushing to
expand.
percent
- that's
when in.rate
' l atlon
the present
real interest
of Is5 1
"God only knows if we'll E'Ven get
subtracted.
back to our '79level' ' of 1.38 mlllion
But Ohlo AFL-CIO spokesman
people working In manufacturing,
John R. Thomas is skeptical of the
said James L. Hemmerly, Ohio's
investment-brings-jobs approach.
asslstarit director of labor market
"We found that a Jot of the
Information.
unemployment was caused by the
Some examples:
Introduction of new tee hnology.
- Middletown-based Armco lost
more than by lack of sales," hesald.
more than $1 billion and chopped
Everyone agrees heavy industry
one-third of Its 52,0)) jobs In 1982-83.
will conllnue to be the backbone of
It closed a steel mill in Houston, Ohlo's economy.
Texas, phased out parts of mills In
"Not every state can be a leader ln
Middletown and Ashland, Ky., sold
high-tech. I lived in the middle of
most of its oil and gas division and ~--------'------1
now wants to unload its Insurance
companies.
Armco turned a $56 million profit
In the first quarter this year,
although It broke even on opera lions
and made most of Its money from
seiling Its coal subskllaries. It also
hired a bout 900 steelworkers after
making money In carbon and
specialty steels in the last half of last
year.
-Owens-Illinois of Toledo wrote
off$1.'ll million in capacityin1982-83.

Industrial lobs.
Toey Fortunato, regional director
of the Ohlo Bureau of Employment
Services, told a recMt state Senate
hearing that such changes In the
Mahonlng Valley have been
"devastating."

SlllcOn Valley (In California) last
year, and the people out there are
laughing at theOhlo'softhe world,"
sald Vedder.
State ot!lclals, In a recently
released strategic plan, "Toward a
Working Ohlo," projected that
Industry will continue to produce
about one-third of the gross state
product. But they also said those
companies, whlch employ one of
every three workers, will employ
only one of every five by the year
2rol.
"That's a tough nut to crack. We
have a lot ofpeopiE'whodon't believe
It,.. said G. Raymond Lllrello.
assistant director of statE' business
development
"Ninety percent of all new job
creation will come out of small
Industry," Lorello sald - often
low-paying and non-union service or

'

"Since 1973. the Y oomgstown·
Warren area has lost 40,00J factory
jobs at an annual w~ge of over
$25,0)) a year for fii(\Wj' workers,"
Fortunato sald. "The jobs we're
getting now are mostly In nonmanulacturtng, particularly in retail sales and the sen1ces. And
unfortunately, most of these are
part-time jobs that pay minimum

wages."
"I think that poses a heck of a
political problem, especially if you
are, as the governor is, from a union
base, " said theOBES' HemmPrly.

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'Rustbelt' economy looking up

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The Sunday r.,_Sentinel Page

Ftlint Pleasant, W. Va.

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0-T
24,0ll
jobs worldwide I~
overabolished
the past four
years.
-Eaton Corp. of Cleveland, stlll
heavily Into auto parts, nonetheless
changed focus In 1978 when it bought
electronics, tubing, and automated
material storage and retrieval
companies. Eaton closed nine
plants last year. Including axle and
fastener plants In Cleveland.
Executives say Eaton, which lost
$189 million In 1982 but made $93
million last year, shows what heavy
industry must do to survive. Eaton
cut its w ork force by about 2J,OOJ.
-Cincinnati Mllacron, darllng of
the media with Its robots, trimmed
its work force by 4,00J, primarily
because of a slumplnmachinetools.
"There's been a slow hemorrhaging going on for years," saJd
Richard Vedder, professor and
economic historian at Ohio University. Ohlo manufacturing employment peaked In 19ffi at1.47 million.
Manufacturing accounted for $4
of every $10 in gross state productthe tota l value of goods and services
produced in Ohio - in 1960, but
slipped to $.3 of every $10 In 1982.
Even with rising profits, compan·
ies are "gun shy," and are
borrowing for more efficient equipment, not expansion, said David
Daberko, executive vice president
ln charge of commercial loans at
Cleveland 's National City Bank.
" ThE&gt;y'd rather operate ai 100
percent of capacity than expand, "
he said.
Eaton spokesman Renaid R.
Romain agreed. "In '78-'79, wewere
very positive and felt we could blow
the top end off anything. Then came

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NEW WEEKEND HOURS
The Holzer Clinic Urgent Care Center is now open
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9:00P.M. at the Main Clinic on Route 35 near Gallipolis. Physicians from the Departments of Family Practice and Pediatrics will be available for
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5 P.M.-9 P.M.
1 P.M.-9 P.M.
1 P.M.-9 P.M.

CASH FOR OLD CLOTHES-FURS
MEN'S OVERCOATS
buy and sell old clothing if made between 1900-1965. Men's or women's. The following is a partial list.
Old dresses. suits. blouses. blazers . jackets &amp; coats with shoulder pads
from the 1930's, 1 940'a, 1 950 'a. 19 3 0 's, 1950' s suits S. dresses with
peplums. Beaded sequined aweatera, 1960 Stiletto spiked heels. 1940's
oPen to8d0r platform shoes. Silk scarves 11nd blouses.Old rayon scarvea.
Men's ties from 1930-1960. Men's 1kinny ties. Men's pleated pants from
1930's, 1940's 8a 1960's. Men's pointed toed shoes from 1969· 1963.
Men's 1940's double breasted suits. 1960 pegged-legged trousers.
Men 's tweed overcoats &amp; sport jackets . Gaberdine shirts&amp;: short jackets
from 1940-1 959 . Gabardine hobby jackets. Used bowling shirts .

shaws. EVENI~G GOWNS FROM 1920-1965 Velvet upes. coats.
opera coats . shews, dresses , evening gowns. jackets S. ~k irt s . Beaded
bags. Lewis bags. Shoes with ankle .stral?s tr~m the _1940 !. . Flo~al ray on
or silk robes from the 1930's-1940 1 . Vtctonan whtte cotton . htgh n&amp;Ck
or flat collar blouses, long petticoats. dresses &amp; nite glowns. FLAP~ER
CLOTHING Hawaiian shirts from 1930-1969 . 1959's rayon shtrt s
Men 's 100% cotton. small collared button-down shirts from 1958 -1963
Celluloid 8t Bakelite Bracelet• &amp; Neckla ces. Rhinest one Jewelry from

t920-t946. Old fabric t900 -1980.

I 960-1965.

Small med. size vasU from 1936-1969. Straight skirts, poodl e skirt s. cir cle skirts from 1946-1969. We1 look or vinyl mini skirts from 19681976. Funny or cat -eyed sunglasses from J960 '~ · Skinnv bow ties, Elf
shoes from the 1960' s, Old Weejuns. 1960 s capn pantt or peddle push ers. Men's 2 tone shoes from 1930-1966. Tuxedo pants . Jack Winter
Sweaters, silver &amp; gold Lame items, smoking jackets. Baseball_shirts.
Teddys, Velvet Capris, Men 'a Formal Pumps, Used Ban~ Untforms,
Oriental Dre11es, Blouses, pamajas. Cashmere / Orion Cardtgan Shark akin suits , Mexican Jackets, Guatemalan Skirts, Bolero Jackets, or anv
item of clothing made from 1900-1966.

FUR COATS, CAPES &amp; SCARVES Black or white tuxedoes. tails. tu111
1hlrts top hatl &amp; derbiea. Wide brimmed (gangater style) hats. WO·
MEN:S HATS FROM 1935-1955. Allgator, liurd &amp; snake purses. belts
or lhou . Chinese kimonoe oriental dre1111 and blouses. Silk piano

If you have any of these items or some older item not mentioned abo~e .
pteasa call me in Huntington, at 1- 304-622-2198 . If no answer try ag~m .
I will buy one item or 1.000 . This is no joke ... CASH for vour old clothing
if made from 1 900 -1 966.

Skinny ties, cumberbunda, tkinny bow ties. bulk mohair and ang~ra
1weaters. cowboy ahirts, suede jackets. fur-c ollared sweaters. bowling
ahirts, black motorcycle jackets. World War II bomber jackets , Mexican
akirts and blouses, painted aklrta, tiaras. cnhmere sweetars, silk dresses.
men'a rayon Florida print shlrta, white linen jackets and white tux jackets.
Korean / Japanese dragtm jackets. hand painted ties. Women ' s pen dalton
jackets aaquin dresses, straight and circle skirts and cowgirl clothing.
cocktail dre11aa from 1960~ 196!i. beaded or sequined cocktail top1 from

Call collect (after

OLD CLOTHING BOUGHT AND SOLD ~~o~u~~:~~~~ssible)

LISA KOCH

1-304-522-2198

INHEARIN

ask for John Humphreys...

Sec:of1•~

,Ave.,

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E-8- The

nmes-Sentinel

Ohio ftolnl

Third World debt
By DAVID SMYTII
1\s&gt;locialed Press Wrtter
The Third World debt crlsls has
boiled up to a point where at least
three debtor nations are in open
revolt, one major American bank is
in big financial trouble and four
La tin American presidents have
issum a joint warning that something has to h&lt;' done about the
problem.
What exactly l• the problem? And
what if anything can be done about
it?

On the answ&lt;'rs to these two
questions may depend the suJ'\1val
of a healthy financial system in the
ent ire non-communist wor ld. The
U .S. Commerce Department has

linked the debt crisis to the lass o! an
est im ated 400,COO American jobs m
1981-83.

The basic problcm is that developing

nations

have

accumulated

foreign debts of about $IDJ billion
and at'P finding it lncreasingty
difftcult to pay thelr crcdltors. The
credi tors are m ai.nl.v Wf'Stern banks
and government s and international
financiaJ institutions such as the
lntem ational Monetary F'und, a

___ __

United Na tions-affiliated agency
bascd ln Washin!'lon .

•, .... /'

.,......

CnSIS

Some nations, such as Argentina
and Brazil, would have to use up
huge amounts of their export
earnings to pay their debts coming
due this year. This would allow them
Uttle left over to pay for Imports,
Including goods produced by
workers in the United States and
other industr1allzed countries.
Argentina's economy minister,
Bernardo Grlnspun, says the money
needed to seJ'\1a&gt; hls country's debt
had risen to the point where it
requlred the income from two thirds
of Argentina 's total exports early
this year.
According to the IMF,Mextcowtll
have to pay ou t an average $12
billion a year to meet Its foreign debt
obliga tions between 19ffi and l!lro.
This represents about a third of all
Its export income.
The average Latin American
country's payments just to meet
interest charges "Is an tntolerable38
to 40 percent" of export earnings,
according to Ramon lllarramendi,
executive dlrector of the InterAmerican Development Bank In
Washington. "The result Is a
hopeless treadmill."
Swampcd by thelr debts, most of
the indebted countries are now

~---- ----

• •

boils

trying to borrow more money
merely to pay the interest on their
old loans.
The debtor nations, In short, are in
an lrnposslble situation, the presidents of Argentina, Brazil, ColornWa and Mexico said In a joint
statement May 19.
The four leaders said that rising
interest rates in the United Statesrates to whlch their own loans are
linked - are creating unbearable
coots for their countrtes. They also
contended Ihat a growing tide of
protectionism In the lndustr1allzed
nations - the United States, Japan
and Western European nations -Is
making It lrnpossible for them to
earn enough to pay their debts.
The presidents concluded: "Our
allons cannot indefinitely accept
these risks."
They did not threaten any specific
countermeasures, but Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru and Ecuador have set a
meeting in Cartagena, Ollombla,
lor June 21-22 to see what they cando
to resolve what has become their
single most·nagging problem.
Foreign Minister RarnlroSaralva
Guerrelro o!Brazll said the meeting
is "an alert, not a threat." He said
the participating nations do not
intend to form "a cartel of poverty."
However, events in other countries In the last few weeks have
signaled what shocks nnlght be in
store lor the world financial system:
-Dn June 4, Finance Minister
Pcdro Pinto of Ecuador announced
unilaterally that hJs country was
suspending payments on $?A7.5
million it owes to foreign governments, pending renegotiation of
these debts. Ecuador would like to
repay them over a period of seven
years. He said Ecuador would
continue making payments on its$7
billion in debts to foreign commercial banks, however.
-Also on June 4, Bolivia officially
informed foreign commercial
banks thatlt had decided to postpone
payments on the $7W mill1im it owes
them . The Bolivian planning minister. Emesto Aranlbar, told the
banks, "Bolivia is in no condition to
effect an:' partial payments to the
private banking consortium, and Is
therefore proposing a postponement on the payments while It
restructures Its public debt." He
added that Bollvla Is willing to
negotiate with the banks.
-Prlrne Minister Sandra Marta tegul of Peru expressed his
government's " full moral support
lor Bolivia in its decision." And on
June 5, Mariategul persuadcd the
Club of Parts, a group of Western
governments, to reschedule $1
billion of Peruvian loans falling due

' Jne 17 1984

W.Va.

Motor Car Brokers

over the next 13 months.
-Economy MlntsterGrtnspm 11 .
Argentina warned that several
other Latin American coontrles
might follow Bollvla's example,
which be pralsed as "an act c1
national sovereignty." Argentina
owes foreign creditors about ~.ro
blllion.
-Tile Bollvlan decision was also
closely watched In Brazil which
owes close to $100 billion, In Mexico

NEW AllRIV

($90 bllllon), In Venezuela ($.'6

blllion), and In other Latin Amertcan nations w006e overall foreign
debt comes to about $4Xl bllllon.
TheBollvlandevelopmentcaused
bond prices to plungle In New YOl'k.
drove the U.S. dollar down on
foreign exchangl&gt; markets and
further depressed the share prla!s
of major American banks on the
stock exchanges as-investon saw

the banks' prospects dimming even

tilver metallic with dark blue vinyl top, blue velour interior, V-8 !ngine, auto.
overdrive trans., air cond., tilt wheel, cruise control, AM / FM stereo woth
clock, power seat. power windows, power door locks. rear window defogger,
wire wheel covers, radial tires and only 32,000 moles.
511,900

further_
It also added one more headache

for the IMF, a 146-natton lntemattonal organtzatlon that provides
credit for needy nations. The IMF
had proposed an economic austerity
program for BolMa - a plan that
provoked hunger strikes by m111tant
left-wing Bolivian workers' unions.
Bolivia, and other countries in
financial dltflcultles have had to
reach agreement with the IMF on
such austerity programs as a
condition for getting any new loans
from the commercial banks.
The IMF programs, always
politically unpopular In the debtor
countries, have now reached a point
where - as the Bolivian developments conllrmed - they are
sometimes Impossible to enforce.
One such example was the Dominican Republic, wliere the IMF
insisted that the guvernment save
money by ending food-price subsidies. The prices of some staples
doublcd, causing rtots In April In
which more than 50 people were
killed.
When the lMF subsequently
insisted that the price of gasoline be
doublcd, the Dominican . guvemment slrnply refused to comply

4 door, pastel sandstone wiih matching vinyl top, vinyl seats, V·6 engine,
auto. trans., power steering and brakes, air conditioning, AM/ FM/Stereo, ra·
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SAVE$ ON THIS ONE

56,900

A Guide to local
Television programming
June 17 thru June 23

Includes complete
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V·6 engine, auto. trans., power steering and brakes, air cond., AM /FM/Stereo,-

57 , 900

cruise control. radial tires and only 21.000 mites on thi s one1

·-~

listings

Filmeter
Pages 3, 4
"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."
~tation

..

MODER:'&lt; WORW ADVANCES - Indian women and children
!rom the Zoro tril.., walt outside the office of the Indian affairs bureau on
their tribal land In the /\mazon Jungle In Porto Vclho, Brazil. The

..... ....,

'

Indians of Brazil's /\mazon are growing In numllers once again, but the
('UUurr and ways of the modem world and the white man are rubbing off
on tht•sr hnldo\'Pt'i from ancirnl timf'S. (A P I..aserphoto).

BALLOON AND COMPANY

413 4tl1, Kanauga

Balloons for
All Occasions
Delivering to
Middleport.
Pomeroy,
Rutland
and Mason.

'Wedding
Balloons
'Singing Songs
To Ftiends

'Remember
Birthdays
and

Get-Wells
Bring th is ad in
Get $2.00 0!1
Bouquets

TRY OUR SINGING GORILLAS

DONELLI'S PIZZA
453 SECOND AVENUE
GALUPOLIS, OHIO

'

STAYING CALM - M.;. Stewart, who stars as BIUy Melrose In CB8' "Scarecrow ood Mns.
King," calls his character a conservative. Says Stewart, "While everyone elM Is losing lhelr head,
he remains calm." (i\P Lase111h&lt;JW),

GROUP RATES
Church Youth Groups
Ball Teams
Scout Groups

School Groups
Parties
Bowling Teams

Food Discounts-6 Tokens for $1.()()

QUICK CASH!

(Ask Manager for Details)

.

•BUY USED ITEMS
•GUNS •TVs •STEREOS
•GUITARS •JEWELRY •TOOLS

•SELL OR TRADE-GOOD SELECTION

FRANK'S PAWN SHOP
430 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.
PH. 446-0840

4door, beautiful medium red with matching halfvinyl roof , red velour interior,

V-8 engine. auto. overdrive trans., power windows. seats, dootlocks and an tenna, AM/ FM/stereo, delay wipers. rear defogger, intermit1ent wipers. lac·
tory alum. wheels, radial tires.

$]3,900

LOCALLY OWNED

•LOANS ON PERSONAL PROPERTY

BIRTHDAY ·PARTIES
1. s2.75 per child minimum S27.50 .
2. Free balloons for each child (2 each)
3. 5 free tokens for birthday person
2 free tokens for each child
4. I-IT' pizza with I topping for every 5-6 children
5. I can soft drink for each child
6. Party hats for each child

Huntington. WV

WS4Z
HIIQ

Home Box Office

MAX

Cinemax

CBN
ESPN
WTBS
WTVN
WTAP
WCHS
WPBY
WBNS
WOUB
WOWK
WVAH

Christian Netwric:
Sport$ Network
Atlanta, GA
Columbus. OH
Parkersburg, WV
Charleston, WV
Huntington. WV
Columbus, OH
Athens. OH
Huntington, WV
Hurricane . WV

Hollywood
Page 5

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
1983 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Our Game Room Can Be Rented

.

listings

IN

,..,.u

Jay
Alan Evans
. and Frank Gheen

Monday thru Friday 8 a.m.-8 p
8 a.m.· 3
,

U liJ
(I)
(I)

CIJ
(!)

m
m

C1J

OCl.l

C1J
llO
(lj]

Ol ~

Iii

�PAGE EIGHT

6/23/84
MORNING

Sixth Annual Dave Diles
Cll Littles
0 Cil Bugs

Bunny/Road

Runner Show
Cil Do-lt-Yourself Show
(!) Professional Rodeo
®l Putt Putt Golf
from Mesquite. TX
ID (121 Kidsmag!
ill Night Tracks Cont'd
11 :00 0 (l) aJ l\llr. T
1D (fi) Prog cont' d
® ID CUI Puppy/Scooby
6 :00 (l) MOVIE : 'The Divided
Doo Show
Heart'
Cll Motorweek
Cil Blackwood Brothers
111 MOVIE : 'The Last Hard
ill TBS Morning News
Men'
C1J Aware
fl) listen
®I CNN Headline News
11 30 0
(l)
aJ Amazing
6 :30 0 CIJ Saturday Report
Spiderman/lncredible
(l) Rich Little's Robin
Hulk
Hood
C2J MOVIE : 'Grease 2'
Cil Jimmy Houston
CIJ SCTV #16 The com1cal
Cll Discover Columbus
chron1cles of the myth1ca l
0 Cll TV Classroom
Melonv1lle television c hannel
®J 20 Minute Workout
co ntmue m all -new ed1tions .
ID (fi) Weekend Magazine
Stamng Joe Flaherty, Eu7:00 0 (l) Joy of Gardening
gene Levy . Andrea Mart1n
Cil Weekend Gardener
and Martin Short .
(I) ESPN's Speedweek
ill Play Your Best Golf
ill Between the Lines
Cil Rod &amp; Reel
0 Cll Captain Kangaroo
ill) Bits and Bytes
C1J Market to Market
fj) Show My People
®I U .S. Farm Report
fl) News Conference
AFTERNOON
7 :30 0 CIJ ill Baseball Bunch
C2) Fraggle Rock
12:00 Cil Westerners
(l) MOVIE: 'Charlie Chan
(!) NFL's Greatest Moments NFL 's Greatest Moand the Curse of the
ments presents highlights of
Dragon Queen'
the 1976 and 1980 World
Cil Athletes in Action
Champion Oakland Ra1ders .
(!) ESPN's Horse Racing
(60 min)
Weekly
Cll Romper Room
(1) ID C12i ABC Weekend
Special 'The Haunted Man(I) Great Outdoors Host
sion Mystery . F~rst of 2
J1m Tabor gets outfitted for
parts . A boy and girl are dewhite water rafting and re termined to solve the mysceives a lesson in nature
drawing from artist Jim Ar tery of a missing miser and
nosky . !Closed Capt1onedj
his million dollar fortune . (R)
(Closed Captioned!
(!~ Agri . Country
0 Cll Biskitts
(fi) Littles
Cil To Be Announced
fl) Report Card
ill) Pet Action Line
8 :00 0
flintstone
fj) MOVIE : 'Ghost on the
Funnies
Loose'
C2J MOVIE : 'Mountain
12:30 0 C2J Let's Go To The
Family Robinson'
Races
CIJ Robert Schuller's Hour
CIJ MOVIE : 'The Pony
of Power jCiosed CapSoldier'
tioned!
Cil Wild Bill Hickok
(!) SportsCenter
Cll Solid Gold
ill Starcade
(!) Thundarr
C1J ID (12) Monchhichis/
0 Cll Benji. lax/Alien
little Rascals/Richie Rich
Prince
0 Cil Charlie Brown &amp;
Cil Bluegrass Ramble
Snoopy
ill) Kathy's Kitchen
Cil Doctor In the House
ID (j}) American Band®J Bugs Bunny
stand
fl) Dr . James Kennedy
C2) Alvin &amp; the
1 :00 0
Religion
Chipmunks
8 : 1 5 (I) Instructional
Cil MOVIE : 'The Quiet
8 30 0 (l) aJ Shirt Tales
Gun'
(4) Inside the USFL
(I)
USA
International
Cil MOVIE : 'The Charge at
Diving
Championships
Feather River'
Coverage of the women 's
0
00 10) Saturday
competitiOn 1s presemed
Supercade
from Fort Lauderdale. FL
(j) Butterflies
(60 m1n I
9 00 0 Cil aJ Smurfs
CIJ MOVIE : 'The Left IIl MOVIE : 'The Pride of
Handed Gun'
the Yankees '
(I) Happy Days
(1) James Robison
0 Cil New Fat Albert
(I)
Rugby :
Michelob
Show
National Club Champion Cil Austin City Limits
ship Coverage of thi S Rugby
( t~ Cousteau Amazon
Champ1onsh1p 1s pres ent ed
(!j) Photography
11om Hartford, CT (60 m1n)
® 6J liZ! New Scooby/ 1 30 0 (l) (I) Major Leagu e
Scrappy Doo
Baseball : St . Louis at
® Seeing Things
Chicago/or Los Angeles at
fl) Insight
Atlanta
9 :30 Cil Lesson
C2) MOVIE : 'The Sting II '
® 6) (12) Pac -Man/ Rubik
(I) Tennis: Mixed Doubles
Cube Hour
0 Cll Children's Film
0 CIJ ®J Dungeons and
Festival
Dragons
ill) Meeting Will Come To
fl) This Is the Life
Order
10:00 C2) MOVIE : 'Twice Upon A
ID (121 Curtis Cup Golf
Time'
Championship
Cil Cisco Kid
fj)
MOVIE :
'Arizona
(!) PKA Full Contact
Bushwackers'
Karate
2 :00 C2J MOVIE : 'Raggedy Man·
0 00 (lOJ Tarzan : Lord of
(I) Play Your Best Golf
the Jungle
0 C1J MOVIE : 'Zorba. the
Cll Dad's Army
Greek '
fl) Jimmy Swaggart
Cil Avengers
10:30 0
(l) aJ Alvin &amp; the
ill) Computer Chronicles
Chipmunks
2 : 30 Cil Call of the West
Cil MOVIE : 'Thunder Over
(!) Unlimited Hydroplane
Arizona'
Racing Coverage of the
liJ MOVIE : 'Witn§ss For
Budwe1ser Hydroplane Rethe Prosecution'
gatta ts presented from
5:00

m

m rn

Miami , FL . (60 min .)
Cll ID C12i Professional
Bowlers Spring Tour Cov erage of the $125.000
Showboat Doubles Class1c
is presented from the Show boat Bowling Center . Las
Vega s. NV . (90 min .)
® Victory Garden
3 :00 ffi MOVIE : ' Forbidden
Trail'
ill High Chaparral
Cil Living Wild 'The Search
of the Giant Otter . To night's program looks at the
elus1ve giant otter. a shy
crea ture who IS one of the
most threa tened animals 111
the world . (60 min .) (Closed
Capuoned j
(jQl Make it Microwave
ill) Magic of Floral Painting
fj) MOVIE : 'Savage Five'
3 :30 (I) MOVIE : 'Race for the
Yankee Zephyr'
(!)
Rugby:
Michelob
National Club Championship Coverage of this Rugby
Championship IS presented
from Hartford, CT . (60 min)
®J 1984 Springnationals
Championship Race
ill) Magic of Oil Painting
4 :00 CIJ Maxtrax
Cil Wyatt Earp
liJ Portrait of America:
Wisconsin
(1) ID C12i United States
Olympic Trials Coverage ol
the track and field tnals 1s
presented from the Los An geles Memonal Coliseum.
Los Angeles . CA . (60 min .)
Cil All Creatures Great and
Small
ill) Square Foot Gardening
4 :30 0 C2J All Star Wrestling
C2J MOVIE : 'Megaforce'
ffi Wagon Train
(!)
ESPN's
Ringside
Review
Cl) SportsWorld Today ·s
program fea tures boxing
and the World Finals of Dray
Rac1ng . (90 m1n.)
0 (J) ®J Atlanta Golf
Classic Coverage of the
third round IS presented
from the Atlanta Country
Club. Atlanta. Ga . (go min I
ill) Lap Quilting
5:00 ill
Fishin'
w/Orlando
Wilson
(I) 6) (fi) Wide World of
Sports Today ·s program
features a 12-round WBC
l1ghtwe1ght
champ1onsh1p
bout betw een champton Ed win Rosano and Howard
Dav1s (90 m1n I
Cil Masterpiece Theatre
'To Serve Them All My
Days.· From the battlefields
of World War I, Dav1d
Powlett -Jones encoumers
the bamers o f class preJud ICe 111 h1 s new teac h1ng JOb
(A) (60 m111) jCiosed Cap uoned j
(HJ Do It For Yourself
fl) Big Time Wrestling
5 :30 0
(l) That Nashville
Music
C2) Rich Little 's Robin
Hood
ill Motorweek Illustrated
ill) Last Chance Garage
EVENING
6 :00

6 :30

0
Cil

(I) 0 Cll (lO) News
The Monroes
(I) World Championship
Wrestling
CIJ- God Has the Answer
ill) Great Outdoors J1m Ta bor explores Vermont' s
w~nter wilderness on crosscountry sk1 s and Judi Wtneland searches for the one horned rhino and the elus1ve
tiger. (Closed Captloned j
Iii Greatest American
Hero
0 CIJ Cl) NBC News
CIJ MOVIE : ' Twice Upon A
Time'

(I) MOVIE : ' Love and
Death'
(!) Auto Racing '84 'NAS CAR Penn H1ll Pont1ac Dash
from Pocono , PA .'
(I) ID ~ News
0 Cil c .oncern
®l CBS News
® Sneak Previews F1lm
cnt1cs Jeffrey Lyons and
Neal Gabler spo tlight 'Mov Ies to W atch For.· f1lm s m
llmtted release th at you
should not rn1s s su ch as
'Danton ' and ·ca rm en ·
7 :00 0 (l) Dance Fever
Cil Alias Smith and Jones
ill SportsCenter
® 0 (1) Hee Haw
Cil Star Search
Cil Dr. Who Movie
(jQl Lifestyles of the Rich
and Famous
® All Creatures Great and
Small
ID @ Solid Gold
fl) How the West Was
Won
7 :30 0 (I) Just Say No
liJ Down to Earth
8:00 0 C2J CD Diff'rent Strokes
Mr Drummond finds h1mself
attracted to a local television aerobtcs instructor that
hts company IS trytng to
promote . (R) 1Closed Captioned I
(I) MOVIE : 'Spring Break'
(l) MOVIE : · ' Everything
You Always Wanted to
Know About Sex·
Cil MOVIE: 'The Eternal
Sea'
(!) Amateur Boxing : USA
vs. USSR from Moscow
(I) MOVIE : 'The War Lord'
C1J 6J (121 T .J . Hooker
Hooker and Stacy become
involved with a woman who
was raped . (R) (60 min .)
(Closed Captioned j
0 Cll ®J Mama Malone
Dina threat ens suicide and
Mama · s dtrector IS threaten tng her w1th a move from her
apartment to a TV stud1o
ill) Ramblin'
fl) Mrs. America Pageant
8 :30 0 (l) Cl) Silver Spoons
Problem s arise when Freddy
overhears Ri cky d1scla1m
the~r fn endsh1p (A)
0 Cil (1Q) MOVIE : 'The
Fury'
Cil MOVIE : 'Enter Madam'
9:00 0 Cil CD Mama's Family
Tempers come to the bo1ilng
po1nt when she constan tly
requests people to drtve her
around so she can comp lete
some errands (R)
(!) USFL Football : Los
Angeles at Arizona
Cil Q) 1121 Love Boat Tw o
show -btz ve terans scheme
to get a publ1sher to produce
memotrs,
an
exth etr
husband meets h1s ex -w1fe ' s
fi ancee and Capt Stub1ng IS
baffled by a husband 's be havotr toward h1s wtfe (R)
(60 m1n.)jCiosed Capt1oned j
liD Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin
9 :30 0 Cil CD Scene of the
Crime Orson W elles hosts
th1 s program 1n wh1ch the
vtew1ng audtence is challenged to solve a murder .
(l) Assaulted Nuts
ill) Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin
10:00 0 (l) (!) NBC Reports
Mark Nykanen examines the
sexual abuse ol children by
adults and the world of ch1ld
pornography . (60 min.)
CIJ
Hitchhiker-Morning
Comes A commercial producer' s life is changed by a
chance meeting.
CIJ MOVIE : 'National
Lampoon's Vacation'
Cil Feed the Children
Cll Gl CBI Fantasy Island
Three woman employees
try to overcome what they
believe to be a lack of cour-

age and a man wants his
wife and family to experience the wealth he was
never able to g1ve them . (R)
(60 m1n .) (Closed Capuonedj
(ffi MOVIE: 'The Private
Life of Henry VIII'
fl) Switch
10 :30 CIJ Not Necessarily The
News
Cil MOVIE: 'Cult of the
Cobra'
10:45 (I) Wild World of Animals
11 oo
(j}) News
ffi MOVIE: 'The Sting II' ·
Cil Special
fl) Twilight Zone
11 :15 liJ
Night
Tracks Chartbusters
11 :30 0 (l) CD Saturday Night
Live
Cil John Ankerberg
Cll MOVIE : ' Meet The
People'
0 C1J MOVIE : 'Return to
Peyton Place·
® All In the Family
6J C12i MOVIE : To Be
Announced
11 :45 C2J SCTV #16 The comical
chronicles of the mythocal
Melonville television channel
continue in all-new editions .
Starring Joe Flaherty . Eugene Levy . Andrea Martin
and Martin Short .
12 :00 Cil Ministry Special
(!) SportsCenter
Cil Night Tracks
® MOVIE: 'Paper Moon'
12:15 Cil MOVIE: 'The Frozen
Ghost'
12 :30 (I) MOVIE: 'Force Five'
ffi Other Angel
(J) This Week in the NBA
'Season Wrap-Up.'
Maximum Security ThiS
1 2 :45
drama focuses on life inside
a federal penitentiary .
1 :00 0 C2J MOVIE : 'To Each
His Own'
Cil Emergency : A Special
Report
ill ESPN's
Ringside
Review
(!) Solid Gold
fl) Outer Limits
1:15 ID C12i ABC News
1 :30 CIJ MOVIE: 'Grease 2'
Cll Solid Gold
1D (j}) News
2 00 Cil Best of 700 Club
(!) News/Sign Off
6J C121 CNN Headline News
2 :15 (I)
MOVIE :
' Puberty
Blues'
2 30 0 C2J News
(J) SportsCenter
3 :00 Cil Heritage Singers
ill PKA Full Contact
Karate
3 :30 (I) MOVIE : ' Spring Break '
Cil Hi Doug
3 :45 (l) MOVIE : 'The Brood'
4 :00 Cil Westbrook Hospital
4 :30 Cil Ross Bagley
(!)
Australian
Rules
Football '84 : Semifinal #2
'North Melbourne vs Hawthorn

APPALACHIA GOLF TOURNAMEN'I'

om m mom oo m

m

"I just do what the book
says. Honor your father and
mother so your days will be
long on earth. I have tried to
be honest and live right."
- Betty Lyons, wbo at
118 Is tbe oldest penon In
North Carolina and po~~lbly
In tbe United States.

"When you reach 70, the
future can be just as uncer·
tain as it was when you left
college. How's that for com·
forting words... make love
and propagate. That's what
we're here for."
Burgen Meredltb,
actor, addressing tbe gada·
atlng seaton of Middlebury
College In Ve11J!O!It.

JUNE 20 &amp; 21, 1984
RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE, MASON, W. VA.
.'

.· S.UPPlEMEIT TO ltfE SUNDAY TIME$-S~NTINEL &amp; POINT. PLEASANT REGISTER

�PAGE THREE

PAGE NO

Dante Lavelli, ex-pro gridder, will
take part in charity golf tourney
,

AGENT

Lawlli had a brief rolk&gt;gp
ca~r at Ohio Statt&gt; and gaint'd

football imrnonalitv -.ilh the
(l(',"t'land Browns as the m an
Quartt&gt;rback Ono Graham
sought out wht'n he neroed a
cornplf.'lion. Llvt'lli. who was
rom in Hudson. Ohio. joint'd the
Bro\\1\S when tht':-· werE' in the
old .-\ll-America n Football Con·
fPf'Pfl('(' in 1~. and pla,·ro
through t tx&gt; 1956 season. As a
roo kiP. I'll' was thl' league·s top

POINT INSURANCE
AGENCY

PIA
JIM PEROOE,

Professio1ul football fans \\ill
•tl wa\"S ['{'l'l1('mbf&gt;r Dantt&gt; Ll ·
, .Pili as OOP of the ~&lt;am&lt;'&gt;
.tll ·timt&gt; grpdts. and Llwlli is
comi"l' to the Dan• Dik&gt;s·
Appa lachia gulf toumalllt'nt and
supp&lt;&gt;r.
Tlle Clt•• el.lnd. Ohio busint'SS·
man. \\'ho was enstuin&lt;&gt;d in ! ~'
Pro Football Hall of F ame m
1~. " ill tx&gt; mdlung his mt tal
Jpp.&gt;ardlX'&gt;' in ttus annual ch.tr·
ir• affair .

2415 Jacison Awe.

Point Plusant

•l
'

'

\;

675-2218

Chicken
Right.

.
.

I

NED GARVER

BOBSTAAK
(Xavier cage coach)

GALLIPOLIS FERRY

rr·e Do

'

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Welcome 1984 celebrities!

Waterbeds Our Specialty

WHEN THE fWIE IS NAPA
THE STANDARD IS QUAUTY
M~in

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FLAIR FURNITURE &amp; DESIGNS

AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLY CO.
233

caught 11 passes in the 1!YJO
league tit it&gt; ga me. In aU. La\'(•lli
playt'd on 10 diVision or lt&gt;agup
champi ons hip tpams . Thrpp
times ht&gt; was an all -pro
S('iection.

675-1371

KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN
675-5666

319 Viand Street

Point Pleasant

DANNY NEE
( OU cage coach)

(Fonner Big-Leaguer)

DARRELL IIEDRIC

ALBROWN

(Mlaml Associate AD)

(Ball SWe Coach)

These celebrities will .also attend event

Compliments Of

"Complete Insurance Protection"
67S...3499

!'{'('(&gt;ivPr and in all caught passes
for 62 touchdowns .
La,·eiJi was particularly tough
in titlt&gt; ga mPS. with a record 24
catcht'S in six NFL title gam&lt;&gt;s.
Old "Glut&gt; Fingers. " as ht&gt; was
dublx&gt;d Parly in his carper,

I

Making a return appearance
In the 1984 Dave Diles·
Appalachia golf tournament Is
former big league pitcher Ned
Garver.
Old-time baseball fans remember what a spectacular
career Garver had with the St.
Louis Browns from 1948 through
!952 and it has often bt'en said of
the Ney, Ohio native that had he
pitched for a successful tpam
he'd have been not only a
millionaire but a sure-fire bet for
baseball's Hall of Fame.
Garver. a righthander, won 20

games for the Browns In 1951
and altogether, the hapless
Browns won only 52 games this
season. Ned Is the only pitcher In
major leaguP history to have
won 20 gamPS for a team that

lost as many as 100 games.
Garver was the starting pitcher
for the American League in the
1951 all-star game, and started
an opening day eight times in his
14 major league seasons. Garver

Hedric changed assignments at Miami
Darrell Ht'dric, 50, announced
in April, 1984, a change of
assignments after 14 years as
head basketball coach to asso·
elate athletic director.
Hedrlc r eached a coaching

milestone this past season as he
recorded his 216th victory
aga inst 157 defeats for a winning
percentage of .581. This past
season he guided the Redskins to
a 2H I"E'CCrd, the most victories

of any Miami basketball team in
h.ISt Ory.
He has helped guide Miami to
fivP Mid -American (MA C 1
championships and to four appearances In the NCAA tourna-

ment. Hedric's 1977·78 team
upset defending national cham·
pion M arquete, 84-81, In over·
time, in the opening round of the
NCAA Mideast Regionals.
Continued on Page 4

Compliments Of

THE

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
In The Heart of Pomeroy

HOME NATIONAL
BAN
RACINE AND SYRACUSE, OHIO

WELCOMES
ALL GOLFERS

'

porting him.
Garver Is a past recipient of
the covett'd Good Guy Award .
There are stlll some spots
open for local golfers to com pet!.'
in the 18-hole event.

later pitched for the Detroit
Tigers, Kansas City Athletics
and Los Angeles Angeles and
curiously enough during that
14-year career, never once had a
really competitive team sup-

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Name Brand Clothing For Men and Women
MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992-2351

GOOD LUCK GOLFERS

DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN
INSURANCE
POMEROY, OHIO

Compliments Of

WELCOME GOLFERS

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

K&amp;C JEWELERS

MIDDLEPORT
992-2641

212 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Compliments Of

New Haven Fire Department

CROW-HUSSELL FUNERAL HOME
1701 JEFFERSON BLVD.

POINT PLEASANT
675-2630

EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBER

882-2015
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

MEMBER FDIC
- - - - - - - --

--

�PAGE FOUR

Two fortner Redskins to
help golf chairity June 21
Two

former Washington
Redsklns are among the celeblitles scheduled to appear at the
Dave Dlles-Appalachla Golf
Tournament June 21 at the
Riverside Golf Club.
Meigs County native Ron
McDole and teanunate Bill
Brundige will again partlclpa te
in the charity event Both were
Redsklns durtng the 1m.
Other celebrities who will be in

Hedric...

PAGE FIVE

Riverside to host Diles event

MASON - Riverside Golf,
Course Is owned by Gary and
the tournament are coaches Bobby ·Roush and their Wives,
trom Ohio Un!Yerslty and MI- Mary imd Louise. they pur- .
ami University, several Pro- chased the course In 1m from
Golf Association players, former Paul R. and Douglas Roush.
At the time, the course was
just nine holes but has been
enlarged to 18-holes with the
addition of a practice green . It Is

major league pitcher Ned
Garver, Archie and Ray Griffin,
Harvard basketball coach,
Frank McLaughlin, Hoty Cross
basketball coach AI Brown, Air
Force Gen. James V. Hartinger
and former Ohio State quarterback Art Schlltchter.

the onty J.8.hole cwrse IR the
trl-&lt;-'OUIIty area.
A 11ew fairway

wat~r

sprinkler system has been Installed wtlich covers the lO,IQl
teet of pipe. In the past, grass In
the fairways had to be cut high In
order to keep the fairways fr&lt;m
drying out
1be new sprinkler system

Installed IJ8st year help&amp; eliminate ttw problem and now
allows the fairways to be cut
shorter.
A new fairway mower has also

STATE FARM INSURANC.E
Paul Somerville, Jr.
Agent
675-4030

~I

Ph. 446-2691

I
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Club[g

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!____ ,

Puttmg

0 .8 .

Gr"""

COURSE LAYOUT -The above diagram shows the layout of the Riverside Golf Course which
Is located along Rt. 33 near Mason. The golf coUBe which covers 130 acres olland Is the only IS.hole
golf coorse In the Trl-County area. The Is-hole course Is a par- 'lO, wtth Hole No. Five being the
longest at 514 yards and a par-five. Hole No. 14 Is the shortest with a par-three at 94 yards.

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY
PHONE 992-6661

PHONE 992-3007

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as

AMBURGEY AVIATION, INC.

~()

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675-7311

"THE BEST OF LUCK TO ALL"

MASON, W. VA.

773-5574

MASON COUNTY AIRPORT
675-2354

Point Pleasant

MASON RESCUE SQUAD

BORDMAN FURNITURE
"SEE US FOR ALL YOUR HOME FURNISHINGS"

Point Pleasant

tjNATIONWIOE INSURANCE
*

WILLIAM HUSSELL, AGENT

773-5942

MASON FIRE

DEPARTME~.T

"PLEASE SUPPORT THIS YEAR'S TOURNAMENT

773-5574

Mason, W. Va.

110 South Second Street

THE FASHION SHOPPE
5TH STREET

NEW HAVEN
882-3312

675-2406

Your Financial Center
WELCOMES
ALL GOLFERS

0

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Ph. 992-2054

WELCOME GOLFERS

313 Main Street

MIDDLEPORT I OHIO
FDIC
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

'

POMEROY
113 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

,--

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'

On The "T" In Middleport

Your Professional Jeweler

L

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SUPERMARKET

Lm•e"'

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"Dignity and Service Alwe~ys"
o

C. K.

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Gallipolis. OH.

I

MASON, W. VA.

2ND STREET

Pomeroy, OH.

342 Second

106 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY,OH.
PHONE: 992-2121

I

Sl' nd .~

PH. 992-2039

assis ta nt coach In three-tl!le
winning seasons under Dick
Shrider, now Miami's Athletic
Director, a nd ·one with Tates
Locke.
A native of Franklin. Ohio, the
!iO-year old Hedrlc has guided
the Redskins to MAC championships In 1970.71, 1972-73, 1976-TI,
1977-78 a nd 198.1-84 with records
of 20.5. 18-9. 20-6, 1 ~9 a nd 24-6.
The 198.1-84 team won more
games tha n a ny Miami tea m in
hi story a nd more MAC ga mes
tha n a ny l£'ague team ever.
Holde r of a master's degree
from Sa vier 1Cincinnati I in 1962.
Hroric a nd his wife. Jan , have a
daughter. Kim. 24. a nd a son.
Cra ig , 22. Both Kim a nd Cra ig
a rl' Miami gradua tes.

773-5561

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"Th e Way America

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

I

A

FOGLESONG FUNERAL HOME

1400 OHIO STREET- POINT PLEASANT

401 Viand Street

\

Ty Somerville
Agent
675-4035

tae•

been purchased to add to the

overall look at tile course.
1be new fairway sprinkler
system Is operated manually
Continued on Page 6

Continued trom Page 3

Hedric was Inducted Into
Mia mi's Athletic Hall of Fame
In February of 1978. He has been
selected as the "Baske tball
Coach of the Year" three times
in both the MAC a nd the state of
Ohio. In 19TI he received the
A.K. Morris Award from the
Miami Alumni progra m in
recognition of distinguished service to the uniwrsity.
A 19!'i5 graduate of Miami.
Hedric is the first Miamia n to be
full -time head basketball coac h
a t his a lma mater. He has been a
part of 12 of Miami's 14 MAC
title s. As a four- ~•£'ar l£'tt £'r
~&lt;inner at guard. he playro on
thr£'£' c hamp ion s hip tl'am s
undN Bill Rohr a nd sern'd as
co-ca ptain his senior y£'ar. Hl'
was a gradua l(' ass is ta nt a nd an

UAU

HARRIS FARMS
GARDEN CENTER &amp; PRODUCE MARKET

MASON, W. VA.

675-2702
1111 Viand Street

NEW HAVEN SUPERMARKET
5TH STREET

NEW HAVEN
832-2125
"W. Appreciate Your Business"

"Good Luck Golfers"
"LET'S ALL GO TO DAIRY QUEEN"

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Ple~~ant

Point Pleasant

�PAGE SEVEN
PAGE SIX

Riverside...
Special awards will be
(Continued from Page 4)
available at sixth annual
whlle the tee and green
sprinklers originally
Dave Diles charity tourney when the course was con·
Installed

Special awanls will be avallable at the sixth aruma! Dave
Diles Appalachia GoU Toumament on June 21, according to
Bill Nelson, planning committee ·
member.
"We're delighted local buslnessmen have pltcbed In to help
us award special prizes oo all the
par three holes," said Nelsoo. He
announced that there will be six
such prizes.
On the ninth hole, anyone
scortng a hole-irHlne will re-

celved a

1984 Ford Escort,

courtesy of Pat Hill Fonl of

Middleport.
Clark Jewelers, Pomeroy Is
awarding to Selko watch to
person whose tee shot In closest
to the pbt oo the seventh hole.
PoweD's Super-Valu wiD give
a beef loin for the closest to the
pin oo the IUh hole.
Paul Simon's shoe store will
give a pair of goU shoes to the
closest to the 11ag on the 12th
(Continued on Page 11)

Ute

structed, operate on an automatic timing system.
Another recent Improvement
was the enlargement of the tees.
All 18 tees have been made
larger and bent grass, the same
type of grass on the greens, was
used on the tees. ln addition to
the sprinkler system, more than
500 feet of tlle has been laid to
help drain the low spots through
the course.

MOORE'S HARDWARE
675-2920
305 Main Street

~ig hit of the '113 event was "Our Gang" and "Uttle Rascals"
star _George (Spanky) McFarland . Here, Spanky takes part in an
am•t1on at the '113 supper.

Point Pleasant

"FOR All YOUR HARDWARE &amp; POINT NEEDS"
*Gray Seal &amp; Dutch Boy Paint *lawnboy Mowers
*Huffy Bicycles
*Hoover Sweepers
(Repair &amp; Parts)
(Repair &amp; Parts)
*Stanley Tools
*Homelite Chain
*Black &amp; Decker
Saws &amp; Trimmers
Saws, Drills, Sanders *Toys *Keys Made
*Hedstrom Swing Sets, Big Wheels &amp; Tricycles

WH~ rJ lT COMES Tt&gt;

Good Guy Award in 1983 goes to Danny Nee, who led the Ohio
University Bobcats Into the NCAA Basketball Tournament.

Archie Griffin, the only two-time Helsman trophy wbtner,
gets another award at the 1983 tournament dinner. Archie makes
an annual appearance at the local tournament.

HEll HEATING &amp; COOLING
ADD ON HEAT PUMP
GAS FURNACES
AND HEAT PUMPS

nte

~1'

IN FULL SEe\/ LC.£ BAN~ NG
vou'rz£ tJEVER MOllE 11tAtJ
A FIVE lrzoN AWAY.

MYERS WATER PUMPS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

POINT PLEASANT
675-1812

MASON
773-5536

Jackson Ave.
22nd Street

Six North
Second Street

Rio Grande hasketail star
Kent WoUe gets off a good drive
on the first tee.

A. 0. SMITH
GAS &amp; ELECTRIC
WATER HEATERS
ELJER PLUMBING
GERBER &amp; DELTA FAUCETS
WATER CONDITIONERS

SMITH PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Point Pleasant

511 Burdette

675-2710

SUMMER HEADQUARTERS

VILLAGE INSURANCE

MEN -WOMEN
NIKE • PONY • DEXTER
All At Sale Prices!

BANK ONE ..
Member FDIC

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Cecil Minton • Saybra Jackson • Bernie Riddle
Curtis Roush • Dorothy Gibbs
AGENTS
311 5th Street
New Haven
882-2017

2118 Jefferson Blvd.
Point Pleasant
675-2739

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Men's Levi's ••••••••••••••~.16
W omens Lev1., s •••••••••••

88

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RARDIN'S SHOE CENTER
510 Main Street

675-3250

Point Pleasant

�PAGE NINE

/

}.:t: ~
..... 1;11'~.
t'
·,
• j

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.··

. . . . . No

..'

"'

Ohio U. Football Coach Brian Burke and BowHng Hall of Farner Dick Weber
share some conversation at the 19!13. Hillbilly Supper.

aw-.

Georse Hackett .Jr. presents a Mt of Irons IAI Ohio U.'s Frank

.11m
111e famous Hank Williams lrnpenona&amp;or, gets a
special awanllrom toumament host Dave DUes.

Richey for Richey's accomplishments.

For All Your Insurance Needs

'

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' i . ·-

·. ·~u_!~- . ,·.

- - - - -- - ---- -

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Harry Miller, Agent
Carolyn Thorne, Agent

'

•FIRE

..( 2.,_

~ - --

We've always been able to ~t down and talk.
Now there~ more to talk about.

.....
MASON COUNTY
INSURANCE AGENCY
"THE AGENCY THAT CARES"
ART GHEEN
MIKE RAWSON
LEW WILEY

Point Pleasant

610 Viand

882-2145

"Two's Better Than One"
415 Main Street

/

HIDDEN VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB
Point Pleasant
Compliments Of

E &amp; R EXCAVATING
5th Street

New Haven

882-2271

i-

~-.1

"YOUR COMPLETE EXCAVATING SERVICE"

I

BUY ADOZEN DONUTS
GET ADOZEN SMIDGETS
~~ I
FREE!

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Give Us A Call, No Job Too Big
Or Too Small

~ L_~:~·P!·=~~~4

MISter

DoN&amp;t;

675-6890

Successful Tournament

New Haven

BUY A DOZEN DONUTS
GET A DOZEN SMIDGETS FREE!
·what a Tasty Offer! Stop in between now and
·Saturday, June 30, 1984, for a dozen deltctous.
fresh donuts. You'lt get a dozen Smidgets FREE
with coupon below from Mister Donut.

Point Pleasant
Federal
Savings
&amp;
Loan
Associ1tion
· ·

We Hope You Have A Very

•AUTOMOTIVE
•BONDS
LIFE - HEALTH -·RETIREMENT

5th Street

Every day we ~eep coming up with more way' to help you manage your financial
future . And now we've got more 'crvirc' than ever hch&gt;rc .
So drop in. 'it down. and tal~ with u, . we·,,. "•'t""'re to tal~ ahout than c1er.

217 Sixth Street

Dave Diles Golf Tournament

MIIJ.ER'S INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
;i\

675-4067

BEST WISHES
To The

CALL

Spanky McFarland bas a word of encouragement for Tom WoUe, President of
the Racine Home National Bank, before they tee off. Paul Simon, background, had
an
round of goU.

Bob MOler was one of the
uaMfly attired &amp;offers .
Here, Bri One's MIDer hits one
off the first tee at Riverside.

more

?322 Jackson
Point Pleuant

675-5159

OPEN
24 HOURS

• Free Estimates

882-2271

�PAGE TEN

PAGE ELEVEN

HOST COURSE FOR TOURNAMENT- L tor, Gary and Mary Roush, Louise
and Bob Roush, with the plaque they received for being the host course for the
tournament. The Roushes own the Riverside Golf Club in Mason.

Tournament spon~or Kenny Kerr, right, post'S with two of the Beautiful Stroh
girls and Comedian Spanky McFarland .
,-----------------------.

.'

~

~~~r·t+.

AV6628070

.

FORMER Ohio State University Football great Art Schlichter
will perfonn Ill the 19M Dave Diles golf charity classic at Mason
this week.

LAST MINUTE INSTRUCTIONS- Spanky McFarland has some last minute Instructions for
Horace Karr, seated, and Gary Roush, rear.

Spectator reminders .. special Awards ___

(_Co_n_ti_nu_e_d_fr_om_P_a.:.;..!(!'_G_l_ _ _ _ _ __

1. Wear comfortable shoes.
2. Drink plenty of fluids.
3. Guard against heat whenever possible. If you are a
fair-skinned person, rest In the shade or bring along a golf umbrella.
Protect yourself against the sun.
4. Bring binoculars for better viewing.
5. Pick up a pairing sheet with a m ap of the course. Also, organize
your day so you have enough time to follow th!' golfers you would like
to see.
6. Observe proper golf etiqu!'tte.

Pat Hill Ford annually gives a new Ford to anyone who gets a hole In one on the
par three ninth hole. Hill, right, Is shown with crack salesman George Harris.

hole.
A specially-engraved watch
commemorating the tournament goes to the person with the
shot closest to the llagslick on
the fourth hole.
On the 14th hole, golfers will be
able to shoot at a circle and any
shot within that circle rewards

V.D.EDWARDS
INSURANCE, INC.

YOUR TWO IN ONE SHOE STORE

AND

Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-10 p.m. - Sunday 10 a.m.-10 p.m •.

MIDDLEPORT

HERITAGE
HOUSE
FAMILY SHOE STORE

spot In tbe 144-man tournament
field the following morning at 10
at Riverside Golf Oub. Appllca·
tions are available at Bank One,
Pomeroy Branch; Racine Home
National Bank, Fanners Bank
and Savings Co., Jaymar Golf
Club and the Riverside Golf
Club.

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

215 E. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
"Insurance For Every Need"

Best Wishes To All Golfers

the golfer with three premlwn
golf balls.
The celebrity field Is all set but
there are openings for local
gofters who want to take part in
the charity event. A $150 registration fee means two tickets to
the hillbilly supper at 6 p.m . on
June 20 at Royal Oak Park and a

PH. 992-5432
p'*UQY .QN•

INGELS
CANDY'S CLASSIC
COLLECTION

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KUT RITE
CARPETS

MIDDLEPORT OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-7028
992-2635
•
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INGELS FURNITURE STORE

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

Golf Shoes by Endicott Johnson
Golf Clubs &amp;Bags by MacGregor
PH. 992-5627

106 N. Second Avenue
Middlepoft, Ohio 45760
Zenith TV

992-2635

Amana Appliances

�PAGE TRIKTEEN

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
Ph. 992-2556

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

Pomeroy, OH.

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp;Heating, Inc.
Re•identi11l &amp;: Commercial
•Plumbing Repairs
•Gas &amp; Water lines
•Electric Sewer Cleaning
•Water Heaters

.

24HOUREMERGENCYSER~CE

•A1r conditioning o Boiler Repairing • Heating Contractors o Haat Pump•

"Kerm's Korner"

Pomeroy, OH.

NICK LEONARD-Owaer

232 2nd Street. Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2036
Call 992·5547

8

.

TEWKSBARY
BARBER SHOP

.

uslnessman Lan-y PoweU, left, and Ernie Shuler center pose with fonner Ohio Stale
foo*baU great Bob White
0

•

•

Hls professional career has been
interrupted by his Involvement
with gamblers and he' s currently under suspension .
"We want him here for our
tournament ," said committeeman Bill Nelson . "He gave all of
us a gn•at deal of pleasure
during his college career and
thls is a good tlme for us to thank
him for that.

FRANCIS
FLORIST

PLEASANT VALLEY NURSI~G
CARE UNIT

Pomeroy, Ohio

Schlichter to join field

MASON -Former Ohio State obtained at area banks a nd golf
quarterback Art Schlichter has courses. Proceeds of the event
joined the field for the sixth go to charity In the Meigs-Mason
annual Dave Dlles-Appalachia area and to date some $34,&lt;XXl
golf tournament to be held June has been turned over to charit a21 at Riverside Golf Club In ble causes.
Mason.
Schlichter had a record The celebrity field Is fast studded career at Ohio State
filling up but there are some University, starting as a freshspots remaining ln the field at man, and leading the Buckeyes
$150 and applications can be

Compliments Of

Compliments Of

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
VALLEY DRIVE
Two Miami men compare notes - fonner Miami Foo*baU
f,oach Johnny Pont, left, chats with long-time Redskin Basket baD
Coach Darren Hedric.

MASON COUNTY BANK

675-5236

SAND HILL ROAD

POINT PLEASANT

675-4340

SIMMON'S
Olds.-Cad.-Chevy, Inc.
Pomeroy, OH.

Count On Us . . _ We're

nRE

"A GOOD BANK IN A GOOD ARIA"

YOUR ONLY AUTHORIZED
GOODYEAR DEALER

CUSTOM POL VSTEEL

$43

"Meigs County's Oldest Florist"

POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2644 -~'lhl n
v•~euom

1 55 BO R 13

00 !18:;;_, , :
P176 76 R 14

47.1f5

P191&gt;76R 14

54 .95

P206 75 R 15
P2 1575R 15
~R14

U .lfll
82 . 1~-­

15316

r P2311 ii!'.l! _ea:n

·

G&amp; J
AUTO PARTS
W. 2nd St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-2139

Rt. 33
Mason, W. Va.
PH. 773-5511

Available At

See Us for All Your

THE

Banking Needsf

MASON COUNTY BANK
882-2135
5th Street

New Haven
' ' ''I

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,-

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Peoples Bank
OF POINT PLEASANT
2212 Jackson Ave.

675-1121
Member FDIC

�PAGE FOURTEEN

PAGE FIFTEEN

EXXON GASOLINE AND HEATING OIL

Who is
Dave Diles?

Distributed By

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

Dave Diles, host ofthe Appalachia semi-closed golf tourna ment and hillbtlly supper held
annually in the rolllng hUls of
Southeastern Ohio and West
Virginia, is a resident of Racine
who was raised at Middleport,
Ohio. He served 21 years in
numerous sports capacities with
ABC-TV. In 1982, he handled
college football play-by-play for
CBS sports. He began his
journalism career with the
Gallipolis Tribune in 1947. He
also worked for the Athens
Messenger, Pomeroy Dally Sentinel and Associated Press.

WE REPLACE
ELECTRIC HEAT.
If you have electric heat, see how
much less your heating bill would be
with energy -efficient Pyrofax Gas.
Some homes can be heated and
cooled with Pyrofax Gas for the
same fuel cost as heating only with
electricity. Call us for the facts.

From 1961·72 and again from
1979-1982, Diles served as sports
director of WXYZ·TV in Detroit
and from 1962·72 served in the
same capacity with WXYZ
radio.

E

A graduate of Middleport
High School and Ohio Univer·
sity, DUes has won more than 90
awards for broadcasting and
wrtting. The Diles Tournament
has raised nearly $30,!XXI for
chartttes in the Melgs·Mason
area.

Meigs ootive Dave Diles

G&amp;B
EXXON

RALPH E. THOMAS -

(304) 675-2460
.

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

In Meigs Olunty Phone

'.

Rt. 62

Wishes

HEATING AND COOLING
EQUIPMENT
FURNACES -FUEL OIL - GAS &amp; ELECTRIC HEAT PUMPS SPLIT SYSTEM
Self Contained Air Conditioners
Super Efficient Hermitage Top Discharge System

Great

ONE STOP AUTO REPAIR
ROAD SERVICE

Success

EMERGENCY
ROAD REPAIR SERVICE
WHEN POSSIBLE

If Energy is a Problem
Let Us Solve It!!

To The

MAJOR &amp; MINOR AUTO
REPAIR SERVICE

Dave

OFFICIAL STATE INSPECTION STATION

Diles

2 EXPERT MECHANICS ON DUTY

Golf

E
gas
F EL

PT. PLEASANT
EXXON

G&amp; B
EXXON

2112 JeHerson Blvd.
675-2531

U. S. Rt. 35, Henderson
675-7450

... . , , ,, , . .

, , , , ,, ,

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Save our RC, RC·100, Nehi, Upper 10,
Diet Rite, Dad's Root Beer and Decaf·
feinated RC bottle caps for charity.

.'

RC Bottling Co.

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

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'

.

Mill St.
I

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CALL 675-5750

pyrofax

"NO MUSS - NO FUSS - DON'T CUSS - CALL US!"

Tourney

Point Pleasant

992-2145

Royal Crown Bottling Co.

Owner

® pyrofax gas

In Mason And Gallia County Phone

DUAL WINNERS - The 1983 tournament had dual winners,
Riverside's Ty Ro~h. right, and Meigs High School's Bob Oliver.

PT. PLEASANT
EXXON

Pyrofax Gas heats 2.3 homes with the same amount of
primary energy it takes electricity to heal one home!

Ph. 992-3542
.. ~iddleport,
. . OH.

In Mason, Gallia &amp; Meigs County _Phone

3.

•

Located Beside The Former Pantasote Plant
In Camp Conley

..P.h •.304-67.5~2460 ....

�SUPPLEMENT TO:
Pt. PleBJenl Regiater
Pt. ?Miasant, W. VA .
~undey Timet SW~hnel

Items &amp; Prices Good
In Silver Bridge &amp; Pomeroy

PAGE SIXTEEN

THE RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE

WELCOME GOLFERS
COMPLIMENTS OF

THE JAYMAR GOLF CLUB
FULLY EQUIPPED PRO SHOP
SNACK BAR
GOLF CAR RENTALS
LOCKER ROOM
MEETING ROOM
CLUB REPAIR
GOLF LESSONS
Bill CHILDS, MANAGER

JAYMAR GOLF CLUB
PHONE 992-6312

POMERY, OHIO

I

Is Proud To Be
U · S .D.A . INSPECTED
HOLLY FARMS

The
Host
Course
For The
6th
Annual

I (

....b::;::::::::=:-tii....

,

\

I(

Mixed
Fryer Parts

I

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. I

,· I

I(

I .

· Pound

(

•

I

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(

Dave Diles Appalachia
Celebrity Golf Tournament.

Good Luck Golfers, And
Thanks Very Much For
Your Support.

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners

. ·· · · · · · · · · ··· · · • ·· · · ·..... . .

RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE
773-9527
Rt. 33

Mason, W.Va.

Kroger
$
Homogenized Milk ... ~~~
12-oz .
Pkg .

Kroger 2o/o
Lowfat Milk

IN OIL OR WATER

t

Bob &amp; Louise Roush and Gary &amp; Mary ~oush-Owners

Star-Kist
Chunk Light Tuna ......... 6 ~~~z

$ 79
. ...... .. ... . . ... Gal.
Jug

$ 59

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat Milk

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

99

. .. . ....... . ..... Gal.
Jug

Del Monte
Catsup

RIPE, SWEET

TO THE
SIXTH ANNUAL DAVE DILES

Southern
Peaches

32-oz. Btl.

PINT RETURNABLE BOTILES
MTN. DEW, PEPSI FREE '

Diet Pepsi ·
or Pepsi Cola
8-Pak

APPALACHIA GOLF TOURNEY

PLUS
DEPOSIT

From the Staff &amp; Directors of
AVAILABLE ONL Y IN STOlES WITH DILI· IAKIRIIS
HOT FOODS AVAILABLE llam Tll7pm DAllY

•

Farmers
Bank

FRESH BAKED

Cinnamon
Ralls .. ..

s . c~.
.. Pkg ·

99C

Fresh Baked
Brownies . . . . . . . . .

kg .

Mrmber FDIC

Your Community Owned Bank

HORMEL HOMELAND HARD
SALAMI OR

ROSA GRANDE PEf&gt;PERONI
OR SAN REMO GENOA

Honllllleoni

Hormel

Pepperoni

Sal~mi

Fresh Baked
Kaiser Rolls
.·f.Cl Pkg.

$318 $a•• age
I'OIII'd

AMERICAN OR MUSTARD

Potato
Salad .. ... ...........

lb.

99

c

FRESH MADE

Pound

$

.

Coconut
Layer Cake. ......

Each

Whole Milk
Mozzarella

$2

Pound

~~:~:e.
NA CHO

. ..

lb .

HORMEL

4

49

INCLUDES: 3-BREASTS . 3 LEG S 3 THIGHS
AND 3-WINGS
.

$699

Wishbone
Fried Chicken ... ~~~~~

Cheese &amp;
Pepperom·......

lb .

$249
$399

/

I

�((
.c:=:a -

-

- - - -.

-

Sa.ve9.00

Glul table lamps

with "Florette" print
sh!ITed fabric shades.
Assorted bases 1n
acrylic colors. 19" ta.ll.

Attractive
3-Pc. Drop-lila.f Dinette Set

49.88
have

Bag. 69.96
Walnut-look table top With ~ronze-to~~
metal legs. Cha.lrs
ca.retree vinyl
upholstery in beautiful flora.J. p&amp;ttern.
.

"

"Centwy Classic" "Century ClassiC"
Oval Bath Rug
Bath 'lbwels

9.96 3.77

l'luah ayloll1'11C matches
b&amp;th towels. 24"x 40".

eonsourrag,2l''x 24''
8.118. Lid cover, &amp;.118.

Br!ght solid$ with P1Jl9d

border. Cotton/polyester.

I..,.,_

Hu4 tow.JI, now
1hllullcRJI8, now l.t.T.

-=::&gt; -

.

SEND T~OSE
KNEES ...

29.96

NOW TO YOUR
RIG~T...

STRETCH TO
T~E LEFT ...

Reg.42.97

8" double winclow fan for sash or
casement Windows. Manually reversible.
Casement adaptor bracket. 4W!I\Y switch.

10.97aave7.00

"l'lcmmtlae" 8-pc. bath set. Easy-care

polyester/nylon. 2-pc, tank set, 20x22"
contour, 20x31" non-skid mat,.Ud cover.

8.97Save3.00

-

... -

--: -

.

816 CIRCLES ...
LITTLE CIRCLE5 ..

--- -

- ..

-

-

---c:!&gt;--... - -- - - --

,,-

- ·-

L&gt;-

-

-

. .. .,..-GIC?l :w

-

REAC~

TO '(OUR
LEF'T.. REAC~
TO '(OUR RI6~T...
)\

\

SO.ISO" :nruuaible braid ra&amp;. Durable
heavyweight bea.uty With 9~o nylon SUI'face and-cushioned core. Vibrant colol'B.
IOdO'' b1'ai4 r1i&amp;
DOW $,8'1', ,

Save 2.00,

--Recliner
Slipcovers

.

_.,.. ..
©

6-17

6.88

1984 United Feature Syndicate.lnc .

Adjusts to all

chair positions.

Machine wash
stretch fabric.
Solids, prints.

"

.2)$7

J'Uhionable l&amp;" china tau pmow.,
fluffed With 100% polyester.

To serve everyone, we reserve the right to limit quantities.
No sales to dealers . Regular prices ma,y vary by store.

Choose ruffled, welt edge and
Turkish styles. Decol'llotor colol'B.

A Hlr~HHifCI~G
fTofq'
AJOUT A !'\AN WHO FINe-? THAT'f
WA1 FINEP fO~
A 'f}fu~JiA~ ·
JiliC::Ht\IICIN
~e~e·1 A

ANI&gt; A )TO{tf
,ABOUT AGJp
~AIN.

A CA$1:
Of pOfi\AIN

Po•S'ONirJG.

ANPA NoTaCf
oF A BoPYBuiLPING

co.MPEr•T•oN.

Shop Our Spectacular Colorful White Sale For
Fantastic B~¥a~i9o~~~~~~~~~}!2~~iFcitSrishings!

NOgor&gt;Y
CJttTie;&gt;uef
TttE1..tt&lt;=~

N~WJ

"(ou,
f?RNaS'I,

A TouFNAMENT
oF pq&gt;e:)!

�ALLEY OOP

by Dave Graue ~

®

"Tl-4E PASS IS
KING ~KA WILL BE:
TEU.. J.IIM
SlOCKED! "'()U 1 OVERJOYED! I'M ~
WE'W.. BE
ALONG
DID IT! '{t ~ · RUN BACk' RIGHI NOVtl
AND GIVE ~IM IHE NEWS! 51-!CRlLY,

WELL, GEE, IT
WOUl-D BE NICE 10-rAKE

15 BOUND

'TWARNT
NOTHIN'!

BUGS BUNNY®

~U..Y?

t&lt;JN6 \\ONKA

AWW,

'

"10 ~ A I~INI&lt;ET OR SOM~HIN6

'OJ!

SACK

T'MOO Wrt'H ME! .

GUNDILL!

LCX&gt;K~!

IF I 60K'~OW 50ME.

CN 8EHAJ.-F OF All "Tl-iE crnZENs o~ ONDAMAI-I,

EVERYONE

~I

IT'S MV PLEA6UI&lt;E "TO PRESENT 'IOU \MTH THE
ISLAND'S 6REAJEST 11&lt;EASUJ&lt;E... .__Jlr--~

AWAITS US !

,

'

VJOLILD N€VEf&lt; HAVE We:N'feO
'THIS APARTMENT. ..

:CF ID KNOWN "'ij.j,AIWA88/TWA'3 N~XT DOOR!

b'

by Dick Rogers

by John Lane

BEN SWIFT®
50-YOU WENT
TO "THE SYMPHONY

LAST N\6H1?

e

1..00!&lt; POR TI-Je WORDS DOWN,
ACROSS ANO OIAGONALLY.

"NEW MUSIC'' "THAT HAS NO

i

PENCIL BOX

. d list

I UNDERSTAND ONE SELECTION
"THEY PLAYED WAS SOME OF THAT
RECOGI'IIZABL.E MELODY.

NO

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~., ~IY.-"'ic\ •-~ ...,,"""

· YES

:

LOW

~

· SLOW
FAST

OFF

il ,,..,, _,_....._
~I~&gt;~~

SPELLED ACR055
AND DOWN.

11.1

IN

A SCHOOL eXAM

f?l 71-Jc 50UNO YOUR

EMPTY OUT

a."'~

WRITE TI-lE ANSWERS
IN 7HE BOX. TI-lE
54ME WORDSARE

~

VOICE ML\Ke5 IN A

CANYON
A I=OOT COlleRIN&amp;

I-s. I

UP

f:i'1 TilE PARTS AT T;.{E

"'

L:,;J ENO 01= YOUR I=CXJ T

S:5I:2L 1&gt; 'aoHS

Aw5 :
1
E O!'f:J3Z 'JS:J.L 'l

..g L.,......::;:;;4:

THEY CALLED IT '1AN E)WERt~CE
OF ORGANIZED ABSTRACT SOUNDS."

DID YOU
LIKE lT?

.THe ROVNO SASE 0~ 'Tf.le ~/.OWER STALK,

:()R OVARY, 15 711E PA8,T OF TJ.Ie 8L05SOM

WEL.L- IT WAS DIFFERENT AND
t&gt;ISTURBING AT FIRST 1 BUT ONCE I
GOT USED TO IT 1 1. WE.Ni RIGHI
BAC't&lt; iO S\.EEP.

TINA BUSTER.
sALMOIJ.,zo .

~OW DO APPLE

71-!Ai.W/LL GRQW INTO A :JVICY .

APPt..e. sees Pr:Jl.UNATE ~LOWER5

AS7HEY7RAVEL~~M7REE70TREE

BOYS AND GIRLS,
win OM of lh•H
"JOHNNY WDNDERftJI"
priru il your q&amp;~e•tkln
i• •n•wer«lltrtte.

/N SEARCW OF NECTAR AND POLLEN.
BLOSSOMS TURN AN APPLE 8LOS50\Il WAS !=(JI.FILLEO ITS
\NiO APPLES 2 pURPOSEWJ.IEN ITJ.IAS !JiiE.N Pt1.JJNA7CD
ANO TI-lE BE'GfNNINe!S OF 5CE05 J.ldVE
FORMED. IJIEPCTAL5 AND OT/4ER PARrS
o;: 7J.Ie 8J.OS50M WAT ARF! NO LONGeR
NEEOED WITWER ANO FALL OFF Tf.Je
TREe. Ttl£ OVARY MATURES INTO

A FRUIT 711ATCONTAIN'5 7J.IE 5eE05.

by T.K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS
WJM , ~A\J~

'1oU

5E.EN 0.\D?

'it:S, ~ ·~ L-OUN61N&amp;
0Vl61DE- &amp;£Ti1N6 ~

BUI l-1~vE.

~N
~IM 1 ~E. LOOK? RIOICUL..OOS!

'iov

1 K~W ... ~ ~t&gt;.~ lo ful 01\l A WI Of

·nUS IS VOUR Nl~ A~~E!S'f1HIS WeEK!
I'~ tJ&amp;VER KNoWN A MORE
WOROfi-E!SS SCUM!

LOIION 60 ~6. WON'I GET SLlNBURN£-D!

5lJNTAN ,

II ·~ ~ E-R-1 1-\0T 'TODA-1' A~O '{OUR ~IHER
Cb€.~1-l' i W~l'lT 10 ~E-1 OJEJ&lt;~EAI£0 \

WW.., AC.IuAU..'{, 1 DON'I
M\l'lO \"~ LOIION, MOM ..

BUI DO~'

SI&lt;SN 11-iiS ReC~IPIFOR

!-\~ f&lt;EAU...'-1

VAJ..UA~L~S~

11~\JE. 10 Plll "

'fi-\E.RMOME.Ie.R IN

•

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'(OIJ

HAF1AL

1-l \? 1\l~VE.L. '?

•

ves,

•

�--

by Art Sansom

BORN LOSER®

by Brad Anderson:

MARMADUKE®

,:,W'LL Be ~/JW

~I Hat-Hat~

I

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JUST AN IW?tbN\RCM'rI
~FORtOTTEN

~.

•

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~OLINCI£ ...

I

13oUNCIE. ••.

\..

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"

\I 11' t I

l30&lt;JNCIE, 600NClE.,

80UNCIE. 60UNCIE
~O()NCI€ ...

13oUNC\E., f?oLINC\t,

.

.,1

"'

ANDY CAPP

l
'

.
:

I

WH&lt;\T A DUMP! MIND 'IOU, I SlJPR:)SE
If'S A GCXJD THING 10 5EE 1-0'r'V THE
OTHER HA.L.F LIVES OC~'SIONAU.."V.

SI-O.JLC&gt; WE
ASK THE
t=a:&gt;R MAN

THA-I CHAPPlE ALONG THERE J..CX:)t(S
A BIT OF A CHAAAC I EF&lt;- ,__.-

TO.TOIN

US, DEAR?
~OUNC\E-, i300NCIE., 6DONCIE ...

-

' .

)

.
..

tMSURE
IT \"'J L.D

GU IV~ IT, MA~l,

00 IT. .. DO IT... 00 IT... 00 IT.. .

IT'S MICH~eL j;tL~ ~ILL . .
JVSf GIVE. ~M A COP OF l'CA .

NANCY®
~WHATS
WRONG,
SLUGGO 2

,

I

HOLD IT,

BUTCH IS AFTER

ME

AGAIN~

BUTCH!!

YOUVE BEEN BULLYING POOR
SLUGGO LONG ENOUGH!

HESAIDI

TM ,.,.."' ,

WAS6HOR1"·

SIGHlED

-

..
•

MAKE UP WITH HIM! GO AND
SHAKE HIS HAND! --- - HE'S
HIDING BEHIND THAT TREE!

OOY,HAVE
YOU6EEN
"TAKEN!!

- .

...
I

~

I
L

SHAKE,
SLUGGO!

AM I SHAKlNG
ENOUGH, BUTCH?

�Inside today:

ick Cavalli

WINTHROP®

By the Bend ............. Page 5
Classllleds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
CornJ&lt;s.TV .............. Page 9
Deaths ...... ..... ......... Page 6
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

SHE HATES ME AND

I THINK MRS. STENGLE'
HATES ME.

SHE' DOE5N'T E:-'v1=N
TRY TO HIDE IT.

. '·

Vol .34, No.46
Copyrighted 198-C

MR. MEN™and LITTLE MISS™
N..AJV\E ..

MR.FUNNY

Pl-EASE?
•

Partly cloudy tonight with a
chance of thunderstonns. Low
near 10. Southwesterly winds
cloudiness and scattered thunderstonns. High near 90. Chance
of rain 40 percent tonight and 50
percent Tuesday.

e

by Hargreaves and Sellers

~ omo- MeUssa Anne Bradley, 23, of Mansfield, was named
Miss Ohio 1985 Saturday in MansHeid. She was competing as Ml..s
Clayiand and was Hrst nmner-up in last year's pageant. She is 5-fooH,
weighs 113 pound!; and graduated this year from Ashland CoUege,

where she majored in poutlcal science and broadcasting. She will now

NO!

compete in the Miss America pageant in September. (AP Laserphoto)

AT THE
SOOAPOP

POINT PLEASANT - Agreement In princ iple has been reached
for the purchase of the M ason
County Bank of New Haven and
M ason by The Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant , it was announced today.
The transaction is subject to the
approval of shareholders of each
bank.
M ason County Bank President
Rlcha~d Ord and The Prop\es Bank
of Point P leasant Presidenl Vitus
H artley. Jr .. while jointly announcing the agreemenl. emphasized the
benefits to be derived by present and
potential customers of the facilities.
"Combined. we will have assets in
excess of S-14 million , giving us the
capability to m eet th&lt;' borrowing
needs of practically all Mason

,_:_ 1984 Hargreaves and Seller-.
D•stnbuted by NEA Inc

PRINTEO IN CANAOA

By Cris Hamm
SIRE, !tfQfffl61fT SfA, IN
SEARCH OF TH£ GREilT
FISH... _ _____,

/l81)UT BEING JL......--.....-;
R!illfK!fAN.

IV!ANSFIELD. Ohio !AP I Politics is important to the new Miss
Ohio. but she says she would rather
rPport on politicians than ixo one
herself.
Melissa Anne Bradley . who
entered the pageant as Miss
Clayland. received a $6.00J scholarship for winning thf' title Saturday
night and will represent Ohio in the
Miss America pageant at Atlantic
City, N ,J. , in SeptPmber.
Miss Bradley. 2.1. graduated
magna cum laude from Ashla nd
College earlier thi s month aft er
pursuing twin majors of polit ica l
science and television broadcasting.
She has hosted her own program
on the college's cable telev ision
station. She also has been hlred b~ a
Cleveland televlsion station hut

won't be able to begin work as a
reporter until after her year's reign
as Miss Ohio.
ShP said she decid&lt;&gt;d agai nst a
career in politics because "Att itudes toward politicians are formulated by the media. I decided I
wanted to ixo where the power is.
That' s why l havedecidl'd to pursUl'
a career in tei Pv i s ion
broa dcasting."
Miss Bradley was a champion
sw immer at age 12 and won several
trophies and ribbons as a swimmer
and tennis player throughout her
teens.
" My P'lrents raised me to ixo an
achiever," she said.
ChOS&lt;'n first runner·up in the
climax of the three-day event a t the
Renaissance Theater was Cynthia

.•. WEEK AFTER WEEKI Wtm
NOTHING 10 DO BUr FISHAND FIX

County rrsident s an d businesses,''
Hart lev and Orrl commented.
Mason County Bank. established
in 1919. expanded ils Bend Area
opera tion in 1Y83 with the opening of
an a ttractive ne\v building in the
midd le of Mason. The main building
of M ason County Bank. in New
HavC'n, was constructed in 1965 and
Pxpanded in 197H.
Hartley said ThP Peop les Bank of
Point Pll'asanl . if the purchase
agr eement is r al ifil'll by shareholders and gowmment al rPgulatory agenc ies. will co ntinue to
opera te both the Mason and New
Havrn facilities.
Board memlJ&lt;&gt;rs of the M ason
Countv Bank, in addition toOrd, arC'

Don Foglesong. Cha irman: Lloyd
Roush, Michael Shaw. Howard
Burris, Jim Layne and Ray Weaver.
Randy VanMeter i s board
secrPtary.
D ir-pctors of The Peoplt'S Ba nk of
Point Pleasant are Hartley, Forrest
Clark. Chai1man of the Board : Jack
E. Fruth. Chairman of Ihe Executive Commitlee; DalP N1berl, Vice
President : Cecil Williams. Russell
B ibbee. Vaught Smith, Robert
Wingett , 1\. Dale Taylor. Paul
Somerville. Jr.. Babara J. Brown
Leac h, Aarom Boonsue, MD, and
John R. Felkf'r II. Don Swisher is
board sec rf'tary.
"Tlle boarrl of The Pcoplcs Bank
of Po int Pl easant gav~ much
considerat ion to th&lt;' effocls of taking

such a bold step." said Hartley.
"And cam e to thr conclusion it was
the natural ly progressivr artion to
take.
"Th£&gt; Ma son County Fl&lt;Jnk has
ahva ys been operated in .a proff'S·
sional and profitable manner and
the acquisition of it wouldprovc tobe
of benefit to all concerned ... Hartley
concluded.
The Peoples Bank uf Poin I
Pleasant was founded in 1965 and
was loca ted in I he building that now
houses Musgrave, Musgra,·e &amp;
Casey law firm in downtown Point
Pleasant until acqu iring it s presen t
Point Pleasant location in 1972.
II is proj£'cted it will take about six
to 12 months lo finatize the propos&lt;&gt;d
acquisition. Hartley sa id.

7HE

80~T. ..

AND FISH- FRJ&amp;o Fl~

BOllE() FISH~ FISH

STEW, FLAKED
F/511 CW
TOllST...

... t..EEKS AND WEEKS
OF WET SOCKS.

Both counts against Mrs. Plummer dealt with the employ ment of
her son. Jeffrey, for par1 ·1imc janitorial work that was "not
pertorrned." ThE' contracts questioned WE'll' alll&gt;gi!d ly written in
1979, while Jeffrey P lummer was paid $~ ..17121 on C&gt;4 vouchers issue-d
between January 1978 and February 19ffi.
M rs. P lummer, who was the tilR boan:J's e'ecutive director for 12
years prior to her dismrssal by the board last Septemlx-r, was the
subject of a state-appoint&lt;&gt;d review group panel's study of her
operation of t he board and it s r·elationship with the fotmer G-J -M
Community Menta l H ca llh Center.
The rl'port. in addition to wriltm charges preparr&lt;l by thl' board
las I Augus t , led to lhf&lt;'(' nights of hearings bv thP board in Sep tt•mtx•r
that resu lt ed in her firing.
Mrs. Plummer pl£&gt;aded not guilty tu both indictml'nts. Prior to
winning the change in Vf'nuc motion. s lw had f'arliC'r ~·titionc&gt;d
Judge Richard C. Roderick to step down from the• cas&lt;' .
Roderick refu sed, and tlw matter was left to CelebrcZLe, who
requ£&gt;sted Roderick to t&lt;'mOv(' himself from lhP cast.' lu rvmow anv
indicat ions of prejudice or'' lmproprif'ty.'' C(' lehn_rap latf'r assigned
Stilwell to the cas&lt;'.
Cain wa s not available for comment this m o rning .

Straub, 2.'i. of Westervi lll'. who was
Miss Will ard .
The othpr three finalis ts wC'rf'

Cat herina Gy£&gt;nes. 22. of Miamis
burg, who was Miss Miami ValJPy :
Aim('(' Felde1man. 21. of Crneinnati.
who was Miss Tol&lt;&gt;do ; and Suellm
Cochran, l9, of! Ieat h. who was Miss
Southwest Ohro.
The new Miss Ohio was rrowncd
by her predecessor. Pamela Rigas.
Miss Brad ley made a clean sw('('p
of the preli minary awards bv
winning swimsuit honors Frida:--:
night and the talent com pet ilion
Thursday night . She sang a modi£&gt;)'.
"Piece of Sky" and " Papa. Can You
Hear Me?" from the Barbra
Slreisa nd movie. "Yent l."
&amp;i ng selected as the sw im suit

winner was pa rt icularly grat ify ing
for M iss Bradlev, who missed
winning thr Miss Ohio pageant by:
one&gt; point las t ~ ·l'ar bE'c·a use some
judgf's gan' lwr lm~ · scorC's in the
swimsuit rotf'gory.
She spent most of thE' past vmr on
a gruC'Iing \..\·orkout sc hC'dul&lt;~ runn ing, a tt0nding two daily· Jazzf'r ciSP rl asSC&gt;s. jumping rop0 and
lifting wf'ights- to shape up what
s lw jokingly rf'fC'rrC'd 10 a ~ her
"t hunder thighs ..
Miss Bradll·~· i!-. :l- foot .+) and
wrighs 11:1 tXlu nds. Shf' wa s chosen
Miss t&gt;&lt;otional Tc'Cn ·i\.grr in 193)
Silf' i!-. 111f' sC'Cond Mis.-, Ohio from
:vtansficld in the pageant's :r:.vear
history. Mansfield' ' Lmda Ka v
Hatnnan won t he CTO\.\TI in 1957.

Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant purchases
Mason County Bank of New Haven and Mason

FACTORY.'

EVEK SINCe I WAS A lfTTLE
K/0, IVE 1/AD 7/IIS FIINTIISY

I Se(tion , 10 Page,
25 Cents
A Muhimed1a Inc . Newspaper

Ashland College graduate Miss Ohio

PHY51CI5T

SPEEDWALKER, PR V

enttne

LOGAN - The tlial of Maxine Plummer ended before It started
today when one of the charges against her was dismissed and
another was left up to the presiding judge's review.
Mrs. Plummer. former executive director of the Gallia-JacksonMelgs 64ll Mental Health Boa rd . was indicted by a Gallia Count y
grand jury in December 19R.1 for thdt in offic£&gt; and using her office to
influence a public contract.
Today was to be the first day of a projected week-long trial in
Hocking Coun~; Comm on Pleas Cour1. The tria l was to be held there
after Mrs. P lummer's defense attorney, Daniel M Hunt of
Columbus, won a motion for a change of venue fromGallia County in
May.
In an agreement reached by Ga llia County Prosecutor JOS('ph L.
Ca in and Hunt . the theft in office charge was dropped wi th the
agreement tha t Mrs. Plummer repay $6,500 of the more than S9,!XXJ
listed as taken in the first count . On the second count. Mrs. Plummer
pleaded no contest.
However, Judge James E . Stilwell. who was assigned to the case
by Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank Celebreue. said he
would decide Wedn esday if the contracts mentioned in the count
w ere "public" contracts.

••-4
AT "THE
UN IVER'S'ITY?
•

at y

•

Dismiss one Plummer charge

•

REALLY~!
••

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio , Monday, June 18, 1984

ME FEEL 8ETTE:R.

OCCUPATION'?
•

wins three tilts ...Page 3

5-10 mph. Tuesday, variable

I q'UE:SS THAT W/¥.3
SUPP05E:D TO MAKE:

f THINK 5HE JLJ5T I&lt;.EFUSE6 TO
ACKNOWL.Wc;{E YOUR EXISTENCE.

I DON'T THINK MR5 .
5TEN6l'LE: HATE:5 YOLJ,
WINTHROP...

ohless health care...Page 2

Weather

NEXT TIME I HINE
A FflNTASY- II

5711Y Ol/fOF /T•.

Midwest hit hard by more tornadoes

.... ...

.

, _,,_.,., ,.

By JIM PENSIERO
Associated Press Wliter
Stonns pac king 70-mph winds
spun off more than a dozen
tornadoes and dumped uplo7inches
of rain on the soggy Midwest.
keeping l,!XXlpeople in Missouri out
of their homes today after injuring
four people in I owa and ripping the
roof off a Wisconsin chu rch.
Flash llood walches for low-lying
areas w ere in effect today across a
broad band of the na lion's midsection from Texas to WE'StE'rn New
York as scattered heavy rain
showers were rpported this morning, the National Weather Service
said.
Officials In Nebraska. Missouri,
Iowa, South Dakota, Wisconsin and
Kansas are waiting until the water

goes down from the wecklong
deluge before making formal damage estimates. But in Nebraska
alonealleast1,500 homes have been
damaged and more than 1 million
acres off arm land was flooded or too
w£&gt;1 to fa1m.

In northwe-s t MbsouJi, where a
week of heavy rain pushed th&lt;'
Missouri River ovpr its banks and
onto more than 70,!XXJ of prime
bottomland, a t least l ,llXl families
spent a third night in shelt ersorwi th
families and friends.
Atchison County Sheriff Jack
Millsap said he hoped some familiPs
would be able to return home laiPr
today. Bu t the continuing rains
made It doubtful.

"We have a town in Nebraska
report 7 inchf's of ra in in a half-hour
and we recpived a hmvy rainfall. so
it is still not cer1a in what we wil l do, ..
Millsap said.

Six tornadoes toucht'!l down
Sunday near the Nebraska tO\.\.·l l S of
Tekamah. West Point, E lgin. Elba.
Madison and Ceresco, bu I no
injuries w ere reported .

Harry Gordon of the Nationa l
Severe Storms Forecast Center in
Kansas City, Mo., said £&gt;arly toda y
that the storm systPm was expected
to pick up intensity after dawn.
"Normally these kinds of storms
die out after sunset," Gordon sa id
today. "But these just keepon going.
They keep on rumbling and drop·
ping rain."
In Madison, Neb., about 85 miles
noriheast of Omaha . aboui7lnches
of rain fell Sunday, flooding severa l
county roads bul forclngnoevacua·
tlons. pollee said.

There was widespread stfC('t
fiooding overnight tluu ughout west rrn Iowa. but no injulies or
evacuations were repo11ed.
In Wisconsin, where70-mph gusts
were r eported in M adison, the roof
off thl' Calvary Baptist Church near
Platteville was tom off only an hour
before dozens of worshippers were
arriving for a Sunday evening
serv ice.

"We will thank the Lord for its
timing," the Rev. Patrick Wilson
said.

Stick of dynamite found on 1-71 today
MARENGO. Ohio (AP) - A
hazardous materials crew from the
State Fire Marshal's office detonated a stick of dynamite Jourid
early today on southbound Inter·
state 71 in southern Morrow County.
There were no injuries, and no
damage resulted.
The Ohio Highway Patrol briefly
closed the interstate near the Ohio

Route 61 interchange while the
dynamite was exploded . The Highway Patrol called for a hazardous
materials unit after an officer noted
that the device contained t he word
''explosive."
Randy Chandler, a lieutenant
with the Marengo volunteer fire
deP'!rlment, said two m en sent by
the fire marshal's office determined

the dynamite was unstable and set It
off where they found It about 4 feet
from an emergency parking str ip of
· the highway.
"Som e passerby round It In the
road and threw It off to the side."
Chandler said. "We got the call at
7:43a.m . We don't know who the
passerby was, but he took h.ls ll!e in
his hands by doing t hat."
Chandler said the stick ofdynam -

ite, about 12-14 inches long, was
taped between and a I one end of two
metal rods, each about 4 feet long
and less than a half inch In diameter.
Chandler speculated the device
was rigged lobP lowered into a well.
The patrol recelv&lt;&gt;d a repor1 that
the device fell !rom a truck, but had
not dett&gt;rmlned the truck's
whereabouts.

___,_
SEVERAL OF TilE PARTIE5 involwd in til&lt;' pun:ha.'W of the Mason
C.ounty Bank of New Haven and Ma.'&lt;On lly the Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant go over the agreement. From leftlo ri ght in the front row art'
Vitus Hartley Jr., pn-'Sident of th•• Peoples Bank 'Uld R ichard Ord.
president of the Mason Cowtty Bank. In th&lt;• hack row left lo right an'
Fo!TCSI Clark, chairman of the hoard of l'eoples Bank and Uoyd Rou.&lt;dt,
longtime member of the board uf diredo"' of til(' M"""" Count) Bank.

Knight asks court for
hearing replacement
Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight will not ixo the presiding
j udgP for the hearing on the Orange
Township E lect inn dispute.
Kn ight fikodapetitionThursd av to
remove himself as the presiding
judge. HC' has asked thf' Ohio
Supreme Cour1 lo appoint a judge
from another LDunty.
Knight said he emphasized in hi s
letter tha t a hearing is schedu led on
the matter for Thursday. He said he

hope-s thC' cou11 \\rill appJin t anothf•r
judge bv· that lime.
CharlC's C Ca l awa.\· and H.ogpr
Fortn&lt;'Y of 'l\Jp'P('r ~ Plains r arlif' r
filed a pc'lttion, olkging Knight w as
prPjudic&lt;&gt;d . Knight said in his lct tPt
to the Supr('mf' Cour1. h£&gt; w as not
prvjudic&lt;&gt;d. Howf'ver, he did removP himSC' lf.
'' If somronr in 1he caSC' f(l(&gt;ls 1hen•
i' J problem. then I do not " ·ant to
cause hard !('('lings." Knight sa id .

Vandalism probed in Meigs
Meigs County Sheriff's office is
investiga ting two separate vandal
ism Incident s.
Ed Daugherty. of Belpre reported
Sa turrlay to Sheriff James,!. Proffitt
his cabin in Boston Hollow In Olivr
Township was vandal17.ed .
Daugherty repon ed the fiv e posts
had been pushed over. a comer of
the porch was tom off and an outside
toilet was destroyed. Fourteen blue
spruce trees were also damaged in
the incident.
The sheriff's office is looking for a

four·wheel driw pickup truck in
connection wilh thC' inciden t. 111£&gt;
vandalism OCC'll.JTI.&gt;d sometime last
week. the rPport said.
The second incident hap(X'ned
around Junr 4 or o. thp sheriff's
report stated 11m'&lt;' fence pos ts
were tom from the g~uund along J
lane off F latwoods Road, the repor1
said. The shpr iff is looking for u
1976-78 white Chevmlet or GMC
tlatlx.'!ltruck with racks. according
to I he rcporl .

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