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Browns
hope
to
break
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Three
Rivers
jinx
Story Pa~
Th
t• . .,
- . t .
f '82
Storyoo~~a 19n .s econo111y .op story o .
Bontb
.blasts rock New York. City· ~
Story

Today's·
Times-Sentinel

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9 Sections, 58 Pages 35 Cents
· A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Gas ruling good news says counsel
By MICHAEL HOLMES
Assoclaied Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A federal ruling that a
pipeline company paid too much for some natural gas
Is good news for consumers, who should get refunds
because of it, the Ohio Consumers Counsel says.
"We're very pleased. lt's a very important legal
precedent," Counsel William Spratley said Friday.
On Thursday, an administrative law judge of the
Feder~ Energy Regulatory Commission said the
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. was guilty of
"abuse" bec_ause it bought excessive quantities of
high-priced natural gas while cutting back purchases
of cheaper gas that was available. He ordered
GoJumbla Transmission to refunQ $100 million or

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more.
· "Columbia's purchasing practices during the
periods in question have been unjust, unreasonable
and harmful to the pul&gt;lic interest," said Judge
Michael Levant.
If the ruling is confirmed by the five-member
commission, the company's customers wUI get
refunds plus interest, the judge said.
Columbia TI;ansmlssion sells gas to 71 local
companies, including Columbia Gas of Ohio. Both aJ:l!
subsidiaries of the Columbia Gas System Inc.
Discussing the judge's ruling, Spratley said the
decision closely followed arguments the Consumers'
Counsel ·staff presented to the feqekal commission.
Because the commission still musi uphold the ·

Gallia County awards
contracts for addition
:.~ courthouse building
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judge.and the likelihood of an appeal by the company,
consumers probably won· t be getting refunds for
several months, officials said. They said refunds
likely would take the for.rn of reductions in future
bills.

.

The ruling came in a case ·that several states and
local gas distrlbution companies brought against
Columbia Transmission, seeking to overturn part of
the pipeline companY's $4,81 miUion in increases for
new gas purchases during 1981.
Criticizing Columbia Transmission, Ms. Samuels
said the pipeline company bought the higher prlcfid.
gas without good reason.
·
"Nobody said they (Columbia Transmission) h;d
to agree to these terms. They had never done any
kind of marketing study to see that they neeeded to
sell gas at these prices. They were just blinilly paying
whatever was asked," she said. "There are other
companies that did not go as far."

.

But while it will be somE! time before refunds are ..
made, Spratley and Margaret ·Aim Samuels ·
estimated the average Columbia Gas customer in.
Ohio would receive·l).bout $25.
"There's a lot of confusion. That $100 million might
be more," Spratley said.
"It's a question of when any refund could ·be
ordered. It would take at least two months before a
comtnlssUon decision could be made. We're hopeful it
will go the consumers' way," he added.
~

Jolynn BoSter.: ..ber thoughts on the eve
of inauguration as •new 94~h ~tate Rep.

By JEFF GRABMEIER
wUI not go into effect.
'l1mell Sentinel Staff
On Thursday, the commissioners
. GAf..LIPOLIS - After a one-day
hired Evans indefinitely at $.'X! an
: delay ,~:&amp;~~sed by legal problems, the
hour to advise the county on the
. GaWa'County Commissioners Fri·
courthouse project. ·
. day awarded contractf1or ·con·
The commissioners said . they
· structlon of the new courthouse
hired Evans because County Proaddition.
secutor Joseph Cain was unavaila·
, The five construction contracts
ble to meet with them Thursday to
· for ihe project tOtaled $1,564,698,
discuss the legal problems with the
· about $93,1XXl less than the archi·
contract.
teet's estimated cost.
.
.Commissioner James Saunders
Architect Stephen Cassaday said said Cain had "misinformed" the
wu pleased with the contrac~s
ftllt' the county · reCeived
,
"extremely good bids."
Cassaday said the county reTbe commissiOners apparently ceived "extremely good bids that
solVed a leglil problem by including can't be matched at a later time."
an addendum in the contmcts
stating the agreements will not go
Cassaday said he does not feelthe
into effect until March 1.
county will be able .to ·build the
courthouse any cheaper in the
This clause will protect thecounty
Immedia te tutu re.
in tbe event the .5 sales tax hike
approved by the coounlssioners in
"You have a very competitive
December and earmarked for the
market now that you won't have in
COUI1bouse cannot go into effect, . six months, .. he said. ·~
The following firms were
according to D. Dean Evans, the
awarded
contracts:
· county's special legal counsel for
Custom Faclllties Inc., Indiana·
.the courthouse project.
polls,
was awarded the general
Although the county does not col)tract
for $1,031 ,900; A.J. Stock·
fo~ any problems in collecting
meister, Jackson, won the plumbthe tax, Evans said the addendwn
will serve as a precaution.
ing contract for $9G,96S; Geiger
"I don't think there'sa problem," · Bl,'Others Mechanical Contractors,
. Logan. won the heating, ventilation
besald. "It's justa formallty. ".
and air conditioning Contract for
Tbe county should know for sure
$Z7J,OOO; Southeastern Electrlcal,
by March 1 if the tax can be
Crown City, won the . electrlcal
· · Collected, Evans said.
If the tax cannot be collected and
alternate fUnding cannot be found,
protection contract for $31, 700.
the addendum states the contracts
..

By LARRY EWING
Tlmes-S!!ntlnel SWf
GALLIPOLIS..:.. On the eve of
her inauguration as 94th District """'
state representative, Jolynn
Boster ·· carries with her 1o
Columbus a number of hopes
and concerns for her first
legislative term.
Duling the November general
election, Boster, an attorney,
unseated 10-year legislator
Claire "BU1Z" Ball Jr.. by
posting a lMdslide victory in the
newly created 94th District ~-~~sed o(.Gallia, Meigs and
counties.
On Monday, the freShmen
Democratic legislator from Gal·
lipoiis will appear lri the Ohio
House Chamber to be sworn into ·
office by Frank D. CelebrezZe,
justice· of the Ohio su.
· ·
.Court.
"I hear it's going to be a tough
year- budget years are always
bad - and thereareanumberof

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crucial budget' decisions to be
made," Boster said Friday.
While recognizing such statewide considerations. would oc·
cupy a great deal of her time.
Bos.ter said her major goals for
the 94th would center on im·
provementsforroads,educa' tlon
and employm~nt.
"By doing ~&gt;omething about ·
the roads in the area," she said, .
"you help the remainder of the

~:~:~~:.sg;~~~. H:~~oth~:

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businesses to come in- and i.t's

94th District State Representative Jolynn Boster
only through Industry, business
and education that we can solve
the current · unemployment
prob.lem."
·
In terms of . aiding those
unemploy~. Boster emphas·
ized that- for the short term- .
it is necessary to not cut

be~~~~ow have large numbers

of unemployed workers who are

without jobs for the first time in
their lives," she·said in reaction
to the double-digit unemploymen t th a t ex It
s s throughou t her
district.
"These are ,people who want
to work ... people who have ai·
ways worked ...and people for

~~~':~~~~:::fnsw~kh:t~ c~~;

from the state."
For the long term, Boster
advocates a. cooperative effort
between industrvandeducation.
·J
"The , state must work to
coordinate future employment ..
needs with its educational institutions, " Boster said. "Educa·
110

'~I~~eth~a~~Y·;~at

a thousand
(Continued on page A3)

impossible-- they need support '

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.commissioner
Meigs . ptojects on line,
says
.
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By BOB HOEFLICH
'1'1me8-Sentlnel Staff .
POMEROY ~Major projects in Meigs CO,lllity will
apparently become reality in 1983, according to
Meigs County Commissioner Richard Jones.
In an intervieW relating to county affairs, Jones has
ouWned several projects which appear to have
smooth salllng ahead:
'·
Jones, who is also president of the Meigs County
Elderly Housing CoFp.. indicates soli work and
boundary surveys are being completed on the elderly

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Survey stakes, already in place, show where a road
only allow the children's home structure to remain
· will go between the new medical complex and the
intact but also it will retain th~ original architectural
front of the children's home building. While final
design in the renovation processes. ,
design Is not complete for the new complex, which
The building Is being registered with the National
will be 100 percent subsidized with rent to be
Register of Historic Places and tlie renovation wUI be
on the basis of income, Jones sa'ys
determined
in accordance with maintaining tliat. status.
tentative plans call for covered walkways to extend
A new building wlll be located east of th~ present
from the new building to the children '.s home
children's home as a part of the housing complex and
structure and then to the senior citizens tenter.
It wUI be of ari architectural design to complement
The project, sponsored by the Meigs County
that of the children's home. Land on which the ·.
fr
(Continued on page A3)
building is to be constructed is owned by the county.

housing complex planned for Mulbercy Heights.
Jones said it Is hoped that all necessary work wUI be
completed so the project can be put up for bids
sometime in the spring. CompletiOn date for the 46
housing units for not only elderly but the handicapped
•
is 1984.
Of the total46 units, Jones reports )hat 14 of them
wUI be located in the • present chlldrel)'s home
structure which will be completely renovated. Most
impovtant to the Meigs County Commissioners and to
Meigs residents is the fact that ihe project will not

.....-----'82 in local news: the year in review
.. l

...In Meigs, stories that ·stirred inter~st

•••In Gallia, controversies top ·news
"·

By KEVIN KELLY
'l'lmes-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Continuing controversies sur·
lllWid1r!g two local health facilities- both resulting in
state lm{estlgatloos - ranked as the top local news
lt(lrlel ol 1982.
. ' .
· L.on~-standlng. dlflerences between employees and
admlnlliratlon at GalllpoiJs Developmental Center,
itralned earlier in the year by the posslbiDty of
· masatve layoffs, came to the sulfaee lri June when
nevly ilo people' lost their jobs due to declining cllent
pop.tl&amp;tiDn at the facility for mentally retarded
people.
Many of those laid ofl claimed the administration
axed those who opposed Its policy of releasing more
' clients.
.
· Couplecf wtth l!rotests by city officials who saw a
furtber. decrease in the community's tax base, the
Ohio Department of Mental Retardation began
into the situation, but concluded that

delnstitutionallzatlon would continue.
In August; a departmental panel was formed io
hear employee oomplaints about the administration,
al)d. in early December, a specially-appointed
legislative review commlttee also started Its probe
intO the GDC.controversy.
9D!\fR's report Is scheduled to ~released soon.
_ Later in · ~ summer, another brewing storm
_erupted between staff at the Gallla-Jackson·Melgs ,
Community Mental Health Center and one of Its
funding agents - the '648' board.
Center i&amp;atf. claimed the ' board, headed by
Executive Director Maxine Plummer, was lilvolved
in tlnanclallrregularltles and was withholding funds
from the center. A state audit was ordered, a citizens'
Investigative panel was fonned and Gallia County
made preliminary motions to withdraw tnm the
mentalllealth dlitrlct.
· ,
As of this week, the audit had yet to be releaaed, the
· (ContlnuedonpqeA7)
.'

By BOB HOEFlJCH '
1lmes-Sentlnel staff
POMEROY..Another year has passed and Meigs
County was riot without Its share of news stories
which stirred interest and activity durlng the year.
On Jan. 3, the administration ofDavld L. Gleason in
the Meigs ~al School Dlstrlct ended unexpectedly
as Gleason aimOuhced his resignation with' Dan E.
MoiT!s being named to the 1np spot. Gleasonwas·pald
the salary remiunlng on his contract. Weather began
to be a prlmary interest to residents and things got
rough. Sub-2l!!ro temperatures closed schools on Jan.
11 and the cold sliap continued. Dr. Mateo Dayo fll~
a $l.lm,IXXl slander suit~ Dr. R. R. Pickens in
the Meigs County Common Pleas Court and
renovation began on tbe Rutland gymnasium turntng
into a Rutland civic center. Plans wefe anpounced for
closing the local eiriployment services oftlce,
In early February, patlenta_of Veterans Memorial
Hospital weatllered a bomb threat .and were

two

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evacua~ed to other buildings closeby. The FHA
withdrew funds for the county landfill and the county '
received another heavy snowfall. The Holzer Clinic
moved intq Middleport late in .the month and after
numerous protests a decision was made to keep the
local employment serviCes off,jces open.
In early ·March, Middleport Village Council
. approved an addition for the Middleport Fire
and on M¥ch 12
suspects were arrested after an
armed robbery at the Tuppers Plains Branch of Bank
One of Pomeroy. The
Bsketball
team
' Southern
.
.
moved into reglol\3! competition and moved ahead
lntq the state tournament out the second top Class A
team In late March.
A $50,!XX1fire hit the Appalachian Stove Co. as April
got under\vlly and Veterans Memorial Hospi(!ll got a
24·hour emergency service underway. Doug HW·
· gave up directing the Meigs Band and Kaiser
Alumlnwn announced additional layoffs, again a
(Continued on page A5)

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P-oy-Midcl~port-Gallipolis,

January 2, 1983

•

Comm~ntary and, per,specttve
.,

2. 1983.

bulldlng ban for the pas t couple of
years In that community.
Council on Aging, is being financed
Jones spoke of plans presen ted by
through a $1.9 million loan secured
the
John David Jones Engineering
t/lrOugh Housing and Urban DevelCo.
and reports that It Is the
opment. The project should help
commissioners
hope tha t the r eMeigs County's bleak employment
commendations wUI correct the
· situation In 1983.
Hitting upon the county's finan - s ituation a nd entl the buUdlng ban In
that corrununlty.
He said the
•. ces, Jones statE!,:
"It would seeril we are going 10 be ' r ecommendallon is for upgrading
able to end 1982 In the black and "Some systems in .place, and
-hopefully, ever! wltli a balance of ·replacing those which cannot be
· thlrtytothirtyflvethciusanddollars. · upgradedo
Jones s tales he anticipates the
However, the ood sld&lt;' of the ledger
completion of the project in accor~$ . that departmental requests from
county offices and agen&lt;;ies for 1983 dan~;e with designs by the·engineers
with grant s of 85 percent and the
presently exceed our anticipated
balance to be assumed by home
1983 income by about $250,00J. -owners.
"The Board ol..County CorrunisTotal cost .of the project )las been
sioners is presenlly working on tbe
estimated
a t $3&amp;l,!m for the entire
1983 budget and wUI cut where it can
atea
and
this
would result in a cost to
without hurting service. When the
property own~s ranglni from $75
1983 budget Is Completed, it will be in
to $1,000 each depending on the .
balance. ·
severity of each problem.
':There wUI be a very small
Hitting upon the proposed riew
Increase in 1983 funds due to the fact
highway
from Rock Sprin~s to Ihe
that there has been very little new
Ravenswood
Bridge. Jones stales
COilstructlon while at the same time,
feels
it
Is vitally Important to
that
he
expeitditures continue to rise."
the
~nomic
health of ·Meigs
As for ihe posslblity of the
County.
"piggyback sales lax" which the
He cited Meigs County's need for
slate legislature allows; being
lnd~try ahd points out thai tl)e
Imposed in Meigs County, proSpects
highway will open up industrial sites
do not appear likely. Jones says he
in that section of the county.
will never be In favor of enacting the
"Industry means' job, industry
tax unless It is for some type of
means
· taxes and taxes ·provide
capital improvement Which will be
ability
to hrmish more service and
of benefit to all cltze'ns on a long-time
provide better government.
basis. Some surrounding counties
"We will never acquire the much
have already adopted the piggy·
needed industry until we have
back sales tax. Jones feels such a
adequate highways.
tax put into general operatingfu.nds
"We need to concentrate on
would have no long range benefit.
industry
In this county. We need to
Ariother commissioner, David •Ko.
develop
some
plan that will bring
blentz. has also gone on tecord as
industry
and
jobs here", Jones
being against lhe piggyback tax as a
states.
general fund measure.
·
Meigs County could take . on a
,.A problem which thecommlsslonmore pleasant appearance In 1983.
ers are hoping to solve In 1983is that
Jones reports. that the county is
of the sewage situatiOn In 1\rppers
.
currently in t~Jeprocessofacqulring
Plains. The proJ&gt;Iem has created a

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.j-uribaJ! ~imes· $tminel .
'A Divisiun nf
I""T""\....-L..--T'"I~dlt===~
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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohiu
i6lfl 44&amp;-2342

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Ill Cuurl Sl .. Pum•·roy. Ohiu
1614) 992~2156

RORF:RT 1•. WI NGETT
Publisher
HOBARTWII SON .JR .
F.X t'('Ul tn • Editor

PATWHITF:HEAD
As;.; islH nt PubIisht ·r·Conll'l llil'l'

A ~U:.\11\ F: H Jtf Tht • A ~~ ut ' i a lt •d l ' r• ·:-li, tul ;uul I l;'aih l' n •s " ,\ ~ MH ' iat i un :tud ttw I! nwrlt•;ut
Nt'" S[).!IJlN l'uhlis ht· r~ Assul'iu tiun .
·
, ~

Lt-:TI't:HS tW OI'I NIH;\ un· \\dt·umt•tl. Till'\' shuultl bt• h•s!-&gt; Uwn :1011 l'nnl s 11111).(. ,\II

lt•ilt•rs 11n• ~ uhjt• t · l tu t•tlilill ).). :uul mu ~ t lw silo!ilt 1tl ~o~ i th n:mll' , achln · ~ ~ ami lt•h-ph11!11'
numht•r: N n••n'-iJ.:IIt ' lll• • l l •· r~ ~ill ht• t•nltli"lwtt l .d lt· rs s hotultl b.· i11 ~-tt•utl t.t a sh·. ittltln·ssi nl!

,t-:Onu-1'1 . nn l [lt"rS•mulitin .

ffemporary tax hike:
.too little--too late
! ; Oh.io lawmakers , who e ndured the political paifl of raising taxes in
;Nove m ber 1981. a re now lea rning that all their efforts may have been too
~hue. too -lat e.
·
~: Budge t Dir-ec tor Howa rd Collier came up wit h that reve lation and
passed it along in leit ers received Thursday by leaders of both political
.partie s in til&lt;' Legisla lur&lt;'.
: : He sa id almost a ll of thE' revenues generated by thE' ta x package, which.
ibcluded a 1-cent boost in the sales la x, had to be used to replace revenues
:the state lost as a 'result of what he called " the Depression."
; Las! summer, wheri• Ohio faced a $1.3 . billion budg&lt;:'t deficit, lhe
p.eglslature acted again. th.i s limE- with a nine-month ;5&amp;percent surcharge
on the s tate Income tax and .continuation of some earlier,lemporary taxes
lm corporations and utilities.
:: Without the 1982 tax packag&lt;' and the continuing 1981 t&gt;,~x Increase.
&lt;Collier told legislative lead&lt;'rs. "state and local government services
:.Vould have colla psed by ·now .."
·
' ; ' Instead. he said, the two tax hikes averted a defa ult for all of calendar
Year 1982.
,
.
·
' But the last six months of the current biennium that ends June 30. 1983.
:are another matter, Collier warned . "It is obvious." he said. "that further
:cooperative legislative-executive action is necessary for" the last six
:months of the fiscal year."
· ; Although Coili~&gt;r did not recomme nd specific actions. Ia wmakers
~ I ready are contemplating continuing the income tax surcharge and some
:Othe r temporary taxes. due to expire March 31, at least until the end of the
:fiscal year.
·. But even tha t action a ppa rently would lea ve the state short .
:: Earlier. Collier's office projected a deficit by June 30 of $312 million.
That projection was based on the assumption tha t the surcha rge a nd the
_other taxes would not be e xtended .
: But if the taxes were to be extended. the revenue for the three-month
'period would be only $112 million, still leav]ng a shortage of s:nl million, .
:Collier said.
: Sen. Harry Meshel. D· Youngstown, who is expected·to be elected Senate
presid ent Monday when the 1983 session gets under way. said he eX])el?ls
tpe)P,_fOIJiem to be conside red promplly.
·
.
. He said leaders will want to meet with Govelil!llr--elecl Richard Celeste to
8iscuss the surchirge and fiscal matters in gel)eral.
: Me shel said the top priority. as he sees It, Is to get the problem worked
out for the current fiscal year.
Afte r that, he said " we are going to make an honest effort at tax refonn"
before S€eking to balance the 1983-1985 budget which Celestewlll submlt to
l)le Legislature b y March 1.

·lames J. Kilpatrick
Ode to the new·-year
~~-.==7
,====~==~~===================

Sound the bells! Ring out the old,
and thus ring in the new,
It's welcom~ time· for '83, fare.
·well to '82. .
.
.
The midnight hour strikes a_new.
and may it pleas&lt;' your fancy
To start ihe annual ro11n~ or
toasts: to Ronald and to Nancy!
May no bad news disturb your
snooze,, and as for som~thlng flna .
May Providence protect . you
from anotherglft of china.
To George and Barbara Bush we
send affection warm and great;
'Tis truly said, they also ~rve
who only stand and wall.
To David · Gergen , Larry
Speakes, Who ' help us when we
needya .
In tribute to their stamina: Good
wishes from the medya.

From sturdy Rehnqutst on the
right, opinions we'll believe in.

Let members nmke a high
reSolve from Insult 1to abstain.
If Jesse one&lt;! a:ga)1r mounts up, to
Up on the Hill !he lialls tonight - -lead a fllibuster, ·
·
In comity wish not for ·hlm the
most thankfully are dark;
Two by two the lame ducks all
fate of Gen'l Custer.
have waddled from the ark.
1
And should the need arise again
&amp;I sing a sqng, and God be to cast a vole for cloture,
thanked, of this we may be sure:
Let every yea and nay be cast
Until the 98th returns,- our
without a trace of hauteur.
·
freedoms are secure!
To Cannon, Schmitt apd Harry
Goodbye, you members of the · Byrd, and sleepy Hayakawa,
Farewell, adieu, and may you
House who filed of re-election;
In '84 your conquen)rs may face
share some happy years tomawa.
the same rejection.
Welcome Lautenberg and Tl:ible,
Happy New Year; Mr. Speaker; -starting up the ladder;
.
. Hail Bingaman and Wilson too,
and keep you from aU evils!·
Wield your gavel, herd your
and Hecht who's R·NevaiJder.
flock; have pity onf boll 1weevlls.
·
In the Senate let us wish for
Presidential can&lt;lld11tes, those
harmony to reign.

sreklng Pllths to -glory,
_,
Could do a pubUc service by; ·
restraining oratory: ·
Good luck to Halllngs, Hart and
Glenn. good luck to Cranston to!&gt;,
As you pursue the fieetlng Fritz,
we'll raise a brave halloo.
•
-One candidate has.stepped aside,"
but please withhold a threnody We have not heard or sren the.
last of Edward "Teddy" Kennedy.
Republicans and Democrats! .
United let us be,
In seeking new prosperity In
nineteen eighty·!hree. .
Politics mean skirmishes; but
let"s stop short of war,
Anll brace ourselves for what's to
come In nineteen eighty-four.

. I

..'

" .

Boster...

(cOntinued from Page All

: times and ll may sound trite. ...bul, it's something I feel very
· strongly". "
· ~nterlng on education in
rural areas, Boster stresses a
realloca tion of state funds. ·
"In te rms of stale funding ,"
she said. "rural communities
are not receiving an equal
opportunity .lor quality education ... rural communities have
fewer dollars."
"No child should be penalized
rorthe benefit ofothers ... each Is
i' entitled to the same educational
opportunlty ...and the facts and
figures show that isn't being
done, " Boster added.
·
Boster said that while she was
aware Ihal pressure would be
brought to bear on her as a state
representative. she has no pa r ·
tlcular fears as she prepares to
assiune the position of treslunan
Ieglsiator.
"I know !here will be a lot of
pressure.. .'that goes with the
job... there a re .lots of lobbyists
representing all kinds of different groups," she said. "I don 't
fear the pressure. but it' s
something lo be aware of. "
" It's important to maintain a
sense of perspecllve.'" Boster
said In reaction to a question
about the " trappings of power. "
"The most positive feedback I
received throughout the cam.~~
paign.,.and since the el('Ctlon...was the feeling that people
were pleased 'that someone they
fell !hey could talk to and trust
was ruMing for political posi·

God save the cburts! To judges
all , on benches high and low,
May your opinions be well cast,
but shorter may they grow.
Chief Justice Warren Burger,
sir! Now may 'tt please your honor
If we raise first the champagne
glass lo Sandra Day O'Connor.
Give grace to Brennan. Mar~
shall. White. and Powell, Blackmun, Stevens -

Berry's World

•

INSPI!;cr SrrE- Richard Jone~, rtght, and' David Koblentz, Meigs
·County Commissioners, are pictured attheslleof anew structure which
will be huUt as a part of a new housing development for the elderly and
handicapped. The site isontheea'ltsldeofthechildren 'shorne buDding In
Pomeroy.

A toast Is also due to those whom
histor;v oflen buries;
They serve in anonymity, eleven
Secretaries.
So raise a glass and make a wish:
May what the Lord had wrought
Receive m11ch tender, loving
care from Secretary Wa(t.
To Block and Bell and Lewis too,
iiJ'
and Silent Sam In Housing.
May victories cap the cau~s that
you're constantly espousing.
To Donald Regan, money man,
we wish this paradigm:
May higher be the revenue, and ·
Jower be the prime.
For Shultz at State, God speed
you. sir! May you "and Mr. Reagan
Combine to fi!'d Mideastern
peace. Shalom, Menachem Begin!

ogy and agricultural products. !hey
disastrous harvests In the past four
desperalel¥.. need. And there are ,. years - with no great improveonly two .ways they can raise hard I 1 mrnt In . sight. Without imported
currency: Either tloiTOw the"mograin, the Soviet people would get
mighty hungry.
ney or ~II something of value for
dollars. West German marks or
So sell they must In the second
Swiss francs.
,
half of 1981, the Kremlin began
The only things lhe Russians
unl&lt;;&gt;adlng Soviet gold. But they
were dumping 'If onto a declining
have to sell' are gold, oll and arms.
A~d the market in all three
market. Necessity had forced the
commodities. like the Old Gray
Soviets - usually hardhearted
Mare, just ain't what it used to be.
capitalists In foreign trade -on a
Gold prices have been skidding and
classic road to the poorhouse.
the world oll glut has made . It
~lllng low and forcing prices down .
still further .
Increasingly a buyer's market
Munitions customers are caught In
Much the same thing happened
with their oil sales. 1n 1979, when ·
lhe worldwide recession and can't
see why they should pay ha:d cash
the Soviets sold oU after the bad
for stuff they used to get dirt cheap
1978 ha.yest. prices were sky·high.
and on credit. Anyway, the quality
They mad&lt;' a killing.
But by 1982, the oil glut had cut
of Soviet armaments Is less than
the best, as lhe Syrians discovered
prtces. Furthermore. the Russians
dldp't have much for export; their
last summer.
oil production has been leveling off,
Meanwhile, weather and wheat
are deaf to Marxist dogma, and the
and what oU they do have Is needed
for themselves and their satelllte
Soviet Union has suffered l ee

•

The

Meigs projects•• 'L-,,-------:---,-------.::~c2:.-Jlln~u-ed_fro_m_pa_ge. .:.{;

Page-A·2
January

.,

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

customers.
In desperation, the Sovtets siphoned o~Jfor export the oU that
had been earmarked for their
Eastern European allies. They
even sold some oU that had been
Intended for use in the Soviet Union
itself. The drastic tactic worked;
lhe·Kremlin 's harcl-&lt;:urreney crlsls
was alleviated - but only tempor- ·
arlly. Now another bad harvest has
left the Soviets short of grain again
and more oll wiD have to be sold at .
depressed world prices to buy food. ·
Hard times also loom ahead for
the Soviet satellites; according to a •
secret CIA report shown to my
associate Dale Van Alta . The CIA
analysts foresee a gr1m outlook
Indeed for Eastern Europe.
"Faced with hard-currency con·
stralnts "' and potential Western
credit restrictions. Moscow Is
trying to conserve foreign ex- ·
change, In part by reducing swpport
to dependent allies and clients," the
CIA notes.

.

tion.'' she Said.
"Being viewed .·as "regUlar
people' and a 'non-politician'
was Important."
Bost~r said she was confident
she rould maintain that relationship with her electorate"
"The first .thing to remember
is that a state represerllatlve Is
Important only· in that they
represent the people of their
diStrict." she said, "The representative Is not important in
their own right."
"Then. you must alwars
remember to not take yourself
too seriously - the job. yes but not yourself."
"It's also helpful to have
people around - mainly my
husband - who will not hesllale
to remind you of that ."
. "And there is nothing," con·
eluded Boster. who lives on a
farm and aids with her husband
Allan's veterinary practice,
"quite like cleaning out an
animal cage to put you In your
place."

"rlhad In l'llfllll'd ID annual expenditures for
. verloua tliXel. im.wt. c'-riteble contribu·
tlone. rnadlcel end dental .,.... etc.
TheM tupoyera ' - a vwy good chance of realizing the tex
.beowftbi of~ deductions if a plan-11 implemented to "bunch"
daductiona into _ , other ye.. A dociaion could be made. for
llllllrnpe. to "bunch .. a n~~~ny daductlono u poaible into the yaero
1982, 11184, 1988, etc. allowing the' texpeyer to itemize In these
,..... To . bunch claductiona into 1982. u many 1983 items as
poalblewould bei. tloNted into 1982. Forexemple: (1)meke1983
cheritable oontributlana in 1982. (2) instead of buying that new car in
1983. buy it' in 1982 and get the ..... texdaduction,(3) prepay your
1982 elllmetad- income tex. end (4) eyegiUMS. contact lensa• .
ph.,.;c.ll rmd dentel eurna, prescription drugs, ate. can be
!IICCBteralad into 1982 where appropriate.

NEIGHBOR .
OF YOURS
The
fl

rour lomllr
lnsut~nce
naed~t.

CAROL.L. fiii~wi~s;t
411 Second Ave.
G•Itipotls, 011.
Phone 446-4290
Home44HSII
lilu

'"'·=~

MURPHY'S IIARJ CIRCULAR
ON PAGE 3
The $2.00 Bath Towel will not arrive.
Manufacturer is unable to ship. Sony
- No Rainchects.

IIUUIUIC~

CfiTifiED PUIUC ACCOUNTANT

'"""
..;,hbtx,
S/111 F1111

Stale Fum Jnsur.anCe Comp1n1es
Home Offices : Bl oom inRton , Il li nois

CLEARANCE SALE!!
AU WOMeN'S

DRESS
SHO!S
GROUP

All LEATHER

ANGEL TREADS

40°/oOFF

OTHER ANGB. TREADS
20% OFF-

Year, ~ause we were doing so
lousy in the old one. We felt, as does
the White Jiouse, !hal 1983 will be
much better than 1983foreveryone.
Without this bill things wiD only gel
worse."
"I W$lllld like the fioor again."
"The· Senator from North Carolina."
"Mr. President, I wish to offer an
amendment to the New Year Bill,
which will require 50 percent more
subsidies and tobacco, prayers In
school, bans against ~"ijprtlon and
busing, and a constl«!!\iiiial amend·
ment preventing the Supreme ·
Court from declaring this amend·
ment unconstitutional."
" Mr. President."
"The Senator from Michigan."
"If We're going to start adding
amerulrnents, I would like to
propose that a,ll Japanese automobiles sold In the United States be
made In America ."
"Mr" President."
.
"The Senator from Washlngtoh."
"I amend the bill to permit the

"The Senate will come to order.
WUI the clerk read the bill now
pending on the noor? "
_,
0
"A BUI H.R. ~which provides
~ t
a
replacement
of 1982 with a New
('!)
Year
to
be
known as 1983.
" Look at"it this way: we now have an excellent
commencing
on
January 1 and
climate for comedy in the nation. "People WANT
ending on midnight, December 31, ~
TO L~UGH when times are bad. "
consisting of 12 months, 52 weeks
and 365 days whichever is greater."
"Mr. Presid&lt;'nt, I ask unanimous
consent that the bUI be passed so we
can all go heme and watch the
football bbwl garries on television ."
"Are there any objections? The
Senator from North Carolina."
Many of my customers are just valved here, banks .will be burled
"I wish to object to this blU on the
beginning lo realize that Congress
under mountains of new and
grounds !hat it is being rushed
passed a law last summer lo
unnecessary paperwork. ·
through Congress without debate.
withhold 10 percent of their Interest
The Commercial and Savings
How do we know we want a New
and dividend earnings beginning
Bank slrongly oppOses the with·
Year.andhowcanwebesurewhat
next July 1.
holding of taxes from interest and
It wUI cost us?" .
·Banks and other financial institu- diVIdends. It is unnecesSary and •
"Will the Senator from North
tions have opposed Interest arid' unfair. It' s unnecessary because 95
carollna yield?" ·
dlvldend withholding since the idea
percent of taxpayers already pay
"Only for a minute.:•
first surfaced 40 yefli'S ago. We sllll -the taxes they owe on interest and . '' Mr. President, my subcomm!t. dividend earnings !hat are subject
do.
.
tee on New Year's held hearings ·
Withholding on Interest and 'to reporting when ·they file their · day and night,· and we came to the
federal tax return. It Is . unfair
dlvide~ds wlll cost America's !ll
conclusion that we need a New
mllllo savers and in.vestors some
because it will lower tlieir interest
$1.5 bi ion In foregone aarnlngs on
earnings by reducing the ~neflts of
their terest and dividends. It will
compounded savi.,gs groWth.
cost th countryu'sflnancial instituIn'short, the_Iawclearlypenalizes
savers and investors. It should be
tions at least another $1.5 b' fn 10
put withholding Into place. · ·
repealed by ,Congress, and we wiD
Altliough there Is, an exe ptlon
need the help of every saver and
allowed for most senior citizens and ' inVestor to achieve this goaL
low Income people. this exemption
If you agree that·thls 10 percent
process Is an administrative night·
withholding · law is unfair and
ware in Itself. To be exempt, people
unnecessary, please write to your
will have to rue a government form
Congressman and Senators to teU
with each Institution where they · thel"(l so. We can get this law
·have an account. On this fonn they
repealed, but we mwrt begin now.
will have to swear !heir tax liability
Donald L. ·Crance
· is below the celliilg. Besides the
.
. .
. President
obVous Invasion of privacy In·
Commercial &amp; Savi~ Bank

Letter to the editor

Bank opposes withholding..,

GROUP..OF

All WOMEN'S

SHOES

CASUAL

$1000

20°/o OFF

ENTIRE ST()Q(t'J
DIN GO-CONNIE-THOM
McCAN

BOOTS

txiriler from Juarez three years :
Boemg Aircraft Company to ~II
ago. I would like to amend tbe 1983 '
$600,!m,!m worth of planes to
Libya."
·
bill to make Donna Flora ·an :
American citizen so she can work :
"Mr. President. may I offer my
for us legally in the United States." ;
amendment?:'
"Mr. President."
"The Senator from Texas."
'"the Senator from New York." ,
"I cannot ac:'cept the 1983 bill
'
"I would
like to submit an .'
unless Texas is assured a fa ir price
amendment !hat · if this body
for Its gas. and lhe United States
balls out all Texas banks that made . declares Donna F1ora an Amertcan "
citizen. the federal government will ·
loans to Mexico."
guarantee that subway fares In .
"Mr. President."
New York City will remain the ·
"The Senator from Illinois."
same
as they were In 1982."
.
~·wm the Senator from Texas
"Wlii theSenatorfromNewYork : ·
permit this amendment to read, 'as
well as Chicago Banks that lent · yield to lhe Senator from :
Alabama?"
money to Brazii, Argentina, and
"I yield."
Poland.' "
"I wish to amend'the bill making: .
"I will."
pre-marital sex a federal offense:
"Can we vote on the 1983 !lUI, Mr.
pun_tshable by ~eath and a fine
President? It Is now a quarter· to
S100,!m."
•
. .
mldnigh t. ''
.
''Are we ready to vote? All those '
"Are we ready to vote?"
In favor or replacing 1982 with 1983 ~
"Mr. President?"
say 'Aye.' .AU those 3ialn_st say:
"The chair recogntzes the Sena·
'Nay.' The ayes have 11. On behalf·
tor from New Mexico."
of a grateful nation, may I wish th~ :
"We have a maid named Donna
bQdy a 'Happy New Year.' "
Flora, . who slipped across the

UMITED QUANTITY

·-OF SHOES·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

SPINESAVER
•

EXTRA FIRM

.

"THE MONEY MARKET DEPOSIT ACCOUNT

lave to

. ¥2.

R

.~

Reg.

'·

'•

set

..

• · $100,000 F.D.I.C. Insurance·
• . Cheok~Wrltlng PriVIleges
• Dally lnter._st Rate

set

QUEEtl
,.
NQW

·448-

S224•et

...

•. No Wlthdrawai · P~nalty

•

• SISOO Minimum Qeposlt
... ,.

Open Fri . .
Evening

·till I

'·

'I

DRESS SHOES

or:

.....

"

. ,.

500/o OFF

200/0 0FF

Chamber of Commerce Building
16 State·St.
Gallipolis, Phone 446·4417

..

SHOES

'

'

~

.• .

40o/oOFF

.¥2 PRI.CE

An amended new Y.t::.=e=a=r======A;;::;::rt=Bu=c=hwa===ld .
~
&lt;
~

PURSES

' BOOTIES

. herit(Jge house

William 0. Smeltzer

;, ·mm.

.

OUR JANUARY

DRESS
SHOES

Many !PP"vera come close to the
M'
ry IIIIIOUnt of daductiona each year
nee
rv to iternla but they don't quite
m8lal It; consequently no tax benefit ia

ro•••
lor ell

esti!nated 10 year life s pan and ;lt
the end qf tha t.tlrhe, other areas 1n
the same location can be developed ,
Jones reports. The current landfill
located on the Harrisonv llie Route •.
Route 143, wUI be closed 9~ the,
new facUlty is in operation.
·
Estimated total cost of the landfllJ
· d&lt;'velopmenl Is $100,00) · Jones:
reports wllli $60,!m coming from
block grant · funds already a~­
proved . .. Some revenue' sharing
funds wUI be used and the balance
nE'eded for the project will ~
genera ted from . fees cnarged,:
1
according to plans.

GROUP MEN'S

TIMING OF
ITEMIZED DEDUCTIONS

one

a Ut ter control grant to be used in
c leaning up littered a reas and
Illegal diunps.
Also the ·commissioners hope to
have the new Meigs Co4nty la ndfill ·
in o!Jerallon within lhe next 30 to 60
days, The landfUI Is located in Salisbury.
Township on Howell Hill Cem etery
.road, a 140 acre tract ofla nd . Plans
prepared ·byJohn Dav id J ones artll
Associa te$, Columbus, have been
approved by the Ohio ,E irvironmeritlil"PrOtectionAgency a ndpresenlly
a new roa d is being construc ted io
the site .
The new landfill will have an

.-

'·'.

.. '

p.m ..

COR~IN ~

SNY[)fR
fiJRNITURf ~().

Ave.

Ohio

~

hio Valley Bank.
Poll' locltlena to aerve you better.
Member: f'DIC
. ·

'.

Promises, c011fusion, ~m~ bolluses ., you11 hear ~ alllxlay ... what some financial
institutions are I!Oing to do for you. But ooce again, !Jllo Yaftey Ban~ the Tri·County's
innovalir of the best in 10011 banking service, ~ ooe step ahead:Easiy proven when you
check our •ance record ~nee we intrOOUC«&lt; Daly lnveSttrent Iway back ln
August 1981, when manv.inStitutions ei)her didnl know What consumer daily interest
investrrent savin~ were or-simply didn, care to offer th~ cus!Dmer service. No, oor
·Daily Investment II Money Mart.et kcount ~not mething new.lfs ~mply something
better.
.
•.

'

.. '
.' '

~----------------~~--~----------------~------~------~ ~ '

�..

..
'

'

'

-

_._;,.______ _

~~~~~~~~~~T~im~~~-~Se~n~ti~n~~~==========~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~~~p~~~-n~t~~~~~V~a~.~====~========~~==~====~·~·==~~~~~1~98~3 •

-. ~ontinued rains :may (orce .

.

SToRE HOURS:
.........,,~ 9 1111 tUJO

second round of·evacuations
I

Pamerpy-Middleport~Gallipoli5, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Th~

·,.
•

..

'.
•
! ...

59
WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service forecast
for Sunday predlcls rain for most of the southern AUantic s~ mixed
with showers over the rest of the south. Most of the northeast Is also
pt-edictAld to receive rain sh&lt;&gt;wers,, with the Gre_a t Lakes region
predlctAld to re.:.-elve some s oow Dunies. ( AP Laserp~o)
I'

SLJCB)

SIRLOIN
STEAK

J

A RINDED

~~l

SLAB BACON·

•

!J
',

·59.·

59

.

,~,

OlD FASHION

TENDER &amp;JUICY

'

Extended ·Ohio "jorecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY; Chance of snow flurrieS
ln the northeast, hut otherWise fair on Monday. Chance of snow
flurries Thesday and fair Wednesday. Morning lows In the teens
Monday, warming into the 20s by Wednesday . Highs, mid-20 to
mid·:vls Monday and :n; to low 20s Thesday.

classrooms in July. Middleport
Village approved a .$2milliondollar
,.
]983 _bUdget and Eastern hired
:, - · !Co!ltlnuedFromPageA·1l ,
,David , Janzen as high school
a blow lo the local economy.
principal.
1 A $10,00) · fire hit the ..Harold
· A
t D v w· ..... 0f
Blackston residence In early May
· 1n
ugus ·
·
·
e""r
0
· ----'·vWa won the Kerr's Run
'""""' c
.- . and the annual lri-county mock
disaster was staged . Meigs High
sewer construction project and the
I
seniors graduated on May 19. with
119th annual Meigs County "Fait
•
Sou
ds ~ 1
opened for a successful run .
1 . Easternand
Jherngra
olowPortable classrooms were ap;
ing a few days later. Middleport
proved for the salem Center School
observed General Hartinger Day
and local lawman conducted a 5
~ wirh· a gala celebration and many
.._ d
lj
"d .
il• activities honoring James Hartin· m 1111"'' 0 11 ar mar uana ral m
Meigs County fields
•
~;. · ' ger,Four
former resident. ·
Bob B
beg h·, d ,.
Meigs High track members "
yer
an IS u JeS as flew
•
·
administrator of t~ Meigs County
i' , participated In state events lo open Emergency Medical Service In
•:
June and In the June primaries, Se
d
Loc 1
: '.
Mannina Roush won I be only
ptember .an lhe Meigs
a
"
Board ra t"fied
, contest--the
county COill!llissioner
I
con tac ts w ith ce rti fied and non-certtiied empl&lt;lyj's. An
po st nomination. The Dave Diles
U ~ent care center was m
• .: '-Celebritv Got! Tournament was
'~
· · 1'tlated bv
·
. ~ ~ , again a big success and on June 17
Veterans Memorial Hopsital and
,•
he
Middleport Council awarded bids
~·'
mUd
tornadoca,!lsed dama_~~e ln 1 .
for the fire station addition. flower
• • • ·aend area. The s)g Bend Regalia
· · was on a the new Raelnehydl'()('lecl· .. ·took ov,er to end the month .
. plant ·
riC
· ; Salem Center School patrons
Meigs County evan
'elt
the shock
·' united to fiahf the transfer of
&lt;
''
"
''
ln October when the d.is membered ·
:'StUdents
from" the school to-Rutland
. 'and 10 secure promised portable
bodies of two Logan teen-~gers
'•
.
,
~C" ·
o

r

t',

Wlthcaupan

r

SUPERIOR ALL MEAT

WIENERS

GROUND ·
BEEF

·Each Chipper dinner ·
Includes: Two golden brown
fish filets, crisp trench tries,
creamy cole·slow, and two
southern ~le hush puppies.

:1

OlloreiiiJl""JAN. 16, 1983

Captain
D'se_ ·
lealood

· · ,

21 7

I • I CLIP THIS COUPON I I I ,

Upper

..

River Road. Gallepohs

I • I . CLIP THIS COUPON I • I

$

III!ONDAY, TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY

a

•

• TWO'CHIPPER DINNERS • 2.00 off VAWE PACK
FOR $2.99
•Ill
or THRIFT PACK •II
,::• .1•11
II
•II

"
:..

Eoch Chip p er dinner Includes two golden brown tlsh lllleiS, c risp
trenc h trle 5, c rea my cole s~w end two so u !he m sf&gt;fle nush pu~pies.

•

YALUI PACIIHCWDIId2 fiahHIIeb, crisp frerrch lrles,creamy cole

·

d,}ury
• -to hear a·}}egatiot:~S

sloW b nd 8 huitl puppies. Serves4 or more.
·
JHIIFT PA¢M INCLUDU: &amp;fish llllets . criSp trench fr ies. c reom.v

co~

·

~ran

.

slaw cind 8 hush puppies. Serves~ .

u·.:• ;~
Ca~n D. . .
;~ ,a;•;li:~::::aN P:USTOM~ • I .,a;nt;M:::~:~PON =~OM;• .• •
:: •

Olle•••Pi•e• 1-1.8-83

•

Captain

0 • •••

••• 1-16-83 '

• •

• f! ' moNTON,

·i

.

'.

.

:. Sun. Thru
Tues. Sale
; Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

ALLISON'S
GRADE AlARGE

•!'

r·
:

EGGS

The Saving Place"'

Ohio IAPl- Lawrenee County Prosecutor Richard
Meyers says he will present _results
of an Investigation Into alleged
sexual misconduct within the sherill's department to a county gr
jury.
.
The lnY.estlgar~ga--s
rom' a
:complaint by a female prilsoner ot
1
the county jail; who said she )VaS
,sexually assaulted Nov . .26 by the
head jailer. The
alleged assault
,

•r
!

EXTRA LARGE

C:::.r--..

,
1
'I
fI!;

:1

:l
·''-~~

nation's weather

By The A~latll&lt;i Press
A saturated Louisianll was geti lng st ill more rain Saturday,
spurring the threat of renewed flooding, while Texaswasdigglng out
from as much as S.inches of snpw and c.Itrus and avocado growers
near San Diego were protecltng:rhelr crops from New Years's Day
temperatul\'5 forecast to dip as low as 26 d€irrees. •
~I least a half-Inch of rain fell over flood-ravaged sections of
Louis!~- tod·a y and officialS sa id a second rourid of flood)ng m ay
force the evacua tions of pt'OIJie who had just returned to !heir homes.
Gov . Da:.te Treen said Friday tha t 9,700 people had to flee tti~ir ··
homes this. week in Louislanawhere an ·estimated $50 million ln ·
damage had been caused by r a in -S\\ ollen waters spilling out "Of
rivers and baypus.
Rain also was reported falling in Alabama, where street flooding ·
was reported In Mobile, and in Mississippi, where as much as 750,&lt;XXl
acres of lowlands are inunda ted because of rains that began ";H
Christmas.
·
Winter storm warnings were posted for portiof\S of Texas ·for
saturday night. Over B!nches of snow fell Friday in El Paso helping
to set a 11ew city s nowfall record for the month of December.
Dense fog blanketed the East Coast from Virginia to northeast
Florida and a trave ler's.advisory for fog was Issued for the Central
Valleys of California. .
.
._
Wilbur Shigehara, a National Weather Service meteorologist ln
San Diego, advised growers to protect the ir crops from frost, which
can ruin oranges and lemons within a half-hour when temperatures
plunge to the mid-20s.
.
Freezina rain was predicted for late Saturday over Olilahoina and
Texaswhlle showersa ndthunderstorms were tocontlnueacross th!'
Gulf. Snow ·f lurries were forecast for northern Maine while rain was .
expected to be scattered aiong the Oregon-Washington coast.

..

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:

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were found. Cindy Crooks became ·
Meigs County Junior Miss and t he
LifeFiight- helicopter service was
begun by Veter.ans Memorial
HospitaL
Heavy layoffs were
announced at the Meigs Mines.
Pomeroy O""ned
its new village hall
.in the former Pomeroy Senior High
SchooL
The November election saw
Mannlng ,Roush elected as a . new
MeigS County Commissioner a nd
voters were receptive to tax lfvies.
Mel= Cou.ntv. learned that it .would
..,,
serve as a host uni r ln case of a
ma1"or disaster in the Columbus
area.
In December, communities wei.
. n.
corned in the Chr. istmas seaso
Modular classrooms arrived at the
.Salem Center SchooL Meigs Local
admm" lstrators were given sa
. lary
adjustments. Pomeroy Council
made plans for rev ilaliza tion of
Pomeroy ln 198.1. 'flle historical
Higley .h ome in Rutland went up in
flames, apparently through arson.
Members of the Pomeroy United
Met-hodist Church. looked forward to
the razing of the former Pomeroy
Village HaU which the church
purChased. One hundred r:nore
: t t n e workersl'ej:eived layoff

~fTt'!lwhlletheprtsOnerwasen r-------------1
roote to a hospital.
Meyers said he wlll present Ibe
resultsofhlsprobetothegrandjmy
Thesday. He said more than 50
statements have been compiled as
part of the Investigation.
, Meyers said the prisoner twice
denied offers to take a lie-detector
examination concernjng· the inci:
dent. He said \he jailer passed a
lie-detector test.

'li11 -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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PEPSI :·
REG. or DIET
MT. DEW

FRIED ;
CHICKEN :(

-

39 t
••

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...
THAT FORM OF DOCTRINE

Avt'RUC', by the Ohkl 'Valk&gt;y PubiL"h-

t~

Company - Mulllmedla. Inc.
Serond class_ po;taR"&lt;" paid at GaUlpo4~1 -

. lis, Ohio

E:nf(&gt;n!(l as SE:'C'OI'ld

f'laot!l · m ailing m atl('r at Pom(&gt;f'Oy,
Ohio. Post Office.

MemiX'r:

1"h&lt;' • Assoctat&lt;"d Pn&gt;ss.
. Inland Dally Pn&gt;ss AssociatiOn and
ttk&gt; Anwrtcan N&lt;"'NSJ)aper Pu~l&lt;iher s
Association, NatJon&lt;;~l AdvrrtLc;lng RC'-

Deodor·
,a nt Products
,

•

2 48
•

(212i •

POTATOES

UW" Home
Perman.,t

!'- , •. ~

. •. ,. ·$}37- •

. 'Netwt:

• "Ft Ol.

185 U er River Rd.--Galli olis. OH.
I•

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20 LB,-

YI:LLOW

RED DELICiOUS "

ONIONS

APPLES ~· -

'3 LB.

49¢

'

¢;

3 LB.

79
•

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OFF
SELECf GROUP

, MEN'S SHOES
1QO/o-50°/o-OFF
.
. .

HANDBAGS
10%-30% OFF .

EXCELLENT INVENTORY
,
·

OF

FALL &amp; WINTER BOOTS

l£e

Th' Sh
. oe C.·. .

·1.:

:tiHJ Second .-\ve .

I.

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. i'll

~~. . .,
...

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not a\:allabk&gt;

JtJ/1
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lulawllle Roecl o P.O. ••• 3111
~ALLIPOI..IS,OIII04!1Uf

--

SIZES 36-50

.

._,,.

.-.,
...

·-

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

........ .

o.lty·W.IIH
• II:IJ lllM

•

CAlF. SUPER STRAIGHT,

WHITE PATCH.
SIZES 3 TO 15 .
BAGGIES, EtC.

MEN'S

SPORT COATS
REDUCED 20% TO 50%

SALE PRICE· $ 2 2

COATS ·&amp; JACKETS
REDUCED 30o/~

TOP COATS
REDUCED 20%

.LADIES D_
RESSES
REDUCED 1/2 .PRICE

MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS
REDUCED 20%

'

LA-DIES SWEATERS
REDUCED .30%

MEN'S

SW~ATERS

MEN'S COLORED

LADIES BLOUSES
REDUCED 20%

DRESS SH_
IRTS
REDUCED 30%

LADIES

SUITS &amp;- BLAZERS
REDUCED 30%
•

LADIES SKIRTS
REDUCED 30-o/o

'

MEN'S

LADIES. ROBES
REDUC~ 20%

FASHION JEANS
BY LEVI

REDUCED':"20% ·

-

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LADIES LEVI BENDOVER'

· ·· MEN'S JACKETS
REDUCED 20%

One yC'ar , ... ... ... .......... ..... , ... $20JU1

Dally and Swld'a y
MAIL SVBSCRIP110NS
ln!ilde OhkJ ,
$2 Wft&gt;l&lt;S ...... ...................... , $51 .4 ~

SLACkS
REpUCED 30%

•

BAHR CLOTHI-ERS

26 Wreks ............................. $27.10
...... ....................... 114.114

n W&lt;'&lt;'ks

RaWo Outtoldo Ohio
52 w........... .. .,................... $.16.16
26 W&lt;'&lt;'ks ...... .. .... .. ..... : ........ . fl9 .64
13 Wft'ks
.............. ........115.21 -

UU.DID_.IC ®

.. 4

'

payfTI('nf ~

Six montns .......................... $10.40

OUR LOSS

88

LADIES

MEN'S

REDUCED 20%

Mi\JL SVBSCRIFnONS
Sund.o,y Only

MIDDLEPORT

Is YOUR GAIN - PRICES APPLY. TO STORE MERCHANDISE ONLY
.. END.·OF THE YEAR ClEARANCE SALE
-

HOTPOINT AND GENERAL ELECTRIC

·LANDMARK ®

, WE WILL ·NOT .BE UNDERSOLD
-

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-~~ -

·c (

-

LEVI DENIMS
REGUrAR
. $28 to 132

mack&gt; lo carrier.;.

'

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LADIES

MEN'S SUITS
REDUCED 20% To 50%·

. WOOLS. BLENDED.
PilL VESTER &amp;,CORDUROY

Thr Sunda y T! Illt'S -~'\tlnrl wU Jnot bf&gt;
rt"Spon.'ilbk' for advenN"

Lafa)•ette ~hill
Gallipolis, 0.

·•

PRR!E

We are not called upon 10 iterally die on the cr~ be buried in a lomb, or be
~tren!d hom the sfalt! d the dead. We are called -upon ID obey that form of doctrine,
the death, burial, and leSUIIedion ol the L(lnl.ln baptism, we un• oooelws with Clirist.in ·
His•
1. -o.tlt "Baptized inm JesuS ChrisLbaplized m, his death' (Rm. 6:3). As the
siniesl; Christ. in death, PISSed from a lite suqected _, the sutlerings d the sins of the
whole WOI1d, sort ~ I'Mtl u~ Wh111 we are baptized into Christ and into His death, we pass
!rom the WOI1d d sin"ID the ife that is set free hom sil, fnrn a lost slatetoasawedslllll!.ln
blptism, our "old man", the "body d sin", is destroyed so that we win ','no longerserw!in"
· (Am. 6.'61. By baptism, we are united witll Christ is H~ b&lt;XIy, "For by one Spirit are we aH
baptized inm one body" ~ eo.. 12:13).
- 2. 1!01: "Buried with him by baptism into death' (Rm,6;41. The burial of Christ
a~~firms lis delth and cessation lnim lis former life. Likewise with us. in blplsm, the
burial wilh Chritl ~our dyilg to sin, being set ln!e fnrn sin (Rm. 6:6, 7), and our
c:essdon hom lhe love and ~ of sin in the fmner ife.
lllnlmd!o!t "Planted lll&amp;elher in the likeness _d his death, we _shalf be also in the
ikeness Ill hili risunedion" (Rm. 6:5). As Chrig was raised from the dead by the glory or
power d God to 1 new life, so are we. By the Hfllry oriJOMr of God, we are raised from lite
water:y grave • walk the new ife that is in Clirist The quickenin&amp; power and quality of the
new ife ~ Christ i\ing)n us (Gal. 2:20). The new ife is hid with Clirist in God~. 3:3).1t ~
Clirist's iii that we 11e reproduci1&amp; in our own bodies and 1'1!5 that hides self.
.
fnJIIIThe '"-1
· 'The form of doctrine is not comliele by outwan! compliance only. Hmust be
mOOVIIed hom within man, his heart or mind. We learn, make decisions and lowe witll the
nind. The nind must be renewed with the wit at &amp;lid (Rm 12:2). When the nind arns
and rec:eMs !hit form d &lt;~~dine •hiriCJ, and decides to com~ with thai f(Jfll of
doct!ine (leichingf,l demOrlslrates its loVe to God in oUtward obedience klthal f(Jfll of
dodrine ~· in baptism.
.
.
\
Wher1 .,., obey m .the heart the lDrd in baptism, we pour ounelves ir1to that form
d lb:lriile. Wurtthen ll1ilad with Christ in His death, burial; and resunection, laking on
the desired U.as !!IMrE at ~ lnd patllkers d the divine n111rre ~~ Pet
1:3) as-new Clllbns in Clirist ~I Cor. 5:7), we wal in newness of ife (Rm. 6:4), being
"'rrnniGJ1111d by the {efll" ;!W': ol our mind, pruling' "what is tl!at 8ocxi and !Cceptable,
and perfect J¥11 d God" ,tlm. 12:.21•every day of our lives!
· .

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1 61.'l:~ref®

•

JOYCE

MEN'S ·PANTS

prPYntatlw. Bra nham. 17117 W&lt;'SI
NII"P Mllf' Road. Suit(' 204, DE&gt;t roll.

o,..

· (For Free 'Bible CorresPI!rldence Course Write·:..)'

••

$15-$SO OFF
.·.20°/o-

).

BASS.
10°/o-40°/o OFF

FRYE BOOTS

A Multiml'dta NPWspapPr
Publls~f'd_ earh S~.:~ncla:v , ~ Thh'd

S~RIFnON RI\TES
By Canter or Mo&amp;or Rouk'
Woe!&lt; .. .............. ............. $1 .00
Ol'lf' MOnth ......... ........... ....... $4.40
OI'K' Year ................ ......... .... $52Jl.O
SINGI.E CIII'Y

;

U.S. NO. 1

LARGE SELECTiON AT SALE PRICES.

'

B.v subscrlpUons by mall J)('lll1111N:I In
towns whl.&gt;ll' horJl(' carrk&gt;r SC'IVI&lt;'l" Is

MARGARINE::

SUGAR

CLEARAN.CE, SALE,

REDUCED 30%

u~~a5-800

· M!chlgan. 4Rmi.

William B. Kughn ·

BLUE BONNE\fT

SlfJRANE
PURE CANE .

For each coupon you redeem in our store by Jon. 22,
1963 Proctor &amp; Gamble® will contribute 5¢ to Special
Olympics ...
h~lp for the mentally handicapped.

By The Associated Press
1,510 Ohioans had bee,, kUled In
Ohio traffic deaths (lropped traffic accidents as of Friday
sharply In 1982, making the year's mornlng .
higl];vayfatalltytollthelowestsince
.Last year, 1,780 :fatalltles w.ere
World War II.
'
recorded. The previous post-war
DeJlnl!j-\ ~halen of the Ohio low w.as In 1961, when ,1,679 people
Department ofH!ghwaySaietysa!d .._died ..

CARDIGAN &amp; PULLOVER

JunbiiJl 'limrtl- Jmtinel

.t'i,CC'nts

REDEEM PROCTOR &amp; GAMBLE®MAILED COUPONS

Times-Senlinei-Pa~A-5

I!'j - .
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:JfJ~· ~....;....._____~.
Jn
Mei~S
••~ ·
~Jl#4ANU'#4·
AR· Clf!J;'#JlARA
_

•

GROUND FRESH
SEVERAL TIMES DAILY

The Sunday

Ohio on way ~o low.dfiath toll -

pin ·

QrisED SUNIMYS

'
By DEAN FOSDICK
rain continues, causing backwater. southern California and dense fog
A9i0Cialed Press Wrl~r
flooding. The LouiSiana National
blanketing sections of Vlrglnla,
Louisiana resldents who just
Guard has activated 150 troops to
northeast F lorida and the central ·began shoveling '~twa from their
help if evacua tiOns agaiJ! become valleys of California.
flOOded hoines faced a second tound
necessary.
·• ·
· Many highway and railroads
of evacuations as· more rain fell · -It was alSo ralnlng Saturday In
remained closed In northeast and
Saturday .fn the neep South;. where •. much of Mississippi and Alabama,
ni&gt;rt~ central-I'-Ouisianab€cause of
,
. riversarealteadyoverthelrb&lt;lnks.··. witere ' there ·has . been sporadic "hlgh _w ater. ..
Gov. Dave Treen said Friday that · flooding since Christmas. ·
" We've gilt 18 Inches of water ln
9,700 people had )leen forced to flee · . Officials In Mississippi said about the house," reported Ernie Moser,
750,cro acres were under water
this week because of flooding from
wjlo lives In Morutle, La, where
across the sjate, but mostly In
swollen rivers and bayous. Prel im!2,500 people had 'to leave their
nary damage estimates stood at
agricultural areas with .few homes.
homes. " We only moved ln six
more than $50 million_.
E lsewhere, the New Year rang in 'months ago, Nobody in thls subdiviMany of the evacuees have
wit h snow over Texas and New
sion has any flood insurance."
returned, but. local officials said
Mexico, freezing weather predicted
"We are j~st sitting here waitfor a
of
t hey may have to leave again if the
ing," he said. · ·

••

• .• January 2, 1983

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,

WASHERS- DRYERS- REFRIGERATORS- FREEZERS
PORTABLE &amp; CONSOLE TELMSIONS (In B&amp;W and Color) ,

All RED .TAGGED AND PRICED FOR QUICK CLE;ARANCE
•

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

,.

. 992-2191

Driw A Uttle and Save A lot- Delivery Wrthin 76 Miles
· ' Yea, We ·Service lit yaur lOcal Hatpoint Deeler
Stdra Haun; S::io ta &amp;:30. Mill eta nd 11t &amp;:00 P.M.
Gllllll Md Maon Countlee

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Page-A~The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

P.citMroy

w. Va. ·

January 2, 1983

ACLU calls Ohio cri,me study ~a lobbying .bidi'
lt!, By ~UCHAEL HOLMES

Associated Press Writer 'COL-UMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A new
study of organized crime in Ohlctlsa
lobbying bid by pollee for new laws
that might tlu·eaten citizens' ~onstltutional rights, ihe American ClvU
Liberties Union charged Friday.
The 174-page study "j;&gt;roduced
··
.
·
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.

'G aso·II·n
·e
•

--

notlllng but a ·lobbylng document,
dangers inherent in unsubstalt·
much ofwlllch ls hearsay and other
tlated allegations by ItS attempt to
unrellable information," said Ben- st_lgmattze private citizens willie
son A: Wolman, e_xecutlve director
circumventb\g pi'Oper(legal) chan·
of the Ohio ACLU.
nels," Wolman added.
"(The report),y.ras prepared by a
niechargesweredlsputedbythe
pollee lobbying consortium, was ·a
pollee olflcer who headed ~ task
slipshod and lnaecuratio refiash of c force 'that prepared I~ study. . _
.old mater-Ials &lt;¥Jdilemoasirates the ·
The~~dy, rele~ Monday, w~...
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year since 1971, when it slip'-"" less
""'
than half a cent. Never had It
dropped as inuch as In 1982,
according totheCommerceDepartment, wbose figures go back to 1936.
And the trend was stU! downward
a5 1983 began. Standard on eo. or
California, one of the b'=est
.,.;

By Ro"'ERT BURNS
.,
. M' Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP ) - A statistic
for American· motorists' to cheer:
The price of gasoline fellll cents a
gallon in 1982 to mark the biggest
· yearly decline on record.
The. drop was .frotn-$133
· a gallon
at year-end 1981 to$1.22agallon,and
it was the first yearly decline in
more than a qecade. In the three

·

BEDROOM
80
. SAVE $300

Man charged for
digging up friend

..

·:Any

of the
same )lel'liOOJiel who have demon·

Lt. David Dalley;-cofujiifttee. would be sUbject to _some

chalrman and' a member o! the
Columoos police department's
organized-crime ooreau, said the
f tual
d in ·
·repprt was ac
•n
many
:eas ::;en:nro~~In
ere · ve
c en s
convictions.
-"The repor:tls lJased on fact. The
information was provided by law
enforcement agencies andprosecli-.

t=

strated their dlsrespecUorconstltu·
ilona! values by the lack .o! care
·
·
manifested in tile report Itself.''
'The ACLU, Wolman said, "will
challenge any attempt to allow
pollee t.o use evidence wlllch they
acquire by methods· which violate
the Corislilliilpn; a ~mmenda·

"Whenwetalkaboutaracketee
. r·
ing statute, wiretaps, witness prot.ectli:m- we're talldng about tl)lngs•.
the federal governrnent already bas i•
~k
•
to r with, 'Dalley said.
'• "
. · "I knoWButhe ACLU is ag~••
· wiretaps.
t the majorlty o! 01111(,
ll!COrrunendatlons have been put
Into etlect in other stiltes or.by the&lt; I
federalgiJvernment," be said. , ''·

· furlher ~n;earty J983·, the trend may
be interrupted _April 1 when a 5-cent
increase in the federal gasoline tax
takes effect. Refll\ers, who will pay
the added tax, are llke)y 10 P&lt;!SS•On
most o! it 10 . consumers, many
,- economists IX&gt;Ueve.
The national average price at the
gasoline sellers, said It would
pump ended 1982 at $1.22 a gallon, r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::~~:
completeanatlonwlderoundofcuts
including taxes, accprding to the_
thlsweekendtoshaveasmuchas2
Lundberg ~urvey Inc., -a Los
·
' ' ..
·
·
·

years
the ·national
from
Its wholesale
price.
thata
averagebefore
price 1982,
of gasoline
had ._qmts
While
many
oil industry
analysts Angeles:based
tracks gasolinetrade
pricesjournal
through
jumped more than 50 cents a gallon. expect retail gasoline prices to slip survey of 19,1XXl retail outlets.
Until this Paljl year, the average r--~------....o.--------:: ,.....---~
price of gasollile had risen every

.,

complied by the governor's Law
1m's statewide,'' Dalley Said.
.
tlon In tbereport.
_,
Enforcement Consyltlng CommitWolman saJd the study's ~· ·
relaxation of constitutional
. t,ee. ·I t •conclud!!d that organized _ mendatlons . that law entorcemeat standards . ~ only epcourage
crlnje, once believed to be~ offtcers be ~en _aut~rlty for · filrttler ~ttuslons ~the sanc~ty- .
to northern Ohio, has SP,read to wiretapping has been properly of people s ~.
· _.,..:,
everycornerof\)lestate.
resisted ~.!he past by.. the General
But , J?alley said many of ~
It said gamb!lng,_mu~r. arson
Assembly.
.
reports recornmendat~ only ask,
. for pf!l[lt a_nd the manufacture and
. The reason law.Jrulkershavel!een lor legal \OOls that other states and..
. sale of Illegal drugs are seeping Into reliiCtanl, . ~ ,said. perhaps Is , , federal officials_. alrea!JY have · f!llf ·
. everyday llfe-.around the stat¢. ~- . ''because the l;lrlvacy or citizens lighting ctlme..
· ;· 'l

·e s·. d-o w
·". ·n' ;I·n
· -'8·2'' .'

·p· ·r·' ··l· c
·"

HARRJSON,Oillo(AP,-Aman .
who thought his dead friend would
have been unhappy being buried in .
Miamitown Cemetery Is charged
with illegally tl)'ing to dig up his
buddy's body. '·
Hamilton County Deputy Sgt.
Don Co~le said Wayne Roether, 32,
of Harrison, told 'deputies he wanted
to dig up the corpse o! his friend,
Gal)' Linzy, and re-bury the man in
his own back yard because Linzy
didn't like thecemetel)'.
A caretaker at the cemetel)' in
Whitewater Townslllp, west of
Cincinnati, said he found the hole
over Linzy's grave Wednesday
morning.
''.He was witllln four inches of the .
vault in the grave," said caretaker
Arthur Metzger. No one was at the
grave when Metzger discove~ed it,
·but he said he and pollee "had an
iilkling of who" had been digging.
"I understand that he and the guy
thaf were buried there were real
buddy-buddy," Metzger said. He
said Linzy, of Miamitown, was
burled at· the cemetel)' in November 1981:
The man 's widow, Dottie Linzy,
said she, Roether and her former
husband grew .up together in
Miamito\vn and knew each other
vel)' weli. Her'father Is a member of.
the cemetel)''s board, and the
cemetery can be seen from her
home. .
'
After talking with deputies,
Roether was charged with felony
vandalism for allegedly digging the
3-t~ ·foot-lltuare hole over Linzy's
grave. If the vault containing the
coffin·had been entered, the charge
could have been desecration of a
grave, wlllch Is a fourlh-degree
felony, police said'
Roether entered no plea at Ills
arraignment Thursday in HamUton
Cotinty Municipal Court and was
freed on a $150cash bond.
Rol!ther refused to comment on
the incident, saying ''I really don't
want to discuss it." He Is to appear
for preliminary hearing on the
felony vandalism charge Jan. 6.

Maple - Double Dresser - Mirror - Four
Dfciwer Chest -:- NightStand ...... .Bed

.

·

PA:., .· B·REA
. . K.FAST ·spE&amp;--1·
2 $(:RAMBLED EGGS
SAUSAGE
·
.
. .
- . H4SH BROWNS
. . ENGliSH MUFFIN
..

NOW$5CJ9
Regular SI.65

5~COFFEE
_·OFFER .GOOD THROUGH JAN. _31, 1983

· WU~e

SAVE $400
Two Finishes - Dark Pine or Honey Pine
Triple Dresser, Hutch Mirror, Five DraWer Chest.
Nightstand and Cannonball Bed

WAS $JJOO "

NOW

$899

'&gt;

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T

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-·.-

',;;dk .

1705 EASTERN .AVENUE

Ohi_.point Pleasant, W. Va.

1983

Explosions rock NeW York
Byi.AWRENCEJUlMAN ·
Year's Eve, injuring three NeW
· ' AW'daledl'rellsWrllet
• York City ·. pollee officers and
' NEW YORK i.AP) - The FBI ~a using - u.ruletermined property
says it believes a PuerlO .Rican . damage.
terrorist ~p was responsible for . A fifth bomb was dlsmaJ\tled
~ bomb&lt;; that exploded at four before It exploded. .
.. fe&lt;)eral and city
_ buildings on New
Oneofthebombsnear!ysev~red a

·J
. a·
· 11•Ja ·. . . ·.· . ·. loWing
a three-day tr!al .ln April, .
·_. n· G
Ro_binsonwassenten
_· ced _tcia_prlso_n..

'.

·a r. ~if;Stf?'!W,; I·i!t
1.'

policeman's left foot, authorities
A short distance away at pollee t-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:';;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
said. Mlcrosurgeons at Bellevue headquarters,OfflcerRoCcoPascaHospital tried ID reattach the foot
rella, 33, was on security duty. He
but finally had'~ remove it.
heard the Federal Plaza blast,
·The explosions damaged the New stepped outside to investigate and_a
· MONDAY-THURSDAY 10 A.M.-9 P.M.
York City Police Department • homb exploded .under him nearly '
headquarters, the Manhattan-Fed· severlng lllsleftfoot.
FRI. &amp; SAT. 9 A.M.-10 P..M.
· era! Building: the U.S. District. - Surgeons amputated Pascarel- .
.
.
:. Courthouse ·ln · Brooklyn and th~ Ia's foot below the knee, McGuire.
.
.
. .
Metropolitan COrrectional Facility . . said . .
·a fE.'!Ieral.detenllon center:" .The third bomb" exploded at the
MON.-LIVER &amp; ONIONS
Shortly after the first two bomb&lt;;
Brooklyn court house atlO:10 Ill~·
TUES.-MEAT LOAF ~
went off, the FALN, a Puerto Rican
according to the oommlssloner,
· terrorist group, called WCR&lt;; radio
"causing extensive property damWED ..,-LASAGNA
....
and claimed responsibility for the- age but no Injuries," ·
THUR.-PORK
&amp;
DRESSING
..
And at 10 : 45 p.m., MeG u1re sa td ,
blasts.
The FBI expres'sed skepticism
police found two bomb&lt;; outside the
FRI.-SHRIMP WITH FRENCH FRIES
about a call to The Associated Press
Manhattan offtce bullding that
SAT.-SWISS STEAK
in which a person claimed responsl· · houses the U.S. District Courthouse
bllity tor the PaleStine Liberation
and the U.S. attorney's office.
Organization. That caller said two
Police officers Covered the devimore bombs would go off within th\!
ces will,l-.steel mesh l;lomb, biankets.
lOBS_TER TAIL, CORNISH GAME HEN, SUR'F &amp; TURF. FRO·
flour, and they did.
and called the bomb squad. When
GLEGS, STEKS, SEAFOOD AND MEAT ENTREES.
. Police Commissioner· Robert J. . two bomb squad officers removed
McGuire told a news confer~nce , one of the blankets, the bomb
early today that the first bomb
beneath It exploded.
OPEN 10 A.M.-2:30AM.
expioded around 9: 30 p.m. on the
Officer Salva tor Past orella, 42, a
main floor of 26 Federal Plaza iii
policeman for 15 years, suffered
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY
Manhattan. which houses the offi· . extensive injuries to both eyes and
ces of the FBI and .. other federai
fingers and may have lost his
agencies.
hearing, the commissioner sa id. ·
The blast from the device, made
Officer Athony Senft, ;36, a
·of several dynamite slicks and a
nine-year veteran, sustained exten-·
timer, knocked out windows on · sive eye and facial iii juries.
three floor,s 'but caused no injuries.

THE LaS!LLE RESTAURANT

DAILY LUNCHEON SP-ECIALS

term. · ' · ·
"·
fContinued From Page A-1)
· · Also -In AprU, a trial resJ!lted ' in "
coun\y had yet to draw up_a pl_gn to · lmprlsorunent for Alvin R. M~tleave the district, and the 648 board. chum, .. a ·. 38-year-old , Franklm ·
was plaMing fo sue the eounty for County resident indicted In connecuncollected taxes from their ex- tlon ~th the August 1981 ctel!th of
Craig Fisher, 25, Rt. 2, Patriot.
Plred levy. .
. The worsening natiOnal economy
Fisher was accidentally shot by a
. began making itself felt In the area, • ·gun owned by Mitchum while
starting in JanUal)' with the layo!fs Mitchum was manager of the
'of hundredS . of trl-county area · Skyline Lanes ln Kanauga on July
workers at l&lt;ilser Aluminum &amp; 28, 1981.
.
Cbemlcal Corp.'s Ravenswood,
On OCt. 22, Donald Patrick, 60,
\V.Va, plant
10~'h Third Ave .. was found lying
; Ooser to home, . another ll in the street near his residence by
workers· recetyed permanent fur- city pollee alter having been
klughs from the Scottep-DUion Co. severely beaten. He died three
plant in GaUIPblls: The chewing hours later, and a_n investigation
fllbacco manufactuner .was closed Into toe Incident Is continuing.
Uimld-JulyduetodecllningsaleS. ·
Therewereseventralficfatalitles
:, In a mystery-shrouded move, the In the county, whi~ two people died
Gallipolis Hatfield · &amp; McCoy ap- in fires. In another major crime
P.'ltance and carpeting outlet clOsed lqcldent, Crown City's post office
for "inventory" purposes in June, was robbed of cash and money
~ with several other H&amp;M omers June 8. The robber has not
~ores in Ohio, ·West VIrginia and been caught.
Kentucky.
.------.......__..;,.._;."'-~
· ---...,.....---...,.....---------~-~---....L' A week later, it was dlscov~red
' company flied for bankruptcy,
the.
~tensibly to reorganize. The store,
io the Silver Bridge Plaza. reopened
f!iur months later under local
ownership.
· : Also, Gallipolis' PennYfaresuper!J'I8rkct r loscd its dooi'S in mid-April
alter · heavy speculation as to
Whether It would remain open or
rfit. It reopened In June as a
Foodland market.
1
Anq, just when predictions surfiK'ed the recession was at or
~arinR its peak, 9'.ll employees of
Southern Ohio Coal Co,'s Meigs
• rhlnes received lndPflnlte layoffs ln
November. '
''This wa~ precipitated by low
~mand for electric power, which
1\jldforced twoshutdownsofunitsat .
AirK-rican ElectriC Power's James
M. Gavin plant at Cheshire dur_jng
the year.
Althou!(h there werc only two
local races and a new legislative
district seeking a Houserepresentat~ve. the 1982 election started with a
multitude of June primary
{)ndl&lt;lates.
. '
Re!J!Ibll!;ans llJII! four. OefnQ- . _
' ,.,
O!;Bfs.vied for their party's nomlhat)i!l for the couruy commls.•ion post
!Jibe vacated by Incumbent Lonnie
b\il'g('r. Out of that, Verlin L. Swain
ton the GOP nomination and J.E.
';Dick" Crt'ml'&lt;'ns, the Democratic

:&gt;w

EXPANDED EVENING MENU
\

LOUNGE

_____..:.__-:--:-'::-'-----c--~~ .,-...-,--

.

'

PLANS

:.siX

IJOI:I--

•

CORf&gt;IN &amp; SNYDfR
fU RN ITU Rf CO.

a

955 Second Ave.

446-1171 Gallipolis, Ohio

• START YOUR NEW CAREER OFF RIGHT.

J\eStgnatlon after six years in ollie&lt;-.
~' More than a wrek altl'r a
l!!mporary treasurer was apll9!Jlted, the county's Republican
~tral committee elected Myron
1!.. "Bud" McGhee. an unsuccessful
commission candidate In the June
pdmal)', to fill the renialnlng two
.~arsofMills' term.
'! AlthoUJ!h an August 1981 'levy to
~lace the old wing of IlK&gt; Gallla
~nty courthouse that was des:tr.JYed by flrewasdefeated ll'SOUnd·
\iigiy by voters, rountycilmmlssionG!'S lmposed a haU-percent sales tax
111: ()ec(&gt;mber 1982 to raise revenue
ftlr a courthouse addition.
Lthe ·move, opposed by some
~!dents and · merchants. was
~plalned
.necess&amp;IY by the
d_qmmissJpners, who, likP SPVeral
direr county departments, have
• ~ 11ousedln ll,?llporaryquarte~.
·::in December, bids were received
:t~u&gt; Ofllo Department of TransP.,r'latiOn for grad~ a proposed
~ f(!r u.s. 35 through the
t'()imty. The project, dlacUsSed for
than 10 years, InCludes thre!i'·
ptlbes - and ooor oU!clals are · ,
stlll unsure as to when the bypass
be completed.
'
' :~lenCP continued to make
lle6dlineS during the year. On.Jan.
21.~ faul E.~. a ~-old
Rl:lt, Cheshire resident, was shot at
~ mobile home near Addison and
died a few hours later at hill wound.
)Us rrtend, Rus!lell Rubinson, 24,
a..0Rt.1,Chelhlre,wasamsledby
1119 aherllrs departJnent and subap.
quently Indicted for munler. Fol-

IT'S YOUR_ FUTURE - MAKE THE
BEST OF IT.. .. ATTEND

. GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
IT WILL COST YOU I.IESS AND YOU
WILL GET ON THE JOB SOONER!
'

GREAT PROGRAMS IN
.
. •BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL. I
··ACCOUNTING
. ·• MICRO-COMPUTER ADMit,ISTRATION

1!1

.

APPROVED
FOR VETERANS

'·

Our Money Market Savings Plan gives
you the best return possible on a shortterm investment with a low minimum
deposit. Your funds will earn money
market interest and you can _
make
deposits and withdrawals on your
account anytime, without penalty for
early withdrawal. The mioi[l1um deposit of only $2,500 is lower than many
money market funds. And just as
important, your money is insured by
an agency of the federal government.
You will also receive a monthly statementon the status of your account.
Fotcustomerswhowanttoearn
~ m ney market interest ~nd have .
ycces5 to their tunc;ls,'like a
·
regular checking account,
· .
BANKONE'Snew .

•

CHECKING THREE is the answer.
The minimum deposit is only $2,500 and
you have unlimited access to your funds.
You can write any number pf checks for
any amount with CHECKING THREE ...
anytime, anywhere. You can sign up
now for CHECKING THREE and
start earning money market interest
on January 5.
·
The interest you earn on the
Money Market Savings Plan and
CHECKING THREE is not subject to
the Ohio personal property tax.
The Money Market-Savings Plan
. and CHECKING THREE ... two
grea~ plan·s you've always wanted your bank to offer.
Now you can get them
atBANKONE.

NOW
.
·n,
·
YOU CAN

•,

··:

..

..
~

PUT IT BACK IN
I

.

'

np.e·

Gallipolis

ean

Business Co_lleg.e
GALLIPOLIS! OHIO

"~ PROI'IIIIONAL COLLIOI 0" BUIINIIS WITH YOUR
CARIIR tN MIND"
'

\'

•'

as

Enroll .Now - Call .446-4367

529 JACKSON PI~E

..

&gt; ..

!ltflcc
t!';,!~~~ ~~:;:-~ ~r~':!':~~l':~

Final Week For Registration

FINANCE AID
AVAILABLE

• tour Democrats and two Rc&gt;publieans went alter IlK&gt; auditor's
~It ion to be vacated In March by
~termer Dorothy Conde&lt;'. · Ro~ K. Canaday recelvro the
Jllrmocratlc nomination. whill' Ar·
. t)l!ir A, ''Pete" NI!Jert was the
~ubi lean candida!&lt;'.
: In the Nov. 2 l'lf('tion. Swain
defeated Cremeens, 4,5fi9.4,279,
~hlle 6J5 votes w~t to in&lt;k.'!iend('llt
Roller L. F~tterly. Canaday tx&gt;st!'!l
Nibert in the · auditor's · race,
!!,4.'i8-3,929.
· After a v(Rorous campaign,.
&amp;.U!potl~ attorney Jolynn Bost~r. a
Jbi.mocrat. won election as rcpf&lt;&gt;.
~tative for the new 9tth dl~trlct
aUla. Meigs '\fld Athens COlin), d&lt;'fl'ating Incumbent Rep.
· Ire "BIIzz" Ball. She will tal«&gt;
.Jan. 3.

"'

...
' .

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·BANK ONE _· . .

.BANK ONE OF POMEROY

..

. POMEROYiRUTI.ANDeTUPPERS PlAINS
Member FDIC ,

J

''

/I
,.,;

(

•

�A-I-The
Sund~t Tlm11 S1ntl...l
•

P~

-••

.

•;

Middleport-GalllfiC!IIs, Ohio-Point Plea1arit, W. Va .

•

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'.

JanuiiiY 2, 1913
'

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"

Section~

theri er
•

SALE·STARTS MONDAY ..
·JANUARY 3, 1983

'

EARLY .
MAN¥ ITEMS ARE
ONE OF A KIND. :
ALL I~EMS SUBJECT TO .
PRICE SALE. ENTIRE INVENTORY .
OF FURNITURE REDUCED FOR THIS
BIG EVENT .....
\..u.mE

•

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•

. '

.

'·

DESK

UPTO

Reg~

2, 1983

•

.

ODD
TABLES

Sunday

· Reg:

$249.95

(!)

'$6900

~139.95
•

$]995

..

'

City lights ·

.

'Night images of GaiJia landmarks
F loodlights reveal the windmill aft e r the
Story Wid photos
· by Del! Fox
sun sets on Bob Eva[\.5 F arms along S.R. J5
Times-sentinel Staff
in Rio Cranae (left p hotos ). Because the
.
.
windmill's arms rotate, a traveler on the
- ~- G"ALLiPOC:IS ..=&gt;.Each llay -altk
"llfghwav may notice a blur from the
'
wanes In Gallla County,' a display of lights movement
as he or she passes thcstruc tu r&lt;'.
succeed in illumina ting not only pathways or
In the cent~r qf Ga JJ ipoli' City Park r ests a
dwellings' interiors, but also in,showing off bandstand (belOw p~oto ) . Park lights show
some of the area's landmarks.
the bandstand decked in trimmin ~s fo r the
• Adorned with lights that guide motor ists is holiday season,
At 011(' corner of the citY park is the Second
The Silver Me morial Bridge (above photo' graph) . While lining the beams from guard Avenue a nd Court Street intersec tion ·
. rail to apex, the fU,tures' reflection on the (bottom photo) . Streetll!mps and bu ilding
Ohio River shows tlie current as the wa ter lights line the roads and di splay the shops
a nd. businesses along the streets.
·
flows downstream.

'

SOFA
and

RECLINERS

CHAIR

Reg. $299.95

0

. r

siliiset

.•

•

•

..•

Reg. $699.96

$l]g9s
•

wooo :

5-PC.
DINETTE

.· TABLES

Reg. $149.95

W/6 CHAIRS '

Reg. $599.95

$7995

$36~995

BEDROOM

SOFA
LOVESEAT
·
•

SUITE

REQINER

. Ra,. $999.95

.Reg. $299.95

95
~599

'

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$199 95
..

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,,

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�~,.'If'

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•
Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis, Ohi0:-.Point Pleasant, W. VJJ.

· ·Page- 8-2-_ The Su_!'lday Times-Sentjnel

.Helen help

Weddings
..

us

. I

"

Iyl r. and Mrs. Jensen
GAlLIPOLIS - Chery l Ann
Clark, Cleveland; Patty Tisci,
Toledo, and Sandy Reynolds, MasRobinson became t h~ · bride of
Mark -Qona ld Jensen on Oct. 16 at
sillon. Junior bridesmaid was
Crace United Methodist Church.
Betsy Bergdoll, cousin of the bride.
Pastor \Ja mes V. Frazier .Jr. and Kelly Koby, friend of the bride,
Fa the~ William Myers officiated
Ga1lipolis, was flower girl.
th e do ubl e -ring, ca ndlelig ht
¢11 1 attendants wore ' ldentlcaf
ceremqny..
gowns of red taffeta accented with
a deep flounce a nd silk roses at the
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Earl W. Robinson. 515 • port rait neckline. They wore
Oak Dr., a~ct ~he bridegroom is the
wreaths of red flowers and carried
son of Mr . ·and Mrs. Dona ld' D.
a white long stemmed rose.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiggins
Jensen, Pepf&gt;er Pike. •
Best man was Clark Hataway,
Anne Fischer served as organist · · New Orleans, · La . Groomsmen
GALliPOLIS - Shelley Kay
In the wedding pi.rt~ usan
were 'steve and Greg Jensen,
and the voca lists were Amy
Carson and Charles Warren WigSheaffer, Brenda Carson, Arlene
Weaver, Indianapolis. Ind., and
brothers of the groom, Nick and gins were married Dec. 27 at
Lucas, Rick Fyffe, Dave Thomas,
David Earl Robinson .
David Robinson, brother~ of the Columbia United Church of Christ.
Kevin Cain, Jennie Badalamenti,
· Escorted down the aisle by her
blide, Glen ·. Dugger, Jack Coni,
The bride tS the daug hter of
and Jaren Detchon.
Upper Arlington, and · WilHam Donald R and Yvonne M. Carson,
father, the bride wore a for mal
The bride and groom are graduwhite gown of sllk organza over I' Reid;- Birmingham, Ala.. RingNorton , and the grOOm is the son of • ates of Miami University and
bridal taff,e ta designed with form
bearer was Michael Issacs, ltlend Curtis C. a'1!1 Ethel E. Wiggtns, Rt.
employed by . Carlisle Local
fitted bodice. and · feat uring an· of the bride, Gallipolis.
I
4, Box 171, Gaiiipolls.
Schools.
a rched waistline. A flounce of
All wore black tuxedos With a r---------~-~-------------1
wedgewood lace accent~ with
white rose boutonniere. The groom
irid~cents al\() white satin ribbon
· wore black tails.
draped across the portrait n~k- , Registering guests were Patty
line, creating an off-the-shouldei· ' ,£atrick and Mrs. Tim Godwin,
.
_look. The Lady Diane sleeves, / frie nds of the blide, Gallipolis , and
adorned with a deep ruffle. reach~
Am!Jer Nl~holson , . cousin of the
elbow length. A full bquffant skirt
])!ide, Belleville, Ill.
A champagne reception w_as held
featured flou nced lace raised in a
waterfa ll effect at the hemline, ·,at Scottish Inn, Point Pl~asant, W,
which reached to a chapel train. ' .Ya. Music was provided by Gary
Ber jewelry was . a single strand of
Stewart. Wilson Catering, Point
pearls, a gift ·from the groom. and
Pleasant, 'catered the reception.
pearl earrings, .a gift of Betsy
Flowers for the wedding.were by B.
Berg(loll, cousin of the bride. Her
J. F)ora l, Point Pleasant, and .
'(ell, a 'w reath of white roses
pictures by Lear Pkotography,
·. adorned with satin' ribbons, held
·The bride is a graduate of Ohio
: ll ngertlp silk illusion. S~e carried ii·:. ·state University ·a:ns assistant
-spray of white roses. She pre~ nted ' manager at julie's, 'a dress shop in
both mothers v;ith red long- . Charlot te , N. C. The groom is a
stell1rlU'&lt;i roses,
'( graduate of the University of
Tammy He~worth, . Gallipolis, ' A l&lt;1bama a nd has a n M.B.A. !rom
frientl of the bride, was maid of · Miami University. He is employed
. honor. Brid,e sm&amp;ids were E lizA-"::: by Price Waterhouse, Charlotte.
'. Gct lh .tnd Mary .~(•n :.en , . s i s!P i .Jf 11\f. ; ·~ The couple resides at 41 Provigroo m . Pepper Pike; · Debbil' , dence Sq. Dr., C)larlotte, . N. C.
Muchnirki. FPrn Zuckerman.
28211.

By HELEN AND SUE BO'JTf:L
READERS ALL:
They say that . making New
Year's resolutions is like building a
boat in the basement: Easler to do
than carry out. 'But there~s a
sure-fire winner:,
~In 1983, I resolve not to build a
bOat in the ba!!ement.
( ... And I resolve not to help you
carry It out, Mom . - SUE)
Speaking of ~arry-oyt~. however.
inspires me toward ari ongoll)-g new
effort for the year -ahead.
· ·,
To fight household build-up -the
creeping accumulations of 20 years
in the same home - I Will give
away or throw away at least one
boxful .of no longer useful items
each week, until no longer neces·
sary. (Size· of box: nexib)e.) Well,
anyway, I'll find new uses, like
transfoi'JTling the burnt-out barbecue grill Into a planter.
And that's my serious resolution
for 1983 ... 84 .. . S!r.". - HELEN

·
(GOT A PROBLEM? ,or- a
subject for discussion, iwo -generation style? Direct your
questions to either Sue or Helen
Bottel - or both, it you want a
combination . mother-daughter
· answer - .In care of this
newspaper.)
·

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
ENTIRE FAMILY ROOM OUTFIT

;-----------· "

Pediatrics-Adolescent
is accepting new patienw.

Office It
·PieasaiU Valley Hospital
9 A.M . to 6 P.M.
Mondey-FO&lt;Iay
Evening !Mlurs for

'
Mr. and Mrs. Riggs
.

working moms on
Thursday 6 to 9 P.M .
CAL167&amp;, 1096
For Appointment

JANUARY. FABRIC SALE

~

CORDUROY

.

.... lashlollld • •
-IOUiriMINI
friends and custo11ars ·
· tor m• conanuad
SIIIDOrlllld 1018. dOll
In IIIIIIW Year.

VELVETEEN

WOOL

200/o oo

· A$,,Your Singer Approved Dealer

.

HOBOKEN. N.J. tAP! - This
harbor city Of\ the Hudson
: River is in the midst oC a reviva l.
:
With rents soa i·ing in c rowded
; Manhattan across the river. devel·
• · opers are turning ·to Hoboken · to
; meet the demand for Mahattan·
St)•le living.
A plan exists to build a 1~-acre
: complex of luxury apartments,
:- hotPls. reStaura nts and marinas
~ along Hoboken' s ha rbor with a
: spectacular vit'w of the New York
: City skyline.

= aging

POMEROY .
FLOWER .SHOP
"llMi Wey America Sends Love"
PH. 992·2039
106 BUTTERNUT AV.
Dr 992-6721
POMEROY OH.
We Accept AH Major Credit Cards. ,
And Send Flowers

all

CHRISTMAS WREATHS,
ARRANGEMENTS
GARLANDS, OTHER. JTEMS ·

"

'

300 Secoitd,Ave.
Gallipo\is, OH.
•

A TOT ALLY UNIQUE DESIGN

fresh

Ave.

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
f-

TOWEL BONANZA

.'

- /

o~r
•
•
baked biSCUitS

· · · · ~- ·

o/"~

.• ,

$199

Bath Towel

. '2.99
Hand Towel$149

Reg. ' 1.99

•

Reg. 1 1.39

99
Sol1d, color'S ol Blue,
Pink, Green and Brown.

.
SPECIAL PURCHASE .
·BATH TOWEL, Reg. 14_99 ............... s2,99
HAN 0 TOWEL,.Reg. 13.99 ............. sf. 99
WASH CLOTH, Reg. 1!.99 .. --'· SI.29

.

.-

plus

foronly

OPEN EVE'NINGS AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT

Sl~ · ._
'Ltmlt 1 ooupon I*'

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.

au•toml!ll'. Good. tor
oombln&amp;Uorr
WhHI/4..-11, otdln.
cu.tomu pq~ .U ap.

--~:

VINTON, OHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.

PH, 388-8603

1

"

Offer good ~: Juuar,v 11, 1 •

"CC

----------- ---------fi&gt;ronUi

!bronzy

. •S79
Limit 1 ooupoo pw

cuer.onwr. Good ror
oombUI&amp;UQn

.•......

wh. . l dU'k,ordtN.

""all •.,.
...
,

.

100%CRUSHED GOOSE
STANDAR[\, Reg $13.99
QUEEN, Reg. $14.99
KING, Reg. $15:99

$22.00,.. $16.49
$33.00 ...$24 69
$43.00 ...$32.29
$54.00 ..,$39.99

SALE

%PRICE

TWIN SET ................................... ,·:..... .........Reg. 121.00 .... 115.99
FULL SET ............................ ;........................ Reg. SJI.OO .. .. s22.99
QUEEN SET . ........'. .. ....... ......... .. ....... Re g 141.00 .... 130.99
KING SET .......... . .................................. Reg 154.00 .... 139.00
A 160 count s heet in a blend of 80% polyester - 20% c otton.

MATIRESS PAD

SHIRTS &amp;
PANTS .
1/ ' .

FAIRFAX or FANFAIR .

BLAN.KETS

i .e::~ol!Sl/lht

'
Th18' offer good at: leblend (I looaUou)
h••n, llrQ80II, BarliDCIOD. a.JUpolil

Warmest

Zone

Zooe

A Regular ·

ACK&amp; 1I~L'S
. "Faaltloru for tile Yowag" ·• ·

326 Second Ava.

· .

100%

Pad is
treatoo.

Slight Irregular.;
A Regular
$1.50 Value

BOTH

SORRY .
NO LAY-AWAYS
All' sALES FINAL
NO REFUNDS

heat rises from Underneath to k~p you warmer. The entire
sutface stays warm. .
,.
·.
.........:...................................... Re~ $47.00 ........$36.99
Single (A)ntrol .... .. .. . .. . . Re~ $53.00 ......$4
FULl, Dual Control ..................., ....... Re~ $75.00 .......- ~~6999'1
KING ...... .... .. ............ ............. Re~ $96.00.,......$76.99
machi ne washable and is
controlled to less than

g·

'

•

tor Twin or
" Full Siza
Choose from either a fibetwoven or thermal styl~ .
Whichever you choose it will give the warmth and service .
Chatham is known for. Both feature a 100% nylon binding
and come·in Blue, Gold and ·

WASH . ..
CLOTHS
. .
'

'

.

9¢

If Perfect

.

FOR $l ~0
3
'.

. ..

SOLID COLORS

Weekdays 10:00 to 9:00
· Sunday 1:00 to 6:00

.

Galipolis, OH.
J~.OH .

'

.

72'WJ"
A practical Size

TERRY LOOP

KITCHEN
TOWELS

1f4oF.F
.,

Genffe Warmth

100% COTTON TERRY

COORDINA11!D.

DRESSES

Lunlt 1 ootipon par

ou-.omer. qooo ror
oombinaUOn ,
WhiW113arll; Of'deN ,
CUMomer JM1P ..U ap·

~40fF

GIRLS

sgss

•
.

BED PILL

SPRING MILLS KEY LARGO SET~

BOYS

·1f4-oFF

... ~
9-'PieoeT.brt.ft
Bax·
18-Plec:e Carry Pack
plus
,
plu::;
"Butterm:lllt BiJicuita 6 Buttet'\nUk Bi8Cilita

Culornu

MOTHER GOOSE

$9.99 V~ ue.

PLAYWEAR
1 Buttermilk BLica1t

' ,. ,

Yellow Daisies on a whije background Set includes tlat and Fitted Sheets and
the appropriate Pillow Cases. ·

%oFF

BP!ecea afl!btcJren
----·------- ------------

'

SLEEPWEAR

TODDLERS

NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS LAsTING AS A
PERSONAUZED- MEMORIAL . FROM · LOGAN
MQNUMENT CO. IT IS A WORTHY EXPRESSION
· OF LOVE AND RESPECT.
·

Reg. $5.99 each .
:,:._ Printed ti cking
.::...corded edge
- Non-Allergenic
- Mac.hirie Wasn .

¢.

Wa sh Cloth

INFANTS

WINTER

·· - - f lfl

Standard Size Only

Cann on "Applause"

%oFF

•

•

_,.. / _
•

8ED_P_iLLOWS

' COORDINATES

'.

.

DUPONT DACRON FILLED

WINTER COATS

SALE
STARTS
MONDAY
JAN. 3

and save.

:

fUI&lt;.NITURE CO.

Matching bedspread s and pillow shams also available .

fry

•

CVRf,IN &amp;t . SNYUER.

TWIN SET ................... .............. ............................... ... Re~
FULl SET ... ................................... ............................. Reg.
QUEEN SET ......, ..... ,.... ..................................... Re~
KING SET ................... ....... ......................................... Re~

SMELTZERS
·
- 453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH.
D~~~: ~KS

-••

.

SAVE ON THESE FINE PERCALE SHEETS

SPICIA'I. RACK
.SHIRTs - PANTS .- SWEATERS
•

Now$17500

SPRING MILLS "FRESH DAISY"

.•

-.

ADDITIONAL SAVINGS OF $104 ON
5 PC. WOOD DINETTE

Nice assortment of solid colors in terry loop
constrtion with Dobby borders.

•

Clearance Sale
Savings Up·To 1/3 Off

-

.

: -Hoboken revival

"

-- -

ClearanC:e •· sale

•

$60.00 .GIFT CERTIFICATE WINNER
Mary L. Edwards - New Haven. W.\ VA.

THE FABRIC SH.OP
. Singer Company
r.ese e'"r' on all model I

.- .

•.

$20.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE WINNERS '
Danny G. Sayre - N- Hawn, W. Va .
Mrs. Howard A. Wilson - Pomeroy, OH.
· Pauline Riley - Long Bottom. OH.

1/2 Price

· 11.:; W. 2nd
Pomeroy, OH .
~ Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co . •

.

OIRISTMAS GIFT CERnRCATES WINNERS WERE:

·lARGE
.ASSORTMENT
OF FABRICS

.

HARRISONVILLE --" Pamela With dark brown peasant skirts and
Sue j\'llller and David Ray Riggs
carried yellow roses. They wote
baby's breath in their hair. The
exchanged wedding vows in a fall
:. ceremony at Harrisonville United
flowergirl was in a beige ~nd dark
: ·Presbyterian Church.
brown dress .and carried a wicker
'
Tlie, bride is the daughter of Mr.' basket of orange and golden
and ~- Willard E. Miller, Union
flowers.
r
Avenue, Pomeroy, and the groom
Se!'Ving as best man for the
:- is the son of Mrs . Gloria Riggs, groom was his brother, Mark.'
• Harrisonville, and David Riggs,
Usher.s. also'brothers, were Danny
• Pomeroy. Theweddingwas0ct.16 and Paul Riggs, Harrisonville, a nd
• at 1:30 p.m. Wlih Dr. Ernest they all wore brown tuxedos.
A reception was held at Harrison• Stri~klin officiating. Armand Tur. ville Masonic Temple immediately
: ley provided organ music.
folldWi"ng the ceremony. The table
The church decorations featured
• a golden archway adorned with fall featured a four-tiered cake adOrned
• flowers and yeiiow roses in each with flowers in the wedding colors
with illusion in fingertip length and
• window . The famUy pews were and surrounded by lace: flanked by
edged in lace. A blusher was added.
candelabra with sliver and crystal
• mar)\ed with white bows.
She carried a bouquet o1 white
:
Given in'marriage by her father, appointments.
roses, carnations, Illy-of-the-valley
Judy
Miller,
Middleport,
regtsthe bride was attired in a Gunneand lavender roses tied with pink
tered gl!ests and presiding 'at the
• Sax Original In old-fashioned deand lavender satin streamers.
Matron of honor was Lorelei
• sill!'. It had a high neckline of love refreshment table were Vickie
Hoischuh, cousin of the bride.
• lace repeated in a V design over the Boyles, Kathy Haley, Vicki Not·
Bridesmaids were Dei_o res Hendershoulders and coming to a point at tingham, Linda and ·Lisa Riggs,
. son, sister-in-law of tlie bride, and
the waistline. A flounce e ncircled Susann SisWn and Julie Zwayer.
The couple honeymooned at
Beth Coburn; friend of the bride.
: ·: the skirtwhich was softly gathered •
A ttendan Is ·wore sleeveless
- at the waist. in her hair she wore a Hocki~ Hill Lodge. They reside at
'gowns of acetate taffeta with
• ring of miniature yellow and white · 987 West Ninth Ave., Columbus.
ruffles encircling armholes and
A graduate of Meigs High School,
roses with white ribbon streamers.
princess-seamed bodices with full
• Her bouquet was of white roses, the bride is employed with David
• with white lace streamers. The Keith Hair Unlimited, Columbus. · skirts and ribbon belts. The bridesThe ' gioom, a lso a graduate of
maids wore pink aild the rna Iron of
~ groom wore white tuxedo and a
Meigs, is employed with CTL in
honor wore lavender. Each wore a
:: yellow rose boutorullere.
halo of silk flowers and ribbon
Robin Richmond, Athens, was Columbus.
:
rna tching their dresses a nd carried
• maid of honor, and bridesmaids
- were Tammy Daniels, Canton, her
sister, and Diane Reed, Columbus.
~ .·
• Wendi Dawn Daniels, Ca nton,
• niece of the bride, was flowergirl.
: The attendants wore beige blouses

•

.

$799

7 Pes. For

DR. GEORGIANA
'BURNS .

HAPPY NEW YEAR, ALL! And

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-3

PATRIOT - Linda Henderson · a bouquet of matching silk flowers.
the church bilsement were Lisa
Wood Insurance a nd Real Estilte,
· and Dave Pope were married June
Wells, Cathy Pope a nd Carol Pope.
Best man was Tom Pope,
Gallipolis.
.
5 ' at Arabia Mlssinary Baptist
brother of the groom. Ustters were
The couple took a wedding tlip to
The groom is a 1976 graduate of
Church, Deering, by Eart' HenderMarvin .Stanley, friend of the _Myrtle Beach, S.C. and will reside
Southwestern Hlgh Schoor and.. a
1
groom, and Jeff Pope, brother of
son, uncle of the bride.
•
.s-·
at Rt. 2, Patriot.
1980 gradute of. Ohio State Univer,
the. broom. Air wore sliver ashley
The bride is .· the ·daughter of
The qride is a 1977 gradua ~of
slty. He is employed by Meigs ftigh
Symmes Valley High School, WURichard and Ann Henderson, Rt. 2,
School , Pomeroy, as a vocational
tuxedos. ·
•
Assisting·at the reception held in
Patriot, and the groom is the son of
..
agriculture Instructor.
iow W,ood, and Is a secretary ~th
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pope, Rt. 1,
Patriot.
.
,
•
Church . decorations for the ·
double-ring ceremony included a
45-llght spiral arch with 15 taper
candles and twospiri!J.Pamieiatras,
.
bea~ty baskets with. ·.pink and
• lavender roses, carnations and a
trinity candelabra With ,. pink ana-1~..,..
lavender pew bows.
Music was provided by Beth
'
·Coburn, solois_t, al)d Da nny Payne,
Sofa, ,Chair, Rocker. Ottoman. Two lamp Tables,
pianist. Selections included "SunStorage Oval Coffee Table
rise, Sunset," "Wedding _Song,"
"Wedding March," "Time in A
Bottle 1" "I Believe," "The Lord's
Prayer,' "Colour My World," and
"Theme from Ice _Castles."
Given in marriage by. her father,
the bride -wore a formal gown of
chantilly lace in white. Fashioning
the bodice was a high ne&lt;:kline of
REG. "279
Venice lace which formed a sheer V
yoke in the front and back. The
Sale Lasts Thru the Month of January
sheer full bishop sleeves were of
chantilly lace ana fastened at the
Many Items Priced 20% to SO% Off
cuffs. The ~Ice had a basque
Regular Low Price!!
waistline a nd was accented with
'
'
'
sequins and pearls. Fall(Jtg from
the waistline was a full bouffant
skirt . with tiers of chantilly lace
which were swept to the back to ·
•
form a chapel-length train. Herven··
had a Juliet cap covered in
955.Second
Gallipolis, Ohio
chantilly lace and pearls attached
446-1171

may 1983 be remembered as The
Year of the Great Recovery. · HELEN AND SUE
1 .

·

.

·,

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

Patriot couple marries at Arabia Missionary Baptist · Church

a

Great
Our
.. Savings During
.
.
Semi-Annual

..

January 2, 1983

A i:loliday from problems

.

.'

January 2, 1983

•

NORTHERN
AUTOMAT-IC ELECTRIC

BLANKETS '~.
2 YEAR WARRANTY
•
Ul APPROVED
:'
REG.
SAL e
Twin
Full SI C
Full 0/ C
Queen
Long

49.99
54.99

34 . 9~

38 9~
63.9~ 44.9S:
76.99 '53.9!1:
115.99 82.9!!;

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W.Va.

Times-Sentinel

Janu~ry 2, 1983 •

·. .

Engagements

Engagements
•

.

· Richrhond-Cotterill ·

PearsonZromley

-··"'

.• 'Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis; Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

FAC's Riverby calenqar of events

(continued from B-4)

'

&gt;.

Roger Don Cottelill, son of Mr. and
Mrs.

Don

A. Cotterill ,

Harrlsonvuie. · · ·

·

,The brii'l~lect Is a 1982'graduate
of Alexander High School. He!'
fiance, a 1971 graduate of ,Meigs
ijlgll Sch6ol, Is employed by ,

STORE -HOURS: .
Mon.~Sat. 8 am-10 pm

South!!rn Ohio Coal Co.
in~plete.

Wedding plans are

The Sunday Times-S.ntinei-Page-8-5

Classes will be held from 7 to9 p.m .
frorT) 1 to3p.mPre-reglsterbyJan 5
Tuesdays for six weeks. Individuals
by calling Barbara Epling, 446-1516,
may pre-register by · calling Baror Maxine Kinnaird, 6'15-3034. Feeof
bara Epling, 446-1516, ol\ Maxine
$12 for mem~rs and $15 for
non-members.
.
Kinnaird, 675-ll31. Fee for the class
Is $22 for F.A.C. members and~
Jan . 8- Dance classes resume.
- .To· register call Judi Sheets, :•
for non-members .
· Jan. 6, 13, .20 - Chair caning
44G-7865.
classes tuaght by Elwanda Blake

GALLIPOLIS- Galleries of The
French Art Colony's Rlverby, 53l
First Ave., GaUipolls, are open to
· the public Tuesday and ·T hursday
from 10 a.m to 3 p.m. and Saturday
an(! Sunday tronl 1to 5 p.m.
. Jan.4- Gal)erles open atlO a .m .
Jan. 4 - Lap quilting classes
by cathy Pleska.

Sunday 10 am-10 pin .

'

- Md&lt;;:inney-bunn .

.I

298 SEOOND ST.

•

Perm Spect.cular

Wi'&lt;ther you want extra brxly. CIJ~' or an easy-care haiJStyie. we
have a perm thafs rig~t for your hair and a Slyist tflats right 1.yoo. . .
. . .,

Burdell McKinney, Middleport, ·
have announced the engagement
- and approaching marriage of the!J:
daughter, Uretta Jo, to Timothy _
r;ee Dunn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Dunn, Carlisle.

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l

:j

II'

Crumley, Pearson

GRA.DE A WHOLE ··

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pearson, Point
Pleasant. W. Va., a nnounce . t he
engagement of their daughter,
Diana, to Edward A. Cromley IV,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Cromley liT. Point Pleasant. ·
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Point Pleasant High School and
Marshall Uni ~rsity . She is a real
estate salesperson for Canaday
Realty, Gallipolis. Cromley graduated from Point Pleasant High
School and West VIrginia Univer·
sity.' He is a teacher and coach at
Wahama High School.
· · The couple is planning a March
wedding.

j

I

$18.75 to $26.7$ ..

..• t

'

bri~lect Is
et~ucatloll major and

The

: Richmond, Cotterill
•

HARRISONVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Robert H. Richmond, 4\thens,
have announced the engagement of
thelr"daughter, Robyn Jessica, to

a business
her fiance a
p:tysical education major at Rio
. qrancte College. Botjl will ~duate .
inMay.
. ·
Plans • for the wedding are
. Incomplete.

naw throUgh l/15/83 v.ith a ropy ol this ad.
Hairtut not iocluded.

Dunn, McKinney

. Sih* Bridge Plaza

446-3363

!

Chi eke ns...........L!~.
.

Our ~P o1 the lne perms - One Bl!tter. Uripenn and Uniperm
led, and ~mme cu~ are HAlf PRIC£. ·
•
Reg. $2A.5p to $3950
.

!

•

112 PRIQI!

~DLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs.

. POMEROY,
0.
'
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 8, 1983.

.'

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l

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I

l'
)

I1

·SUPERIOR

.M.. t' .· $. 39
lunch ea S...,....

il

LB. PKG.

'

C

E .

COLUMBIA
• ··

.

¢•

.

Round Steak.~.~ 99 Sliced Bacon.. ~.
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED $
09
Sausage,..........!!...
~
. . . .· .· $ 39
Grou n·d Beef..;8~...

Gclacl

·
-Oo Stoclc o,·

~\\
. · \o
Sl '-

' ·PIECE
'"! 'Jgg.,
lrrEs
SEt .
'29800

•10tto~"',.
••'' ~
G£ sa.•O
,.~~

s

f-'JO sPtt\t&amp;G
.
su,\es

99!)
I

S\a~ ~\ 'S'l

a£0~
8\J" "
'fi\\b \nnetsll"""

D Otlfi

puttc"'"su\1£ ,.t&amp;o

0

Now Just

.

SLEEPER

tAa\ttesies, .

1

ae&amp;u\al. '199' ·

s~\.t

SAVE OVER 'l•

~l'rk. 39995

'$'/_f:l99S

-

~ook" .

·lus\

'29

SOp4 fLOOILA~P5

Nice Coli
er, Sofa 8 -.
Bed At N· h ' Day,
R
'it
.
egutar '49g•s

. ~\('ltOOd

to\1\11\e\8

.

1

-

95

tfi\1\i 3 ~~'f SW\lCM
'

..

Haning, lbrn::rr
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barrett Jr., Route 1.
Rutland. have announced the en·
gagement of their daughter,' Robin
Barrett, to James K. Harting Jr.,
son of . James K. Haning Sr.,
Albany , and Margie Haning,
Mtllfleid.
The bride-elect is a senior. at
Meigs · High School. Her fiance Is
employed with W. E . Shrider Co.
Oil and Gas De.velopers, Logan.
The wed&lt;;ling will bei n June.

'

•

EXTRA

·

14 Cubic -FOot
Gibson

ROOM

SUITES

on Sale To Move f•t
Up To

50.%

As

..
.
0n1on s.................

YELLO.W

.

tow As

'

.REFRIGERATOR
.
.
'

OFF

c

. ei2 DOOR
'

-

0
·Only~488°
. .

•WE• HAVE 3 PIECE SUITES

.

FROST FREE

.

•2,_ &amp;3 PIECE SUITES

HaymanWinebrenner
/1-

G.O OD BUYI

LIVING

'79 5~

.

GOOD IUYSI

¢

3-LB. BAG

l'

•

.(

..

'

I
I

J·
I

•

PARKAY

MAXWELL-HOU

-.
LONG BCYITOM - Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Hayman of Long Bnttom h,ave
announced the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
eldest daughter, Paige, to Greg
· Winebrenner, son of Marlene Dona.van, Alfred, and . Roger WlnP.
brenner, Syracuse.
Hayman graduated from Eastern High School In 1981 and Is
employed . at Kroger's • In Belpre.
·Her fiance Is a 1975 graduate of
Eastern Higl1 School and Is .employed with Royal Petroleum.
The open,-church wedding will be
Jan. 15 at 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul's
· United Methodist Church In
'
Tuppers Plains . .
Rev. Ric hard 'T homas Will perform
doub!P.r'ingceremony and'
a reception will follow In the church
social room.

t;

. l~ OZ. ~AR

.

$ 99 Margarine.~~.~.

Insta.nt Coffee...

.catsuP.........~.~~;~.
R.AVORITE NAVY

OR

4LBS.

the

'. ¢ _. JE~O'S
,.

_

.·. $12'

Just

·

¢

..
P·lzza...................
.

-

• I

g·

LS

95

.
tl
Ra&amp;~ '\19.

,llo.. his\

•

.

J~~~ 2/$1
Umlt Two Per Customer
Good Only At Powel'1

~

Jen.B. 1983

(continued on B-5)

)

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1 .f

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SHAG CARPEtS

150Z.

.

SUGAR
·5-LB.
BAG $149 '

79¢.

1t 15' .
iteadY 1o LaY

Only One Left
.

..

12'

BED
Rea. '169.'

5

.

RAVORITE

·PINTO BEANS .

r

.'

..

HUNTS

SOFA
.-

J

.

..

.

119

$ . . . .9!).

.
.·
S~'4t 'flO.•

�.
\

OhiG-'--Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

.JOnuary 2, 1983

Ralphs reach-golden year

Anniversaries

CHESHIRE - Kenneth and
Marie Ralph of Rt. · 1, Cheshire,
observed· their 50th wedding aMI·
versary on Dec. 24.
They were married In Pomeroy.
Helping celebrate their 50th
anniversary were the Ralphs'
children and their spouses: Ken·
,.. neth Jr. and.Sharon Ralph, Plckerlngton; Betty and Raymond Rupe,

Winter Park, Fla.; Marvin and
Marjorie Ralph, New Cumberland,
Va. ; Joyce and Clifford Bryant,
Marlon; and VIvian and Richard
Curfman, Columbus.
They have six grandsons and six
granddaughters; three great·
granddaughters, and th ree
grandsons·ln·law.

w.

Topes celebrate _24th

:
·:
•
:
;

M

SIST~ds

·et.eSft ·.

300 Second
Gall! polis

,

Clearance Sale

r

Now In Progress

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul E . Tope, KUeker Road,
Gallipolis, will celebrate their 24th
wedding anniversary on Jan. 4.
The couple was married Jan. 4.

Save Up To 1/3 Off

. · POMEROY - Meigs County.
Senior .Citizens Cenler, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Invites aU el· •
derly Of the county to take part In
activities atlhe. center. The center
' ·Is open Monday ttu:ough friday
: .from 8: 30a.m. to 4: ~p.m.
;
Schedule of activities for the
• week of Jan . a.7,1983 1s as fotlows:
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11: 00 a.m.; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
.
Tuesday - Physical Fitness, ,
• . 11: 00 a.m.; Chorus Practice, 1-2
. - p.m.
· · , Wednesday - PhysiF!ll Fitness,"
' 11:00 a.m.; Blngo,1·2 p.m .
· Thursday - Physical Fitness,
11: 00 a.m.; Ceramic lnstructlon,lO
a.m.-12 noon.
Friday - Physical Fitness, 11: 30
a.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.

·

The second week of January wltl
begin tJie second ye11r of the RSVP
Fixed Income Consumer Counsel· .
lng series of educational sessions to
help low lnrome persons with
managing money. Tuesday, Jan.
11, at 11 a.m. John Qark. niarliet·
lng representative, Columbia Gas ,
of Ohio, Inc. from the Chillicothe

•

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i...,

2141
(

'I

ATARI~

}
I

REVENGE'"
(216)

(215)
~1.88

......

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County Is brought ~
the Meigs County Publlc Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Mon·
day, Jan. 3, 1983 - Carpenter
(Laura's Store), 3: 10.J: 40 p.m .;
Dextf r (Church), 4:104:40 p.m.;
Danville (Church), 5; 20-5: 45 p.m.;
Rutland (Civic Center), 6: 3(}.8
p.m ., short fllm will be shown 15
minutes after bookmobile arrives.
· Tuesday;· Jan. 4, 1983- Polilaoo
(Post Office), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls (Effie's Restaurant),
3:()(;.3: 50 p.m .; Racine (Bank ),
4: Ja-6: 05 p.m ., short tum will be
shown 15 minutes after bookmobtle
arrives; Syracuse (Pool), &amp;. 20-7:50
p.m., short film wilt be shown 15
minutes after bookmobile arrives.
Bookmobile schedule .for Wed·
nesday, Jan. 5, 1983 - Tup~l'l!
Plains (Arbaugh ), 7:25-7:55 p.m.;
Rlggscrest Addition, 8:10.8:40 p.m.

II

To

Aetlon·paeked Atarr Game Cartridges For Arcade Fun At Home

Su~r Breakout. Fun, Fasr

.

actoon. Save.

~

With Yar's Revenge"' you battle

evllln·a dlstanholarsystem.

21 •88
23 •88

Decipher Swordquest EalfhWorld"'
clues and find great rlches. 1
·Ast.....ids 66 Video Space Games.

26.88
·
26.88

Mr. and Mrs. Tope, 24rh
Mr. and Mrs.
William Reynolds, VInton, celebrated the ir 57th wedding anniversary on Sept. 1.
They have ' one son and fou r
daughters: Emerson Reynolds,
Bidwell; Mrs . James (Maxine)
· Hudnell, White Pigeon, Mich.;
Mrs. Richard (Avenell ) Mount,
Bidwell ; Mrs. Jack (Wilma)
Mount. Bidwell; a nd Mrs. Rob
(Jea nnetta ) Coffman, Spring!leld.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Reynolds have 16
grandchildren and 10 great·
grandchildren with two great·
grandchildren expected to arrive In
the near future.
VINTON

-

66.84 '(

INttw~-

..
VOICE SYNn-iESIS CARTA~·

1983
I

SENIORS

it
talks I

2211

'

*

Maftef'l' lntelllvolce"' Voice
Synthesis Module
Electronically adds voices to Mattei""
Voice video games for more reollsm.
Hear cheers, stategy and taunting,

,

'

GET YOUR
PICTURES MADE
NOW!
. CALL FORAN
APPOINTMENT, 446-2103

Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds celebrated their anniversary at t he
home of their da ughter, Wilma
Mount. Cake, Ice cream, punch,
nuts and mints were served.
Guests included relatives and
!rlends fro'11 Ohio a nd Michigan.

TOM GRUBE
.. PHOTOGRAPHY

'

1 ~ILE OUT

BORTSMOUTH ROAD

..~

,

JOH,N ·A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
'

"'

'

19.97

I,

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

.

'

'

34.97(~0)

(219)

lpacll Hawll"' Cartridge Por lnlellvlalone

'

Travel through lpace on exciting adVentures
that test your skHI, stamina, coordination. ·

,

Office Hours by Appointment Only

.lomb lquacl"' •VoiM lyntllells Game Caltrldge
You're face-to-face with tlcl&lt;lng disaster!
Volcea help you and taunt you all ft'\8 way.·

.

675-,1244

.

c;rro '

''

"

I

••

'

.

DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC·
TURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 4~ IN FACE VALUE.
,

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
&amp; MARK V

THURSfJAY ONLY
JAN. 6, 1983 "
'

Budget'

Pleaser
Special

Pleas'er

USDA OfoJCE
BONB.ESS

Pleaser
Special
U.S. GRADE A
MIXED .

CHUCK
ROAST

FRYER
'
PARTS

GRo~o

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

USDA OtOICE BONELESS
'

~pedal

CHUCK

LB.

STEW BEEF

SUPERIOR

$1

WILSON'S SLICED

99

SLAB BACON

SUPERIOR

SMOKED

CHUNK BOLOGNA

Ple.a ser

Spetlal

U.S. NO. 1
•

MAINE
POTATOES ~JB.

$ 59

JLB.49¢
ONIONS , BAG

Budget

Pleaser

Special

GOLDEN

ICEBERG

RIPE .·
BANANAS

HEAD
LETTUCE

EMPEROR

RED RIPE

GRAPES

TOMATOES

Budget
Pleaser
.

Budget·

MAXWB.L
HOUSE

MARTHA WHITE

Pleaser

JOAN of ARC
'

KIDNEY1 s.~ oz.

PlAIN or .
SELF RISING

COFFEE

BEANS CAN

GOLDEN ISLE

KETCHVP

COR=EE CREAMER

5 LB. BAG

Hoz.79¢

TEEN QUEEN

MARGARINE

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget

Budget

Pleaser
·spedo(

Pleaser
Spedal

AMERICAN, SWISS,
PIMENJO ·

ROYAL CREST

12

SINGLES

=49

oz.

7.25 OZ. BOX .

KRAFT

2% MlLK .
ROYAL cREST

.

MAC: &amp; ~CHEESE
. Budget.
Pleaser
Special

Budget'
Pleaser
Special
SUNNYMORN ·
.GRADE A

Royal Crown
Diet Rite
R.C. 100 ·

.

JUMBO
EGGs .·

8·16 OZ. BOTTLES

$1.39

~·

DOZ.

Plus
Deposit

CTN.
'

'

89¢

Special
BANQUET

OfiO&lt;EN PAniES
NUGGETS, STICKS
12 oz. Pkg.

$199

~
'

'

'
1

'

' .

36 $}09
R

SPAGHml
2 LB. BOX
HALF
GALLON

99¢

Budget
"Pleaser·
~pedal
' CREST
ROY"L

'

HUNT'S PRIMA SALSA
'

Budget
.Pieaser
SfH'.dal
.'

. COITAGE
CHEESE
24 Oz. Ctn.

49 Oz. Box

•

$}19

,_

SPAGHETTI SAUCE

TIDE
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

..

'

4 STICK
POUND

SKINNER'S

GALLON.PLASTIC

.PKG.

19

CORN MEAL

3 LB.
CAN

HUNT'S

KRAFT

MARTHA
WHITE
·· CORN
MEAL

Special

Special

Special

LB.

Budget

Pleaser

Pleaser
Special .

YBlOW

SUPERIOR

FRANKIES

PI~IC

8udget

.

•

Locally Owned
and Operated

Budget

CHUCK STEAK

1

Your .
Hometown
Supermarket

Budget

11111

l

~REDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY·SAVlNG
•COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V AND
RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PUR
CHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER
ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE
REDEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY TO "fREE
MERCHANO~E" COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER 49'
IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN DUUBI.E
COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEIII.
CIGAIIETIES AND CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE
EXLUCED BY LAW. TO INSURE PRODUCT TO All
OUR CUSTOMERS, WE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE
COUPON" OFFER TO ONE JAR OF IRSTANT COFFEE
AIID ONE CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
EAM!LY'. DOUBLf r')UPON OFFER GOOD THURSDAY, .
JAN. 6, 1983.

COUPONS
I

bran muffins.
· Thursday - Spaghetti, meat
sauce, broccoli , tossed salad , fruit
cocktail. garlic bread.
Friday - Meat loaf, mashed
pota t oe~ . Harvard· beets, Ice
cream, biscuit, apple butter.
Choice of milk, tea , coffee
available dally.

PRICES
.EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY
JANUARY 2
THROUGH
SATURDAY
JANUARY 8

DOUBLE

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Samu'el-L.
Bossard Memorial Library witl be
'at the fotlowlng places the week of
Jan. a-7.
.
Monday - Ewlngton, 1: 15-1:45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m. ; Adney
Rd., 2:45,'): 15 p.m.; Vinton P .O.,
3:304:30 p.m.; Bidwell, 5-G p.m.;
Hanisburg, 6: ~: 00 p.m.
'I'~esday Eno, 2: :n-3 p.m.;
Rece, ·3:~:20 p.m.; Attica Rd.,
3:30-3:45 pJ'll.; Kyger I; 3: 50-4:;10
p.m .; Kyger II, 4:254:40 p.m .;
Roush Lane I, IT, 4: 45-5: 15 p.m .;
Cheshire I, 6-6: 30 p.m.; Cheshire IT,
6: ~7 p.m .
Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15-2: 3C
p.m. ; Smith, 2: 45-3:15 ' p .m.; Myers, 3:30-3: 45; Mercerville, 44:30
p.m.; Surd, 4: 4().5 p.m.; Crown
. City P.O., 5: 1!Hi p.m.; Eureka,
6: 15-6: 45 p.m.
,
Thursday - Watts, 2: 00-2: 45 ·
p.m.; Blick School Rd. , 2: 55·3: 10
p.m.; Addavitle Elementary, 3:153:45 p.m.; St. 'Rd. 7 (AddavUle
Rest), 3:554:10 p.m.; Georges Cr.
Rd. I. ll, 4: 15-&amp;p.m.; BulavUl~ Tr.
ct., 5: ~ p.m.; Plantz. Subdv..
6: 15-6: 45 p.m.
, Fl1day - Kerr, 3-3:40 p.m.;
Buck Ridge, 4·5:00 p.in.; Jay Dr. I,
ll, 5:15-5:45p.m .; Bob McCormick
Rd., 6-6:15 p.m. ·

~·

~ ~~. . P~e· 446-9593

"Me Reserve the RigM to Un~ Quantity"

.

Gallia bookmobile

- . - • 1• Dlus'IMYOIDe ...... rnadi~M

&lt;:ALL 6l4) 992-2104

or

,

,,

. 8~-Vine Street

GALUPOLIS - Activities for
the week of Jan.•a-7, 1983 .at the .
Senior Citizens Center located at
2W Jackson Pike are as follows: · .
Monday, Jan. 3 - Ceramics,
Class, 9:00 a.m.-12 noon.
Tuesday, Jan . .4 - S.T.O.P .
Class,10: 00 a.m .; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m.; Super Seniors Day, 10
a.m .-3 p.m.; ·Bible Study, 1·2 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 5-CrownCJ\Y
Mobtle Unit, 1 p.m.; American
Literature, 1 p.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.; Yoga Class, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Jan.'S- Qulltlng and
VIsiting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Nutrition
Meal,' 12 nQOn; Radio Report; 8: 50
'
a.m.
Friday, Jan. 7 ·- Staff Meeting,
8:15-8:45 a.m.; Advisory CouncU, 1
p.m .; J\ri Class, 1-3 p.rm; Craft
Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.; Social Hour,
7 p.m.
The Senior Nutlition Program
wUI serve the following menus:
Monday - Wieners, sauerkraut,
noodles. cornbread, apple, butter,
milk.
'
Tuesday - Swiss steak tn tomato
sauce, ma;;hed potatoes, lettuce
salad, tapioca pudding, bread,
butter, mll)(.
Wepnesday -:- Beef stew, one
slice of cheese, coleslaw, biscuits,
!nllt jello, butter, milk.
Thursday- Meat loa!, scalloped
potatoes, broccoli, cake-frosting,
bread.
Friday - Chicken Overs, onions
and gravy, lice, carrot salad',
applesauce-cinnamon, bread , but·
ter, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
"Services rendered on a nondisclimlnatory basis."

Meigs bookmobile

·.I~' '

I

SUPER MARKET_:.OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

Gallia Senior Cemer

' ' .
..,,.. I'WOIDOUIS,.......,_

Dlvlslon, which serves Meigs
trorn 10 a.m. to noon . Blood Jan. 3-7:
County, will speak on energy
pressure will be checked free of · Monday -Wieners, saue,kraut,
coflservatlon and Ups on how to charge.
mashed potatoes, cake-fruit 5auce,
save you gas and thus lower the gas
The Senior Nutritidn! Program ' \!read, butter.
.
blll. Clark will have a question and , servjlltl[ hot meal at nQOn each day.
Tuesday ...., Beef stew; cole slaw,
a ns wer session following the ~ 992·2161 to make a reservation
peach cr is p, cornbread,
session.
·
'
!or a mea l no later than 9 a.m. the
applebutter.
'
The · January Blood Pressure day of the reservation. The follow·
Wednesday - Pork chop, sweet
Clinic· will be Thursday, Jan. 13,
lng menu is planned for the week of
potatoes, green beans, applesauce,

$189
•

32

oz.$}29
.

JAR

Budg~t

Pleaser
Special

THRinY
TOILET TISSUE
'

8 Roll Pak

$}59

'

�.-

..
Pe~ge-S-8-The
.. f

-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

SUNDAY
CROWN CITY - Grubb
Family Singers will be at Bib
Four Church, Hannan Tt'ace
road, Sunday at 7:30p.m . Rev .
Bob Grubb will preach . The
public is invited.
PROCI'ORVU.LE - A service will be held at 7::J(J p.m:
Sunday"'l t Lucinda United Bap·
tiit Chut&lt;:h. Wolf Creek Road
iwar Proctorville, with E lder
,James 0. Sizemore.
yALLIPOLJS - John and
Wnda Fellurc will sing at Baile)'
Chapel Chu rch. eight miles
sout h of GaUipolis on S.R. 218. at
7 p.m. Sunday. J olm Fellure will
be speaker. The public is invited.

.

NORTifUP . - Rev. Larry
Hall wUI speak at Northup
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday.
•
CROWN CITY - Rev. Bob
· Albright will be guest speaker at ·
Victory Baptist Church al 7 p.m.
Sunday.

MONDAY
GALLlPOL!S - N.S.D.A.R.
will meet Monday at 1:30p.m . at
the Mrs. Ernest Wiseman ·
· res idence.
. / ' ....

RACINE ,._ Racine Chapter
124, Order of the Eastern Star.
will meet Monday at7:30 p.m. at
the Masonic Temple.

W.

Ve~.

. Jgnuary 2, 19$3

¥eigs and Gallia area classes

Calendar
.

Plee~sant,

Parenthood

·

GALLIPOLIS- The next preparatlon for parenthood
. class
L d sponUl
red bY Ho lzer Clin lC, t · w be
so
h ldJ 3 d' hr hF b 7 dB
e a n. ~n ~ t oug e · an
from 7 ·to
p.m. in the clinic
classroom.
Th
eclassistaughtbyaregisterect
d will
th t i
nurse an
cover e 0P cs p.1
prenatal
· d ·nutrition,
· 1 bo · breathing
·r
· exerd
ciSes urmg a r,
m
ant
care
an a
·
tour of Holzer Medical Center's
maternity department. Upon completion of the class. a father will be
able. to att~nd the deljvery of ~is ,
child.
Fee lor · tlie class Is $40. For
information and •to ·register call
Karen Wamsley. cllnic business
office. 446-5278, or BeckY Sanders.

MIDDLEPORT
. Meigs
Chapter Order of DeMolay will
meet at7: 30 p.m . Monday at the
Masonic Temple in Middleport.
All members should take their
mothers · to a Mothers' Club
meeting to be held at the same
.time and place. ·
··

9

POMEROY - M('igs County
S(! It&gt;n 710 of Eight and Forty will
meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at tt)e
home of Julia· Hysell. Money
· from fU·ndraisi ng projects
should be turned: in ai the
meEJjing.
LETART FALLS - j.,etart
Township Trustees will meet at
7 p.m . Monday at the Letart
Falls meeting room.

Coll~e

m
·

....-...;;;P....
. _0_
.

GALLrPOUS - 0.0. Mcintyre
p ark Dis trict wU! offer a photographyclassbeginningJan.1lfor35
and 1~ m.'m. film siZed cameras.
Classes will meet Jan.ll,l8, 25, Feb.
3, 8,15, 22 and March 3. Fee for the
eight -week course is $25 with a
minimum ofl5 studenis.
For further information and to
•
pre-register
call446-4612, extension.

rc.:..;..=-==;.=..::;==:::....___....;~56

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

ACROSS

Monday thru Friday
9A"M to 9,PM

Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

'fHE

.....r
•'\.tt

WAlli N 0A (. AU fOil
Aif ~I' "DDN r Mf ,..1

r-·r -~

~-

:,rress management
RIO GRM'DE - The C&lt;lmmunity Education Cou nselinKCe~ter at
Rio Grande College and Corhmun-

,.. ~

446-9510

tiiiiiiii,.__

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
AP Sports Writer
HOUSI'ON (AP)- TheCincinnatiBengalshavealreadyclinched
a spot In the National Football League playoff derby but would like
another victory to ~their momentum intact. The Houston Oilers
would just llke a victory.
·
The Oilers will take a six-game losing streak and 1-7 record into
the noon kickoff at the Astrodome on Sunday; while the Bengals are
tuning up for their second straight playoff appearance, hoping to add
sparkle to their 6-2 season record.
pnc!nnati Coach Forrest Gregg won't admit to being completely
pleased. After all, the Bengals did lose two games. But he's not doing
much complaining either,
·
•
"I think we could be better than last year's team," Gregg said.
"We'll have a lot of chances to prove It: But I thin1t a lot of others are

' -

~6-2509.

t

Jl!llllllllir~t~s_
_ ....: _________.....;.._________~_.nn_ts_.. ,_e_nti-nd.....s. .e_·c__ 9iiii'-ia!l.....
Houston hopes to end six-garne · losing. streak

~lx sessio~s Photography

tty
will host
during January and February for
area persons interested
st~s
...
m.anagement through yoga· exerelse and relaxation t~ining.
The sessions
wUl. be held from 6 to
•
7::lJ'p.m. Jan.11,18,25andFeb. 1, 8
and 15 in the Jam""
'" A. Rhodes
Student-Community Center. They
are free and open to the pu'bll'c .
For add!'t 1·0·nai '-'onn
u&gt;&lt; · at!o'n. contact the college at245-5353.
·

A, NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN ''

.·

better, too. I can't complain too much. Wereallyplayedonlyonebad
game, ihe one against Sal! Diego."
·
.
.
Houston Coach Ed Biles could complain, but isn't.
The Oilers rank last In the NFL in total offense and defense and are
on the brink of losing·seven gam'es In a row for the first time since
1973; when the team finished 1-13.
"Considering the circumstances, the attitude of the players has
been exceptional/' Biles said. "Nobody Is pointing fingers at
anybody else, which happens a lot of times when a team is in a
situation like we're going through."
The Oliers came close last week before'fumbllng away a 20-141oss
to the Cleveland Browns.
. Gifford Ni';\l!en wUI·start at quarterback for the Oilers, replacing
'the injured Mehle Manning, who left with a hamstring injury in the
first quarter of last week's game.

~

WE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR
-INVENTORY AND PASSING, THE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~SAVINGS ON TO YOU.
" -BRAND NEW

ONn-

~ A.L..,...

.Vlf' ·~;

10.9°/o

FINANCING .
Only $-232.17/month. Based on Sale
Pirce of $10,200 with $1200.00 down
d 48
thl
an
mon Ypayments. • ·
ONE ONlY -:-Offer
• 31.

NTH

Based 1;
•••••• vO With
$495.0C L... wn payment.
•
Finance $5,000 for 48 months at 10.9%
plus State Sales Tax.. Offer ends Dec. 31.

1982 Buick Skylark
GM Official's Car.
Two-Tone Blue, Sharp ·

$6880

WAS

1982

miles, tilt wheels,
'

BlACK &amp; SHARP!
1980 Pontiac Phoemx
..._5 Door Hatchback
Auto., air, AN!-FM
14495

··

·

whSo&amp;b

~~=

c

.

•

·nt

"Jut)

list '12,011.00

1982 Chev. Cavalier
low Miles

~~is

$5980

~~~5

AM-FM, 4 speed. Sharp.
WAS
.

$4980

Green with whit~ landau roof.
local owner.
~
~

~~~5
1978 Honda Accord

owner, 3 door hatchback.
Red. Sharp. Below wholesale.

$2990

13825

1980 Chev. Monza

Two-tone blue, a1r, auto., rear step ·
~A~per. 'h Ton Cheye~ne Pkg. .

Only 16,000 Miles
Dark Blue

$4400

$3480

WAS
13995

$

1980 Chev. Impala

1980 Pontiac

4 Door, family car, runs su_perb.

4 Speed, low Miles

$3290 ~~~~

'

1978 Chev. Pickup
14995-

· local One Owner

$4170
1978 T-Bird

White, auto.. A.C., vinyl interior.
low miles.
.
WAS
16995

S~arpYJiack

Extra

Loca I One Owner
14995

4 Door ·

Grand Prix

Electra 2 Door
WAS

WA

.;so_,_b

1979 Pontiac

1978 Buick

1980 Buick
Century 4 Door

~~~5

$3 770

14295

All Models Discounted .

... -- -

Extra clean, 36,000 miles,

$4380

$3980

1977 Buick R~l

~-

....._

~01.: 11

W

la -

1

00
~ ~::l

~

0

Sunbird

•WAS

Grand Prix

locally Owned, Blue.

1978 UUI"I\

2 Door

Blatk with raised
tires ..Sharp.
WAS

.

'Good condition, new tires,
navy blue, local owner.
WAS
1
2995

$2.29.5

'-

whitewall

2 Door

Auto., A.C , 42,000 low miles,

-·•A ~~~Sseat~

1977 Malibu Coupe

l~tter

$
"
1'
4
.-~~~~~~~W~AS
onwagon

Book Price '3450
Dream

.'

1980 Fiebird
[spirit

local one owner. 42,000 mi~.
Chestnut brown. Sharp.
TO SELL!

Park Ayenue
Extra clean interior, loaded.
WAS
$

$
Mercury ·
".Cougar

1976, Buick
Electra ~. 2 Door
Runs super

Runs Good

Mechanic's

$

Delta

The ·interior of thi.s car is showroom clean.

" I~

$299

WAS

$

11495

STARTS

.• Auto.
One Owner

8:00 A.M.
'
'
MONDAY

$780

l.-.· 1911-Eastern ·Ave.

·Galli

lis,

..
HAPPY TIMES - 'lbe St. Louis CarcllnaiB, , taldn« the Serle! title over the MD waukee Brewers In
lndudin« Wortd Series Moll* Valuable Player Darrel seveu ,ames In October. (AP La.serphoto) .
Porter, weadlg . . _ celebrate oo the 6eld alter

·1979 Chevette

local owner, 2 door.
Good Transportation
..
WAS ~· .

.·

Two-tone blue,
Overdrive
loaded.
WAS
.

5 Door HTBK
Local one

1979 Datsun Pickup

.Auto., A.C., 5 door, clean, low
miles. Silver.

"!

READY TO SELL

Our Price·'l0,611.00

. Corona·LE

2 Door .-4 Speed ·

V-6, Atr, auto .. tan.

$3990

WAS

1982 Pontiac J200

Dar'· "

OVER 50 NEW 1983
BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS

$1,~00

. SAVE

1981 Chevette

Berlinetta

y 2500 low
cruise, A.C . ·

1983 BUICK REGAL
DEMO - LOADED

-

1982 FIREBIRD

1982 PONTIAC 11000

··.

Grid strike, retirement
of Bryant,World Series
'highlight 1982 sports

Over 40 Additional Cal'S
Not Listed. Stop In and Check
Our Red T~gs.

BRAND NeWNE ONLY

It Will be the end of the most disappointing season as a pro"for
HoustJJn's Earl Campbell, who has gained 474 yards on 146 carries
,;n!d has gain/!9 100 yards IIi a game only once in l8 games.
Ken AMerson will lead the Bengals at quarterback, and wid.e
r~Iver Chris Collinsworth should give the Oller secondary
problems. AI\derson is third In the Arnertcan Football Conference in
passing, and CoUinsworth is second in receiving.
.. · ·
Pete Johr!Son leads Bengal rushers with 553 yards on 138 carries,
good enough to rank fifth in the AFC despite a lingering overw~lght
problem left from the NFL players strike.
''That thing has been blown out of proportion," Gregg sa.ld. "He's
heavier t!Jan we want him to be, but he's taking It off gradually
rather than going on a crash program .
"Pete's weight Is like a woman's age," _Gregg said. "We don't talk
about it."

A year to ,remember:

/

'SMITH'S FAMOUS

0~

Browns /eye. first win ever
·in·Three Rivers Stadium
'

.

good team, it makes you play·better, just as we did
By AlAN ROBINSON
.when we played the' Steelers two weeks ago and heat
AP Sports Writer.
PriTSBURGH ( AP) - The Pittsburgh Steelers them,'' Gollc said.
.
The Steelers, 5'3, will likely play in either Cincinnati
could be forgiven If they were approaching Sunday's
regulat season finale against the Cleveland J3rowns or New York in the playoffs by. winnlrtg Sunday, but
. with sometltlng less than playoff intensity.
.
· would probably play in. San Diego, Los Al)geles or
The Steelers don't need to win to qUalify lor the Miami by losing.
.
.
The Browns, ·4-4, are also in the playoffs - unless
eight-team American Co~rence playoffs, since
New England and Buffalo play to a tie Sunday. If the
they've already earned a berth.
But the Stee!ers S!IY they have winning, not losing, · Patriots and Bills tie, both will be In the playoffs and
the Browns would be fit to. be tied.
On their minds. ·~
--} .
CI!'Iiel!ind owner Art Modell asked NFL Commis~·This Is the biggest game we'll play. I mean that
sincerely," said Mel Blount. "We want a victory sioner Pete Rozelle to. rule that the Bills-Patriots
untier our belts before we gollfg into the playotfs. • game be played .until a winner was decided, no
"It's an bnp:&gt;rtant game, believe me. We are matter how many overtimes It takes. Bill Rozelle
~ getting ourselves-ready to play and-ready to win.'' , turned down the request.
•
Meanwhile, third-year quarterback Paul McDoDefenSIVe tackle Toll\ Beasley agreed with Blount.
nald will earn his third corisecutlve staJ:t f?r
"It Is an important game,'' he said.
· Beasley missed the Steelers' 37-14 blowout victOry Cleveland. The Brow.ns benched veteran quarterlast week . over the New England Patriots with a back Brian Sipe after getting off to a 2-4 start. .
Coacn Sam Rutllg!ano said , McDonald is one
sprabied neck, but Is listed as probable for. the 1 p.m.
game. The Browns have never In Pittsburgh since reason why the Browns apparently are In the playoffs
after being wrttten off only a couple of weeks ago.
Three Rivers Stadium was opened In 19'10.
"When we were 2-4, lot of people were ordering.
Bur Cleveland did beat the Steelers 10-9 in
dirt to bury ~guys," he said. "But they did
the
Cleveland just two weeks, a fact not forgotten by ·
Browns' defensiVe lineman Bob Golic.
. what we thought, would do. They came back."
'"'be Stealers are a good team but when you play a

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By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Writer
It was a year that said goodbye to
Bear Bryant, Sugar Ray Leonard,
Bowie Kuhn. Earl Weaver, the
OaklandRaidersandastar-crossed
horse named Timely Writer.
And, for a while, to pro football .
Yet, the 1!£.! Year in Sports also
welcomed back Jimmy Connors,
saw Ed Garvey and Jack Donlan
pushed to the forefront. looked on as
youngsters Wayne Gretzky and
Rickey Henderson soared to new
heights and watched Larry Holmes .
get some res~t.
'
There was t~e closest indianapolis 500 finisn in history, an intriguing
seven:game World Series, a happy
ending lor Dean Smith, more magic
from Magic and an intema'tional
spectacular that left Italians cheering "VLva. Paolo!"
Mucn of the sports news was
genera led away froni the stadiums
and fields. A drug scandal rocked
t)1e National Football League,
probation hit college football "and
basketball klilgpins, and the role of
big money in sports continued to
. grow.
Probably nothing summed up the'
"year without" as well as pro
football's 57-day strtke.
For months, Ed Garvey, head of
the NFL Players Association, and
. ·J ack bonlan, the team owners'
chief negotiator, talked about the
possibllty of a strike.
And then It happened. On Sept. 21.
the players went on strike, the first
regular-season walkout · in the
, league's 63-year history.
•
As Cotnmissloner Pete Rozelle
stayed on the sidelines, thetwosldes
reached agreement Nov. 16 on a
five-year, $1.6 billion contract,
salvaging a nine-game season that
is 'the shortest ever and leaving an
• expanded, 16-team playoff format
that could leta losing team reach the
Super Bowl. In the meantime,
striking players took part In
"aU-star" pickup games and talked
about . joining the United States
FootbaU League, set to begin In
early 1983.
The NFL also endured a major
drug .. problem.- which exploded
.when formerptayer Don Reese said
in Sports lllustrated that "a cocaine
cloud" covered the league. Several
players, tncludltlg such stars as San
Diego's Chuck Muncie ·and New
Orleans' George Rogers, later
admitted they used the drug. Reese _
ended up · in jail, as did former
players Mike Strachan and Mer- cury Morris, on cocaine-related
charges.
.
And AI Davis, managing general
partner of 11\e Oakland Raiders who had won the Super Bowl the
year before - temporarily won his
court battle and movetJ,hls team to
Los Angeles.
Star quarterback Joe Montana
and wide receiver Dwight Clark led
the San r'r;mcisco 49er8 to a 26-21
Super ·Bowl ·victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals, whUe the Ed. monton Eskimos won their fifth
straight Grey Cup, symbol of
· Canadian Football League
supremacy. .
· In the college ranks, Clemson unranked at the start of the season
- beat Nebraska in the Orange
B9wl on NeWYear'sN!ghttowln the
natlolll' I championship, led by
Coach of the Year Danny Ford. ·
The bubble burst, however, when
the NCAA found Clemson guilty of

recriiltlng violations.

The enSuing
penalty- two Years' probation and
the loss.of~schoiarshlp$- was the

1Tl06t severe In NCAA history.

HerSchel Walker, Georgia's stellar tailback, won the Reisman
Trophy after. two near misseS and
led the undefeated Bulldogs to the
No. 1 •ranking. Georgia• was in
position to wrap up a second
national title in three years when It
playedsecond-rankedPennState!n
the Sugar Bowl on New Year's
Night. ·
..
For Paul . " Bear" B~t. 1\112
was to be his final year on the
sidelines. Following a disappointing
74 seas6n, the 69-year-old Bryantthe winningest coach in college
football history - announ9eg that ·
he would leave Alabama after a
quarter-century and hrrn over the
Crimson Tide's future to one of hts
former stars, New York Giants
Coach Ray Perkins.
Bcyimt's last game was to be the
Liberty Bowl, a .chanceforhis323rd
victory.
Pitt Coacli Jackie Sherrill· igned
a six-yearcontractwith TexasA&amp;M
that would pay him $287,001 a year.
The high salary startled many in the
halls of higher ·learning, who
wondered whether priorities on
college campuses had gotten out of
·
line.
Money waS' apparently no object
to the Philadelphia 76ers of the
National Basketball Association,
who signed dorninatlitg center
Moses Malone to a six-year, $l,;l.2
million ,contract before the 1!£.!-83
season.
For the second time in three .
:;easons, the 76ers reached theNBA

final only to lose to the Los Angeles
Lakers in six games. The Lakers
combined thetalentsofplayoffMost
Valuable Player Earvln "Magic"
Johnson. Karee!D Abdui-Jabbar,
bruising Kurt Rambls and a
rejuveptated Bob McAdoo.
· With perennial power UCLA on
probation and out of the NCAA
playoffs for the first time since 1961,
Dean Smith finally got his just
reward in college basketball. After
six trips to the Final Four, Smith's
North Carolina team won its first •·
national title by beating George- :
town 63-62 in a' thrilling championship game. But Georgetown
marked itself as a team of -the
future, led by 7-loot center Patrick ·
Ewing, now_ a sophomore.
And VIrginia's 7-foot-4 ' center,
. Ral[lh Sampson, was honored as
Player of the Year for the second ·
consecutlve season. Sampson, a
senior, i'nd Ewing met Ol!the court
for the first time in December, when
IDP'ranked VIrginia held off thirdranked Georgetown. Samps,on won
· the individual matchup. With 23
points, 16 rebouhds and seven
. blocked shots to Ewing's 16 points,
eight rebounds and five blocks. ·
Baseball rebounded from the
strike-torn 1981 sea5on to set an
all-time attendance record of
44,587.874. The St. Louts Cardinals
used their gambling -a nd scrambling style to _ beat the
Milwaukee Brewers In the seventh
game of the World Series.

CELEBRATING THE WIN - 81111 FraDcl8co ••en~ bead coach .
.:811 w.wi II carried off the field by hill team abet winnlnll tile SuiM!r
Bowl from the · qnclmulll Benpls In Detrelt In January. (AP

LMei'pheto ) •

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Page-C2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Janua.y 2, 19B)J

Pomeroy-Middleport-'-Gallif)91is, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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

Arka~sas

Hawkeyes
lo~k,ng
.
forw8rd
to
.
this fal~ after Peac~ v~ctory

The Sunday Tirnes-SentineJ.:-Page-C3

28-24- winner' over Florida

.•'

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Tennessee. 6-5-1, which scored in
By TOM SALADINO
tlw
opening' Q\Uirter on a 6-yard
AP Sports Writer
keeper
by quarterback Alan Cock·
ATI,ANTA (APl -lO\"a 'sChuck
rcll,
m
ade
a .furious second-half
Lon!(and Ronnie Harmon, a pair of
charge but fell shon when the
youngsters who keyed the Haw·
Ha~I'YI'S stopped the Volun~rs
. keyes' ~-22 P each Bowl victory
at lhe 9-yard line with. ~
over Tennessee, are already look·
remaining and .again in the closing
ing forward tQ next season.
"This game is big for our ent ire· minut eaftPrTennessee had moved
to the Iowa 39.
offensive unlt. · It will give us
"II was just a super game. I have
confidence for next season," sa id
Long, the sophomore qua rterback. never seen a defense rise up on the
goal line and sack the quarterback
wlw fired tlm~ secon\1 period
like tha t. Thl'y were very tough
touchdowns, two to Harmon, F ri·
when they had to be, " sa id winning
day night and was voted the game's
Coach Hayden F ry, whose HaW·
outstanding offe rtsive performer.
keyes finished the season at 8-4.
"This game will cert ainly give me
TennesSI'€' scored following .t he
confidence going into next season ,"
said Harmon, a freshman wing· .second ha lf kickoff with Chuck
Colema n, who ran lor 103 yards in
back. "This was a great way to end
the game, went over from 10 yards
the year."
out. But , Fuad Ri'velz, the soph&lt;J.
Long, who connected;;m hi s first
more AU-Southeastern Conference
11 passes. hit Dave Moritz on a
kicker, missed the only extra point
57-yard scoring bomb early in the
hi s careeer.
of
. second period and then followed
Following
a 2-ya rd TD run by
with TD strikes of 18 and 8 yards to
Iowa 's Eddie Phillips, tl)e Vols got to
Harmon to give the Ha~keyes a 21-7
within 28·22 on a 19-ya~d pass. from
lead a t intermission.
Long a lso broke the Peach Bowl Cockrell to WiUie Gault and Reveiz
27-~ard field goal with 11:05 left to
passing yardage record in the first
play.
half by comple ting 14 ofl7 passes for
Tennessee threatened to win it
231 yards. He finished with 19 of 26
with
a 60-yard march to thl' Iowa 7
for 304 yards . Moritz 'tied the bowl
but Cockrell fired a:n incomplete
reeord of 8 receptions - a U in the
pass on a third-and-two situation
first ha lf- and broke the record for
and then was felled for ,:2-yard toss
yardage with 168.

Victory is
lOOth for
Coach Hoi~

on tourth down with 3:29 left.
"The two plays atthe end- third
a nd two, fOI\_rth and two- were the
most crlticat-parts of tpe game," ·
·said Tennessee Coach Johnny
Majors. . ·
·
·
" We'vpgottofeelgoodaboutthat,
even though we didn't win," he said.
"OveraU, we wer~ just one play
away from winning thl' game." .

By MlCHAEL A. Ll:!Tl
AP Sports Wrller
HOUSTON (AP) - Arkansas
Coach Lou Holtz, a veteran of many
rainy days on the~dellnes at
FayettevUie, Ark. , haatogo Indoors
to get drenched coaching a football
game;but on the last night ot 1982 in
the Astrodome, tt was worth lt.
Holtz switched io the 1-formatlorr
a week ago· and the 14th·ranked
Razorbacks adapted to It well
enough Friday night to start out the
new year with !I 2&amp;-24 victory over
the Florida Ga tors In the 24th
Bluebonnet Bowl.
· . •
AI; an added bonus, II was Holtz'
·, tOOth collegiate coaching victory
and his players treated him to a
shower alter a r:omP-frorn·behlnd
effort.
"I've coaclied well over 100
football games but I've never gotten
• WI'I untO I came to the Astrodome,"
Holtz said. "I was .concerned .at
halftbne, but we played Wtth an air
of confidence bt the second hall. it
wasn't one of our better defensive
effOrts, ~ut Florida had a lot to do
. with that."
Florida had almost too much to
say about. the outcome, building a
24·14 third-quarter lead an three
touchdown passes from senior
quarterback Bob Hewko to Wayne .

•

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•••
•
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Cage
Standings
TEAM
Pt, Pleasa nt
Wheelers.burg
Portsmoulh

Waverly
Galll)Xllis
Ironton -.
Northwest
.Jackson

ALL GAMES
.
W L P
~ 0 175
71588
8 2 fi89
5 3 492
4 3 394
5 5 543
5 5 585
4 5 549
~

Athe ns
Alexander
Logan

~=~ngtOn CH~1

OP

1Zl
' 448

•

555
476
363
532

552

'542

5 553 550

344414$
4 6 !j96 • 601
2 6 434 510
"' 8 370 535

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
lronton
Waverly ,
Athens
Logan
Galll[i&gt;t ~

4
4
3
3

.

WLP OP
I 274 221

2

2 385 373
2 323 285
2 304 298
3

~256

2 3 283 21U
0 5 - 219 348

Jackson
Meigs

rorAIB

18 18 111111 21151

•

SEOAL !WlEKVE'I
WL P DP

TEAM

Logan

Waverly
Galllpot~

4 l . 200 214
4 2 214 197

·

3 2 187 185

Ironton
3 2 197
Jackson
2 3 199
Athens
2 3 196
Meigs
0 5 189
TOrAU!'
18 18· IC3!
Thiii'Sday's re8ults:
GaiUpolis 7J Alexander 58
M1aml Trace 55 Jackson 54
Lakewood 64 Logan G2 tOt)
Wheelersburg S3 Northwest 62
Tue8day's game:
Waverly a l Northwest
Friday's prneA:
Jack.••m at Athens
U:lgan at Ironton
Me-Igs a t Gallipolls
·
Pt . Pleasant.at Wahama
Valley al Wheeteniburg
[4nclen McKinley a t Portsmooth
Warren L:lcaJ at Alexander
Washington CH at HWsboro
Portsmouth at North~t
Jan. 8 pmes;
lronton at Jackson
Atheqs 8.1 Waverly
GalllpoUs at Logan
,
Parkersburg South a t Pt. Plea sant
Wbee»ersburg at FaJrland
Vinton County at Meigs
Washington &lt;;Hat Greenev1cw

200
200
188

242
le3!

Two Redwomen
amongtop8
loop scorers
RIO GRANDE - Two Rio
'Grande Red ~Wmen are ranked In
the top eight scoring in the:Greater
Ohio Athletic Conference; accord·
lng Ill statistics released today.
· lOW!\ CELEBRATES- Iowa running back RonJie Hannon (31)
Kathy DetU!Ion is ranked second
exults Friday after scoring against Tennessee at Atlanta in the Peach
~wl. The score came on a pass from Chuck Lol)g in the set.oond period.
in the leaguE' in scoring with an
Iowa won, 28-22. lAP Lalserphoto) .
average of 20.2 per game. Detllllon
Is a freshnlah guard from Bl'aver.
Robin HagPn, a ~7 senior guard
from South Web5ter,ls ra!edelghth
with an average of 19.7 poblts per
game. She has missed recent action
due to Illness.
TueM8yTri~~-.L.~
Early Wedne8day Mixed
December 14, 1!m
Gloria Banks of Malone College
S&amp;andlnp
December 15t 198!
,
Is
topping the loop with' an averagE'
Teom
Pis.
Team
fts.
Blue Tartan
S.'l
,.- of 19.5 markers per contest. Mal{'.
No. 6
so
Larry's Grocery
65
Zide's Sport S~p
76
J~san of Ohio Dombl!can is tops In
Meigs Inn
62
Eagles Club
68
Sugar Run Ashland
48
the league In rebounding with an
Smith-Nelson Moi(J'"S
59
Wald (Juss and Sons
46
Tony's Carry Out
56
average of 12.5 caroms per contest
JBL e"~tructlon
38
Ff'tty's ~Service
.
45
Rio Grande's Redwomen will be
High itldlvk:lual game - Carolyn Bachner
High sertes- John Tyree 562. Betty Smith
185: Diana Ash 170; Charldene Hanning,157.
klle ' untU Jan. 6 when they make
tn; Ray Roach 543, Pat Carson' 49l.
High series- Carolyn Bachner 488; Pliine
High game -Ray Roach 233, Pat Carson ' their home debut at the Paul R.
Ash 449: Janke Ha nkJa 428.
~
lll~ lbb Hensley 211, Belly Smilh ISR
Team high game - Larry's Grocery ~9 .
Lyne Educatiln Center against
Team se-Es -No: 6 1984.
Team high serie.s .- Wald Cross and Sons
Team game - No. 6 765.
Ollj.o Dominican College. Game
1\63.
tlnie is 7:30 p.ll). ·

GW.. GRt\IIS PASS- Iowa running b8ck Owen
Gill (right) grabs a pass bt Friday's 23-22 Peach Bowl
. victory over Tennessee. Vol defenders are Joe Cofer

(42), along with Jeff McMichael (diving) and lioq
Parrish (86). (AP Laserpboto).
.·

.
.
Curry paces_Redmen 1nscormg
-

. RIO GRANDE - Dan Cuny, a .
6·7 sophomore .forward fl'om
Derby. Ohl'lr teads the Rio Gran de
College Redmen In scoring and Is
ranked second In rebounding,
according to statistics released
IDday by the lnsUtuti01i's office r1
sports Information.
Curry Is averaging 14.9 points
and 6.9 rebounds ' per game so far
this season despite missing early
action with a severe ankle. sprain.
: He Is also shooting ·"8 percent
from the floor and 68percent at the
free throw line.
Jerry Mowery, a 5:8 guard from
Williamsport, Ohio, who is coming
off a stellar 33 point outburst
against Thomas More College last
Wednesday night, is second in
scoring at 11:5 and tops the ·t eam In
assists (8.5) and steals (3.7). He is
shooting 52 percent from the floor
and 70 percent at the free throw
line.
·
Bob Shaw, a 6-8 center from
Wheelersburg, Is pacing the squad
In rebounding (7.3) and field go3J
percentage (54 ) whUp averaging
~.1 points per outing. Shaw is

' .

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4

Two ~9 guards have had stellar
years rtf the bench. Kent Wolfe ot
Racine Is averaging 8.1 poblts per
outing while ,connecting with 86
percent accuracy at the tree throw
line, and Tim Richards of Columbus ls netting 5.6 markers.
The Redmen wUI be back In
action Wednesday when they lxlst
Franklin University bt a 7: ll p.m. '
bout at the Paul R. Lyne Physical
Education Center.
'

shooting 68 percent at the free
throw line.
John Maisch, a 6-3 forward from
Austintown, Ohio, Is averaging 9.6'
points per game and Is tops In free
throw shooting with 88 percent.
The other starter, 6-0 guard Rick
Penrod from Nelsonvllle, is averag·
ing. 8.4 points per outing while
shooting 46 percent from the floor
and 84 percent. at the 'tree throw '

line.

UNITED SECURITY &amp;
COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
•Buovllr. Are. end Hold-Up Alonn s_..,

R-

oCommon:iol, lnduotrill,
•Purchuo or LMoo Pions Awii•Central Station MOnitoring or

COnn.ction

.

VICTORY RIDE - J\rkaasas roach Lou Holtz leis a victory ride M
the shoulders or Earl Buckingham (73) and Milton li'lel!ls (48) Friday bt ·
HOUtitoa after his Razorbadl8 won Friday's Bluebonnet Bowl game
over Florida, 2&amp;-24. (AP J:..ase.,r.otoj.

'

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Robbins &amp; Myers
Fetty's 'J'rec ServiCe
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BloMom Basket Floris!
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V anrou~ 'l" ut ~p,r,· .k'rst')', tnt .
Wa&lt;&gt;hlnglon 111 QuMn:-, t n t•
PIIISbUIJth a t Montrwt\, In! .
Ptllladl .. phla ut r hk.-dj..&gt;O. 1n 1.

•

1bio Meigs !M

?doni AmsborY

Jf.llr Dnfllner

Jolnon, llaJTiel Wallil&lt;olll2; June Ulmbert
18).

HIP (Jid. lhfee-games - Dori&gt; G~r
el; J,_ Lambert 4115: Harriet Watlace 454.
HIP teom pme -Two's Company 1129:
SltnlriOMOkii,Cadllla&lt;andCbev. 197; Two's
compony77t.
HIP -lllroe-games- Two'• Company
Dll: St111J.- .Oklo, Caclutac and Cbevy
2161: M'eta• Inri 2Jll0. .

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~N.UO- Hodu•J I.e~·
MO N TREAL
CANAOl F.N SRr&gt;c-alkl:l
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U NIVER S I T Y
O F;
C""O NNECfJ(Vf'NHmi'd TGm .JU("ki!Oil ~ rootbull mad!.

Briefs
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Cloud st. 1\1

S. Dukola 84, S. Dullota

_st. 79

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Mon. &amp; Fri.
Til 8 P.M.
· Tues.·Wtd.·Titurs.-Fri.
Til 5'P.M. .

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ClrS . Bank
Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

'I

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ct- National Bank
Ctrde's
Bateman Fanna'IO 50
Vlllqo PizZa

The Commercial • Savings Bank
"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDe-K

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Pl. l'll!lllnt Auto Partl

M1111bt~ FDIC

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Spring Valley

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Joe Coin, Any,
Grlmm'l RolillllrY

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Wl•t•a•u SObio

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78 42

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JndMduals: Cltl2Jono National Bank, M.
J1roW111n1 198-etlll; Cbde'o, J . Reed Jlll.4l8;
Bateman Flrml, K. lllwn 181-437; Vlllqo
PizZa, v. Jordan 191-"ll: Electric Service, Flo Ana 187-443; Pl. Pteullll AU1o
. Pll'll, D. Adaml161-429; Joe ColD. Any., 0.
Halliday 163-41i8; Crimm's Rabllhry, L
Grimm 2»627: Pl. Plouut E-. .c.
Reynoldo 111. J, Bna&amp; ~9olllo,

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WW..II-1~7.

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WBC heavyweight champ,
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Local bowling

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''You're Gonna
Stars!"

Winners, runners-up, and their
famllles ·will be .homred: with a
banquet and wUl reeelve trophies. .
Winners In each age category from
the area finals will advance to the
dlstdt finals to be held In Irontoo
on February 19, 1983. Competition
will continue to a siate, semi·
regional finals, and a natlonalllnai
to be held at Butler University In
Aprll.
For more. Information contact
arm sc!Dol prlndpals or call Lewis

••

!=:1 . Olut' &amp;1, MI. MArty ·r.a

.

·r-::::::::::::;;::::::s:====::=::========-

1D the l!nals.

,

w"'*' "'·
llolllllly .....,...,.
'n*dPia'f' -

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gotten the attention hi' deserves." ·
. Hewko hit 1J of 18 passes In the
first half and finished with 19 of~ for
for 234 yards. Jones completed only
two of five passes for a minus one
yard but his team got the victory.

.S.2JOO

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By SJill' LATT
first nine-victory season since 1~15. off lhl' field with
ABSOCIBtW Press Writer
an 8-4 mark.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -Alter his' Air Force
Trailing 2&amp;-23, AJr Force took the lead with 10:11
Acad~my lrooJ16 downed Vanderbjlt 36-~in the sixth
remaining in the game when Kershner rammed into
annual ~II of Fa,rne ,q:mtest, Falcon Coach ken the epd zone from the 3·yard line. That capped a
. Hatfield relied on a ·Commodore alumnus to express 21· yard drivl' after an interception by Falcon
his feelings.
cornerback Carl Dleudonne. the game's most
"Grantland Rice once said that 'It ll)atters not valuable defensive player.
whether you won or lost, but how you played thl'
Louthan added the final tou~hes for Air Force,
game,"' Hatfield said aftl'r hi' accepted the bowl's which finished third this season In the Western
championship trophy Friday night at Legion FiPld .
Athletic Conference, when he bolted 46-yards on a
"There are no future prof~slonal playprs with us. fourth-and-one play with only 3; 38 remaining.
They will all be tn leadership positions In the Air
It was Kershner who aUOJWed the Falcons to control
Force when they graduate and that makes me Legion Field's artlflcal turf as he rushed 32 times for
proud,"' Hatfield sa)d.
132 yards and one touchdown.
For 00 minutes Frtday, the Falcons displayed the
While the Commodores werl' having their trouble,
grit and knowl€dge of tactics, refusing to surrender to containing the Air Force rushing game, the Falcons
the -pressures of a record-setting Vanderb!lt passing seemed helpless when they attempted to· stop the
game:
Vandy aetjal attack.·
The Southeastern Conference Commodores rode
Taylor,., fhp game's most valuable player, led
the right arm of quarterback Whit Taylor and the Vandy to Its halftime lead with marches of75, 63 and
receiving of taUback Nonnan Jordan to a 21-14 50 yards that togethpr consumed only 5: 25.
halftime lead. But tl)ey werl' finally plowed under by
For the game, the Vanderbilt senior connected on
a rugged Falcon wishbone attack that set a Hall of 38 of 51 passes for 452 yards and four touchdowns ~
Fame recor¢1 with 69 rushing attempts and cant rolled all Hall of Fame Bowl records.
the football for nearly 40 mlnut~.
.
1 Jordan caught 20 of Taylor's passes for 173 yards
Led by a pair of juniors - quarterback Marty and three scores, also records for the bowl game
Louthan and fullback John Kershnl'r - the Falcons · which had 331nd!v!dual and team records broken and
struck for 19 points in thefourthquartertowrapupan eight others tied.
8-5 season and send Vanderb!tt, which was seeking Its

NQW

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BluellonnetBowlactlonFriday.Jonesfumbledonthe .
play with Arkansas recovering. ( AP Laserphoto) '

Hatfield proud of Air Force
bowl victory
·team after 36-28
.,.
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LARGE GROUP

"'!&gt;WD&lt;r

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Illinois 7.1. l4'ol1t, llllitobl 7'l
.

hit tn'

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1\thtnf' !II, St .J(Nllh"J, Maii'M' -L'"I

Transactions

I•

....,,,... J
Mln111."!11ia, 9 . p.nt.

Fridil.V'II ('dk~ .......... MI,'(Jf't'tl
EABr
Duqut"Snn• m . n..\•loo &amp; Elkin!! 51

&amp;!nda.J'II OllllW
S!tn Antonlti a 1 Clevrland. tnl
l&lt;ilnsas Cl!y at Atlllnla, !nt
Hooslon at MllwauW, tnl
SrotllC' at PbomiX. 1nt
'Opivt'l" a t Por1land. tnt
Indiana at ('.qlck'f1 Stair. tnl
Drtmlt at Los AnJN:'s, tn t
Monda)''•G~mfti
No a-arrfi's !K'hrd\&amp;1«:1 •

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College soores

No ~llfTl(l8 M'h!Uik&lt;d

F1orlda's fullhack James

•

~REGU~SEA.~

f'tida7'M GIWnt'K

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We can rer:nedy your "lemon-on-four-wheels .blues!" 1
Our personalized .auto loans could have you .up and
around in no time, in a new or used car! "But my
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Dalla." at

Ptn&gt;nix 11~ . Drtro!t ~
Los An~ 137. Sl'atlk' 117

•
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p.m .
OnW(If ar St'ank&gt;. 4 p.m.

San Ok'RQ liM, H(ll.Lilton 9.1
lpdlana 11~. Utah 114
Basion lol5. OPnVf'r" 132

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lAM AniiE'k's Raldfors ar San flk:.wl, \

!:ian Antonio 1M, "Chk-a)Ki l(J2
Mltwa uko&lt;' 111. Oalla.&lt;~ 9!1 ..,.,

••

GALLiPOLIS. - The Elks Na·
Ilona! "Hoop Shoot" free throw .
contest Is currently taking place In
the Trl·County Area.
The Co-ed Prog~ am Is open to all
. students· age elght-13. Students Wtn
compete In three agl! categOries eight-nine, 10.11, and 12·13:
One boy and one girl will advance
m the finals to be lleld IIi the Gallla
Academy High School Gym on
Saturday, Jan. 15, at 1 p.m.
Area schools In the b'l-county
area must hold their own eompeU·
tlons before students can advance

Australia 6-7, 7 - ~. 6-i.

nd

1.'1 17
1:! IIi

•

, In orhrr ma1r txos. ,Jdf &amp;I"(Mrlak dfofroollrd
Pl'tt•r Doohan Of Au.~lraU.t &amp;.1. 7-fl. whlit'
Milu• l wmdolfo drfrutrO Chris ,JOfln.'oiOI'W' 01

.:m !lit..,.
.:n1 tn

RJMBLE -

noses Into the turf after being

Gallipdlis to host area
h90p shoot finals Jan. 15

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1\ Nallonal F'no tball lA·~ Sl)llw:\matl '
said, lvM'f'\'1'1", lhat rhr lolaffil' rl(M' 1!1 sflll
srlwdutro tot.· \)la.v «&lt;ln MlnOl•uJX&gt;Il,.;.

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KANSA.~ CITY CHIEf'S!-PIIk'C'd 'tom
Condon, oflrn:U\'t' guard, on lhr lnjul'fd ·
l"f'S('fVr lis!; sl$!nt'd .Jameo; Wallwr. llfw.

n1M111a baC'k, on tbr lnjul'l'd R'R'I'Vf' ILI\1 .
Sf. J.f&gt;U IS · CARDINAL.c;....Ac'tlvafed ,'
·
Van«' &amp;:-dford . ~k.
TAMPA BAV BUCCANEF.RS- SI.I(fiC'd
Rk k ~·r. NMII\tl: bor;.

NBA Results
I

PAC'KF.R S-

boclwr.
·
SAN DIF.l .O CHARGF.RS-i\('1fvaiC'd
Bob Gl"('fi!Gr. .'ill ~l' l)' : ' ptOC&lt;'d Rld&lt;,V fkil.

Orlrolt ill NN' v f:trk Ha11J:('I':'. t n l.

\

40

HIP ll)d. game - Don. G~ J!l'l; Zcrra

An,l!f'kl

MondiQ''!&gt;! GIUIII'

•

BAY

1\1:11\'aiOO

tblon 111 WlnniJXl!. 1n 1.

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MOnilnsGiorteo

55
43

CR F.F:N

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I:JI 1.&amp;2
l2'i It';

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Hartfont al Buffalo. 1n1.
lif&gt;troll 1111 Toronto. IR) .

H

December 21, 11182

59

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~&amp;wllntJLa.­

71

FOOI'RW.
N*'ioftlll Football lA~'

FJo&lt;~;tun ~ . MlJUlf'!j()!;• .1
FAmonton M, VancotiVf"'" 1

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· headache?

•

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Washlnifon 4. Har1bl'd -1 . llr
NN.' "orle lt:.tn"'" ~. N(&gt;¥,• JN''S&lt;I ~' :!
PhlladMphi4 li, Calgary :1
Prfduy'" (OIIfl'lo.,.
Rulfalo 5. NN · Y«k lslan&lt;t:&gt;r:'i ·t
[)Mrol t -1 . Chk'IIIW 1

Rndney Supply, Debby Barcus 163-4a!:

.,. CUllom Print
SlmmOra 01&lt;18, Ca~utac
. and Chev.
T1le Fabl1c Shop

14

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64
66
68
75

Pta.
92

Ia All£lil:os

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Convenienl Food Mart, Sheryl ·walters
181-4ti6: Robbins &amp; Myers, Hazel Holly 233,
Carolyn Lockhan 541; Johnson 's Marker,
Gate Ferguson 2011·548: Jordan's Gas Ser.olce,
Marty Huntli&amp;525: Fedel)ll Mogul. Sharlene
Dlxon L'l7-444; Tim's Body Shop. Vloler COx
182-~: Bl~ Basket. AUeen Long (sub)
196-516; Bryan's St'!vlce 1 Center, Shlrley
Shobe 1594431 Sue's cerarrucs. Sue Holley
173-!:07; J'.!l Food Mart, VenlttaSmlth273-539:
Fetty's 'free Selv\ce, Cindy Jones l!ll-512.
,Converting gplits: The 3-10 split · wa s
oonverted by Loutse Green, Joyce Russ.
VlrginJa Grover. Aileen Long, Mary· Robinslin: lhe 2-7 by Pam See: the 2·10 by carolyn
Burton and the 5·10 bY VIOlet Cox.

Teom
Two's Company

\lanrouvr1'

H • Jl
)."\• }1

'l'llun.da)r'~t GMRH'Io

Are you driving a

INDIANA PACER"\..:-"fipdro . lotwln~·
nt\"bi, ,ir~Ji~rd. lo lt11' Atlanta Hawk.'i for
t ·iL&lt;ih and a !I«'""nd-roorv:l draft pktc Wl

'"

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1 16.1 In

. 16 16

Cn t~ary

WooLoot

60

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".I

II 196 L~

19

WlnniiXl!:

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58
57
. 56
M
52
45

7 14:1 1:.!1

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rF4oonlnn -

BOWIJNG BELU; BOWIJNG LEAGUE
STANDINGS OF DEC. 17, 111112
41
52
54
57
58

17

N!i~ktnlll ~ A~'illlloll

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79
68
66
63
62

1i lfiti llfl
M 17!• \~

17H - Iilll!+IOO
Hart brd 111 "rl
5 ]ljj Hll
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19

MAIN· OFFICE ;,.,_ GALLIPOLIS, OHI.O- 446-3144

Le-

Sue's Ceramics
Rodn&lt;YSupply
- Convenient Food Mart
Bryan's Service Center
JohnsOn's Market
J 's Food Mart &amp; Dell
Tim's Body Shop

21 9
:.!1 l(J

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Local bowling

TEAM

8.\.'iKI':rBAI.L

AdWI~ DlviNon

. Mont mil
IMI;IIo

. •'

.Cioood Circu~ TV &amp; SuMiilonce Syotema
•Phyoiclt Security s.......,. &amp; Cons!AU~Iion Service
•Radio Diopatched Service TechnlcioM

ro n1rac1

N.t.llaoMIJb-kt')'L.·~·· ·

'

.u.L Ce!tifiod- lnsurance Approwd

.

By 'lbi• .-\!otlotiMk-4 Pr.r;;,

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Direct Police

Gk&gt;nn
Hubbard. !'M'Ond. }JalW'fllal'!.. to a ftvl"- ~ill"

DlxQn and a 34-yard field goal by
substitute kicker Bobby Rayrlxmd.
It was the first of his collegiate
career.
But tiM! Razorbacks finally
wArmed to the new offense with 161
yards rushing on 26 carrtes and two
touch.downs by Gary Anderson and
a . pair of _fourth-quarter
touchdowns.
.,
Anderson scored Atitansas' first
· two touchdowns on runs of 16 ·and 1
yanls. Quarterback Tom Jones,
. playing his final collegiate game,
added a 3-yard· touchdown pass to
Jessie Clark and ran a yard oil a
keeper In the fourth quarter to put
the Razorbacks over the top.
"I feel this was my brightest .
moment as a college player," said
Anderson, voted the Razorbacks'
most valuable player in the game.
"The I Is theformatlonofthefuture.
The comer was Openallrilght.Ijlist '
can't say PRough about theotfPnslve
line." '
'
Arkansas' comeback spoiled a11
outstanding performance by •
Hewko a!ld Dixon, who set a
Bluebonnet Bowl record with their
three· touchdoWn performance.
"We played
great otfens!VI!
game ourselves and have nothing to
be ashamed of," Fiorlda Coach
Charley Pell said. "I give aU the
credit to Al'kansaS for coming back
the way they did. They took a lot on
their part, to beat a great team.''
Dixon caught elg~t passes for 106
yards en rout!' to his thl'eeiD-catch
perfonnance.
~·r lhought Dwayne Dixon had a
truly outstanding gartW. IJ!,lt he's
been making catches like that all
year," Pell said. "He just hasn't

01\TORS

Jones

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-----:-----......--------- ·. ,,
UPPER RT. 7

GAWPOUS, OH.

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Times-Sentinel

1983

· b~t keeps ~· out ' 'o f its ·.affairs

''

By JACK A. SEAMONDS
~laied Pre,s Wrller
FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - Little
has changed at Marathon Oil Co.
''
nearly a year after U.S .. Steel Corp.
bought it In a $6.2 billion deal that
was the second largest corporate
takeover in history..
.
Mara thon was the nation's 17th
largest oil company wllen It was
acquired by U.S. Steel, the "white
knight" that rode. In after · Mobil
Corp. began bldding fortheFindlay -'
based company.
·' U.S. Steel promised · to keep
'Marathon in Findlay and to
mainta in a "hands off'' Jl!)licy.
Since
\
· the m erger. industry analysts say
U.S. Steel has done just that.
In a series of inter.vlews, oil and
steel analysts said Marathon Pres!,dent Harold Hoopman continues to
have a tight grip on, the company
because U.S. Steel J&lt;nows little
about the oil business. ..:
.There have been no h_igh·level
corporate shakeups at .Marathon,
no disposal of Marathon assets and
no policy that requires Marathon to
check With its parent rompany
before buying paperclipsordrtlling
COMPUTERIZED EXCHANGE ~ Richard Nie- Cincinnati system is the only a\ltomated auction
in the North Sea.
hoff, left, watches Mona Leiker as he works at a market system on My exchange In the United States.
"From the view from the outside
computer Inside the Cincinnati stock exchange. 11le (AP Laserphoto).
and also from what I've heard from
the inside,
jus t like it used to be. "
said Findlay Mayor W. Bentley
.. Burr, a retired Marathon executive.
"It's almost like U.S. Steel never
acquired Marathon.''
But a year ;1go, Burr said.' 'There
was a lot of apprehension. It was a
tense Christmas all right."
By TERRY KINNEY
nance in Cincinnati that is supposed
· The ordinance also sets aside 7
When Mobil opened the bidding
i\ssocialed Press Writer
to set aside 15 percent of' all city
percent of the ciiY's ·supply con- • for Marathon on Oct , 30, 1981, by
CINCINNATI !AP I - There's a construction projects for minority
tracts and 5 percent of allprofes·
Minority Business Enterprise.ordi· · contractors.
sional service contracts for minor-'
ity businesses.
But contractor William Cargile,
who is black. says that ordina nce is
being subverted by illegal application of regulations. including thE'
~lect officer.~
pr,aclice of some black contractors
CINCINNATI !API - A phone
who act as "fronts" for white
booth
inscribed "My First Office"
J ACKSON - James 'Cochra n of Wiseman Real Estate, Gallipolis,
contl'I\Ctors in order to qualify for
stands
in a com er of the Stora!(e
the set-aside jobs.
·
·
was elected president of the Southeastern Ohio Board of Realtors at
Trailer
Rental building. reminding
the group's recent m~ting a) the Fairgreens Counf.I)' Club ..
"The city fathers did a good job in
Herbert
Hicks of how it was
owner
Bruce Teaford of Teaford Realt y, Pomeroy, was • designated
putting the ordinance on the bOoks,"
when
he
opened
the business.
president -elect. Clyde Walker was named secretary and Betty
said Cargile, 55, the son of a form er
hotel
manager, Hicks
A
former
Hairston, treasurer. Both are also employed by Wl;.\man Real
Alabama sharecropper. Cargile •
didn't have a n office, a phone or a
Estate.
migrated to Cincinnati and founded
.
storage place lor truck trailers
Outgoing president _Winnie Blair of Century 21-Winnie Blair
his construction business In 1968. He
when
he decide&lt;,! to launch his
Realty, Jackson, was honored for her service to the organization .
contends,that administrators make
company in 1974.
·
it too easy for unqualified blacks.
had
an
ad
in
the
paper.
People
.
·"I
and ~chenlingwhites. to graboff the ·
wo~ld call the . answering service,
lucrative contracts.
c·
I'd go to a pay plloneand return
and
· "We have as many 'front'
COLUMBUS - A 4 -for·3 -~t~k split on all Bob Evars Fanns, .
the
call.''
Hicks said.
contractors in Cincinnati'as we do
Inc. -issued common stock ha s been authorized by the company's
For a while, friends In the
minority contractors," CargilE' al,
board of directors.
business
let Hicks store his trailers
leged . ."A guy.can be a laborer one
Shareholders of record Dec. 31 will receive one new share for each
at
their
lots.
Today, Hicks operates
day, and all of a sudde n he'~ bidding
. three owned on the record date, explained Daniel E . E vans, board
out
o'fa
small
building with a large
on $2 million to $3 million job."
chairman.
gravel
lot
that
contains about 100
C~rgile is suing the city, contend·
Cash will be paid in lieu of fractional shares on the ·basis of the
trailers, the type that·are attached
ing lhat it should reject a bid to build
mean between the bid and asked prices of the company's common
to trucking rigs.
a downtown parking garage subshares at the close .of business Dec. 16, adjusted for the split.
Hicks said he got Into the business
mitted by a joint venture that
Evans said the stock split allows .e ach shareholder to more fully
includes former University of
participa te in the company' s growth through receipt of additional
Cincinnati and NBA basketball star
shares and dividends. The same dividend rate, adjusted for the
Oscar Robertson.
4-for-3 split, will be maintained. This will be 75 cents per s!)are
Robertson, who is black, is
quarterly, or 30 cents per sha re annually.
"fronting" for a white contractor,
Frank Messer &amp; Sons Con,struction
Co., Cargile a lleges. He contends
that his company has the expe~
•STRONGSVILLE -Nearly $1.65 million of equity refunds have
to do the wor\&lt; being contracted and
been returned to dairy farmer members of of Milk Marketing, Inc.
Robertson's company does not.'
(MM!i in December, upon approv&lt;\1 of MMI's board of directors.
One of the provisions of the
"With this refund for 1982, the tota l redemption from MMI to its
Minority Business Enterprise ordl·
members wUI be more than $9.3 million since MMI was organized in
nance is that the minority·owhed
197ll,' ' according to Don Schriver, director of membership relations
business have major Interest in 'the
and public affairs.
project ,and be in control of the
RECEIVES CERTIFICA·
The current redemption is going · to members and inactive
day-to-day work on the project.
farmers who had been with Miami Valley Milk Producers
TION
- Lawrence D. BrogiUI,
Cargile, who argued his ca,se this
president
of Brogan-W~r In·
Association, Central Ohio Cooperatl'(e Milk Producers, MILK Inc.,
WeE:k~ befo~ Hamilton ~ounty
Services,
214 E. Main
suriUice
Cincinnati Coopera tive Milk Sales Association and Wayne "
Common Pleas Judge Thomas
,.jt.,
Pomeroy,
bas
recel~ed a
Cooperative Milk Producers under a plan developed before the 1978
Crush, contends that the bid
m erger.
"t!ertifled Insurance COUIIOelbr
submitted by Robertson· s company
All equities with total value of over $18 million from predecessor
designation from the Society of
was .Incomplete because it did not
cooperatives will be redeemed by l!lffi, Schriver said. , .
Certified
Insurance Counselors.
comply with rules regarding sub·
Certification
will he officially
, "This is in line with board policy to have a l(}.year revolving pian
mission of flnancfat statements.
confened
on
Brogan at the
for members financing the coopera tive, " he said. "The ability to
Robertson could not be reached
:---~~l'l'(Jeem,neJmber&lt;"JUoltiEsisi1 he resultofMMI'scommitment to keep
Professional
Insurance
Agents
for comment despite repeated
the ownership in the hands of the users. Redemptions are paid 10()
State
Convention
to
be
held in
phone calls. His attorney, Robert
percent in cash."
·
May.
BrogiUI,
whoseniaJorarea
Brown, says Robertson's firm js a
of study was Insurance .inc!
December's refund figures do not reflect patronage refunds for
legitimate minority enterprise.
the year ending June 30, 1982. Additional allocations wUI be
philosophy, is a 1973 Ohio
The joint venture in which
· determined by MMI's directors at a later date ..
Unlvemilty
graduate. He and
Robertson'is involved submitted the
his
wife,
Patty,
ll.we tbnie
low bid of $2,146,001 for general
children:
KeUy,
SluimMin
and
construction of \,lie parking garage.
Erin.
: ·'
~·

~

it's

Black contractor criticizes .
city's mino~ity ordinan~e

·

bec·a use it usually qtanages to
weather recessions witllout serious
difficulty.
" We're one of_ the lasl to feel the
effects," he said.
Nonetheless, Hicks' business has
felt the economic pinch, an'd hesa id
he doubts profits wUI amount to

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolis attorney John E . Halliday has been
e lected a fellow of the Ohio State Bar Association.
·
A,soclatlon fellows fun(llng efforts allow its foundation to be an
educationa l and charitable organlzaUon dedicated to advancing
knowledge of the law a nd improving the administration of jus tice.
'

File for incorporation
COLUMBUS - AJ11Cies of Incorporation have been filed with
Secretary of Stat•.. , Anthony J. €eiebrezze Jr.'s olllce .by Robert
Campbell an\1 Nancy Campbell for Heml_ock ~lpeline, Inc., ·28MO
' Tanners· Run Rd,. Racine.
,
Ten shares were filed. with Robert Campbell listed as agent.

'

• GREENVILLE, S.C.- Multimedia and Stanwood Corp, intend to .

sion for licenses. IQ conduc · ellular radio operations In Charlotte,
N.C., Ashevllle, N.C., Kno,.:Ule, Tenn., GreenvU!e-Spartanburg,
.
·
·.
S.C. and Wichita, ""n. markets.
Cellular radio Is a recently perfected communications and
electronic technology enhancing !,ISefulness and availability of
mobile telephones installed In cars and other vehicles.
Thls..technology has other applications In the mobile el~tronlc
communications business. Stanwood, an apparel manufacturer, IS
headquarted In Charlotte.

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#0

PARK

of 409 First Avenue home

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JIICk 6 Jilt's
'0
G&amp;J Auto Parts Com~
Fronch City Preu
T- · • Studio
Boor's Su.,.,.....tcet
Fruth PherrniiCV
Tho Jumbo
, John10n's Suponnarkot
r
Spring Veley Ci""'""
•'
Span About of Galipolis
Holzer Clinic
O'Dol Lumber Cot!'PI"'Y
Mill Sondy Filch
Wills Tn Cort1&gt;env
Mia April Curr,
French City
&amp; Hilcenl
Mr1 . Sharon Tocllen
WJEH/ WYPC Redia
Mr~ . Ruby Jriins
Glllpolis Dolly Tribune
Mr. lYon Mayo
Ohio a.- Thumb
Dr. Ruth Cowloo
Bob s..-. !luolcer Stalll
Dr. o., Notter
.Go...... s City Schools
Mr. Bil Ward
Gol!ie Comty Loc:ot Schools
Mr. &amp; Mro. Randle Simpoon
Ohio Volley Chriltlen Sc:lloQI
Mr. Jim a...,.
GoHia Acedemy Fntnch Club
Mr1. Mll1ho Wilil
Johnoon &amp; Johnson l'ooducb1. Inc . Mr. &amp; Mn. Tom GNbo
!lrnericen Fontst tnltituta ·
Mia Lynne G Gollla Comty Boy SCOUII
Mr. Doug '--•
Gollie County Gio1 Scouts
Mr. &amp; Mro. Cert Cameron
South)Nestom Band Boostlll'l
Ml• V\ivlrU 'Tirpak
Bidwel 811eball 6 11d ietion
Mill Kolv Belley
Gollia County Hiatoricoi Society
Mr&gt;&amp; Mn. EdWMI Coudll
State Farm
Mr. ~ Flold .
Gollia County Ewtension Service
Mr. &amp; Mn. Bon McGun
Century 21
Cfntral Trust Company
Mr. &amp; Mro. Rev Balcer &amp; Famlv
Mr. ll!&gt;rdon Ohio Historical $ocieiy
Mr. &amp; Mn. Tom J"'*
Ohio
of Natural R-.roos
M". &amp; Mro, G«&gt;rge Woodwanl. Sr. Par Mar OM
•
Mr. &amp; Mro. Tom Woodward
G.C . Murphy Company
Ml• Jocllia Knight
Otlio Volley Foodllnd
· Mr. Lorry Burnette
Tho Krog.- Company
Mr. &amp; Mro. " - ' Reynotdo
Go"""'l Stote of Rio G,.ndo
Mr. K., Tomtl-. Game Protector Royool Crown Bottling
'
·,
Mr. Klngsiay Meyer
·
Con- Food Mart
Mr. Gerlond Om
KMn11 of Oollpolia
Mr. Don Ebort
Jonklno eo.-..
Mr. Lonce Clllfon!
McDonold'o R-.rom
MDrr. Drew Tod(l .
_
o.!!s •• J-vc. Mllg.- HU110n
Golllpollo Chombor of Co"'""""'
Mr. 8 - Tunw
Gollia Comty Aninfal ~ Loog ..
MFI.
R.N.
Zoloold C1v11en eo.-volion ~
•
Mr1. lnmlio Abolo. R.N.
itoc:kwoodomot!MUIZie Loading Rlfte Club
Mr1. Oonill Nl&gt;ort. R.N.
19th Spoolol Forwo Group- ·.
'
Mr~ . Tondy...,_..
' ~82nd•
Mr. Ilion Somuolla
d M...-. Ubrooy
Mr. Ben Cempbol
llllllpallo ~prnental Center ·
..... HThe 1\,.glotliio
·
·
Mr. Kim Nye
, ~of Youth-Mr. DIM Dot10n
Gollla loll &amp;
Dll1rict
Mr. Dannolly
. cieltpolo
·~v
·,
Mr. Weyno Ro•
F....... City F16riot
Mill ~ - Drlgoo
Golllpollo Rotrt Club
Mr· I&lt;AIIth a-MI
Oollla Comty T-Botl
,' •
' Mr. FtodDan . Oollla County Unlt.Amoolcon
Soclolyl
· Mr.po,_
Crown-City Mtnlng-U.M.W. I..Ocol 21110
Mr1. 1'111 SwtMr~. DNnne Cool&lt;
Mr. 0oorvo Woodword. Jr.
Mr. John llloke
Mr. F..- Clarf. Jt.
Mr. Bob Eowin
·
Mr. Hamid Montgo"""Y
Mr. Allie 0.1111
Mr. Jim Morrison
Mr1. Carol O'Rourke
Mr. Richerd Roderick

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Lid.

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c..._.

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HOM ELITE.

330 Chain saw
I •

••

"*'"'"""

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Koran-..

FOIIHISAiD
. 018112?arrt
.CIIIII • .

-

~idanour S.PIIIJ
OniiF,IIIt
.

..,.

v-

w- eo.-

Mr. Tony .......

':t......~ ~'!&gt;"''...
.........., n

~

dn•• of..._

..,_.........,Lid.
Moun•..-• Inc.

\

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c.-.

v-,,..,_ i - Agency

.

Cornnwclol&amp; ....... Bonk
Gollo County Work-Study Progrom
Nol1h 0o11a. ~- 11onnon T....,.
Kvuor ~ &amp; 0o111o ""' 'rny Bondo

CHAPTER ONE ranges from
TilE LAST PART of this volume
African slavery in America to the
is blank and lined for boo~eeping
Missouri' cornpromtse, occupying a
purposes, and names in 1887 were
dozen pages. Separately It gives a
D. A. Russell, w. H. c. Ecker, John
tabulation of a couple of rollealls ., • Dages, J. W. Gardner, John H.
Following that is a section of four
Evans, and Leroy Pickens.

ONE OF PEEPS' obetter Christ- ·
mas gifts was a telephone call from ' ·
his sister, Mary D. Peeps, also a
native of Gal) Ipolls . .Peeps hied to
can his favorite cousin, A. Don
Pope, In Florida, but six times a
recorded voice said nope; the
circuits were a ll overcrowded. All
five Columbus Peepses were here
Chrjstmas Day, and one of themthe youngest - stayed a week.

.:, Rohf(rt Warth origin~l owner

The 0, 0. Mcintyre Park Commission and staff
wish to thank all those who have donated manpower,
•
equipment, supplies, materials. technical assistance.
and financial contributions during the past year. These
gifts are ~ply appreciated. ·
·
.
Best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New · •

Year!

and a half pages by Gen . John A.
Logan, in one volume octavo,
pointing qut that the sale will be
only by subscription. .~or prtc~s
ra nging from $3.75 to $10.

BUILT IN lMt FOR Robert Warth, thlll boule wu Ulled In lhe fll'llt
decade ol the IIIIUJ cea&amp;ury u the Marine Hoepllal. Warth 1110111 Ukely
, utilized part ol the hallie u oltlce &amp;pace, wllere be could oversee'Ids
, :r aawm10, ptotmlll, IIIGre, and llleamboat '"••bey. ·During tile 1830s
~ Wlirill wa,~lhe lao-geat shipper ol gndn to the soillh In GaDlpoll&amp;

••

DISTRICT

I

of months ago. It's unusual In the
sense that It has chapter titles and
SU!flmartes. However, It gives
Chapter I .:..., a prellmlnary retrt).
'spect ...:. ,In Its entirety.

'&lt;

muc h this year.
- ~··~
Businesses that might rent trail- "~
ers from Hicks are culling back, -~
leaving less demand for trailers. ·
•
•
"People don't carry as much '" '
inve ntory." Hicks said. "And rotl- :~
s truc tlon is way down, so we don't :
rent to many of those s ites. "
:

1982 HONOR ROLL
0. 0 ." ·MciNTYRE :

THERE'S AN extraordinary little volume which Jack Grtffln, 500
LeGrande Blvd., lent to Us a couple

. ,,

o_.,_,

Entering radio market ·
me joint applications with the Federal Communications CommiS-

GALLIPOLIS- Peeps Is writing
this for Jpn. 2, 1983, and that's only
18 years untO the end oftheceqtury.
Some baby born In 1982 :_w11! be
graduated from Gallia Academy
High School in the June, 2000,
commencement.
. ,-

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a

c

VBy J. SAMUEL PEEPS

"

Authorizes stock split

Halliday elected fellow

,Q

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Dairy farmers get refunds

Some baby born in 1983 will
graduate.from high s~hool in city or county in year 2000
PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary: ·

...

offeringSII5 a share for stock selling . waged on thl'ee froJ\ts - financial, :
·at .$55, many of Findlay's 36,00J
legal and public rel!\tlo~ . While ·:
Marathon dtrectors shopped for a
residents panicked.
'
corporate suitor and the lawyep;
This is a rompany town. Marathon's ties to Findlay date to the 'threw paper at each other, the oU
company took Its case to the streets.
mid·19th century, the Wlldcai days
Marathon employees in three- ,:
wl}en the old Ohio Oil Co. sunk we lis
piece suits paraded to lunch . •
across northwestern ·Ohio. Hoopwearing, basebaU caps bearing tile ·
man ls the first Marathon president
company's!rademark, a big red. ·
who , wasn't part of Findlay's
"M." Signs appeared In shop&amp;' on ·
Donnell family, founders of Ohio
Main Street boasting, "We l...oVe .
Oil.
Findlay residents feate&lt;Mllat If Marathon." Red ribbons were tied. ~
to trees at Findlay College, where :
Mobil acquired Marathon !t would
move the C\)mpaDy headquarters to
the football team is named tile ::
Texas and sell · off Marathon -Oilers. Hundreds rall!ed In tile~­
streets.
•
refining and marketing operations.
"Sure, part of the battle was ;
An Internal report prepar.ed for
selling Findlay aas small-town•~
Marathon put the company's asset
value at 'IJE;&gt;tween $189 and $226 per America being attacked by the big :
share . based on its oU reserves,
corpora~ giant, Mobil'," conceded ''
IJ)c!Uding a -~bstantlalpercentage · a public-relations consultant hired, '
by Marathon. "After au, can you
of the YateS Field In Texas. The
YateS holding was the crown jewel
Imagine anybody In Manhattan rallying for an oU company?" .
of M&amp;rathon's assets. It Is the
largest' oil field in the continental
When the l'vfllr.aUlon·U.S. Steel
merger was approved March 11 United States.
"The perception, anyway, was ranking only behind the $7.8 billion
Dupont takeover of Conoco - U :S.
that Mobil just wanted one thing
Steel chairman David Rodertck
(Marathon's domestic on repledged that he would not"upset the
serves), and the rest of It could be
sold off and forgotten," . said ·a munlctjlal peace." Marathon would
stay In Findlay, operate independ·
Marathon executive who asked that
•
his name not be used. "And I think .ently and continue to drtU for oil.
"So far as our local position ts .:
there was.something to that."
Marathon Is Findlay's biggest concerned, nothing has changed,'' :::
said Don Herring, ,Marathq!l man·.:
employer, with 2,:nl workers, and
ager of press and publications. , ~
its biggest source of tax revenue.
"There have been some changes
"The loss of Marathon would, of
cou~. have been devasta ting to
Since U.S. Steel took over In "'
Findlay," Burr said. "And that's
financial and accounting systems. ;';
But aside from those areas. there •
.w hat everybody expected Mobil to
do, move Marathon out .''
has been very little con tact with U.S. , -.
Steel.
The struggle against Mobil was

,.E ntered mobile ho.ite business
because of econpmic durability ·

Business Briefs:

Realtors

'

W. Va.

Ohio-Point

By JAMml SANDS
the Warth Sawmlll, the Warth
Special Correapolldeot
General Store; ·and the Galllpolis
GALUPOLIS - The pta,qtie on
Boat Company.
the front of the house at 409 First
The boat company, which was
Avenue reads that Robert Warth
located also llear First and Vine,
was the original
when the
became after 1839 the Gaillpolis
s~tute was put
Machine Shop which manufacup In 1824. The
lured flies. In 1853 John Gray was
Warth family, .
running the machine shop. It was
.Which lived In
probablyusedd_u ringtheCMIWar,
Gallipolis for
but this area around the old boat
many years, was
company works fell Into disrepair
an Interesting
after that and In the UB:ls there was
one. The
an old wharfboat parked here that
GA111polis
was Robert, who
was known as Madame M's Dive.
came to thle Old French City from
In 1B87 Madame was tined $25 IUid
Marietta where his father had
given six days to leave town. Her
served as an Indian scout, an
"girls" were fined $10 and the men
occupation that eventually caused
caught here were given only a $3
his death.
fine. ·
AFTER ROBERT Warth's fallYoung Robert became an apure In lll39 he remained in town and
prentice sUversmlth probably to
JoSeph DeVacht and by the 1820s
ran a §lllall store untO his death.
owned his own shop on Court S......,t.
·
111e·
Store
was · near. Second and
UG"'
'I
About the time Warth was buUdin~
Court. Th~ Warths had several
his house, he had branched out Into
children but the most Interesting
the miWng business, establishing
was Julia Warth.
In her teens Julia was recOgnized
both a sawmUI and a grtst miU at
. VIne and First Avenue (on thertyer _,as "the belle of Galllpolis.': She had
bank). Warth attracted so much
a score of admirers. She 1was not
·. business to his rnlJ1s that he soon ·only beautHul but slle was a noted
• deemed It advisable to develop a .. actress In the town~s dramas and a
poet as well.
, quicker way to get · his flour 19
market In Memphis, Tennessee,
Her populartty was not confined
IUid New Orleans.
merely' to Gallipolis, for 'suitors
It was In 1931 that RDbert Warth,
came from Cincinnati' and Pitts·
· Gen. George House, Charles
burgh to court here. One famous
MU!er, and WIUiam Clendenin
lawyer by the name of Colonel
organized~ Gallipolis Boat Com- , Blackburn had apparently won
pany to make steamboats. On Nov.
JuUa's hand In marriage, but at the
2, 1831 the first boat was finished .
last moment she backed out. She
Wrute lbe Ga!llpo!llliewapaper: . gave no reason.
"Sbe made a del~ plullge IIIIo
JUJ.JA WAS never to wed,
tile river aad no accident
though she often con1ided to her
: .oecurred."
,!
friends that she had Wtshect that she
, That first steam~! was approphad taken Colonel Blackburn's
, rlately named the Galllpolls and It .. offer. Blackburn did marry. In
; weighed 65 tons. The Gallipolis was
Julla's later life she became almost
: actually the ,serond steamboat
a . recluse 1 sitting In her room
made In town, the first was the
writing reams of poetic verse. But
Scioto made In 1823 but It was not
strangely she never allowed
made by the Warth company. ·
,anyone to read her poems and none
From 1932 to 1839, six other • or them were ever published.
•
steamboats were : made by the
Julia was given a job at the
Cincinnati Ubrary in the daytime.
: Gallipolis Boat Company: NavaAt night she wrote her poetry. Only
rine, Jack Downing, Invincible,
Crusader, .Medoc, and Gallant.
one person was ever allowed In
. We have ·an Inventory of cargo
Julla's room and that was the
tOr the Crusader for thE!·year 1836
woman who did her grocery
iutd Included were: New Orleans
shopping. When Julia Warth died,
'· molasses, ttgs , tea, pepper,
· a 1.
some satu that she died of a broken
heart over one decision wltlch she
: moods, spenn candles, raisins,
: Havana sugar, whale oil, French
later regretted. Ironically Colonel
Blackburn became one of the
: briUidy, and Cod fiSh .
The steamboat bad made GaUl·
wealthiest men In Cincinnati and
often Passed Julia on his way to
: polls accessible to the whole world.
; IN 1831 WARTH had sent a large
work each morning.
· shipment to New Orleans In several
As to the house at 409 First ~e
; flatboats which . Warth's sawmiU
know that In 1907 It served as the
: bad made. The man 1n charge or
Marine Hospital and that for the
: this shipment abscol)ded with _last sever~ years it has been In the
· tbousands of dollars. Creditors
Wetherholt family.
I.made a run on Warth's assets and
Box 112, Clarksburg, Ohio, t:Jll5 Is
: 11!! was ruined. Going into bank· the maiDng address of Jarpes
~-~~!P~Y ~Warth Flour Mlli,
Sands.

STEREO·
COMPACTS,

'

! Doonesbt~:ry in hibemation
'

,' By DOLORES A. BARCLAY
AMoclated PreM Writer
, 'NEW· YORI&lt;; (AP) - Jollnie

TAPE DECKS&amp;
MICROPHONES ·· RECORDERS

• Caucus, that bel.oved fen\lnlst who
: totters on the brink of cheerful
: gloom, ls a mom. That much we
1 know. 11le last we saw of her, sbe
l \llllS h~ her lnf;1nt fion l!(ter her
: entire childbirth class\ ifelped her
: give birth.
.
But It will be at Jeasi 20 months
·I before fans will see 111m toddle
l across a cartoon panel, or even
' team his name. The characters in
I
'
,
~ "[J(x)nesbury,'' , Garry Trudeau's
l lrri!verent comic ship, are going ·.
: Into hibernation as Trudeau gQeS on
• sabbatical,
·
: · "Doonesbury" enthusiasts are In
I.a frustrated frenzy, fiddling with
.
'
1 re&amp;Olutlons to other untld;v sltua·
Still, there's a tlttleclgar-chewlng
I !Ions: WW B.D. Join the Dallas
: Cowboys? Is Uncle Duke in Jall? · frog who's married to plump
; WW camp'!-' ra~al Mark Slack·
princess In the comic strip, "COn: meyer mo:-:e In with his establishrad.'' His fans think he has a gooct
, ment , father? Wlli the nuclear·
shot at filling the' "Doonesbury"
: freezenewsletterputoutbytheRev. · void, There's also :the brand new
·: W.S. Sloan be a supcess? Wlli
sirtp, ''Rudy,'' which makes Its ·
• Zonker HaJTis ever achieve the debut Mooday. Rudy Is a talldng
: ,quintessential sun tan?
· chlmpal1zee who also fancies c:tgars
1
"Coones bUry," whoae ·last panel' IUid Willits to make a comeback in'
: ~ran today, 1'111 be missed In the~
show biz,

33°/o To 40°/0 .
OFF ~ ·

40°/o To 50°/0

OFF

ANTENNAS

290/o ~ 430/o

Off

.' ' .

1•

,

VHF~· Tv

AUTOSOUND

10°/o OFF

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SECURITY
DEVICES

Hl·fl EQUIPMENT

· 38°/o To 46°/0 200forn50o/o Off
Off·.ELECTRONIC·
TOYS

.
.'

CALCULATORS
44°/0To 75°/0

..

OFF

' In, and
newspal_lers It has appeared
many of the papers say nothing can
take its place.
• · "We're · very ,unhappy about
losing 'Doonesbury, "' said Stan
Wyman, city editor of the Corona
Dally Independent In "RRverside,
Calif.
"I donlt think there's anything on
• the market right now that can
replace 'Doonesbury' In 'the hearts
and minds of those hardcoreaddlcts
IUid fans," added Tom Wilrk,
·I ~late managing editor for
features at the Philadelphia Inquirer, which has carried · the
Trudeau ship for more than five
years. "They're justgoingtoluiveto
suffer until it returns, and I think It
wiU. I certainly hope so.''

•

Off

31)0/o rn 32o/o Off

~

'

RADIOS .
19°/o To 69°/0 .

I

30°/o ro 50°/0

Off .

&lt;.

.
. le Items In different stores, but all .
Different ~ ded with budget plellsers, many
stores are oa h . Hurry In for best selection .
not mentioned ere.,
.
.

i
I

,,
..

'10 Off!

S~4reo

Low-Cost Deluxe
Headphones ' cassette R~rding 11De IBattery Tester
Novee-40-by Realistic

Cut40o/o

Realistic"

·~

r ·~ ~~

By Micronta•

21•10 Off·

88
Reg.
7

9.95

· TesJs most regular and mercury

..
.

batteries, including nickel-cadmium,
walch and camera types. Ranges:
1.5/6/9/15/22,5 \/Oits. #22.()30

Check Your
A DIVISION OF TANDY

I

·nMor Dealer Nearest·.......
MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

�,.

...

.

·.Page-~ The Sunday Tim&amp;Sen.tinel

•

)

JanUary 2, 1983 ~.1

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Poinl Pl.cnant, W. Va.

Farmers' .credit cut off·. as loan ·boom ends ·

January 2, 1913

-.' . . ""

...•'
..•
~

.
.
feed with his com. Roesler said he "•
1~-"
.
·Lenders said they were working
t!on, ,a federal flnanclpg agency of capltalpurchases,cutti!Jgexpenses
was certain he could have !IOld the
Bank vault doors were s-winging more clolely wltll farmers; they
last resort for fal'fllf'rs, paid off the and taking a second job. Evenso, It's
cattle at a profit. Efven so, the ,
widehecausethevalueof·fannreal
want to know that !be tanners Will
PCA and and extended Powers
predicted that at least 50,0ll farms
FmHA decided It was not wise td :.
estate was rising by up_to a! percent
be able to keep.up With bill•.
m~ credit. But not for long. .
.
will fail In 1983.
secure
a loan tor a man whose debts :,
a
year,
Larry
Canon,
president
of
the
At'ler about six months, the
Farmers borrow from comffierexceeded
his assets by more than a
But USDA surveys Indicate farm
FmHA decided Powers; profit "Cia! banks, life Insurance compan·
Lancaster State Bank of Lancaster,
qwp-ter
oi
a miiJion clollars.
land value dropped 1 percent Wis., saki his bank had three
margin was too slim and cut hlmoff, les, the Prnduction Credit AssoclaRoesler
said
he has done all he can
nationwide In 1982. Many predicted
full-time loan officers who haNlled
essentially leaving lllmwithjustone tlon and Federal Land Bank
to
d!g
out·from
his de'!ts·
.
:'.
choice. The farm aucllon was ln. Assoclatlon: The.lattertwocaterto
the decUne would rontinue In 1983.
farm lending, and each one spends
H~t bas cut prncluction costs.
...
agriculture alld operate along the
"EVen though everylhlng else at least 00 pei'Celit of J1!s time In the
__...~~:~~b:y the Department of March.
"I stopped fertlllzlng two years ·~
lenders , farmers and ,.
was working against us," .saJd / field, elWnlnlng everytblng fl:om
Powers Is out offarming but up to .Jines of a ·credit union. 1lley ·are
ago. I've l1linlmlzed tillage, ind cut
who- believed land values .Ills cap brtm In debt.
regulated by the government but
Roberi Roesler; a South Dakota
crops ,and Uvestock to balance
rise forever and export
"! had optimism, dreams and a
use no federal funds. Local PCAs
farmer, ''you had your tanci bellind
sheets.
back on Insecticides and !le-blcldes•'' ··
We ':q'o with the : absolute-...
marke:ts would cure whatever ailed
vision," said Power s, who now Is
provide short-and lnterrnectlat~
you when Itwas tlme.tor a loan. Now
"We're going out to the operators,
'.(~
'' ·
'
necesiiUes.
. ,_
American agricUlture. ·
making the ~t projectiOns we
even that's slipping away."
studying ior the ministry at Hesston
term loans lor prncluctionexpenses,
He
has
.
·stopped
buying
. ~·
Powers started out ;n 1965 with College In Kansas. " Butalltheroses
Another factor In expansion fever can," Cars&lt;~( said. "Solid loans
for such tllings as seed, fuel and
equipment.
'
WJO and 68 acres of rugged land turned to horse manure."
equipment. Land banks provide
don't IJ&amp;ppen by accident."
was the popular beUef that export
"I~ whatever I can, but It's still
long'tel1il loans for real estate. The
near La Tour In west -&lt;:entral
markets would. support U.S. farm ·
As well as restrlctlni new loans,
Powers, 45, believes he would still FmHA, on the other hand, has
wearing out. ·'· And that's going to . •·
Missouri. He borrowed money, and
lenders are clamping down on
prncluctlon. But, undei'Ciit by devel·
catch up to you sooner or later.''
be farming had . he not expanded generally served 1 farmers who
delinquent ones. 1lle FmHA set a
grew . And borrowed. And gl'I'W.
opments such as the 191lJ grain
with sucli zeal. Had Ills appetite for could not acquire credit elsewhere.
He cannot afford farm hands. ·' 1
And borrowed more. ·
embargo, theforelgnmarketswere
goal 11 . collecti!Jg 70,000 overdue
rot
been
so
voracious.
Had
In
the
past,
lenders
could
otter
"Apy'snotgolngtocomeoutand ''•
money
a
disappointment.
·
notes
by
the
end
of
f1Jca119113.
By the end of the decade, Powers
work
for peanuts. So my family and , ,
that
money
not
been
dished
out
so
credit
secure
In
the
knowledge
that
'Nevertheless, Monte Reese, a
Roesler, the Soutll Dakota
was planting 900 acres of rorn and
Itry
to
work 24 hours a day."
reMIIy.
Inflated land was pushlligfarmers' . sjlokesman ior the Fer!eral Land
other crops. His few hogs had
tanner. so zealously heelled the ~all
He
haS
Utile life away train the ·,
"Theymatleafeatherbedforme equity skyward. Even ·l1 the
become a few hundred. His sheds ·
Bank In Wichita, Kan., satd It would
to expand and plant fencepost to
farm.
~/
to lie on, and then it burned right out borrower got In trouble, they
brimmed with modern equipment.
have been "very Improper" for a
fencepost that he Is deeply In debt
"Weusedlllgooutfordlnner.Now .·
from under me," Powers said of the
reasoned, the FmHA In many cases
A new lrriga lion system and grain
lender to suggest to a farmer that
and Is considered a poor risk for
we stay home and work or worry
lenders. ''You know, I rould
would be there to cover Ills ·notes
storage bins were i!Jstalled. Powers
el!pa~lon was not to Ills benefit In
further FmHA loans. ·
··
bijslc'IIIY sit down at my kitcl;len . through refinancing. Now, With
was making a good living.
the 1970s. ~ ·It appeared thattluitwas
Roesler-alll'l'e5, to a point. But about ho)V we can keep our butt ·
the way to go," he said. ·
untUafewmonlhsago,hebadhoped above water/' he said. "I suppose ,.;,
Then came the 1~s. with soaring tableandwriteout aloan.Itwas just · agriculture In .a recession, the
It's justa matter of time before i sell
FmHA has taken over a steadily
With land value and rommodlty .to borrow still more money Interest rates and depressed com- · too simple."
or get foreclosed."
out
Jim Powers' plight has become a
Increasing number of farmers. At · prices sagging and the FmHA modity prlces. Beyond those wor$300,000 to buy cattle he wanted to
'
ries , Powers' farm was strlcken common one: Eronomlsts and 'the heg1nnlng of 19Sl, for example,
under pressure from the Reagan
'
analysts. farmerS and lenders
FmHA held ll.9 pel-rent of all
with drought and a swift, deadly
administration - restrlctlng Its
non-real estate farm loans. In 1981,
agree that many problems In
swine disease.
lending pollcles, farm credit today
14 percent. In 1982, almost 16
Suddenly. the only thing getting agriculture today are rooted In
Is ronslderably tighter.
free-wheeling
credit
practices
that
percent.
bigger at t\)e Jim Powers farm was ,
"Not too IQng a~ a fal'fllf'rwould
grew primarily from Inflated land
In1979foreclosureandllquldation
his debt, a pile of bills that totaled
ask for a loan to buyvnepenofcattle
..
values.
·
of farms WIth F.rnHA loans was weU
almost~ ,Oll. Hecouldn 't keepup
and his lender . would after llim
not nibble while doing other tllings.
Del .Wilken, a University of
below 1 percent. In the first three
with the interest, much less lhe
enough to buy two," said John
By &amp;tile Clark
Allow yourself only one moderate · , •
llllnols extension economist, said
quartersof1982, 1twas2.75percent. · Junior Armstrong, president of the
County Exteasloo Apat,
principal.
seivl11g.
Try portioning out food ,
the vast majority of the nation's 2.4
While net farm Income was
In mid-1981, Powers was·dropped
Kansas Farm Bureau. "That same
Home Ec-mc.
moving from $14.2 billion In 1970 to
fanilernowwantstopurchaseapen
GALUPOLIS- Do you have an before you bring It to the table. . "
by the Productkm Credit Associa- million farmers would survive the
Use a smaller plate than usual.so •.. ;
recession
by
falling
back
on
saVI!lgs
an
estlma
ted
$19
bllllon
In
1982,
farm
ofcattieandhe'stold
to
buy
just
half
annual
year-end battle of the bulge
tion. his source of operating money.
make
your. portion look larger.
a
pen.
"
and
always
lose?
Maybe
Y.OU'd
was
shooting
from
$53
bUllon
to
from
prosperous
years,
delaying
,
debl
The F armers Home Admlnlstra Eat
slowly so you'll feel full. ,
Lenders
are
not
as
concerned
now
like
to
start
the
new
year
off
with
almost $:m bDllon. Although many
Savor
and
enjoy every bite of food . ,
with a farmer's net worth as !hey some new habits that wlll,help you
factors had a beari!Jg on these
Try
putti!Jg
your fork· down be- ...
are with Ills abUlty to pay Ills bills.
rontrol your weight.
figures, It's apparent farmers
tween
bites
to
help sloW you down ... ,
"You have to ask, 'Are we doing
Here are some ti(l6 from the U.S.
borrowed more than they could
and
no
eating
with fingers while ., .
tills man a favor by keeping llim 1n
Department of Alirtculture's nutrl·
afford.
, ..
your fork Is down.
tlonlsts on how to control the bulge:
"We went through an easy-&lt;:redlt business, or are we doing lllm an
Choose
foods
that
you·u·
have
to
Injustice?'
~
'
said
Earl
Bullington,
Plan
'your
meals
and
snacks
syndrome In this country," said
work at to eat. For example, It ·,.
presldentoftheCaruthersv!lle,Mo.,
ahead of time. Haphazard eating Is
Ma'rvln Duncan, a Federal Reserve
takes longer to eat an or:ange than ..
often lligh · calorie eati!Jg.
Bank economist In Kansas City . PCA and the' Association of Mls·
to drink a glass of orange juice. · . .
Write your shopping ·nst when
.. And the go-go ~king and sour! PCAs. "You can't Imagine
· When you get the urge i o eat •.
you're 1191 hungry, and go grocery
farming of the 1970s has left some how hard a decision 1~ that is.
between
meals, do something else -,·
, . shopping on a fuU stomach. That
unfortunate l)angovers In the We're really on the tlrlng line."
By Bryson R. Carter
cover such topics as 1) Farmers
· way you ' won:t be tempted to buy
Instead. Sweep the sidewalk. Pollsh ,. ,
County Exteusion Agent,
questions about crop and llvesi.ock
extra. goodies.
. the car. Walk the dog. Anytlling to
I
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
~tlmates, 2) The Futures Market
Cut back on lligh-&lt;:alorle snack get you away from food ;
••
and how It worJ&lt;s, 3) Undersandlng
GALLIPOLIS -Our first annual
Stop eati!Jg leftovers when you . ·
·- foods . It you havelo buy them for
"Farm Marketing- Risk Manageterms used In marketing, 4)
leave the tabte. Don't be the family .,
the rest of your family, store them
ment School" starts Jan. '1:7 and
Marketing alternatives for· grain
out _of sight. Or gel another family
garbage disposal unit for leftovers. :
runs through March 10. There will
and livestock, 5) Cost of production,
member to store them so you can't
It your Idea Is to keep from from •.•:
be six sessions totaling i5 hours of
6) 1983 Acreage reduction program
find therr..
gonlg to "waste", remember If you . "
Instruction (three sessions on . -· for wheat and feed grains, 7) ..
Eat only when sitting at the
eat It, It will go to "waist" :
'·
WASHINGTON !AP I - Just as
-Among European prospects, a
Thursday afternoons · a nd thl'!'e
Marketing strategies: Periods
kitchen or dining room table. Do
Americans Dock tostoresdurlng the buyer In the Netherlands wants rice
sessions on Thursday · evenln~s . )
available to price a grain crop;
holldays, foreign buyers also have and syrup: an ltallim rust&lt;imer
This school is being sponsored by
selecting the best posSible market,.,
'
year-end shopping lists. They want would like regular shl!iments of
the Ohio Cooperative Extension
tog option for a specific point and
heifers, eggs and even fish heads. Kentucky bourbon, In ban-eIs; In
Service and we'll be c?nductlng It In
time, 8) Demonstration oi ACRES
the
Agriculture Department says.
Sweden. the't Is dema(ld for prtme
CIRCLEVILLE, Ollio (AP) Before leaving the PCA office, , ,
he .)ackson PrQductlon Credit
- Farm Bureau Computer netThe USDA's holiday weekend rose oil; and an Austrian company
Farmers whb organt!zled a tractor- some farmers said they may
work and 9) Reviewofmajorpolnts
Association bulding, Upper Rt. 7,
report on export needs of foreign wants protein-rich fish meal.
cade to protest poilcteS by the organize a convoy to the Columbus ·: 1••
Gallipolis.
plus choosing the· most profitable
All farmers , farm wives, famUy
alternatives.
buye'rs shows how wide-ranging the
West Germany. a big market for
Prnductlon Credit Association say office, wllich nversees operations In .,;
they may bring a convoy to severalcentralOhlocountles. PCA·. : ,
members and Agri-business perThe dates are Jan. '1:7. Feb. 3•. world .marketlsforAmerlcanfarm . U.S. agricultural exports, Is a
potential market for "mushroom
Columbustogetsomeanswers.
officials In Columbus rould not be, ·,
rommodltles.·
sonnet In Galllll and surround_lng
Feq. 10, Feb. 24, March 3. and
Ohio and West Virginia counties
Mal'\!h 10.
•
Issued weekly during the year. spawn for the cultivation of Shll·
About 40 fai'Jilf'rs rode their reached for roflllllenl Thursd!ly .:, ;
are Invited to participate.
··
___ _
the report is complied by the ,Take, oyster mushrooms and o ther
tractors Into this central Ohio night.
~ ,
department's
Foreign
Agricultural
.
species
of
mushrooms
that
grow
on
rommunlty
Thursday
to
protest
Although
PCA
Is
..
owned
and
.
Each family and/ or firm Is
Don't forget the Farm Income
Service from inquiries received by straw pr wood."
what they called "unfair pressure" operated by tanners, protesters .' , ~
Tax Workshop this coming ThursInvited to pay a $15 registration fee
agricultural attaches stationed
Other Interests In West Germany
by PCA to get loans repaid.
complalned that the rompany has . •
(covers all who attend from that
day, Jan._ 6, at the Columbus &amp;
would like wines, beef, seafoods,
"We're just trying to find out the diluted . the voting strength of . .
Southern Electric Company buld· · abroad, and other sources.
family or firm flfr the entire school)
Aceor,dlng to the last issue of 1982. snack Items and sugar substitutes. ·
direction of tills Of'lanlzation as to farmers who challenge Its policies. .. :,
to help defray expenses for refreshlng In Galllpolls. The program runs
here arle some of the brief trade
-In Colombia, a buyer wants
loans 1n the county, " farmer ,Larry . · Thetractorcadewasorganlzedtn
ments, publicity, telephone compu-.
from 9:30a .m. to 3:30p.m., lunch
leads theagencymakesavaUableto some seedless raisins- five metric
Sheets told the Columbus -Citizen. part byofflclalsoftlleFamllyFann,.
t.er hook-up and out of county
will be on your own. Main speakers
U.S. exporters and others who may tons to start with. That's more than
Journal "We just want some Movement, a group that bas ,
speaker travel expense.
will be Delol'!'s Waugh, Carl i and
be
lntereste!l
In
selling
specific
ll.Oll
pounds.
Otherfrult
prospects
answers."
recently gained a large central Ohio ,.
Mary Keebler from H&amp;R Block.
Folks may register at the door,
items:
Include
the
United
Arab
Emlrat~.
Afte
0
1Je
drl
f
Olli
f
· otber tllings, the ..,.
but It would belp a lot with our
The event Is being sponsored by the
'"
r a ve-m
ve rom
o
oUowlng. Am
. ong
- Peru wants to buy2,0llHolsteln 50,0)) cartons of apples- abou1 40
Route lOti and U.S. Route 22, ·the group has protested the pressures ·
Buckeye Hills Career Center Farm
planning If you would pre-register
dairy heifers, and Tunisia wants pounds per carton.
farmers from Plckaway, Madison brought by lendlng $0mpanles at a • ,1
by Jan. :zo. Our address is Gauta
Business Planning Analysis Inl,IXXl. Two other dairy-minded
The report said that arompany In
and HJglliand counties arrived at time when low prices a~ forcing .u1
• County Exenslon Office, 1502 East·
structor, E. Glenn Graham with
customers are Egypt, wllich wants Japan'- the!argest foreign buyer of
the PCA office.
'
many farmers ou! of business.
.
ern Ave., Galllpoll~ . Ohio45631. Our i assistance from the Gallla County
to
buy
cheese;
and
Ecuador.
which
U.S.
agricultural
productswants
Ross
Pickard
of
the
PCA
apFamily
Farm
leaders
say
lending
telephone Is 446-7007.
Exlenslon Office. The workshop IS
is Interested In powdered milk.
100 metric tons of fish heads. large
peared before the protesters at one Institutions thai refuse to negotiate', .'~:,
I'll be glad to rnaII you prog(am
open 'ID all local arid surrounding
- In the poultry category, the and of any variety, for use as
point , but '!ffered nothing the with tanners will resulr In many .,..
details so you will have a better
farmers or Interested personneL
Idea of what Is in store for you. We'll
UnltedArabEmlrateswants frozen fertlllzer.
farmer:s wanted to hear.
farmers havi ng to se11 out .
.. "'
chicken; a Nigerian rompany
It the Initial shipment Is satlsfac"We reaUydon'thaveacomment
Sheets, who said he'owes PCA $1 ' ·
would like to start a joint poultry tory, the buyer wants 500 tons
to make," Pickard said.
million, said he had been told by the" •r,
venture; and Jordan wants 2,1XXl "regularly thereafter." A metrlc
Dave Jordan, a member of the companythathebasunti1Jan.l5to~ ;:
metrictons offrozenchickens.
. tonlsabout2.:mpounds.
.
group that organized the protesi, repay the money. Sheets farms ):
De
Rl h rd
ha
Venezuela, the report said, Is
said, "They really didn't sa~ 2,0)) acres ln·Pickaway County.
,::
ane · c a son, c lrman
_Interested In shelled almonds In
-'-'
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -The
·
d
r
d
td
th
z1
anything.
'They moreorlesspusheo ·
"I
haven't
been
uncooper&amp;tive,
•
computer shown on the cover of
an co- oun. er, sa
e maga ne
bulk cartons and 1..-.pound bags.
U
uvus out."
but. right now It Is Impossible to se . •'
Time magazine's "Maclline of the
first noticed Ills company at a
Year" lssuewasmadelnColumbus,
Chicago trade show of advaneed
~
Alsofeedgralnsandbaledalfalta.
land,"Sheetssald.
~

By MARK PETERSON
Associated Press Writer
KANSASCI1Y, Mo. (API -~lm
Powers spent much of ·the 1in&lt;i&gt;
taking out loans to buy more land , to
plant mol'!' crops, to acquire mol'!'\.
livestock- to grow, grow. grow.
. Uke many farmers, Powers was
the get-bigger mentality

-

Homemaker's circle

It's battle of bulge time

..

Agriculture and our community

Farm marketing school
will begin January 27

Foreign buyers also
have shopping lists

...

Farmers niay organize seeond convoy

• Qh"10
• .' s computer rnade In
lme
T
and thedeslgncompanytha\buUtlt
says people shouldn't consider the .
choice of a machine as facklng 1n
humanlty.
·

office systems. "We're probably
doing as much In this area as
anyone," he said.
One of the largest lnduslrlal

Crop watchers
keeping tab. .on
developments
elsew~ere

desR lgn rompailles In the Country,
"Some people are upset. They
think lhls . was a dehumanizing ·
lchardson-Smlth currently Is helpthing. But It Isn't,' ' said Mary
lngXeroxdeslgnltsproductllnefor
Colburn of the lndustrlal design
the next 10 years.
company Richardson-Smith. "The
City National Bank &amp; Trust Co.,
~rsonal computer is a gl'l'at
which Richardson-Smith renamed
advancement for humanity. It can
Bank One, has been one of the firm's
· tree people· to do many other biggest clients through the years.
things."
.
· '
When developing. prototypes, of
Time, wllich since the late 1920s
products. ,Richardson-Smith n orhas been naming a " Man of the· mally tllinks five to 10 yei'rs ahead.
Year" annually, this weekcho8ethe
ikl\ Time want!!() something that
personal computer. It says. the
would be recognized by today's
machines !).ave had a tremendous
public.
effect on people's lives this past
Allhough the magazine has been
ye~;~r.
.
at the. center of controversy this
To depict the Invasion of the
week because It chose~ macllineof

FacilitY said Thesday that In the
.Soviet Union during !he week of
Dec. 19-25, wet weather "stretched

the Year instead of a human,

east from the Baltic states and

r

computer tntp the American home,

Ttme

commissioned

sculptor

George Segal to sculpt a pair of

human figures· sitting at computer
terminals.
.·
. esaJdltchoseSegalbecause
nm
or his "stark and dramatic settings
•In which tbe •~ eye is dra~ 'to
· ob'ects."
.
J
object Is. the personal
Ccimputer, but
didn't want to .
appear to be endorsing lillY particular brand, 10 It ~
RldlardsOO-Smllh to create one.

· The

nme

Richardson said the choice was
apporxoprtate.
.
the 50 employees working for
him, Richardson said, half purbased
t
c
some onn of. J]ersqnal
romputers for Christmas this year.
In add!Uon, electronic mernocy
chips are being used In hundreds of

to

&gt;

Jt (a corniJUter),''
RichardsOn said. "But you already·
are using it."
J,UJe

(

'

1

•i

~·

$
~
~
•1

' ~

DEADUNE FOR PURCHASE OF 1983 DOG UCENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. TWO
DOLLARS ($2.00) PENALTY IF UCENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR
YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPUCAnON BlANK AND MAIL TO TH!'
COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE FOUR DOllARS
($4.00) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE. (KENNEL UCENSf PENALTY IS
$5.00·.)
.
·
·
·
·

~

;t
~

~

~
~

Mate $4.00

Spayed Flllllllle $4,00

~ ·.

· Kennel LicenM $20.00

' r - t e e4:00

~

owner:a Narne ••·••••••••••••• ; ..................... ~ ••• •••• ,,,,,,,,, , , , ....... n.·-·········

The Joint Agricultural Weather

andtelevtslonsets.
..~le say, 'Oh mY God, I don't
want

THE 1983 DOG UQNSE
GO ON' SALE DEC. 1st

WASHINGTON (AP) - As
f;1rmers and other residents dig out
of the latest winter storm to punch
through the U.S. midseetion, govemment crop watchers are .also
keeping tabs on developments In
otherpartsoftheworld.
One Important agricultural reglon Is the Soviet Union, where
fall-planted wheat and other winter
cro(l6arewatchedclosely. · 1

everyday items, such ascalcula'tors

~

3 .'
'!

Add ............................. •·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••• ·
'.
, ·
,

:;

Townthip •••••••• , ••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••• , ................................................. , ', •• ~..

-A

Belorussia, extending Into the
noHrthemportionsoftheregion."
owever, the report said, "SnoWcover Is scarce In major winter
In
· " r the Sovle Unlo
gra areas o
t
n.
which Is "making the crop more
wlnerabletowtnterkilllntheevent
ld
of a co .outbreak."
In ~urope. continued heavy rains
in central France produced local .
nobding, while 1n southern SpaiD

• ·.
·
.
·
:····· .... ·~1
:· ~
~_- ·;·g;.;.;d··:·~·:
,
If
•
:• y AGE
: SEX •,
.
•
•
•
• y-"---·:•
HAIR
:•
:• .-n-.t...a :
M · • M F • BDc • --......... ,
• T
•
: '·
o.:
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~---llllliii!-- -----~ ·DcMudi., CondM. . . . County Auditor

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Broken arm causes
problem for wom~n··

MIDDLEPORT..A former Mid·. case for McKesson · &amp; Robbins
dleport reSident, r:tlarles L. Brooks, Drugs.
Is heading SCORE lri Mansfleid as a ·
"We pioneered Toni Horne
part of Ills retlrerJient .a ctivities.
Permanents..remember them? I
Brooks grew up In Middleport went with Armstrong Furnaces In
wl)ere Ills father, Charles LBrooks 1949 and was a salesman forthenext
'looklngup!
had il Ford dealersllip. He went to 10 years. We moved to Mansfield In
Middleport High School where he the summer of 1959", Brooks states.
Pomeroy Pollee Cllief George
SSY!i, he learned the JRs .. reading,
"I formed Mansfield Motol(i and
'riling and Route · 33.
After started selllilg VW's. There· were
Stittlsmorelhanappreclativeofthe
graduating •trom Middleport High only 13 VW dealers In Ohio and
. excellent cooperation lie Is recelvSchool In 1940, he · rrioved to Kentucky at the time. Beetles went
•ing from the department of Sheriff
James J . Proffitt and his lnvestlga- · Columbus wl~ his parents and for $2,0ll fully equipped. I had the
tor, Gary Wolfe, and the PrQsecutattended Qhlo State Unlv~rslty.
dealersllip for a! years. I sold out
He gilt his social security number and retired In 1978'', he r.eports.
ing Attorney Rlcll Crow and his
trivestlgator, Paul Gerard. 1lle two
In 1936 through driving speedboats
Srooks as one of his retirement
county departments have exerted
at Buckeye Lake receiving $10 a ·-activities Is thechalrman-presldent ·
week for the chore. He was 14 at the of Mansfield 's SCORE. Score
extra effort.. In working with the
POII'leroy PoiJce Department with
time and resided In Middleport
stands for Service Corps of Retired
the result being that crlrn~ are
when not driving the speedboats · Executives which Is sponsored by
across Buckeye. Lake.
·
being solved. Chief Stitt orters' a·btg
the U. S. Small Business AdminisIn the ROTC atOilioState, Brooks
thanks!
tration. It also stands for brains,
went Into the army In June, 1942 and
ideas a nd know-how . It's a volunArizona Stewart wasreeentiyone . spent three years as a howi12er
tary, non-political organization of
of three peopie honored at the · Instructor at Fort Bragg. After
retired busln~ssmen and women,
coui-lhouse because they were discharge In December, 1945, he and Its roster Is a l'l'gU!arwho'swho
!'!'turned to Ohio State and received
·leaving their jobs. Two of the
of ·retired Mansfield business peohis bachelor of arts degree the
three-·Jolm c. Bacon and Henry
ple. The primary purposeofSCORE
following June.
.Weils-'are rettrtng but not Arizona.
Is to help small businesses solve
His first job was lugging a brief
She'sgoingontothejobmarketnow
their opera ling problems and beand is nowhere near ·retirement
-age. It's customary for a new
common pleas co)lrt judge to bring
In his own office help and since she
Daily 10-~
bas been working for Jlldge Baron
who Is leaving, Arizona Is out of
Sunday Hi
work tor the time bei!Jg. ·

.•

ByBOBHOEFLKJI
You'll be sorry to hear that Tunl
· RedoVlaii Is having problems- Thnl
iS one of ~ bright, cheerful
people ill !he llves ot many.
·
In late November, Thnl was
putting up .the tatnuy Christmas
tree and fell . tram a stool. She
received an arm · fracture--and at
first, you think, "well-that's not so
bad." Wrong.
Tunlls unable to move her right
hand and Is trying to walt patiently
until she can·see a neurologist and
!hal won't be for some time. It
seems that IJelU'(lloglsts are booked
heavily.
By the way, the start or' the .
Sentinel has voted· ' Mrs. · Jolm
(Nellie) Redov!an, Tunl's mother,
ln·law, of Bergholz, Ohio as goodie
maker of the holiday season. We
received a great samptlng of Mrs.
Redovian's cookies and candles to
munch on ·a t the office: Fabulous!

'

. and February.
rome better manager s. ·.
Brooks had been Involved In a lot
. , Brooks operates four rental .
of conununlty organizations and
'properties doing a lotofminorhouse
maintenance and lawn mowing. He ·projects over the years'·ffi,tary
Club, Unive rsity Club, Westbrook
Is a member of the Fun Center
"tlub , Chamber of Com .Country
Chordsmen si!Jgtng In the bass
merce
a
lld
the Ohio and Nation,•I
section and handling the group's
Auto
Dealers
Associations.
public relations. Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks head south to Sarasota. Fla.,
. where they annu a lly spend January

Oil from tires
CHETE~ . Wis. (API- A hOt-air
Systein, In opera tlort here produces
oil, methane-type gas and other ·
by-product s from old t ires, acebrdlng to an energy Industry
·publica tion.
·
·
Energy · User News says 'the
process; called pyrolysis. extracts
origina l component s from a substance by subjecting i1 to hot air heat
up. to 800 . degrees Fahrenheit
wi1hou t a flam!'.
The tires are no1 direclly burned
but rat he r arc "gassdied" or
decomposed imtll the various component s are separated, the journal

.

says.

CHJVtLEs L. BROOKS

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

Mike Roberts, formerly or Pomeroy and son of Mrs. NongaRoberts;
Pomeroy, and the late Bob Roberts,
has an outstanding , rollectlon of
Meigs COunty memorabilia wllich
lie · maintains at Ills home .In
Newark.
Wonder it we are getting our
The collection has been ~ed to
lhe Meigs COunty Historical Society ; share.
Secretary of Agriculture John R.
In the event of his demise-and
Mike's hOping that will be some Block reports that after one year of
tlmeaway.
.
operation the special dlstrlbutlon of
Mike Is currently compiling surplus dairy products has reached
iotormation, with the Idea of 10 million people with more than 135
publication, on Meigs County stenmllUon pounds of cheese and 8.2
cUed stoneware. This ware Is · rWIUon pounds of butter being
generally gray or tan with cobalt ctelivered.
Block reports that distribution of
stenciled . letters--sometltnes sten:
surplus cheese and butter will .
cUed or free cobalt designs or
ornamental designs are also pres- continue through Dec., 1983, and
ent. In Ills personal coUectloo, Mike stresses the need for continued
has a! different examples and he lnvolv.ent of the private sector
has also positively Identified and
and vOT'Iinteers In the distribution.
·
I only recall pne distribution of
catalogued 10 other types. Mike
feelS that several other varieties cheese beingmadelnMetgsCounty.
I'm sure our people neect help as
also exist .
Mike says that specimens are much as any others so If we dldn' t
known represenllng one or more . get our share In 1!1l2,!et's hope we do
merchants In Pooleroy, Minersbetter In '83.
ville, Syracuse, Racine, Letart .
Falls, Long Bottom, Rutland and
Harrisonville. He suspects there
· Louise Gilmore sent along a New
may be as many as 50 or more types
Year's card ..shedoctored It up with
with other Meigs County communia photograph reading, "remember
ties betng represented.
Mike
the good years" and of course, the
would be happy to purchase--at top card Is aimed at a belter year for
doUar..any type he doesn't own but
Louise's beloved Cincinnati Reds. I
is eager to catalogue any pieces he can't Imagine the Reds having a
doesn't know about whether or not better supporte~ anywhere. I think
they are for sale.
It's time they honored dedicated
Mike is also eager to acqllire any Louise.
pieces made by "J' ' or "Jehu
Roberts", Long Bottom, Jehu
You'U bedellghted. Inl983 youget
RobertswasMike'sgreat-uncle. To to purchase another sticker for your
round It out Mike says he's autollcense. Thlsonedenoteswhlch
Interested In acquiring any old roWJty you Uve ln. The ad!lltional
llislorical or aclvertlslng Items, cost Is :1:&gt; cents and the sticker Is
photos, postcards, etc. from Meigs ' required by law. The idea Is to help
County to add to the already pollee officers more readily identify
extensive collection.
vellicles for enforcement puqJOseS.
You can communicate with Mike
By the way, remember til Meigs
·at 840 Elm
Newark, OH., 4311i5. · COunty you will continue to get your
license from the Deputy Registrar
MlUie and Gerald Shuster, Pome- of Motpr Vehicles at lhe comer of
roy_resldents who are constantly on Lasley St., and Mulberry Ave. A
the move were " grounded" for the new registrar will be named with
Christmas holiday season,
the change of state administration,
Gerald spent eight days at but It could. be a month or so away
Veterans Memorial Hospital .. before the riew registrar Is set up so
Including Chrls1rnas Day- with a you wUI continue to visit Sarah
respiratory ~roblem and MIUle Gibbs and her staff.
picked up Influenza which kept her
pretty confined. 1lle Shusters are
You have my sincere wish that
recuperati!Jg at their home Qn . 1983 will give you lots of reasons to
Unroln Heights. and · things are
~smillng.....
'.
.

..

Clearance
Ladies'
-Skirts
or

Pants

..,.. • • ~ • •.

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Values'.".-·_tt

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447

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Thermal
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Comfort Top ICnee·hlghs
Nylon/spandex. Suntone or mist-tone.

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(201)

Ou~g. 3.87 .

lundle Of 12 Dishcloths

1 tlm~cgtton/polyester wntfip

weave In

• Men's sizes S, M, 1., XL

plaids.' 13~'' ·

OH2

Umtl2

'1 78our~eg.2.18

presence

•

WITH COUPON
30
LaraeKHchen . .
1.2-mil plastic. 13 gal. With ties.

w

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were

Uml2

~

OUr Reg. 2.6 7

• ' ATLANTA (AP)- Early al~rts. Sllch as warnings against travel,
can help prevent deatha dwing_blizzards, the natipnal Centers for
.
Disease Control says.
The CDC, In Its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, said
Th~Y that the Christmas weekend blizzard wl)lch struck
Colo~ ,"bas ralaed questions/about the publlc healtlllmpact oJ. a

Kodak.Film
Developed And Printed
12 Exp .. ... .. 1.99
c. 15 Exp...... . 2.47
20Exp...... 2.99
Sizes .
.
7
3
4
110,126, 35mm 24 Exp. . . . . . . •
And New Disc'"
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36 Exp ...... . 4.99

K'm,,rt~

A.volable ('lrq

· lnStoresW!IhColeteria

1.77

WITH COUPON
Hearty Barbecue Sandwich Plate
With f rench fries and coleslaw.

KUSTOMAT 4"
Developing And Printing
12 Exp...... , . .. .. _. . :: 3.19
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20 Exp, . . ..... . ..... . 4.69
24 Exp.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5.39
36 Exp............. , . 7.49

1 88
•

Custom processing gives you -full
frame prints on glossy paper. In lux. urious special packaging. Negatives
are placed in protective · sleeve.

0ur Reg. 2.96
WITH COUPON

Quality K mart" Cor Air Filler
For many U.S. and impart cars. Save.

GUARANTEED
Film Developing Service
t===:~;:;:::==:~ OurReg.1.38

Full Fraltle Only

1- .17

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ct\oiCe Ollpray
Paint Or Primer

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lnlerlor I exterior.

R\J'l resistant. Gray

-1lle public should ·be .wuned early qainst traveling unless
absolutely neceuary. .
·
- 'l'hoR who must drive sbould be advised to have extra clnlhlis
and food witll them, and .ooutd be wamed to stay In their vehicles If
¢aDded. Anyone stranded In a car sltoukl be exbaJiely careful
Uling the vehicle's heatllla l)'ltem becauie of.lhectanger'of cari!Qn .

primer or. black or

white paint. 13 oz.'
'NMWI,

=s:·a®

· Qualjty Prints Back ·
When We Guarantee Or
Your Photos Are Frfte

Clllpt,
Crispy. No preservatives or

""""'".....:::::s::o,_,

Dllve1opi1Q onci' Pflntlng o1c-41. no. 126: cr 35t'lYi&gt;
on a&lt;lginol roll qt ~ondard COiOI prn1 film.

ortitt'clol ln. gredlents. 9 oz.'
"Net W'l.

.

-Ho&amp;pltalllbould be advised to sead patleniB home early, IIIIIDII
en.aptaey veiUcles If, neceuary, If IM!l"CfttWd!ng or supply
lborta&amp;8l are antlc!Jiall!d.

·.·

..

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WITH COUIIqN ·

~nHCOUPON

'
tlie report l8ld ail ~ ~ a ·1978 s p 1n eastern
·MauacblllettiiiUIIIftted u.e precautloas:

',I

-SbaQ

'

Regular

ATLANTA (AP) - !!Poradlc cases cff Influenza have begun
cropping up nationwide, leading the national Centers for Disease
Control to forecast a more severe flu seruion this year than last.
LabOratory tests In most calies have Isolated influenza A viruses,
the strain most often associated witll severe outbreaks, the COC said
,
Thursday In Its Morbidity and MortalitY Weekly Report.
An outbreak struck ·a .nursing home In upstate New York, where
about 26 percent of the 240 residents el'J)I!rlenced symptoms between
Nov. 30 and Dec. 16. l.aboratory tl!sts conflnned lhe
of
Influenza A.
An outbreak at a second nursing hOme: the location of which was
rot released, bi!gan Dec. 18, the report said.
.
In Idaho and Montana, Increased Influenza ac~ty has ·b een
reported since J)ec. a!, the CDC said. Abllenteelsm of about a!
percent caused one school to close early fot: winter vacation.. •
of Influenza A have been conflrlned 1n Atizona, Georgia,
, Hawiill and Utah, the CDC said. Infiuenza A cases earlier
reported In Alaska, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
Texas1 Virginia and Waallington.

AllOW d!AI!ter."

o a• ·•~ ·· .,.., .&lt;• - ~ • •

'"'"Hnr- • - -"'·
·-·
"·-··-··-... --.... ........

J

Health briefs•••

·cases

We HonOr

Open

Ct.:

.

linej- Page-C7

Foi-mer ~eigs ~e.sident heads project

8eat of the Bend

l1IOIIOXIde pollonlng. .

..

The Sunday Times-S

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

.

•

�•

•

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P'a;a C I =The Sunday Tim• Sentinel

Pomera~

1~

Janu111p 2,

Middleflort-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plecnant, W. Va.

·

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bus iness slump in the post-World' War II era .
By The Associated Press
The U.S. economy, struggling through Its worst
Unemployment c limbed steadily from 8.5 perC!'n t of
year in four decades,' was.oveiWhelmlngly voted the
the workforce In January to 10.8 percent by
top stacy· of 1982 by J\ssoclated Press newspaper and
November - the highest rate In 42 years. Factorles
broadcast m ember editors.
operated at the lowest level ofcapaclt~ In the postwar
Second place went to the Tylenol murders, a new
period and businesses closed at the fastesi pace in 50
years.
kfnd of lunacy that remained unsolved as the year
drew·to a close. Just behind the Tylenol deaths was , High iWerest ra tes plagued the economy through·
the 74-day war In the Falklands between Britain and
out the year, although a drop of about 5 percentage
Argentina . The death of 75-year-old Leonid Brezhnev
points in the prime business loan rate In the sec_ond
half pumped new life into the stock m a rket. Other
was ranked the fourth most iniportant story, followed
by the Israeli Invasion of Lebanon.
types of interest ra tes· also fell , but the cost of
The Top lQ:
'
borrowing still was high..
I. The nation's economy.
lnllation was the big except ion lo the otheiWise
2. Seven &lt;Ue front 'c yanide loced Extra-Strength grim numbers. The year's ·increase in consumer
Tylenol C"P""Ies. prices was held to about 6 perceni, compared with
3. War In the Falklands.
nearly 9 percent the ·year before.
' •
~- The de.ath of I.A,onid Brezhnev.
The Tylenol Deaths
5. Israel invades Lebanon.
Cya nide-laced Extra -Strength T);lenol killed seven
6. John Hinckley Jr'. is fo und innocent by reason of
people In the Chlca!(o area . They we re unlikely
Insanity.
companions in death - a 12·year·old girl with a sore
7. Massaere tn Palestinian camps.
·throat, a mother recovering from .chlldbir1h . a post
8. First artlflc.lal heart Implant.
office supervisor with chest pa ins and a stewardess
9. Air Florida crush tn Washington.
resting afler a flight. The ta inted capsules of
America 's best selling over-the-counter pa}n I'l'liever
· 10. Football strike.
The runners-up were stories about the results of t he
we re all bought the same day. Wednesday, Sept. 29.
off-year election. P,o1and ouUawlng Solidarity, the
By that Friday a ll were dead, Including a mourning
defeat of the Equal R ights Amendment, the space
husband and wife who took cap sules from the same
cyanide·filled bottle that had killed the man 's
shuttle going operat,ional, the nuclear freeze
brother.
movement gafhlng strengt h, the conviction of Wayne
·
,
Williams in the Atlanta child slayings, the Pan
Johnson &amp; Johnson , maker of the product , spent
American crash in Kenner, La., President Reagan's
$100 million re.;alling its c~psules. Authorities
budget victories. the resignation of Alexander Ha ig
de termined the poisoning occurred locally and not in
as secreta1y of sta te and Reagan running Into the manufacturing or distribution process.
opposition from U.S. allies over sa nc tions against the
The hunt for those responsible spanned the nation.
So did Incident s of copycat tamperers , leading to
Soviet na tural gas pipeline.
ca ncellation of Ha lloween in severa l comi'nunilies.
Votes were ta bulated by awarding 10 points for a
By yeat's . end, tamper·resisiant packages of
first place vote. nine for second, down to one point for
lOth place. The na tion's et;onomy won handily with
Extra-Strength Ty lenol were back on the shelf. Those
4,220 votes. The second and third place stories were
responsible for the poisonings rem ained unaccounted
only 71 points apart with the Tylenol deaths receiving
·&lt;
for.
3,172 and the war in the Falklands 3,101.
Falkland.• War
Tjle Nation's EConomy Argentina and Brit a in fought a 74-day war over the
AI the start of 1982, .the recession was six months
right lo rule the F a lkland l sl~nds in the South
old, iMld by year's end it had betcome the longest · Atlantic, an Island chain of boulder s and bog

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'

'State/ ational

OIINA CABINET
STARnNG AT $188

SAVE UP TO $150 ON
SELECTED RECUNERS
.
.
SEALY and IMPERIAL
-BOXSPRINGS and ~:ATJRESSES
REDUCED 25°/o JO 50°/o
'•

REGULAR $499.95

$249 . 95
ONE OAK

CHINA CABINET
REGULAR $799.95

$399.95

ONE LAIGE 54" WIDE

..

CURIO

REGULAR $1299.95

$699.95
1 SM. AU. GlASS fiONT

. CURIO
REGULAR $389.95

$250.00
ONE 6-PC. AU WOOD

LIV. RM. SUITE
REGULAR $799.95

$499.95
TWO .lOLL TOP

'.

DESKS
REGULAR $699.95 .

$;1~0.00
ODD AND
DAMAGED
PIECES'

UMSEATS, CHAIRS,
TABLES, ETC. ..

'

V2oFF.

'

'

.

&gt;
,
FABI'PACE- AbocJmJq stock li'UII'ket made lor a leveri.h pace at file New York Stock Exchan~as
lbe mwket set records on several different days lor. volmne 110111. (AP I a rph!IIAI)
·

I

J

. 1/

.v

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inhabited by l ,!m people and 600.000 sheep. Britain
;....,..,.
had ruled the archipelago since 1833 despite a
decades·old Argentine sovereignty claim.
On April 2, Argentine troops stormed ashore at
Stanley. the capital. a nd seized the Islands after a
brief gun battle with a small force of British m arines.
Peace efforts, including an 11-day peace.shuttle by
U.S. Secretary of State AlexanderM . HaigJr., fizzled
a nd Britain imposed a 2&lt;X&gt;mile blockade around the
disputed island chain , which the Argentines call the
Malvinas. The largest British fleet since World War
II steamed for the Windswept islands 8,000 miles
away, The British armada eventually Included more
than 100 ships a nd 25,000 men.
The· Argentine air iorcy m anaged to bloody the
Brit ish fleet. s inklng thecruiserSheffi eldand smaller
vessels, them selves losing their largest wan;hip, an
ancient cruiser, and scores of planes. For navaL
tactic ians. the encounter raised interesting questions
of the vulnerability of ships to air power .
Before the Argentine forces surrendered on June
14. more than l,(XXlllves td been los I , three-fourths
TAINTED TYLENOL LOT - 'This i' a bottle of .
of them Argentines.
Extra-Strength Tylenol from the lot which was fowld
·
·The Death Brczhnev
to have tainted ·capsules in the Chicago area in
Rumors flew that a high ranking Soviet official had
October. Seven people died after taking the cyanide •
died - a hockey gam e on television had been
tainted capsules and tile product was withdrawn from
replaced by a solemn Beethoven plano recital, a
sale around the country, ( AP ~rphoto)
concert was replaced with a patriotic film about
storm of protest within Israe l a nd abroad and named ..
Lenin and television technicians were wearing black
a three-man judicial commission to investigate the · .
arm bands. F inally, 26% hours la ter, the Kremlin
massacre and determine how much Israeli a uthor!·
a nnounced that Leonid llyich Brezhnev, 75, had died
lies knew of the killings while they were going on. In
on Nov. 10, of a heart attack. Brezhnev had presided
Novem ber. the inquiry forma lly wa rned Prime
over the Soviet Union for lB years, longer tha n any
Minister Menac hem Begi n, Sliiiron a nd. se~en other
leader except Sta lin .
officials that they might be harmed by the
The leadership of the Communist Party passed to
commission' s findings,
.'
Yurl Vladimirovich Andropov, 68. a former KGB
chief who said he would continue Brezhnev's
FirSt Aitificial
Heart Transplant
domestic and foreign policies . .
A
61-year
old
retired dentist ·was wheeled into
,
• Israel Invades Lebanon
On J~ne 6, the Israeli army launched a massive
surgery the night of Dec. 2 and ~'"F' the first
· patient. Dr.
human to ri"Ceive a man-made heart.
invas ion across the border Into Lebanon. ·
Barney Clark of Sea ttl e, s~ffered from cardiomy·
Prime Minister Menachem Begin said the
apathy. an Inoperable heart disease. The surgica l
operat ion was aimed a t elimina ting the threat of
team of 20 doctors a nd .nurses was headed by Dr.
Pa lestine Liberation Organization terrorism on.
William DeVries, the only surgeon authorized to
Israel's northern· frontier .
perform this opera tion. Wit hout il. doctors said, Clark
Within six.days the armor-led forces. supported by
might
have died by morning.
heavy air attacks. routed PLO guerrillas from
There were ·a series of ea rly set backs, the most
southern Lebanon and pressed on as far a s Beirut.
ser ious on Dec, 14 when a va lve in the a rtilical h~art
The Israelis a lso clashed with Syrian troops stationed
failed, forcing an emergency operation. DeVries said
in eastern Lebanon's'Bekaa Valley.
the breakdown may ha.ve resulled lrom an
The Israelis besieged PLO·held west Beirut for 11
"overzea lous" attempt to ma ke the hea rt beat too
weeks. By the end of .August , under Israe),t'military
fast.
press~re a nd through U.S. media tion, PLO chief
By Dec. 21. Cla rk was standing on hi~ feet a nd
Yasser Arafat and several thousand guerrillas were
joking With his w.ife a nd daughter In the University of.
evacuated from Beirut a nd scattered throughout the
Utah ho~pita lln Salt Lake City.
Arab world.
Air F lorida Cr:L'h ,
Jolm Hinckley Jr. Not Gupty,
On Jan. 13, a n Air F lorida Boeing 7JI sta lled
By Reason of Insanity
• , A federi}l jury that deliberated 24 hours over four ' millutes after ta king off from Was)lington's Na tiona l
Airport, clipped a bridge and ·• plowed into the
days found John W. Hinckley Jr. innocent of trying to
ice-covered
Potomac River. The snowy cras h of
kill President R eagan outside the Washington Hilton
Flight
00
claimed
78 lives and prompted num erous
Hotel on March 30, 1981. The seven-woman, five-man
heroic rescues.
jury found that Hinckley, because of "mental disease
One crash victim passed a line from a helicopter to
or defect, lacked subs tantial capacity to conform his
other s. h!'lptng five people to safflly before sinking.
conduct .to the- requirem ents of the law or lacked
An offiCe worker, driving home on the, briflge, jumped •
substantia l capacity to a ppreciate the wrongfuliless
Into the water to save a woman who had lost her grip
of his conduc t." That Is the iegal test for sanity.
on the lifeline.
'.
The 27-year-old qefendant showed neither joy nor
'Six
months
later,
the
Na
tional
Transporta
tion
reljef when the judge read the verdltt•on June 21. On
the
blame
for
the
cr
ash
.Safety
Board
placed
much
of
Aug. 9, he was committed Indefinitely to a federal
on
the
n
ight
crew,
for
falling
to
insu!'f'
1
hat
th~
plane
mental ho~pltal , where he. continued to nurture 1\is
• was free of ice and Wrnot aborting the takeoff while .
obsession with actress Jody Foster.
there was still tln;)e.
Th~ verdict produced II" outcry over the Insanity
FootbaU Strike
·
. . ' · .
defense and the role of psychiatrists In the courtroom.
From the time the. baseball strike was settled· !ri,~'
Massacre !n
midsummer of 1981, the word was out: "F~alrs ;
Palestbtlan.Camps
next."
.
· ,
.
~~ .•,
On Sepi. 16, following a summer-long siege of West
.And
so
It
was.
The
contract'
between
I
he
Na
tiort~f
',
Beirut. Israeir troops sealed off the Chatllla .and
Football
League
and
the
NFL
P
layers
As,o;ociation
·
·
Sabra Palestinian refugee camps.
.
. A massacre· followed the Sept. '!4 slayll1g qf · expired on July 15; with no movemenl a t a ll on m ajor . ·
Issues.
·
\
·
·
·
· .
Lebllnese President-elect Bashir Gemayel at his
Christian Phalange Party headquarters. Crtttcs, both . There was no strike duNag tra ining camps- ihe
players had tried that In 1974 and gained nothing. This
tn . ~rae! and .abroad, Insisted that Israelt forces
time thet waited until Sept. 21, the day afw the end of
shOuld have knllwn his Pha!anglst loyalists would be
the second I'eg!Ilar-season weekend .
out for blood.
Th~ strike lasted 57 days. H w~s settled on Nov. 16.
In October, the · Israeli government yielded to a

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January 2, 1983

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

Page-D-2-The Sunday ·Time5-Sentinttl

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallip;,lis, OhiD--':Po-int Pleasant, W. Va .·

January 2, 1983

Economic 'logjam' breaks as
indicators: see recovery ,
!
By ROBERT BURNS
AI' Bwilness Writer
NEW :YORK (AP)- If1982was
· the year of recesslon,l983 may Well
be the year of recovery. .
It seemed clear as Deeember
ended that the rE;'Ce5sion- now the
longest in .the post-World War II
period- had not. But improvement
appeared finally at hand.
The last few weeks of Deeember
brought some signs of a revival in
the depressed housing tndustry, and
automObile, sales perked' up in the

holiday season.

HAPI'Y NEW YEAR ~ Jubilant revelers ring in
the new year Friday night in New York's RockefeDer
Plazll. From left, B.J. Cafiero, Harold Abbott, Mary
Anne Tuthill and Bill Cafiero of Mountain Lakes,
'·

N.J., jOin Karen NoD of College Park, Md. in tooting
their horns before tbe Rockefeller Center Christmas
tree. (AI' Laserphoto) ,
I"'
&amp;

High user fees not ruled
,. out to decrease '83 deficit
•

f··-

may be needed in the new year, and
By .JAMES GERSTENZANG
·
Budget
Director David Stockman
A.o;sociated Press Writer
reported
to have argued that
was
: · PALM SPRINGS, Calif. !AP I selec tive tax increases were unPres ident Reagan has told aides
avoidable in the face of a budget
that he will not seek "seleetive" tax
deficit that, according to some
increases IQ narrow budget deficits
in 19&amp;1 But a White Ho,u se official . ·estimates, threatens to nudge up
against $:00 billion.
sa id in disclosing the dl\:isjon
Friday nigh I thai higher "user fees"
The White House official said
had 'not been ruled oul.
Reagan has . made it clear in
The 5-cenl gasoline tax.)ncrease
administration discussions that he
laking effect Aprill origiri'ally was
does not favor any tax increases,
called a' "1Jser fee" by the While- although he was successful in his
House, and lasl year's miscellane- efforts tow in congressional passage
ous tax increases originally were of the gasoline tax increase,
ca lled •·revenue enhancements."
The president also said Ina recent
The source. requ~g anonym· · news cotlterence that it·would take a
ity, said it was "99percent certain he
"palace coup" for him to support a
will nor accep(any tax increase." .
tax increase in 19&amp;3.
"He feels like he's making
The official said that suggestions
pi-ogress with his program " of tax
of any sort of tax Increases are rare.
and. budget cuts. I he official sa id.
" I don't think it has come up that '
Treasury Secretary Donald T. often." he sa id.
Regan was said earlier this week to
He sa id the president's aides
haVE;' sa id "selective" lax increaseS
"know him well enough" not to

~',

klioWn.WJtll later in January .
Even so, Chase Manhattal\
Bank's economists concluded that
the recession was persisting Into
1983. One thing thatwlllrestraln tbe
economy as It moves out of
recession is a big backlog of .linsold
. goods In warehouses,' the Chase
.e conomisls said. ·
1n other economic an!i business
deveiop\'llents during the week:
-Bethlehem Steel Corp. said It
would ; end _most steelmaking In
Lackawanna, N.Y .. in 1983 and
,reorgan~ operations at two other
plants. The moves will eliminate
10,o:xl jobs and result In a fourthquarter chargeof$750mlll(on to$101
milllon. The company Is expected to
report a 1982 loss of more than $1
bllllon.

Also this past week, the government reporled that lts · main
economic barometer was pointing
to a modest r-eCovery. The Commerce Department'S. index of
leading indicators, which had risen
in six of the previous seven months;
-The government reported that
jumped again ln November.
the U.S. trade deflclt narrowed a bit
Malcolm Baldrige, t~ &lt;;pmin No.vember to $4.1 btlllon, as
merce secretary, ~ld !he eeonomlc
" logjam has been broken," mainly
imports deelined more ' than
because of the sustained drop in
11xports.
-The Commerce Department
interest rates since July,
said sales of new single-family
But even as moreeconomlstssald
houses hit a two-year- peak In
they thought the recession was near
November, jumping 12 percent
an end, there was Utile doubt that it
persisted through November and
from the month before. 'The annual
sales rate in November was 569.o:xl,
probably December.
up !rom a revised 508,o:xlin October
The Commerce Department. for
and the highest sinc;e November
example, reported that its main
measure of cur.rent economic
191ll.
-Stock prices soared early In the
conditions fell _ 0.6 percent · In
week ,'with the Dow Jones average
November. That pushed tthe department's index of coincident
of 30 industrial stocks jumping to a
·indicators to Its lowest point since- record 1,071).5.~ on Monday before
Fel)ruary 1977.
giving up ground later in the week.
The key measures of Deeember' s · The Monday spurt was laid to a lack
such as
of sellers due to the holiday seas&lt;'n
economic activity Jndustr)al production , factory use.
rather than a new or wider sense ol
optimism among investors.
new orders for manufactured goods
-The government teported that
and unemployment - will nol be

suggeSt such thil\gs.
This.source said the only jx)sslble
revenue-increase would rome from
such areas as raising the so-called
"user fees " charged for the use of
certain federa lly provid ed
facilities .
.
Thls would only be accepted. by
Reagan, the official, said, "if iJ
doesn't appear to be a tax increase." &lt;"
The president ended the year
Friday the way he began it, relaxing
with old friends at the desert resort
of Palm Springs.
In comments about the New Year
broadcast by CBS News, the
president said he hopes ''we will tie
able to put every American into a
solid and permanent job. That's not
only hope. that's my prayer ."
He a lso !i3id he hoPes for peace.
particularly in the Middle East, and
for success in nuclear arms
reduction talks with tht&gt; Soviet
Union. '

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON iAPl - Most
U.S. industries will share in a
moderate natlona l economic recovery expected for next year·and a few
high-teehnology " bright stars"
should do very well, according to a
government forecast.
SomP Industries such as those
Involved with heavy machinery and
big airplanes probably won't have
reason to celebrate the liE'W year.
evl)n if recovery from the long
recession arrives. the forecast says.
But there should be better times for
most .
For·example, 82 percent of the212
manufacturing Industries that were
surveyed expect to Increase shipments in 1983compared with only 31
percent whlcb actually saw gains in
1982, said the Commerce Depart·
ment's 1983 U.S.Industrial Outlook.
A summary report on the
588-page outlook, released Friday,
said projections for jndividual
industries were influenced somewhat by an ov~rall forecast that the
nationaleconomywouldgrowaboul
3.7 percent itext year - a forecast
official s now say appears to have

a

Reagan's new_year resolve:

~~~~~~~'!~~~.,~~~~"~!~!'~~

i\~ciated Press Writer
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. tAP) President Reaga n began 19S:Iwitha
plea thai the nation should get its
dmnken dr ivc•rs "off our roads and
gct them off nbw."
"[f we ins ist long enough and
loud ly enough, we ru n save lives, so
1 rho~ghl it appropriate to start Ihe
ball rolling on this. the first dav of
the new year." the pres ident said
tooav in his weekly radio address 1o
the ~a lion.
The New Year' s Day s peech was
reeorded in advance for broadcas t
today. ·hours after New Year' s Eve
rev e lers had ended their
celebra tions.
T he pt'E'Sideftt said that apprqximatety 25,00l lives m·e lost each

the U.S. tradedeflcltnarrowj!da blt
In November to $4 ..1 bllJlon, as
Imports declined more than exports. David Luqd, 'a Commerce
I:lepilrtment economist, predicted
the i982defiqltwUI break the record
of'$:42.4 bUIIon, set In 1978. For the
first 11 months of 1982 the trade
deficit was $.1):1 billion despite a $17
billion decline in the · nation's
.aU-Import bill.
· -The· Investment Company Instltute, q tra!l~ group of mutual
funds, ,reported that assets of oft
nation 's money market mutual
funds plunged $6.5 billion ln the
latest week. That was the seeondlargest drop ever, exceeded onty by
il $8.3 bllUon decline the previous
week. Thellugewlthdrawalofrunds•
refleCted consumers' attraction to
new bank and thrift accounts that
carry no Interest limits, The money
fund group ~ld it also was due to
stepped up holiday spending.
-The. Comme~ce Department
said sales of new slngle-farnlly
houses hit a two- yea~ peak In
November, jumping 12 ilercent
from the month before. 'The annual
sales rate in Novemberwas569,ml,
up from a revised ~.(XX) ln October
and the highest since November
l!Bl. The pickup in sales was due
mainly to drops ln mortgage
Interest rates, government economists said.
-Stock prices soared early In the
week, with the Dow Jones average
of 30 industrial stocks jumping to a
record 1,070.5.1 on Monday before
glvlng up ground later ln the week.
The Monday spurt was laid to a lack
of sellers due to the holiday season
ra tll~r than a new or wider sense of
optimism among investors .

been at least a bit too high. However,
it .also said broad industrial gains
could stlll be achieved.
"The bright stars among American industries are in the high
technology area," the report '\Jid.
Those include eleetronic comput ing equipment: semiconductorS
and related ·devices: games. toys
and children's vehicles: robotics:
surgical and medical instrument s:
radio and televis.ion communications equipment and guided D:~is·
sUes and space vehicles.

~

On the other hand . the report sald.
Industries thai will remain sluggish
in 1983 include makers of machin~
tools, farm machinery and equipment, f~rtllizer and some other
chemicals, big civllian airplanes
and·nuclear power plant s.
·
As for the national economy, the
report said improvement is ex·
peeled for severa I large Indus\ rles
that "hold the key to the recovery
and to long-term econom ic
growth."
Included ·are construction. autos.
steel and savings and loan associa tions- Industries that "had a very

file for marriag~

0

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,

More construction money due

MASS FOR 11IE MARINES - Cardinal Tert'llce
Cook&lt;•, archbi•hop of New York and vicar-general for
th•· U.S. i\ rmed Forces, offers communion wafer and
win&lt;· to -a n i\merican Marine durin~ New Year's Eve

•mWI.r

·-

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I
~···

muhinational peacekeeping fol'(.oe in Beirut. ( AP
Laserphoto).

Govern111ent contracts· keep
tire ·manufacturer in black
.

WARREN; Ohio (APl - Eight
~ears ago. the ,llny Denman Rubber
ManufactUiing Co. was near failUIP. unablC' to competf' wllh the
na tion's big tlremakers and struggling to find a business niche.
Like many companies, Denman
turnf'd to thC' ,fC'dcral gov~rnment
for help. But the company didn 't
want a loan. It wanted business.
Government contra cts fo r speciallv tires arC' a big reason
Denman's ~W employees wm·ked
full time. with no layoffs. through
the rcecss ion that st~nt unemployment in 1982 above 20 percent in the
Mahoning VallC'y.
The company recently landed an
$IDl.OOl conrmct to manufacture
.-l.fffi tirrs for m,ilitary machinery
·t ransport trailers. a contmct Denman P~esld&lt;'nt Robert Wcbslersa,id
was larger than most .
"What Wf' rpally live on is two or
three -smaller coni ra c ts running a ll
the time,'' hE•'a id.
Denma n. reportf'dly the nation's

'

smallest tiremakct . dropped the
manufacture of passengPr car tir~
and ordinary truck tirPS eight yean:
ago in the .company's life -saving
reorganization.
With thP headquarters for four of
the na tion's largest tire companies
iess than ;;() miles away in A.kron.
Denman was being squeezed out of
the markk So il met with the
United Rubber WorkPrs local.
which represents employees at the
plant . and agreed to m.'W work
standards and piece-work rates.
Denman producE's about 700,00J
tires a year at a ratcof:I,(XX)a day in
a bout 40different types. Anavera!(e
car tire weighs about 28pounds. but
Denman's ,a verage tire weighs
abou t 50 pounds.
!nst&lt;'ad or competing with the big
companies.' Denman now works
with them . The. Fir..Ston&lt;' Tire &amp;
Rubber Co . buys racing tires from
Denman for use in stock racing
-under the Firestone name. Firestone stopped making the tires
about two years ago..
•

Denman concentrates on special ·
lies like rhe machinery I ranspo11
tire and tires for olher.governmenl
vehicles . Its largest product line is
for off-road and four-wheel-drive
vehicles .
"There's not a tire in the plan I now
tha i was made here eight or ninc
years ago." Webster said.
Rep. Lyle Williams. R-Ohio. said
tie Is especially proud of Denman.
He explained tha t government
contracts are hard to land .

foreachofth~past

lng years.
lo a 9New
, percent
expansion
wassix
machinery
amount
installed early in 1982, and more is
plannedfor19&amp;l

••

.Ex·c·ar dweller 'Harold' gets
shelter, lrionetary assisiance·
BRUNSWICK, Ohio iAPi-:The
' fortunes of art uncmploy('j:i vetera n
who livC'd In his car arE' IOOking up as
pecple from ai'Ound the country
have reacted to his plight. One
woman &lt;'\'Cn I houg nt s he had found
her long-lost father.
Ha rold, whO requested that his
last name not be used, had lived in a
car for seven months until a
v!'lerans agency came lo his aid in
early December. ThE- group paid for
fu'Clnber's renl at the Brunswick .
MotPL
...•
When Harold' s story .received
nationwide publicity , a r~ader in
Tyler, T('X,.S, sent acheckfor~200 to
cover Harold 's nml for January.
The 60-year-old quit his job.as a
maint~nance worker at a YMCA
school las t spring . Whenhecouldn't
find other work. Harold took up
residence in his car. parked in a lol
ol a Medina County J'('S\aurant.
~ Jason McCour1, county services
director for the Veterans Adminlstrat ion. said Ha rold used the money
to pay part of January's rent and •

in Beaumont. Texas, " I saw the
pictures In our pap!'r, and it jus! got
m e to wondering. Th£' only picture I
. have of my father is his wedding
picture to1my mother."
Mrs. Boucher's mother died 24
years ago. According to her
relali\'es, Mrs. Boucher's father
never cap1e home after the war.
Bul M~urt said thai according
Harold also has a chance to get
to set,pl!'e records. Harold's last
name was not Daniels.
into the Ohio Vel~rans Home at
"l'w triro to round lip peopleovpr
Sandusky. McCourt said.
Harold served In the Army during
the yea r s that knew him. but I've
World War II and was married at
never checked with the VA,'' said
Mrs. Boucher. wtio was ra ised by
least twice. McCourt .said. HI' has
five daughJers. one of whOm he has
her stepfathN. "I don 't think Ihis is
not SC('n in· more than 20 years.' the guy, but !hoped it was because l
McCourt said.
·
·
·
krjow how Mrd these things ave.
Charlotte BOucher thought she
'fhiS would have just been too easy."
was Harold's daughter. She said she
Mrs. Boucher sald she will
has · not seen her father, Harold
continue the search.
Langford l,)anlels, for more than 35
'TV~ asked some relatives to help
years. HewasanAnny veteran and
me, and I will go totbe VA after the
holidays and , see what I can find
old enough to have a child of 39.
"I was a little. Jlny baby when I
out," she salt!. "I don't think this is
last saw hlm,'' she said in a
the guy; but you never know what
telephone interview fi·om her home
could happen ."
poped lo use the rest to get his
glasses fixed and repair a broken
ho s~ in his car.
''There is a couple over in Sharon
(Pa.J that has offered to take him in.
They offered lll:foreall \)lis publicity
started. He's thinking a,bout ta king
them up on th e offer,'' McCou11
said.

.

. By EDITH M. LEDERER- .
Assoclated Press Writer '

\

crises and worldwide recession, the
arguments !,or and ·against COQ·
tlnued EEC membership are strikLONDON (AP) -Tenycarsafter in_gl:&gt;&lt; similar to those expressed
Britain joined I he ·European Com · during the 15-year debate before
mon Market, Prime Minister Mar- Britain decldf;'d to join.
garet Thatcher insists the 1().natlon
Opponents initially argued that
-trading bloc ls "a real force" for
membership would lead to higher
freedom. But a majority 'or the .. food · prices and increased unemBritiSh publlc believes joinlng was a
ployment. They claimed the British
..
' .
mistake.
Parliament, regarded as the
. When .Conservative Prime Mlrils- mother of democratic legislatures ,
/er Edward ~eath led Brltaln l(tto would forfeit Its sovereignty to
· the E1lroPeaQ Economic Commun- comr'niHees offacele8s bureaucrats
Ity on Jim . 'i, · 1973, he said ln. Brussels, the .Common Market
membership provided "a tremeritl- capital.
,.
ous opporll,mtty" for rebuDdlng
Britain's economic strength and its
Supporters countered that Bri·
jlolltlcal voice In the world,
tain was an Island nation with
After a decade marked by oil seve.rely ltmlted lJ8 lund resources

• anyone, " he said.

"The rest of th&lt;' settlement jus t says we'll keep doing what we
have been doing," Adler said.
The suit is a consolidat ion of7o sepa rate .lega l a ctions filed agatnst
the state in 1976.
'

]ac~son

.

HiJBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobsletter, Jr.
,.
·
Broker ·
Office: 992-S739
RUTLAND - Nice 3 bedroom
home, inside city limits on SJ.
Rt 124. Lot 60'x100' . An
aftordable home. $20,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - PRICE REDUCED to $40,000 on lh1s li~e .
n!lW 3 bed room home. Large
family room wtlh fireplace.
Beautifully carpeted throughf
out Woodburner 10 basement
11
Nice level lol.
COUNTRY LIVING - Remode~d 4 bedroom home, living
room w[h woodburner, roodern kttchen Srts on I acre. VA
assumable loan. Askin g
$32,500.00,
POMEROY ~ Main Street.
Comfortlble 3 Ocd10om home.
ll)odern kitchen, gas lurnace,
detached catport. Asktng
$27,000.

'

'

attorneys request delay

COL[,JMBUS, Ohio (API - Lawyers for Dr. Edw a rd Frnllklio .
Jackson Jr .. a physician chargC'd with three dozen rapes. arc asking
for a postponement of his .Jan. ~4 trial.
Th~ lawyers filed the motion ir1 Franklin County Common PlC'as
Cout1. Assistant county prosecutor Edward Morgan sa id .Judge
G.W. Fa is miglit rule as early as Monday.
Fais .earlier denied J ackson's bid to hav&lt;' his tri al moved out o\'111!'
county . Jackson was cha rged in a 98-count indictment a ft c•· bei ng
arrested in Sept~mbc r inside an apartment belonging to two
Columbus women, pollc&lt;' said.

.

Banker may fill

and needed the European community with a combined populatlOI! of
· 250 million to survive . .They argued
that a ul)ited Europe would turn the
enemies of two world wars into
peacetime partners.
In an anniversary lntervlew,Mrs.
Thatcher said ·she ls convinCed
Britain "weathered the stonns of
the last decade far better in the
community than .we could have
done outside." .
"Th~ community Is ~ · real force
for stablllty, freedorn and · democracy In an uncertain world," she
said. '"Above aU, the community
has given all the member-states
acting together. a strol)ger' votee ~
the world than any of us could have
achieved on our own."

•

"'

One of the largest indu,&gt;trlal
design companies in the country,
Richardson-Smith c~rrentiy is helping Xerox des ign il s pi'Oduc t tine for
lh&lt;' nexi!O yea rs.
City Nationa l Bank &amp; Trust Co.,
which Richardson-Smith renamed
Bank One, has been oneofthefirm's ·
bigges t client s through the yPars.

hour.

po.~t

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
741 3092
Phone
·
..

Ch~~~;:~~{'3~~~oc

r~====~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~b=~~~~~~~~=~==Junh)l 'Q!imes- ~entinkl

.

f

Tribune - 446"2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

-~lassitied Ads
I (' -" ' ' " ' ••.,... , ll'·- •1 " ' • •' ' ·'" ' ••I

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-.D ebate still clouds Britain's
:·10-year.EEC -~ssociations

tone

fiLUM BUS, Ohio (AF ) - The long-delayed seltlemcnl of a
lawsuit against the state by Chillicothe Correctional lnstilutC'
inmate$ has been filed in .\J.S. District Court .
.
The class-action suit on behalf of2,00Jinmat es is expected locauS('
few changes in the prison's operation, said AI Adler of thC' state
attorney general's office.
'
''The settlement ralls for C'Xtra clerical personnel 10 m;~ke sure
prescription records are kept up to date on all patients' ml'd icri l,
dental and pSychological records, " Adler said Friday.
The state also agreed to increase holiday visitation times by an..·

·"Jt'stoughlogetinto.WC'makcno . ·
bones about it,'' .sa id S. Charles
COLUMBl)S. Ohio !AP I - Warren W. Tyler. vieepresii:lcntofihC'
Hemming, Cleveland di~trict dlrecState Savings Co .. is a leading,_cQ(11endPr to become dir('('t0!' of'r h0
Ohto Department of Comm('rce. according to a publis hed rPport·.
· tor for the Small Business Admin istration. "But once you get into it and
Tyler, 38, is a rcgistPred Independent who has bl'cn cons iderPd in
learn the ropes, it works."
lh~ past by both the Republican and Democratic parties for possible
appointments.
WebSter said sales and produclionin198'.lranl2percenlofar!'COrd
The Columbus Dispatch. quoting two unidentified Sratch6u~
sources, said Friday that Tyl~r is at thC' top of the list being ·
performance in 1981. Denman's
sales have grown
constderedby Democratic governor-elect RIC' hard Celeste.

•

•

._

Mass for CathoUcs among the U.S~ contingent of the

·

Time sa id .it c hose Segal because
·.- of his "stark and drama tic settinp;s
· in which . the eye is drawn ·to
objects."
·
The objec! is the personal
computer, but Time didn' t wa nt lo
appea r to be endorsing a ny particular brand, so i\ commissioned
Richardson-Smith to create one'
Deane Richardson, c hairman
and co-founder, said I he magazine
first noticed his . company at : a
Chicago trad~ show of advanced
office systems. "We're probatlly
doing as much in this area ~s

Files CCI suit settlement

.

er

terminals.

WASHINGTON (AP 1- Ohio'will be among e ight states toTeccivc
at least 65 iJercent more highwi}y construction mQney Ihis fiscal year
from the nickle-a-gaDon fedl'ral gasoline tax inc~:,ease.· . .
· ·
According to till&gt; U.S. Department of Transportal ion . Ohio wlll
receive about $410 million. That Is an increase of 91 percent over last
year's $215 million, officials said .
·
·
David L. Weir, s tat e transportation direclor. said th~ ex ( ra m9ney
·still won't be enough'to do aU the highway work that is ne«&lt;C'd. But it
will speed up construction time tables on many project s, Weir said.

Scholarship hunt offers a 'sham'

a-

Ohio-Briefs:

./

Publisher dies

1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ..::. The
"Some people are upset. They
·things."
,
think this was a d e humanizing •. • Time, which since the la te 19n.
-cOmputer shown on the rover of
Time magazine' s "Machine of the i thing. But it isn't, " sa id
has been na ming a· " Man of the
Year"lssuewasmadeinColumbus,
Colburn of the industrial des!gp
Ye ar" annua lly, this week chose the
anq thP desigp ~mpany that built it
company Rich ardson-Smith. "The
personal comput er. It sa ys the
person;rt computer is a great
m achines have had a tremendous
says peo_ple shOuldn't ~onsider 'tl\e
choice of a machine as Jacking In
advancement for humanity. It c·a n
etreet oA people 's l!vt?S this pas t
humanity.
free people to do many ,othe r
. year.
•
To depict the invas ion of the ·
· computer into the lmlctican home
·Tim e commiss ioned sculpti:u~
George Sega l to sculpt· a pair 'of
. \
'
human figures s itting a t computer

Mw

difficult 198'.l.'; thereport said.
But It added that things should
change next year, as follows :
-New construction is forecast to
increase more than 4 percent in
lnflal\on-adjustt!d c;lollars. the first
gain s ince 1978. The biggest push
should come from a 21 percent rise
In hOme buDding:
~A 29 percent gain in the real
va lue of domestic motor ,vehicle
shipments " ls expected to give the
general economy a lift in 1983," the
report sald. U.S. ·pnxluced car and
truck sales have drQpped about 40
percent from 1978to 1982.
-U.S.-produced steel' shipments
are forecast io reach 75mDllon io~
million tons In 1983: .up from this
. year's 60 million tons; the lowest
level since 19!i8. But that gain
dPpends on comebacks ln the auto
and home-appliance indus tries and
decisions by steel-makers to rebuild ·
Inventories that were depleted this
year .
.
~Savings and loans and c6m merclal bank• "wUI be able to
finance the recovery ln 1983," the
report said, although business loan •
demand probably will ilicrease only
moder ately .

and an additionalli50,00l.peoplt&gt;are
The president said that public
ser iously · injured in such crashes.
awareness of the problem "has
He sa id alcohol is a · factor in 0.~ never been hight&gt;r." and added:
percent of the nation'sfatalautomo"Citizens groups. local officials,
bile accidents.
· legislators,. judges. polkl'olficers"The personal pain and heart people from all over the country are
ache caused by these needless
saying 'enough is enough. Lei's get
tragedies is immeasurable, and
these killers off our roads and get
billions of dollars are lost in rnedical
them off now ....
costs. wages and through hours of
Reagan appointed a Presidential
missed work," he said.
Commission on Drunk Driving laS!
"A drunk driver accident is no
April and said that thepanelnoledln
accident," Reagan said. "The
an interim report ~hat - lear of
determined lo use a scholarship
CLEVELAND tAPl- Compan would prevent them from m aking a
motorist who drinks too much and
prosecution encourages people who
service,_ he should call schools in
Ies that offertoseek out little-known
profit .
:then drives, who uses drugs a:nd
have had too much to drink to not
which they are interested to see lf
schqlarshlps and financial aid for
"Many parents see these services
~ then gets behind the 'wheel of a car,
Insist on driving -home .
the college has beardP,f the service.
college students often are costly
as offering them a pot of gold that
•!s adisaslerwaitingtohappen."
"For lhis deterrent to work,
"As a rule," besai&lt;f.'"iftheyhave
shams that , provide nothing that
wUI enable their son or daughter to
, "The drunk driver has turned his
however, state and local law
heard
of the service, they probably
can'_f be found lor free. says an
attend college,'' be said .. "The
car Into a we~pon, ·a weapon that
enforcement officials must make it
offlclal of Case Western Reserve
problem with these search firms Is · won't recommendlt.1 know that we
threatens the ltves and safety of the
clear that they mean business, " he University.
wouldn't recommend any of the
that It Is verydlfflc~ll toevaluatethe
said. "In l cas where police have
seJ'Vices with . which we are
"A student, at iii cost, can go to quality of their services."
.
made drunk drivers a prime target,
the local library _and research the
Chenelle said If a student Is · famlllar."
ttaffic deaths have begun to
same scholarship infonnatlon that
James R. Holley Jr., 20, Bidwell.
decline."
GALLIPOLIS - The following
these services have in their flies, "
unemployed, and Dawo M. Hungercouples filed for 111arriage licenses
said Donald Chene!le. director of
ford, 17, Bidwell. student.
reecntly in Gallia County Probate
undergraduate admissions and uniFU!ymond F . Brooks, 63, Melrose
Court.
versity financial ald.
Billy J . Mullins. 26, Rt. 2, ·, Park, Ill., retired, and Gala S.
"I don't thinktbepaymentof$45,
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAPl
Saber, 32, MelrosePark;grientalion
Gallipolis, painter, and Dana Pax$75 and ln. some cases $100 ls
Robert W. Burdock, the first
and mobility specialist.
ton. 25, Rl. I, GallipoliS, Robbins &amp;
justified for a limited number of
publisher
or
Ohio
Magazine
and
WIU!am B. 'I-Illi, 20, Rt. 1, Willow
Myers employee.
sources to which a student can apply
former
managing
editor
pi
The
John T. Mitchell, 29, Rl. 1, West . WOOd, U.S. Army, and Patricia S.
(ClevelandJ Plain Dealer, died .. for financial ald.'' he said.
Warren, 18, Rt. 1, Crown City, at
1
Columbla , military, and Pamela R.
Chenelle sald he requested and
Friday after a lot\g illness. He was
home.
·
Mitchell,
28, Madison, Wis ..
studied
materials from several
55.
Chester F. Hale, 22, .Rt. 4, Oak
student.
·
scholarship
search companies. He
Burdock was graduated from
Hlll, __truck driver, and Brenda S.
. . Russell E. Burcham. 61, Rt. 1,
said
I!
was
nearly Identical to the
Kent State University · with a
Call, 22, 520 Spring Valley Drive,
Proctorville, auto sa les, and He len
Information
available free ' from
journalism degree i111951 . He was
L. Robinson, 61, Patriot Star Route, : lic~sed practical nurse.
high sehool guidance counselors or
editor of a Rittman newspaper and
.. Donald L. Denny, 22, Rt. 1,
therapeutic program worker.
financial ald offices at CC(lleges and
later
worked
in
the
Trumpull
Gallipolis, welder. and Cindy S.
Mark A. Jenidns, 19, Rt. . 2,
universities.
.
County bureau of The Youngstown
Chrlst\an ,- 19, 547 Jlurnette Rd., at
Patriot. laborer. and Colleen A. Cox.
"There
have
been
cases
where
Vlnqtcator.
home.
22. Rt. 2.'f&gt;atriot, unemployed.
the. InformatiOn we have iecetved
From · 196.? to 1968, Burdock
E.
St8pleton,
25,
New
Michaei
· Louis £ . Cox, 39, Rt. 2, Galllpolis,
listed
sources that have gone out of
published the Spectator NewspapYork, N.Y., U.S. N&amp;"}', and Andrea
concrete finisher, and Shirley B.
business
and scholarships that lilY , ·
ers, a chain of suburban Columbus
S. Stauffer .• 20. tlortolk, Va., U.S.
Helmandollar, 33, Rt 2, GaUlpolls,
longer
exist,"
he said.
papers.
Navy.
.
hQusew~e.
Many of the comJll!llles offl!l' to
Hr was hired by The Plain Dealer
Floyd .S. Nibert, 19, 32 Madison
Harry Weeks Jr., 20, St. Petersprovide
students with Information
in
1Jl68
as
a
reporter
and
later
served·
burg, Fla. , U.S. Air Force. and . Ave .. sawmill employee, and Kathy
on
Dt!Jeeknown
or unpubllclzed ·
as
legislative
correspondent
and
G. Branham, 20, Addison , cashier:
Methaney· Phillips, 17, St. Petersscholafshlps.
· ·
metropolitan
editor
before
becomKevin D. MacFarland, 23, 520
bu_rg, student. :' · ·
.
"Usually
the
crlte.rla
for
these
Ing
managing
edl(or.
He
left
the
·
Spring Valley Drive, compilter
MVI~DY WORK - lktan Meellrth,V, front, of Clevebuld, .and
paper lri 1975.
•. ·
llttle-kmwn scholarshiPs Is deflnl!!l
programmer,. and PatHcla A.
:Donald L. Spencer, 24, Rt. . 3,
O'NaD ot Nellonvllle CUT)' a plank &amp;IU'Ou!lh a trail made hy a
Burdock. served .as pUblisher of very narrowly," Chenelle said.
Palmeri, 18, 520 Spring VaDey
Bidwell. U.S. Army, and Tamie L.
badd10e at t11e 111e 0111o u~··
llllaloribnJ 1n A~.
"I'mnotconvlncedthesearch!!lms
Ohio Magazine from 19'78 to l!llll.
Drive, student.
Martin, 21, Rt. 3, Bidwell, Robbins&amp;
really
try
to
IIJit'iNer
these
small
SoullleiiMm
Olllo
COIIIItnJdlon
wWiren
Iaiit
week
traded ill their
At
tbe
tiiJle
Of
his
dea!h,
~rdock
Ronajct·L. White, 24,-107 Garlleld
Myers employee.
,
scholarshfps.
H
they
researehed
aU
.
I
U
lor
Nbber
boots
Ill
onler
lo
ward
off
llie mud 118 hlp
was
a
parlner
ln
the
Columbus
Ave., unemployed, and Anna J.
·Paul E. Marttn, 24, Allendale, Ill ..
public
relations
consulting
finn
of·
the
l\umeroos
smaJJ
schOlarships
lai4»Ei
twa
lunled
the
rr-,
J1'UIUid
Into
a muddy niess.
Miller, 22, 107 Garfield, Ave., nurse
· oil driller. and Mary C. Boyd, 19,
(AI'
I Ml~).
.
.
tor
every
c!ll!llt,
theCQSI
d.
research
Burdock
and.
Roberts.
aid technician.
Allefldale. unemployed .

Coupl~s

'Time' cover designer·irtsists
illustration .not d.eh~manizing

Moderate industrial growt~,
high-tech advances this year .
By ROB~T FURLOW

'f.he Sunday Times:Senfinei-Pa"ge---D-3 .

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64

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~~~

TOBACCO
FARMERS
We will haut your tobacco
FREE to the Huntington Pride
in Tobacco Market. Call Paul
Daines at 1-614-156-1353.
After 5 p.m. call 446-6285.
Public Notice

1

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lh oO o•ol ol•·
G uy • o [l"'

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~ JO(l

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WHOLESALE
WILL BE CLOSED
BEGINNING
'SAT .. JAN. 1, 1983 ·
FOR REMODEL! NG .
WATCH FOR THE
GRAND OPENING

"Oh, it's the same thing
year. Ea makes these wild
Year's resolutipflit''

'

Announcements

Cat!

j

1415 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

STILL PAYING

CHRISTMAS
RISK MANAGEMENT
· SCHOOL
Jan. 17, Feb.' 3', Feb. 10',
Feb. 24, ftjal. 3'. Mar. 10
"denotes uv.rfing clase

. PCA·aLDG._
, GALLIPOLIS
call·Bud Ca.iter.
_Co. "'-'Alt-. llc1it.
'Phone 446-1007

' COOPERATIVE
EXTE~SION ·AGENT

,·

Terms of sale w1ll be cash or ·
Checf( '4'tlh POSitiVe I 0
.
·Sa1d Boatd reserves the nght
to wa1Ve mformal•t•es, to .accept S~EEPER and sewilg maor rc1ec1 any and all or pans o f chme· repsii', parts. ·and
auppti8s. ~ Pick fr.IP and
a~Y and all btds.
Me1gs Local delivery, Davia Vacuum
• Scho ol Otslncl Cleaner, one hetf mile up

.

Ploo.-.., o

DISTRIBUTORS

at the Me1gs local Bus Ga• ag e.

l
''·

Ill
~~~ ~

&lt;t

1502

..

CARD

Goorgoo Crook ,Rd .
448-0294,,

... ,.,...

lh &lt;1'~ ""•'""~ " ""

Card of Thanks

4

Jane wagner. TreaSurer
3tc

l•uo~

On•ot•v""~ ''"'"

.

Home, pallbearers, Rober3
NOTICE
Purtell and Paul Pratt, minisNot• Ge ~ ~ hem by g •ven th at
ters, and all those who
the Board pf .EduCJ t• o.n o f th e
helped in any way during the
Me•Qs Local Sc hoo l D•sH•Ct.
illness and death of our
Me•ils Countv. Oh1 0. will o lf fH
husband, son. · and brott ~r.
tor Sate by sealed b•ds seven ( 7 )'
The Family of Wit. :.rd
cancelled buses Jnd tw'o ( 2)
lee Roush.
p1ckup lrucks at the Treasu re r' s.'
o1f1ce. Me1gs local School
We wish to express ·our
D1stn ct. 621 South Th11 d
sincere
appreciation to Doc AvP nue. M1drllepor1. Ohto. at
12 OQ noon Janu ary 1B tors and nurses at Fayet'te
County Memorial HospitaL
1983
· Dr. Hung,· or . Wattariasarn
Th e ve htcles are as follows
1- 1971 Chevrolet bus - at Washington Court House.
Oh .. EWing Funeral Home.
#SF52 tPt 125 19
pallbearers. Robert Melton .
2- 1972 Chevro let b~ s ministers. and all those whO
#CS &lt;522V t 13547
ln any way in the
3- 1970 lniern at •onal bus ' helped
illness and death of our
- #4t6370HO I t227
brother , and
tl - 1970 International bus father,
grandfather.
'
- #4t6370H0t \24 2
Th.Fomijy
of
Allen
5- 197"5 InternatiOnal bus
Roush
.
·
- #t3672EHA33747
6- 1972 Chevrolet buS #CS E522Vi t 3527
' 7- 19 7 ~ lnternauonal b'us
OF THANKS
- #00822EH837 750 • '
To
the
Mill
Creek Com·
8 - 1960 Ford 1/J ton P_ ~' munity for their contribu· truck
·
/ .
~
lions and kindness to the
. 9- 19 63 ' lnt 11? ton p•cku p
family of Carl Janey .
tru ck "
Add1110nal lnforma\10n o n
. The Janey ~amily
th ese veh1cles may be obta1ned

\112 . 9. 16
!65- t42 0

~t

fo I!&gt;
4\VI

Ut i 10! I ~ """ ' ' ' '
kJI I IU 1 ~ I'Y U!Ih

We wish to express our
sincere appreciation to Or .
Scholtis , Dr. Cowles. Or.
Walker, nurses 8t Holzers,
Pomeroy Emer. gencv
Squad. all those who donated blood. Ewilg Funeral

3

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LAFF -A-D AY

..........._.._

ill• :&gt;&lt;~io C,.

...••• r. ..dr. ] "04

-~~-

~ LEGAL

Rutland. Oh•o. 742-2990 .

'.l4~

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Employ-1 t
1111•·•··""·"'''' 11
1 7 !io lll.oh· tiW""''''I
1 ·' 1.. . ..... .. . .

...~ ... ,

. ..

BILL~??
today about our Januaty '
.~,; ... c~ss and get started
exciting . Welcome·
Wagon career. Position open-.
ings in Gallipolis. Pt. Pleasant ,and other areas for
flexible hours. full -time and
part-time employment. Car a'
must. Creel peiJille and
represent local businesses.
Phone today, 304-345-6~
between 9 a.m: and 5 p.m.
Ask for Nancy Kelley.

WELCOME WAGON

'

HAMLIN KING

ATTORHE¥-AT-lAW
ilissolutioos or Uncontested Divortes ';$350.00
(Costs 'included).
,. · Wills_$25,00
Small Est··e~ $350.00 .

. 446..0855

5!2 Setond Ave .. GolliPotis
• S.rvin&amp; Gill~ &amp; Moils
CountiH

t qual Opportunoty
Employer

I

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Ohio-Poin

Tim es-Sentinel

4

3 .Announcem !\nt s

Giveaway

TO BUY Oldfurnl·.

Houoe lor •I• on ion~
cont•CJ. Cheohlre", Oh. 7

does not offer Qr attempt to kind s , c ell . Kefln eth Sw •in,

off!ir any ot her thing f&lt;&gt;t: sale 441! -3 169

a&lt;

rma., ba1ement • . garage,

y••

266-1967 i'l

workahop.
!Um.,ce.
I 14-388-82 8 .
Earn $700-•1.1100 mo. o p - 1 - - - - - - - -- ' -

may · place an ad in th i1 ttle even ing a.
column . There will be no 1 ---~'-....;~--charge to the adverti1er .
Buying
Plat i
num, old
rings
Cocker Spaniel w;t h papers. B. silverware .
quotes
Call 446 -9743 .
available . Al s o coins B. coi o
s upp lies for~ sale. Spring
3 rat Ttmie r pu~ pies. Call VaH ey Tradi ng Co., Spring

etlthig your fNIIn pa" time.
In-homo buoineoo. CluiiUfy
for comP,any c•r. " travel.
retlr-ent progrom . llepeot
prolltl on conMimable P"'"

4

teleph ones by Cob'ra ·s 1 ~5
ea.: te lep hone -answerUlg
mach i ne : code -a - phone
$135 ea . new &amp; Panasonic
$296 ea . new, diam ond
ring s pre - owned , ot h er
misc . merc handise New &amp;

Gu n shoot. Racin8 ·Gu n
Club . Every Sunday s tarting
1 p .m. Factory choked gu ns
only.

6 Lost and Found

446-0069

.mua sell • . con eider ·laue
purc.h aae. Near Ch11•r.

LOST-Bolt cutting s he,ars. Wanted to buy Sq ua re bane ·

HOME LOANS 12% fi•od $113,900.
rate. Leeder . Martg•ge, 1 • 4321 .
614-692-3061 .

knows w ho
. o 1 2 goats on the J im
L.Jcas farm S a t urd ay

Dec.1_1 . 514-742-2753.

golf course . Ran dy Armes -

614 -99 2-763 9 or 614 - 4537.
992-3181 .

:

8

All .

wi nter mercha ndi se
r ed uced 10- 50 pe rcen t .
:Sale start s J a n. 3. Racine
Oep ertma nt Store .

6 4 Mi sc . 'M erch andise

and women's. Call 44 6 ·

Buolnelo l!o Second Mort·
gego loano . Equity Ro-

Will · pey castl for used
mobile homes. Damages.
re p ass ed or in~ urance
claims considered . Call 1 46 -

Publ ic ,Sale
&amp; Au ction

aour•a,

WVa State Cha mpion Auctioneer Rick Pearson . Estates .
antiques, farm , hou seholds .
Licensed Ohio -WVa . 304-

773 - 5785 or 3 04 -773 9185 .

Auc tion evf:try Fri . nig ht at
the H!Htford Co mmunity
Center. Truc kloads of new
mer chandise every week .
Consigments of new a nd
u•d ' merchand ise always
welcome. Ric hard Reynolds
Auct ion eer. 275 -3069.

No sales at the Hanford
Communitv· Building o n the
Friday night sale!J till Jan .7 .
1983. Hope everyon~ has a
Merry · Christmas and a
Happy New Year. Ric~ a rd

Reynolds." 27 5- 3069.

Ban

Saw,

446 -9729.

phone

BEDS-IRON . BRASS, old

fu m iture. gold ; .silver dol ~
Iars, wood ice bo ~ e s. stone
jars, an tiques , etc ., Com
plet e ho use ho ld s. Write:
M . D. Miller. Rt . 4 , Pomeroy,

Oh. Or 992 -7760.

Gold, silver. s terling. je welry, ring a, old coins &amp;
cu"ency. Ed Burkett Barber

Shop. Middleport . 992·
3476.

Old boo k, ~i a rias , etc., and
old oil paint ings . 1 614
4

4

593-891 5.

WANTEO - locus1 po s ts.
304-675-1197 af1ar 6 p .m .

The West Virginia Department of Health is seek ing e
full -time Hospital Adminis·
trator fo.- ib Fainnont Emergency Hospital. located in
Fairmont, YVestVirginil . Requirements: Baccalaureate
degree ph.Je _two ' year• of
experience in hotpltal or
he'alth l&amp;rvicet . or buainess
administration . This 44-bed
facility prCW'KiM long-term
skilled nursing HI'VIcaa and
outpattent clinic' aaNices.
Applicints should submit
rrisurroesand applications to:
Hansberger, M . D..

11

Licensed Administrato r ·for
100 bed skiUed nursin
hol"((e in Southeast ' Ohio .
Salary comensuratl d with
experience. Send resume to

CHEWING TOBACCO PROCESSING PLANT
SCOTTEN -DILLON CO.
700 First Avenue. Glllipolis. Ohi o

TUESDAY. JAN. 11, 10 A.M.
LATE MODEL WEL-L MAINTAINED LANDRUM
THRESHING LINE

SHMC, P.O.Oox 1088, Gal·
lipolis. Oh 45631 .

Featur int : l~ Vacudyne Al tair Tobacco ConditiOning Unit. 68"

LOVE CRAFT?

wde. l' ~ i~h. 10' depth, 2 hogshead, 9/ 19176, landrum BaleBus·
ter wilh 42"x.l 4' reve r ~ n g co n~ eyo r and upfee d con~ey or with
Daul/er· lla ndrum Bale O~ner . Landrum Incline Conv~ors

ViUI·

ous enJ&lt;Ihs and w1dtrs, 7 Cardwell Threshers Model Mf-450 SN
l5J. 03ff-l 0..Blandrumand Hammack Air l egslSN1455, 12Vacu
dvne Carts 8 Tobaa:o seRarators, Cardwell. - Vibe-0-Be_y S.S.
Shaker Tables. Cardwell H Separator. Mo del ST664 -2'iSN567-2372, 5Bulfalo and Amen can Blowersan d Clolh In -Plant oba cco Ousl
C!) lle:tors ..Ph neu.matic. Tobacco. Press. Budding and Tob acco Ti p(l ng Machme. Th1s eqUipment W1ll beo11erall and piocemeaL Parti at
listing only.

T06ACCO PROCESSING EQUIPMENT
·
1 Bu~kete piece cuttmg machine [RibbonCut Peac hy), 2 SQ. S.S.

H~ld i ng

Tanks

~ilh

MiKers, 2 S.S. CooKi ng Tank s with Mixers Adt.
01p Wnng Machme, Model 1430! She p No. 10 271 (1955), 2 Syrup
Meters, 2 Syrup Pumps 2 Hy\Jo ConveY a s Portabl e, 2 Steampak
York Power Ge n erat ors 'IB~Iersl 125 P.S.I, Feed Pump and Water
Sof1 ener, Gardner Denver 40 HP Air Co mp_ressor Misc. shop and
~I ani equipment 37 Wood Tobacco Carts._Sargenl 0f)'er, 8' Apron

SS. Bell Conve1or 50' Long, Tobacco Separator 1 feeder Hopper

w ~h Ooufler, 2Adl Rotary Dryers, Model No. 441 5, SN 1 030~ 1Tobacro Cond1tiooing Cylinder, Moisture Analyzer, Model Mtt with

:&gt;Peed·O-Max Recorder 2 B1g Joe Pall et Trucks 60 A.C. motors
fspa resl Modern Power.~ubber Bell Co nveyo~ Upleed andStraight

vano~ s

SIZes. types, m1 sc. 1tems. Partaal L1st Only.

.

MODERN INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE
Featurina: 16.000 SQ.c Ft Building! Poured concrete lloors, insulated r oot, clmr span structura steel and concrete b10 ck
sprinkler sy.; tem side loading dock with sell leveling system, front

access door sky1igh~ . approxi mately 100' wide and 160' lo ng, 30'
to bonom o1tr usses.
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Terms of Sale: A 2~ % de posH required at time of sale by cash,
cutlerSor certified checks made payable to Clem Long Auction·
eers, Inc. The balance due within three (3) days. The machinery
and equipment will be offered overall and then piecemeal and win
ell in lr.t maiUl~~lainiPLiho~~~ overaJI Prill&gt;. . .
em o sate .of 1 me: i.JU.OO . dep
re 1re 'tt1 e
sale. \noce~n
ysatl 1meo c oSina"ff~ ..~~ sutlo:t T.ft
hour confirmation y owner.

!

~te phone (61414-46 - 957~

4P.M.

- lns)llction: Mon .. Jan. 10. 9 AM .Io
..

Clem Long

Auctioneers, InC.

Help Wanted

Earn money . Artcraft Conceipts is seeking 2 peOple
who would like to change
~heir hobby to a 5 figure
income. Full time po stiot;~
training &amp; benefits. Call

614-266 -9348.

Desk· Clerk 37Y, hours per
week. Prefer soma college.
library eKperience helpful,
must have flexibility in
schedudling , must like
books &amp; people. Physcially
&amp; mentally demanding job.
Must be . able to operate
office &amp; communication
equipment r Some typing
required . Readin-gonthejob
not permitted. $3.65' per

hour. Call 446-R EAD for
appointment.
HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bill s . Sell Avon and
earn good $$ $ , meet nice
people . C a ll 614 -843 2982. 6, 4-388-9046, 6, 4-

Heallh, ·1800
26306, by December
16.
Salary negotiable. Equal Opportuni.ty Employer -AA
Plan -M-F -H

16

for all typu of busin•••·

Schools
Instruction

Corol Neal 448 -3882

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Pl ANO TUNING&amp;. REPAIR
Colt Bill Ward lor oppoint·.

1- -- - - - - - - -

RN -LPN

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35 AcruotRodnayonW. f.

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Men. wom.,, l!o

JOBS Overoeos. Big money
1-716-842-6000.

WA I'JITED: pontime medical
transcriptionist. imme diately .· Plea1e cell, 614·

448-1338.

6 rooms an battt near 2 bdr. p;ortlaMy furniahiod
Racine. 614· 992-6B60. ' 8ullaville-Portor Rd. •180
mo. •1 00 dop.. water In·
2 bd.room hou11 with new ctudad. Coli 446· 7824.

Watson Rd. Ow_, ., Financ-

ing ovolloble. 448-8221 . -:,

kitchen. Close to IChool and

Eight lt;lll bottom, Fij"O
Point• ..... f4,000. acre or $30,000. lor on.
814-992-6344. .
~

tOwn , 6114-992-2918 .

6 rooms and bath.

niohad.

or

Re~l

18 Wanted to Do

end dapandoble. Col 441·
3159 alter IPM 251-1917.

9

a . m.

Sjtuatio ns
Wanted

GINGER BREAD STUDIO.
Art lessona. Joni Carring·

ton. 698-3290.

Special Windotiv Tint ing .
Auto, retidentitl. c:omrMr·
ci.. l!o R.V. wiodowo. Fr•

odaled, carpet. 18.600.
eotimatea. 446 -3100 or 814-928,4417.
448 - 7122 , Kotollc

BMR 424 - 2 plusacres w~h avery nice 3)ledroom ranch style
home. -You will love the coun ~y atmospohere. Possible ,loan
assumption.

INTEREST FREE LOAN - &lt;Niner wHI carry wnh no interest with
down payment or land Contract at 12% interest Two story Coloni~
in lown, beaublul entry, formal dining, br~k patio.
#1149

BMR 425- Exea.tive type brock home,"-on Frenc~ Pr~on~!al
tea1unng 2,100 SQuare feel olliving are•.on the main floor plus a
lull walkout basement. This·fine home is one of a kind in this area.
Be the first to see lhis one. Call now.

OiJiSTANDING BUY - Frame home with aluminum siding, 2 '
· bedrooms, bath, located in town. Only $8,500.

BMR 4~6 - Priced 'nght at $37,500. It has an assumable lean
with only.9'h'J\ interest We are talking about a very clean, 3 llR
home situated roo nice flat lot in a f~ mily oriented neighborhood.
Call for complete details.
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fl0085
: 150 ACRE FARM - Has !Jarn, tobacco base, timber, and ~ree
polld,'·good loct~n. .
,

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EVENINGS. CALL

Nelli Smith. ASsac. 388-8251
lob Fr1nce. AIIIK. 446-1162

i

BMR 429 - AI eleclric bHevel in Kyger Creel\ School Dstrict
~tualed on 121 aeres with ~mable 9~% loan. Cal for comple1e
details!

.lcilln Fuller. lllttllor 446-4327
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Furniahod Apt . Fully car·
peted. bdroom , living room,

2 bdr, uttfumiohed mobile Modern · Furnlahod Mobilo1 I kitchen, bath. garage, 8186.
home, 1 2x80 in Cheahira. Home In city, one or
month. 614-992-2362 ofCall 441-4229.
adults only: 446-0338.
tor 4 p.m.

Inc.~

Jill~~
HOMES FOR -RiNT; LEASE, LEASE WITH OPTION TO
BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO AND THREE
BEDROOM STARTING AT $200 PER _·MONTH.

Real Estate -General

[B

REALTOft"

part basement
oven,
of town. Cal Ranny

~~~.~~~~~~

WAlNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef, hay &amp; grain farm.
80 acres, mit, approx. 35 A good cropland, 10 ~
woods, balance pasture, good fences, 9 rm./beth
home was buitt in 1872 &amp; has been partial~
remodeled, 50x50 cattle barn withpncrete ftoor,
large silo with auto. unloader, several sheds, tar~
pond, springs, standing crops go to new owner . .

WOIA.D like to do houR·

HOUSE"Meadowbrook oddi-

cleaning. can 1110 give refer- tion, 3 bedrooms. reference

675-6974.

1642.

Real Estate • General

BRICK RANCH - COMPLETELY FURNISHED - love~ 3 bedroom r&lt;~nch fearuring a loving room, den;
dining - ki!then combined, 2 baths. Therm~ne
wind&lt;ll!l'i, with marble window sills and many more
extras. A'lovely home wi1h many fine fearures. CAU

NEW USTIIIG-BRICK HOIIE-Very well kept home. features

3 bedrooms, large ~!then. lots of cabine1s. foimal livin~m­

CANADAY
REALTY

NOW.

'

larJ! lam. room, l!lltra roollj rolid be used to&lt; stora~......_. ~
sewing room. Gas heat and centraiPair. Has 2 storage boidongs.
~re I&lt;X and nice garden space: lcXs ol plants and shrubs. Locate
din citv school district Washinglon ~mentary AI thos and
much more. Prired only in the lower 40's.. , .

-H227

· · --·-·-·-·------- -

·~:ti~r·~::

BiAunFULVIEW- 2 acres and home has 1,728sq.
ft. of living space Beautiful fireplace 'in living 100111. ·
formal dining room. Kitthen complete. 3 bedroan~ _
2
!laths, covered patio breezeway. large garage. Tlis
~o me needs some worl&lt; to be completed.

.

,

112U

LOVELY SURROUNDINGS - Approx. 1 acre of trees
and shrubs. Newer ranch home / 1300 sq. fl of living
space. Home has !ami ~ room, large kitchen, bath,
livong room and 3 bedrooms, covered patio, lront
porch. Priced at ~5.000

11224

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FAMILY COMFORT - Th ~ striking bi-level home was
bum with a famiy in mind. 3 bedrooms, 1 lui and 2 ~
baths. large ~tchen with appliances. family room Mil
fireplace. Garage. Nice size lawn. Assumable mortm&gt;e.
Call!o see th~ one today.
·
*197
NEW LISTING-Tara ~te$. Modern bi-levet overlooking alar!Jj
lake. 4 bedrooms,? baths, formal iving ioiJTI &amp; dining room . Over
2,500 SQ. ft. of ~vong space Erjoy tiE use of tiE cl ub house,
swimmllg (Xld and bask~l courts.
•

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 5 room modem house,
carpet woodbumer, county water. Two mobile homes
nilw rented. l};er one acre of ground. Wi1hin 2miles of
Holzer Medical Center. $35,000.

•

11200

LET THE SNOW FALL! Vou11 be Wzy warm thiswinter
in thos cU1~ easy to heat3 bedroom home. Bath; den,
· partial basement, unattached 2 car garage, smal
workshop, rural water and much more. !lose tJ .
schools, church a~d grocery sto~. Call1odaJ! ~

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15

· YOU'll BE COIIFY ~~ around with a fireplace and
central air in this inlrnaculale 3 bedroom ranch. 2
baths, family room, divided basement garage, natural
gas fA furnace. large covered patio. 'Oose 1o city
conveniences.
11214

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SCENIC ACRES
91.47 Acre Farm open &amp; wooded. Approx. 55 acres tillable
. remaiilder in pasture &amp; limber. Has road frontage on S hell~
Garden - ford ' Roads. Raccoon Twp. Excellent for larrninR or
develoomentl 7 room farl]l home. lar~~e closed-in oorch~
­
barn, smal tobacco barn, c~lar, big shf!!l, detached 1car gara .
Approx. 1,961 lb. tobacco quota for 1982. Very good far ·
·
' one ever offered lor sale.
FIRST TIME'
'This charming home has been placed on the market. Colontil-l
setting in the city. lots of ~rge b"ees, plants and
ordinary home. 3 bedrool]ls, Jormal living room
i'
modern kitchen. Beautiful lamily room linisho!O ·
wood. large laundry room, rec. room
10~i;~~::n~~v:;~~~
pon:h ovet1ooking the city of
Oo
maintllned home and gardens'
•

L-$HAPED
beautiful stme fi'!ll~te. 3~!drtln,
dishwasher, lots ol cabinets.
bldg Near city. $54,500.
, ,
APPEALING BRICK RANCH -On one ace genUy skipng, suburban srte. 4 boo rooms, 111 baths,tam~ room, cenb"al aircond., 2car
garage pus 24x40 boidihg lor worllshop or garage. Gas he ~
$38.00 g;~s budget: ltlmeis only 12 years ad, exc~lent cond. Ill
miles lrom cny. $69,000. .
. .
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~celen110CD&gt;n,

LARGE CORNER LOT near goll oourse. 2slay
frame '11~ 3bedroans. 2 balls. family sizekrtchen. dining nook.
This hoAlte has old laslioned charactel. BEST OOUAR VAlUE.
$37,900.
.
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VERY cozy- 3bedroom home on Lower Second ~venue, walk m
• shq~Jin&amp; park, schm FanP.t.;l\l\)&lt;at~n kitchen with ranJ!
. and refrig_ Fuly carPIIIId. l~...oaoor barbecue lllit. low
mainl!nlnll:e vinyl sidin&amp; C111JD1L Slrper buy al $39,900.

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FIVE ACRES - miER CIIHII MEA - RemodeEd 3bedroom
Irame.home. fl!tipped eel-in ltilr:llelt 24x36 barn. c~ckelt house.
Beaulifui10Cation: $38,900.
. .

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Hll7

LIKE A FINE WINE - It imJ)rwes with IJ!. Charm
and comfort are tbe key -lo this lovely 2 story 3
bedroom, 111 bath home inside : the city lim$.
lnground pod. Areplace. Aluminum sidio~ "Updated
and well maintained. $63,900.

N198

'. 1'h ACRES included with the sale of lllis older home
with basement 30x40 barn. Tobai:ro base. Priced in
the mid 20s.

t181

roP

TIP
SHAPE!
Just a little prettier than so many. Modern 3 4 bedroom tirick
home. formal dining and living room. large k~chen. Full basement.
Large 2 car garage. Worl&lt;shof! and barn. Sittirlg ''" 5.8acres, more
or less of landscaped grouiids. Spring will I&gt;'· breathless here!
Owner will help finance. 10% Int. Rate.
~
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· $11 000 - ·Three bedruom llldl, llrly-carpeled except kitchen,
·attaChed &amp;Jill!!. Hook-up lor ~ burner. Near Rio Gnlnde.
'
EVERYONE II LOGitiNG lor 1 few 1C11S ne~r· !own ... and here rt is!
SIX ACRES. 2 bedruom home w/ldditional r(Xlm that cot*! easiy
be convetled _, llinl
I.Q livina room. I!_I.!Ji and
' rlfrillfi\Or in lttchtn. SIDle 1*1&amp; Cily Schools. $27,500- JtJST
LISTED!
.

bal•
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SMALl FARM w~h fin ~hed basement located in city
school district Home has atum. siding, iving room.
kitchen, 2 bedoooms on main lev~. ,Basement.has
lamily room and 2 bedrooms.

lARGE SPACIOUS HOME
This home is new. Features 3 bedrooms. 2'11 baths,
livina room, formal dinin&amp; room. family room ," modern kitchen and 2car pra&amp;e in cily school district.

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DP£N WOODED AREA ..;, 756 surveyed acres ckJse to
Ohio River. Can be )!Sed to&lt; lots. $6,000. • ··

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my in the 40s.

.)

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NIM •

COII ..ERCIAL LOT. - Super location. Approximaty 7
aces. Slate Route 35. l·

MODERN RANCH !lOME
3 or 4 bedrooms, nice iving room, eaHn ~tch· n. lami ~
basement This home has been very well kept. •car (larage.

1

RODNEY-CORA ROAD . ~ Approi . 30 acres
woodland kx:ated 3 ml from Rodney. Counly water
·available. ·$12,000.

.I

Thi&gt; spacbus liome features 3
bedroans, large formall~llg room with w.b.lreplace, and dining
room. Modem bui.t-in kilt hen induding a ori crowave even.
Spacilus f;rnit( room. Many extras, including the use ollenni&gt;
rourts and swmnjng pea.
.
•

WARM. wtLCOIIING AND SPACIOUS RANCH - Exceptiooa1
zoning makes ~ possible to&lt; an activefamily lo live in lhis heme
without lyving 1o tiptoe around each &lt;Xher. famoly room wtth
firep'(ce os well separated from formal dining, ~vi ng room and
bedrooms. 'Everyday traffic erers lrom the garage tJ the lami~
ooom and kithen. Master suile h,1s private bath, there are 3 &lt;Xhel
bedrooms on~ noor plus bednlom and storage on secood floor.
2 car gagaJ!. 16x32 pool. Near city. $78,000. JUST LISTED!

THIS .AD ISN1 FOR YOU unless you're ioo~ng for a 3
bedroom, 2 bath home priced inthe30's. Woodburner,
Ill acres. Close lo Addaville SchOO. Nice flat lawn.
#172

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE .:.. 20% down
- Campsites in the Wayne National Foest 5 to 8
acre tracts wooded land, J)od hunting. Prices start
at $3,500.
•

br~k &amp; stone ranch. overtJoking the

Evans

NEW LISTIIG ~ COUIITIIY COMFORT - Escape 1o
que~ ff1d carlhe livina in this&gt; fantastic
contempolitry homl. llellfiftj Quakl!r made cabinets
in· kitchen, sunken livinll room with firetiace and
cathedral ceiling formal dining, 3 or 4bedrooms, den,
2'h baths, iamly room, basemen~ 30'•60' g;~rage.
Approximately 10 acres. Owner wiH consider financing,
City schools

·Peace,

BEST BUY IN TOWN - St~i sh 2 story home was
buitt in 1894 and 111U$t be seen to appreciate.
Large open foyer and stairway, lR, dining rm.,
parlor, completely equipped moqem kitchen. 4
BRs. 2\l baths, new siding, ga~fl!. near schools,
shoppng, ~/ - '

11241

L0A11 ASSUMPTION- 8Y; INT. - ~3,900 OOWN_PAYIENTMonthly payments $348.24 including taxes &amp;In~ !tee 3bedroom
ranch. large modern kitchen. Th~ home would be an excelen,l
starter home.

I

BMR 398 '- PRICEGREATlVREDUCm &lt;Niner tran~erred and
must sell this 3 BR ranch. Close lei town includes deluxe 18K36
inground pool. Rooucecl to $44,500 - PLU S owners wil pay
f .HA-VA · points and closing costs.
.
·

110021 .

'

'

614 -992·5434 or 304 882-2566.
•

T. REALTV

HUNTINGTON TOWNSIIIP - 176 acres _m/1
vacant land, lronts o~ Raccoon Creek &amp; the Tom
Glen Rd. Approx. 31 tiiable &amp; t~e balance wooded.
Under $400 per acre.

BMR 421 - Possibleloan assumption at 811% onterest Nice 3 BR
ran~h on It llat lot Priced at $35,000. Better ca ll on thisonetodayl

SUPER LOCATION. - Nice ranch with 3 bed rooms, vinyl siding,
close to golf cour&gt;e. l m me~ iate posessioo.
fl·4350
'

ht floor lurnlohad ollloncy
opt. Apt. no. e. comlortol!te
lor 1 penon. Rent. depoo~.
utlftioo paid. 729 2nd. Avo.
con 448-09117 .

Real Estate-General

6 bedroom, 2Y.t baths. elec·
rettored victorian,
will to wall carpet: ac g11

· BMR 414 - ·12x60 mobile home-srtuated on 1 acre pius lot.
locludes lu rnrture, has rear patio w/ coveJ, converted lront deck,
,
12x24 garage with slorage.
BMR 420F - Th~ fne home is only lhree years ojd. It features
1400 SQ. ~- of living·
, with 3 ~rge bedrooms, 1\? baths, large
living room and a ~vely · S)len with dining area, full basement
Pricedat only $60,000. Oh es, I amsure you wolatsoen1oythe 24
cres.olland rt srts on. Owner linacning considered.

#2800

2 bdr. unfurnlohad apt. In
Crown City. Coil 114·211·
11120.

tricity,

BMR 413F J - Mini farm lbcated just off the Appalach~ n highway
near Jackson. 311 acres m/ 1with an older two BR home, several
outbuldings JUSt right lor leisure bme or lull time l ivin~

BMR 423 ..:.. In town locatioo. Walk 1o school. large two story
home includes 4 bedrooms, living room, dining room, formal ·
entrance, lg. country kitchen, lull basement with _lamily room, 2
fire place~ plus more. Reduced to $53,000.00. Call fer detaols.

riverfront lot. rel. l!o dap. Cal
81 4-843-2644.

ces required, 30"4 -876 •
2946. $126 . month.

~

LI FE

BMR 422 - Nice ranch located on Roush umeis priced to sell at
$38.000. large l R, 2 BR. kitchen includes range, eye-level oven.
dishwasher and (lisposat. Call to see.
·

Eureka 2 bdr. , furnished ,

4 room apt . tor rent, referen-

,I

IN SURA.NC E

BMR 389 - This line home has 4 bedrooms and islocaled close
to town. You will hbavea large lot woth a country atmosphere and
have all the city conveniences. Call now!

Trailer In Syracuse a nd Apt .

AME-RICA'S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER, CENTURY 21.

11205

BMR 427 - $30s, maintenance free sid in~ lenced back yard,
family crient~d neoghborhootl. ThiSos a Vef'/ clean 3 BRhome. Cal l
for appointment.

-

.

Judy DeWitt, Broker--388-8155
J. Merrill Carter, Broker-379-2184
Becky lane, Assoc.-446-0458

Call t4&amp;-0552 Mytlme-

TIA(D OF RENTING? Buy this ljome like paying rent.
i
·pay points and all elosing costs for VA or FHA loans. NO down
paymenl on VA. $900 down on FH~ Call today, see how easy you
can buy this heme.
·
·

'

2 bdr. untumi-d mobile
homo. 12810 on Rt. 36. Coli
4411.4228.

2 room efficiency ap t . 1·

House in Harrisonvlle, rem·

B rake r-Auctioneer

·OFFICE 446-7013

1 bd.room furnished , apt .

Estate • General

632 KRISTY DRIVE - Redoced to $59,500.
BLENDED RATE roortga,ge available to qualified pefson •
purcha~ng th ~ charmonj 3 bedroom briclt ranch, 2 .
baths. family room wi1h fireplace. 2 car garage. City
schools. ·

Null 245-9007

Apartment
for Rent ·

Apa rtmen u . 304- 176 ·
6648.

SOUTHERN '+iiLLS R.E.r INC.

Insurance

Beth

for Rertt

,446-6610

3~

doUars you want to aeelll
after

osit 8100. Cell 614-992·
2288.
'

42 Mobile Homes

for Rant

'

bl

BAIRD &amp;·FULLER
REALTY·

__:____

42 Nlobile Homes

I

lndu.'itrial tmd
Commt•n:ia/ Crh•r.~

Real Estate • Ge(leral

~=~::_

Apartment
for Rent

bedroom house 8186. Dep·

•
'

Rd., Jockaon.
Oh. Col1 814-281 -3074
614-384-8180.
Bu~ing!Dn

Real Estate • General

.,

deposit noquired. ·

New paint and carpeting.

C.M.A. "with

Sincl' lll9()

rP~-~m~-~~~~·~·i.~~
unfur-

61 4-992-3090.

Real Eatata
Wanted

Clill Wando Girten. =l04·

13.

3 bedroom troP•·Ior rent .
n 60 o m_onth pluo utilitloo.

814-992o3489 altar 6 ,p.m.

cletes Karate Studio. 143

en ceo. 14.00 hour. 304- noqulntd, phona 304-875-

12

.

6 bd.rool\1 houaa. Equipped Ya mila off At. 7 on Bulaville~
kitchen; Garpeting. lleopon- Addioon Rd.ln Addlaon. Oh.
sible parties ohly. Phone Coli 114-)8$-9766 oltar 8

forma puching ond kicking
.. go, end p10t8ctive ~ufp­
mont. JIH'ry Lo-ry l!o AIIOO·

DO YOU HAVE ENTHUSIASM 111 Thai• the key to the

'

44

•.

Typing. 12 yro. eKp, Cill
446-0224 or 446-4271 .
heot. 304-876-8804.

E.O.E.

Apartment
for ,Rent

'

POMEROY-2 bedroom unfumiahed apt.. 8160. 2

Real Eatate·General ·

rienc
dairy hand. non
drh*er.. Write Box P30 in
care of . the Point · Plea.. nt
Register .
4

Secluded, mini farm , all
fenced, remodel farm home,

44

lnstn.Jction thru .
Al·. o availeW. Ktrltll

LAndscaping ,

DEP NDABLE . oxpe -.

'

.

General Haulng and Tl'llah
remove! Service. Reliable

fest . Job offers guaranteed.

676-7601

0

with 4 bed r.. 8300 per mo. In Middleport. 8 14-992·
Clelond·Reolty 992,2269 . 781, .

: ;: : ;: : : :;:=======

446 -4372".

0
0

phar'macol o gy t rainirig
wahting to workshon hours
on Saturday only. Call Mark
Harvey at 614 -992 -7271 .

·oayton,Ohio45440 •1513[439-5492

.

firaplaca. 31'2 mi. out 160
put Holz~ r . Call814- ~!46 - l ____ _ _' - - - 9170.
42 Mo"'le Homes
for Rent

992 -3690.

Wrill', "'irr, t lf call/or hmc h u r~: .
EXECUTIV E OFFICES ,
The LON G Building- Suite 103 .2090 llewiU A"e .

'

I

JlrMt parking. Owner fl...

mobile home, gea heot. rurol
wotar. clooe to town, ovolo- 36
btoJon . 1at. Cel448·1240.

ment , Ward ' s KeyboarcP.

Karate the ultimate in aelf
detlnCB all priVate lea.on1,

44

TWO bedroom troller. Mo· ·l tove 1!o refrig. 8100 mo. 304·BB2-2686 ... 1-614992 -7206.
son. depooit r~ulrad, 304- Call614-992·6880.
773-6216 .
EFFICI ENCY APAR T- UNFURNISHED apartment
MENT. 600 block of Third for rent, 1 bedroom .
Ave. 2 rm• . and bath. 8126. 1180.00 Call Automo~ve
43 Farms for Rant
pluo u~iil ioo . Coll448-4222 Supply, 8 ·1. 304 -175 b-een 9 and 6pm.
2:!18. 876-6763.

2 bdr. rriodern' home with

CLEAN USE&amp; MOBILE
HOM .ES KESSEL'S QUAL·
'
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
acre lots-160 ft. roed
4 MI. WEST. GAlliPOLIS. Two
RT 36. PHONE 448-7274. frontage, city_water. behind
84 Lumber. Col 304-8711For aale· or rent 1'2xeo · 8873 or 876 -3818 . '

C&amp;L Bookkooping
Bookkeeping 8t tax Mrvlce

4

i~~~~~~~~~~tl~~;~off

.....,AUCTION

.Services

Sales petson ne8ded at local Are vou paying too much for
business . Send resume to VOlA' hospit•l -hitatth inauP.O. BoK '720 D.H . Core of rance . Call Carroll
Snowden,' 441-4290.
Dll!iiY Sentinel .
.

Street, Eut.
Charleston, West Virginia

Industrial

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED- CARS.
TRUCKS . GALUPOUS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 448-7572 .,

&amp; rm· apt .:t,'private porch ,

I

For Solo 80.175 Camni'.
Ind. city lot. 1200. oq. ft.
buHding portiolly rentod. Oft

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

for Sale

Ohio 1 -800·

town . Partly carpeted. '230
TWO mobile homeo lor renl month , w.l ter Included .
on Rt. 2 obout 6 minutto I 100 depooit. Cal 446from towr'i . Call after 8. 0088.
----...,..-'---~-'-304-676·6277.

2

nanclng pi&gt;llible. Coil 44159567 lifter 6. .
~

32 Mobile Homes

992-2361. out of Ohio
1-613, 258·01 12.

017 5.
Wood

in

Coli 814-988·

Apartment
for Req t

12xll0 mobile home. 2 Three bedroom apanment
bd.r..,mo. 304-773·6802. with basement n• r Food ·

12'•60" .

'2500.00, phono304-117827154.

3 bd.room ranch, 2 acru,

44

for Rant/

Va .

Rouah Lane, Chethlre. Ohio. land. 1chool1, and down-

1988.

REWA AD OF 100.00 to . left in lock er at the Jay Mar ing outfit s. A U s izes, men ' s
r ·yona who

1970 HOUSE trollor,

22 Nlonav to Loan •

by Larry Wrl·ohll 42 Nlobile 'Homes

cellent c:ondlt lon, good

Wooldy tralnlf111 ·

FrenChtow n Car Co .
a·ill Gene Johnson

KIT 'N' CARLYLE••

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

price, 814-9:$7-23511.

lt8rt In J1nu1ry.

11 wks. old . 614 -992- We p ay ca sh fo r late mo de l
clean used cars .
7406 .

Houaes ~or Rent

41

Smal l fu m ished hou1e. 1 or

wilh P••nt

3 kitte ns . 2 calic o. 1 yellow.

Used~

Houses for Rent

r'

Ohio-PQi~t Pleasani,' W .

• 2 adutll only. Coli 446·
0338.

PMC 1970 Mobile Home.
12xlltl, 2 bedroom. refrlg•
rltor.awnlng • raUinp. ••·

bedr ,o om,

ducu . oo .. n' t lntarflfl

. Vall ey Ploz ~, 446·8025 or
446-8026..

446-11;74.

41

•

•

for Sale

any th ing to give aw ay a nd tu re an d Ant ique• of .ill

Second Ave .. Galli polis, Oh .
Jewelry repair· F·ree Esti mate•. ring sizing , etc . Complete set o f 9olf clubs with
bag &amp; cart $225 like new,
portable B&amp; W TV's $45 and
up, co lor TV . r·e mo te co ntrol

32 Mobile Homlia

31 Jiom. . for Sale

Buy

ANY , PERS ON who ' has

Frank'S Pawn Shop . 406

2, 1983

W. Va.

.

)I
\

' .

11234

© t.ll82

CROWN CITY frame IIIII briclo ranch home well
maintained. SJIII]ous llwo with lots of tru~ trees on

back. 3 bedrooms. 1 ftj and 2 ha~ bath~ lar~
kilthen, iving room, family room, M basement and
oversized 2 ear gll1&amp;l. Approx. 1\\ acres!

.

#240
.

CQZY! is the word 1o describe this darling 2 bedroom
home. Newly remodeled; one car garage w.th attached
carport and somm IOI!;hen, alumonum sidtng,
tllerrTqlane 11indows and storm doqrs. Noce famoly .
horne.
·
11228
R£110DE1£D 2 SIORY 11011~ .- Located in
Middleport, There are 3 bedroom~ bath, IMng room,
· IW:hen and dinin8 room. Older basement front (Xlt'Ch
and priced .at $40,000.
.
11226
CROWN CITY LOCATION - Small neat older home
with lovely view of .the river. Home has 2 bedrooms,
iving· room. dinina room, kitchen, bath-and enclosed
P9rth. 2 llU1buildin&amp;$ in J)od shape and a big lawn
with lots of trees and shrubs.
·

SUPERB smiNG - Ftve acres ol wooded area
surrounds this natural wood ~ded home. 3 bedrooms,
2 ful baths. ~replace. Cathedral ce, ng and wood
beams. Tastelully decorated. Mi~ of Holler
Medical Center. .Priced to sell. ·
.
#196
FRINGE BENEFITS - Buy this home and enJoy free
natural gas for heating and a monthly check from
royalties. This larm home isin excelklnt condition with
all modem lacilities and 48 acres olland.
#193
CoMMERCIAl BUILDING • PLUS ADDITIONAL
INCOME - Ideal location tor your business, plus 3
molite homes, all rented for extra inrome. Two lots. Off
street Parking Formerly a floral shop. &lt;Niner&gt; anxious
to sell. Call for more information.
.
#233
EXCELLINT RETIREMENT or starter home! $22.500 is
the Jlice of this 2 bedroom home ~tuated al the edge
o1 town full basement Garage. Energy effic~nt natural
gas fJ!h,;ce. Insulated storm door&gt; and v.indows.
Priced lo sell.

#2 35

.#212

· REDUCED $2.900 - &lt;Niner will provide the finaocing
oo th~ older ranch home. 3 to!rooms. living room,
POSSIBILITY OWNEI FlliftiiCING - Two Slcry well
dinin&amp; bath, utiity. Needs repair. Nice lot Priced at
constructed home. 5 rooms, bath, lui basemen~ fuel
only $15,000.
oil furnace, fireplace. Good kt approximately l4 acre.
#IAA
Blacklnp road. cbe to ~ school &amp; grocery store.
listed $29,00'l, $5,00'! dOwn, 1 yrs., 10% AP.R.
•
11181
VICTORIAN STYLE WITH LOTS OF CLASS - Home
. has been partly reslnred. Could be a beautilul.home.
ACREAGE - 3 1C11S total. Alovely buidll~ spot Sis · New kitchen, new bath, formal dining room. lamily
h~ and overlooks river with a beautilul voew.
room, living room, 3 bedrooms. Basement and attic.
11149 Approx. 1 acre. Pricett.in the 20s.
.
'"lit....
'
. #189
6 ROOIIS and bath. 2&lt;I" 3 bedroom~ wood burner, and
fireplace_ llriled wei. County water avalable. 1.50
acres. Close Ill Wryne National Forest $24,900.
#185 LOAN ASSUMPTION ~ 3 bedroom home: BuM! 1975,
located on large lot More land available. large living
DRASTICALLY R£DUC£D
3 bedroom mObile room, ~ge kitchen combinaoon. Patio and dec~ 10
home. Expando
family room with woodbumer. minU1es to lllspbl or Gall polis. priced .in the low $40s.
#In
Cowred patio. rage. C'A!IIar, 114 acres approx.
Excelent financi lemls.
,
'
.
.
#165
$22,900 IS THE ASK!NG PRICE ol th~ _3 bedroom
HOllE AIID .64 ACR£ -' Near Raccoon Creek. Priced home in Rutland. li~ng room, formal donong room,
kitchen, enclosed heated front porch. Basement
at $24,000. Buyer can take 011er land cootract with bath
NatUral
gas. large stora~ area. Qwner finaocin~
' approl $5,000 down, 8% APR. ~yment $366.50
avaita~e.
·
·fi2Cig
redtx:es to $216.50 in 2 years and land contract PiliP
oH·in 811 years.
·
11152 '
BUILDING LOIS - located off uper Route 7 and
40 ACRES roore or less. Bi-M home, Syearsokl 11ith priced at S5,000. Lot size left side 120' front and 100'
3 bedmoins and 2 full baths. lBIJ! ~late garage deep. Rlf!ht side
front and 120' deep.

sus

roo

Coal shed. Tllbaa:o blse. Apprux. 5 ~cleared. Tlis

property ,js ~ wooded and located in ~
Towrt5hip.
·
.

11237

_==

.

'

-

COMMERCIAL BUILDING
62x80 all steel construction with fire
proof insulation. Ovelhllad crane. has
office &amp; baths. forme~y used for boat
sales &amp;repair. Located across frqm Ohio
River. Potential unlimited . Call Hanny
Blackburn.
PRICE REDUCED TO $32,900 - 50 acres more
or I~ near Eureka, approx. 15 ~ grassland,
balance wooded, nicely remodeled 6 rm. and bath
home. WB fireplace, stove, refrig., several
outbuildings. Owners leaving the area and wOuld
like a quick ·sale.

PERRY TOWNSHIP - 78 acres, 15 ~ Simms
Creek bottom, ba~nce rolling pasture &amp; woods,
nicemodular home, ~rge barn, several otheobuikl~gs. Tobacco base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
Woods Rd.

--

RECR£ATiDN lAND - 25 acres m/1, most~
woods, front; on l~ Raccoon Creek &amp; State Route 325 near Tycoon Lake $15,000.

llo/; FINANCNGAVAIIABLE - 5YR. OW SP UTLEVEL - Features 4 or 5 BRs, 3 baths, 30 fliR, 2
faniy rms., 2woodburnin glirep~ces, ~rge k!chen
and dining area. 2 car garage. oneof_the .rounty~
nicest poo~ 12Qx50) and truly prdffiSvo. ~landS­
ASSUME BY&gt;% LOAN - lovely ranch at the edge caped lot. located on Oebby Drove. Owner vssdl
of ti)Vn ~ priced to s~l at $49,900. Features are 3 - so call RANNY BLN:KBURN lor a ptosonal
BR., 1\? baths, large lR'wrth WB firep ~c~ modern showing, Vou111E ~sed you dd.
k~ch en &amp; dining are~ laundry rm., garage &amp; gas
heat Call for app&lt;intment
NEAT AND CLEAN - CONVENIENT IN TOWN VACANT LAND NEAR TOWN - Approx. 4~ acres
LOCAtiON - 2 BR's, 12d8lR, large k~chen &amp; on the Graham School Rd. in GreenTwp. SOme Ita!
dining area with range, relrig. &amp;disp., laundry wilh land mosUy woods &amp; hills, ideal lor bui ~d in&amp;
washer &amp; dryer. new carpet, expensive drapes, county water available. $21,000.
carport. gas heat, humdifier, dehumidifier, air
clellller, central air. Watch the Blue Devil football
games Irum the large rear soo deck. $50,000?? NO, PRICE REDUCED .TO $55,900! OWNER Will
only $37,500.
. FINANCE. This lovely 1story home hasa 15x21LR,
formal dinin&amp; 14x27 family rm" finoshed on kootty
SECLUDED COUNTRY SffiiNG. LOOKING FOR pine 2 fireplaces. tull basement. 42ft. screened on
SoMETHING SPECIAL? let us show you this new rear' porch, garage and large let 300ft. deep. This
3 BR, 2 bath double garage home W11h over 1700 home is vacant and needs 1o be sold belore the 1st
sq. ft. d 6ving area. Just right for the large fa moly of the year. Located in Mms Vil~ge.
that needs ample space. Otper leatures are natural ·
wood sidin&amp; heat pump, range, refng,, OW &amp; d ~p.
BARGAIN PRICED AT $10,500 - 10x55 mobile
Can be (llrchased with 2 acres or 40. located tn
home wnh ;Ox18 addition, several buildings. over
6 acres ol ~nd oo Sand Hollow Rd. on Green Twp.
Green Township.
CHiner will help finance.
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should describe this
lovely 3 BR brick ranch. Special features are a
NEW LISTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
large LR &amp;dining rm , equipped kitc hen, 1\? baths,
approx.
4 mi, north of HMC on old route 160
laundry, quality carpet, cent air &amp; an over&gt;ized 2
ModErn trHilllel has brick &amp; von~ construction. 3
car garage. located on U.S. 35 West &amp; shown by
DR's, 2 baths, eqtipped krtchen, dining area,
appointment
laundry &amp; 2 car garage. Can ·be lxlught with or
without acreage.

. #222

ARE YOU LOOKiNG FOR SW ACREAGE! - Then
look no further. 13.90 acres. 3 bedroom ranch style
home only 6 years old. 20x60 !obacco bam. Tobacco
bese. Tractor. Farm priced at only $37,500.
.

AffORDABlE COIMNIENCE- Riverfront property.
Alu!ftinum sidinl Mil stucat. _Olarmii1g 2 IIDry 3
.'
11211
bedroom hOme~IIi beths. BesemenL Alllebed prage,
l ecnrs. DIY s:ltods. Taloe a llltlk tod,y. - FINISH THIS ONE! and have a beaulilu l)pme at the
o1 woods. 5 Acres. more or less, 3 ~l!drooms. 2
$42.
.
.
·-1~ ed&amp;J
fireplace. Lots ol"pOt;sibililies.

BUILDING lOT - ilhns Cleek Road. Guyan Twp.,
dlid well.. ellctric. Sdlaol busand
.. . maiiOUIB. $2.000.
#239

HOMEsTEAD HERE or use a hunting lodge,
vacation home, etc. Rustic log horne is bUtt from
hand hewn beams and has a sleeping loft. modern
bath, ~rge stone fireplace and approx. 27 acres of
woods in the Wayne Nabonal Forest Extra land
avai~l:j e. EAsy Terms.

BEST BUY IN TOO .:.. St~~h 2 story hlln)! _was
'buit in 1894 and must be seen to. app!llCI81e.
Large open toyer and $~airway. LR. dmirlz rl]l.,
pam completely equipPed modem 101tilen, 4
BRs. 211 baths, new sidon&amp; Prill'!, near ochOols,
shopplll(. etc. .

PEACEFUL CO_
UNTRY-LIKE SETnNG. EliCIIIInt
bur at $45,900. Owners have been transferol!:l &amp;
are anxious to sdl this' lOVely brick &amp; frameran ell
wilh 3BRs, large kitchen LR will WB1ireplare, rim
carpet throuRilouf. attachsl g;raie&amp; 1acre pinestudde:l k1l Possible ~ended mortagelor quaified
bUVI!rs.

2'h ACRES located at Bladen, 2 t11iles below Eureka.
Excelen1 mobile home site and priced at $3,5oo .
.

.

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.. .•

.

.#223

or

•
•
•

�....
Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipoUs,

limn-Sentinel

44

2, I

Ohi8oint Plea10nt, W. Va.

2, 1983

JS:'parJ:ment
for Rel]t

Real Estate-General

Furn . apt . downtown Po~ nt
Pleasant. all utilitie• p11d .
deposit required 304-896-

UnJCJamtM theM fou" JumtHs,

t.

I KEPOD
I rJ ) T

FURNISHED apartment,
adults, 304-67f!·2257.

"'.:::.:;:""'..:=- - -

FURNISHED 4 room cot·

J

PHONE 446-3643

.

675 -1453.

Ike Wiseman, Broker, 4-46-3796 tYe.
Jim Coc~ran, Associa!e, 446-7881 Eve,

'r

B. J. Hiirston, Assoc. 446-4240Eve.
Clyde
Assoc. 245-5276

INSTALLED
CALLAL
Ph. 742·2328
11 -H mo.

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174 ''
2-21Htc

esting defensive hand from
. the 1982 World Team cham· .
pionship.

$60, 2 people $70. Circ le' s

·I·VOONCY ~

GRACIOUS LIVING
MODERN RANCH WITH
COUNTRY MOBILE Hn.~•·l·
IN A COUNTRY
·
A
PP.
I
y,
ACRES
Park. Route 33,
ATMOSPHERE
VA ASSUMABLE LOAN '
Pomeroy . large lots.
..-fru~
gracklus
family living can ..
Large living room. 3 bedrooms,
992 -7479.
2 baths, utility room, well be yours in this bea~tiful 4
equ1Jlll(l eat·in kitchen, h.orne. bedroom home appr())( . 8 mrles
carpeted lflroughoul and a hom Galli po l~. The krtchen ~ a
2·ca r garage. Near Gallipolis on · gourmeYs delight Unbelieva·
51 Household Goods
a blacktop road. Call lor ble dining' rooom and tamr~
room. Burtt tor lhe mosl d1s
mformat1on. ...
557 crimrnatin g homeowner. 20
#
acres Pastureland. Horse sta·
SWAIN
ble Another 73acres available.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
Many many amenrt1es.
·
STORE 62 Olive St .. Galli'
#542
polis . King coal 81. wood·
heaters with fan 8469, set
WOW! $39.900.00
boJC spring&amp;: mattren81 00,
WOW!
9%
owner
financing.
Wow' 3 BR. 2 baths, central air,garage,
firm $120, sofa-loveseat &amp;.
building,
all
furniture
induded. 5 mmutes lo downtown
storage
chair $--199. love seats 870,
Gallipolis Oty schools Large level lot
new coal &amp; woOd heaters as
low as $399 with blowers,
used coal &amp; wood heaters.
new dinet sets $75 &amp; up,
refrigerator.$, ranges. bunk
beds complete $179, bunkie• mattresses S40. chests,
dr8ners. TV's . Call 446-

3159.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
. washers, dryers, refrigerators. ranges. Skaggs Ap·
pliances. Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel .

446 -7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair. rOcker, ottoman, 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier}, $686 . Sofa.
chair end lovaseat. $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

$285. to $895 . Tobias, S45

and up to - $125 . Hide-abeds,$440 . end up to
$626. t ·Recliners, $175 . to
$360 .. lamps from S28 . to
$76. 6 pc . dinettes from

$99 .. to $435. 7 pc., $189.

and up . Wood table with six

chairs $426. to $746. Desk
$110 up to s226. Hutches,
$650. and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses. $250 . and
~by

beds.

$110 . Mattre!ll81 or boK
springs, full or twin, $68 ..
firm. $68. and S78 . Queen

sets, $196 . 4 dr . chests.

$42. 5 dr. chests, 854. Bed
frames, 820.ond $25 .• 10
guo - Gun cabinets. $360.,
dinene chairs $20. and $25 .
· Gas or electric ranges, $326

up to $376. Baby mo·
tresses. 826 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20. $26' &amp; $30,

king fr8me $60. Good ~~lee·
tion of bedroo~ su1tea,
cedar chests, roclters, metal
cabinl(t.M,, swivel rockers.
Used Furniture-- bookcase.
ranges. chairs. end t~bles.
washers, dryers, refrigera tors and. TV's. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
6pm, Mol\. thru Fri. , 9am to

6pm, Sot .
446 -0322

·

-

3 temp .
dryer. real clean $90, GE
washer also reel nice $110.
Guaranteed. Call 614-2561207.

Westinghouse

USED FURNITURE. 5 pc.
metal dinette. soia bed,
queen cannonball bed. twin
bed "Outfit. refrigerator. livIng room tables, swivel
rocker. Corbin and Snyder
Furniture, 446-1171 ·
Dilhwasher good cond ..
built-in. gold color, best

offer. Coll446-064?·

EAFORD

VIR Gll B. SR· 'R-EAL&amp;.T,..OR,;:II,I
• 216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
H 614 )·992·3325
NEW liSTING - Back of
Middleport on Rl 7 is this 4
room home with bath , root
ceUar, 2_ porches, LC. water,
ch1mney for your woodburner,
and 3.47 acres for on~
$15,000.
DUPLEX - Uve in one· and
rent ltle other. 2 large apts. of 3
bedroolns each. Baths ·and
nice kllchens. View ol river on
large corner lot m Middleport
JUst $28,500.

#407

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots, nice size build'rng lois wrth all utilities there. Lot ~ ze
101.8 by 171.2. Better get 'urn now.
#456
BEAUTIFUL SffiiNG- BEAUTIFUl HOME
PLUS I ACRE PLUS
8 rooms plus lull basement 2. full baths with s~owers. tam1ly room,
livmg room, dming room, mce step-saver kttchen. 3 or 4 BR,
Lennox heat puinp, also coal and wood burner furance. N1ce
landscaped yard. All of this for only $53.900. Needs small amount
of worfl to finish lhis NEW HOM[
·
#532
HOME WITH A LOVELY VIEW
,..
ASSUMABLE LOAN 11%%
If ! -floor living su1ts your life st~e this brick &amp; frame rancher is
for you. 3bedrooms, I 'h baths, dimng area, well equ1pJlll(i k!chen
with burll-in cabinets; livmg room with brick fire~lace, garage,
redwood porch. and a large above ground pool, w1th an acre of
land more or less. Cily sc hoo~ .
#563
DON'T FENCE ME IN
Give meland lois of land. 49 acres, moreOf less, w1th clean 12'x70'
mob1le home, ~uge barn w1lh 20 A. tillable, approx. 3500 lb.
tobacco base and pond. BONUSII Older ?-room house could be
remodeled goes with this property. Uve 1n one while you remodel
the other 11 you wish. low 30's. '
#487
25 ACRES - 8-ROOM HOME
. .
Nice remodeled home. Blown-in rnsulalion. 2 storage bu~dmgs,
chicken house. Mm1 farm. Cheshire Township. Nice country
krtchen.
#558
GOOD HOUSE SIIISE
R£11REIIENT OR STARTER HOME
Comf&lt;lnab~. reatlxlme with lar&amp;!' ivi1g room, "'!·in kilchm v.i1h bu~· in
~lcl'en wlh b u~ in mbilel&gt; 2bed•ws, slorage mom. balh and c~IXJII.
Very coMflonl locahon. Gall for furtll&gt;r deto~
#533
DUTCH STYLE COUNTRY HOME-· - -· ..
4 bedrooms. 21h balfls. lullv equiooed eat-in kitchen,.for.mal rtmm~
room, famiii'_!OOm with woodburner, two car sara~ Wllfl ·3U!Oc
opener. Style, beauty, charrn &amp;comfort- all describes thiS home.
Priced $74,900
'
#
322
I~ GALLIPOLIS-WALK TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
6 rooms, 3 BR, full basement n~ee large fronl porch. No upkeep.
Vinyl srding Natural gas furnace, mce large shade trees, ~w laxes.
Home you should check on.
#530
COUNTRY H!!ME
&amp; 40 ACRES M. &amp; L
8 room country home- 5 bedrooms. bath. shower. some carpet·
ing, drilled well wrth iJ\Imp. Nice tobacco barn. Two rorn cribs.
Garage foJI miner.al rigitfs goes. Several natural springs. some frurt
lrees. localed on Slale Highway Priced only $30,00.00
#543
' 6.94 ACRES
VACANT LAND OFF ·RT. 35
.
.,
Rolli~g land - besrde Old U.S. Highway_35. In an area·thai~
dev~opin g fast. Rl 35, short d1slance wesl of Gallipolis. Gel rt now.
.
#544
CHARM &amp; SPLENDOR IN GALLIPOLIS .
Elegant spacious room s is yours in thrs 2 story homein lhe Crty
Scho~ District. large lam1~ room. liv1ng room. eal·m klchen,
laundry room, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, garage, fenced yare( lull
basemen! plus much more. Th ~ home is a pleasur11.to show. Call
today for an appointment
#549
ONE ACRE PLUS - HAS ASSUMABLE LOAN .
Kyger Creek School Dist 4 room home with full basement Wrth
small down payment possrble lo assume the present loan. Phone
f.or delails.
'
#
556
..
WHAT A DEAL!! $27,000
Come see for your.;eiL .Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washer, dryer,
dishwasher, relqgerator, woo~nd all like new. Storage
building and 2 car carport. ~creek Schools.
' '
#552
·
LOOKING FOR PRIVACY?
.
WE WOULifLIKE TO SHOW YOU THIS ONE
Wooded setting at Charolais Hil~ overlooking the lake. Step into lhe
enlry on the recond level and view the beautiful atnum from lhe
level below. This contemporary unique de ~gn is a decorators
dream come lrue. Indoor pool, office, well equipped k!chen wlh
built-in lood ~land, extra large liv. room. imported lie floor grace
the spacious tam . room. 2 fireplaces, 217 baths, balcony on lront ol
both ~vels. Call for a personal showmg and find out the many
details loo numerous to menti!Jn in this ad

Print answerflere: "

'

I

.

;

.'

+AK

~

EAST
.876:t3
Ya .

t9 7 5 .

t A63
+Q9 3 2

+9&lt;
YAKJI09!

PH. 94~2182
or 949-3055

••

i2-1J.Lmo. ·

I ·I J
,_

A ""["""J.,......,l.,...-I""'
, .....,)(

Yesterdays

1 Answer :

What he did wh ; n !he rowed-JUST RODE

EIIIY. CALL JIEUJI, IIIJCE

H46

OIVIRG.

Huus1. 111

'

APPLIANCE
SERVICE .
9.85 3561 .---:

All

nme ·"'

On

oi- 992-'206

608 E. MAIN .
PoMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

PRICE
TO $55,000 - Owres are an.ious lo
sell &amp;havedr~llld (Jiceover $10,000.lovely 4bedroom
roi..UI on 40 a&lt; res miL Hoose has EII•~IJ'd kitchen, 2•
tiJII:ollts, foepla:e, basement, master bed100m il ah~e
14'x2l', wi&gt;albumingfu~anc~ thermo wmilws, etc Also
• has 30x50 bam, smallliJIC&lt;O blse. and 30 ac woods.
S..:l.illed selling wlh a
view. Call
Walker.

NEW LISTING- Sa~m Twp.- Approximate~ 79'h acresof rice
laying ~nd. mostly cleared. Apond and a 2 story brick home, with
4 ,bedrooms, dining room, sun room, and a full basement with ·
$3.000.00 down, financing availatJe. $54,500.00.
NEW LISTING - POMEROY - One of the best homes m the
county is now offered for sale. Historic home leatures 9 rooms, 2)'1
baths basement and all the ~her features you want buitt&lt;n
krtchen: large formal d1mng room, breakfast nook, large family
room and a 32x 16 livmg room, large lot with nver frontage. Only
semus inquiries.

f

-Dump Trucks

hea~

DOOER - Approximately 6 acres with a I ~ ~ory frame-block
house that has a hu'ge living room, with fire~ace , dining·kitchen,
and 3 bedrooms. Front aRd rear porch. $26,900.00.

~rlduding

w~

-Trencher

-water

·-GasUnes
-Septic Systems

NEW LISTING BY•% ASSUIPTION - Good
location' 4 bedroom home in Pleasant Valev
Estates off Rt 35. Over. 1450 SQ. ft of liv._are~
.includes dining room, fully eqwpped ~!chen, 111
baths. uti!. room, nat gas, cent air. over.;ized
lli'rage &amp; Ia~ yard. Owners anx~us io sel. Call
jm Cochrnn.
•
EVERYTHING 'IOU'll NEED .- A PRICE YOU
CAN AFFORD- You must see an the extras this
fine 3 bedroom ~e offers. located in city school
district, this ranch has a· beautiful kitchen with
quaity cabinets, range &amp;• oven, dishwasner -.
·• compactor, fireplace in i~ng room, 111 bths, fulf
: barement, farrily roorn, garage and 18x36
in·ground J)OO, huge covered deck and %ac. Only

I

1' 70
I

II

$53,900.
.
ACRES ~ MOBILE HOllE-~ you enjoy lois
of woods, plenty of wildlife, streams, springs, a
and 1·ust "'a,·n elbow room, lflen you'll
large ~·er
~
,.
.
want to ree this. lndudes l2x64 mo~le home
w/WIKll stove. Call Oyde Walker-tor info.

'

SURVEYED

Frbm

.

BUilDING LOTS for sale in 1Tarn Subdivison.• from $5,000.00.
Wood Realty, Inc.
..
)2 locust St:, GalliPOliS

.-.

NT

We have made a New
Year'-s resolulion. We are
goong 10 be kin&lt;ter to East
and West than we have been.

Sins from 6'16' Up
to 24'136'.
lnsulottd Dot Houses

H. L WRITESEL

For all your wiring '
neeas;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residentia I
&amp; Commercial
Call742-31

Cell 446-1408.

WOOD AND COAL stoves
by Blue Ridge ~nd Utly. Free
standing stoves and fireplace lnsert1. Swlah8r Im-

plement, Upper River Rd ..
Gallipolis.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
· Racine, Oh . •
Ph. 614-1143-2591

Rd . GalliPOiis,·OH.
Slabs cut-up e15 full length
$10 PU load, round wood,

•New or Repair

Misc . Grocery Store equipment &amp; supptlas. Inquire

,.

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992 •2791
or 949-2263

614-446-9520 between 9
4
&amp; '
Vending machines. Coffee
&amp; sandwitches. Call 446070 ·
.1·983 Necchi aawing me-

°

Diai-A-Matic

with

$25.000- Not a bad price to pay for a4yr. old 3
bedroom home with vinyl ~ding, woodburner,
patio doors, 12x24 carport and a large yard.
localed off Rt 35 in Jackson Co. Call Clyde Walker.

"WILL TRADE FOR FARM" - PRICED UNDER
MARKET VALUE - Seller.; anxious lo ntove to
t Will trade 'Of our farm Of -~ at only
coun ry.
·' y
"""
$43,500. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room,
fi p1
f 11 base
1 '-'·
1 d · nat
·
"e ace. u
men, ''"rna ' ~lng,
ga~
heat plus 3car garage and extra large~~ w/ motJJe
home hook-11p. RL 7. I mile frorn bndge. Call Jirrt
Cochran.

canto
•

2

Jltw HoJRts -

•wtdllil•
o(loctric work
- oCultool Palo

•

Ph. 742-2834
Or 949-2160 •n 1?&lt;1"' I

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

&amp;Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

tJtensive

Bides. .

&amp;~s

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM
SIDING
.

...'iliiiulttion

Call

for

estimates,

GREG ltOUSit

lroe

siding

949· 2801

oReplecement Windows
•New Roofing ·
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

or

949· 2860.

Pit 992-1583
or 992-2212

No Sunday Calls
3· 11 -tfc

ll· ll·ttc

::===~=====~~========~Pr=====~12~·3~i·~i=roo~-~
CONTRACTING

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

FRYE'S
.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
, REPAIR

TRUCK &amp; AUTO

DOZER
B4CKHOE
LOWBOY

PlASTiCS
., &amp;,SUPPLY

oORANGE
~LACK

GAll PIPE

GAS PIPE

ofiEGOlATORB •

· DELIVERY

&lt;

PH. 98S.3892
or 985-3837
)2-11).1 1110. lXI

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
·. S~RVICE

!H·I mo CHI.

.Chest.-, Ohio ·
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

.•.,.,e w......

o.,~

• Soottle Smith
Al .mek•ond modeh
A,_,al-81i&gt;n
. . Houle colla and shop

$65 . a cord. ' Spilt and
d~llvared . 614-843-9603.

firewood delivered eeo .•
cord. Coal delivered e45.
ton. Call Tom HOskins 614949-2160 or 614-742·
2834.
·•

coated. 4•8 thru 4 • 12,
Pricea,. s7.00 to $9.60.

.

for trailer und•r·

Sam Somerville' a Army War

Surplus.

New Era. Old

Route 21.

East

Ravena-

wood, open until further
notice Frid~y. Saturday,
Sunday, 1:00-7:00 P.M.
Army- denim clothing,

winter. army
leather
ieckell
heavycombat
•II sizes
all
boot a.

Stradlvarlouo

trumpet, 1Hver plated, excellent condition. G, E. black &amp;

12·3 - 1

Reg. Doberman• pup1 and
Doberman Stud Service.

Cell 446-1795.

POODLE GROOMING. Call
Judy Toylor ··t 61 4-367·
7220.

I

SALES &amp;SERVICE

I

u.s.

Rt. so ·East
Guysville, Ohio
'
Authoril~ John Deere,
New Holland, BUill Hog
F•t.m Equipm~nt
OHler
•
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-J·Ifc

1111 )l~"e;

Drive

STUCCO PLASTERING
eatimates. Call 614-2561182.

Milrcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 v•ers experience.
specializing jn built up roof.

Call 6·1 '·388-9867.
GENE'S CARPET CLEANING. Deep st8am cleaning.
Scotchgaurd . Free estimatea. low ratea. 814-992~

6309.

piea. CFA Himalayan. Per·
••n
and Siame" klttana.
446-3844 after 4PM .

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call676-1331 . .

~II

Would you like 1 cute Cocker

59 For Sale or Trade
Raglstei-ed Polled Hereford helfora: Dole M Bo1m.
448-0871.
For aale or 1rade fpr lives-

tock. 1971 Chevy pickup
truck, runa good. Calf 614-

266·1871 .

.

63

ACROSS
1 1 Arbor ·
16 Scottish
landowner
21 Clerical

lilt

37 Chinese .

RIDING horse~ &amp; oaddl81,
304-676-2263, 676-2610,
676-2821.

40 Track

,99locate

36 Support

100 1812 event
102 Lets fall
103 Red or

38 Attempt

Black

104 Spread lor
dl)ling

events

42 FoOd fish

105 Airplane

part

106 M8diter-

45 Period of
time

ranean

56 Financier

114 Permit
116 Inquire

59 Old salt

117looks

fixedly
119 Proverbs
120 Grafted, in

• 'heraldry

122 Depends on
124 Genus of

-Paix

66 Hebrew
month

mll8at•·

very

cond. Cafi446-0B27.

good

1978 4-dr Olda Oeltt-88
low mileage. B11t offer. Cell

448-0070.

•

1980 fiAT X18. oall ,304·
e715-3089 aftor 4:00,
1974 MAVEICK, 33,000
mllao, 304-67154437.
ect~al'

1th CA,.ERO, whilrl wHh
J&gt;l•ck otrlpeo. 304·8822230.

.·,

156 Word with
'~ lube or ear
158 Narrow
openings
159 Virginia

67 Red or
bleo&lt;

69 Allempted
70 Subsrde
71 Sunny

shade

cattle

125 Storage
compartments
126 Lotharios
· 128 Goddess of
healing
. 129 Violin p~rt

...-.........--..-......-'-

neighbor
48 Al lowance

160 Collect
161 Abounds

DOWN

FUture

flower

area

51 Begtn
52 Kettledrum
53 Enthusiasm
55 Moves

gazelle

58 Rages
61 Dillseed

mounds

116 Venli lates

118See78
Down

119 Warble
121 Empowers
123 Chinese
fnile

125 Ridicule
ltghlly .
126 Promptly '
127 Spirited

horses
129

Quarrels

130 Repulse

13 1 Possesses
132 Obtuse

134 Airline abbr.

m onth s
139 Remun.
erates
140 Satiat e
144 More than

tales
70 Airplane

8 Bitter vetch
9 Three-toed
sloth

Court g'ame
73 Howled

attendant ..

71

74 Egyptian
goddess

knowledge
11 Made a pie

75 Sinned
77 Saber

12 Was in debt
13 Small lump

78 Son of
Adam

eo SlestSs

81 Sill!

83 Fairy
84i PrOhibits

16 Need
17 Perform
18 Call a day

90 Detests

19 Mountain

91 Occurrence

asn

112 Tolled
113 Mix •
11 5 Goll

64 Teller of tall

6 Proves fals e

deity
15 Meal

volcano
1 11 Jog

136 Seraglio

68 Informed

14 TeutOnic

97 Jerks
99,Fish limbs
101 Renovates
105 Sorrows
106 Stitches
107 Sicilian

63 Cuts ,
olcl style

4 Diphthong

10 Range of

fruit
95 Labor
96 Pester ·

furtively

56 S!Qpper
57 African

5 Pigpen
7Told ,

, 93 Tropical

for waste

dances

110 Printer's

ttt Pile~
112 Gives in

46 MA's

50 Recreation

50 Crony
of steps
54 Challenge

profit

43 Chtef
44 Diminish, . .

secretly

154 Watched

3 Recede

measure

of time
40 Planet
41 Remain

49

109 Article

51 Fllghl

39 Penod '

deeds

t08 Plunge

Jchoice
62 Longed for
64 Bait
65 Rue de

1974 Novo 360 hotchback,

152 Wicked

Colonize
49 Chair

vessel

47

60 ·Vacattbner·~

low

of old

1 Poet AQbert
" \ 2 More
unusual '

weekends .

1973 Ford Grand Torino.
runs 'good, •300. Call 4460066.

150 Postone

group

43 Stockings

suite, 304-675-6162 after
6:30p.m.

92 Counted

98 The birds

44 StaH

Ear Corn lor sole. t2 .26 bu.
Call 667-6164 or 6873689.
'

147 Wash
149 Money

94 COllege

341nlet

plant

88 Siuggrsh
89 Ache
90 Aids

calories

pagoda

Hay 8s Grain

64

42 Nets, as

86 Singing bird

Compass
point

boots. 614-698-3290.

85 L1nger

144 Swift·
145 Climbing

groups

olus

35 Conducted

84 Musical

hotder

zant of

Regiltered Quarter HorH .
A uth Reev8s. A lao g fade .
Saddles, brid lea. winter
horae blankets. Western

.36 Wild hog
37 Speech

79 Fleeting
82 Kabob

22 Uncanny
23 COQnl-

20 Fear
27 Before
29 Century
pJant
31 High card ·

138 Lamprey
139 Sharp pain .
140 To and 141Wager .
142 Paid notice
143 Above

78 Coin

' collar

33

film fame
76 RR depot
animal

26 Shouts
28 Bare
30 Agreement
32 The IWO

Livestock

131 Suspend
132 Kind of
lettuce
133 Evaluates
135 - Na Na

77 An11ered

for one

k

7.,2 A Reiner

74 Dunne of

1 Uberates
6 Shaner

25 Globe

'

I U;

SUNDAY P,UZZLER

24 Olivier. ·

.. ....
'···-- ..........
....... .
'

.

\

691 Mil~r

SOLUTION

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

JEEPS, CARS. TRUCKS
under t100 ovolleble •t
tocel gov'lsalea In your eroa.
C•ll frelundablol 1 •714,
1811·024 1 ext. 1I l l for
directory on how 1o purah•oe: 24 bra.

BOGGS

Mobile home awnings
~ Aluminum utility
buildings

textured ceilings commercial and residential, frae

NEW, 6 ·piece living room

614 -246-5121 .

Need · som&amp;thing hauled
away or sometftlng moved?

Home
Improvements

DRAGONWYND CAnERV
' KENNEL AKC Chow pup-

atock.

I

81

55 Scorch

Building material• block.'
brick, aewer plpea. windowa. llntela. etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Ora.n de, 0. Call

Howmet Patio Covers

'

white TV, 12" ocraen. brand
new. 304-773-11'396.

!

General Hauling

axp. Call 614-388-9662.

HARTS Used Car•. Naw
-Haven West Vlrglnle. Over
. 20 Ina oxpenslve cora I~

mo. pd.

85

We'll ifo ~ - Call446-3159 or
614-256-1967 after 6.

2.000 bolos of mixed hay.
Stored •• Lasher Ferm.
Rutland, Oh. Call Coolville
614·667-3838 evenings or

56 Building Supplies

Nu- Prime .rep Ia cement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
.

exterior. plumbing. roofing,
10me remodeling. 20 yrs.

cond. 614-986-4348.

$85., Kenmore 30" electric
range $1 00., 30" LP gas
range $85., 30" blua LP or
N.G. range $66. 614-742'
2362.

Bill's

PAINTING - Interior and

Pets for Sale

1918 Chevy lmpato. 283
engine. Runs good. e14·
986·4346.

1

&lt;I

~zea

HILLCifEST KENNEl ·
Boarding all br8ecls. AKC

Remingtonauto.
.' model
1 1·:
Sportsmen
20 gauge.
modified choke, excellent
Norge he.vy duty washer

Electrical

NEW SHIPMENT Metal

1heet1 for all building purpoaes. Flat porc;elien enamel

'-~--''-------+---------'---'--l7'x10' ilium. truck body.
~
B•n type doors, exc. condition, t&amp;OO. Call 446-0224
01' 114-3117-7867 • ..

MrYiceavellable ,

I

------·------ -----

Other sizes. Cell 1-614886-7311 .

R••·

R••·

G&amp;W.,

Firewood. *36 . truck load :

~~~~4~: ~30~P~-~m~-~~~1f~c~·

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized " Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sc;1son. Fabric Shop,

Build your. own garage or.
bam, 24"24, $895 . lumber
furnished . Can deliver .

.

CALL 992-2903
AFlER 5 P.M . .

I
I
I

town call collect, frH delivery. · Th11e machines are
bran·d new~ ule in orginal
frwight bo" .

Electrical

Howmet screen rooms

Spaniel puppy? AKC blonde
Cocker Spaniel pupplao
holes. Reg. price $439.96 a160. Hava been wormed
yNr in clearance ale *126. •nd had -all shots, Call
C•ll 614-386 -8918. Ounf 614-388-9766 ajter 6PM.

BACH

NEW &amp; USED
HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTIIAS SPECIALS
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH
CHROME PRIMARY$
Rec. '107.50
J'
.
NOW 187.50
SEPTIC SYSTEMS I
Complete Kicker Assembly
Roc. 1119.95
·
' Also Tr;~nsm~s ion · ;
NOW 1147.50
, PH. 992-5 2 .
.
L01ther Vasts
1
or992-71 1
149.95
179.95- 1B9.95
NOW
3·24-lfc '
12·2-1 mo.
Horlov .ltwolry-Hori!IY Pins
''
13.95-1&amp;.95
•
NOW 2/1 5.00
;,..._ _.!__ _ _ _ _ _~------..;...---llleothir Hots, T-Shirts, Accessories &amp; much m.o rt.
Hn.: 9·5
Closed Sun. &amp; lion.
llttch1rD¥t Rd.
Rutloncl, Ohio .

I
I

1
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'

.Stonn Doorw
S
w·
• tonn indows

"Beautitul, Custom
.
Built Garages"

•olot!l' Wart
~
&amp; Yin,l Sidin&amp;s
'
15 y..,.·bporion(t

I

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I

TOM HOSKINS

PH. JIM CUFFORD
992· 7201 IIH·Uc

CONSTRUCTION

I

I
I

FRH ESniiATES
· 20 Y..,. bporisnce

Guaw•lllld

Excopt an p....,,
Speclala.
.

ROUSH

1

II

'Storm Windows &amp; Doors

.~=========j~~===~~~~~t;=====~~~=~
r -.....;.----:----il

I
I

5

AND HOllE MAINTENANCE
•tootinc o1 oil ,_
fllsidentill&amp;
Coomwtiol
"Rsmodeiine

........
tl!og and=nil'll
oR- and Syracuae
..... hookup
., Wook lnoured and

ll·ll-1 """

1
I,
1

J
I
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l
I
1.....
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*• '!hoe
uabng
-""::"".

We- Golden 8ucbye

1I

roof repair and k~chen cabinels. Prited at
$14 000 we need an clfer. Excellent localion in
lobacco base, 60x90 barn. 24x38 barn, 18x65 Silo,
Rio ' Grande. Make a pertecl renlal Call Ike
concrte floor ~~ barn with approx. 4,000 sq. fl
Wiseman.
·
loafing area. Hlgh:!lay frontage on Rl 75 · Also
CHANCE OF•A LIFETIME - RESIDENTIAL PRO:
Includes an attractive 4 bedroom home wtth pool.
FESSIONAL OFFICES OR BOTH - Attractive 2)'1
• Call Clyde Walker for mfo.
· the hea rt ot
story, 12 room houre on 2nd Ave. 1n
JUST LISTED - AttractM!' 4 bedroom horne near
the profe~onal bu'~ness community. Includes 2
enema, shopping and grocery. Th1s hmle offers a
k!chens, _2'11 balhs, full basement 2 car garage.
, hu!J! fami~ roont. 210 balhs., equ1pped kitchen,
Top quahly construction when bu1tt and good
bining room, cent air, nat gas, 2 car garage. VA
ma1n1enance makes lh1s a solid mvestmer~t A
~umption. $69,900. Call Jim Cochran.
.
state~ atmosphere is provided by the large rooms,
509 OAK DR. - Beautiful 3 ?' 4 bedr~ bnck
harqwood floor.;, fireplaces, etc. Call Ike WISeman.
rnnch that has everylhn~g. JhiS top quality home NO INTEREST CHARGED FOR YEARS - Can
•
.
.
.
offe hardwood &amp; teak ftoor.; some new CliiiJt't.
r}rb d
ti
2 baths fireplaces, fonmal
you be~ lhal! Seller.; anxousfor QUick saleandw1ll
SUR!
ecora ng,
xe kiiChen lui barement, finance wilh reasonable dowQ payment and ~ydlmn~J~~~~~on~m~:s~ping, and large heated m_ents of $375 mo. Bnck and frame ranch located .
~ M
Call Jim Cochran
wrthin walk1ng distance of downtown, schoo5, etc.
uc . more.
.
·
Has 3 bedrooms, farn1ly room: fireplace, dertor41n
10% ASSUMPTION -'- LOW OOWNPYMTS. bedroom, 2 bathS. deluxe krtchen, diniAg rooth,
Very nice 4yr. old brick &amp; frame ranch.lndudes 2 nat gas heat, central a1r, 2 car garage and larg~
baths, 3 bedrooms, equipped krtchen, fireplace,
wooded yard I Year Buy~r Prolecto~. $65.000.
central air, 2 car garage w/workshop plus over I
Call Ike W1seman. .
_
•
ace tree shaded ,yard. Call .1!11 Cochrnn. Sellers
164 J£. - SR 141 -located on Raccoon Creek,
must sel.
·
th~ fann otter.;· tobacco base, appro~ 60 .ac.
2 YJIS OlD - WITH MUCH TO OFFER pasture, 50 crop balance in woodland. 4!J&lt;60 bam
,
Ye 3 bedroom home with 1~ baths. efficient and 16x60 ~hed for tobacco &amp; livestock. Well &amp;
~
11.11 basemert (could be easily
rural waler avaiabfe for home ~te. less than $450.
~-~"; prnge, 1acre yard and many other ac .•Call Clyde Walker.
features that you must see. Call 1m Cochran Iosee 169 A. _Beef cattle Iarin, 25 A. m/1, crop, I L5 A.
th~ one lnday.
·
pastul'e 2 barns 2 houses wrth one remodeled &amp;
IRICK 1 CEDAR_ PINE TREE SETTING- A own gas supply from well on farm. Just off S.R. \
l~owt~ 5 ac. picturesque seltins really enhances the mile W. Rutland. Call Clyde Walker.
•
beeuty ofthis 4 yr. old home. The home has over
.
1750 S.F with 3 bedroom~ 2 baths, n~e cozy • GRADE ~ DAIRY --" 2-homes, 23~ ac~es m/1,
.
"'-· -~
·pped f&lt;i':hen 2carsarase~us
Meiss Co., I mile w. Rutland. 90 acres ra/l _i!ood
!~:':~ae- Loclted oo RLI60, 7 . cropland. Modern m~kparlor.&amp;mllkhousew•hall
m· from town Cal Oyde Walker.
equipment in place. 60 feed stall~ 16'x50 C. STV
t ·
·
~lo wilh unfdader &amp; feed bunk. !-Tasteful~
4 BlDROOMS - $34,900 - And located in ~ity
remodeled ~der 6 room brick dwellng with t.ull
ICtoll district 110 sby home thai has afireplace, · baSement AlSo 2nd remodeled frame dw~ with
l!llin kicllen, fUf blsement &amp;pr181J. A fPDI 11e11 litchen ·,&amp; bath. Fl.ll line of farll! equip.,
111111~ home locllld hill off Rl. 7iull3 m1les south · included in price. Cal for detais in ·priiine and
a1 town, Cll 1111 Wisemen.'
parlill financin' ean Clyde WJikef. ..

-

VALLEY
ROOFING .

Insulation

Wiring.
446·8515 or 446-0445 '

PoiJleroy. 992-2284.

Camping
Equipment

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPJUSE ASSN )

Lennox Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning . . All Types

., &amp; Refrigeration

Motorcycl11s

78

soored the first five tricks.

Odd1

:g:'::~

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Brirw Tllis Ad ·
Good For
15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS
, lion.-T-. -Wed.
!low lltru Dec. 31
KAY'S IEAUlY SALON
169 II. 2nd ·
Middleport OH. · '
PH. 992-2n5 . ,

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

1982 Honda ATC 186
8900. 304-676-2671

TROYBILT TILLERS. now a pinning. 814-867-3086.'

largo truck load. Can· 814246-6804.

•Painling

van,
eir, Call
auto,
good tires,
f2.296.
448-4564.

74

no tro~ble finding a diamond
lead and the defense had

~===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj.

_pa~songer

84

since East bad shown out on
the second heart
Billy Eisenberg, sitting
East, . had discarded the
thi-ee, five of J_pades and
deuce .of clubs. Jimmy had

304-675-4164.

&amp; Heati!lg

t:::::::========t;:;;::;;;=;;;=:;:::;;:::=l · 1972 22' Starcraft camper,
54 Misc . Merchandise 55 Building Supplies
304-676·26.04.
For sale lump coal &amp; firewood . linn Coal Co .. Inc.

MOWREYS ·Upholstery Rt.
1 80K 124·, Pt . Plaa1ent.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine l\
Phone 4•6-3888 or 4464477

1978 Ford 12

with the iO. South had noted
East's play of the eight and
ducked a~ain. .
Now J•mmy took his. ace
and king. There was no way
to sneak the ·nine through

and James Jacob)!

ROOfiNG

S£RVICE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

I
II

.I

~'

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3 NT

Pass
Pass

By Oswald JacObf · · • •

"

SCHEDULE I
Wed.-Fri.-SIII. Nights
7:30 to 10:00
Sunday 2:00 to 4:30
Opon Christmas Eve
Clo,ed Christmas
Open New Year's Eve
7:30-12:30
Open New Year's
Avlilable for Privat~ Parties
· Ph. 985-3929 or 985-9996 .
12-l-1 mo

MILLER
IH'TI RIC
ELI;."

Sins stort lrom 12'116'

CLOSE TO TOWN - Convenient location, II\ miles
west of town. Ariractive &amp; Spacious 3 bedroom
ranch . Has M basement warm &amp; r:t:Jly fire~ace,
lamiy &amp; recreation rooms, plenty of s1Dr1ge area.
Nat gas &amp; central air plus gara~e &amp; fenced yard.
Priced to sell. call J•m Cochran.
2Y.ACRES -1 MILE FROMHMC- Very nice 3
bedroom brick in Charolais HilS. This bnck ranch
offer.; over 1650 sq. ft of living in a quality
reighborhood. Has famiy room with woodbumer,
eQUIPP d k1lchen. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat
· pijmp, 2 car ga,.ge and over 2 acres Y!•d~ ·•
$69,900. Cal Ike Wiseman.
. ,

l

lWO, .2 BtoRII. APTS. available, adults only, no
$175.00 per month. Near golf course, •

~-

Pumps Sales and Service.

Sure enou~h . South piayed

special price on 1982 mod-

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

. .

·I qualfied
buyer. Good beef &amp;tobacco farm, approx.
50 ac. crop, balance m pasture &amp; woods. large

RESiolNTIAL.AND 'INVESTMENT property located along 2nd
Ave., Calipdis. 8 nn. home_plus 3 bednn. garage apt. BOO block.
Pric.e $85,000.00.

Pass

Pass

tbat

~ack

Trucks for Sale.

48 Chevy . 1'h ton truck.
G.C. $2,700 . 304-9372643.

low. Then Jammy continued

·-=========::;-t:==:::::7~:=:===i1ir===;=====~ eta
. Whiletheylaat.
Implement.
UpperSwisher
River 56

Of

BARGAIN PROPERTY loc3,ted alon~ StoiV'SRun Rd. near Cheshire.
Price includes 1969, 12'x60' mobile home, 16'1128' ooncrete block
building and .aprox. 2 acres olland. All lor only $10,000.00.

OH.

12·24-1 "'"

.r

I
NEW LISTING - Seller Will pay VA-FHA poinls I
closing cost on th~ home-so you,canassumereller's I
l
present mortgage. 3 bedroom bnck and frame
I $26.000
_:_ 4 bedroom liome situated on l'h acres ranch on Mill Creek. Has equipped kitchen, balhl I
on Bidwell - Rodney Road. Has alum. sidmg, new cent air and garage. Good location. $49,901 Cal
I roof, rural water. cellar, plus 3outbuildings, cellar J1m Cochran.
1
houre and trailer pad apd hoqk;J,lp. Call Oyde MAPLE DRIVE - Vf!!'l attractive 3 bedroom
I Walker.
ranch in Spring Valey Walk to sll!res. theatre I
elc. T~is fine home has deluxe kit· I
I $12,000. -located· .mtown. 4~s &amp;ba"·Nat'· , .. ~&gt;rgrounds,
chen, 2 baths, full· basemen!, tarrily room, fire·
bid~ and tree shaded yard. ptace, bar. nat gas, cent air. garage, large deCk 1
I gaslocatedhea~onstorage
deadend street Could ~ good for and corner ~t Priced to sell. Call Ike Wireman.
•
1
• rental startEr home. Call Clyde Walker.
BARGAIN EllER ON A FIX IT UP SPECIAL
. land contract to BEST
I 115. AC. FARM - PoSSible
_ 7 room, 2 baths, poslage stamp lot- Needs 1

INCOME OR RESIDEIITIAL property kx:ated along 4th
Gallipolis. Prerer\tly arranged as 2 apt blilding bit can be
oonverted back ID sinsle fall)iy dwelin~ La~ kt Price'
$ti!l,lJII! UIJ. .
.,_

IY

South

arm equipped
to zig sew
zag,
monogram,
oVer caat,
----------4-----------1--------:---1 free
on buttons 8t make button

·1

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446·4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408
HAP~Y NEW YEAR

,.

East

No rUt

Opening lead: • J

'-~---~---=-:.c.::"--11 chine.

I

"

Pomeroy,

'

10·6-Hc

I
I
Real Estate - General
_..,..,.,..,..,....nn,....,....,....,..,.......,....,,..,ITIII..-.r,.,.,..,.., .•l
'

DABBLE SHOP ·
2SHS W. Main St.

12·1 -1 mo. d.

~.;·

5692

•

~ .~of Januaoy

lARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH 992-2478

REALTORS
~
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.. GRI ....... .............. ....... ..... ~t 191
Dottle Turner ............................................. ....
2660
Jean Trussell ..... .. ,........ ......... .... ........ ... ....... ... 94t2259
Off1ce .... ...............,.. ... .............. ........ , .. .......... 99

WOOD REALTY INc
446-1066

.

-Sewer

~t

at $26,500. Call j.m Cochran.

I

PLA'STER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
Cit- Our Spocialo For

-[.o.Boy

su~e),

flre~ace,

Pass

Long Bottom. OH .' 46t43
986-4193 or 992-3067
,
12·20·HC
I

SKATE-A-WAY

THE DABBLE SHOP
OPEN &amp;-5
CLOSED THURSDAY

-Backhoes

I
ON IARKET - You canl beat the
I
2100sq.fl brick ranch localed in town
a very IJlO(f neighborhood. Has 3 bedrooms
.I
(16122 master
_3 baths. 24' lrvmg room, •CHEAPER THAN RENT-- Payments of $242 mo. 1
25' family mom, formal dining room, very ·
taxes &amp; insurance. 911'1&amp; mortg;I!J! I
nice equ1pJlll(l kitchen, nat gas
cent a1r and as1mmJiion
$4500 downpymt 2 bedroom
large landscaJlll(l yard . Call Clyde Walker. $69.500.
home locaed m.the city school d Has freploce. I
eat-I n kichen, new paint 1\ acre yard Bfld priced •

NEW LISTING - MULBERRY AVE.- Conven~nce- Older 3
bedroom home with ongin~ woodork, fireplace. and a buittin
llookcare. Front porch on street and back porch to a2 car garnge
needs.some work. $25,000.00.
·

Pa ss

Roofing &amp;R~s~~ Co..

oflefrigerlton

-Dozers

-I

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Bu~ness building with 2
apartments abov~ 2 businesses. Gross income now $50Da month.
$26,900.00.

Wesl

AND SON

aoryers oFreaz.,.
PARTS .ond SERVICE
4-S,Hc

EXCAVATING

1
II
I
1
.·: , .,,. .,.&gt; I
'.,. 1"'1'· ., ,,,, .
,, I
.

er would hold

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Galli~olis .
446-7833 or 446 - 183~ .

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domeatic . Test holes.

·queen and not play it at trick
one.
.

WP. will start With an Inter-

BRAND NEW
- EXCELLENT LOCATION ••
- You'll find this home to be one rl.lhe best
decorated on the market Quality livin1 space in
over 1900 SQ. ft 3 nice sized bedrooms, 211 baths,
new equipped kitchen, an oversized and attractive
family room, wood burning fir~ce, dining room,
nat gas heaing and priced well below re~cement
costs. Situated on a lovely landscaped yard elf Rt
35 in a fine neighborhoOO. Call today to ree th~
home and start the new year off ,~~"',
:1. ,,

+J 107154
Vulnerable: Both

'CHARLES SAYRE

Makes - :

;:..,-,:!;:':.

CALL 992-'273

',

t K J 10 2

Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . Quaur. and

304-895-3802.
1978 Ford F250: 614-986·1 = =========
82
Plumbing
3606.,t1,200.

hearts. He was sure that
dummy would show up with
five hearts to the queen, but
he .was. also sure that declar-

••

RON 'S Talevlalon Service.

JIMS WATER - SERVICE .
houao calls. Call 576-2398 Call
Jim Lanier. 304-875or 446'·2454..
7397
.
74 MUSTANG, snow tires,l - - -"-_;_ _ _ __
aiOO. 304-e76·21i14.' .; RINGLE'S SERVIC::Ech;:,iinll-1
rienced roofing, 1n
87 Upholstery
'1 9 7 9
H Elv R o L E T hot tar application, carpen· ----~----­

72

came out with a profit
James Cayne of New York
held the West cards and got
off to the iead of.the iack of

Dealer: North

earns.

I
I

'

t

'

U.S. 35- Very well constructed 3 bedroom biM&lt;
with full basement Very nice krtchen, nat gas, cen.
air, large Han~ 2 car ·garage. Homes has had
excele~t care. $57,000 CaU Ike Wiseman.

.'S , :
KE.N

ClientS
'
low Rites
15 YIIIB Experience• ,
All Wott Gunnteed
To Bt Done Rilht and

..

irij - Siding- Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction·- Hemodelillll - cust0111 Pole

FOR FUTURE USE"

1213011 mo.

446-lDU.

flt:,l(ir!lldf (I'( s

.

'

R"eal Estate • General

#531

3.85 ACRES OR 18 ,
In Green Twp. close to Gallrpoli~ farm home Screened in fronl
pore~. ~a$Sed· rn back porch. Perm stone siding, chicken house, 2
storage bldgs. lots of shrubberY and trees Priced to rell. See lt11s
love~ land and counlry home,
#534
COUNTRY - 3.5 acres of
.
I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
,
almost level ·_ ~nd. 12x70 ·
N1ce comfortable home wrth n~e large,shade lrees. Concretetrontl
Fleetwood 2 bedroom tra1ler.
porch, lots ol frurt trees (app~; cherry, plum and peach), grape
Root cellar and outbuildings.
arbQr, raspberry ~nes, good garden land, all level. In Green Twp.
$20.000.
Rural waler, 2 car garag~ fuel oil FA furnace. Basement barn
I&gt;21PPrllx. l6'x24'. Pnced 1n the $20's.
NEAR RACINE .., 4room nice
#491
!lome with 1\l baths, full
8 JtRES
liasemenl and small yard for .
Wrt~n 10 min. drNe to aownlow~ Gallipolis. (Jty School Syslem
little upkeep. Just right for a
Has hookup tor the mobi~ home. Gallia Rural Water. ~ectr~ and
septic lan~ n«e lighl on pol~ 200ft. frontage on Graham School
couiJ!e. $23,ml.
Rd. Timber. Building srtes. Call Now.
VIEW QF RIVER - You can
#4T{
buy there two houses f&lt;lf one
OWNER WILL FINANCE '
price Rent one for your
Walk into ' formal entran~ Wllh open stairc~se ~~ lhis lovely
payment 8oth have all utilities
comp~e~ . redecorated home located 1n ti-e city. Wrth1n walk~g
and just $21,&lt;XX\,
distance to shopping area. 3 bedrooms, 2. full bat/Is end charm1ng .
largi! klchen. Spac1ous living roorn wnh.Wllodbur~1ng hreplac~
' YOU CAN NOW BUY BEFORE
This gracious home has a nalural gas FA furnace like new.
THE SPRfiiG liSE Ill PROP·
Immediate posession. We're wat1ng for your call.
l

- Attractive
south of Rio Grande. 3 bedrooms,
bat1'5, large dining room , Aa. room.
lui base~nent, woodbumer, 2 car gara!J!, ~us
. sm1e
ro~ng lilld w~h 600' h~ay
frmtage stocked pond &amp; large barn. Will consider
rell~g less acreage. Call B. J. Hair.;ton tooifl!

Jumbles: SAUTE JADED UfjLESS FORGOT

'

all the cards as usual and
got to an unbeatable three
no-trump, . East and West

. SOUTII

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Coli 614-367-7471
or 614 -367-06!11 .

'1!100 cash , I 304-8B2 - _4_6_6_0~·------------3690.

while North and South held

1

WEST

85

Chevette, hatchb•ck, 4 cyl., ter. electrician. ma1on . Call
atanderd, needa body work. 304 -676-2088 or 676 -

be-good-to-East-and·

West, the answer is that

.

+KQ

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
Now Acceplifll New

'.
,,

with

Home
Improvements

c

maccordance

hand ·can be

.Q76 S3

• - • Qa

====::::t;:==::;:;;;::==t~~;.;::::;l
"CUT OUT
KitChen Cabinets - lloof- ,

.• =·

_I I I [1 I

46 Space .for Rent

up to 839_J;.

..

il you wonder how this

_.. NORTH
. .. J 10 2

81

11,600. Call 614-3!1B·
B662.

.

r8tes, one per10n

Motel. Cell 446 -2601 .

.'

TANKS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

'.IUUUI

*BLOWN
INSULATION
*SIDING ·
*ROOFING ·
*NEW
CONSTRUCTION

SEPTIC
,.

Fnitn tht s.tllst Heater
Core to tht llrpst Radiator.
Radiator Specialist •
NATHAII BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Furnished Rooms

Weekly

•

'tf~Wr·

Autas for Sale
'

Defense ta~es first five
I

The SU'nclay

1977 Chevelle Malibu tllke
over payments, 1980 Honde
CB 8150 ei.alton motor cycle,

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

. COIIP!ETE

TB

71

BRIDGE

.. •.

-.

\I

Ohio--Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Business Services:

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

tage , adults. no petl. 304-

45

I
I

WISEMAN

one letter to each ~qUW&amp; , to form
lourorninaryWonls.

3450.

••

87 Stairposts
89 Seasoning
·92 Eat

137

Hebrew

~

plump •
145 - or the

· land
146 M an's name

· 14 7 Succes$or
to ass
148 Nerd, British

style
149 Number
151 Beholdl

153 Brother
of Odin

155 Mrs Thaichar. for
shan
157 Compass
point

�•

.. -

... .,

•

Page

D-8

•

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

j Holid~ys bring series

Area deaths

of thefts to deputies

ti,.Or~na)

Dexter, a nd Mrs. Ronald
Taylor of Mount Holly, N.J .: three
sons. O.E. of Middleport. Osb&lt;'nd of
Tucson, and Jack of Boise, Idaho: 31 ·
grandchildren and se,v eral gre~t ·
grandchildren: three sisters, Mrs.
~ thel Mace of Charleston, Mrs.
Florence Proctor of Detroit , Mich ..
and ,Mrs. Mary Stewart of
Middleport .
He was also pt'£'Ceded In death by
a son and daughter.
· Funeral services will I)!' held at 3
p.m . Monday in McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will
be in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
ho_me from 24 and 7-9 p.m. today._ , ,

William E. &amp;&gt;a,:er

LEON ~ William, E . "Bill"
Beaver. 87. Leon." died Friday in
Pleasant Valle)' Hospita l-after an
e.( tended illness.
Born May 23, 1895, in Mason
Coug~.y. son of Ihe Ia I&lt;' Sherman.and
A~nena McCoy Beaver. he was a
retired employee of Electro Metal·
'turgica l Co .. Alloy, W.Va .
Surviv ing a re three·sisf('rs, Mrs.
Margarrt Roossa of Harrisburg,
Mrs, Anna Gladys Dow of Rt. 2,
Point Pl~asant. and Mrs. Louise
Burton of Florida; three brothers:
Dewey of Columbus. Charlie of
Dunbar. W.Va .. and Mace of
Ironton: four grandchildren. five
grea t-grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
fun eral services will be he ld at
2: ll.p.m. today in Raynes funeral
Home. Buffalo. W.Va .. , with I he
Re,· William "Bud" Ha tfi111d offi·
'ciat ~g. Burial will be in Leon
Cemet e ry .
•

Erma F. Wilson ·
POMEROY- Erma F. ~ilson.

85. Rt. 2, Racine, died Friday night
in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born Oct. 27, 1897. at Morning
Star. Ohio, daughter of the late Milo
· and Emil ia Holder Van Meter. she
was a member or Letart United
Methodist Chu rch and Ohio Valley
Grange.
Surviving are three daughters,
Kat herine Hunt .and Mrs. Charles
(Margaret 1 Burr i, both of Racine.
arid Mrs. W.F . (Betty) Bearhs of
Suffolk. Va.: five sons, Edgar of
Ashtabula, Richard of Romulas,
Mich., Robert of Cleveland, Dorset
of Sissonville, W.Va .. and Wayne
Racine: 23 grandchildren: several
great-great grandchildren a nd sev·
era! nieces a nd nephews.
Also surviving is Chester Van

Frt'd H. Durham
VINTON - F red H. Durham, 89,
Bidwell , died at 3 p.m. Friday in
Pleasant Valley Hos pital's nursing
care un)J after an extended illness.
BornMay 20, 189.1. in Cla.vCounty,
W.Va .. son of the late Mekin and
Ange line Mullins Durham. he was a
retifffi coa l miner who worked
primar ily in the Charleston area fdr
40years .
·He married Goldie Moore on July
4. 1924. in Queen 's Shoals. W.Va ..
a nd she also preceded him in dmth
on Oct. 26, 1980
Surviying are six daughters. Mrs.
Evart 1Bernice I Williams of Tuc·
son, Aiiz.. Mrs. Leslie. (E loise!
Siders of New Haven. Mrs. Bill
!He len) Hunter of Vinton, Mrs.
Harold tKatiel Tucker of Tampa.
F la .. Mrs. Ernest ILital Jones of

of

of Racine.
Meter
He was
also preceded in death by
a

Janua'Y 2; 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport-'Gallipoli;!Ohi.,;:_Point Pleasant; W. Va.

GALL[POLIS - Five recent
theft s have been report\'(! to the
Gallla County Sheriff's
Departm~nt .

Two cars were broken into at the
Buck Ridge Apartments near
Gallipolis Thursda~ night or early
Friday morning.
,
Debbie K Clary said an adding
machine and a clt.izens·band radio
were stolen ·from her 19TIChevmlet
parked at the apartments. Total

valuewasSll&gt;.

Saturday morning: .
S~lng: Joseph L. Jelfel'!l, ~.
Pomeroy; Donna J. Conley. 38, '
Chesapeake: Donald R. Farley,18,
Rt. I. Point Pleasant; Kevin D.
Knapp, 22. Rt. 2, Patriot.
John D . Smith, 55, Gallipolis, DWI
and resisting arrest: Anna G:
Miller. 22. Oak Hill, F la .. no driver's
license: Franklin E. Wolfe, . 19,
Syracu·se. no headlights:·

735 2NQ AVE., GALLIPOUS, OHIO
PHONE 446-2601 .
STORE HOURS: .
8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
. . SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
PRICES· EFFECTIVE
SUN., JAN. 2nd THRU SAT., JAN. 8th
. •QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERvED

;___,~

A power booster and 36 ~assette
tapes were taken from a Camara
owned by John Fox a t the
apartments. No value of the stolen .
merchandise was listed.
Thieves broke into a I railer owned
by Helen Payton on Jessie Crews
Road so met inne recently.
Various household items valued
at $189 were reported missingll'wo
clocks and twoelectric heaters were
among the items take n.
The sheriff's department reports
. an a ntique coffee table valued at
between $121 and $175 was stolen
- from Leonard Maynard's residence
on Spruce Street Extension sometime Frid'a y.
·
Thomas Belville told deputies
thieves pried open a soft drink
vending machine at the front of his
Crown City store sometime Friday.
Between $~ and $50 in cash was
'taken from the machine, he
repol1ed .
Gallipolis City Police cited the
following persons Friday and early

Check accidents
GALLIPOLIS- Three single-car
arcjdents. two involving deer. were
iJ\vestigated by the Gallia·Meigs
post of the State Highway Patrol
Friday.
Troopers say Dona ld R. Moore,
29. Crown City. was eastbound on
Little Bull.skin Road . at 2: 10a.m .
when he went off the right side of the
road and struck a tree.
•
HiS car sustained moderate
damage. There were no injuries or
citations.
At3:16a.m.,JosephA . Young, 58,
Pomeroy. struck a deer while
tuming.from U.S. 33 'onto Ohio 71n
Meigs County. His car received
moderate damage.
The patrol reports a car driven by
Robert W. Fellure, 43, . Rt . 2.
Gallipolis . was slightly dam'}ged
when he ·struck a deer on GaUl a
County Road 5 a t 7: ~a.m .

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

s;~~~:~ds~~=~· ww be held a t

ELBERFELDS ·WAREHOUSE

A 'g uide to local

M.ECHANIC ST, POMEROY

JO :ll a .m . . Monday in Ewing
Funeral Home. BUiial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery . Friends
m ay call at the funeral home from
2·4 a nd 7-9 p.m . today .

television programming·
January 2 thru Jan. 8 ·

gathe~ing

.Jazz greats.,

•
squalor
·spot now In
refuge for low-income blacks who
could not find adequate housing.
They say a landlord is trying to
drive tenants off the potentially
lucrative real estate just blocks
from Lincoln Center for the
Performing Arts, the glistening
home of the Metropolitan Opera and
the New York City Ballet , built in

NEW · YORK !API - In the
'shad'ow of Lincoln CPnler. the city's
opulent showcase for the arts. lies
an island of squalor where poor
tenant s and illegal squatters survive in ramshackle buildings"· ere
jazz legends once gat hered.
In the buildings known as the
Henry Phipps Houses , where the
late composer and piamst. Thelen·
ious Monk lived a nd worked and
trumpeter Miles Davi5 paid regu lar
visits. the lew re maining tenants
are fighting to keep hot water and

,.

listings

: 1.-ong before Linroln Center, there
was music at the Phipps Houses.

''When wrwerekids, therewasan
ongoing 24-hour jam session at ·o ~r
house, " Ms. Monk said in an
inte rview. " Miles Da&gt;;:is came
, knocking on the door every da y."

"These are among the very worst

wf.

'

1966.

he;! I.

(a partment s\

Includes complete

have in this arra

of Manhattan . maybe in a ll the
city."stateSen . )\ranz Leichtersaid
Thursday.
The tena nts, including Monk's
da~ght cr. Ba rbar a. a nd local polit icians including Leichter are fight ·
ing to save the mostly abandoned
housing project. built in 1906 ~s~a

'Dr. Detroit'
"-.f'· ~

..., Pag~ 3;· 4

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

'

PiCtured Above: Buck ·Stove
Inserted in existing fireplace.

1

County board
elects president .

Showheat
Page 4

Pictured Below: Buck Stove
Free Standing Installation

'

LIFE
INSURANCE

POMEROY- Harold Roush was
elected president of the Meigs
Count\• Board of Educat ion a t it s
organizational meeting Saturgay

I

* Money for Education

morning.

* Money for Retirement
* Moile11·for
Protection
Cali:

Oris Smith was named vice
president during the brief session.
In other bu siness. the board set its
meeting date for the year as the
second
Tuesday
'
.
. of each month at 7
p.m.
.
.
.
The board a !so voted to conlin ue
;is membership in the Ohio School
Board Association ant! renewed its
board liability policy, according to
County Superintendent Robert
Bowen.

Private Eye
Pages 5, 6
Filmeter·
Page5

GARLAND M. DAVIS
512 Second Ave .• Gallipolis, OH.
Ph. 446-8235

Home Phone- 388·9691
MODERN WOODMEN

OF AMERICA
'Frat ernal Ltft fnsura11ce
Home Office

•

GRACE KEU.Y FUM- Cheeyl Ladd 11tan .. "Grace Kelly," a dramat.,two-murmotDn
picture b-.1 oa llle •e ol lbe lepllcllu)' INftm liar Qrace llelly, whldl wDI be te....,.l ao a
apeclal Valeto&amp;.,e'l DIQ' pr ea ....... • llle ABC televlsloa aelwotll. laD Mcllha•e as Prlooe
Rain« pea G~ a tour efltla..,........ wldch IDdacles a private zoo where be lllapllo shake
halltdnllh a I• I dJy e~.aee. (AP haerphato).

Rock Island . Illinois

Hollywood
.Pages 6, 8 '

.

'

·'

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Ma,~n Counpes
·ThepneandonlyBuckStore.
STOP IN ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
A .. D FIND OUT HOW A NEW lUCK
•
'STOVE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON

.

YOUR HEATING BILLS THIS )¥INTER
Autlloriled Dealer for lleip and Glllia Counties

•

renchtown
.
C
ar
Co.
'

992-3671
•

"

'·

,'

•

WA
OUR FULL PAGE AD
IN WED~ESDAY'S PAPER

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•

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•
\

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