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                  <text>Page-l~ The

Pomeroy-Middleport, "Ohio

Daily Sentinel

I

Two Pomeroy
men enter
guilty pleas

Area deaths

Herman Kloes

Two Pomeroy area men entered
pleas of guilty to charges of
breaking and entering upon appear·
ances Thursday before Jud~
Charles Knight In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
The two--Herbert D. Noel and
Robert A. Davis-- were charged
with the offense as a result of a
breaking and ~terlng at the
Salisbury School early Thursday
morning In bills of Information flied
by Prosecute~ Fred W. Crow Ill.
They were arrested by Meigs
County sherHfs .deputies early
Timrsday morning, within ro min·
utes after a breaking and entering
was reported taking place at the
school. Noel and Davis were each
released under $1,1XXl bond Thursday after Judge Knight ordered a
pre-~ntenclng Investigation. They
will appear before the judge for
sentencing at 9 a.m. on March 21. ·

To end marriage
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Greg Lewis, Clifton and Ella
Mae Lewis, Middleport, flled for
dissolution of marrtage.

Albert W. Shoemaker

I

are

ness. $100 and costs, four days
confinement, two years probation;
Pamela Stuchell, Sebring, Ohio,
speed, $22 and costs; Timothy
Basham, Gallipolis, fallure to yield
one-half of roadway, $10 and costs;
Anthony W. McGrath, Rutland, no
operators license, $75 and costs, jail
sentence will be suspended when
operators license Is obtained, speed·
lng, $29 and costs; Janette Tiemeyer, Pomeroy, reckless operation, $40 and costs; Wesley Clark,
Racine, no operators llcense,- $100

Meigs County happenings
Marriage license

Emergency runs
Seven calls were answered by
local units on Thursday, the Meigs
County Emergeocy Medical Service reports.
At 9:59 a.m. the Pomeroy Unit
went to Minersville for John
Houdashelt, taken to Veterans
Memortill Hospital; Raclne at 10:12
.m . to Blind Hollow Road for
Clarence Napper, to Veterans
Memortal; MlddleportFireDepart·
ment to near Silver Run area for a
railroad company shed which
burned down; Middleport at 1: 04
p.m. to 336 Broadway for Jack
Bechtle, to Veterans Memorial;
Middleport, 4:35p.m. to Stonewood
Apartments for Inez Snyder, to
Veterans Memorial; Tuppers
Plains to elementary school for
Paul Hislop, treated but no trans·
porta lion; 8:40 p.m .. Pomeroy to
sheriff's quarters for Robert DeMoss , to Veterans Memorial.

Meigs
Countylicense
Probate
A marriage
was Court
Issued to
In
Mark Preston Kreuzer, 21, Parma,
and Molly Ann Fisher, 24, Racine.

Gas rates...

·
Ills final day as secretary of health
and human · services, declaring,
"There Is no more time for rhetoric
ordelav.
"Fearonthepartofbothrettrees
and youn~r people that Social
Security Is tottering on the brink of
collapse .h as been. allowed to
contlnue too long," said Schwelker,
who Is leavlng the Prestden.t
Reagan's Cabinet to become chief
lobbyist for the life Insurance
Industry.
Schwelker said the Interests of
retirees and tmq)ayers alike "can·
not be allowed to fa ll victim to
narrow viewpoints now when we
are so close to restoring Social
Securtty's ability to meet its
commitments today and for the
fUture."
··
But various interest groups and
pOliticians have begun Increasing
the pressure for and against the
package that Includes payroll tax
Increases, a six-month delay In
July.' s cost-of-llvlnglncrease, a'[evy
on benefits going to middle-and
upper-Income retirees and other

Council approved .the first read·
lng of the ordinance to Increase 0
water rates. Those paying $5.75will
· pay $7. 75, those persons 65 of age or
over who now pay $5 will pay $7
underthenewrate, thoseoutsidethe
corporation now paying $6.25 will
pay $8.25 and commercial rates for
businesses and schools will Increase
from $1Ui0 to $15.50. Two more
readings of the ordlance are needed
for passage.
John Bentley, councUman, asked
for council's approval to have
benches constructed for use at the
tennis courts and the park. Council
applauded the idea.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Janice Lawson, clerk, George
Holman, treasurer, Milton Varlan,
pollee chief, Willie Guinther, Jack
Wllllams, John Bentley , John

In the "Pick 4" game, played
three times a week, the wlnnlng
number was 4.D9.
The lottery reported earnings of
$814,765 from the wagering on Its
dally game. Earnings carneonsales
of $U66,!0l.50, while holders of
winning tickets were entitled to
share$.li2,035.50, officials said.

Admltted··Michael Russell, West
Columbia, · W. Va .; James Ams·
bary, Syracuse; John Houdashelt,
Pomeroy; Clarence Napper, Ra·
cine; Lydia Davl~. Pomeroy; John
Bechtle, Middleport; Inez Snyder,
Middleport.
Discharged--Benjamin Fields,
Robezrl King, Michael Russell.

t uyers
~a ~ now ~~~~ce 11ny ~w
Q

ua

IT
d b
1 1

1 •ancl! a

•Feb•u,. y2 8. Vo;dwhm
p 10r'11b 1ted . Deale1 con lribu
lion m ~t y al!l!(:t pile i!

Renault Al li ance com ·
b•nes Eur opf'!l n tKh nolog)·
and all o •da b•l ity A Euro
pean -des 1gned 5·pa.u!1'n e1
~edom tor the pll(:e of a~

e new 1ow

•at e. of 11 9 % . Appl 1es to
veh1C if's dl!l1vered th rough
March J I or orde•ed b:,;

p11ssen ger ft:onobo~,- W1th
front -wheel dr i~e . Full y 1n·
depl! ndent s us~ n)10n
Powe r fr om disc b1 ak es .
Rack and piniOn steermg
Elec troniC luel mJrct •on
And much morE'

J2: ~~ IJ7i:,;; 'Ame'R~N~_!J_!.l
ncan
n

BUilTIN

AMERICA.

muaJnl

Sweatheart dance
Sons of American Legion wlli
sponsor a "Sweetheart Dance"
Friday, Feb. ll, beginning at9p.m.
at the Rutland American Legion
Hall.
Admission If $2.a single, and $3 for
a couple.

COME IN AND HAVE YOUR HAIR STYLED
AND RECEIVE A FREE ALOE VERA FACIAL
f

Call Connie or Crystal
992-6311 For Appointment

PHOTO SPECIAL

2()0Jb OFF

88¢·

'

PINS~BRACELET5-CHARMS

REE
PARKING

16" REG. PIZZA
LG. SQUARE PAN PIZZA

8 DAYS ONLY

GET 5 LBS..FREE

JEWELRY SALE

EARRINGS-NECKLACES

szoo OFF
Gino's serves up special rood.

8INXLIVING10

ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF

PH. 992-6179
or 992-1941

Saturday; Jan. 29th Thru
Saturday, Feb. 5th

Weather forecast
Tonight: clear and very cold. Low
near 10 above. Ughtvarjablewlnds.
Saturday: clouding over with a
chanceofsnowlatelntheday. High
25 to 30. Chance of snow: near zero
percent · tonight and 40 percent
Saturday.
OttJo Extended Forecast
Sunday lhroogh 'l'uesday: a
chance olsnow ~.lair
Monday and Tuesday. Continued
cold. Dally highs tnai1JJy mid 2118to
low :.Is and nlghUime lows 10 to 00.

4 MO: OLD MALE
LOST: TAN WITH Bj.ACK
FACE AND WHITE CHEST
Last Seen on Eaate Ridp Rd.

SPECIAL
Rat~

You can get 30 lbs. of Purina
Dog Chow for the Price of a25
Lh. Bag.

COLOR
ONLY

•No Age Limit
•Limit 1 Per Person
.One Special Per Family
•Sin1le or Group t~lten

F.RI., FEBRUARY 4
SAT.; FEBRUARY 5

DATE
.
·:

PHOTOGRAPHERS'
HOURS:
FRI. 11 A.M. TIL 7 P.M.
. PLACE:
SAT. 10 A.M. TIL 4:30 P.M.

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
.
•

POMIIOY, OM.

I'HOTOI IY HONIY POITI.UlS

""

.u ............ : . ........ . D-2

Clas&amp;Uiedll ••

oo•••••
EdHorlal .•••. oo oo •••••••. oo oo
0 0 0 0 0

0. 0 0 ••••

~7

0000.

A-2

Video funeral: man conducts·his own
Stocy 011 Page D-1

'Bevo'

~t

age 50--looking for work

story 011 Page C-1

Farrrl .............................. C..S
Local.,..-:,; .• ;: ... .'., ........•... A-4-8 .
state-Natlonaloo •• oo ••.••.••••• D-1'2
Sports ............................ C-1-4

TV guide •••••

00 00 • • • • • • • 00 • • • •

IJIIIel't

·A Meigs

Co~nty

family reunites .

Featured oo Page B-1

•••

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main Street
992·2164
Pomeroy, OH.
The Stcn With "All Kinds Of Stull''
'
For Pets-Stables-l.qt llld Small .Animals
lnns-Ginlens

entine

No. 49
1913

·9 Section,, 60 Page' 35 C•ntl
A Multim•dia Inc. New•paper

Middlepott"--ffomeroy Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, February 6, 1983

----

----------------

-

State, area officials await 648 action
By JEFF GRABMEJER
Thnes.Senllnel Staff
ffiLUMBUS - State and area officials are waiting
to see what the GaWa-Jackson-Meigs 648 Board does
before they take any steps concerning recommendations of a state review group.
However, It Is uncertain If the 648 board can act on
the review group's most Important recommendation
- the firing Of Its execiltlve director, Maldne
Plummer - until five vacancies on the board. are
fllied.
'
The 648 board has scheduled a special meeting for
Feb.14.
The Gallla, Jackson and Meigs county c'ornm!ssion·
ers met with state mental health officials In
Columbus Friday to discuss these and other Issues
surrounding recommendations of the Community

In Implementing the report. The meeting was closed
to the media, but officials talked to reporters after the
· session.
One thing state and county officials acco.mpUshed
was deciding how to fill the five vacancies on the 648
board, according to Jim Myers, acting deputy
commissioner of the Ohio Department of Mental
Health.
The commlssloners agreed to nominate persons for
the.positions within 10 days, Myers said, and the state
wlU appoint the members within another 11,) days.
There are 15 members on the Gallla-JacksonMelgs 648 board, 10 chosen by the county
commissioners and five by the state department of
mental health.
All five vacancies are state appointments, Myers

· Se!vlces Review Group.
In Its :n.page final report, the state-appointed
review group called for the resignations (/f Plllffi!11er
and Bernard N!ehm, executive director of the
trt-county Community Mental Health Center.
' The panel said Plummer and Nlehm were poor
administrators and blamed the two for the continuing ·
conflict between the 648lxiard and the mental health
center.'
After release of the panel's report, the 648 board
voted 6 to 5 to ask for Plummer's resignation, but she
has refUsed to leave her position. The center board
voted 8.io4 to support Nlehm and did not ask ljlm to
step down.
As requested by the panel, the county conunlssion·
ers and state officials met Frtday to dlsctiss progress

said.
The deputy comnuss1oner said he Is unsure
whether the 648 board can fire Plummer without a
IUD board.
"It's an Issue that has to be·clarified," Myers said.
Duling its special meeting Feb. 14, the 648 board
will discuss what action it should take In light of
Plummer's refusal to step down. board chairman
John Rice said.
A specially-hired Columbus attorney, Joseph
Strapp, will advise the board, Rice said.
The chairman said lie "can't guarantee what
action the board will take" at the meeting ..
The 6 to 5 vote asking for Plummer's resignation
shows the board Is "pretty well fragmented" on the
Issue, Rice said.

·collins
blasts
Celeste
Schools see no major
state
budgettax
plan
changes as result of
new state standards
By KEVIN KELLY
Times Sentmel Staff.
'
GALLIPOLIS - No major
curriculum Overhaul Is antic!·
paled by officials in Gallia
County's two school dlstrtcts as
they tace the establishment of
new minimum educational
standards this fall.
Because the Ohio Department
of Education has allowed local
scbool dlstrtcts to determine
what areas need upgrading, the
local task will be to Identify
those areas before Ia te August.
Gallla County LoCal Schools
will conduct an analysis to make
this determination, while Ga!U·
polls City Schools feel they are at
or above present minimum
standards.
,
The result of three years ·of
regional study by the education
department, new standards
were adopted by the State Board
of Education In December 1982.
Present minimum standards
for elementary schools were
adopted In 1970, while high
schools have been operating
under the same set of standards
effected In 1968. With new
standards, the education depart·
ment expects complete Implementation by 1981.
"It was a response.toconcerns
that some standards are out of
date, and a li'enu!ne concern
about areas of education," noted
Gallla Local Superintendent
Gary Toothaker.
"Right now we' re In the
process of determlnlng where
we stack up at this point," he
continued. "We're domg a geoeral analysis to find areas where
we're already In compUance.
Having found a problem, wewW
address ourselves to clearing up
any discrepancies."
· Specifics on what new stand·
ards say are lort!Icomlng from
Columbus, but one of the biggest
changes Is the tact the standards

GALLIPOLIS ~ Area schools
wlU be forced to slash their budgets
by as l'l)uch as ro percent under
Goverl'lor Richard Celeste's proposed budget, State Senator Oakley
C. Coll!ns (R·Ironton), charged
today.
"Our basic education programs
are really going to suHer when this
prqxlSal cuts through the heart of of
basic educatlon fUnding," ·Collins
said, adding that the nine percent
cut."as requested, Is an effective cut
of about W percent when com·
pressed Into the five months
remaining In the school year.
Senator Collins said he refUses to
support the governor's budget·
balancing plan as presented early
last week partly flecause of its "dire
effects" on education.
Celeste asked In .a speech to the
legislature on Tuesday for a
permanent, ~ percent Increase In
the state Income tax-- coupled with
$282 million In spending cuts - to
help erase a projected, June 30
budget deficit of $528 million.
"Taxpayers will be paying twice
as mucli in taxes for deteriorating
services, particularly In educa·

lion," Sen. Collins said.
"As a taxpayer, a leg!slator and a
member of our Southeastern Ohio
community, paying more and
getting less dlstorbs me greatly."
Collins said he particularly objects to thef)ermanent natureofthe
tax Increase.
"State revenues are up this month
and as the economy continues to
rebound, the state will be taking
more than it needs at the expense of
middle-Income wage earners. Mak·
ing the tax Increase permanent
means doubling of our Income taxes
Inside of18 months."
"With federal and municipal
taxes on the lise, the wage-earner
can.be asked to give only so much to
keep government programs going," said Collins.
Governor Celeste asked that the
tax be made permanent on the basis
ol projections by his budget
·
director, Crtstlna Sale.
Collins charged that under the
proposal, ''taxpayers and schools
are the big losers."
According to Collins, primary
and secondary schools will lose $J!JO
million and higher education will

Sen. Collins
. lose $40 million.
"The schools are fac!J!g the third
round of state cuts In three years.
We've· made modest cuts In the
past," Collins said, "but this wlU
create a real crtses for the schools."
Sen. Collins vowed to vote against
the budget proposal "unless and
until the tax burden Is modified ."

Strike-related arrests
include independents
·,

'

By SCO'ITKRAFT
Aasodaied Press Writer
While the leader of str\klng
Independent truckers complained
his drivers have been wrongly
lllldltloaal two ldll rl. ~are
blamed for shootings and vandal•-equlred for secondary lldloal poaduatloll ..ter new mlnlmmn
Ism this week, authorities In several
smndards In Ohio, effective lids laD. In a cia 1110111 ~. above,
states said at least some of the more
GaDiaAcademy IUgh ~ nUith ~DeaD Muon explains a line
than 40 people arrested have been
·pollll of lhe ooune to sludeM !klG« Slooe.
Independent truckers.
TbrEe Independent truc~ers arlack of coordination."
address, for the first time, both
. rested In Pennsylvania on Frtday
"We now have a set of
elementary and secondary
(ace char~ of forcing two trucks
standards-torK-12,
an opportuneduca1ion.
off the road and damaging lights,
Ity for the first time to plan a
'This Is seen as a positive move
windshields and fenders with ax
unified curriculum," he added.
by
Schools Superintendent
handles and baseball bats, state
"This will ensure continuity .." .
Joseph Carter, who said past
police said.
Another signJflcant change Is ·
standards established at differ·
Of eight others arreSted Friday In
ent times created "a certain
(Continued on page A3)
that state, at least two are
!nttependent drivers, authorities
said. The occupation of the others
was not known.
"There are probab~ other than
independent (truckers) Involved"
In the violence, said Tom Lyon,
spokeslll8ll for the Pennsylvania
state pollee. "Th~'s just' no way .
we can prove any ot It" until aU the
program In mllid beyond speedlngo of 10.4 percent by previous stand·
By.JAME!IG~G
~king Is completed.
·
ards. The December rate was 10.8
up government construcllon
A,_,!e*ed 1'..-Wrker
There
have
been
more
than
1,1XXl
percent,
measuring
only
civilian
·
projects. .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
incidents
of
violence.
Including
one·
jobs.
• Sen. Alan K. Simpson, R-Wyo.,
dent Reagan, citing Improved
death,
durlilg
the
strike,
.
shooting
"Millions
ot
Americans
can
take
predicted that despite the Improved
government economic· figl,!res, Is
which entered Its slxthdaytoday. At
heart,'·' Reagan said, because the
predicting that unemployment wlll · employment picture, pressure fora
leaat 43 people have been arrested
not return to the post-Depression J&lt;?bs program "~ remain on" In · natlon'sunemptoyinentmtewllino
cluu'&amp;eB ranging trorn crlmll1a!
longer reaeh the record-setting
the House and Senate.
hlghsofthepastmonths.
·
mlschlef
to carrying concealed
levels Of
miJIIIIIS:-'-'1 think Ills
The president visited the White
'We are on the move now," ·
weapoa~~.
House press room Friday, hours a trend," he added.
Reagan said · Friday at a news
Mike F .ll'khu!llt, 'president of the
Reagan
reelect
off
several'
posk
conference that Ills wife turned Into a'tter the Labor Department anIndt:peiideut
Truckers AlsQclatlon
nounced that unemployment In · tlve signs In the government
a 7llnd birthdaY p8.rty for the
wi!D
called
for the shutdown,
Indexes · that measure I!ClliOnlc
Jan!W'Y drtJRII!d to 10.2 percent, In
pnsldent.
clalmm
that
tmee shooting at
perfonnanoe: thefalllngunempioy·.
Reapn also sald he would listen part because mUitary. jobs were
tnJdal
Wl!l't!
not
independent drlV·
ment mte, .l!ld higher retail and
counted.
toCOJ1&amp;Il!IS(oliaJllwosalstorajobs
en but "a lot r1. slckos and weirdos
autcrnobjle lilies.
Therarewascanplirable to a mte
(II'ORI'am.- although he ' has no

CitY

whothlnk!t'scutetofireattrucks."
Incidents, )38 cases of objects
Maj. Ray Yingling, spokesman . thrownattrucksand151njurtes.
· for the Ohio Highway Patrol, said
Most of the arrests elsewhere
the ,patroi Is "corilldent that the
have been truc)\er,s, truck mechanpeople we're dealing with and have
!cs or friends of drivers, aspotcheck
arrested are adults associated In
of state authorities indicates. But
some way or another with the
teen-age vandals and a few non-.
trucking Industry," Yingling said.
truckers also have been arrested.
At(orney General William
But, he ' acknowledged, he
couldn't say "whether all are
French Smith on F_'rtday said the
members of one particular assocla·
Justice Department Is actively
t!on or another."
considering federal prosecution of
violent acts allegedly connected
Authorities have arrested 23
with the strike.
people In Ohio, where the patrol
says there have been 96 shooting

Nation's · jobl~s$ rate won't.
inc~~~se predicts . president

CSLBS.FREE

• &amp;I If . . . . . . I

••r

Vol. 16

ANNOUNCES OUR SWEETHEART SPECAL
FEBRUARY 9th • 12th

MORF.BIGNEWS!

Times·S~ntinel
Along rlver .. oooo•··············B-1-8
Area tleatlls ...................... D-8

c ........

Winter
"Warm-up"

9

Out~~

.

tmts

RENAUIJ' AIHANCE
NAMED .MOIDR TREND'S
1983 CAR OF THE YEAR!

Annua l Percenta e

1·

Today's

•

lr;;;;:;;;;;:;1iiiiiiiiiiii~~i;!iiiiii;i;i~===,-1

.IL9%

1

the figures

r-----------'-

------------L-----------I HEADQUARTERS BEAUTY SALON

.Lottery winner

game, ''The Number,'' was 403.

s~.
The executive committee of
"Save Our Securtty," a coalition of
140 labor, senior ~ltlzen and civil
rights groups, voted4S-2Thursday
toendo~thereformcomrnlsslon's
rescue plan. Thetwonegativevotes
werecastbytheAn1erlcanAssocl~tionofRetlredPersoiiSandtheGrey·
Panthers.
·

Philson and Katie Crow, council
members, and Jean Hall.

The regular meeting of the
Syracuse PTO scheduled for Feb. 8,
has been postponed until Feb.15, at 7
p.m. Students of the school will
present a variety show.

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally

•

(Continued from page 1)

9, at 7:30p.m.

and costs, two days .confinement,
one years probation, license plates
and registration revoked until
operators license Is obtained; John
Carpenter, Middleport, grand theft,
one days confinement, one years
probation, restitution and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Dorsey
bhllnger, Middleport, !llegal
bumper helgbt,$25; Jack L. Provence, Long Bottom, no valid
registration, $41.50; Sheila J . Taylor, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, failure to stop
within assured clear distance,
$41.50; Donald B. Nixon, Warsaw,
Ohio, speed, $50.50; George J .
Zanos, Wellsburg, W. Va., speed,
$46.50; Nola C. Young, Rt. . 1,
Minersville, stop sign, $41.50; T!·
mothy A. Basham, Gallipolis,· no
operators license, $66.50.

Meeting postponed

Veterans Memorial

SHOP TONIGHT
TIL 8:00 P.M.

Politicians, special intere.~t groups
·stepup influence on SocSe~ writers

Albert W. .Shoemaker, 69, Rt. 1,
'
Herman Kloes, 81. F~t Street,
Cheshire,
died
Thursday
at
VeteWASHINGTON
(Af') - Politi·
Middleport, died suddenly Thursrans
Memorial
Hosp!till.
.
ctaQS
and
special
Interest
groups
day evening at his residence.
Mr.
Shoemaker
was
born
Feb.
7,
stepping
up
lbelr
efforts
to
Mr. Kloes was born Sept. 17, 1~1
In WestVa .. thesonofthelateHenry 1913atGallipolls, thesonofthelate lnflul!hce the tax wrlters In Con·
and Elizabeth Ohlinger Kloes. He Elmer and Mattie c. Washington gress who will draft legislation
was also preceded in death by his Shoemaker. He was also preceded repairlng the Social Security
wife, Helen Pooler Kloes, three 1n death by Ills wife, Audrey Mae ' system.
The House Ways . and Means
brothers, one sister and one RatcllffShoemaker,threebrothers
and
one
so
n,
Kelmeth
E
.
subcommittee
on Social Security
grandson.
Shoemaker.
was
opeolng
five
days of hearlngs
He was a retired coal miner and
todaywith25membersofCongress
worked In maintenance at Athens
. He was a retired employe of parading before .t he panel to
State Hospital.
Owens·Illlno!s
Glass Co.. , cr!tique the $168 billion bailout plan
He Is survived by two sons and
Huntington.
fas!Uoned by the Natjonal Comrnls·
daughters-In-law, . Manning and
He
Is
survived
by
five
sons,
Phillip
slon on SoclalSecurtty Reform.
June Kloes, Middleport and Robert
and Charles Shoemaker, bothofRt.
More than 100 organlzati0ns and
and May Kloes, Waterford; four
1,
Cheshire,
AJIJE!rt,
Jr.,
and
Billie
R.
Individuals,
ranging from Amerl·
grandchildren, Kent Kloes, Belpre;
Shoemaker,
both
of
Columbus,
and
cans
for
Democratic
Action to the
Lort J. Kloes, Lancaster; Lynn
Roger
D.
Shoemaker,
Huntington;
A&amp;SOClation
of
Bowling
Proprtetors
Kloes, Middleport and Tim Kloes.
Shoone
daughter,
Helen
Louise
America,
will
testify
before
the
Waterford; two brothers, Edward
Kloes, Youngstown, and Harlan emaker, Aberdeen, Wash.; one legislators next week.
sister, Mabel Smith, Rt. 2, Cheshire.
The subcommittee wlU write the
Kloes, London, Oh.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
first draft · of Soclal Security
Funeral services will be held
Sunday .at 2 p.m. at the Rawlings- Monday .a t 2 p.m. at the Rawlings· legislation that Is expected to go to
Coots-Blower Funeral Home with . Coats-Blower Funeral Home with the House floor by March 10.
the Rev. MarkMcClungofflclatlng.
The fUll Ways and Means
the Rev. Mark McClung o!flclating.
Burtal
will
be
In
Pin(!
Street
Committee
wrapped upJhree days
· Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery,
Gallipolis.
Friends
may
of
hearlngs
on Thursday with
Cemetery. Frtends may call at the
at
the
funeral
home
Sunday
call
Richard
S.
Schwelker,
speaking on
fUneral home Saturday from 2 to 4
from
4
to9.
and 7 to9.

O'Brien ends 18 ·court cases
Eleven defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrtck O'Brien
were Dana Turner, . Syracuse,
failure to y!(!]d, $10 and costs; Owen
Dalley, Portland, possess an Illegal
deer, $25 and costs; Anna Wiles,
Pomeroy, speed, $22 and costs;
Garland K. Nalstettler, Pomeroy,
taking an antlerless deer without
permit from the DlvlsonofWlldl!fe,
$100 and costs; Barbara Richards,
Reedsville, obstructlngoffic!al bus!·

. Friday, FebruC1rf 4, 1913

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recent

sTRooNG TRUCKER - An bldeplilidea&amp; tnlcker ll&amp;end8 In the
pe&amp;h of a lruck Mit l!llten •rolldWa.J to tl!e 'S.C. S&amp;eae porta Autllortty

Columbul !~tree&amp; Tennlnal· hen! Friday. Captain ol Pollee Lieure Jtt.
Hnpw wllllldl badp Ia hill hand lllld lltop&amp;lhe d!'tver ol the truck
wllo II IIIII ftDiag. 'l1le rlpt bud laM II already blocked by another
lruck db plclceU Wklnllo the driver. (AP Luerphoto ).

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�r-.bruary 6, 1983

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Commentary and perspective.
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Page-A·~

FebrUary 6, 19a3

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When evidence isn't"========J=a=m=es=J=.K=i;;::;;lpa=t=ri.c=k

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A Division of
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825 Third Ave.', Gallipolis, Ohio
16141 446-2342

'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
16141 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publi,her
I

'.••'' '

.:;

HOBART WilSON JR
E xecutive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Ass istant Publisher-Controller

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A MEMBER uf Tik· A ssodat~d Prt&gt;Sti. Inland Ottily Prl'SS Assl)('iatiun and lht&gt; Amt&gt;'ri~·;ul
Nr~· spupt&gt;r

Publishers Assvd alion .

LETTERS OF' OPINION ar t' ~t"l {' umt'd . Tht'}' shnu ld ~It'S!&lt; than 300 vmrds long. All
ldtrrs &lt;m' subjert tu t•ditillt.! und must bt· si~ncd with namt·. udd~ss and tch.•phunl'
numbe r, Nu un...,l~ned lettt'rs wiU bt• publisbt•d. L!:llt&gt;rs should bt&gt; in gund t.astt', add ressln~
isSUt'S, nut pt&gt;rsnnalitit·~ .
·

•, L:::::==============:!.l
•

WASHINGTON - On May i, . may well become a landmark In
1978, the p6llce In Bloomingdal(\1 that fleld ·ofthe law which governs ·

Dl., received an anonymous letter.
It read:
"This letter is to Inform you that
you have a couple In your town who
strictly make theh' living on selling
drugs. They are Sue and Lance
Gates ... Mostofthelrbuysaredone
In Florida, where she leaves· (their
automobUe) to be loaded up with
drugs, then Lani:e files down and
drives It back. May 3 she Is driving
down there again ... They brag
about the fact that they never have
to work and make lhelr entire lly·
ing on pushers. they lire friends
with some big drug dealers, who
visit their house often."
Thus began the Gates case. It

the admissibility of evtdence In
crlmlnal trials.
So that you will know what happened: Acting on the letter, the
Bloomingdale pollee Immediately
located a Lance and Susan Gates at
an address In the community. Us·
lng elementary detective tech·
nlques, they learned 'that an "L.
Gates" had made a reservation on
an Eastern Airlines !Ugbt from Chi·
cago to West PalmBeachonMay5.
Survemance at O'Hare Airport provided a description of "L. Gates,"
whlcb was talephoned fu agents of
the Drog Enforcement Admlnlstra·
tion In Florida.
At West Palm Beach, agents

r:.F irst counts
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\i.only
for
show
.

•. · In The Announcement Game, first counts only for show. The challenge is
.: ; · to be the last candidate standing when White House nominations are
.: -: bestowed.
.
Sen. Alan Cranston of California was first in for the 1984 Democratic
·: presidential nomination. Yes, he announced, he Is running for the White
: : . House, SUrPrising only ·those Democrats who weren't paying attention. He
:- , said so in Washington, and then in New Hampshire, and then in California .
·: and Iowa.
. That's a latter-day refinement of The Announcement Game. Candidates
; ··don't just say they're hmning, they get on chartered airplanes and say it
: • ·. over and over again.
·:;
Before the month is out, the Democrats wUI have a record lineup of early
··: candidates, all of whom will solemnly announce the obvious.
'
Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado wUI do so on Feb. 17, former Vice President
: •• Walter F. Mondale on Feb; 21, and former Gov. Reubln Askew of Florida
':·on
Feb. 23. Sen. John Glenn of Ohio hasn't . set the date, but he too has
I •'
, :. started the run for the Democratic nomination.
,
Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona is to disclose his plans next Wednesday,
:: and while he'd like to run as he did in 1976, he's had health problems, and
•: may decide to pass.
·
Aiinouncements of presldel)tlal candidacy seldom are more than
rituals. Before he announced anything, Cranston went out and raised
enough money in~ states to qualify ior dollar-for-dollar federal matching
of his presidential primary campaign expenditures. Mondale has done so.
too. Askew reported spending more than $336,000 on his campaign durtng
1983. Hart said he spent about SlZ7;000.
These days, annoUncements of candidacy do-no~ mark the start of
presidential campaigns. They are part of the process, but not the start. 'The
first step is to get some money and start spending it.
The announcement that will do the most to shape the 1984 campaign is
due later, from President Reagan. The assumption, studiously nurtured at
the White House, is that Reagan will again be the Republican presidential
nominee. U he decides against running, the picture changes dramatically.
Vice President George Bush, Senate Republican Leader Howai'd H. Baker
Jr., Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, and probably
other Republicans wUI almost surely be lining up to make their own
announcements of candidacy.
Reagan isn't saying what he'll do, or when he'll say what he Is going to
do. It probably will be next fall, although some of his most ardent
supporters, and some of his potential successors, would like to hear sooner
than that.

tailed the suspect ~om. the.airport
lawyer moved to. quash the evl·
to a Holiday Inn, where he was seeil
dence on the grouJids that It had
to enter a room registered In the
been obtained In violation of their
name ot his wUe. On the morning of
Fourth Amend!nent rights. The
May 6, Gates and his wife lett the
motion was granted; the evidence
Inn In a gray Mercury sedan bear- · was ruled inadmissible. Now Illl·
Ing Dllnots license plates. In the
nols has appeilled thai ruling to the
meantime pollee had obtained a
U.S. Supreme Court. The Clllll! was
search warrant for both the cat and
not argued last October, but will be
the residence. The cm;.p!e returned
reargued next month. ·
to their home In· Bloo!lllngdale at
It Is not easy f()r non-lawYers to
5: 15 a.m. on May 6. The cops were
follow the reasoning, If that Is the
waiting for them.
'
right word, that made such palpaIn the trunk of the car pollee
ble evidence oot legally evidence at
found 350 pounds of marijuana. In
all. One obJection was that the 81Klthe residence they found drug paranymous letter failed to satisfy a
phernalia and a quantity of co:
"basis of knowledge" test; the aucaine. Lance and Susan were
tho!" had not said that he or she ac·
arrested on drug charges, but bequlred the Information by personal
fore the case could get to trial their
observation. Secondly, the letter
failed to satlsty a "veracity'' test;
the magistrate who Issued t he
search warrant had no way oi
knowing If the author was a trulh1ul
person. People w~ write anonym- .
ous letters should know better; they
should read Aguilar vs. Texas, 378
U.S. 1M, before taking pen In band.
1be state of Dllnols makes the argument that the sentence In the let·
ter about the Gates' "!ragging" ·
clearly Implied personal observation. More to the point, the Gates'
actions absolutely demonstrated
the trulhtulness of the tip. Before
they obtained the warrant on May
6, the pollee had seen the couple
doing exactly what the author of the
letter said they would do. What
more could be asked?
1be Supreme Court has asked
that next month's reargument be
directed to a new area. Instead of
rehashing the two-part test of the
Aguilar case, laWyers will go to
another question: Did the pollee act
In "obJective good faith?" In a brief
filed on behalf of the International
Association of Chlets of Pollee, several distinguished lawyers contend
that the concept of "reasonable
good-faith belle!" offers a way out
ol the " Intolerable morass" tn
which the law of evidence now ·ls
mired.

Stiper-wea.Ep=o=n=s::::::;::::;::t=e=s:::S;ts========='=J::;: :ac=k=A=nd=er=so=n
WASHINGT0N - The Pentagon's arsenals bulge with futuristic,
bllllon-dollar weapons. Unlike the
technoklg!£al maJVels In "Star
Wars," though. many of the mil· •·
ltary's super-sophisticated weapons systems don't work the way .
· they're supposed to. In fact, some
experts doubt whether they'll work
at all if they're ever used in actual
combat.
1be reason Is shnple but appal- •
ling: The weapons are never tested
under realistic battlefield
conditions.
Instead, Pentagon o!!lclals and
defense contrac!Qrs run perfunctory tests and assure Congress at
appropriations hearings that tbe
super-weapOns are the best that

money can buy. This Is not ~rprts.
lng. 'The contractors make no money If the weapons aren't
approved; and some military offlc·
ers have their eyes oo lucrative
jobs In Industry when tbey retire.
They are Inclined,' therefore, to go
easy on their potential future

bosses.
Sotheweaponsaretestedlnclose
cooperation with the manufacturers. This Is a llttle like letting a high
school senior, whose ·riCh uncle has
promised him a newcarongradua·
tlon, score his own final exams.
Sen. David Pcyor, D-Ark., a
former member of the Govemmen·
tal Mairs Committee, has studied
the way the Pentagon tests Its
fancy new weapons. He's under·

standably alarmed.
"I find generally an Incestuous
relationship when It comes to test·
ing the weapons that our soldiers
are supposed to use." Pryor told
my as&amp;Jclates Donald Goldberg
and Indy Badhwar. "Generally,
they're tested by the people whO
manuf1 -~ them. They're basi·
cally te .ted under oon·battlefleld
conditions. And they're given every
advantage In the testing procedure
to make cert.iln thatthey work. so
the mWtary can come back to Congress and seek the funding for
thetn ." •
'The senator continued: "Look at
the M·1 tank. That's a perfect ex·
amp!&lt;;. A tank that was scheduled
to cost several hundred thousand

dollars Is now $2.8 mllllon apiece.
And as we've also seen, the testing
procedure was faulty; the tank
breaks down, and It Is a tank that
won't work properly under battlefield clrcwnstances."
· · "The problem Is that , the Pentagon today is accepting what the
contractors tell them," said Pryor.
"As a result, we end each session of
Congress by appropriating blllims
and blllloos of dollars to try to solve
defense problems or weaknesses,
when In fact we're not solving
them. We're creating additional
problems. We're weakening our ordinary (forces) , our standby forces, our standby reserves and the
basic necessities for our military In ·
the field today."

Best book of the yJ=.~=ar=======Ar=tB=uc=h=too=ld
The most ·hnportant book published In Washington this year Is
titled, " 'The Budget of the United
States Govj!mment Fiscal Year
1984."
I haven't had time to read It myself, though I've browsed through It
. to see U my name was mentioned.
But I asked a friend whO reviews
fiction and nonfiction for The Washlnglon Post what he \h9ught of It.
" It's the best book I've read this
year," he said. "Frankly, I think
It's going to be another 'Winds of
War.' '.'

"That good, huh?"
"l couldri't put It down. I kept

Today.in history
TodaY is Sunday, Feb. 6, the 37th day of 1983. There are 328 days left In
the year.
Today' s highlight lr ilstory: ·
On Feb. 6, 1952, Brt ·"in's KJng George VI died aJKI was succeeded by his
daughter, Ellzabe~. .
On this date:
In 177i!, France recognized the Independence of the United States.
In 1788, Ma,ssachusetts became the sixth state to ratl1y the U.S.
.
Constltl!tion. •
:in 1943, U.S. Gen. Dwight EisenhOwer was named Commander·In-Chief
of Allied Forces In North Africa during World War II.
: In 1964, Cuba cut off the nom- \1 water ·supply tb the U.S. naval base at
~tanamo Bay.
'Ten years ago: ·The United States and North VIetnam announced that a
postwar Paris conference would begin Feb. 26 to mo!lltor the cease-fire
~dlng .the VIetnam War.
· ·
.
.
years ago: A tentative settlement wa5 reached to end the 63-day
·lioal strDce In Appalachia and the Middle West.
· ·One year ago: In his budget message to Congress, President Reagan
ulpd c:on8ress to "stay the course" by slu1nklng government's social
responsibilities wliiJe expanding the nation's military strerigth.
Today's birthdays: President Reagan Is 72. ActOr RJp Tom Is 52.

.:·.Five

turning the pages to see what government program would be cut
next. It's more frightening than
~Rosemary's Baby.' "
uyou mean It's a ttu1ller?"
"More of a whodunnlt. Or, specifIcally, who's d.olng lt ,to wbom. It's
about money .and power, the strug·
gle for survival, death aitd taxes
and man's fate In a world he never

made."

· ·

"Any sex?"
"The military chapters are very
sexy, particularly the lOve scenes
between thePresldentoftheUnlted
States and -~ new weapons that .
the Pentagon has seduced him Into
buying."
"You mean the President of the
United States Ia In bed with tbe
rnllltary·lnduBtrlal complex?"
"All throuall the book. SQme of
the scenes between them are so hot,
that np O'Nejll has threatened to·
ban ~ book In Boston."
"Does the President's wife know
he's In love with the new

whO has lost so much of his money
that he Is down and out and In debt
up to his ears."
"How did he fall on such bad
times?"
"He was caught up In a recession
and couldn't pay his bills. Finally
he got so sick that the President's
doctors had to operate to save his
!Ue. They ·cut everything down to
the bone, and froze everything they
couldn't cut."
•
"Does he live?"
"In the book he does: 1be President's doctors maintain tl!ey just
removed the fat, and althoUgh the
patient will have to suffer pain, It's
_the Onl)l way he can get weli. The
White House doctors admit the
medicine they've prescribed Is a
bitter pW to swallow, but the Uncle

Is now on the mend."
· 'That makes sense to me."
"1be only problem Is that Democratic doc-t ors whO have red the
book claim the President's surgeons have cut out the Uncle's vital
. organs to save his !Ue. In Its present
form they find the plot not very believable, and they're calling lor
changes In the next edition before
tJley ooy tt. ~· ~....
"Everybody's a critic. What
book wOUld you compare this work
With?"
"The first one that comes to mind
Is 'The G1:3pes r1 Wrath,' thoogh of
course It's not written as well. The
poor, the sick and the old ones are
the ones whO get hurt the moat."
"It soUildS depressing. I'm not
. sure I want to read It."

...

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

r---Weather:-------"---.
Forecast For 7 p.m .
February 6

e&gt;u111mov,

EST

Nation's weather

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Fronts: Cold ..,...

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'WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service pr&amp;
dlciB rein for mOIIt of the West Coelit Sunday. Snow l!i predicted for
northem New England tapering off to rein for the East Coast and the
South. (AP. LMerphoto).

'.

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY: chance of snow Monday,
fair Tuesday and Wednesday. Dally highs in upper 20s to lower :lls.
Lows at night mostly In the teens.

Winter storm moVes taward Ohio
'.

Brownsville, Texas.
Other rep:&gt;rts:

School
standards..•
(Continued from Page All
an increase of minimum high
school graduation credits from
17 to 18. The county schools have
been at 19 for some time,
Toothaker said, while the cltv
system Is already at 18 and"' .
go to 19.
Last year, the city's board of
education had approved plans to
Increase graduation standards
at Gallia Academy High School
to Include another two units of
mathematics - which is In line
with the new standards starting with the class of 1986.
With standards starting In the
fall, this wUI become effective
with t.tle class of 1984, Carter
explained.
"We aren't faced with a great
deal of revamping," he added .
"Som~ standards require three
units of English, and for the
most part, _w e've added those
units. Two units of math, which
is also required, our collegeprep kids already have it. "
One area both superintend·
ents wlll be working on Ls . a
requirement determining com·
petency testing. in which local
standards will be created.

speaker will be Robert Saunders,
Marshall University swhnmlng
coach.
Members of the 1982 Class of Eagles are: John Lewis, Andre' Runnels. BU!y Graham and Robert
Brown, Jr. , Troop 42, Baptist Ternpie; Albert Anderson and Tom Wll·
mink, Troop 62, Pea Ridge United
Methodist Church: Bill St. Clair,
Troop 12, First Presbyterian
Church; Byron Buck n, Troop 21,
Beverly Hills Presbyterian
Church; Erick Cushman, Bill
Murphy, Mark Perry, Bill Pofahl,
William M. Jennings, and Dan
Kennedy Jr., Troop ~. Johnson
Memorial United Methodist
Church; Karl Epps, Troop 22, St.
John's Episcopal Church, all from
Huntington ; Daniel Perkins, Troop
Gffi, Locust Grove Baptist Church,
Kenova; Todd Mooney and Butch
Culp, Troop 92, Bethesda United
Methodist Church, Ona; Wayne
Dalley, Troop 701, Beulah Ann Baptist Church, Ona; Alvin Watts,
Troop 400, West Hamlin United
Methodist Church, West Hamlin;
Timothy Broo!Cs, Troop 133, Prtn·

-East: Atlanta 32 cloudy;
Boston 24 partly cloudy; Buffalo
15 snow; Charleston, S.C., 36
fair; Cincinnati l2 fair; Cleveland 22 snow; Detroit 23 cloudy;
Miami 52 fair; New York Tl
windy; Philadelphia Tl windy;
Pttt~u~hrosnow,Was~

'J:l fair .

oomeciy."

cess Church of Christ, Grayson;
Don O'ROurke, Jr., Troop:IJO, Galllpolls physician; Mike Edwards,
Randall Murray and Greg 'fho...
mas, Troop 249. American Legion
Pest No. 39, Pomeroy; Denny Carr,
Richard Hill, and Adam Lewis,
Troop 259, National Guard Armory,
Pt. Pleasant.
Malcolm Orebaugh, Gallipolis,
Chairman of the local chapter. of
the National Eagle Scout Assocla·
tion, will preside over the dinner.
Orebaugh will present Eagle Scout
paperweights to the Eagle Scouts
and Scout coffee mugs to the
escorts.
CertUicates from the Sons of the
American Revolution will also be
presented to the Eagle Scouts.

r--;:===·=
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"Well, tell me this. Does It have
an upbeat ending?"
"All budget books written by a
President have an Upbeat ending .
This one predicts In 1!186\he Uncle
will be fully recovered and regain
his fortune again. And everyone
willllve happily ever after."
"WW It make a good movie?"
"It's been optioned by all three
TV networks. they don't know yet If
they'll make It Into a soap o!)era, a
.docudrama or a situation

FEBRUARY '83 SALE

NOW

bQm in

"You have to because that's all
people will be talk1ng about this

spring."

LONDON, Otito (AP) -A group
protesting the jailing of farmer
Doug Dalley planned a rally at the
Madison County Courthouse Satur·
daY, according tQ a spokeswoman
for ihe Family Farm Movement.
Royce Mosbacker said protesters
planned to rally at the jail beginning
at 9 a.m. Sbe said Wayne Cryts, a
Missouri farmer jiilled for con·
tempt after removing his corn from
a bankrupt grain elevator, will
speak with Oatley.
Dalley has been in jall stnce Jan. ·
28, when Common Pleas Judge
Robert Nichols cited him tor
contempt. Dalley was cited alter he
refused to provide requested flnan·
cia! data at a debtors' hearing.

•

·. Huntington Legion hosts dinner
HUNTINGTON - Amertcan Le,glon Prnt No. 16 of Huntington will
host the annual Eagle Scout Recog·
nitlon Dinner for those Scouts In the
tri-state who have earned the Eagle
Scout rank during 1982. Guest

Protestors to
gather at jail

na-

· By The Associated Press
A winter storm will move east Into the lower Mississippi Valley
Saturday evening, ·and snow will spread ahead of It into southwest
Ohio, then over the state. Heavy accumulations of new snow are
possible over most of Ohio. Areas along the Ohio River will have &lt;1
mixture of snow, rain or freezing rain late Saturday and early
Suhday.
The weekend storm will move to along the·EastCoast late Sunday,
·
with soow diminishing to flurries In Ohio.

·weapoQ?.,

"Everybody knows. But the
· President JlllYI be has to do It In the
name of national security." '
"Ia that the maiD plot?" .
"No, It's Jlllt one o! the subPlots.
The main plot Ia allout a rlch Uncle,

By 1be A"'''de!pd PnM
1be winter storm that has
· produced heavy snow In the
· southern Rockies and Texas .
Panhandle blew Into the Central
Plains early Saturday, prompt·
ing travelers' advisories for
"''' South central and eastern Ne. braska, ruir\ols and Kentucky.
As of midnight Friday, Lubbock, Texas, had received 2.3
inches of snow from this latest
storm, bringing Its total for the
season to a record 34.8 lnche!i,
the National Weather Servk:e
said.
Ught snow was falling across
the upper Ohio Valley and lower
Great Lakes Region as well as
portions of New England early
Saturday.
Snow was to- continue to
blanket much of the nation's
midsection through Saturday,
moving into the eastern Tennes·
see Valley by evening.
Temperatures around the
tion at 2 a.m. EST Saturday
ranged from minus 11 degrees
at Madison, Wis., ·to 70 at

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

g;~
gtH,~
Je••···

4114 Second
"""'"'Ollie
446- lMJ
Galllpolta.

MAGNAVOX 25" COLOR CONSOLE
REG. '698°0

NOW

$49800

�The

Ohi-.Point

Times-Sentinel

W.

1983

6, 1983

Blacks upset with Kennedy, Mondale
mayoral race.
.
Cranston's press secretary, John
Russonello, said the endorsement
was "part of Cranston's effort to
show his support for qualified black
leaders." Washington has ,the
fonnal backing of the 52-member
DNC bl.ack caucus In the Feb. 22
contest.
·
Mondale, a leading contender for
the 1984 presidential nomination, Is
supporting_and will campaign for
RlchardM. Daley, the Cook County
state's attorney and son of the late
Chicago mayor.
Kennedy, who has taken himself
out of the 1984 presidential race, has
written a letler endorsing Mayor
Jane Byrne. .
After meeting with Moildale on
Friday and Kennedy on Thursday,
the black caucus adopted a resolution ce~urlng both.

ByEVANSWll'l'
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Top
black Democrats are .upset with
fanner Vice President Walter F .
Mondale and Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., for endorsing
white candidate$ In the three-way
. Chicago mayor's primary.
Mondale failed to calm the anger
of the black caucus of the Democratic National Committee at a
meeting Friday, but the caucus
stopped short of taking any action
beyond issuing Its criticism, saying
both men had exemplary records on
civil rights.
Mean\i.(hUe, California Sen. Alan
Cranston, the only · officially announced Democratic presidential
contender In 1984, endorsed Rep.
Harold Washington, D-Ill., the only
black running In the Chlcago

"The membersoftheDNCBlack
Caucus express L. :lr utter dismay
and extreme disappointment with
their actions concerning the mayoral race In thecltyofChlcago," the
resolution said.
The caucus took "serious issue"
with Mondale's decision to campaign for Daley.
The group's resolution Said: "But
for Mr. Mondale's and Mr.
Kennedy's exemplary records durIng their public careers on civil
rights and issues of concern of
minority voters, we would have
been compelled to · take stronger
action.''
Mondale' s meeting with tbe
caucus Friday seemed to have been
less than completely successful.
"I cannot say they are satisfied,"
Mondale said after the hour-long
meeting. "I do not think they are."
Mondale promised Daley his

The federal budget: facts
behind spending estimates
actual dollars that either have been
or will be spent on a particular
activity In a given period."
Figures lor both authority and
outlay are included when a govern·
ment activity cannot be completed
In a given year. The Defense
Department, for example, may be
given the authority to spend several
bUllon dollars on an aircraft carrier.
''The outlays In the first year will be
relatively small," says Collender,
"because it takes a longtirnetostart
construction. The budget authority
In the first year, however, will be
large since It will reflect the full cost
of the ship." In future years, the

By WUISE COOK
Associated Press Writer
If President Reagan has his way,
the federal government will spend
more than $3,700 for every man,
woman and child In the country In

the coming fiscal year.
Reagan won't get his way of
course. Congress will make its own
additions and subtractions. But the
·numbers alone are enough to
contuse most people. And the
federal budget Is even more
complicated than It seems at first
glance.
Take the basic spending
estimates.
There are two way to look at
spending - by department and by
function. They are not the same
thing.
The Defense Department budget
proposed by Reagan as part of his
$848.5 billion budget for flscal19841s
$238.6 bUI!on. But the outlay for all
defense functions is $215.3 billion.
That's because the Pentagon Isn't
the only agency that spends money
on national defense; same of the
Energy Department's spending on
atomic energy, for example, is
counted as defense spending.
Look at It this way: Suppose
you're married with two children.
You probably have an overall
family food .b~flget - for food at
home - and four Individual food
budgets - for snacks, lunches, etc.
Your total food spending - what
would be called "outlay by function" In budgetary language Includes money from five separate
or "departmental" budgets.
Another aspect of the budget that
can cause misunderstandings Is the
dlstlnc.tlon between "authority"
and "outlay." Stanley E. Collender,
authOr of "TheGuldetoTheFederal
Budget," explains that "budget
authOrity Is the permission granted
toanagencyordepartmenttomake
commitments to spend money ...
Outlays, on the other hand, are the

Hoeflich's Beat ojthe Bend
· llm•1 t'im,. • llmlind

.

'

~cllle.

----

fOMEROY - Veterans Memor-

.Mon.-Thurs. 9 am til t.lO
Fri.·Sal_. 9 am t1 10 pm
'

P~ce~=~~

Is important to formulate a plan before an emergency occurs."
Dr. Brizendine suggests preparIng an outline of simple steps.
"First of all, plan abead how you
would get to the hospital in case of
. an emergency.
,
It Is even a good idea to drive over
the route, especially If you have recently relocated In the area,".suggested Dr. Brizendine. "When

W Hospital's Emergency Depart-

I.

.

Cl.DSED SUNDAYS

Sat., Feb. 12, 1

SUPERIOR

BOILED .

tnent Is staffed by a physician
twenty-four (21) hours a day to provide emergency care. Unfortunately, however, there Is often a
problem getting a patient to a medical facWty and the responslbWty
frequently falls to a friend or farnlly
member.
Dr. Paul T. Brizendine, director
of the emergency physicians'
group at Veterans Memorial Hospital points out that chances are two
in ffve tl~Jt a family member will
require emergency strikes, every
minute becomes precious while
you're seeking professional help,"
said Dr. Brizendine. ''That's why It

I·CLEVELAND
;

dealing
emergency
lion, timewith
Is aan
vital
factor. Getsltuahelp·
quickly!
Keep phone numbers for the
rescue squad, emergency room
and your physician on or near the
phone. Depending on the severity of

Yau may geneoally deduct the ordinary and noatSICiry expen•• of education
(even if it may lead to a deg-) .,.....ided
that it (1) is required by your employer, or
by law or regulationo, lor keeping your current oalary, llatuo, or job, or (2) maintains
or im...,.... skills ""!uired in doing your

PORK
CHOPS

work.

chronic or recent illnesses, or of
any medication the patient may be
taking," Instructed Dr. Brizendine.
"There's just no substitute for
preparedness:".
It, In an emergency, there is any
question as to first aid or transportation for a patient, the best solution
is to contact the Veterans MemorIal Hospital Emergency Department at (614) 992-2104.

(AP)

game.

-Thewlnnlng

The earnings came on sales of
$1,253,w.l, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share$533,910,
lottery officials said. ·

UREA
PHOSPHORUS
POTASH-28% LIQUID NITROGEN
ALL ANAYLSIS ON HAND
COKE and SPRITE
2 Liter-ONLY 89(

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Yes, We •rvice at your loco! Hotpoint Dealer
Store Houl'l: 8:30 to 5:30; Mill Cloted at 5:00P.M.
Gallia and Maoon Coun~es

CftT/flfO PUBliC ACCOUNTANT

$6 9 5 00
LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.
SPECIAL

Chamber of Commerce Building

16 State St.
Gallipolis, Phone 446-4471

EX-Large
EGGS

William B. Kughn

•su&amp;ar Free

1$139
CAMPBELL'S

SOUP

8-16
BTLS.

I

.

HOLlAND

RICH 'N' CREAMY

PUREICE CREAM

19

.t

If you need just amatt:Jess or just abox spring - we have some super savings that
• you
can'hfford to miss during this WarthOuse Sale.
· . ..
.
'

·,

•Free Delivery

446-3045

::••

'.

••
'•'i
••
..,

,.'"~ -

'';~

1626 tl8t

•Free Perking

••••-.
·!
-:

''
•'

• Queen

(2 1111 ..ly) 1760

••
••

..•''.
·-·-.,
'',,

·Beeutvrest

Oliw, Glllipolis

POMEROY, OHIO
LEO VAUGHAN, Mgr.
PH. 992-2588

'Otclfinoted

SIZE
"'EG.
· SALE
·. Be.uwnm Umited Edition (x:tra fimt)., ..... .... ....... Twin
· .•380 . t 1 179 . t
Deluxe (FirmJ ................. " ..... ....... .... Twin '(I sotllllll) '400 .n . •200 tl8t
.
.
FUll fl sol llftiy) 1 600 lilt 1 360 . t
CluMn (I sot ooiJl ·•eoo .n •420 . t
' ~ Eteganee (x·tra finn) : ... ................... ... .. Ful
'640 iet · 1369 . t

.Lifestyle

SIN NOT UNTO DEATH
SIN UNTO DEATH

FREE

~--, .

·FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

VINTON, OHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, MgT.
PH. 388-8603

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

PEPSI

Here are just a few of the bargains!!!

lnepitadun (luxury finn) .. ..... : .... Queen

-

at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post Ofi'lce.

Member: ~ A.c;;socla ted PrHs, Inland
Dally Pras Association and the Ameri-

ca n Newspaper Publishers Association.
National Advertising Representative.
Branham. lTI7 West Nine MUe Road.
Suite 204, Detro1t. Michiga n. 0015.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor RouCe ·

One Week ..... ,.......... ... ....... .. ....... $1.00
One Mon1h ................................. $4.40
One Year ..................... . ....... .. .... $52.!ll
SINm..E COI,'Y
PI\ICE
35 Cents
No subscriptions by mall permlr1ed ln

towns where home carrier service Is
available.

The Surx:lay Ttmes·Se ntl nel will not be
res ponsible for advance payments made

to carriers.
MAIL SIJBSCRJP'l10NS
Sunday Only

One year ........................ .......... $3).11)
Six months ...... ....... ........ ........... $10.40
DaDy and s.mday

MAIL $UBSCRlPnONS
l lllilde Ohio
52 Weeks ... ..................... ....... ... $51.48
26 Weeks .... ........... ................ ... $27.:1)
1J Weeks ....
. .. ,.......... .. .SlUM
R.at.es Outside Ohio
52 Weeks
................. ... $56.16
2E Weeks
.. .$29.64
l1 Weeks ....................... .......... $15.21

CORRECTION

.·

-

IN TODAY'S
FOODLAND CRCULAR

MAINE POT ATOES
20 LB. BAG
READS S1.39
IT SHOULD READ

20 LB.

BAG

49

. .

WE ARE SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE TO OUR
CUSTOMERS

FOODLAND
Ohio Valley
Rt . 35,

Gallipolis
252 Third

Pt. Pleasant
Jackson Ave.

446-4008

446-9764

675-4889

scOT ·.

·
TOWELS ,~sge

.~
I '

•'•

.•',

ShoneySNew

Country Fried
Steak Dinner

·$4.29 '
~

.

a TENDER STEAK, UGIITLY BREADED, AND ~MOfHERED IN
OUR OWN SPECIAL-RECIPE «;OUNTRY MILK GRAVY
a FRENCH FRIES (OR BAKED POI'ATO AffER SPM)
. • ToASTED GRECIAN BREAD .
e ALL THE SOUP AND SALAD YOU CARE TO EAT
• FEATURING SHONEY'S
OWN HOMEMADE CABBAGE BEEF SOUP
-------~- '

~·
Dinnerlible~

328 V"llnd Street
Point Pleasant, W~ Va.

'

"If any man see h~ brother sin a sin which is not unto death, he shall ask, and he shall give
himife ftlr them that ~n not unto death. There is a~ n unto dealh: I do not say that he will
pray ftlr it" II Jno. 5:16)
Sin Not Unto Death
1.-"Which is not unto death" or "that does not lead to deeth:" This is not a
physical death, the separation of the soul from the body, ~ is a spirnual death, the
separation of the ~nning brother lrom God. His ~n separates him lrom God, and he
becomes dead once again in trespasses and sins. The negative "not" shows that n~ nct a
com~te separation from God (death) that proves to be fatal to the soul, offeringno hope of
spiritual life being restoreil.
2.-"He shallask"has reference to prarer The laithful chikl of God may pray ftlrthe
sinning brother, requesting the forgiveness o his ~ n. The prayer of the faithful does not
override rx cover the sinning brothers sin, bul must be aCCOOJpanK!d with the coooitioos
iwftlr~ve~
·
3.-"He shall pe him ife for them that sift not untodtlth:" Ufe has reference to
the life of the sou( that God gave the obedient believer when he entered into the family
relationship, becoming a child of God by way of the new birth. Having his soul quickened at
that tim~ he no bneer walked in darknesli but in the i~t (I Jno. 1:6, 7). Delth has
reference to the erring chikl of God returning to walk in the dart&lt;ness of sins, at which time
h~ soul became sick unto death, bul it was not hoptjess nor incura~a God restored the
spiritual life in the soul when the sin was removed. The ~n was removed when ~was
forg~en. The sin was forgiven when the sinning brother repented of his ~n . confessed his
sin, aoo when the faithlul in prayer asked for his f01giveness. The ~nning brother was
brought back Into the feHowship of the ight of God and Christ therelor~ his separation
l;pirtual death) was not fatallo the soul.
.
The "sin wllich is not unto delth" is a ~n thai thesinning brother acknowledges,
repents of, confesses, aoo asks ftlr lorgiveness.
Sin Unto Death
1 1.-"Then Is a sin unto death" describes a sinning .brother who has been so
overcome with "sin" until he keeps on sinning. His sinhardens his heart. aoo he livesalife
of complete rebelioo against God. He rejects God and refuses to obey His word His
cooscience becomes seared, until he is no looger concerned about his spiritual condition.
He does not confess his sins, repents of his sin~ nor as(ls ftlr God's forgiveness. He ~nks so
far into the pit of perdiion unli his soul is completely dead and separated from God until
there is not point of return 1D the laid. This is lhe fatal "sill unto
2.-"I do nOt SIJ thlt he slllll pny for It" informs ys that there is no need frx us 1D
. approach the throne of God oo th~ brothe(s bella~. We cannot pray for the forgiveness of
· the sinning brother who reluse!s fo confess and repents of his sin!

delthr

(For

Free Bible Correspondence Course Write :..)

~\ ~J,ajul
'

'

~ : ,\ '

,jf',U

-~~,.· . ti ~lu#l

Bulovitte Road • P .0 . Box 308

GAi..LIPOL_tS, 0Ht0 ~5631

Sunday Momirlv
B'lltl• $t\Hty t :M
y.~Onhlp III : JI

Sli~Y

Evflllng

Wonhlp,: IICI

I

IT'S .YOUR FUTURE

I

MAKE IT THE BEST
ATTEND

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE

OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT

AWSON'S
GRADE A

tf60 ... ' 1439 ...
Beeutvrett Ell11i (luxury finn I ..... ........ : .............. OuMn (I $II only) '780 . t •&amp;69 . t
Simmone Golden Value Ill (extra firm) ....... . : ....... • King (I Ill only) 1 740 . t 1 369 tl8t

Don't you Jove the expression,
"eye winker?" I keep wondering
what those sophisticated eye makeup commercials would be like If
the announcers used "eye winkers"
instead of lashes. I mean, you, too,
can have longer, lovelier eye
winkers. You keep smllln' .,.

Published each Sunda y, 825 Jlbtrd
Avenue, by 1he Ohio Valley Publls!Ung
Company · ¥ultlmedla, Inc. Second clus
Jl)s1age pak1 at GaUipolls, Ohio 45631.
Entered 3S' sec:.'Qnd elM$ maUing matter

BUY NOW AND SAVE!!

William 0 . Smeltzer

.

Thomas, world famous newsman
and commentator, visited Pomeroy ~d presented a lecture on the
capture of Jerusalem as· well as a
talk on his various travels and adventures. As I recall, Thomas was
brought in by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce. Heading
the reception group was Edison
Hobstetter.

LOWEST PRICES ON
ALL FERTILIZER

Drive a li"le and save a lot-FIW delivery within 75 miles

. .

'

It was May 19, 1934 that Lowell

fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

SAVE $205

Howe-. ouch expen,.. may not be deducted if the educatiOn i•
NqUired to meet the minimum education requiremenll lorqualifica~on
in your work or if it is port of a pr119ram of otudy that will leod to
qualifying.you in a new trade or buoinea.
Education expen... include 11.tition, boako, supplies, labotatory
coots, etc. You moy deduct moll educational expen... 111 miscellaneous
dedudiono an Schedule A (Form 1040); howe-, certain trawl and
ltanlfiOrlation expenses can be deducted whether or not you itemize
dedudionL

This Is The Sale You Have Been Waiting On. Premium Bedding Up To

The Great Bend Hunt Club will
hold a spring fox hound bench show
and field trial, the bench show being on April 15, the field trial on
April 16. Anyone wishing more In·
formation may contact Corbett
Cleek at 843-2075.

Ohio lottery winner

Ohio Lottery's dally game "The
Nlanber:' was 356.
- The lottery reported earnings of
$719,789 from the wagering on the

. CENTER CUT

the emergency, either contact your
persenal physician, local emer·
gency medical service, or proceed
dlreetly to your emergency department," added Dr. Brizendine.
"Stay calm and drive carefully.
Your emotional state can affect
that of the patient."
"U(Xin arrival at the emergency
room, you can aid treatment by advising the personnel of allergies,

A Multimedia N"""P"P""

tlans are InVIted to take part In the
Athens chapter. Anyone wishil)g
more Info may write Box 2601,
Athens, Oh. 45701.

LANDMARK ®

ll!!ffiber drawn Friday night In the

PREMIUM
BEDDING
by Simmons Beautyrest and Steams &amp; Foster

eon. «Tl1ird '

.'

ment deputies - many oi them Our other "youngster" is already Jackson. The phone numbers are
91. She's Mrs. Esta Roush of Por- 286-5403 and 286.2519 respectively.
from · around the state working .
under the direction of Sheriff Proftland who is descrtbed by her
If you travel around the county,
fitton the particular floor. Both the
friend, Shirley Johnson, as a resherltf and Gary put in a long day. '
markable woman. She lives alone, do keep In mind that Bernard Gilkey,
superintendent
of
the
Ohio
DeAnd
do let me hasten to add, Sheriff
takes care of her own needs and her
partment
of
Highways
In
Meigs
blggle Is quilting. She underwent ·
. Proffitt and Wolfe paid their own
surgery at the Holzer Medical Cen- County, has announced that Route expenses.
ter the past week and appears to be 121, about one rnlle below LongBotTile weather may have turned
.doing fine. Cards may be sent to the tom, will be closed Monday from
8: 30 a.m. to 3: 30 p.m. A new drain
considerably colder, but the Meigs
hospital, room 204.
pipe is to be Installed. '
County Fair board keeps an !!Ye on
warmer days, all year 'round. The
A spring craftiest has been scheI
am
pleased
that
a
number
of
group
will meet at 8 p.m. Monday
duled at the Canter's Cave 4-H
Meigs
Countians
did
have
roles
In
to continue plans
at.thefalrgrounds
lodge on Route 35, six miles west of
for the annual- fair in August.
Jackson on Aprll :KJ and May 1 and · the Inauguration of Gov. Celeste this event will mark the first !line at least.sorneone knows we're here.
Sheriff James J . Proffitt and
The Athens Area Vietnam Vetethe new Canter's Cave Outdoor Education Center has been made Gary Wolfe, special Investigator rans of America is In the process of
available for a craft show and sale. for the sheriff's department, were forming a disaster response team.
You craft people - and I know In Columbus inauguration day Those who would like to assist with
working with the secilrlty force. the team are Invited to attend a
·there are many of you out there They
went by lnvltatl()n. Sheriff meeting Monday at 7 p.in. at the
can get the details by contacting
Audrey Massay, 46J. Rock Run Proffitt was In charge of the secur· electric company, 100 S. May Ave.,
Road, Jackson, Oh. 45640, or Mar- ity on an entire floor of a crucial Athens. Since Meigs have no VIetbuilding. There weresherlffdepart- nam veterans groups, Meigs Countha Walburn, 78 Grandview Ave.,

STORE HOURS:

ON

Fo•r

who

EMPLOYEES' EDUCATIONAL
EXPENSES

WAREHOUSE .SALE

St.em•.

Two uprtver ladles are In the spotlight today. Both have lived 90 years and are stlll perking along
pretty much on
·
One Is Mary
Furbee
will
be observing her
91st birthday Friday - you mtght
want to send
along your greetIngs. She lives
a molblle
beirne near her son, Raymond
Furbee.
She does her own housework,
laundry and other chores and just
loves to get out - especially to eat
at a restaurant. She's a regular
each Sunday at the Great Bend
Baptist Church.
Her other children are Harriet
Schaefer of Dayton and Juanita
Sayre or Route i, Racine. Mrs. Furbee's mailing address Is Route 2,

89

Lifestyle ~~~WJ~rl

.

By BOB HOEFUCH

.Get prepared for .emergency situations

outlay figure will increase, but there
will be no new budget authority.
Here's a closer-to-home example
of authority versus outlays: Suppose you plan to buy a new car for
$10,000. That'syourbudget"authorlty" ~the amount you're committed to spend over several years.
Your "outlay" for the current year
will be much less - the amount of
the down payment, 'plus whatever
payments are due In upcoming ·
12-month peruod. You need to know
what the total cost will he so you can
plat for the future, but you will be
spending only part of the money
each year.

USPS I~

Birthday celebrations in spotlight today ·in Meigs

backing last October, before Washington had entered the race, he
said.
Daley "is a good friend of mine
and helped me when I needed his
help and I could not In good
conscience find a way to do other
than l had promised to do," ·
Mondale told reporters after. tl)e
meeting. "Hhlnkaboutallyouhave
In public ilfe 1$ yourword, and I have
given my word."
Thursday night, Kennedy held a
half-hour session with black DNC
members to expiain his decision to
support of Mrs. Byrne.
As he left, the Massachusetts
senator said he told the group that
"Mayor Byrne had been the fli'st
mayor In the country to support my
(presidential) candidacy and had
stood with me Shoulder to
shoulder."
While Mrs. Byrne supported
Kennedy in the 19ro Democratic
presidential primary, Daley
backed Mondale and Jimmy Cal'ter, laying the foundation for the
controversy.

. Sliced the
you

ptlllllftt

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

W'tdMid•y
l!venlng
7: M

R•dlo
'" Meu... irD•
the Bible"
D..ily-W.IEH
H :nAM

IT WILL COST LESS AND
YOU WILL

GET ON THE JOB SOONER
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DEGREE
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL DEGREE
ACCOUNTING DEGREE
MICRO-COMPUTER ADMINISTRATION

ENROLL NOW!

'•

SPRING QUARTER
CALL NOW - 446-4367

FINAL WEEK OF REGISTRATION

GALLIPOLIS .BUSINESS COLLEGE
APROFESSIONAL COLtEGE OF BUSINESS

..'·
..

.,

'
'•

529 JACKSON .PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
APPROVED FOR TRAINING OF VETERANS
FINANCIAL AID .STILL AVAILABLE
St. Reg. #76-02:0"721

.

'•

.•'
·'

~···

�·' .

Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

· Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Plea~ant,

W. Va.

Febfuary 6, 1983

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea~ant, W. Va.

6, 1983

The

Workfare
program
money out

DOUG PAULEY

Gallia SWCD
names Pauley
•
•
conservationist

•

GALLIPOLIS - The GaWa Soli
and Water Conservation District
board of superviSors announce em·
ployment of Doug Pauley as the
county's district conservationist
Pauley trained In Gallla County
during 198).1982.
For the past 18 months he has
been working as a soli conservationist In Belmont County, where he
assisted W\th 6,000 acres of farm
planning thls past year, along with
20 spring developments and the
planning of contour strips. Pauley
would like to see more no-till and
conservation tillage management
and planned contour strips In Gallta
County.
The Soli Conservation Service 1s
an agency of the United States Department ·of Agriculture. SCS
works with the soU and water con·
serva tlon dlst,rlct to convince people to conserve natural resources
through the use of good planning.
SCS and the district will check
the progress and results of the prac·
tices Installed and update the land
user's total conservation program
whPn requested.
Services are offered to everyone
from family farmers to land devel· ·
upers and local government offices.

Athenian held
onDWicount

A 10% DEPOSIT
- - - ·p l'S r.,

DAYTON ..;.. Pork · producers
from Athens, Meigs, Gallla and surrounding counties are urged to
make plans now for the Ohio Pork
Congress, Feb. 11·12, atthe Conven·
tton Center here. Each year, the
Pork Congress draws thousands of
farmers from ..Ohio and other
states, and Southeastern Ohio
swine producers will want to be a
part of the action.
· · Wayne Upton, president of the
Mid-Ohio Valley Pork Council Is
busy trying to build Interest In the
Congress. Upton says farmers
from thts area should take the time
to attend the Congress. "There Is no
better chance at any tlme of the
year to learn more about our
business.
From the products exhlblted at
the trade show, to the seminar
speakers ~. you'll receive a wide
·range of Information and new
kMwledge by partlctpatlng In the
Congress." Entertainment 1s a blg
part 'or the Congress as well with .
Jerry Clower of the Grand Ole Opry
blghUghtlng the weekend.
For full details· on the Ohio Pork
Congress, contact the Ohio Park
Producers Council at lli Allvtew
Rd., WesterVrne, Ohio 430!1 or call

614-882·5887.

Form corporation
COLUMBUS - SecretarY of ·
State Sherrod Brown reporta articles of Incorporation have been,
flied with hla office here by Hackett
Rooting, Inc. of Middleport.~
Ha~kett Jr. 1s the Incorporator.

w.

·'

~~[HI

A 10

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SUNDAY 12:00 to 6:00

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STARTS
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY
6
PRICES
THRU TUESDAY, FEBRUARY's. WHILE QUANTIJIES LAST

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Tempest Torch with
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includes anti·clog I
eliminates interruption
fuel flow.

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11 OZ. NOXEMA

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MEDICATED
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$129
EACH

GIMte body + curl"

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VOUR CHOICE

Nylon exterior with rubber backing,
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GALLIPOLIS - Citations were
issued to drivers In two accidents In
Meigs County Friday, according to
the Gallia-Meigs post of the state
tlighway patrol.
Troopers ticketed James Lemas·
ter, 48, Athens, for DWI after h1s
vetlicle reportedly droveoffOhlo 681
at3 p.m .
The report said Lemaster was
traveling eastbound when his vehicle went left of center and struck a
guardrail, causing moderate dam·
age to the vehicle.
Terry L. Hutton, 20, Rutland, was
eastbound on Ohio l24 at 4: ll p.m.,
entering Langsville, when his
vehicle entered a curve and dip In'
the pavement. ..
Th1s caused the auto to go across
the road into the northbound berm,
strike bushes, a fence and several
fenceposts, and then come to a stop
on the road.
Hutton's vehicle was slightly
damaged and he was cited for
excessive speed.

Pork producers
invited to session

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP)
Money to launch Ohio's workfare
program has IJeen ·stopped at the
county Jevel, says a state welfare
offlctal.
"The general approach 1s to
reduce the program this fiscal year, .
to assist In balancing the state
budget deficit," S&lt;!ld Rose Anne
Benson, chie( of the Ohlo Department of Publtc Welfare's division of
publtc assistance.
"In order to be sure that we could
save funds , we pulled back t~
(county) allocations," she said. •
Under the workfare plan, able
recipients of welfare would have tp
perform some form of public
service to get their . welfare
'
payments.
Revised plans for the $17 mllllon
program have not yet been worked
out, although Gov. Richard Celeste
is expected to make suggestlo.ns. ·
"What's going to happen In the
future Is not yet clear," said Ms.
Benson, adding that planning ts
underway.
One idea would have test programs developed In counties of
different sizes.

EACH
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• POWDER

lEG. $1.19

Acceptable for use in
all states Choose hom
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1-LB. SNACK SIZE

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$

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WITH BITS
A handy, dispenser that allows you to selecT and
re ce1ve the one dr1ll bit vou desire . Stands up on
!he JOb or clips to electric drill co1d storage

REG. $14.99

.s

DOUGLAS

SLEEPING .BAG

33" x 75" conan outer shell ball with cotton tlannel
Two bags can be lipped togetheJ to hnm double
s!eepPr .

RIG,_$36.99

$

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SOUNDESIGN®

lining. lnsulatedwilh Hololi~ 808. Mathine washable

GENERAL

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REG. '15.96

$1197

(Similar to illustration)
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REG.

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$3~.96

JfWitiiY
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$2399

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CLOCK RADIO

W11h tully elecTroniC LEO clock W8ke to AM, FM
01 buzzer alarm Sleepsw11ch plays up IO 59
m1nu1es lind has snoo1e and automatiC oil

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52·487

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oilly 4 1' ' lbs lfs tdeal lor quiCk p1tk·ups Accessory tool~

52797

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REG. $36.96

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sealer

Cast tron. front jew. bad jaw, and blstplale. Back jaw·
cast around steel bar lor bes1 fit and durability . Integral
anvil and anvil horn. Swivet base. Built-in p1pe 18\NS.
Herdened
I
faces. Polished anvil
and tops of ·
zinc·plaled. Mllite
· finrsh.
~·
'·
lEO, $15.69

POMEROY - Randy Simpkins,
20, and Richard Parsons , 18, both of
Rt.4, Pomeroy, were sentenced to30
days In the county jail Friday by
Juvenile Court Judge Robert Buck
on charges of contrtbutlng to th~
unruliness of a minor.
Fifteen days or the sentence were ,
suspended and both were placed on
six months probation.
The charges were filed following
an Incident Monday when the pair
picked up the youth at Meigs Hlglt
School without authorization to do
so.

Stolen vehicle
found burned

REG. $15.96

S SHADES

SPOIITS DEPT.

Charges bring
jail sentences .

ELECTRIC

BREWMASTER
4 cup lt!&gt;OMtt briWitWSieo is ideo! lor Wiler. IM,
cofflt, ""'P ltld hot dlocolott.

•

REG. 19.99
JEWELRY DEPT.

GALLIPOLIS - A car reported
stolen Friday morning was recovered later In theday;butnotbefore
the vehicle had been burned . ..
City police received a report from
the car's owner, Betty Waugh, that
the car was mlsstog that morning.
She had parked the vehicle, a 1979
Chevette, at her residence at K &amp; K
Mobile Homes at.9 p.m. Thursday.
The car was later located by the
Gallla County Sheriff's Oepariment
on Poplar Ridge Road In Cheshire
Townshlp, Extent of damage was
not Usied on the report.
Cited for DWI by pollee overnight
Friday were EdWard L. Harrington, 26, 1815 Chestnut St. (also
driving under suspension), and
Ronnie L. McNeese, 25, Cheshire.
Police also ticketed John L.
James, 73, Huntington, W.Va.,
Illegal drug document, and Phillip
W. Waugh, 19, Rt. 2, Crown City,
failure to obey a stop sign.

Meigs principal
Rotary speaker

.

MIDDI,EPORT ..James Miller,
principal of Meigs High School, was
speaker when the Middleport.
Pomeroy Rotary Club met Friday
night at Heath United Methodist
Church.
Miller outlined his philosophy
regarding the·work of a principal as
well as gtvlng aspects of his career
before coming to Meigs County.
The speaker pointed out that
many times It Is necessary to spend
90 percent of his tlmewith 10percent
of the students.
·
·
· Miller was Introduced by Roger
Luckeydoo.
The annual Valentine dlpner was
announced for next Friday ·with
Rotary Ann's to be guests. Henry
Cleland III was a gue!;t Friday
evening of his father. Dinner was
served by women of the church.

OBES filled half
as many jobs in '82
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment Servl:
ces filled· about half 1!5 many Job!~ .
last year as It dld In 1981 while
paying out twice . as · much In ·
unemployment benefits, according '
to year-end figures released by the
agency this week.
OBES said it filled 69,004 jobs In
1982, compared with l26,905!n 1981,
The agency said It paid put about
$1.6 bU!ion in unemployment benefIts last year, compared with about
$874 million paid out In 1981.
The agency said It collected
roughly the same amount, about
$500 million, In employee taxes ld
each of the past two years.

I

I

�Page-A-8

PotMroy-Midclleport--Gallipolls, Ohio

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

,,_

Nnt Pleatant, W. Va.

February 6, 1983

Chiers personal encounter heard over: pol.:ni.nce.n··nTw.. .,.amvrnenmsrrtT'I"rrrrrnnr11'11T1111'1r~
MARSHALLVILLE, Ohlo (AP)
''They have not Informed~ as to
hall.
Carpenter said village solicitor
- Pollee Chief JameS Meredith,
Local police and state agents
who the CQmpJaln. •I was, just tllat
Mark Clark haS asked thesherltffor
who says he was off-duty when he
selzed liquor and gambling devices
!here was an Investigation," Mereacopyoftj!elaperecordlngandsaid
'
.
dith said.
''They
have not lnfonned
accidentally brQadcast ' a personal
valued at more than $15,1W apd
Mei'ed!th haS been given a· Dst of
.
arrested three people in that raid.
me of any meetings or let me quest!~ about tbe InCident:
encounter with a woman over hts
The mayor and several village
explain. They doll't know what
hand-held police radio, has told
The mayor has said he e)!:pects to
COlii'ICil members belong to the
happened; all they know Is rumors - · report hJa ~ to·the council by
village .Officials investigating the
and lies."
Legion.
incident to "go jump."
the end ot the month.
Details of the Jan . 10 encounter
Carpenter denied thatthe Legion . r--~-'-,.-------were tape-recorded as a matter of
raid Influenced ·his decision to
Investigate. The mayor was unpolicy in the Wayne County sheriff's
available friday and the village
.office, which dispatches pollee calls
'
'
.
l...: .
for the v illage, located 40 miles . sollcitor was in court, his secretary
said.
south of Cleveland.
"What went out over ·the radio
Meredith has vowed to remain iil
TO A NEw LOCATION AT 900 EAST
STREET. POoffice ·despite some calls for his
was private and confideqtial and by
BOOK
_ . .
resignation.
mistake," Meredith said.
"1'\re done my job," he said.
The exchange, or!gina t!ng from
WE HAVE EVERYTHING
YOU NEED .
"Whom
I date l,s my business, not
Meredith's car, was broadcast
.. -,
throughout Wayne County via the
the mayor's or the council's or the
FOR MOBILE HOMES
sheriff'scentraldispatchingsystem
town'S . ''
PH()NE 992-5587
and could be heard on pOllee and
He said officials have refused to
discuss the incident with him.
civilian radio scanners. The broadcas t lasted about 10 minutes.
"This- particular incident occurred on my own time in my own
personal vehicle," Meredith said
friday. "Accidentally, that mike
was pressed open. It was an
argument between me arid someone who was in my car and I'm not
going to say if it was s&lt;:imeone I was
dating or my wife or who it was ."
Meredith, who is separated from
RIVERSIDE .
his wife, said he was confused about
the Investigation, sincehehasnever
LANE
had so much as a verbal reprimand
since starting with the village In
1979. He was appointed chief in 1900
BLACKSMITH SHop
and is the village's o nly full-time
officer. SINGER
. · CHARISMA
" If you're going to investigate
t\O\JSl
public officials in their personal
B\JR\.\NG'tON
STONEVILLE
lives, we'll have to start with
everybody, Including the council
mem bers, and ask if they have ever
had an affair or dated while they
served," Meredith said.
Meredith said he thinks the
Investigation by Mayor RDbert
· Carpenter is In retaliation fora raid
·last August at the American Legion

Royal .Of Hawaii &amp; •

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•

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Waooti
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Prince Kuhio
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.. "'btfY Frldlf-,.. u• trne_trOuiHitrip vii UnitH ~ir!i~ tra Col1111tut io ll011ot.l• - tr~~~sttn•lti .JI.ifll.
tlr toncllt!ONiroomwltfl tv-taltt 11111 fNal .. lfllllittts ......, •. 011ttf isllfld vl1it1 posslilt: ' St., .,._ 11 ott

· wttt •• low n U39.0CI"' Ptrln

ComPare This Information

Children united aftei nearly 40 years apart
.'
By CH.ARLENE HOEFUCH:
Times-Sentinel stall
POMEROY -''It was heaven
o_n earth," exclaimed Margaret
Foster Tuttle as she detailed the
touching story of a family reu- _
nited after a separation of nearly

AFTER
INVENTORY

Sorority
faces .suit
DAYTON,Ohib (AP) -ADayton
woman has filed a $1.1 million
lawsuit ·against a social sorority.
-c laitnfug she was not elected "Miss
'!)eb" because of her learning
disability.
OnMay 7,1982, TajaunaTitns, i9,
said she waited in her white,
noor·length gown at the Dayton .
ahapter of the Delta Sigma Theta
sorority's debutante bali expecting
to be crowned "MiSs Deb."
But because Miss Titns is
"mentally handicapped," (he law- ·
suit claims, "she did not receive a
gala evening of honor but an
evening filled with dishonor, humiDa tlon and grief."
MiSs Tims was not even introduced as a contestant at the ball,
. according to the lawsuit filed
Wednesday In U.S. District Court In
Dayton.
·
Margaret Nickerson of Dayton,
identified as the defendant and bali
chairman, declined comment on the·
lawsuit.
Miss Tims seeks -$75,000 in
compensatory and $1 million in
punitive dannages from the na tiona!
sorority and Its payton chapter and
officers.She also asked to be
awarded ali the ' 'prizes. honors and
-privileges of Miss Deb" and to be
'crowned Miss Deb at tlie next ball.
· Delta Sigma Theta Inc. was
established in 191.3 at Howard
University and was "envisioned as
an organization of college-educated
women dedicated to the principle of
using their kilowledge and voluntary service for the bettel'l'(lent of
mankind," according to a souvenir
book announcing the sorority's 33rd
annual ball.
. The sorority chapter is rtot
affiliated with aneducationalinstltitlon in Dayton.
Miss.Tims is listed' in the book as
''a . graduate of Jefferson High
School with plans to attend Central ·
State University majoring In
busiiless."
The suit said the contestant wllo
sold the most ads for the book w as to
be crowned. Miss Tims paid the$:nl
fee and sold $3,285 worth of ads,
compared to the winning contestant
who sold$1,664, (he lawsuit said. But
sorority officers decided not to
crown Miss Tims. because of her
"learning disablllty," we suit
· claimed.

JACKSON

CAROLINA
KINCAID

BY BROOKWOOD

BY BENCH CRAFT

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40years.
A reunion of the eight living
sons 'and daughters of the late
Ralph Foster of Sorden Road In ·
rural Meigs County arid his tkst
wife, took place at .the home of
Lorraine Foster Cline at Tazewell, Va. on Dec. 3.
It was the first titne they bad
ali been together sfuce 1943 when
their mother died' following
childbirth.
With iO children, all under 16,
the father felt unable to bold the
farniiy together and began plac·
lng them as best he could with
relatives and friends .
The baby. Ellen Marie, and
three year old Katherine were
adopted by Nell and Floyd RJfe
of Carbon. W. Va. Ellen Marte
died when she was 11 months
old. Katherine moved to another
state 'with the RUes who were
later divorced and all conlact
with her was lost.
Deloris and Patricia went to·
N~ York to live with the daughter of · one of the FOsters'
neighbors .
Nancy and Lotralne were
raised by their aunt, Delia Bllln·
kens hlp of MQhawk. w. va. wuia;d, five at the titne, soon joined
his brother, Ralph, who gQt a job
and .moved to Charleston. Leonard Uved with Margaret until
he was old enough to go Into ser'
··vice. In 1954, he was killed In a
car accident.
Through the years there was
occasional contact between the
'brothers and sisters -all except
Katherine.
'
She became the focus d. a lOng
search which ended last fall for
her two sisters, Lorraine and
Nancy. both now living in Tazewell, Va.
Their search took them
through a series of contacts with
former neighbors and . distant
relatives of the RJfes In West
Virginia.
They sought assls tance
through HELPline and the
American Red Cross.

And their persistence In_the
search paid off.
on Oct. 13, 1!18'2, they located

Meets Tuesday ·
• POMEROY- The M~ Local
VoCal Boosters Club
m~t' at
7:lJ p.in. Tuesday at the high
schooL

w!ll

•

•• • _! .

.',

Ga. .
.
That week J?lanS for the reunIon began.
·

The . place was no problem.
The spacious home of Gordon
and Lorraine Cline in Tazewell

with its numerous bedrooms
and bathrooms was ideal. Se!'
tlng a time when everyone coul~
come was a bit mor~ difficult:
But on Friday, Dec. 4. the fan)·
ily gathered there ·to await
arrival of Katherine who wa8~
met at the airport by the hw
bands of two of her sisters.
Her greetlrig by a joyous fam-Ily was enhanced by the yellow
ribbons on trees and slirubs sur-rounding the home, a large
"Welcome Back, Kay" cake and
an arm bouquet of red roses. '
Mrs. Tuttle described · the
scene as one of laughing and cry;~
ing together.
.
"The first night we stayed t4r
unt\)3: 30 In the morning just-get: ling acquainted, and the ne'!'f
njght we didn't go to bed at ali.1 '
0~ of. the things they planned
that night was another reunion
to take place at Tazewell.
But before then they Will ha'!e
a monument placed at their
mother's grave in Sight Hili
Cemetery near Laing, w. Va .'
Their reunion wlll include a trip
to the cemetery where in spirit
they feel they wlll be reunited
with their mother.
Before parting that memora·
ble weekend, the eight brothers ·
and sisters formed a family circle a,nd told what the weekend
had meant to them.
Katherine's expression
brought tears as she said that
through .the years she had al·
ways· felt some part of her was
missing, and that now for the
first titne she felt a whole per·
son, a pari of a family .

U!e

HEAVEN ON EARTH - For Margaret Foster Tultle, who lives on
Eagle Ridge In rural Meigs County, the reunlllng of her family was
"heaven on earth.'' Traveling by bus to Virginia on a ticket which was
an earlY Chrfitmas gift, she was joined later by her Jwsband, Glen, her
daughter, Kathy Johnson, grandson Billy and a close friend; Mary K.
Holter.

NO MORE SAD SONGS- Margaret Foster Tuttle penned the song .
"We'D AU Be Together Up In Hea.,.en" and accornpWJYing herself on
guitar sang the story of her family's sepa.fatlon - "one by one the little
family parted. never more to be together again." How could she !mow
lhat In less than a year the children scattered when their mother died In
1943 would be reunited.

TOP FILL

And just as Katherine felt she
had been lost to her family, so
did her sister, Margaret, a com·
passionate and .sentimental
woman, who last year penned
the words to a. Song, "We'll Ali
Be Together Up In Heaven."
Accompanying herself on the
guitar on Mother's Day, lli82, at
a small country church, Mrs.
Tutile sang the words - "one by
one the little family parted;
never more to be together
again."

How could she know that In
less than a year there would he
no more sad songs for the reu·
nlted Foster family,

OAK

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REG '124.95

6 CHAIRS

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.
.
tiKi Foster fanw).

Veterans Memorial
· · Actmlli.ect--Florence Eortbg, AJ,
bany; John Motley, Middleport;
DUstin ·Brooks, Racfue; Ralph
· Webb. R.&lt;lcine; Glen Vance, Middleport; Frances Alkire, Pomeroy;
Wiiliam Morris, Pomeroy.
. .·
.Discharged -·Maggie -Nelson,
John . Bechtle, . V\lllliam Morris,
Florence Windon , Willi a m •
Rlchn'lond.

Kathei:)ne, now married to
Royce LeV&lt;I\!&amp;lm with several
children, · residing in Fairburn,

SAVE 38% -

WITH HEATER/VIBRATOR

REG ULAR ' 699 .95
SAVE 43 %

1983

.HAWAII

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

KINGSBURY HOMES PARTS AND ACCESSORIES STOR£ HAS
MOVED
MAIN
MEROY, FORMERLY THE
MOBILE BUILDING.

Present

Section~ '

theri
I
on
·- ......................

.. .

.
'

LOST SL'!jTER - Lollt to the family for almoet 40 yean, Katherine
l,.eVaugbn of Fairburn, Ga., was located In October•.Shewas given a
royal welcome when abe and her aeven brotlters and slflters were

-

STORE HOURS
MONDAY AND FRIDAY ..

rew.1tec1 on ,Dec. 31a ,.,azeweD, Va.

"'

.

.
\

HAPPY TIME- Katherine LeVaughn with her yOIDlgest broiher,
WU1ard Foster. who..Uves bt CoUinsvl)le,

va.

FOSTER FAMD..Y REUNll'ED ~ )Wernbei's of
rewdted after nearly 40 ye8l'll, left to right, are, front row: Mni.Gordoii
(Lorraine) Cline, of 'l'liz.eweU, Va., where .~ rewdon took place; . ·
' ' WUiard Foster of ColllilsviJe, Va.; Mrs, Tedd:y (Nancy.) Mounts o1 ·
. TazeweD; and Mrs. Patricia WUber, Cow~e;N.Y.; back row: MrS; • ·
Kenneth (DelqrliJ) Blade of Olean, N.Y.; Mrs. Royce (Katherine)
LeVauglw, Fairburn, Ga.; .Mrs. Glen (Margaret) Tuule, of ileal'
Pomeroy; arid Ralph Foster Jr., of CharleSton, W. Va.
. ·
•

·'

TIL .8 P.M.
. TUES.-WED.~SAT. ·
.\

TIL 5 P.M . .

.

THURS ..TIL NOON
'

..

•

...

'

r j

.:.:. ·.

,

''

-I

•

(

'

'

I

�Page-B-2

The Sunday Times-Se,tinel

Pameroy-.:.Middleport-Galllpolis, ,Ohio

Point Pleo.. nt, W. Va.

February 6,· 1983:
February 6, 1983

At wit's end

Public items are either nailed or tn cement

NEW YORK (AP) - Comedian Jackie Gleason says today's
enterlalners deal with
that he and other stars of television' s
golden age never faced.
.
"I feel sorry for young performers today," Gleason Is quoted as
saying In the Feb. 6 Issue of Parade magazine. "Television exposes
them to mllllons of people, and they become · overnight hlts.
Psychologic;illy, they can't handle It- guys like Freddie Prlnze and .
John Belushl."
·· '
Gleason, who starred In the long-l'liDIIinli "The Honeymooners," said
appearing on live televlsk&gt;n In the 1950swas more eliciting than working
. In television today:
·
: "It was all brand new. There were surprises ev.ery day. Now It's all
: cut and dried. They go Into a studio, shoot a sequence, walt, shoot
· • another," he said.

ears.

•

Voice classes open
at FAC's Riverby

Kenny Rogers album first
prize in four -county raffle

:university's
president if not cOuntry's
'
.

• LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former Independent presidential candidate
John B. Anderson ·says he Is Interested In an upcoinlng vacancy_for the
presidency of San Franct.sco State University- but only If he doesn't

COUNTED CROSS STITCH.SUPPUES
CUSTOM-MADE FRAMES.. CANDLEWICKING, GIFTS
VALENTINE'S DAY Gin CERTIFICATES
. . .
HOURS:
WED. &amp; THURS. 6 P.. M.-9 P.M.
FRI. &amp; SAT; 10 A.ll.-4 P.M.
&amp; Other Times By Appointment

. button holinc • Low
bobbin indiatlon.

Singer Machine
Model5522
FrM Arm' • Sn•cFIM Thread Delivery

THE FABRIC SHOP

"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER"

400 Second Ave.

.

Point Pleasant
675·51_59

Sunday 1-6

L
J-

49

~

(:lOO)

49

_

.

Our Reg. 68¢

Solid colors. Machine wash/dry. 3-oz.' pull skein.

FOR VALENTINE'S DAY
·.. ::··:: ·: :-: :·

::

.::

. :::

-:·:

:' ;

Develop And Print
Focal®Or Kodacolor IJ®
Film Or
Other C-41 Films
Sizes 110, 12(1 And
35MM And New Disc®

7l~

, , rVocuwn

--·

full.trr. ec:tgto c'-"ing noule..., ~ bNifl 1o1:1t
tto,.jymolora.itch. 7V, ql bog lld~. Ho•"1Df~•
OM del~gn f Mtogrote&gt;e~ eonytng I'IOftCIIIt Comp1t41 Jlllll'l

Ribbed Slack Socks

Hocwer. PDrtabll ..

._ ,, .......... "'&gt;"-'''
• ·· - - ·•.,

r."-"""""" . ~
- --- ®0011 .. lhomDOQI
fUQI ond COif* H'l

•

__
:r....._
eOft'IPI*wlll'lall
~lel !fto
c:ludlllg w6de-flanl

...,.

ll\aMpOO DNIIIetl

......

•

•

r -· · -·· --··
,. • I
..

t~
•

o' '' •

~30

..•••

STATE

Quality Prints
Back When We
Guarantee.Or
You.r Photos Are

~

-FREE
For stondard color-print
film, original roll developing and printing of
C-41, -no, 126 or 35MM
(full. frame only). 1 print
each on our standOrdfinish paper, scive now. .

Sale Price

89¢Qt,
Quaker State®Motor 011 . -

10W40
.Helps clean engine.
Lmlt 10 qtl.percu1tomer

..-.
•

I

•

A

$1

Touch your Valentine's heart with this lo ving fl&lt;;&gt;ral gift.lt's.a
gorgeous Valentine's Day bouquet that comes 10 a roma~tiC
red ceramic heart. So it's a special gift - because the heart ts a
keepsake vase, one that will be cherished long after Val~n ­
tine's Day is gone.
Stop by or call Pomeroy Flower _S hop ~arly. The,n take '
. your heart or send it almost anywhere 10 the country. Its easy.
. · Just ask for Pomeroy Flower S~op's All-My-Heart Bouquet
for Valentine's Day. ~s:ause wtth Pomery Flower Shop, the
flower always come in something as pretty as the flowers
themselves .

.

(304)

Sole Price

Our """'1"'·

8.97 99

1.9lurRe&amp;4-2J

Large Kitchen Towel
15x25" cotton terry towel.
!:115) Our 1.97 Dishcloths... 1.37

7'9.95 .'
,
Moowr• Deeux.lhampQa . .....,

"The Way

Ameri~a

· 106 Butternut Ave. ,

Sends Love'

992-2039
Pom.,oy, OH.
or 992-5725
, We Accept All lejor Cl'llllt C1rds 1nd
: We Send FIOWIJI Everywhere.
"

Dorud: ............

•'•

(:116)

Choice

Tasty Licorice Bites

Mist Curling Iron

Soft cottontacrvttc pullover.

20-oz. • bog block or red.

Mist or dry. Compact.

Sold In Sporting Good$ Dept.

--·
•

·'

'

POMEROY
-·-FLOWER SHOP

Save •40.

eYour

Hooded Sweat Shirt

~~~&amp;m.aryl4.,
'

•

QUAKER

••
•
•

•ROSES •CUT FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
•TERRARtOMS·•MUMS •TOUPS
.
• · .CARNATIONS •AZALEAS ..
eSILK &amp; PERMANENT ARRANGEMENTS
•DISH GARDENS

Save •10

00

Guaranteed
Film
[)eveloping
Service

.
..•
.
.,••
.•
.•
.

39.95 '

Save $20

(:112)

In basic colors. Nylon.

Save '40

69.95

' Kustomat" 4" Prints
Developing And Printing

Our Reg. 1.07

199.95

k1Ybi. WO... ;

Exp. • .••••••••••• 3.47
Exp. • ••••••••.•.. 4.89

.•••

Save '20

Skein
Our Reg. 88¢

Green Oak®4·ply Acrylic Yarn _

.•

Mooftr,. SpirH '' PortableC

.

(301)

Knee·hl Nylons With Comfort Top

...,, __5 ·Exp. ·• •••••••• • • • • 2.47

- ~

e

Nylon/spandex with sandal foot or reinforced toe.

Regular Processing

h!!!O!!!!P!!!I!!!N!!!2!!!4!eH!!!O!!!U!!!R!!!S!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~
~ -··

1~9;

2 Ellp .............. i.B9

MISter Will~

v

Open Dilily

Cuomo

SHOP EARLY
FOR THE BEST
SELECTION

·~~ '

2322 Jackson Ave.

446-1883

I .~·'

CARDS

Save

.

Gleason

You ~~lhoice

GREETINGI

BOXED
AND
INDIVIDUAL

.69.95

Get a dozen of Mister Donut's famous, fresh
assorted donuts for ·just Two bucks. Stop in Monday
at Mister Donut.

A NEW OIREC'TJON IN HAIR DESIGN ''

armaru
(FORMERLY PRICE &amp; SONS PHARMACY)

69.95 ·

446-9510

~on little

PHONE
992-7582
VICKI AULT
Owner

A • _,.. __

Monday only!_
. ·. Assoned .· _·~
donuts,
$2.00 a dozen.
.

r-·r~
-J
~\tt

. ALBANY, N.Y. (AP ) - Each week for the rest of this y~ar, New
York Gov. Mario Cuomo will get about 2 cents' worth of advtce from his
son, Andrew.
That's what Andrew Cuomo's paycheck works out to, now that he has
agreed to a $1 annual salary as a special assls_tant to the governor.
''The governor felt someone would take a cheap shot (11 I were paid a
full salary)," the younger Cuomo said Friday."! tend to agree."

through events such as this ratfle.
No tax dollars are received and all funds will be used In localj~reas."

You Around" and donated it to the r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
local Big Brothers/Big Sisters
Chapter for use In a fund-raising_
rame. This collector's Item will be
first prize In the raffle held by Big
"If you
Brothers/Big Sisters of Gallla,
want to talk
Meigs, Jackson and Mason
counties.
about discounts
The second prize will be an alon homeowners
bum autographed by recording
insurance, talk
star Dottle West tltled " Full Circle." Third prize Is a handmade
to rna.'' ~-,,.,.11.
lightweight, one-piece, granny
square afghan donated locally.
Tickets are avallable for donation of $1 each from Big Brothers/ Big ·Sisters board . members,
Chances are, I
auxiliary merhbers and at the tolcan make low
lowtng locations: Gallla County,
prices on State
The Bastille In Gallipolis; Meigs
Farm
homeowners
County, Bank One In Pomeroy;
Insurance
even
JackSon County, Jack and Jill's In
lower for you.
J ackSOn; and Mason County, Hock.imberry Pharmacy North In Point
CAROLLSNO\YDEN
Pleasant, W.Va .
417 Se&lt;:ond Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
All proceeds wlll go toward supPhone 44H290
port of the local chapter of Big BroHome 446-4511
thers/ Big Sisters.
The program has been formed In
the area to provide adult friendLike a good neighbor,
ship, guidance and motivation to
State Farm is there ..
children In slngl• parent homes.
James E . Levernler, M.D., said,
•un ue•
STATE FARM
"Our local chapter Is totally supfire ... tmlly CtlltHY
HllltOfla:
pOrted from private funds raised
IMIIIIANU

.....·r

r Al l ·fOR
AN API'Qr N IMI i'o'T

· W~lli ·JN ~

Contributing two cents' worth

MAEilJ CANS

GALLIPOLIS - Recording artist Kenny Rogers has autographed
his new album "Love Will TUrn

.· 'fHE

make another try for the White House.
Former California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. also may be under
considera tlon for the job, the Los Angeles, Times said Friday. quoting
unidentified sources.
Paui F . Romberg plans kJ retire in June as head of the 24,00l-student
campus.
; "Some of my friends have suggested It, and I have expressed Interest
' In the possibility," Anderson said from hls Washington office Friday.
•But he said he Is still considering another presidential campaign In 1984.

PATCH
· Toudi-Tranlc• 2010
Mln101 ~ Machine
·2t Stitches •1 Step

Monday thru Friday
9 AM t o 9 PM
Saturd a y 9 AM to S PM

,

~~~$25999

500 Ll NCOLN HILL
POMEROY, OHIO

J.\CROSS

..

THE WATERMB.ON

Margaret Stepbenshon, professor
GALLIPOUS -The French Art
of voice. Saunders' performing exColony Is accepting applications for
lessons In voice. These lessons will
perience includ~ various operatic
arrangements at Ohlo University
. be taught on a private basis with a
Opera Theatre.
tuition fee of $12 per hour or $6 per
Anyone Interested In enrolling In
half hour. Robert Allen Saunders_
-Wtu be Instructing.
the classes should contact contact
Connie Campbell-Eaton at 446-3834
Saunders has completed 72 hours
or Barbara Epling at 446-1516.
of Individual vocal Instructions
Youths under the age of 14 are adfrom Ohlo University under the dl·
rectlons of Edward T. Payne, asso- · vised not to enroll due to ImmaturItY of vocal chords.
elate professor of voice and

lng the institution. The publication
Is published by Dr. John D. Scholl,
Dean of the School oi Business
Ma nagement, and Scott D. Miller,
Director of College Relations .

pressures

..

a

"Southern Ohlo Business Review," a publll;.atlon of the Emerson E. Evans School of Business
Management at Rio Grande, Is
available free of charge by contact-

New pressures' for entertainers

By ERMA·BOMBECK·
right after the hernia repair. I'd
As fir shopping carts with signs that cart?" I said, "l'msteallnglt."
When you think about It, the morrather steal two California redwarning viola tors that theft will be
m., laughter still rings In my
.allty of the nation has really gone
woods and make my own.
punishable by tines aruUmprtson·
Maybe things are worse .than I
downhW during the last d!!(:ade.
Another source of amazement to
ment, I won't even dlgn1fy It with a
teallze. A sign on the Inside ol a
· There Isn't anything used by the
me Is what's madesecurelnahotel
comment exCept to say thatl was, Chlca&amp;ll resii oom booth carried a
public that Isn't nailed to the ground
room. 1be picture over the bed Is
trying to get four Independent
Warning, "DON'T PUT PURSE
or sunk In cement. That can mean always bolted to the wall. Why? wbee~ to go In the same dlrectlon , ON HOOK." For that cheap shot,
-.. .one of two things! ~ are more
We're not talking Slsijne Chapel art .
a parking !Qt and when a
SO!Ileone should get We!
sticky fingers around or stlcky finhere,
we're
aboot
--jj;;;;~;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;-.
gers are gett!Dg stronger.
picture
that talking
has been
overthe
the bed -r.;;;;;;;;;:~~"~Where~iiiiare~~~~
~
It used to be just little things were
of every room I have ever stayed
secured,llke pens In the bank or the
In; a Chlnese.Junkshlplnshadesaf
post office that we all know were
black silhouetted In a red and
put there for show. You can't tell
orange sunset t1Jat glows In the
me anyone wants to steal a pen on a
dark.
three-inch chain that didn't just run
As tor the hangers that are
out of lnk - It never had Ink In It In · welded over the rod, you can have
Singer F,_Arm
the first p~,
them. They're always made out of
Mecl1lne Madel 5625
. Now the Items are bigger, but for wood and accommodate a very
Built-In bullonholer •
whatever reason they still carry a
5-bullt-ln stllches •
large man's topcoat - never
Unlvenlal pressure
)Varnlng.
women's apparel.
lata you sew light ~~~8 ~)
Take picnic tables . .Just try. They
1be genius who came up with the
and
11eaY)' fabrics
are set In two feet of cement, have Idea of putting a link c))aln on an
wllhout pressure
:~ever seen paint, weigh · 3,&lt;XXI
L.A. phOne book does not know tra·
adjustment
pounds and are permanently
velers. I have never had a burning .
stained with bird doo. On nearby
desire to stuff a five-pound L.A.
tree, some optlmlst has posted a phone book In my C8fl'Y-oo whlch
VOICE INSTRUCTOR - Robert Allen Saunders wlll be ln!ltnicdng
warning, "PICNIC TAm,ES ARE
voice at the French Ali Colony.
already IDes not fit Ullller my seat
PROVIDED FOR, PUBUC EN·
No one ever figured out that If you
JOYMENT. THOSE STEALING A
live In L.A. you have your own
TABLE WILL FACE PROSECU·
phone book and If you don't, you
TION." 1be prosecution comes
don't know anyone In It anyway.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-B-3

Business pub1;cation available at Rio

Sunday(People

•

same

Pomeroy-Middleport..:..Gallipolis, Ohh&gt;-Point PII!(Jsant, W. -Va.

••

3¥. Oz:

(;m)

49

• .

.

(:119)

.

49e~JR~

$0urReg,
61¢ ~·

·Aluminum FoiJ
25-sq.-ft. roll. 12"x25'

Kippered Snacks

Smoked nuet o1 herring.
.... wt.

._,'

e
gg

(310)
Our Reg.
1.27 ..

'

1.99:~~oz_.' ·.
.

Box ·-

Lay's® Potato Chips

Cascade®Detergent

·Great tor snack time.

For outomatlc ·dlshwasher.

· - wl.

'

8 Oz."

....,.,.

''

�..

Ohio-Point Pleatc~nt, W.

1913·

Helen help us

Ti~TMs-Sehti nei-Page-&amp;-5

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

. .735 2ND AVE., GAUIPOLIS, 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., FEB. 6th THRU SAT., FEB. lith -

tJeini

298 SEOOND ST.

Evans-Cole
TUPPERS PI.,AINS ~ Mr. and
Mrs. David W. Evans Sr., Camba
Road, Jackson, are announcing the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their youngest daughter,
Ellen · Eileen, to Wllllam Steven
Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. A.
Ferrell
Cole, Main Street, Tuppers Plains.
The bride-elect ls employed as · !he legal8lisoclatlon of Otha, Foley,
agency l!laJI$ger of Travel Shop In
Helser and Cole, also of Wellston.
Wellston. Her fiance ls a partner ln . The wedding will be Saturday,
.
.

PoMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 12, 1983

.

- --Annivers"'.,.,.,.,
USDA CHOICE

··

•QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
Evans

· Md.evey, Smith

March 19, at3: 30 p.m. at ChrlstUnlted Melhodlst Church, Portsmouth
Street In Jackson, with Rev. James
Kuhn officiating !he doubl~rtng
ceremony.

The couple wtll be married on
Feb.· 13 ai St. Pi!Ul Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plains, at 2:30
p.m . ln an open-church wedding.

Smith-Mclevey

$ 99

.

·

...

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
Halve F errell, Rl1, Bidwell, have
atq~Dunced the engagement of their
daughter, Phyllis Phlorlne, to Vernon Walter Hoot n, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Hoot, Bidwell.
ferreU Is !I 198! graduate of
North GaUia High School.
A February wedding Is
planned.
•

SlORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm '

REEDSVILLE - VIolet M.
Smith, Reedsville, ls announcing
!he engagement and approaching
marriage Of their daughter, . Diana
Lou, to Stephen S. McLevey, Par:
kersburg, W. y a. The bride ls the
daughter of the late David A.
Smith.

Round Steak ..... ~~ ..

PATSY:
On the qther hand, a seed can die
from lack of care. Be !Inn wilh
your pushy family , but do give
yourself a sma ll shove. One year of
mourning ls long enough. - SUE

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I'm near 30 and about to have my
~t child. My boyfriend wants us
to' get married, but I'd lose my Ald
to Dependent Children money lf I
did. He says we can Uve on his
check, but I say we're better off
wtlh two. How can I persuade hl!n?
-'".PRAcrJCAL
PRAcriCAL:
I
:OJunter questions: What wtll
y(lur child. think of you later on
wben he or she learns you chose
ill-gotten welfare checks ln prefere!lce to giving him a real father ? -

The

F~rrell-Hoot .

of her s_IX)use

DEAR HE LE N:
I'm disturbed at your response to
the Issue of fur coats .
You weren 'I nearly strong
enough against cruelty to animals
when you Implied fur ls OK unless
!rom an endangered species. I'm
s.;,.e you realize the difference bet:Ween the swUt a nd controlled kll·
ll!!g of cattle tor meat and leather
and !he slow and agonizing death of
a irapped animal.
J.,eghold traps are used to capture
beautiful wildlife such as raccoon,
opossum, wolf and fox. Many, in
ctesperat!on, chew their limbs off In
attempts to escape.
·Man-made furs are just as lovely.
keep one nice and warm, cost Iosts
less, and the biggest bonus of allcause no pain. -BARBARA AND
FRIENDS OF ANIMALS
DEAR BARBARA:
I'm as much against trapping
animals for fur as you are. Sorry I
'didn't make that clear ln my ortg!nalletter. - H. ·

Va.

f:ngagements

-Young woman
mourns death
By HELEN AND SUE:
I'm 24. My husband of six
years was killed In an auto accident last year when I was expect·
lng our first child.
My molher and sister have been
bugg!ilg m e lately, telling me I
should ta~e of! my wedding rlng,
take down several wall pictures of
Rick, and start dating. I'm very
content to be with our son, who
looks just like his daddy.
Two men have asked me out, and
·eep on ca lling. But, (1) I' m not
eady and (2) I'd feel unfaithful to
:Uck. The thought of being Intimate
wi Ih another man m akes me slck
and uneasy.
How do I make m y !amlly stop
prodding? - PAT$Y
DEAR PATSY:
F irst try to understand that your
molher and sister " nag" out oflo\1·
lng concern.
•
Then tell them what they should
already kitow: No am ount of cultlvatlon wUI m ake a seed r1pen before it's ready. And overctiltlvatlon
m ight even kill It. - HELEN

February 6, 1983

(MOST KINDS)

FROZEN DINNERS

..

ALL MEAT CHUNK

Sm!Ih Is a mid-term graduate of
E~rn HJgb School and plans to
attend ~ollege In the spring. Her

Bologna .............. ~

fiance, IhesonofMr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Hughes Jr., East Livei'pool,
graduated trorn Beaver Local In
198!, attended Martetta College for
two years, and Is employed by Flex
Mag Industries In Marietta.

·~WILSON.'S SAVORY
FRESH

LB.$

Pork Steak or Roast .••

Sliced
.
Bacon
....
1!'.
29

VALENTINE'S DAY
SHOW HER

LOVE HER WITH
A QUALITY GIFT
FROM THE NEW

WICKER·.HOUSE

MIXED

41Court St:
RoDNEY- Mr. and Mrs. Rl·
Rodney,
wedding
anniversary Feb. 8..The couple was
marrted Feb. 8, 1947, In Logan, W.
Va., by Rev. Johnny Tomblin.

cluird. Maynard, S.R. 35,
will celebrate their 36th

GRADE A

Tu

Galipolis

Number Total
Price
Dla.Wt.

43.
44.
45.
46.
47.

.05

59.95
109.00
139.00
199.00
269.00

.10
.15

115
1/4

All Pendants
in 14 ,Kt. Gold

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
324 Second,

Gallipoli~

446-0731

Fryer parts......:.. ~
10-14 LB.

YOU

Six Prong Pendants
Available As Follows

r,;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;:::::;;;;:;;;::;~;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
. YOUR STYL• D.PBNDS
ON A GOOD HAI,.CUT
And you can dep!lnd on Hair Happening
lor both.
We let your good looks go to your head .

they have lived In Gallla County
for 17 years and have eight child·
ren. They are Linda Sturgell, Portsmouth; Christine Cook ,
Martinsburg, W. Va.; Mary Ann
Young, Galllpolla; Nancy Gall
Day, Decatur, lll.; Connie Rees,
Rio Grande; Danny R. Maynard,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Gregory
Maynllrd, Rio Grande, and Patrl' .
cia Lynn, Rodney.

LB.

1/z PRICE HAIRCUT
wth r~~rty purchased shampoo &amp; liow-dry «
shampoo and set now ttuoogh V20/83 with copy of
ad.

Sil'llf Bridp Plaza
Ph. 4-46-3353

.

H~LEN

'For shame! - SUE

EMS unit offers
CPR classes
'GALLIPOLIS- A cardiopulmonary resuscitation class will be
ronducted by a s taff member of
Gallla County E mergency Medical
Service ar Gallia County Senior
c ittz.ens Center, 2W Jackson ffie.
from 9a .m. to noon Tuesday, Feb.8,
and F eb. 11.·All serilor citizens' are
urged to participate.

CALIFORNIA

~p.m.-

Crown City (City
Bldg.). 12: :1).1:'30 p.m.; Shafer,
1:45-2 p.m:
Friday -

i'

$ 19

4 LB. BAG

Navel Oranges......
FlAVORITE · ·

2

Gallia bookmo]?ile
GAWPOUS- The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library w1ll
be at the following places the week
of Feb. 7 to Feb. 11.
Monday- Lewis Dr .. noon-12: 15
p.m.; C&amp;S Bank (Rt. 35), 12:1512: 30 p.m .; Wei;t Apts., 12:35-1
l'im .; Meadowbrook, 1: 05-1:30
p.m.; Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
1:35-2 p.m.; Oallla .Metro Estates,
· 2:05-3 p .m .;· Pinecrest Cai-eCenter,
3:15-3: 30 p.m .; Rodney Vlllage, .
4:'15-4: 45 p.m .; Crousebeck Rd., 55: 30 p.m .; Northup 5: ~: 15 p.m.
, Tuesday - Mitchell Rd. , 3.3:30
p~rn.; Sanders/ Adelaide, 4-4: 30
p.m.; McGuire Subdv. I, II, 4: 4:&gt;s;15 p.m, ; LeGrande I, II, 5:20-6
porn.; Neighborhood Rd. I, II, 6: 156~45 p.m.
• .
:Wednesday - Chatham, 3-3:30
p.m.; venz Rd. (Davis Dr.), 3: 404:.15 p.m.; Kanauga 5th, 4: :»5
p;m.; Johnson's Tr. Ct., 5:15-5:30
p.m .; K&amp;K Tr. Ct .. 5: ~: 15 p.m.
:Thursday - Cora. 2: 45-3: 10
p)n.; Raccoon Tr. Ct., 3:15-3:45
p.m.; Patrtot, 4-4: 30 p.m .; GaUls, .

.

0lo
7(

E C SH, A&amp; ROOT $··

BEER,i&gt;IET or REGULAR 7-UP
- TIAK;IS:oz:--BTLS. • • • e •

• • e

$

·

59,,.
M
. ..1 1k ••••••••••••••••
.
PlASTIC ·GALLON

••

.

MAXWBL HOUSE

GOIDMEDAL

COFFEE

R.OUR

$669,

. Umit One Per CU1tom1r
At Powlll's
fib. 12. 1913

21 oz.

.

29 EGGS....... ~ ......•. ~~;.

Crackers.........•.. ~·.
3 lB. CAN

'.

•''

GRADE A EXTRA LARGE

ZESTA.

THE MONEY MARKET. DEPOSIT ACCOUNT

.

4 ROLL PKG.

'

89¢

5 LB. BAG

P« Customer
~~

At PO!WII's

Fib. 12, 1983

·• $1001000 F.D.•I.C.lnsurance
• Check Writing Privileges
·• D~Ur Interest Rate
• No Withdrawal· Penalty
· • , $2100 Minimum Deposit··

Valley Bank

Fciui' locations to serve you better.

Member: FDIC

·

,

.

'•

'

Promises,·confusion, gimb, bonuses .:you'll hear ~ al tod~y ... what some financial
institutions are 10~ to do for you. But once again, Ohio Valley Bank, the Tfi.County's .
inoovmr of the best 1n IDtal ban~ng service, is one step ahead Easily proven when you
checli our perfmnance reoonl since we iltnx!OC8lllaiy lnvestmeft Iway back in
.q&amp; 19111, m many instituOOos either didn1 know what c:onsume(daily interest
inve5bnel1t saving! ree oc sim~ dihl1 care moffer this cusfa)ler serW:e. ~our
DMy Investment II ttbley Market Account is not m~ething new.lfs sim~y something

'*· .

WATCH FOR
OUR FULLPAGE AD ··
IN WEDNESDAY'S PAPER

.,

..

�.

'

Burchett, Elliott marry
GAWPOUS- Rev. J. Harvey
Burche\t, Cincinnati, and Pearl El11ott, Gallipolis, were united In marriage In Concord, N.C. Jan. 'i1 by

.

'

llng.'he will serve tile Church of '.
God In Concord, N. c. as tnterlnl. .
pastor for an Indefinite perlnd of
time,

''

Rev. Wade AuStin.
Rev. and Mrs. Burchett will live
Rev. Burcbett,•a retired rillntster In the parsonage on Corban Avenue
of the Church of God, was an assoIn Coricord. The parsomge Is diciate to his son, Rev. James Bur-. · rectly aci'OISS from -Trtnlty Church
chett, W~tor of the Church of God,
of God and the day center sponCincinnati, serving In the capacity
as mlnls~r of Visitation a!!d couruie-

sored by the church.

·

'·,

E • SALE • SALE • SALE • ALE • SA E • SALE •

-

2 FOR 1 SALE CONTINUES
.

Buy one pair of shoes at the regular price, and eet
the second . pair ~ equal or lesser value

FREE!

. · \BRING" FRiiNQ\

Mr. and Mrs. Barnes

Mr. and Mrs. Grazanni
Darla Evans, Racine; and Mary
Michael Grazannl exchanged wed- Winebrenner, Syracuse.
ding vows In a candlelight ceremThe matron of honor wore a burony at Racine United Methodist gundy gown while the other attendChurch at 6:30p.m. on Dec. 11.
ants were In pink gowns. All of
The bride is the daughter of Mr. Identical design, they were deand Mrs. Robert Morris, Letart signed with layered rumes at the
Falls, and the groom ·is the son of low neckline falling over the
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Grazannl, shoulders to create a capelet effect,
with A-11ne skirts having deep founRavenswood, W. Va.
Rev. James Clark performed the ces at the bottom. They carried bou·
double-ring ceremony following a quets of pink, white and burgundY
program of nuptial ·music by Mon- carnations with greenery.
ica and Beverly Divers,
Larry Pepper was best man; and
ushers were Mike McCray, Rob
Ravenswood.
Two nine'branch candelabra LQWe, ·Scott Trout, and Brian Paxwith !!reside baskets of rose, bur· ton, aU of Ravenswood. The groom
wore a White tuxedo. His attendgundy and white carnations and
roses Danked the center unity can- ants were In sliver gray.
dle arrangement. Candles In hurriA reception was held at the
cane globes decorated with large American Legion HaD In Racine
white bows marked the famlly tmmedlately following the wed·.
pews. Guests were registered by ding. Wedding colors of burgwuly,
Robin Burnem, Letart Falls.
pink and white were carried out ln.
Escorted to the altar by her fa- · the tiered fountain cake which feather, the bride was attired In a for· tured the wedding party In miniamal gown of silk organza over ture on stairways leading to
bridal satin. Alencon lace adorned smaller side cakes. Refreshments
the bodice which had a sweetheart Included a light' buffet served by the
neckline and long fuU sheer sleeves hostesses, Beverlee Wickline,
with wide cuffs at the wrist. The Linda Burnem, Letart Falls, Carol
A-line flowed Into a cathedral train Payne, Peggy Payne, North Ridgewhich featured a wide bottom ville; Margaret Grazannl, Fair- .
Dounce edged In lace. The bride's mont; and VIcky Trout,
fingertip veil of illusion also edged Ravenswood.
In lace and blusher feU from a lace
The couple honeymooned at
cap. She carried a bouquet ill white Snowshoe, W. Va. The new Mrs.
roses, baby's . breath, stephanotis Grazanni Is a 1982 graduate of
Southern High School. Grazann!
and greenery.
Her sister, Pam Manley of Ml- graduated from Ravenswood In
nersvllle, was matron of honor, and 1981 and attended Fatrmont State
bridesmaids were Margie Payne, CoUege In Fairmont, W. Va. ·
North Rldgevllle; Cindy Cross and
RACINE - Melinda Morris and

VINTON - Angela Marie Guy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WUllam
Guy, Vinton, and Donald Eugene
Barnes, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Barnes, Porter, were married Nov.
6 at 1 p.m. at Gospel Lighthouse,
Neal Road, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The double-ring ceremony was conducted by Rev. Johnnie Jeffers.
White and blue satin bows
adorned an archway placed In front
of the altar. Centered behind the
archway were two white vases of
maroon and white bachelor's but·
•tons, White satin bows adorned-the
pews.
Given In memory of her parents
and escorted by her father, the
bride wore a gown of organza and
clung lace, fashioned with a scoop
neckllne. A wide ruffle accented
her chapel-leng!h train. Her waltzlength veU was In matching ta~
seeured to a Juliet cap with att·
ached blushed velling. She carried
a bouquet of white carna t!ons with
baby's breath. For something !J&lt;&gt;rrowed, she wore a single strand of
pearls borrowed from her sister,
Trtnna Pope.
The groom wore a three-piece
brown suit with blue pin stripes,
light blue shirt and brown and blue-

striped tie.
Bridesmaid was Patricia Bonlee, .
frtend of the bride. She wore a turquoise blue fitted gown with chiffon
neckline. She carried '-two long

:100 Second :\ ve.

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis. 0.

*******

DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

SERVED 11 A.M.-3 P.M.

~UL' ti83ti

MIUUlll'llti I

GENUINE BRASS BEDS
NOW ON DISPLAY
ger;.Jine brOia 11\'18 an
eoc:epiiOIIal BII g OIIC&amp;I
FUU &amp; QOEEII SIZES

REG. '114.00

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

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 6
THROUGH
SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 12

$0P,ER 'MARkE'f-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

.as:Yinr Street _

.

. PhOne·446-9593

Ob_io

. - . 'We Raw the Rtf~\ 1o UU Quantity" · .

oREDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY'
SAVING COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V
AND RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU
· PURCHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON
PER ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED.

·DOUBLE
COUPONS
.

.

. .

' ~UI~I"MfDE:E~mNOJ1~~~- DOJJu~1:PPJ~

'

DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS -CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 4~ IN FACE VALUE.

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
&amp; MARKV

COUPONS OVER 49' lrHACE VALUE. NO CASH
IIEFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE COUPONS VALUE
EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM. CIGARETIES AND
CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE EXCLUDED BY lAW.
ro INSURE PRODUCT TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS,
lYE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE COUPON"
IIFFER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE
CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
FAMILY. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD
rHURSDAY, FEB. 10, 1983.

THURSDAY, FEB. 10

Budget
Pleaser
Special

.USDA OtOICE

USDA otOICE

T-BONE
STEAK

PORTERHOUSE
STEAK

LB.
LB.

GROUND OIUCK

$149

locally Owned
and Operated

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

EXTRA~

Your
Hometown
Supermarket

BOSTON BUTT

$ 99
LB.

USDA CHOICE

BEEF CUBE STEAK

~lOR _

ISUPI!RIOR

FRANKIES

POUSH SAUSAGE

udget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

ICPfM

EMPEROR

LB.

$229

LB.

99¢

$ 29

PORK
ROAST

LB.

FRESH PORK

LB.

SHOULDER STEAK

$}39

Sl

SUPERIOR

DART BACON

Gallia senior center

',;JAILIPOLIS - Act!vitl_es for
the week of Feb. 7-11 at the SeDor
aitzens Center are as follows;
Monday, Feb. 7 - Ceramics
~. 9; 1Kl a.m.-110011; Chorus, 1-3

P·!D·

'I'uesday, Feb. 8 - S.T.O.P.
10; 1Kl a.m.; PHysical Fit·
ness, 11:15 a.m.; Super Seniors
~y. 10 a.ril.-3 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 9 - Btrthday
Party, noon; Card Games, 1-3
p.hl.; Garden Club, 1-3 p.m1.; -l
American Literature, 1 p.m.;
cras.,·lip.m.
~ursday, Feb. 10 - Blood Pres- ·
sl¢'e Check, 1-3 p.m.; Bible' Study, ·

Budget
Pleaser
Special

'

"Clliss,

qp.m.

1')1day, Feb. 11- Art Class, 1-3
p.P,.; Craft Mini-Course, 1·3 p.m.; .
S¢1a1 Hour, 7 p.m.
'Die Senior Nutrition Program
wft! serve the !oUowlng menus; ·
Monday - Wieners, mashed potatOes, sauerkraut, apple,
mailln, butter.
~esday - Swiss steak In tomato
sa~. buttered noodles, lettuce
~. tapioca pudding, bread, but·
ter{mllk.
Wednesday - &amp;e! stew, slice of ·
clieese, coleslaw, fnllt gelatin, bls- ·
Cl#b, butter, mlik, birthday cake.
'12lursday - Meatloaf, scalloped ·
potatoes, broccoli, cakelrfqstlng, breed, bUtter, nnllk.
friday - Chicken liver and onlonJigl'!lvy, rice/cheese, cBJTOt, applelsauce/cln{lamon, batter, bread,

~ subject to change wllhout

HEAD .
LrrTUCE

U.S. NO. 1

.RED
G
4 LB.i$129
BAG
•

CAliFORNIA

ORANGES

MAINE
POTATOES

LB.

GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS

t.8.

29¢

20

LB. BAG

POUND29¢
BAG

CRISP CRUNOIY

CARROTS

1

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget ·

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Pl~aser

'

DOUBLE COLA
DIET DOUBLE
RUFRI!S
I

POTATO CHIPS

BAG $}19

h

VITAMIN D
GALLON
MILK
PlASTIC

SHORTENING
42 Ot
8 oz.

-

ROYAL CREST

TEEN QUEEN

8-16 oz.

.....

Special

HAWTHORNE MB.ODY

HAWTHORNE MELODY

conAGE CHEESE

$

'

8 oz.

. CTN.

YOGURT

ncil!ce.

!'Services tendered on a nondJ.tc!rlmlnatory basis.'; ·

•
Meigs bookmobile .

SPECIAL BONUS! .
'

WITH EACH BRASS BED PURCHASE
QUANTITIIES LIMITED

REG.

SALE

SPINDTHRIFT

Queen Size................................. '1.079.00
HANOVER
Que•~n Size ..............................:.. 1895.00

1,556.00

................. ; ......... , .. 1

Full Size................ ~······-'···~-·········· '790.00
)3uy this bl!autllul "Rooe Scatter Pin" for only 1\.o.oo
.. A lovely Valentine Gift ol Krementz 141&lt;:1. Gold
OV!'J'laY J~lry. This traditional Krernentz design
Is enclosed bt a &gt;&lt;&gt;II i&gt;JUCh arxlls offered lor a

'

Oueen Size .................................

·

1159.00

lin&amp; SiZe ...... ~ ...... ~ ..................... ~. '200.00

SPINDTHRIFT HEADBOARD

Queen Size ................................ ,... '556.00

Gallipois, Ohio

cofltract with Ohio Valley Area
Llbranes.
i)le bookmobUe fChedule for
M~y. Feb. 7- Hemlock Grove
(PI!It'O!flce), 2:45-3:15p.m.; Pagevtne (Store), 3: !55-4; 25 p.m.; Harrl~e (Church), 4:35-5:~ p.m.;
New Lima Rd. (one mlie South ol
F~ Meigs), 5:mp.m., short !Ibn
wijibe ahown 15 minutes after book·
~lie arrives; Rutland (Depot
, St.); 6: 41).8: 10 p.m., short rum wW
be lhown 15 mlnutes.atter bookmo-

I 79.00
I 99.00
1
1139.00

ll9.00

bookmobUe schedule for
W~y, Feb. 9- Chester (!Ire
- stitlori), 2:'15-2:4 p.m., short !Ibn

· · ~ lh0Wii15 mtn.utes after bdokrn9*i~Je amves; Keno (North side
of •Keno Bridge), 3:45-4:15 p.m.;
s~

Road (Near' 39000), 3:04: ill p.m.; lAlllg Botton• (Poll Of.
fl"), 4::15-6: lO p,m., lbol'l film wW

'
i

be'ihown 15 mlnutell after bookmo-

STORE
342 Second Ave.

MilJis County Public Library under

~

. ..•. .-. ~ .•....•..• :....... :........
·. ~ ..• .I 11000
,Twin. Silt
•
Full Size .................................... 1135.00·

..

floMEROY - Bookmobile servi~ 1rt Meigs County Is provided by

b~arrlves.

HEADBOARDS

•·

Wednesday - . Baked cubed
steak/gravy, open baked potatoes,
green beans, orange
s«tonlbanallas.
Thursday - Pork barbecue on
bun, hash brown potatoes, cole
slaw, fruit cup.
Friday - Chicken and noodles,
DlfShed potatoes, peas, blscult,
COOcolate pudding.

eath meal.

BRASS TRUNK - V2 PRICE

x~

tajoes, perfection sa)ad, Bostom

ereme pie.

mlijc.
JJbolce of beverage serveq with ·

From...•.
Krementz

Pomeroy. Ohio

!IUesday - Baked ham, .sweet

cJMtse

A Valentine Offer

r€Jt}h
113~St @t
'~d~

POMEROY -Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Invites all elderly of the county to take part ·I n
activities at die Center. The Center
Is open Monday tbrouglt Friday
from 8; ~ a.m. to 4: 1Kl p.m. Schedule of actlfltles for the week of
Feb. 7·11ls aa foliCIIVS:
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11: 1Kl a.m.; Square Danc;e, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday . - . Physical Fitness,
11: 1Kl a.m.; Chorus Practice, H
p.lli.
Wednesday - Nutrttton Edueatlor!. 11 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11: ~ a.rn.; Bingo, 1-2 p.m.
Thursday - Nutrition ' Educa- ·
. lion, 11 a.m.; Pbyslcal -Fitness,
ll::ll a.m.; Ceramic Instruction, 1 ·
a.m.-noon.
Frklay - Nutrttlon Education, 11
a.ll).; Physical Fitness, 11: 1Kl a.rn.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Games and prizes. are being
planned for our Valentine's Day
party to be held on Monday, Feb.
14. Special music for tile Physlclll
Fitness program, and a Valentine
DaY's menu Is planned for this
~ent. Round and sqliare dancing,
after lunch. will complete the day's
activities.
Monthly blood pressure will be
held on Friday, Feb. 18; beginning
at 10 a.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
serves a hot meal at noon each day.
Call 992-2161 to make a reservation
for a meal no later than 9 a.m., the
da'y of the reservation. Tlie followlni menu Is planned for the week of .
Feb. 7-11: . . .
Monday ...:. I .asagna, Italian .
mixed vegetables, garden salad
wtth fresh tomato wedges, hot but.tered bread, plums.
.
.

rom

~=d";:~
~feE $588

Office Hours by Appointment Only

ltm!ied Ill!&gt;&lt;' only.

•

31'1'S • 3l'I'S • 31'1'8 • 31'1'8 • 31VS • 31'1'S • 31'1'S • 31'1'S

Changing Glasses

LaSALLE RESTAURANT

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

The
: "~ Shoe Cafe
·

The LaSalle Restaurant

'

•

kiNG YOUR MOtf!J

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

'

&gt;

stemmedcamationswlthlongDow·
lng blue ribbons.
It-;::::;;;;;;,;;;;!iiiiii~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:::;;::::::==:::::::::;
James Coe, cousin of the groom,
served as best man.
Carrying a lace and satin pillow
with the bride's and groom's wedding bands was Dana Sargent, cousin of the groom. Flowergtrls were
Rebecca Guy and Melissa Pope,
nieces of the bride.
OR. GEORGE W . DAVIS
OPTOMETRIST--Ushers were Jonathan Guy,
brother of the bride, and Brian Marcum, friend of the groom. All men
though you can now see clearly
of bridal party wore white carnaagain and without strain, tile
tion boutonnieres.
If
you
have
regular
eye
check·
change is Jarring and uncomforPianist providing music pmr
ups and have your glasses
table untli you g~ used to lt.
and during ceremony was Shetley
changed when needed, the tranOne solu t!on to this problem is
Singleton.
sition to new glasses Is usually
to get a partial cotTeCt!on In your
'A reception followed at Krodel
comfortable enough. But It lenses to make the adjustment
Park Clubhouse. A traditional,
you'"!! put off having you eyes
easter and more comfortable.
.three-tiered wedding cake was a
checked
and
there've
been
some
But the best solutloo is .10 have •
gift presented by Ann Bonlee. RegIn
your
·
vlnln,
major
changes
regular eye checkups and get
Istering guests at the wedding and
you may tlnd the change to new
your glasses changed as often as
reception was Darlene Ferren, couglasses uncomfortable at first.
needed. Why hesitate when your
sin of the groom.
The ·reason for this Is that usugood vlston Is at stake?
The couple reSides In VInton.
ally a person's vision cha.np
Out-of-town guests attended
gradually, so gradually that you
from Hewett, W. Va.
may not be aware of It untll you
begin to find your present
/u Jhe m teres l o' better 11/slo n
glasses unsatisfactory. If you've
lrqm lhe off ice ot
waited three or four years to
have an eye checkup, for exam,
Gearge W. Dnlll, O.D.
CLOSED SUNDAY
pie, the difference between your
458
Second Ave., Gallipolis
new lens prescription and tile old
OPEN MONDAHHURSDAY-11 AM.-9 P.M.
Phone"'-~
may be considerable. Even
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY- 11 AM.-10 P.M.

MONDAY-SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT BALLS
TUESDAY-BEEF STEW &amp; BISCUIT
WEDNESDAY-SAUSAGE &amp; MACARONI AND CHEESE
THURSDAY-BEEF LIVER AND ONIONS
. FRIDAY-CHICKEN FINGERS
SATURDAY-PORK CHOPS WITH DRESSING

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

• ,:,:, ~11~-

0

::;;

ON WOMEN'S SHOES &amp; HANDBAGS-·

(

Ohio-Paint Plea111nt, W. Va.

Meigs sepior center .

--Weddings-.- - .

..

1983

February (;, 1983"'• .

Pomeroy:=Middleport-Gallipolis, Qhio--Paint Plea~ant, W. Va.

Page--8-6-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

lion: &amp; Fil. til 8
Tutl., Wed .. TIIIIIS.

&amp;'S1t. tii 5 P.ll.

iurtves; ReetiiYIIIe (Had'•

5::1H:10 p.m., lbort !Ibn'
llholm 15 mllllll!l Iller bookaniV..; Tuppers Pl8lnl
(~k's), 7:1D-7:40p.m.; Bllum
Addltloo, 8: J0.8: 40 p.lll. ' . .

STOKB.Y

STOKB.Y

STOKB.Y

.~TIED

APPLE
UCE

CAN

17 oz.
COCKTAIL CAN

,.,.,_

Budget ,,

Special

2F $
~

1

Budget
Pleasar
S ..I

,..,
-

Budget
.
.
Pleaser
speqa. ,..

'.

BLUE
BONNET
MARGARINE

.MORTON
FROZEN
DINNERS

4 SliCK POUND ·

11 oz.

. 2~994

'.

STOKB.Y

STOKB.Y

TOMATO JUICE

'

WHITNEY
PINK
SALMON
15.5 OZ. CAN

69

4

79

09

WK orCS17 oz.
CORN CAN

lONEY 15 oz.
BEANS CAN

17 oz.

' STOI(B.Y
.
.

FRUIT

Budget
Pleaser
Special ,

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Please I'
Special

460Z.79¢

CAN

·

Budget

Pleaser
S~l

STOKB.Y

· BARLETT
PEAR HALVES
· I&amp; OZ. CAN

.CUT _GR.

BEA~S

BUdget
Pleaser
Special .
.SUNNYMORN •

GRADE A
EX.-LARGE
EGGS
·DOZEN

'2 i$ll9 '69¢

160Z.3~99¢
.R

CAN

Budget
Pleaser
Special

..'

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�Page-6-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea10nl, W. Va.

Calenda~

at 7 p.m. There will be singing.

RUTLAND - Skating Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m. at Rutland Clvtc
Center; children, $1; adults, $2;
bring your own skates.

HENDERSON, W. VA. Grubb Family Singers will be at
Henderson United Methodist
Church, Henderson, W. Va.,
Sunday at 7 p.m. Rev. Bob
Grubb will preacl!.

POMEROY - A country·
western dance. Texas style. will
be held from 2 to 4p.m . Sunday at
Royal Oak Park. Gerald Powell
Is the instructor and may be
contacted for fwther lnforma·
!ion a t 992-2622.

LECTA - Ambassador
Quartet will have special singing ·
at Lecta Tabernacle at 7 p.m .
Sunday.

GALLIPO LIS - Gallla
County Heart Association will
hold a tea Sunday for county
heart captains. The captains will
receive their material for the upcoming heart drive at the tea at
the Lola Mae Suiter residence ,
661 Second Ave., GalllpoUs, from
210.4 p.m.

EUREKA - Bert Coldln will
be guest speaker at Providence
· Missionary Baptist Churcti on
Teens . Run · Road at 7 p .m.
Sunday.
POMEROY - Harrlsonvllle
Chapter 255, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7 p.m
Sunday for a practice session.

MONDAY

CROWN CITY - Bruce Unroe will speak at Liberty Church
on Swan Creek Road at 7 p.m .
Sunday.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Garden Club will meet Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the home of
Nellie and hallie Zerkle.

GALLIPOLIS - Rev. John
Fellure , will speak at Batley
ChapelChurch, S.R. 218, Sunday

POMEROY - Eight and
Forty, Meigs County Salon 710,

home of Mrs. Marjorie Fetty
Monday, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter, OrderofDeMolay, 7:30p.m .
Monday at tlhe Masonic Temple.
GAlLlPOUS - Ohio Valley
Christian School Boosters Club
will meet Monday at 7: 30 p .m.
The high school band and choir
will present a program.
GAUJPOLIS - French Col·
ony Chapter, DAR, will meet·at
1: 30 p.m. Monday at the home of
Mrs. M. T. Epting Sr., 601 First
Ave., GalllpoUs. Program on
George Washington's birthday
will be. presented by Dr. Marcella Barton.
GALLIPOLIS - AAUW
meet
at Ohio

will

Bank, Jackaon Pike Branch, at
7:30 p.m. ·Dr: Lucllie Deutsch,
RJo Grande College, will speak
on "Pioneers In Higher Educa·
lion for Women: the Giles Sis·
1ers at Trinity College." All
members and prospective
members are welcome.
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
7:30p.m. Monday at tbe Racine
Masonic Temple.

February 6, 1983
foods should be avoided while
breasUeedlng. For further lnfor.
mation, can 446-6314 or~­
The meeting ts open.
.CHESI'ER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees, 7: 30 p.m . at tbe
Chesler townhall, Tuesday.
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Sorority will meet ~Y
at 7:30 p.m. at Meigs Inn.

ATIIENS Southeastern
Ohio Residents Association will
meet Tuesday at7 p.m.lnAthens
City Building to discuss problems arising from area gas and
·oil drlllln!!. .=.---,.,
GAlLIPOLIS - The regular
meeting of Gallla County Dis· •
trlct Ubrary Board of Trustees ~.
will be held Tuesday at 5 p.m. In
the Rare Book Room of Dr. Sa· ·
muerL. Jlossarc) Memorial Ll-

1r~- ~t..mm Sect~.,..,

·. Annual Dave Diles golf
tournament set June 23

MAYO MONUMENT CO.

TUESDAY
GAUJPOLIS - Riverside
Study Club will meet at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at Dr. Edna Gettles'
residence.

SPRING SPECIAL S495oo

MIDDLEPORT - The fifth aimual Dave Diles·
Appalachia golf IOurnl!ffient Is set for Thursday, June
23.
The official title of the event Is the Dave Dlles·
Appalachia Seini.Ciosed Golf Tournament and HIJ.
!billy ~upper- and It's actually a two-day affair.
While the 18-hold golf tournament Is set for June 23
at the Riverside Goll Club In Mason, W.Va. -the
event will be kicked off with a supper the evening
before at Royal Oak Park ·
In the previous lout years, the event has conlrlbuted nearly $30,&lt;00 to local chanties, Including the
establishment of a scholarship fund at Ohio
.
Ualverslty.
"We're going to make some subtle changes In the
structure of the event," said Diles, "but we must
retain the doWII-horrie flavor of the event." .
Among the change Is the raising of the tournament's entry fee to $150 per contestant. The finance
committee of the toumarnent pointed out that the
entry tee had remained the same for several years,
willie expenses have Increased. There will be an an·
IIOID!cement Ill a few weeks on how to get an appllca·
tlon to the event.
In other years, the field was quickly filled at 144
golfers (two groups on each tee) but last year the field
was overflowing With some 165 golfers competing.
The tournament committee has not decided whether
to restrict the field to 144 this year, or go With an extra
heavy field and aCcommodate It by using five golfers
In each group.
"We've heard all the arguments against boosting

RIO GRANDE - La "Leche
League will meet at 9: 30 a.m.
Tuesday at the Bev Louden resl- ·
dence. Rio Grande. Discussion
will Include whether certain

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Cpll 446.7017

Mancini bout on TV today

11
T?'
Kentucky's Melvin Turpin during Saturday afternoon's Soulheastem Conferenre game at Lexington.
Kentucky won, 76-10. (AP Laserphoto).

AW, COME ON REF! - Alabama lorward Terry
Wllllams (left) reacts In dismay after being called lor
a Iotti while fighting for a loose ball against

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6348 victo·r y
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sophomore Marty Campbell came off the bench
to hit a career-high 17 points Saturday, sparking the University of
Ctnclru\atl In a 6.H8 romp over Florida State In a Metro Conference
basketball game.
Campjlell sconed 14 of his game-high 17 points In the second half, making
10 of 12 tree throws to give Cincinnati Its first Metro conference victory of
·· the season against six losses .
Cincinnati made 25 of 36 free throws to even. Its record at 10.10 overall,
while Florida State fell to 10-8 overall and 3-3 in the conference .
F1orlda State's Mitchell Wiggins, the conference's leading scorer With a
22-polnt average before the game, was held to 10 points. connecting on just
four of 17 shots from the field .
After Florlda State grabbed a three-point lead early In tbe second half,
Campbell hit fotir free throws and a field goal to put Cincinnati ahead to
stay 32-28 with 14:45 to play. Cincinnati hit 15 straight free thl-ows while
pulling away.

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VIrginia 105, Duke 84
CHARWITESVUJ..E, Va . (APJ -SophomoreTimMuUenscoredllof
his career' high 23 points In the first five minutes as third-ranked VIrginia
bolted to an 18-3 lead and went on to a 105-84 Atlantic Coast Conference
romp over outmanned Duke Saturday.
Mullen sconed 20. points In the first hall as the Cavaliers upped their
overall record to 19-2 and their ACC mark to 7-1 heading Into next
Thursday's night showdown at No.1 North Carolina. TheTarHeelsare7.{)
In the ACC and handed VIrginia Its only teague setback 101·95 three weeks
'
ago.
.
.
Junior guard Othetl Wtlson added 21 points for the Cavaliers, who placed
six players In double figures . Craig Robinson had a season-high 16, while
Rick Carlisle and Jim Miller contrlbuted 11each to the 275thcareer vlcwry
for Coach Terry Holland In 14 seasons at Davklson and VIrginia.
·
Ralph Sampson, who had sconed 65 points In his last two games, was held
to ·lO points. That was enough to move Sampson Into the No.~ position In
career scoring In ·the ACC. He now has 1,9611 points moving him past
former N.C. State state star Hawkeye Whitney.
Ball &amp;ate 61, Miami 54
OXFORD, Ohio (AP ) -Ray McCallum drilled In a game-high 18 points
to power Ball State to a come-from-behind 61·54 victory over Miami (Ohio)
University In a Mid-American Cooference basketball game Satunlay.
· Ball State, 11-Boverall and 5-5ln the MAC, overcame a 10-polnt deficit In
the second hall and took the lead 4847 on Jon Mansbury' s jump shot with
4:10 to play.
.
. .
.
Ball State then ran off 11 of the next 14 points to secure the victory. Mlaml
leU to 9-10 overall and 6-4 In tbe conference.
McCallum, a senior guard, led three Ball State players In double ligures.
Mansbury chipped In 12 points, and forward David Scott added 10. .
Guard Craig Tubbs led Miami with 16 points, and freshman forward Ron
Harper added 11.
1'41aml sconed :aJ oflts points from the foul Une, but was out-shot from the
Door, 51 pe1 cent to 34 percent.
J

NFL play ends ~oday
respective lines In today'sPrdBowl.
; HONOLULU (AP) -lt'strresist·
lble forces versus · Immovable
The Amerlc811 Football Conferobjects in today'sP1'0 Bowl.
- enceolfenseofFoutsandCo. wlUbe
The American Football Confer· iJperatlng ~t a National Con·
ence team features quarterback
terence defense thattn'cludes people
DanFootsofSmiOiegoandrunnlng like Ed Jones of· Dallas, Doug
baCks Freeman McNeil of the New
English of Detroit, Tampa Bay's
.
Lee Roy Selmon, Lawrence Taylor
~ork Jets and Marcus Allen of the
of the New York Giants and Nolan
Los 1\ngeles Raiders.
eromwelloftheLosAngelesRams.
' The National Conference has
WashingtCII's Joe Thelsmann at
Thelsmann and the rest of the
quarterback, With Tony Dorsett of . NFCoff~ will be facing a
defense that lilcludes the Jets' Mark
• Dallas and Wllllam Andrews .of
Atlanta the I'UIIIII!rS.
GastineaU:, AI1.Stlll of Kansas aty,
Ted. Hendricks of the Raiders,
. While thoee baCkfields may seem
Pittsburgh's Jack Lambert, and ·
a coach's dream, there IS harsh
Robert BrazUe of Hquston.
reality on the other side .of the

'

,.

•

.,

l

,J

the entry lee," said Paul Barnett o! !:lank one, who
along with Tom Wolfe of the Racine Home N atlonal .
Bank and Ted Reed of Farmers' Bank and savings ,
comprise the finance committee. " But we've held the
Une a year longer than we should have, and It' s one
'heekuva' bargain even at $150. We have to keep In
mind the main theme of the .alfalr, and that's to be a
viable, charity force In this area. Every dime of the
proceeds stays In this area and does something good
for Someone less fortunate. I'm certain we'll have no
difficulty filling the field."
As for filling the celebrity field, that never has been
a problem- and Invitations wtll be sent soon to many
of the top sports flgores In the nation.
Diles said that by moving the tournament to the
latter part of June. the local event can avoid conflicts
With some other major celebrity events In the Mldw·
est and also stay away from somefootballcllnlcs t hat
take coaches and athletes away from the fleW.
He also noted that the local communities are becoming more Involved With the tournament. "Many
local businesses have been most generous In support·
lng the event. It's a big undertaking, and now that we
have It established we want to continue the tradition
of the event. Weapreclateall the helpwe'vehadtn the
past - our committee members really take a lot of
pride on this - and we welcome all the support we
can get."
Last year at t:I:te banquet, In addition to the prized
"Good Guy" awards, members of the local business
ccimmunlty donated scores of prizes, many of them
the novelty or humorous variety, that helped add a lot
·of SPice to the affair.

Kenrucky, Indiana,
West Virginia win
Keatucky edged Alahama,
76-70, In a key Southeastern
Confermce game Saturday af·
~ while Indiana romped

over Minnesota, 76-5L
The W....t VIrginia MOUJQI.
neers were hanlpnlssed In
beating Rbode Island, 'li-n.

By PmRO VALSECCJU
A!llOCiated Press Writer
SAINT VINCENT, Italy (AP)Nearly three months after a title
defense in which Korean challenger
Duk Koo Kim was Injured fatally,
Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini will
fight a 10-round . non-title bout
against George Feeney of Brltal,n.
Mancini, of t oungstown, Ohio, Is
the World Boxing Association
lightweight champion.
Kim suffered severe brain damage when he was knocked out In the
14th round of the chi!JDplonship bout
against Mancini In i.as Vegas last
Nov. 13 and never regained con·
sclousness. Recently It was reported that Kim's mother .had

Mancini's scheduled title defense
committed suicide.
against Kenny "Bang Bang"
· The 21-year-old champion has
Bogner on April 29, possibly In
said he feels ready to fight and
Atlantic City.
doesn't think his style will be
affected.
Mancini appeared determined
"Boxing is sometimes pltlless,"
and willing to fight during a training
said Mancini. "You must hit your
session at the luxury Billia hotel, on
opponent and possibly knock him . the outskirts of this scenic resort In
the Aosta Valley near Mount Blanc
out to avoid to being hit. It's a
prob:em of survival. I decided to
In northwest Italy.
continue boxing, which Is the job I
chose, and once In the ring I will
"He Is In peak condition, ready for
punch as hard as usual."
a victory," said trainer Murphy
Today' s bout against the 25-year·
Griffith. "It wtll not be an easy fight,
old British lightweight champion In
however, as Feeney Is a tough,
an Indoor arena will be televised live
strong opponent with a lot of
on NBC's Sports World, which
physical endurance.' '
begins at 3 p.m.
Mancini studied Feeney on
The fight also is a tuneup for
videotape.

Clarence (Bevo).Francis, all-time-cage
pointmaker, looking for job at age 50
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Wrller
RIO GRANDE, Ohio (APJ -The cheers, the media attention, the
adulation as college basketball's greatest SCOf!"r are now only
memories, bittersweet memories for Bevo Francis.
His Is not a battle against an opPonent's defense. It now Involves a
struggle many steelworkers face - trying to find a job.
Francis loafs at home between Wellsville and Sallneyille In
eastern Ohio. Much of his time this winter was spent huntl;lg
raccOon, rabbits and pheasant.
He's been unemployed since ihe Crucible Division of Colt
·Industries shut down In nearby Midland, Pa., 11 months ago.
In such an environment, the Idle Francis, now 50 years old, finds It
difficult to believe he once sconed 116 points In a single college
baskelball game.
"It's like a big nightmare," Francis said of his career at tiny Rio
Grande College In the southern Ohio hills.
"All I do Is sit and walt (for a job). I still shoot around with a
basketball. I do some jogging. And I did a lot of hunting. Now I have .
to find something else to do - the hunting seasons went out last
Satl:mlay," he said.
For .t hat reason, the 30th anniversary of Bevo's most famous
season at Rio Grande may be hard to celebrate for the6-foot-9 giant.
In 1952-53. tbe NAIA school stunned tbe nation by accumula tlng 39
straight VIctories. That ·single-season total still ranks as the most
triumphs In one season for a college team .
Francis needed' just tWo sea5oris to rewrite the NAIA and NCAA
scoring records. His NCAA standard was a 46.5 scoring average for
one year and a single game total of 113 against Hillsdale (Mich.)
College on Feb. 2, 1954.
FranCis' original NAIA records were 50.1 points for one year and
116 polplll for a single game, coming aplnst Ashland (Ky.] Junior
College. "The NCAA wouldn't recognize the 116 points because we
played some junior colleges that year," he said. However, for that
reason. tbe NAIA later threw out Francis' 116 record and went with
the 113 tlgure.
··
His coach, Newt Oliver, said Fra,ncls possessed such talent that he
could have made It a much larger school. Oliver named Dayton and
Ohio State as examples.
•
•
When OUver and Francis went from Wellsville High School to Rio
Grande as a package In 1952, the coach unvelled his master plan to
put the school of 92 students on the natioQal basketball map.
· "We're going to play In some of tbe biggeSt arenas In the country.
We're going to be the toast of college basketball. We're going to play
a game In New York's Madison Square Garden," he told his players.
Indeed, all of that happened.
·
The Redmen even ranked In the natlon's· top ~ In Francis'
si&gt;phomore year. Rio Grande went 21·7 and beat such schools as
Arlzooa Stale, Creighton. Wake Forest, Providence and BuffalO
Stale In 1953-54.
.
•
·.
. Bevo disappeared lust as quickly as he arrived on the college

scene.

.. '

"After all that, I had no desire to play in the NBA. I didn't even
want to see a basketball game."
,
Wayne Wiseman, a gli!U'd, was the only holdover from a Rio
Grande team that had won only four of 23 games the season before
Oliver and Francis arrlved.
"I couldn't shoot so I had to pass the ball to him," recalled
Wiseman. still an Ohio high school coach at Springfield South. His
prep teams have won more than 350 games In 26 seasons.
· Wiseman can still see Francis lofting In shots from an unheard-of
range for big men .
.
"In that era, there were few big men- none that I know of- that
could sboot with him. He was a 5().55 percent shooter from 15-18 feet .
That's what made him so outstanding," he said.
Wiseman remembers Oliver as a disciplinarian .
"It applied to everyone_: even Bevo," the Redmen's top assist
man said.
"I remember the night before Thanksgiving Newt had Bevo
running JOO.son\e laps because he wouldn'tshoot the ball in practice.
Bevo wanted off early so he could go home. But Newt said there
would be practice. Wf! all had to slay untll he got It through his head
he was going to shoot. We started at 4 and got out of there at 9: ~ .
when Bevo finally decided to shoot the baU."

,

He signed a $30,&lt;00 annual contract to· play with tlli&gt; Boston
Travelers against the Harlem Globetrotters after his sophomore
,
season. 'That. he now admits, was a mistake.
"! don't think I went tn the wrong school. But I would .have been
. ·
wiser playllig two more years and graduating'," he reflected.
The National Basketball Association's Philadelphia Warrior .
franchiJe drafted _Bevo. But contract terms never were reached.
Francis has no regrets he missed the NBA.
· "No, not really," he said, "not after traveling two years with the
GlobetrotterS. We played every day,IICmetlmes twice a day. Down
South, we would have one game for blacks and another for whites the
same day.

ClARENCE (BEVO) FRANCIS

�Pameroy-Middleport-:-Gallipolil, Ohi-Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

February 6, 1983

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

Pc!g-C2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern defeats Southwestern 60-58 in overtime tilt Frid~y
BY SCOOT WOLFE

ern to the outer llmJts of the
per!meter, but a perfectly designed
inbounds play enabled guard Urn
Probert ID hit Newell. The rest Is
history.
· In regulation play, Eastern held a
two-point margin with 45 seconds
left, but the Hlglllanders ·had
possession and plenty ofttmetoknot
the score. The visitors worked
deliberately fora good shot, then set
up in the closing seconds for a tie.
Unable to get the ball inside to Its
bread-and-butter players, Paul
Senior Paul McNeal · led -iiie
Htglllanders with 15 points, Randy

EAST MElGS- A.25-foot jump
shot by J 1m Newell swished the nets
at the buzzer to give the Eastern
Eagles a 60-58overtimevil'toryover
Southwestern's Highlanders here
Frjday evening.
After gaining ,possession With 33
seconds remaining in the extension
period, Eastern worked the ball
around the hom, running the c lock
dbwn to 9 SllCOnds: Coach Dennis
Eichinger cal led time out to set up
the game's final play.
Pressure from an agressive
Southwestern quartet pushed East-

How they fared ...
cou.: MBUS. Ohlo IAP l - How ili&gt; topranked teams ln Ttw Associated Press'
Qh.lo hlgh sctml lxlys baskl&gt;lball poU

4. Oak Harbor, 16-{), beat Tontogany Otrt.
sego 68-45, played Kansas Lakota Satur·
day

fared ~

5. ColumbJs Bexle)', 1&amp;-1. beat RJdlwood North UniOn l(B.Qi.

ClASS AM
1, Loralr) Kln,e. 10.0, beat Lorain Scnklr
00-44, beat Findlay 56-28.
2, Warren Weo;tt"f'n ~. IIXI, be-at
Austintown-Fitch 74-Sti, beat Youngstown

6, WeUSVtlle, 1l-2, )(,list to Toronto 9lrll,

201', bst to S~ubeflvllle 57·56.
7. Young:~town Rayen, 12-4. lost

Farbeat Youngstown WUson

rell, Pa., ~.
68-.l8.
R, ~on St. Vlncent·St. Mary, 10.3,
played Canloo Central Cathlllc Saturday.
9. Mlllersbw"g West Holmes. 14-3. loit
to Onvtlle 56.53 , played Dover Satun:lay

Ursuline 87-58,
3. Canton Mc Kirll~ . i!).t, bt,&gt;at Ciev(.L
land St Joseph 62·55. played Cantoo Glf&gt;.

nOak Saturday.
t Ctnctnnatt Mount Healthy , n.o, beat
Clncilli'LBtl O:Jieraln 71-62, b::&lt;at Cli'IC'lnllatl

10, Porurmuth, 12·3. pia)'(' at Galllp:&gt;lis

Sa.rurday.

Nor1~t'St

53-51.
• J, Akron Centrai-Howe r. U.l, beD! Ak-

"'

ron Ncnh 5&amp;54, played. Cleveland Adams
Saturday,

6. F.ast Clt'Veland Shaw, 17-0, beat
0!!'-'t!land Ht&gt;l~&lt;:hts $41, beat Garfie ld

(].A')S"

1, St. Henry,

Toledo

Delpl'll:'!i
~tur·

Saturday.
4, Old Washington Buckeye Trdll, 15-0,
beat Beallwllle !J743, played Cal&lt;N.til Sat·

Ma ·

urday.
5, Kalida, 13-1, played a1 CotumWS
Grov€' Saturday.
6, Onovllle. lJ.. I. played PanOOra-GUboa
Saturday.
.
7, Anna, 13-2, .lo61 to Jackson Cenler &amp;1-

comber
Sarurday.

Cl.ASSAA
I. Willard, 14-1. bfoat Galion 63-39, played
Lex tn,~Cto n SaNrday.

46, played DeGr&lt;i!'l RlversidP Saturday.

R, Peebles. IS.t , ~ to Beaver Eastern
55-5', beat Qndnnall CAPE 45-32.
9, Racl.ne Southern, l:&amp;-2. beat Vkltcm

2, Colct.va ter , 16-0, brol Rockford Park·

way fi1.J7, played at Dav!on Patterson &amp;u urday.

to

0. beat Marlon Elgin 67·:ll, played Bucyrus

10, Thlfdl BCMoster. 12-4. IF.at Toledo

played

klSt

day .
2. Delphls Sl . John' s,
16-0, beat
St. Hmry 6Hi5.
3. N('\01' Washlngtoo Buckeyf" Central, 15-

played Rkhrnond. lnd. Sarurday.
9, Tol!'do St. F'ranc:1s, 14-1, beat 0r!'gon
Suitch ~41 . beat ToleOO Wood\.l.lard 65-42.
67..ol9,

14-1.

St . Jotll' S 67.ffi. played at Covingtoo

Heights 82·52
'
7. 0a}10 n Dunbar. 14-1. beat Daytoo
Jefferson 94-74, pla)'('d Dayton ChamlnadeJulk&gt;ni'IP Satun:lay,
8, Mldtllt'l:own. J.3.2. beat F'airllekl 98-84.

DeVIlbiss

tD

ioats.

team several clutch
whtle
Layton added l3 and Jeff Meek had
collect1ng
some
key
steals
late
in the
10.
.
game.
After a nip-and-tuck Introduction,
One key Jn the game came was a
Eastern gained control In the first
result of tine defensive play Ji'orn
period and raced to an :JS.l3lead at
Gaul, ,who bekl all-league honoree
the conclusion of the first frame.
Paul McNeal ID just second half
Early In the second round, EHS
points.
.
capitalized on a technical foul from
Eastern had Its best rught of the
the bench to !XII stx additional points
year
from the tloorcanntng22of45
on the board, giving the Eagles a
field
goals for 50 percent and
healthy 26-15 advantage. As Eastcasblng
in 18 ot28 at the ltne. SWHS
em started to simmer, the Galllans
hit W ot 57 tries from the field and
caught fire and quickly closed the
canned 18 of 23 at the ltne.
gap tor a 36-93 halftime advantage.
Eastern won the battle of the
In thethirdframeasee-sawbattle
boards 29-23 led by Newell's 8,
developed as the lead changed
Carpenter's 6, Gaul 5, and Bissell ·
bands four Urnes. Tledat42-42with
five. Layton had 8 and McNeal6 for
·
just seconds remaining Newell
the losers.
came through with a similar last
In the reserve contest, the Httle
second shot to give EHS a #42 edge
Htghlanders took a 4S.J7 triumph.
at the buzzer. Guthrie put forth a
Mike Bailey. Joe Baker, and John
very determined effort, giving his
McNeal and Randy Layton, Ron
Carr saw an opening from the foul ·
line and canned a short jumper,
knotting the score with just three
seconds left.
· The win left Eastern to 1·7 In
league play and 1-16 overall. SWHS
dropped to3-6 and 4-12.
,An elated Coach Dennis Elcbln·
ger said, "It's been a longtime ... this
.
was a great VIctory! It takes a great
. 8-PK.
group of klds to come back from
BTS.
defeatsUkethe last twowesuffered.
Plus Dtp.
Coming back to win In overt!me
6-PK.
says even more of this group."
CANS
Besides Newell's last second ·
heroics, the sharp-shooting East- .
emer collected a game high 23
2 LITER
points, Including a perfect first half
ALL BEER SOLD
and 7 of 9 foul shooting exhibition.
Following Newell on the Eastern
AT STATE
scoring card was junior Troy
MINIMUM PRICES
Guthrie with 13 points, Tim Probert
and David Gaul had 10 each.
Probert hit 8 of 10 free throws in
the clutch ID give EHS a needed
boost going down the final stretch.

NAMI
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.•'•.
'

EDELMANN REBOUNDS - GaDia's Mike Edelmalla (35) picks
off a rebound aga!Da* Jackson In Frl~'s Gallipolis victory over the
Iroomen. Jll8 defender on left Is Jon Clay. - Keith WilBon photo.

~
r.

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RIDENOUR SUPPlY

ICE HOUSE
DRIVE THRU

· CHESnR, OH.

915-3301

Gallipolis

E

ALLGAME'I

~ TEAM .
Wheelei'Sburg

'1. Portsmouth

:&gt;Gallipolis
&lt;' Athens

•'

Ironton
!;: Northwest
• Logan
·
Pt. Pleosant
Alexander
Jackson
WashliW!On CH

Meigs

Week d

F~

5 819
6 997
8 961
8 976
8 968
6 B'll
9 1008
7 lO 988
6 W 962
3 u '181
2 lJ 719

7U
91i3
916
941
958
T74
991

11m
958

W L P OP
8 2 3116 3ft)
7 3 469 409
6 5 illl 386
5511.1372

Logan
Waverly

Athens
Ironton

5 5 :117 391

Jackson
Meigs

4 6 £I 4(]1..
09316443
3135ml:l81

TOTAUl

Friday's resultll:

HWTicane at Pt. Pleasant
Madison. Plains at Wash ington CH

(makeup)

TEAM
Umton
Athens
Logan
Gallipolis

Nazarene
7·9 p.m.!College Swim
!H p.m./Hannan Trace School

7~ p.m./College Swim
7·9 p.m.lbpen Swim

Waverly

Closed

JackSon

H p.m.J()pen SWim

rolii.LS

Metes

Flldoy'o-:

W L P OP
8 2 588 162
8 2 637 554

6
5
5
3
0
31

4 9l! 597
5 555 49!
6 666 717
7 566 564
9 400 6:li

IIi -

IIIII

Athens 62 lront&lt;&gt;n EO (01)
Galllpolls !Ill Jack!On 51

Waverly 74 Meigs '57

Greenfield

at Washington CH

(makeup)

...

..

RIFLE &amp;
- SHOTGUN
.

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NEXT, THE FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT IS GOING TO
WITHHOLD TAXES FROM
YOUR SAVINGS INTEREST
AND DIVIDENDS....

BROWNING
, 12 Ga. 3" V.R. Pump #BPS .......... $288.99
12 Ga. 3" V.R. Auto.-5 Mag. .... $459.97
22 Auto. #BAR22 ........... ., ........ ,. S198.77

870

$22977

20 GA. F

870 12 Ga. Deer Slayer .............. S240.19
1100 12 Ga. F Auto................... $324.17

The recently passed tax bill will require us to withhold and forward to the
Internal Revenue Service 10o/o of the interest you earn on depository accounts,
,certificates, and dividends. It will require~ unnecessary paperwork, and· your
personal loss of these funds during a critical time in our economy.

.

SAVAGE

'

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A vigorous campaign to convince Congress to repeal this 10% withholding
tax is urgently needed. '10 be successful, this campaign will require the help of
·
each and every one of our valued customers.

Double Banels F.M.-MIC
YOUR OfOia ONLY $17333

Our bank, along with financial institutions across the United States, is
working to change the law. We feel that it is unnecessary, unfair, and unjust. The
federal government is alrea y receiving all the information it needs to curtail tax
cheating.
$229.44
· ' #7400 Automatic 3~ Cal. ......... ONLY S310.55

12 Ga. 870

oHr Barrel

We urge you to join our efforts by writing letterS to your representative in
Congress and to the two senators from this state. Thll them you want the 10%
· withholding tax repeaied, because it would impose an unfair penalty on savers ·

like yourself.

................... ;....... $74.00 ·

For assistance in contacting your representative .and senators pl~ase ask
any of our bankers. If we all act now, Congress will get a clear, message from the
vo~ers hac~ home, and they wilJ work t? repeal this needless law.
'
. "'
.
.
.
.

Ali STOCK ON HAND OF RIRES AND SHOTOONS REDUCED
PRICES' E'fECTIVE THRU FEB. 12, 1983

'

'

;

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~

COME IN TO SEE OUR
COMPLETE SELECTION-All ON SALE

Commercial·&amp; Savings Bank
Ohio Valley 8~
The .Central Trust Co•. '

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110 W. rMIN ST., POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2811
TO 5:00

&lt;

.-

· 16 14 14 14.-!111

Lane Top Rebqunder
Lane paced GaWpoUs on the

I boards with nine rebounds. GAHS
picked off 26 caroms while Jackson
had 21. Collins, who did not slart,
but played most of the game (before foullng out), picked off seven
rebounds for JHS .
GallipoHs shot 51 percent from
the tleld (22 of 43) and 73 percent
from the foul line (14-19). Jackson
was 19 ot 42 from the tleld (45.2 percent) and 13 .o t 17 from the foul line
(76 percent). Gallipolis had 10 turnovers, Jackson 11.
"When It rains, It pours," said
Jackson. mentor Hodson followtrig
the game. "Joey (Wyant) was an
aggressive player. It's been one of
those years," he added.
lroaton Here Friday
GallipoUs played Portsmouth at
home Saturday night. GAHS will
host co-leagqe-leader Ironton Frl·

·

And It oilers extraordinary
features:

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ends; Sieve Jacotf-.esl, defenslvp
tackle; Anttllf\Y Rose and Ken Still, de-

GALLIPOLIS

309 UPPER RIVER RD.

renstve backs.

man, to a one-year rontract.

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ARIZONA WRANGLERs-Waived
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JACKSON - GalllpoUs' reserve
Box score:
James Black, dE&gt;t'151slve end; Terry Clark,
Ugttt er'ld Tracy Smilh. Buck Jones, Qr.
basketball team Increased Its first
GALUPOUS RE'iERVIl'8 (38) -Bostic
nell Webster and RJctt Foley, deferulvf
1·2-4;
Bergddl&amp;-2·14;
Carty2.().4;
Dressel~
place lead to one full game over Idle
backs; Paul GllOOw, taclde; Sam Prat("''
8; Pasquale:l-2-8; &amp;averl~M ; FeUurei)M;
and Jol'n Herz, !lrleblk-ktn; AI Hill, widE&gt;
Logan with a 38-25 Southeastern MacKenzie [).().(); Weeks ().(}.0; .Owens 0-0-0;
l't"Ctlver: Davey Sellers. quarterbark;
Ohio League victory over the Jack· Sple"' 1}30: Wodrum IJ.M. 'IUI'AUl NaL
ROO Sldll.man, defenslvt' end; and Pat
JACJISONIIDEBVD! (lll)-MUier1.0.2;
Walker, w1(2 rt'Celver. Signed Mark Deson Ironboys here Friday night.
Hammond 2-6-10; Roseberry 2-1-5; WoU&lt;rd .
Rtwo, linetiacker; Mark Jehn, puntt'f;
The victory, 13th in 15 starts this 1.0.2; Richards 1.0.2; Stnlth 0.2-2; P&lt;le O.H;
9Jtl KJneu, lddc.er: Jim un~e. corner·
back; Rick PIU'tl'ldRe, punter; WaYN'
winter for Coach Jack Payton's Welch O.H TOTALS H1·11.
.~
Ricks. conwback. and Join Spangler.
Bf quorten:
Blue Imps, left GAHS with an 8-2 Gallipolis
purter.
8 10 12 ll-38
NEW
JERSEY
GENERALS4 7 11 3-:15
conference mark. Jackson dropped Jackson
Sij(ned
to 7-9 overall and Hln league play. ·
Todd Bergdoll paced the winners r-----------.,-----------,------1
with 14 points. T. J. Pasquale and
Dan Dressel had eight markers
each.
Mark Hammond paced the Ironboys with 10 points. .
.
GalllpoHs led 84, 18-11 and 3().22
at the quartermarks.
·

I

Re&amp;. 19.99 .-

. ....... "' "'"'''
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• r .... •~ .,,,~ . ~· '"' "'"' ""

$3.99

'White Only

Replace your winterweakened·battery
with a Sears 50

Winter hike reminder

q.....,..,

&amp;!By
GalllpoUs

Sheet~; .

tlght

Orta, outftelder, to the Toronto Bluf Jays
!or Steve Senteney, phdler. Asslped Sentm ey to 'nckwater ol the lntemal~nal
League. Sign(d H\lble Brooks. thlrd base-

OOS'J'ON

Blue Imps hike lead to full game

MET~-Trad ed

YORK

NEW

lceSIIOr 1}30: Lane 5-1-11; Sheel5 f&gt;H6; Sldd·

J ames MayllenY, ruMlng back . Cut Todd
Benson and G!'E'g WyiJy, running backs:
David Peva"e and Phll DriscoU, defens ive
ends: J erry Gaillard. Greg Robertson and
Marty Hensley, wide receivers; ~
Haynes, Michael Wade and Fred Wo11hy,

'KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Traded Cedi
FlehEr, ftrst baleman-dl!slgnated hitter,
to t~ Trrnnto Blue Jays for Uon Rob-

erts, Ol.ltklder.
N.-Lea&amp;ue

Athens at Meigs
Wheelersburg at Lucasville
Hlllsboro at Washington CH
Northwest at Portsmouth West
Alexander at Warren Local
Hun~n High at Pt. Pleasant
Feb.I%Ga,WpollS at Alexander
Logan at Nelsonville-Y or!&lt;
Meigs at Wahama
Waverly at Wheelersburg
Athens at Portsmouth
Jackson at Miami Trace
George Wuhlnjjton at Pt. Pleasant

InJured

Edelmann 3-H; Duncan o.M; Gart&gt;Or o.M;
RAthburn 111).0: Tot&gt;O IHHJ. rorAUJ!!I-1t.;a
JACKSON (51)- Stevens 4.().8; Wyant 1J.Il.
0; E'Ailngton a.a: Clay 5-5-1!!: Da'lla ~u;
Collins :H-14; Wolford liM; MOler cWU:
w~ch liM: - n y ().().(). rorALS lJ. lJ.

We've made the ordinary
telephone obsolete

LoYe, defensive back .
WASHIN GTON

andllllkrllrown.Jllt&lt;hen.

day, and play at Alexander
Saturday.
J · kso
ac n plays at Wellston·Tuesday and at Miami Trace Saturday.
Box score:
GALUPOn.JS (Ill) - Madison 3-4-10; El·

Jackson lost the services of Its top rrm='""==44-=12=;=Cart=er=1=.().=2;=Cla=
rlt=IWO:=,=J=a=ckso=n======8:U:l2=17=:-=;'51
rebounder, 5-11 junior forward
Joey Wyant, who suffered a broken
collarbone two seconds Into the
.game. Wyant colllded with Gallla's
Kev Carter going after the game's
Opening tip.
.
GaWpoUs played without the services ot Chris Ellcessor, who had
been W last week. Tim Madison
played only halt the contest because of lllness last week. Junior
Guard Steve Wolfe did not make
the trip due to illness.
Osborne started Kev Carter.,
Lane, Skidmore, ·Edetnnann and

-

""""""' '-"'

'
BOSTON RED SOX- Signed Reid
NICh oll., wtftlti!r', and Jom Henry Jotmon

Feb. 1 1 -

p.m.IRedmen vs. Mt. Vernon

Wyllllt

Rod Shoate. linebacker, and Bryan Mil·
lard, offenslvt&gt; tackle. Released Don

IIA8ElW.L

Portsmouth at Hillstxlro
Peebles at Northwest

SEOM. Vii.HSJTY

Bflge!!CLead
Behind Mike Edelmann, L!lne
and Skidmore, G;illlpoUs bulltuplts
blggestlead of the game, 52-37, with
4:13 left to play.
Jackson made a desperate bid to
catch the Galllans, outscoring
GAHS 12-2 over a three and one-halt
minute span to narrow the count to
5449 with 47 seconds rematnlng.

Lane's driving layup (30 seconds) and tw9 tree throws by
Sheets (13 sec nds) I ed the vlcto
o
c
ry
tor Ga!HpoUs.
·
. Jon Clay paced tbe Ironme11 with
l5 points. All Collins added 14.

Transaction~

lronton at Galllpolls
Logan at, Waverly

Closed

•JACKSoN - Lynn Sheets and
Steve Skidmore hit from the outside whlle Jamie Lane and Tim
Madison took care of matters ln·
side. here Friday illght as Coach
Jim Osborne's Blue Devils defeated Jackson, 511.51. In a Southeastern Ohio League basketball
game.
Sheets paced Gallipolis' attack
with, 16 points. Skidmore added 12,
Lane 11 and Madls6n 10 as the mue
Devils cbalked up their lOth victory
In l5 outings.
Coach Jeff Hodson's Ironmen
dropped to 6-10 overall, and 3-1ln
conference play.
Score Tlecl Twice
The ~ was tied twice during
the 32-mlnute battle - 2-2 at the
7:&lt;8 mark In the first pertqd and
22-all with 3: &lt;8 left In the first halt.
GAHS, behind Sheets' long
Jumpers, built up a 10-2 advantage,
and led 16-8 after one period. Jackson came back to outscore the visItors, 12·2. during a three minute
stretch In the second period.
Jon Clay's two free throws (3: &lt;8)
knotted the count tor the last lime.
Jackson failed to score the remainder of the haU. GAHS was up
by eight, :ll-22, during Intermission.
GAHS maintained a tout to 10
point lead throughout the tblrd period, and held a 44-34 advantage goIng Into the final eight minutes of
play.

ill(ot)

Feb.8pmea:
Jackson at Wellston

&lt;

1

Athens 47lr0nton 38
Gallipolis 311 Jackson :.5

9113

H p.m./Open SWim
7·9 p.m .!Co11ege Swim

.

SEOAL Jm!EI!VIl'8

Waverly~ Meigs

POOL

Feb. 9 6-9 p.m./lntramurals
; : Feb. 10
7-9 p.m./lntramu.rals
: .. Feb. 11 7-9 p.m ./~ Recreation
~ Feh 12 2 p.m.!RedWomen vs.
.. ~
Central State
· Feb. 13 H p.m./Open Recreation

TEAM
Gallipolis

811;

I, 1182

Feb. 61-4 p . m./~ Rfcreation
Feb. 7 6-9 p.m.!lntramurals
Feb. 8 5: 15 p.m. Redwomen vs.
U. of Charleston
7:XI

12 3 1038 871

N..,.sEQAL-:
il.lexander 64 WelLston 46
Washington CH at Miami Trace, ppnd
Pt. P1euant 1'2 Wahama 49·
Wheelersburg 57 Minford 51

Dii.TE - GYMNii.SIIJM

•

W L P OP
14 2 11!!9 002

10
10
9
9
8
6
7

Waver))'

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE

I

Cage standings

;.

10. Bucyrus Wy nford. 13-2, bf"at Sycamore MOhaWk 7&amp;66, played Ttff1n Catven
Saturday.
.

3, ColumM \\'l lltehall , JH}, ~at [)(ola·
ware Hayes 77.54. llc-at Columbus Frank·

I

.

Enjoy

709 l!lt Ave.

.

.,I

Nort h Gailla 7'1:-57.

·

Blue Devils hit from ·near and afar in
58-51 .. hardwood triumph ove~ Jackson

Woolum each had 9, and Robert
Elltot 8 for the wtnnEn. Royce
Bissell had a 19 point effort for the
Eagles and John Miller added 7.
Eastern travels to FOrt Frye
Tuesday, then hosts North Gallla
Frtday.
.

A GOOD

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page C3

REG

TINTS SLIGHTLY HIGHER

1

499

•WI NOSH
WASHER

69$
SPECIAL

REG. '1.39

2 0-CELL

GAUJPOLIS- The 0. 0. Mcintyre Park District Saturday reminded ;ill Interested hikers the
annual winter hike at Raccoon
Creek County Park Is slated Sunday, Feb. 13, at 2 p.m.
A qualltled naturalist will lead
the hike, ldentlfytng wtklllfe signs,
edible winter plants, winter ldentlfl·
cation of trees as well as preferred
food &lt;if the various wlldllle you may
see on the park grounds. Snow and
Ice formations make tor a beautlful
setting for the hike so anyone who
enjoys nature and walking won't
want to mlss the beauty of the park
during Its winter season . .For more
lntormatlon and to pre-register for
the hike, contact the park district
office at 4464612, extension 56.

Batteries

Not Included

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Jaycees to sponsor
Feb. 8 Rio contest
CAUJPOUS - The GaWJlOUs
Atea Jaycees will sponSor .t he Feb.
·8 Rio Grande · College basketball
· game against COnference rival Ml
Vernon Nazarene College.
The Jaycees urge area residents
to add to the support of the Redmen
as our guests. Tickets tm the game
may be obtained through any Jay,
ceemember.
.Young men between ages 18 ahd
36 Interested In learning more
about the Jaycees' community in· · ·
volvement and Individual development Pl'OIII'am&amp; are asked to stop
by Room 114 of the Student Center
following the game.

NE ANTI-FREEZE

67•

WA.S 12.28

,. SAVE

•BUCK KNIVES
·•FERRY MORSE 'GARDEN SEED
•

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LOG SPLITTER t I Only )

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WINUR HOURS

MON. -SAT.· 9-6
SUDAY 1-6.

..

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Galli'polis, Ohio-Point Pleoiant, W. Va.

Page-C4 · The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Febn-y 6, 1983 -·.

Meigs drops . 7 4-5 7 league decision to Waverly quintet
·

Breitenbach &amp;ll-12; Preble &amp;ll-12; Thomas 0.

·

Br qaartaw:

POINT PLEASANT -

For 12
minutes Friday rtlght, Lennie
Barnette and .his Point Pleasant
Big Blacks were on the 'e dge of their
seats as they watched Lewis H!!ll's .
Wahama WhlteFalconsopenupan
11-polnt lead, 26-15, midway
through the seco!ld period.
Wahama's . juruor guard Ron
Bradley scored on two tree throws
at the 3: 43 mark In the second
· stanza to put the White Falcons up
by what was to be their blgge~t
)ead. the Big Blacks then reeled off
16unanswered points totakea31·26 .
lead at the Intermission and then
·coasted to a 72-49 triumph over
their county rival.
For the Big Blacks, the victory
ended a four game skid to even
their record at 6-6. The White Fa!cons' record dipped to 3-11 on ihe
year.

HASKIN.S-TANNER. SEMI-ANNUAL

SPORT COATS

Winter Jackets

Reg. 85.00 ..... Now '56.00
Reg. 90.00 ..... Now '59.50
,Reg. 95.00 ..... Now '62.50

35.00 ... Now '23.40
Reg. '49.95 .... Now 32.97
Reg. 80.00 ... Now '52.8Q

33 1/3% OFF

MEN'S SUITS

20%-25%-33lf30A,

33 1/3% OFF

The

Big Blacks hand Falcons 72-49 setback

==

TAU !J.HS.

Leading ~27 at the haU, Wav· the\lp-tempoTigersdurtngthet!rst
2-2·. Con!eyfl.2·2·, PurseU0.2-2. ror.u.sa.·~
wav-•·
15 15 23 ~ 7
erly ripped to a 43-31 margin mid· half. Meigs' last lead was at 16-15
Tl.
· ·
·
~
MetP"
14131f ~
, : : :8:'/, w=~~~
'"t th third period then thirty seconds Into the second
MEIGS (Sl) -Riggs 9-+Zl; Edwards :&gt;0(P
"'"
F'tJibel' 0.2-'l; Bush M ·l . TOTAU ll·IUL .
way u , O e
10; Taylot5+14; Cbancey2..l-7; Holcomb!.().
WAVEJ!LY (t:IJ -llr&lt;ltenbach.9+22; T.
maintained at least a 10 point ad· .period.
2; Evans ~; Kennedy 1.0.~ HobeOO ~.
Tackett 1.0.2; Han'1! 3.1).6; Teeters 1-1·3;
w~
yantage, the remainder of the
Jerry Miner, a ji..l sharp-shooting
TOI'MS !S-11-5'1.
DlxM1.0.2; Stahler 2·21; J. Tackettl.0.2. TOM....
contest.
· seruor • drilled 15 tooters trom all f'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;i;;;;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit
The Marauders, playing at a dis· around the perimeter for 25 points,
tinct height advantage, kept with including 12 In the final quarter.
,.., ~IIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIl\lll- Miller also had seven rebounds.
Tim Breitenbach, a ji-.2 senior,
and Dave Preble; who crune off the
bench, each dumped In 12 while
point guard R.Qbbie Lewis added 10.
Preble led Waverly with 13
rebounds.
Nick Riggs continued his high·
scoring with ·22. The &amp;-0 junior now
has scored 59 points In his last three
games.
Gf&lt;lg Taylor played well In a losCOMPLETE STOCK
MEN'S &amp;BOYS
Ing cause with 14 points and a
'
Meigs-high eight rebounds. Rick
Edwards chipped In 10 points.
'
• Waverly's largest' lead was 70-51
with three minutes left. Meigs led
by two on three different occasions.
Coach Greg Drummer's charges
Rea. 1125 .......... NOW '82.50
1
1
Reg.
played well for the most part, but
1225 ........ NOW '168.75
Rea.
1
just couldn't cope with the Tigers'
1
1250 ........ NOW '187.50
Rea.
height.
1
1
The hot-shooting Tigers canned
Reg. 1275 ........ NOW '206.25
32 of 63 field goals tries for 51 percent, Including a! of 341n the second
. half (59 percent). Coach Willie
Hobbs' Tigers were 10 of 16 trom
the foul line for 63 percent.
Meigs connected on 23 of 56 from
the field for 41 percent and SI)Rk a
fine 11 of 13 foul shots for 85 percent.
Waverly combed the boards for
42 caroms to Meigs' 30. The Marauders had 17 tW'Ilovers compared to ortly 10 for Waverly. The ·
Tigers committed 15 personals
with Meigs being whistled for 14.
.
SHORTSTOP- Meigs' Greg Taylor (31) pulsthebaBuponashort
The Marauders dropped to 2-13
shot during Friday's game agalll!ll Waverly. Taylor added 14 poblls to
on the year and 0-9 In SEOAL play.
the Marauder a&amp;tack ·but Waverly deleated the Marauders, 74-57. The
Waverly went to7-10overalland~
.Marauders' BID Holcomb (41) and Waverly's Jim Thomas (22) jockey
In league action.
·for rebounding position In the badlground.
RA!serves Lose
'
Coach Mlck Childs' little Marauders battled to a 35-35 tie at the end of
regulation but fell43·35 to the Waverly reserves In overtime.
After Dan Toomas made two
free throws to tie It with a minute
and a haU to go In regulation, Meigs
'
12%
' RIO GRANDE - Guard Jerry Is listed In the ratings. Forward regained possession and worked
15Vz
John Malcsh Is sixth In tree throw the fln!ll 55 seconds oft the clock
Mowery of Rio Grande College Is
percentage at 77.6.
ranked In three offensive categoortly to·have a slicit fall short.
Rio Grande lscurrentiy second In
ries of the Mld·Ohlo Conference sta·
Rick Wise ledMelgSwlthlOwhlle
the MOC with a 7-1 mark. The Red· Mike Chancey added eight and Tho!!Sties released today by the league
WIRE .
WIRE
men have an overall slate of 19-7.
office.
mas seven. Brad Breitenbach
Here are the Mld-Ohlo Confer· · paced Waverly with 22.
: Mowery ranks ninth In scoring
ence
standings:
With an average of 15.3 points per
MeigS fell to 3-12overall and 0-9ln
Team
MIMlhlo Overall
giune while rating eighth In field
league
play. Waverly is 5-6 In
Walsh Collego
S.O , 2J.O
gpa1 percentage at 52.6 and second
SEOAL action and 7-10 overall.
Rio Grande College
7-1
19.7
Tlffln University
G-2 · 14-6
#56
In · three throw shooting at 84.6.
STEEL F
POST
Meigs · played Nelsonville-York
Cedatvtl1e
Collego
4-4
13 9
Mowery Is alSo averaging 7.1 asSaturday
night,
.
oosts
Athens
next
WEED
5 FT . .... :.'...................... $2.00
Malone Collego
4-4
~12
ststs per game, but the coruerence
Mt. Vernon ~ollego
1·7
H5
Frle!ay then travels cross-river to ,
CLIPPER
5'12 Ft. ............................. $2.20
Ohio Dominican College
1-7
4-22
does not list that category.
·
play
Wahama
on
Saturday.
Urbana College
1·7
H7
6 Ft. ................... :........ $2.40
FENCER
other Rio Grande operative
1/•
9(Vanlty)
(Include. games of Wednesday, Feb. 2).
•
Bo!C IOQI'e:
....
6'12 Ft. ............ :............... 12.60

By KEml WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - Breaking
open a tight ga me with eight points
In the first 90 seconds of the second
half, the WaverlyTigl'rs snapped a
five-game league losing streak with
a 74-57 win over the Meigs Maraud·
ers here Friday night.

· Ohio---.-Point Pleamnt, W. Va.

Team statistics show Point Pleasanl dominating ori the boards, outrebounding the Falcons, 41·26.
Field goal percentages show PPHS
· hitting on 31 of 75 shots from the
field for 41 percent, whneWHS hli
on 17 of 43 lor a 40 percent clip. At
the charity stripe Point hit on 10 of
12 attempts for an Impressive B3
percent while · Wahama managed
15 of 22 tosses for a 68 personal
mark.
Game high SCOring honors went
to Point's Todd Gibson who taWed
27 points. Other scorers for the Big
Blacks Include Todd Simpkins with
14 markers, Shawn Nibert had
nine, both David Lambert and
Kevin Smith chipped In eight
apiece, John Hammack and Donn1e Jones added four and two
points, respectively.
Leading the ·White Falcon scorIng attack was thetr. back court

combination or Donrtle VanMeter went to 3-6.
a nd Ron Bradley. VanMeter
Both Point Pleasant and Wachalked up 16 tallies with Bradley ha ma have hardcourt games Tuesnetttng 12. Mark Roush chipped In day night. Point Pleasant wm host
rune points, Scott Kimes added six, Hurricane In a PAC-8 contest and
while Eric Embleton got lour and Wahama hosts North GaiDa with
Darren Gilland had two.
. game times set for j,: 30 and 8 p.m.
WABAMA (49) - Rouih J.J.~ &amp;adley 4-4·
Leading rebounder5 were Todd
Simpkins with 11 and Shawn Nibert )2; Kimes 2·7-6; Mlt&lt;:heiiO&lt;l&lt;l; VanMelet 7·~
16; Em bleton 1·24; GUland 0·2·2. Tdtal8
with eight caroms for the Big 17-1549.
Blacks. Mark Roush and Scot!
l'OINTPLEASANT (12J -Ci bsonl2..&gt;27; ·
6-2-14: Nlhert J.J.9; Lambert 4-IJ.~;
Kimes Ied Wahama with eight and Simpkins
fl.uthertOI'd ~; Jones 1.().2; Smith J.2-8;
seven rebounds respectively.
Hammack 2-0-4; CiveM fl.f).(l. Totals31·1..,2.
In the reserve contest, Waha- ·w:.O:."Y q ._.
18 8 5 1 9
ma's Boyd Norlhrup scored on a Point Piesant
11 ll14-27-12
layup with just five seconds, re- . - - - - - - - ' - -- - malnlng as the Little Falcohs held
on lor a 50-48 victory over the Point
Pleasant Little Blacks.
The win gave Wahama a S-5
mark on the year while the Little
Blacks dropped their fourth
straight contest as their record

Cook has 28-man baseball roster

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M .

Mowery ·.ranks high in

Ga.

Ga.

GAUCHO

BARB

LUNDY

:One

.

WAVERLY (74)- Mille r 11-3-25; Thompson 0-0-0; 'Lewis 5-0-10; Sharfenaker 4-1-9;

$

.

7 Ft. ............................ 12.75

...aphers with 19.
: Meigs 'hit on 19 of 57 shots from
the field-for 33 percent 'and made 12
of J,B tree throws.
: waverly hit a warm 17 of 28 foul
sbots lor 61 percent. Meigs pulled
doWn 34 rebounds and had 27 turMeigs committed 22 fouls
td Waverly's 21.
•'rhe
. marauderettes played with·
ol11 the services of starter CindY
d;.Oks who ts participating In the
s(a(e lunlor miss pageant In Mt.
Vl!i-non this week. - ·
: 1\i:eadows also set out more than
tWo' quarters due to foul trouble.
: ~ the reserve game, the little
Marauderettes fell 29-26.
! );Ietty Loftus led Meigs with nine
Jl9!nts and' nine rebounds.
•Box score:
·
:JiEios (llll~- SWisher 1.0.2; Dean 1-1-3;

...

.

.
~o\VERLY (83) - R«d 3410; Pe..Ueton

Ul!; Massly 1-J.5; Patrick ~2-10; Tr1mble
Harley
TwaiUI Goble 2.1).4; 'IWI1a
yotJi.M-2; Ju. Smith 2.().4; Jo. Smith 0.1·1.

*''

o.a

WITH LIFETIME GUARANTEE
NEW CONSTRUCTION AND REMODEUNG-AU WORK GUARANTEED -.

1~~~~~For~Com~~pl~olo~O.~~tao~'la~Ca~ll~4~4~6~17~5~9~~36~7~-06~31~~~~
!-

i y o -=

~etiy

8 13 8 21-50

...

Uetillion 17th in
~ throw shooting
'
·RIO
- GRANDE - GUard Kathy
Detllllon ot. Rio Grande College Is
r&amp;nited 17th In the NAIA In tree

.

'

tl.lllcS released tnday.
· DetiiiJon Is averaging 19.i points .
~ game while shooting 82.6 per·
cioru from the tree throw tine. The
~omen ace Is also shooting 54
~t trom the tloor.
:Jilo Grande Is lo.8 on the season,
3-3
the Greater Ohio ·Athletic
Conference,

:1n

.

I

Akron !fl. Milklle Tenn. 76
Dayton 65. Laycia.
58

"

Howard U. 87, N. C&amp;rollna A&amp;T 71
Penn 61, Comell ~
Prln&lt;:'e1:on Sl. Cdum~a 49. OT
. Robe:rt MorriS 95. Long Island u. 62
S. CarolN St. 91, Dellware St 86
Yale 7&amp; Han.'al'd 72
SOO'I1t
Oa\1dson !11, Awalachlan St 6

w.

•

Murrny St. 7!1, Ycw.n~town St. 14

FAR WEST
NcY.·Las Vegas !Ji, cal·Santa Barbara

19

Pt&gt;ppenlrlt&gt; Iii. Santa Clara G2
Si. Mary·s. CalU. 92, l..cyola. Ca1l1 9J.
l1f

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Potential Home Owners
Are You Tired or Renting?
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'

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89

Quaker State .
qt. 1OW30 Reg. 99• Umil12
Quaker State
qt. 1OW40 Reg. 1.09 Llmlt12

IF YOUR INCOME IS BETWEEN
sg,ooo and sts.ooo AYEAR

Wiri!

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H&amp;R Block praparers have received special training to

help you this year. Did you know there are two different
short forms. increased deductions for an IRA, and increased child care credits .... and many ·more changes?
We've done our homework on the new tax laws, so you
don't have to.
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The new tax IQWS. iiioiilllllii.-.Oiiiilliiiiil_oiiioi,_ . . .

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Horse Block.................H!t~!~... ~s.FiO
Rumensin Block..............~Q.lll,.~7.95
37% Protein Block....... }.3;L3.1.1!,.~4.05
R.O.L Block ..... ;............ §j) .lA... ~5.55

BLUE DEATH

· PURINA

Natlonwlae
Maintenance
Free Calcium
BaHerlea

Rat Control
s Lb. $gis

RAT BAIT

OPEN WEEKOAYS-9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
. SATURDAY 9:00 AM .. to 5:00 P.M.
APPOINTMENJS AVAILABLE
618 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-3795

.

Phone 446·0303

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE .

Sears

Also In

Sllrs
Mon.-Thur.-fri.

Silver Bridae PIIZI

. m-mo

9:30 'fll 5

$1SS

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Uu

Stars

Chirp

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UCIPIInWIII cw MoQoil.

~

$2,05 .
5 lb. $],95
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$895

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TAX

SO Month

_..i

Thermostats Rag. 2.2e
Hoses

- ·n.
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10 flc1ary ~CI'
lo lor oil Am- 0011
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hlghor. 4--lllgnmlllt ovolllblo for J . K. llld
X body oorollld oomoi._...

.

Standprdb:lfl'tpiM:
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leJI. a .M. Reg . 2.95
Dllltrtbutor C1p1 for
lcyi. O.M. A&amp;g . 3 .95 .
WlteStulor
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Electrlric E11mpiH:
Tune-Up Klt1 for
lc:yl. Cllf)IIWI Rag. 9.49 .
Dllltrlbutor C..,. ror
··~· ·- .... 305 .
lmrn Wk111M ro.···'· .......... 8.05 . .

2.21
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7 12
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2 96
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6 71
o

•

Realatora
Reg. 1.18

Autollte
Spark Plugs
umn 16 Qn sale plugs .

Our rnodlm -btwMc front·whMI
II by VInce Knight who
hal 20 YMN ~~-ICe ·.net Ia 1
gnduiiO of AllgMIIIIt lchooi.
Cell for y0ur ~ppalnunent todly.

""""*"

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SIMMONS

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GALLIPOLIS, OH.

\

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22 9S

4 88

I'OMIROY, OH,

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Your Cltolco

Pres tone A!lti·Freeze Tester

•

or Flush 'N' Fill

Kit

#AF\420 · IAFI&lt;5B 112" · 518"
Reg . 3.4!J--3 .99

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Reo- 1.69

130%. 17450
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Relined Brake Shoes
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Also, hive 1 frH heldii&amp;M aim wltlt a lube, oil cha!llllllll
filttr on all e111 and 1'1 ton tnJcks. ·
ThoM Speclala lxpl~ March 1, 1983

'

Heeter Control
Valves Aalow ••

MIOWII

DIP THAT .IIIAT Ill niLINI WITH lanillll ... PAITI.

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From3.49

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~I lOW II

1

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A¥. $145

AGRI~CEN

25% OFF

Everydly Low Price

Preatone Super Staler
or Super Flush

IF REQUIRED

308 I. MAIN ST.
i

"""

Mr. OaadwniNitl give~ 1 complete front·tnd
lllgnntOnl loll 'for 1
price. Ho' ldjutto

, AM

.8050

38.88

Sl4!5 ~~. .-

SUPERSAN
Gal:

28.88

IPERAZIN

$460

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GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Open 9 A.M,-6 P.M. Wtakdays, 9·5 Sit.

Lb.

Alternators or Sterters
'lll1tl fw.tdlbll lxc:I\WIOI for moM domttlie WI

$54goo

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Preatone Anti·Freeu lrld Su:nm•r Coolwlt. Pattnted a•l ·
fllltalt to 1octo. out ruat I

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..

cone aMk:.ltllcr alun\ll'lllm Ael
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tftrow percentage, according to sla·

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White Salt Block .............~9. JL'.3.25 Tingley PVC Boot..······ ··········~lQ.~
T.M. Salt Block.... ..... ......~Q.!L.'.4.05 Tingley Top Lace Boot ............~l7.95
T.M. Salt Bag ................. ~P.J~•..'3.70 Tingley Rain Suit.. .................... ~
Special Mixing SaiL .......~Q.I~.)3.45 Lacrosse Pull Over Boot.: .........~.95
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Water Softener PeIlet ....... en
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7-2-16; Steagall 5-Sl8; Horton ~1J.l: ·GordOn().().(); IIA!eves ~. TOI'ALS IJ.IJ.

E. Kentlldcy 62, ,\ustln Peay 55

~

P'rMI

50 Month

ooyers.

~s

'Mt;W

~

'

: WAVERLY - The Meigs Ma·
rauiler girls' basketballers suffered
tljfqugh a drought In the third perlcil then feU to Waverly here
'lirursday, 1!3-50.
; Coach Ron Logan's Marauderettes were outscored 19-B during
uie:thlrd quarter.
: I!enlse Steagall played outstandlliB as the sophomore lass led Meigs
wllh 18 points and 12 rebounds.
Ji!)my Meadows followed with 16
a!Id Paula Horton had 11 markers
the

llyDr

$1705

Waverly girls
defeat Meigs .

t~~~!~n; '"i.~n~:~:~~

,......,., .~

16FT. HOG PANEL

BARB

$2395 '$3250

JUMP BALL - Kevin Snnlth (00) ol Polnl Pleasant aDd Eric
Embletoa (32) of Wahama go after lbe basketball to start the lhlrd
quarter. 'lbe Blr Blacks raDied lor a 72-ft victory over the Wblte
F.w- Friday night. Also pictured are WIIS' Scott Kimes, at lett, and
PPJIS' Donnie J011e11 (M), (Pholo by Tim Davis,)

College results

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. .·,•

�February 6, 1983

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

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Sunday Timea-Sentinei-Page-C7

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Second half rally gives KC
5646 victory over -'·,Wildcats

Southern comeback defeats
'

North Gallia Pirates, 72-57
· VINTON- It took an injul)' - of
North Gall Ia guard Anthony Black· ·
burn- to turn around a sul]lr!slng
North Gallia lead over visiting
Southern Friday night , allowing
Coach Carl Wolfe's Tornadoes to
post a 72-57 Southern Valley Athletic
Conference vlctol)' over the host
Pirates.
Blackburn suffered an ankle
sprain and w ill probably be out or
play for for the remainder or the
season, Coach Bruce Wilson said
Saturday .
The win left Sou!hern with with a
7-{1 mark in the league and 15-2on the
• .. · season. North Gall!a dropped to 2-6
in league action and 5-10 overall.
With an Eric Penick basket three
seconds after the opening t!po!f, the
Pirates blasted away at Southern's
defense. and countered its delaying
tactiCs on the Inside to take a 14-11
advantage at the close of the first
.. period.
.
The second quarter saw the
Pirate pressw-e continue as North
Gall!a led by nine (Xl-11 ) midway
through the.period.
Despite thE! e!forts of Southern's
LOOKING FOR AN Our- North Gallla forward Eric fenick,lelt,
Zane Beegle and Rod Littlefield,
heads
downrouri looking for an out during Friday night's NG-Southem
Wolfe's two top starters, attempts to
game
while
Tornado guard Zane Beegle paces him. A first half Pirate
stop the combination of Mlke Mays,
lead
was
routed
by Southern to give the Tornadoes a win, '72-57.
Penick and Matt Kemper were
fruitless, w!!h the half ending 32-24
in the Pirates' favor.
back on its feet and narroWed it to . In the reseiVe game, NG turned
The effort of holding the ninth·
around a Southern halftime lead of
eight. Southern o!fense continued
ranked Class A school began to take
19-14, established a lead and held it
taking its toll and the margin was
its toll in the third period. Black·
fora 36-34win. TilnSmlth'sllpoints
widened to 67-55. Additional shots
burn's in]UIY, With less than five
and 10 contributed by Thunnan
from the charity line helped ice the
minutes remaining in the third
Holllday helped in the win, while
cake for the visitors in at the close.
quarter, appeared to be the turning
Teaford and Todd Adams led
Steve
Kemper led all scorers with 25,
point in the game.
the
junior
Tornadoes with nine
while Mays scored 12 for NG and
each.
Penick and Ken Neal added eight
Pirate foul trouble allowed South·
Southern was scheduled to play
each. Penick was leading reern to tie the score, then gain the
Ceredo-Kenova,
W.Va., Saturday
bounder
with
10
of
the
Plra
tes'
total
lead. Once that happened, the
will
travel
to
Hannan Trace
and
of
33.
Tornadoes never looked back.
Friday.
North
Gallia
goes on the
Free-throws
helped
Southern's
Beegle poured it on inside to chalk
road
twice
this
week:
to Wahama
cause as the Tornadoes' xecoz:dedllO
up 23 points. Rod Littlefield added
Tuesday and Eastern Friday.
percent on 12 of 15 attempts . NG
19. Littlefield was also top reSOU'J11ERN (72) - N. Bostick 3&lt;f0: Br1 sank five of seven tries for 71
bounder, receiving credit for 11 of
nager 2.{).4; Curfman 4-1·9; C. Bostlck 0.1-1;
percent. TheP!rateshit25of43field
his team's 26 caroms.
Teaford 1-3-11; Beegle 9-5-23; Littlefield S-3goal
attempts for 58 percent, while
Dennis Teafoto added 11 points in
19. -30-12-'IZ.
NOR'IH OALUA (5'7)- Mays &amp;-1-12; PenSouthern was 30 of 71 for 42 percent.
the Southern victory.
ick 448; Kemper 10-5-25; Blackburn 1~2 :
Southern recorded eight turnovWith a new advantage, Southern
NeaJ 4-4-8; Lee 1-1-2. Totals 26-1~7.
Scol-ebyq ..........
jumped ahead to 63-5lin the early . ers, while NG had 30. The Pirates
Southern
ll l3 26 Z!-72
had 15 assists, Southern, 14.
part of the final period. but NG got
North Gallla
14 18 15 10--57

Athens nips Ironton, 62-60, in
overtime, shares top spot in loop
ATHENS - Steve Bruning's
layup with two seconds remaining
:1n overtime lifted the Athens Bul'ldogs to a 62-6(] SEOAL v!ctol)' over
the Ironton Tigers here Friday
night.
The Athens triumph left the Bul·
!dogs in a tie with Ironton lor first
place In the league standings with
an 8-2 mark.
Afler trall!ng Athens by as many
as etght points, the Tigers enjoyed a
brief lead, 26-24, in the second
quarter.
Athens led 30 -28 during
intermission.
. Ryan Ainsworth and Kevin West
:combined for 10 points, giving Iron·
ton a 46-43 lead after three periods.
West continued his long range
shooting in the fourth quarter, accounting lor eight of Ironton's 10
points, including one with 2: 52 remaining that gave the Tigers a 5654 lead.
Ten seconds later, Carl Ma!heny
knotted the score at 56-56 on a short
jumper.
This marked the final points for
either team in regulation play.
Athens saw Brad Baker miss the
first of a one'and-one free throw

Cook ...

witl. 18 seconds left. Bruning's six
foot jumper rolled o!f the basket as
the horn sounded.
In the overtime, Mark Fields put
Ironton on top with 1: 57 left before
Bruning hit two free throws to tie it
with 1: 36 showing.
Fields then converted a pair of
Charity tosses at the 1: 04 mark.
Woody Mayle !matted the score at
60-60 with 4jj seconds remaining.
Ironton ran oH some time, waiting for the last shot, but turned the
ball over with 23 seconds left.
Athens took the ball to mldcourt,
following two tlmeouts, AHS
moved in for the shot, which was
taken by Mayle.
, The ball bounced oH to the right,
was grabbed by Bruning, who put it
in the hole.
Ironton called time out with just

tw1~!~h=!;d

pass went

over half the distance of the naar to
the top of the foul circle·at the other

'

MERCERVILLE- Tied 32-32 at
the half, Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek Bobcats combined a .
good defensive effort with some
poor Wlldcat shooting to defeat
HannanTraceforthethlrdtlmethis
season, 5646, here Friday night.
Leading the _Bobcat defensive
effort in the. second half were
brothers Ron . and David Martin,
senior· Jeff Moles and junior
forward, Brent Love.
The Wildcats managed just 14
points the second half while Kyger
Creek scored 24.
·
In two earlier contests, the
Bobcats rolled to an easy 94-39
de&lt;;ision at KYger Creek and then
defeated the Wildcats, 7349 in the ·
Holiday T ou rna men t at
Mercerville.
Friday's contest was a lot
different, as both teams enjoyed a
good first half.
'"
The first period ended 17·17 as •
Love and Moles paced the visitors
with eight and four points respeclively, while Rabble Brumfield and
Mllke Rossiter had four points each
for the Wlldcats.
Thesecondperlodcontlnuedtobe
even as Rossiter dumped in seven
points and Brumfield four in pacing
Hannan Trace while the Bobcats
stayed in the contest by connecting
on nine of 11 free throw attempts.
J .D. Bradbury, who was forced to
sit out most ofthesecond half due to
an 'ankle injury paced KC's second
period effort with five points. Ron
Martin, a 5-10 senior and Moles
canned four points each.
During the second period, the
Wildcats' J eff Barnes and Allen
Bailey were forced to the bench
with three personals each.
After each team missed a scoring
chance in the early minute of the
third pertod, Hannan Trace broke
the . tie before the Kyger Creek
defense went to work.
The quarter ended with ~yger
Creek holding a 44-38 advantage.
David Martin, 6-3 junior, who
replaced Bradbul)' at the pivot, led
the third period attack with six
points while Love dumped in lour.
Deke Barnes, Brumfield and
Rick Randolph led Hannan Trace
with two points apiece.

.

HANNAN TRACE t~) - J. lllrnel2-2-6:
Bnunlleld&amp;-0-12; SwainH3; Rilu!ter»Ll;
1
81111

·::;- ~J..-

•n-

~

Randolpi!0-2-l

K.YI"" er..o
Hannan
Trace .

17 15
15 126 12-56
17
11-2-46

r----.------..:·':___
MORTGAGE
INBURANC•
let 1M tell you •bout
the Modern WoodMen
Pion.

27 free throws, and claimed 36 rebounds, 13 by Bruning.
Ironton hlt almost 46 percent on
27 of 59, converted six of nine free
throws, and had 27 rebounds with
Fields grabbing 10.
Bruning led four Athens players
in double digit scoring with 19
pdints whlleJi'lelds topped the T!g·
ers with 1B markers.
Box score:
DWNJ'ON (Ill) - Marl&lt; Fields 7418; Ed
Rawlins 2-0-4; Mark Snyder (}.().(); BID Tho-

mas 3-0-6; Frank McClellan 1-G-2; Tooy Keith
2-0-4; Kevin West 7-2·1~ Ryan Ainsworth S-O-

GARlAND M. DAVIS
512 Second Ave .. Gallipolis, OH.
Homt 388·9691

Ph. 46·8235

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA.
Fraternal Life ln1unmce
Home Ollice

•

Rock Island , Illinois

Bo"""""''

KYGER CREEK (51)- Oark0-3-3; Brad-

rr;;;:;;;;;;======~====;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;

NEW '82 MODELS
Seeing is Believing ....

lO. '11JlAlii ln-6-lll.
ATHENS (Ill)- Bill Flnnearty D-J-1; Leon

AUen 3-3-9; Brad Baker 4-2~ 10; Carl Matheny
4-S.lJ; WoOOy Mayle 4-2-lQ; Steve BrWllng 8-

SAlE

PRICE

$2295
Nighthawk~

650

UMITED QUANnTIES

r-:.::-=-------~®; ~ ~ @ ® .
~DRIVER'S EDUCATION ~

SAVE ENER

-Put your
house
in the
Pink!

SUB-ZERO HER
'N W DEL
LE • SAVE $25.00
'

HANNAN Trace's Mike Ros-

~

~

BYERLY &amp;FELTS

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

UPPER RT. 7

~

s200 On Most Cars

~_ LOCAL @&gt; OFFICE
~
~

~

360 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

...
~

.~

.~

446.0699

~~
~

~@;@;®®®;

CARS - LIKE EGGS ARE CHEAPER IN THE COUNTRY! .

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION REPAIR

:~~ ~::e Mark Fields grabbed it ~ C~~~t~~~lNG ~

All

~ORK

.

.

GUARANTEED

9.5

CORNEA KEMPER HOllOW
&amp; KERR -BETHEl -ROADS

PH.
. "446·6639
.

PART .NUMBERS:

.49-50 59-50 81·50 87·50
55:-50 71·50 85-50 89-50

YOU CAN BUY A 1983 FORD RANGER 4x4 PIO&lt;UP FOR THE LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS OF $167.65 WITH $2,0oo.OO CASH DOwN OR ITRADE-IN AND.
WITH APPROVED CREDIT.
.

PAYMENT

r-rl'$.,...i&amp;_16_
· ....,,

11.9% A.P.R.
48 MONTHS

F'oDUtar~z• 0etc:0

Frledom II
8altlt'iel are also avallallle willl
toa aost terminals.

1979 OI.DS"EIGttT.aGttT- Bu'ijundy,,

air cond., cnise. locks. AMIFM

new tires, one owner loc31 car.
'---~111--SALE

1979 GMC C. IS SlaRA ClASSIC -

ENDS

2/26/SJ-~f---__,1

One of the worst things that can happen to you on a
cold winter morning is that your old battery is dead.
Before trouble strikes, see us and save. ·
,.
..
.
'
.
. ,
The ne11er.acld·water. no-worry Delco Freedom II can
be a true foul-weather friend. So get to us now· before
wjpter gets tO ygy 1 and save.

, au1D.trans., air cond.,

AM/FM/8-Track, carpeting. siding rear window, chrome rear step bumper, new
tires, rallye wheels:
$5195
-· -- - .

SUNDAY WINDOW SHOPPERS WELCOME

G &amp; J AUTO PARTS

MOTOR CAR BROKERS

1~

FIBERGLAS

REGULAR ...... $74".95

. AT PAT HILL FORD, INC.
$7575.00
FREIGHT
395.00
5% TAX
398.00
TITLE
10.00
TOTAL.
$8378.00
Down Payment· 2000.00
. AMOUNT FINANCING
$6378.00

Pink Fiberglas"' Insulation from Owens·
Corning keeps your home warmer in winter,
cooler in summer ... and helps lower your fuel
costs all year 'round.
Why not add an extra layer right now? It's
easy to install yourself. And what's more, it's
well worth the energy!

WITH
fAAOE

1979 PONTIAC AIIIIIRD FORMUlA and sit.oer,
V-8, power
steering and brakes, air cood., cnise control, tift wheel, rear window defog
AM/FM/CasseltE, brand new radial tires. Drives like brand new1

BASE

Just one year beyond that date
she'll be 100 years old, and she certainly will reach it, according to her
companion, Betty KJ:illz.

.

SHE.AND OSCAR Odd Mcintyre
were man1ed in 1900, also In Februa!)' Feb. 1B to be exact. Sam
Peeps was born ten days later in
Gallipolis, though Maybelle Mcln·
tyre was married In Newport, Ky ..
across the Ohio River from C!nclnna tl.

,,,j

BETZ HONDA SALES

13 15 18 10 4-60

Athens
1B 12 13 J3 6-62
Reaerve &amp;OOre: Athens 47, Irooton 38.

By J. SAM1JEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. 0 . 0 .
·Mcintyre, 99, will celebrate her
blrthday next Wednesday, Feb. 9,

Congress
told rural
life can
be improved-

Ll MITE DQUANTITIES

CB650

Soorebyq...........

has birthday Wednesday

AS THE 'JWO members ofthe
Kanawha Riflemen walked along
Second near Court, Galllpolltans
OL' PEEPS thinks this Is an OC·
ANOTHER SEPARATE Item
toOk their appearance a .s a taunting
caslon
on
which
her
fellow
Gallla
· this block, relatively speaking·, (1)
reads that Merrill Saunders and
of the townsfollk. The Rlfiemen
the building tho(
Countians can help Maybelle Mcln·
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brucker mo-.,. houses Brunlcardl were harassed and jeered and a
tyre celebrate. They can send birth·
Music (bull! in 1926) and (2) the
mob scene was only averted when
tored In 1983 tn Gaffney, S. C., to
TAWNEY,REMAINED here on
day
cards to Mrs. 0. 0. Mcintyre at
several other members ot the J&lt;a.
buUdlng on the Second Avenue
bring home Mrs. Saunders. Mrs.
the Second and Court COl'!ler. for
the Pleasant Valley Nursing Care
; corner that today holds Dan Tax.
nawha , Riflemen whisked their
Saunders has been there four
about a decade lmd a half Whereu·
Unit, Sand Hill Road, Point Plea·
: The latterlsthesubjectoftoday's . comrades out of town.
weeks. Their new granddaughter is
pon Ill! moved to the present toea·
sant
25550.
Mall It tomorrow or
Wrote one mail who was there:
. sketch. It was bulltabout1920byS.
Rosina Melissa Craig, who was
tlon. In the 1950s untU 1~ Madison
Tuesday so that it Will be sure to
• E. Gilmore as a photographic stu·
"If It had not been for the timing
born
Dec. 28 to Mr. and Mrs. Cal)'
Jeweler~ under Bill Wellman held
reach her on her birthday.
: dlo. One may notice on the Second
of the rescue, tempers would have
Craig.
the business at 33 Court. Then Taw·
· Avenues!deofthebulldlngthesky- flared and hostllltles would have
ney's opened here. a jewelry and·
light window, so necessary in the
begun then and there in Galllpolis
MRS. 0. 0. MCINTYRE
gift shop !bat was then consolidated
• early days of photography.
instead of the next sprtng at Fort
with the 400 block of Second store.
· . Gilmore was known around Gal, Sumter."
In the 1960s Dillon Realty was here
vance of Arbor Day. Co-sponsors of
GALLIPOLIS - Frank Mills III
. llpolls for some lour decades al·
_ Morehead of the Dispatch conand in the 1970s the Auto Club called
the event will be the Ohio Depart·
was recently re-elected chairman
• though he. alternately called Point tinued his diatribe against L!ncohi
the corner home.
men! of Natural Resources, Div·
·of the Gall!a Soli and Water Conser·
• Pleasant and Gallipolis borne. In . and the war even afler hosWitles ·
The upstairs of 33 Court was for
!sian of Forestry and the SoU
vat!on District board of
1.1195 Gtlmore along with a Mr. had broken out. He was finally remany years the office of Dr. L. E.
Conseryation Service.
supervisors.
. Smeltzer also specialized in all
quested to leave town before hewas
SmJth and then the headquarters
Gall!a Soli and Water Is presently
Other
officers
elected
during
the
paintings In the almost dilapidated
unceremoniously dipped into the
for the Junior Chamber of
taking
reservations for the spring
.
1983
reorgan!zatlonal
meeting
. building across the alley behind the
Ohlo River.
Commerce.
planting
season for rental of our nowere:
Blaine
A.
Taylor,
vice
chair, Sohlo station at Second and Court.
•· till com planter to area farmers.
man;
Noel
F
.
Massie,
secretary;
; THE GILMORE STUDIO when
IT IS IN'fERFSTING to note
Folk who want to write to James
District Technician, Kerry Martin
James E. Baughman, treasurer,
that the Dispatch office was heavily
' ·built at 33 Court about 1920 replaced
Sands may address their maD to
and
Doug Pauley, district conserand Gal)' Altizer, fiscal agent
on that spot a building that had
watched throughout the war and
Box 92, Claarksburg, Ohio 43115.
vationist, SCS, will be on hand to
Accepted as new district cooperabw-ned down in the 1910s. For many
give farmers assistance with plant·
tor
was
D
..
Dale
Bryant
with
167
WASHINGToN (AP) - The
years a tavern was located on this ·
!ng,
planter adjustment and recom·
acres
in
Perry
Township.
.
Reagan administration haS told
corner and at least during the Civil
mendatlons
during the planting
SWCD's
annual
tree
seeGall!a
Congress that the quality of life in
War customers watched some un·
season.
dling
sale
is
underway
until
March
usual happenings. around Second
rural America can be improved in
It was announced Gallla County
31. Information and order blanks
the 1980s if local and state
and Court ·
plat
directories are still av.ailable
may be obtained by contacting the
governments are given more say in
In 1860 the Gallipolis Dispatch
from
the district at a cost of $5. In·
District office, 529 Jackson Plke, .
the spending of public money.
newspaper office was located
eluded in the directory are private
Room 3G!-C, or calling 446-8687.
The administration is proposing
across Court Street, and one of the
property ownership locations
Annual
Arbor
Day
presentations
that some of the present federal
prtnclpal writers was one Joseph
within the county, a county map, all
will
be
Aprtl
8.
Each
sixth
grade
•'categorical aid'' programs, includ·
Morehead, a dyed·in·the-wool VIr·
m11ps and Galllpol!s
township
student
will
receive
a
white
pine
ing such standbys as rural housing,
· glnlan. In fact, the Dispatch's apstreets.
tree
seedlings
to
plant
in
obserbe turned over to the states through
; peal was toward transplanted sons
of Dixie who had mlgrat.ed across
blockgrants.
In a letter accompanying the
the Ohio. Some editorials in the 1860
report
on Friday, Agriculture
presidential electjon had drawn the
Secretary
John R. .Block said the
- ire of Galllpol!s1 Yankeedom and
. fundamental premise of the ~tra­
there was more·than one march on
tegy Is that "local and state
· the Dispatch.
· · In the fall of that same year, two
governments have the right- and
should have the autholity - to
llnlfarmed members of the Kandecide how public resources should
: wha Rlfiemen came strolling al~ng
be spent" in America's rural areas.
this corner. This outfit was organ"The federal role becomes one of
' !zed in 1856 by George S. Patton
support rather than direction, and
• (the grandfather 'of the WW II Pat·'
the agenda for action is set
: ton) In Charleston.
•
principally by rural citizens !hemCOMPOSED OF Tim wealthiest
selves," Block said.
young men of the Charleston area
The report was ordered by
(many of whose parents kept
BUH.T ABOUT 1920 by S. E. GBmore as a photographer's studio,
Congress
in the Rural Development
- slaves), the Kanawha Rlfiemen reo
the structure that today ho~ Dan Tax Is the oecond youngettt buBdtng
Act
of 198l. It was prepared
Policy
presented the belief that the South
on -that side of the Court ~block. 'lbe addresa a&amp; 33 Court was later
by
a:
25-member
a:dv!sol)' commit· ·
· was preparing Itself lor war even
home for Watts Studio, Tawney Studio, Madison Jewelry, Max's Jetee
appointed
by
Block.
as early as lS56 when Patton
welry, DWon Rel!ity, and the Auto Club, among olhers.
ent buildings
there total some
1,463 years or an average ·
edifice. Tbere aretwon'eophyteson

3-19. TOI'ALS tl-11-«1.
Ironton

~.().().~clntyre

we .can Imagine several Pinkerton
men meandering around this
comer keeping surveillance on the
people who went in and out of the
Dispatch office. We knew for a fact
that several people's mall was
opened in Gallipolis and that sev·
eral others were rontlned for questionlng on the grounds of spying.
As
to the present 33 Court building Gtlmore remained here until
1931 when a Mr. Watts purchased
th tudl0 In 1933 M
T
e s
!lll awney ·
•
joined Watts as partner anti the
next year Watts retired Ta
·
purchased the building in· 1934wney
·
·

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

$1995

siter scored 13 polDts against vi&amp;! ling Kyger Creek during
Friday's SVAC cage battle a&amp;
MercervU!e.

formed this well trained unit.
In addition, relations between
1
Gallipolis and her West V'-'·
u"uu a
neighbors (whlchweretnlBIKlsWia
part of Yirg!nla) were strained .
when In the-fall of 1~ a Charleston
newspaper had referred to Gall!polis as "N~l!s" because the old
French city was taking In so many
runaway slaves.

Special Corre8poodeat
GALLIPOLIS
tw
Secon -Court Street be. een
d and Third Avenues
(the odd-numbered side) could
· stack up against
the whole state In
terms of the age
of Its wildings.
flY
our calculalions the 12 differ·

Rename Mills S&amp;WCD head

PRICE

Continued from C-5
style of player we want and that
. they'll represent the institution in a
positive fashlon."
Jeff Gangwer, a 6-4, 190-pound
outfielder from Westerville, Ohio,
;md Steve Little, a 6-(175-pound
flrstbaseman from Pomeroy, are
the·seniors on the Redman squad.
Juniors include Allen Azar and
Dan Knost, both of Martella, and
Dave Sweatt of Twinsburg, Ohio.
The sophOmore contingent Is
made up of AI Ilettwiller of MeDer·
matt. Ohio, EriC Frazier of Columbus, Paul Haller of Jackson, John
Kalman of Twinsburg, Ohio, and
Sam Toppins of Sclotovllle.
F'n!shmen include Kevin Bryant
·of S:unbUrY, Ohio; Denny Compson
of Ainanda, Olilo; Joe DeCamp of
Wheelersburg; Maurtce·Harney 9f
North Olmsted, Ohio; Doug Koef·
· pie of Mason, Ohio; Kevin Kramer
of New' Riegel, Ohlo; Jeff Leath of
ChWicotbe; Brian Martin of McArthur; J . D . Merritt of Lucasville;
Mllce Mlller of Sabina, Ohlo; Mike
. Mllllpn ot Delaware. Ohio; Barry
· Schuater ot Batavia, Ohio; Flint ·
Tackett ot Lucasvtlle; Chris Veldt
ot Logan; Jett Wayland of Mlddl4!'
jlort; Joluf Weaver of W)leelersburg; Kent Wolfe of Racine and

19-lS-116.

SALE

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL

The ball bounded oH the front. of
the rtm, was picked oH by Ironton's
Tony Keith.
Keith's successfullayupcameafter time had expired.
Inrunning!tsseasonmarkto10-6
Ath ens made 23 of 62 fielders, 16 of

comebackattemptwasthwartedby
the defensive effort of Martin and
Moleswhoblockedseveralshotsput
up by the shorter brother comblna·
tionofJeffandDekeBarnes.
With 2:50 left, Hannan Trace cut
the Bobcat lead to six, 4l'r42 but that .
was the closest it could get.
Clutch toul shooting by seniors
Roger Stroud and Keith Clark and
Love plus two baskets by Martin
provided the margin ofvictol)'.
According to the charts, KY.ger
Creek hit 19 of 56 field attempts and ,
18 of 24 at the foul lines. Hannan
Trace sank 17 of 48 from the floor
and12ot17atthefreetllroWJanes.
KygerCreekheldaJ3.22rebound·
ingedge. Thel3obcatscommltted16
turnovers while liT had 13.
ThevlctoryleftKygerCreekwith
a 13-3 overall record and 6-2 slate in
the SVAC.
Hannan Trace fell to 9-8 overall
and 4-41n the league.
The Wildcats face Southern
Friday while· KYger Creek goes to
Southwestern and returns home
Saturday against Miller.
Coach Mark Hartman's Little
Bobcats captured their llth victory
this season, 41-32, in theprellmlnary
game. ChuckVogelledthewaywlth
16 points while Steve Waugh added
12. Mark Sheets paced the WUdklt·
tens with 12.
·

By JAMES SANDS

bur)! 2-3-7: Motes Hui StroUil~: L&lt;M
7·2-16; D.Marttn3-U;R.Martbi2-01. Totais

Hannan Trace's fourth period

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary ·

Court St. could stack up against any in state .·

GALLIPOLIS
'

0

240 Jhlrd Avenue

MILES FROM HOLZER IEDK;AL CENTER ON STATE RT. 160.

4~·1813 .

.PHONE 446-6592
SEE ALAN OR JAY EVANS

1704 Eu~rn
448-4204

Ave ..

MASON

992-2139

773-5511

119

w, 2nd

Route 33

autosto...s ... Tlwt's one ... yuul

·Gal)' 1Jckafoose or Chillicothe.

.

( '

for11·roll
minimum ·
purchase of
Owens-Corning
Pink Fiberglas®
Insulation

- TM &amp; © 1ae2 United Arti111
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

AC-Delco is the way tq~ go

PT. PLEASANT AUTO PARTS
POMEROY

tiD BACK

2611 Jackson Ave.

515 lain St.
675·1520

•

675-2731

'

CAROLINA
.LUMBER
.
.
AND
·.
SUPPLY COMPANY
675-1160

312 Sixth Street

Point Pleasan

Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.-.
Sat. 8 a.m. · 12 noon
·
•

�Page--C-8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepart-'-Gallipolis, Ohio

Agriculture and our community

Features

with their PIK grain, once dellvery
is taken, that they desire except put
It under a CCC loan (l'!glliar or
reserve) .
7 -Participants' only dlrecl cost
for PIK Is for IQadlng PIK grain If It
IB not already on their farm.
8- Farmers who currently have
grain under CCC Loan (regular or
reserve) must make that grain
a vallable to the CCC at the time of
the sign up for PIK.

1 _: Corn, wheat and grain
sorghum producers can receive
payment !rom the U.S. governSip Up
ment for diverting acreage from
I - Sign up began January 24,
crop production tO conserving uses. 1!&amp; and ends on March 11, 1983.
2 -Participants In PIK automat- There IB no grace penod. RAP sign
ically participate In RAP (reduced up also ends March 11.
acreage program). They receive
2- Sign up In PIKautomatlcally
RAP benefits (eUglbllity for commitls the producer to RAP.
pnce support loans, deficiency pay3- Contracts signed arebtndlng.
ments and diversion payments)
That Is, participants must comply
plus paymerit- ln-klnd for PIK or face substantial penalties. (Proacreage diversions.
posed penalty for noncompUance is
3 - PIK participants contract to 20 percent of the target pnce on all
reduce planted acreage by 10 to 30 grain that would have been eUglble
percent of their estabUshed base, In ·for i&gt;aYment with part!clpation.)
addition to the W percent required
4 - Sign up occurs at the county
In RAP_ They receive grain from
ASCS office.
·
the government (CCC) as pay5 - All Interested parties must
ment Payment rates are ~ per- sign the PIK contract. These incent of the established yield 'on the clude the farm operator and the
PlK diverted acres for corn and landlord If share-rented. The landgrain sorghum and 95 percent for . lord in cash-rent IS riot an Interested
wheat
party.
4- Ohio participants will he able
6 - Final dates for - measuring
to take delivery of PIK grain any and reporting actual diverted
time 1n these penods:
acreage are: Wheat- June 1, 1983;
Wheat: July 15,1!&amp; to Decemher Corn and grain sorghum- Jl•ly 15,
15, 1!&amp;; Corn and Grain Sorghum:
1!&amp;.
October 15, 1!&amp; to March 15, 1984.
7 - No Interim reports on
PIK will be fortelted If dellvery is acreage signed up will be Issued. A
not taken during these periods.
report on total sign up will be Issued
5 - Fanners have the option of March 28.
bidding to have their entire crop
8 - If any of the provisions of PIK
base In the PIK program. They do change after sign-up, the farmer
this by specifying the PIK payment has the option to cancel his PIK
rate, as a ~rcentage of their estab- contract.
l~hed yield, at which they would
9 -Appeals on base acreage andivert their entire crop base to cond/ or established yields on any fann
servtng uses. PIK apples to aU base will not be accepted by county
acreage except that which qualifies
ASCS offices after Feb. 5.
for paid diversion under RAP (10
SpeclaJ Considerations
percent for corn and grain
1 - Participants In PIK will resorghum, five percent for wheat) . ceive grain as payment: !'lot cash,
Bids will be accepted after March
not certificates for grai!l. There11 at CCC's option, starting with the lore, even though the farmer is enlowest bid In the county. But, In no
titled to receive grain, he will have
ca5e will more than 50 percent of
nothing of value unW he can actuthe entire crop base In a county be
ally get the grain from CCC during
accepted Into au acreage dlverston
the designated dellvery period.
programs.
This means that he has nothtog to
6- Participants can do anything
put up as loan collateral with a com-

· au

February 6, 1983

Dairy Club organized in '82

4--H activities

·Carter releases latest
infonnation on "Payment in
Kind' program for residents
By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
Gallla County
GALLIPOUS - My column tcr
day is devoted entirely to the new
P!K - "Payment In Kind" - Program for fanners. This is the latest
Information that I have.
·•

llliint Plea..nt, W. Va.

:S tate/ ational

\

ByFREDJ. DEEL
· C. Glassburn, Andy. Howard, 1bn
the 4-H trOIIJ'&amp;Illl&gt;r 1983 listed and
our n!llce and we will try to find a
Exteu!loa A,eai, 4-B
Merry,~ Moore, Melalne Nl. - can be an Important resource.for
club In their area.
GAlliPOLIS - The present
day, David Snyder, David Vanc6,
advlaors, l'lll!mbers and parents.
. We also are always· JookiDi tor
Daley Club was started last year In
Gene Vanco, Brian YOUlli, Chuck
The 1983 celendars are sponscred
aduh volunteen to work with youth
1982. there had been a Dairy Club
Young and Kevin Young.
by Commercial and Savtngs Bank, .. as 4-H Club Advisors. lbls Is an op.
several years ago In Gallla County
As yoU can see the Dally Club has w. a "Dick" Brown Insui'ance and
Jll)$lllty for an aduli to contribute
but It disbanded alter several years
been a very active .group for the
O'Den
Lumber Co. The 4-H protheir skills and Ume to belp provide
In existence. The present club saw
past _year In promoUili the lmporgram Is very appreciative of the ·youth with an oppoctwdty to join
a very active year 11)1983 under the ~t dairy products and It it easy to shppcrt of these businesses, as the 4-H. Four-U 1s a Prosram tht all
leadership of Becky Vanco and
see tbelr lmportancetothefutureof calendars are lqlportant to the suc- youth are ellilble to Join wll&gt; are
Joyce Young, the club advisors.
the dairy Industry lnGalllaCounty.
cess of the Gallla County 4-H nine years of &amp;gl! as ot Janua~y 1 or
The 1!£1 ottlcers were: Ttm Merry,
Program.
In the third grade and have not
president; J. C. Glassburn, vice
4-B Caleadan
passed tbelr 19th birthday as ot
president; Annette 'Moore. secreAny 4-H lldvlsO-s who have not
Clubl Bearpnldng
Jan. 1of the ciiin!Dt year. For more
tary; Carole Cannlcllae~ news rehad the cllaDce to pk:k up their 1983
Many clubs have ain!adY reInformation
on the 4-H program In
porter; David Vance, recreation
4-H calendars tor thel,r club are enorganized and many others are In
Gallla
County
contact the Gallla
leader; Gene Vanco, treasurE!' and
oouragt!d to do ·so as SQOn as possithe process so If any Interested
~ty
Extension
Oftlce,1502 EastChuck Young, .h ealth and safety
ble . These calendars have
youth are having any trouble Ioca:t· · em Avenue, ·GalllpoUs, OH, or
chalnnan.
,Important dates and activities of
lng a club w~ urge them to contact
phone (614) 446-7007.
·
The 4-H Dairy proJect Is very Important In Gallla ~as Datryls
the leading agricultural ra-octuct
that Is produced In GaWa County.
All of the members In the Dally
Club are enrolled ln.at lea~one4-H
datryproject. ThestartoftheDalry
Club last year was cme olthe major
1818 Eastern Ave.
rea.sons for the Increase In dairy
Gallipolis, OH.
proJects In Gallta County Junior
Ph. 446--1113
Fair. In addition to·'eithlbltlng the
(} TIRES
project at the Fair the Datry Club
also spent a great dellloftlmedecora tlng the barn and promoting the
•
datry Industry during the Fair.
Other activities the club did Included participation In the May 1
Clean-Up Ohio Day when they
Dayton lhorobred_Radial
cleaned up the area around Tycoon
• WORKHORSE STRENGTH- F: l;;:~~·:~"
Lake. Among !leld trtps that they
• COMMANDING RIDE - Poly"""'
Co1&lt;l
took part In was one to the
R;uhal Body
Broughten Food Plant In Marietta
• THRIFTY RUNNING - R&gt;&lt;J·~.; ~"""
and several dalryfarmsforvarlous
• SUREFOOTED TRACTION- ~~.~~·~::;:~;,
demonstrations.
Durln!i June of 1982, they prepared an exhibit for the display
case at the Bossard Mernonal Ubrary - Recognition of· Dairy
Month. They also part!clpa ted In
Sllf
PRICE
F.l.l
the Fourth of July parade later In
the summer. Their members w~
Pl65/101113
41JO
1.67
very active In Datry activities
45.65
1.78
PI¥110Rl3
IAI.a'fie
throughout the year Including the
Pi95175RI4
49J4
2.06
VVti
••• ~
Pl55/ aom P205n5RI4
Dairy Princess Contest, In which
51.45
2.31
four members participated lnclud·
P205nSRI5
53.18
2.38
whttewall
lng the Senior I&gt;alry Princess P2tsnSRI5
56.10
2.49
Plus $1.44 FU.
Ellen Eggleton and the Junior
P225n5RI5
59.67
2.10
Dairy Princess - C:..role
Carmichael.
,,
Dairy Club members are Carole
Carmichael, Chrts Carmlcha.el,
Wayne Dillard, Ellle Eggleton,
NO
Craig Eggleton, Katie Eggleton, J .
NO
.
0~ NO

·

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OUTSTANDING TIRE!
..

OUTSTANDING·PRICE!

OLD FASHION SERVICE
WITH MODERN EQUIPMENT

~~

CHARGE

OiARGE

~

~,j,

sides over his own funeral via videotape (upper left)
Friday In the Cleveland suburb of Panna, Olllo. Dot-

·
I

'

CHARGE

.

Dayton Tin•,. t. Dayton TirP'i &lt;\ haytnn Ti~~~ t:&gt; Dayton Tire' ', Dayton Tu-..,

In Gallipolis, it's
Frenchtown Car Co.
striving to be your

sauea on
our redUced cost
auto 1oans1

Sundci Februa

D

!-=::-"'"
6 1983

27, died Tueeday from cancer but the a880Clate
palltor of a Mansfield chiii"Ch prepared for his own
death hy making lhe videotape. (AP Laserphoto).

100,

· poufl(l the pulpit and wave the Bible at you, but hell IS
PARMA, Ohio (AP) -The Rev. J;unes Dotson so
a reaUty.
believed In the Christian way of death, his friends say,
"Please don't die without being saved, without
that he arranged to deliver that message at his own
having your sins forgiven . I can't walt to be reunited
funeral - by videotape.
with you aU, In heaven."
"This is very much In character for Jim. For him,
Dotson quoted !rom the Bible throughout ~
this was a message, not a grandstand,"'the Rev. Cay
Siddall, an associate pastor who worked with Dotson
30-mtnute sermon and told the a udience that he
at the Brookwood Church of Christ In Mans!leld, said . 'wanted his funeral to be a " victory celebrl!tlon." Hels
after the young minister's funeral Friday.
survived by his wife, Mara , and daughter, Nicole:
Dotson, 'll, died Tuesday a,fter suffering from
Siddall said after the funeral that he had planned
the service with Dotson three months ago. "I was
cancer for two years. He was an associate pastor at
kind of hesitant at first. But when I got to see the tape,
the non-denomlpatlonal church, which has a national
I felt good about what was said."
membership of about14,00J. Thetapewas played at a
He said Dotson's school, Abilene Christian
memorial in Mansfield on Wednesday afternoon.
University, wanted a copy of the tape to use as a .
At the service Friday, SlddaU delivered a short
teaching tool.
eulogy and Introduced the tape.
"It doesn't really matter what I might say leading
Into the tape," Sldd"!ll said. "What he has to say Is
much more Important"
Dotson, who recOrded the tape In his church on Jan.
5, appears wearing a yellow syveater and holding a
copy of the Bible. The videotape monitor was_placed
on a stand to the left of Dotson's casket, which had
been open untn the tape was played.
"I know at first that It might seem strange that a
person might preach at his own funeral," Dotson told
the audience of aboutlOOpeople. "It was not just to do ·
something od&lt;f or strange. Maybe if another person
were to say these thtogs, you might be offended."
Dotspn discussed the way he dealt with his cancer
and his death.
"Only the Christian is better off after death,"
· Dotson said, "For some people, death will be a
terrible thing. I 've been very open with some of you as
I've struggled against this cancer. I'm not in fear of
· VIDEO FUNERAL - Rev. James Dol8oa Ia
death as a Christian.
shown
preaching his own funeral sel'\'lce Friday Ill
."What I really don't want is for anyone to blame
the
Cleveland
suburb of Panna, Ohio. 'lbe 27-year-old
God for my death," Dotson said. "Let my death b\!an
minister
died
of cancer Tuesday and had made tiM.
encouragement for you. Death is a reward, if you love
videotape
earller
In antlclpallon of his death. (AP
God.''
Laserpbolo).
"This is not fire and brimstone. I'm not going to

Car bomb kills, .injures
dozens in Beirut

BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP) - A remote-control car
bomb blew up outside the Palestine Research Center
and the Libyan news agency in west Beirut Saturday,
turning both buUdlngs Into Infernos. Pollee said the
blast ldlled at least 13 people and wounded 53.
Screaming victims tlied to climb down exterior
water pipes or ropes made out of torn curtains as fire ·
engines sped to the scene. Other people stood on
Oaffijng balconies crying for help. .
A Lebanese army explosives expert, Sgt Youssef
Bitar, said a car laden with explosives set off by
remote control caused the thunderous blast wblch
shook several blocks of the west Beirut neighborhood.
It was unclear what the explosives were, but Bitar
said the force of the bomb was equivalent to 528
pounds of TNT.
,
Several cars raced from the scene carrying
blood-covered victims ..At least a dozen ambulances
rushed to the area .
There was no Immediate claim of responsibility for ,
the bombing.
"The blast hulied my car onto the sidewalk," said

I

~~

~c,'\

merclallender between the time he
signs up for PIK and actual PIK
dellvery.
(To be continued)

VIDEO FUNERAL- Rev. James Doillon pre-

$38~,?

the
Thorobreds!

Section

Videotaped funeral: · lio
grandstand say friends

---

Nationally famous tires
Sale Priced for a limited time

1rnnt!i· itntintt

Associated Press photographer Zuhair Saade who
was driving past when the explosion happened.
"Tongues of flame shot out of the two buUdlngs and
scores of panicked women shrieked." ·
The blast sent a huge tower of black smoke rising
Into the sunny afternoon sky near the western end of
bustling Hamra street. west Beirut's main shopping
center.
French peacekeeping troops brandishing submachlne guns ran toward the scene.
• "I flew out of my seat and the bedroom door was
knocked off its hinges," said Sira Dolian, who lives
near the seven-story buDding that houses the PLO's
research center.
"Hundreds of people stood around screaming and
shouting, the whole (Palestinian building) is on fire.
There Is a car burning on the street below."
Policemen shot a few rounds In the air to disperse
the crowd and clear the way for ambulances and cars
to rush victims to hospitals.
The Libyan news agency is located In the six-story
buDding that faces the Bible House buDding across a
narrow street.
,

BOMB - A rescue worker pu!Ung a wounded
woman from the wrecJ1ase caused by the 111811111ve
bomb explosion Saturday oulslde the bulldlnp howr
lng the Paleodne research center and the Uhyan

news agency bt the c::m sector of Beirut. At least
eight people were
and more lhan 50 others
wounded, and scores were trapped In the building
that caughlllre. (AP Wirephoto).

·Shultz says China visit
may help ease friction

.

No. l Used Car &amp;Truck Outlet

•

PEKING (AP) - Secretary of State George P.
Shultz said Saturday his talks with Chinese officials
may make It easter to solve frictions oVer Taiwan,
textne Imports and other problems.
But In a ll-rnlnute news conference, Shultz offered
no evidence that any of those problems was closer to
resolution because of his four-day visit to Peking.
Shultz decllned to say whether his Chinese hosts ·
repeated public statements descnbtng the Soviet
Union and the United States as "hegemontsts."
·
But he did say: "From the standpoint of the United
States, we don't think we are remotely comparable to
the Soviet Union. And we shouldn't be put In the same
bag. "
Shultz repeated his pledge that the United States
wUl stlictly adhere .to Its promise last August not to
Increase arms sales to Taiwan and· eventually to
reduce them. Peking claims sovereignty over the
island.
He declined to respond to a question as to when
actual decreases In such sales can be expected,
saying he did not come to China to "renegotiate" last
year's agreement.

1981 OLDS CUtLASS L S.
/;;{
•

'

Abeautiful intermediate sedan inside and out Mileage reads 23,599. Equipped with
cruise contrn, rear defroster, delaY wipers, wire wheel covers and much more. See it
tOOay!,

1982 MERCURV ZEPHYR G.S.

our lOwer ratas mille
now aaraft time to BDDIIII

Neither, he said, did he view his role during many
hours of discussions with seven of China's top leaders
as a negotiator on textile quotas or high technology
sales.
"I hope that the result of the visit is to establish
understanding, trust and mutual confidence between
US," Shultz said.
He acknowledged that he and China's leaders had
"plenty of difficult things to work through," but he ,
·
declined to give details.
"The Taiwan issue has been a problem ; it was
raised several times by the Chinese side, and we
discussed It, " Shultz said. "And the most Important
thing Is that we have made some commlbnents with
respect to this problem, and we live · up to our
comrnlbnents "
Shultz descrihed his talks with the Chinese
leadership, Including 2'h hours today with top leader
Deng Xlaoplng, as "penetrating and worthwhile."
"My hosts said I should remember that candor was
something that could take place among .friends,"
Shultz said. "And I received a great deal of friendship

..

this week.''

.

.. ·..

Glenn hopes Reaga~ IS
right--hut doubts it ·

.

I

F.8

•

...

·•

. •custOmer subject to loan approval.

.

Farmers
·Bank

..•

1977 CHRYSLER

4 DR. IUWPoRT
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"
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FDIC

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DOING TilE n.l'ING - Sea. .Jolla Glemt, D-

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'

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - Sen. John Glenn, who
expects to seek the Democratic nomination for
president, says President Reagan's optimism about
the nation's economy should be regarded with
caution.
"The administration had predicted the recovery
was going to start in the last quarter of last year,"
Glenn said Friday. "So I dOn't have much confidence
In ·the'll'drr\lnlstratlon's predictions."
.
. Reagan said earller In the day tha.t a sUght
downtwn In the nation's unemployment figures
marked a poslhve turn for the economy:
"I sincerely hope the admlnlstrat!bn Is .right,"
' Glenn, D-Ohio, said in
news conference at his
Cleveland office.
· "The adinlnlstratlon Is very quick to take credit for
every Indication of a move forward," he said. "But
when the economy moves backward, they take no
credit for tliat."
Glenn said he expects "a saw-tooth pattern" In the
·economy', with little real consistency toward
Improvement:

a

•

renchtawn Car Ca.

Deng Xlaoplag Saturday In the Great Wall of People.

Shullz loki Deng alter extensive meetings with Chinese ·leaders that there remain a few cHsatreeme.U.:
(AP Radiophoto) .

•

W e realize that when "new car fever" strikes, it strikes hard. We at The Farmers
Bank want to help you cure that fever. Therefore, we are offering 12.67%•
financing on any new car loan made during the month of February. All you have
to do is make your best dea l, then bring your purchase order to one of our
qualified loan officers.
·
·

YOU MAKE THE DEAL AND LET OUR EXPERTS TAKE CARE OF
THE REST

SHULTZ MEE'IS DENG- U.S. Secrelary of

state George P. Shulb cbats with China's top leader

......_,oul

wile piloted from Cleveland to Dullea
Alrpol'llll lbudllly, 'fupita. (AP Llllerpholo ),

N

.,

-

He said the Reagan administration's planned tax
cuts are too large and Interest rates remain too high.
Glenn said the economy wUl be one of the most
·crucial issues in his campaign. Other Important
concerns will be nuclear disarmament and research
and development
The fiitng of his statement of candidacy 1n January
with the Federal Elections Commission quall!led http
for federal campaign . matching fun¢;. Ohio
Democrats have ·scheduled a fund-r aiser for tJie
fonner astronaut In Columbus on Feb. 18 anc;l hope to
raise $tW,OOJ. ·
•
"The main thing now is that we get our issues out:"
Glenn said. "This Is a time to ventilate our concerns
and to get our Views across."
.
Concerning the shutdown by .the nation's lndependent truckers, Glenn said he agrees with Reagan that
Congress should not conskler reviewing recentlY
approved gas tax and user fees until the shutdowp
stops,
"If we have to reconsider It, we should do it, but not
'in an almolJphere of violence," Glenn said.

�~ Pome"'y Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleamnt, W. Va.

Page-D-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

·~~

February 6, 1983

••

February 6, 1983

Lessons may be learned from warsemtnar
\

By LINDA DE UTSCH
Associated Preis Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalists, fanner
CIA agents and military policy
makers such as Nguyen Cao Ky
gather this week for a conference
called "Vietnam Reconsidered:
Lessons From a War."
A.J . ·'Jack" Langguth, a former
war correspondent and journalism
professor who organized the four·
day gathering at the University of
Southern California, says he doesn't
want the significance of the war to
be lost on a1new genera lion - or on

Bolivi~

.191i5, says the Idea tor "Vietnam

-·--·
-

governmentsays ithassent ex~Nazl

Klaus Barbieback.toFrance,where

~he 1s

wanted for the World War II .
killings of French Jews and
. lance fighters.
res IS
Known as the "Butcher of Lyon,"
Barbie also is sought by West
Germany for war crimes.
Barbie was due to arrive in Paris
at 5 p.m. local time (11 a.m. EST}
today after leaving the Bolivian
capital Friday night, Interior Minis·
ter Mar\oRoncalAntezanasaid.
The French government says

Barbie directly participated ln 'the
deaths of hundreds of French Jews
and French resistance fighters In
the Lyon area.
French officials also say Barbie
klllln f
took part Indirectly in the
gs o
several thousand more people while
he headed the SS Elite Guard In
Lyon.
"No other country would accept
him," MariO Ronca! told a news
conference lateFrlday nlght.
"The expulsion was to any
countiY thatwouldrecelve him, and
that was France," the Bolivian
official added.

Sources at a military airport on
the outskirts of La Paz said Barbie
lett aboard a military aircraft.
Barbie's departure came amid
numerouscon!Uctingreportsabout
what was to happen to him.
"Iwanttotntormyou(hatatthis
precise moment the presumably
German citizen Klaus Barbie Is
leavtngthecountiYinthecompany
of a doctor and two security
·guards," MariO Ronca! said.
·
MartoRoncalsaldBarble "le!ton
a plane whose name they did not
wish to divulge to protect the
securttyofthepassengers."
WestGermanyalsohasaskedfor

---

·-

Reconsidered" was spurred by his
permanent United Nations represtudents at USC Journaitsm School
sentatlve of VIetnam, will particl·
who knew little about the war.
pate tiom NeW York tbroilgh an
StudelltstromUSCandsurround· electronic hookup arranged by
tng universities are an:tong the 1,00l ' Calltomla Public · Radio and Na~
participants expected to attend ~
tlonal Public Radio.
dl!ferent panel sessions Sunday . A State Department spokesman
through Wednesday.
said travel by representatives of
Although Langguth anticipates a
nations with whom the United
calm, dispassionate examination of States does not have dlsplomatlc
Issues, the ci&gt;nferencealready has
relations ts restriCted to a 25-rillle
· stirred controversy with word that
radllis or the Uiilted Nations
'the U.S. government refused a visa buDding In New York except when
tor. a repre;entative of Vietnam to ,dlplornatlc business requires
attend
travel.
·

Barbie's extradition, accustng him thatsumearllerlntheweekandtlie
of the murder of a French citizen accrued Interest on It Frtday.
durtngtheNazloccupatlonofLyon.
Barbie, 69, has lived tn Bolivia
The West German request still Is since 1951. In 1957 he was granted
pending before the Bolivian Su· Bolllllan cltlzenshlp and took the
Court
preme
.
·name Klaus Altmann.
Asked about the West German
·
·
·rna hlgbly-celebrated
case the
·
request, Marlo Ronca! said: ·~ . Bolivian Supreme Court ruled in
West Gennans did not wish to 1974 that Barbie . could not be
recelvehlm,hoplngtnsteadthatthe extradited to France because an
bet
the s
adlloo
did
t exist
case, now
ore
upreme extr t
treaty
no
Court, would have ended up tn their between the two countries.
favor."
Shortly before Barbie's expul·
The former Nazi was arrested slon, a French Embassy otrlclalln
Jan. 25, and charged with defraud~ La Paz said his government said It
ing the state-owned mtnlng com~ would be filing a new extradltiOJt
pany Comlbol of $lO,!XXl. He paid request.

Lengthy tractor company strike

spa~ks

::

•

---Business Briefs:-....,
Name Reed assistant cashier

.

'Homey' approach may work

Multimedia earnings up 12 percent

~

LONNIE LEONARD

TIM THOREN

Area personnel file
GALLIPOLIS - Lonnie A.
Leonard has been promoted to
, director of divisiOn operations
for Columbus &amp;)luuthern_()hio
Electrtc Co. in the GaUlpells·
Middleport area.
Responsible !or admlnlstra·
tlon of company activities In the
area, Leonard has been with
c&amp;SOE since 1956 and worked ln
the Weliston~ ·and Coll!1flbus
office before his move to
· ... --" t"Balllpolis.
An Oak Hill native, Leonard
has a degree in business admln·
lstratlon from Franklin Unlver·
sliy and Is a recent 'member of
the Galllpolls Area Chamber of
Commerce. ·

'
POMEROY
- Tim Thoren,
23.JXl Pine Grove·Rd., Racine, a
tall1982 graduate o!Rio Grande
College With a bachelor's In

sales and marketing, has joined
the staff of Dale IDII Ford
Tractor, West Main Street,
Pomeroy. ,
Son of Pete and Joyce Thoren,
he headed the student program
board at RGC and was president
of Alpha Delta Upsilon frater·
nlty. He participated In lntrarnu·
rill foo~ball. ~ketiJall, volley·
ball ·a nd softball.
A Southern High School gradu
ate,
has been Involved
with various asj)ects Or !arming
throughout his life.

Thoren

POMEROY - Leslie Fultz of
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., Is
chairman of the Meigs County
delegation for the Ohio Hard·
ware Association and wDI be
attending the 1983 Mid-America
Show and Convention.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A top
Environmental Protection Agency
otflclal has resigned following
accusations that she lied under oath
to Congress, but the subcommittee
chalnnan who made the charge
says he won't seek prosecution.
EPA Assistant Administrator
Rita M. Lavelle, who directed the
agency's toxic waste clean-up
program, submitted her res\gna·
tlon abruptly late Friday.
She gave as a reason her deslne to
"get back to Cailtomla'; and made
no mention about the controversy
suiTOWidlng EPA' whistleblower
Hugh Kaufman.
In ~mber, she denied under
oath to ~ a House Science and
Technology subcommittee that she
had ordered an lnvestlgation of
Kaufman or that she had said she
would like to flre_]J!Jn.
"As a senior manager, I would
never rriake sucll an outrageous
statement," she had said.
. However, the suiJcornnilttee produced an affidavit disputing .that
conf.entlon frcm Richard M . Cam,.P. bell, EPA'sfonnerasslstanttnspec·
tor general.
.
"Ms.Lavelleadvlsedbolhmyself
and (111spector General Matthew)
Novick that lhe wlsbed to fli'e Mr.
KaUfman and lhe lw:lped that we
coo.ld accommodate her request for

an investigation," Campbell said in
his af!ldavit.
Subc;onunltlee Chairman James
Scheuer, D-N.Y., reacting to Ms.
Lavelle's resignation, said he believed his commltlee had prepared
a "strongcaseforpreJuJ:Ycharges' '
against Ms. Lavelle.
Scheuer said, though, that his
committee would not !mward those
charges to the Justice Department
for prosection, saytng he believed
the resignation "closes the books on
Ms. Lavelle'sactlon.S."
EPA otlclals should r~allze that
"Congress will not tolerate actions
which abridge federal employee's
first amendment rights," Scheuer .
Said,
/
' Kaufman last year won a ruling
!rom the Labor Department, which
admtnlsters. a law protecting fed.
era! employees, that he had been
harassed in·an effort to slleace· his
frequent crltlclsin qf agency policy.
TheEPAhasappealedthatdeciSion
and a hearing on the case hilS been
set for Feb. 14:
EPA Administrator Anne Gor·
such, wbo Is herself lacing a
contempt of Congress citation for
retustng to tum over hazardOus
waste documents, said Ms. Lavelle
was leaving an "&lt;qanlzatlon on
which we can continue to build."
r

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HAMLIN C. KING

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GALLIPOLIS - The ACCQIII\~
tancy Board of Ohio has notl!led
Hamlin c. King that he has passed
all tour parts of the certified public
accountant's examination.
King took the examination last
November at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds in Columbus. He , ,
completed his coursework in ac·
counting at Rio Grande Community
Coliege over the past two years.
King said he expects to use the
license tn his Income tax practice. .
King received his bachelor's .,
In political science, juris . ''
doctor and master of science In
public admlnlstrntlon degrees from .. ",
Ohio State University. He Is ·
currently pursuing a master's
degree in philosophy at Ohio
University. He has practiced law tn
Gaillpolis for 15 years, and is a
former Gallla County prosecuting "
attorney.

nee

Fitness
. DALLAS, Texas (AP)-Rilnners
who run moll" than about 15 mUes a
,week are getting more exercise
Ithan theY need, says Dr. Kenneth
.Cooper, a founder of the running
hoom.

' '

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PAUL A. BARNEIT

....
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RIO GRANDE - Two busi·
reside on Baum Addition in
ness executives have been a!&gt;'
Pomeroy. They have two chlld·
pointed to serve on Rio Grande
ren Cynthia and Michael.
College's board of trustees.
Glover, a 1961 RGC graduate
They are Paul A. Barnett,
with a bachelor's in secondary
president or Bank One or
roucatlon, presentiy directs
Pomeroy, and Ronald K.
worldwide marketing, advertls·
Glover, group executive vice
lng and strategic planning for
president of marketing !or
Americl!ll Express cards and
consuiner !tnanclal services at
travelers chequeS.
American Express Co.
In 13 years with ·American
Barnett has beeri employed
Express, Glover has served as
lor the past 23 years with Bank
chief operating officer for Amer· ..
One, and has been president for
lean Express business ln the
the past 2'h years. He Is a
Asla·Pacl!lc~Australia region
member of the Ohio Bankers
and was part of the company's .... ,
Assoclatloo .Credit Conunlttee
launch of five currency cards in
Asia. .
.
.
and the executive coriunlttee of
Group Seven of the 'Ohio
From 1979 to 1982 he was
Bankers AII&amp;OClatlon.
senior vice president and chief
,
Barnett !P'aduated !rom Ohio
operating omcer or Europe. . ' , "
State University with a bacheMiddle East-Africa region.
lor's In finance and later atPrtor to those assignments, he , ,.,..
tended the University of Wlscon·. ~
was general manager lor card
. . business tn Mexico.·
·
,., ....
sin's graduate school of banking
aiid Ohio University's Ohio
A member of the American
School or Banking.
Marketing Association, he also
Barnett Is also a member ot
serves on the boards of several
Twin City
Pomeroy
·American Express sub5ldlarles.
Cllamber of Commerce, Twin
:MartJed to the former Ka·
City Sbrtne Club, Meigs County '
roJyn Sue ;llrnemlan, a 1961 .
EJderbl Houstng Corp., Big
RGC graduate with a bachelor's
Brothers-Big Sisters and the
tn ~tary educatioll, the . ~··
Pwneroy Gun Club. He Is also a
Glovers A!Side in Chatham,
Melp COunty representative to
N.J., with their two daughters, .. · ~~
Kara and Ronna.
the 648.board. ' '
He and his wife, Patrtcla;

RotarY.

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Tumln~

King passes

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RGC board names
two new trustees

. EPA official resigns
after perjury charge

'•. ......._

.,

-: AN INDEPENDENT WHO'S STILL RUNNING-

bitterness .· C.PAexams

bearded man bl)lanced a picket sign . bunkered near a sputtering fire In a
"These guys have been living on
seeking a ~len\pt'llf-court ruling
on his shoulder as he tugged the
barrel . outside the gate of a $65-a~week strike benefits, and the , against the union, citing alleged
hood of his parka tighter and
sprawling Caterpillar Tractor Co. pressure is buDding," says, Phll
vlolatlonsofaNov.3tnjunctlonthat
engine plant.
Amlgonl, chairman of the bargain·
llmJtedplcket numbersandguaran·
"It's a good tbtngourwlvesaren't . tng unit at tile Mossville plant,
teed the company free access to Its
out bere picketing," he said. where strtkers stood shoulder to
plants.
"They'd be carrying baseball bats shoulder and blocked 2,tm whiteDespite the legal actioll, some
and smashing windows."
collar employees from their ]ob5
strikers say radical action may be
It Is a sign of the deepening recently.
the only way to attract attention to
POMEROY - Bruce J . Reed has recently been named assistant
bitterness tn central Illinois as a
A slmllar confrontation occurred
their plight.
cashier at Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
strike by about 2f,!XXl United Auto two days later at a Caterpillar plant
"We need things Hke this worker
Reed. who resides at 100 EbenPZer St., Pomeroy, began his
Workers against tlie Peorta-based in East Peorta. Jim O'Connor,
blockade to get the public aware of
banking career tn the Institution's bookkeeping department whUe he
manufacturer of )Ieavy equipment president of UAW Local974ln East
the fact that the company· won't
was In high school. He was also a teller during breaks !rom college,
h;ls stretched Into its filth month.
Peorta, predicts the company.wlll
budge," AmlgQnlsays.
which brings his years of service with the bank to seven.
The strike affects 18factortes In six seeaturther"lncreaselnactlvityon
A federal mediator has called the
His responslbllltles as assistant cashier Include reviewing and
union and company back together
states - Ohio, llltnols, Iowa, the picket lines."
approving loan. requests and assisting with the loan department's
Tennessee , Colorado an·d
Ca~lllar responded to the
Cor a meeting Tuesday In St. Louis.
overall operation.
Pennsylvania.
actionS against the non·strtkers by It would be the first meeting
between the two sldesslilceDec.17.
A Meigs High School graduate, Reed attended Ohio State
.
University, where he received a bachelor's degree In finance. Hels
also a graduate of the Ohio School of CoriSumer Banking, a one-year
program at Kent State University. Reed will also begin the two-year
Ohio School of Banking Program at Ohio University thts summer.
By BilL VALE
granted the new bank a extensiOn.
moneymakers for you," said
Active ln many civic organizations, Rlied is president of the Meigs
A!I!IQC!•h!d Press Writer
"I should have taken the big bucks
Hendricks.
County Jaycees and a member of Pomeroy Vllliige Council and
FRANKLIN,
Ohio
(AP ) - A
In
the first place," he said.
"I'm
a
veJ:Y
positive
person.
.. Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
portable buUdlng In this southwest· People appreciate going into a bank
By selllng the stock thernseives
ern Ohio community houses the first where they're known and talked to.
instead of throogh a hondtng
federally chartered bank In the It's nice to be important, but it's
company, Hendricks estimated
state in 15 years. It's the realization more Important to be nice.
· they saved abOut $150,!XXl.
GREENVILLE , S.C. - Unaudited net earnings ln 1982increased
of a two-year · dream for the
"This is a hard time', but I know a
Hendricks, 55, was president of
12 percent for Multimedia, Inc., a rise from $25,824,000 tn 1981 to
directors of the new Community
bank like this can besuq:esstullf It's
the Franklin National Bank and.
$28,974,(XXl,
Bank of Franklin.
managed properly. I wOuldn't be In worked there 28 years, It was
Earnings per share, after giving effect to the Feb. 1. 1983 50
S.
Hendricks,
president
and
Ray
It It I had any doubts."
!
purchased by the Columbus-based
percent stock distribution, were $1.00 for 1982 compared with $170 In
chief
operating
officer,
formed
the
The
bank
will
start
a
wide
variety
Huntington
NatiOnal Bank ln 199l
1981 also an increase of 12 percent.
bank
with
the
locally
controlled
of services later, after it becomes and he left in 1981.
The board of directors previously authorized a 50 percent common
supportandencouragementoflocal
more established, he said. Meanstock distribution effective Feb. 15. One additional share will be
business people and farmers.
while, they'll operate out of the
Issued for each two shares of common stock owned on Feb. 1.
In two years, directors sold $15
temporary o!!lce. The cash will be
Total revenues for 1982 were $225,463,&lt;nl, a 16 percent Increase
mWion
worth
of
bank
shares
to
156
put in v&amp;ults In other banks until the
over 1981 revenues of $195,276,000. NewspaPer operating revenues
shareholders.
new bank is completed.
totaled $82,147,!XXl, compared to $78,475,000. Broadcasting revenues
On
Friday
they
received
permls·
He estimates the bank's deposits
totaled S110,509,!XXl compared with $97,369,!XXl and cablevlslon
slon
to
open
from
the
U.S.
will grow to$10 million the first year
operating revenues totaled $32,!m,!XXl compared with $19,432,!XXl.
Comptroller of the Cum!ncy, Cleveand $18 million the second. "And
Net earnings for the fourth quarter ending Dec. 31, 1982, were
land distrtct office.
that's a conser;vative estimate," he ,
$M63,00l, a 14 percent increase over198l'sfourthquarterearnlngs.
Hendricks, who has a disdain of
said.
After giving eff~t to the stock dlstrtbutlon, earnings per share for
big city banks moving into small·
"We are lookJngat a large growth
the quarter were 59 cents for 1982llJid 52 cents for1981, a 14 percent
town
markets,
points
to
the
lnves·
rate"
in Warren County and nearby
increase.
tors
who
helieve
his
homey
a!&gt;'
parts of MontgomeiY and Butler
Multimedia publishes the Sunday Tlmes·Sentlnel, Pomeroy:
proach wm succeed.
counties, be said.
Middleport Dally Sent inel, Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Point
"I've .had people call me with
Hendricks admits to only one
P leasant Register.
tears in their eyes because they
mistake. He tried to get.too many
couldn't get a $350 loan. rn loan
investors with smaller amounts of
people $100 so they won't have to go
money Instead of ones offering
to those high~lnterest credit cards.
$500,(XX} or more.
They're not moneymakers but
That delayed the opening, but
RONALD K. GLOVER
someday those customers can be
federal regulating authorities

By J .L. SCHMIDT
AssoCiated Press Writer
PEORIA, Ill. (AP ) - The

Entertainer Blake toms 100; ·
wants to ~ write .a nother show

Instead, Nguyen Ngoc Dung, , :

returns alleged war criminal to.face

By PETERJ. McFARREN
Associated Press Writer
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP ) - The

~

the older one.
and leaders of the antl·war moveThe roster also Includes 12
"The Idea was to see If out of one
ment, are preparing scholarlY Pulitzer Prlz.e Winners, and there
lengthy conference could come
papers that will be the basis of a will be speeches liy fop joumallsm
some lessons for the world and for
book to be published by Harper &amp; and literary figures such as David
journaltsm," said Langguth. "It's Row w1tb book proceeds to be Halberstarn, Keyes Beech, Harrl~
Important to say that Vietnam has
donated to Vietnam Refugee Relief, son Salisbury, Francei Fl~d.
not been forgotten, but It' s also according to Ed Cray, public Glorta Emerson and Arthur Miller.
Important to say that we are relations director of the conference.
"The panelists fall Into two
learning from it.
Big names at the gathering categories," said Langguth, "those
"It's ~ years since Vietnam Include Ky, the former vice who have assimilated the Vietnam
began appearing on our front
president of South Vietnam, Daniel experience and gone on to other
pages," he added. "In that tlme, we Elisberg of Pentagon Papers lame things and those who have con·
should be able to distill from all of · and Frank Snepp, a former CIA tlnued to express their opinions on ;
this anguish some sort of guide tor agent who incurred agency wrath . the war."
,.
the tuture."
·
with his book on the war, "Indecent
Langguth, who was New York
Many panelists, includingwrtters Interval."
·'l'lmes bureau chle! In Saigon in

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The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Poge- 0:.3 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

up the volwne on lils. CB radio, Warren
listens lor trouble oo the road while he nms a load of
car parts from Detroit, Mich. to his home In

Baltmore. Md. VIolence Is a constant lear during the
national strik-e by most Independent lnlckers. (AP
Laserphoto).

Fear, caution mark paths
of,non-striking truckers
By JACK A. SEAMONDS
All8oclated Press Wrller, .
NEAR EY.IT 11, OffiO TURN·

PIKE (AP) - Warren, an Independent truck driver flbm Balli·
more, Md., squinted Into the sun
frOm behind his sunglasses, and
talked of strikes and iear.
"Am I scared?" Warren asks.
" Yeah, I'm scared. I talked to my
girlfriend just be:ore we left, and
she was real worried. l try not to
tbtnk about getting shot, but it
scares thehelloutofme. They'renot
just shooting at Independents, you
know. They're shooting at
everybody."
So Warren watches the over·
passes as It they are mine !lelds,
qulck to spew death and destruction
from bricks and bullets.
" You see the picture of that guy
they killed In North Carolina?" he
asks a traveler he picked up at the
Toledo 5Truck Stop off the turnpike.
"Blood all over. Didn't have a
chancec They• blew up a truck
terminal over In Young'stown the
other night. Boom. Flnlto. I tell you.
lt' s like a battleground out here
anymore.:·
.
Warren Is traveUngtromDetroit,
Mich. to Tarboro, N.C., back toward
MartinSburg, W.Va. , and then
hound again for Baltimore.
The 29-year'!lld took to the road 10
years ago when he was "Just a kid
who wanted to play with the big
boys," hetelis a passenger.
"Back then, when l got started, l
just wanted to drive, to be out here:
So here I am, " Warren says as the
road east to Cleveland and Young·
stown raceS beneath the IS wheels of
the$lOO,!OOFreightUnertractor. "It
was just tun, you know. I really got
my cookies being out here."
But the cookies crumbled a week
ago. The national Independent
Truckers Association went on
strike. protesting the 5-cent-a·
gallon tuel tax backed by President
Reagan and higher road-use
charges that freelance drivers say
will sen.d them to the poorhouse.
AcroSs the nation, drivers parked
their rigs Or rode home empty to

By .JERRY SCHWARTZ
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP ) - Euble
Blake's hands - their long, elegant
fingers spanning 12 keys - danced
across keyboards before there were
automobiles and before there were
radios.
Blake turns 100 on Monday; the
hands no longer perform in public.
But the man whose first hit,
. "Charleston Rag," delighted au·
dlences In 1899, the man who
brought black artists to the Great
White Way, says despite his frailty,
he'd like another chance at
Broadway.
"Tell eveJ:Ybody I want to wrtte
one more Broadway show. I need to
find a lyricist," Blake recently told
New York Post music critic Robert
Kimball. 'Tm sick of playing the .
plano.... I can write music away
from the plano, and I think I have
one more soore left in me." .
Kimball, a longtime friend of
Blake, has organized a birthday
party for Blake at the Shubert
Theater on Monday, to be attended
by 1,600 of the pianist's friends and
admirers. Several blocks to the
east, a 24·hour celebration wUI take
place at St. Peter's Church,

the partners performed in vaudeville. Sissie wrote the lyrtcs, Blake
the words.
In 1921, they brought a show, '
"Shuffle Along," to Broadway, with ·
its hit, "I'm Just Wild About ·
Harry." It was the first show was
written, directed : performed and ·
produced by blacks.
· Other shows followed. But Blake •
gradually fell out of favor , aM In
1946- atter a year In which he made ·
$700 in royalties - he stopped ·
perfonning.
In 1969, at age 87, he started ~
playing again as the nation under· .
went a ragtime revival. He formed a
publishing and recording company,
He was hom in Baltimore In 1883,
Eubie Blake Music. His music was
the son of two former VIrginia
featured in a Broadway review,
slaves - John Summer Blake, a
"Eubie!" And the man himself
stevedore, and his wife, Emlly, a
traveled around the country to
laundress. He got his first steady job
perform, weaving remintsc'lllces .
at the plano in 1898, playing for the
with ragtime;seml·classical music
cu~stomers ln a bordello In his native
and his own SOng$ . I
His ~t public performance was .
city.
Blake has alwaysdownplayed his last year, with the U.S. Army Band
talent as a,planlst - "My best year
at Lincoln Center. H)s wife of 36
years, Marion,-died ln J une.
(al t,h•~ plano} wa.s.1~.':.,!Je.on~
.
said. The plano was "hard work,
Today, he Is constantly visited by
he said, and he prefer red to . friends like singer Pearl Bailey, ·
compose, first ragtime and then who says: "God has blessed him ·
music for the musical theater.
with 100 years to give. That's a lot of
In 1915, he jolnedNobleSissle, and giving. He's used every year."

. begtnntngat12:01a.m. Monday.
No one knows It Blake will attend
either event, although he did appear
at a show In his honor at
Washinglon's Kennedy Center last
month, to ·be televised on cable and
public broadcasting stations.
He Is not giving Interviews. He Is
saving his strength for the big day,
friends say, although he doesn't
understand all the tCHlo.
But eveJ:Yone who sees Euble
Blake ln his Brooklyn home says
he's alert. He watches television
news and plays chess, listens to
music and spends hours talking to
friends about music and his life.

Benefits were paid ~o dead,
SS investigation reveals

Atlantic shore and home, so betook
the necessary precautions. He filled
the truck's tanks with diesel tuel so
he could go without stopping. He
year after it found more than 5,000 beCause or our (computer Jsystems
eyes bridges and overpasses
By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
Instances of people listed as dead on problems ... we just don't get that
warily.
Associated Press Writer
recorded. And the checks keep
"My Dad wanted to know if I
WASHINGTON (AP) -Acheck Medicare records who had received coming, and pretty soon they get
planned to carry a gun," Warren ofrecordsfrom11states,NewYork ~ million in Social Security
tired of tJ:Ylng to notify us, " he said
chuckles, shaking his head. "I just City and the Veterans Admtnlstra· benefits.
Some people listed as dead by In a telephone Interview Friday
laughed. A gun's just another · lion has uncovered 1,411 cases In .
Medicare
or the state were disco- from SOcial $ecll[ity's headquar~
problem. Somebody'd probably which Social Security paid more
vered to be actually alive. Durtng_ tel's ouWde Baltimore.
take It away from me and shoot me · than $6 million to dead people.
Some "people have been· just
with it."
·
That may be just the Up of the the Medicare match, investigators
taking
the check and putting It In a .
Ahead east on the Interstates are !i, Iceberg, according to Social Secur- found more than 3,200 mistaken drawer and when our employee
the "bad neighborhoods, " as
lty Commissioner John Svahn , who death reports.
shOws up and says, 'We' re looking
Warren caUs them, Youngstown suspects that the agenc:; may have
In one case in Dallas, Svahn said, for so-a nd~so,' they say, 'Well, we
and Breezewood, Pa. He will pass
paid a total of $100 million to the a Social Security official went to the told you four years ago,"' Svahn
through Breezewood and south on deceased.
hOme of a man shown as deceased said.
There Is one confirmed case In on Texas records, spotted smoke,
Interstate 70 toward home In the
But of the 1,411 cases, he said, :
dark.
which the beneficiary had been banged on the doo~ and roused the "we've got a tentatlve9umberof500
"Friday night In Breezewood. All dead since 1965 and another, still "dead': man and his wife, who where thechecks havebeenc ashed,
costs on."
the
drunks will be down there. But
under investigation, where the escaped the fir['.
So despite the strtke, Warren Is
probably by r elatives, after the
lius
truck'll
roli,
and
I
don't
pl&lt;i!l
to
person may have died In 1962, said
rolling six hours back to Baltimore
In another case ln Indiana, he person died ."
hold anything back," he says.
John Trollinger, an agency said, an amputee satd .the mix-up
on thts Friday afternoon. He won't
Svahn said that so far, his agency
Since
the
strtke
began,
Warren
·
spokesman.
probably stemmed from a r,eport h'as recovered $382,!XXlin returned
give his last name, and he doesn't
says, the highway patrol and sta.te
want the name of his company used.
The aver age case Involves an filed to the state when his missing · checks and $87,600 In checks that
pollee
have
been
an
asset.
Daytime
survivors wrote ln repayment:
limb was burled.
Warren · works for a small but
cwerpayment of about $5,600, but In
Svahn said some of the cases · The 11 states involved in the pilot
aggressive Baltimore broker who · truckers aren't bothered much even one case $50,!XXl was paid over the
when they're hlgh·balllng home. At
appeared to Involve fraud and some study were California, lndiaria,
books freight contracts for his five
night, the poUce aren 'tlooking for years to a dead beneficiary,
Iowa, Kentucky , Maine, Michigan,
were foul· ups.
trucks, tben hires drtvers to haul
·
speeders. They're searching for Trolllnger said.
"In
some
instances,
people
have
New Jersey, New Mex ico, Ohio,
automotive parts and fabric and
The agency began a computer
snipers.
notify
us
of
a
death
and
tried
to
Tennessee
and Washington.
Campbell Soup cro5s-countiY.
check of state death records last·
silent
sentinel
Is
calied
Warren's
"For Instance, the boss gets paid
the .Escort, an expensive radar
$550 when we run !rom Detroit to
detector
that spots speed traps two
York, Pa. I get 25 percent of that,
mUesaway.
On theturnpikeltbeeps
about$125or so. The company pays
like
a
PacMan
game gone mad.
for the gas and the truck," he said.
he
doubts
that striking
He
says
"So the truck still makes hlms:n:Jor
fo\ all
truck
drivers
are
responsible
so a day, each trip."
of
the
violence
against
the
mdepend·
.
· Legally, Warren Is only supposed
ents
still
operating.
to drive 500 miles a week and work
"A truck drlverwou.ld never shoot
about eight hours a day. In reality,
at
another truck driver," he said.
ByPAULRECER
training school and conspiring
pre-trial hearings here.
the truck Is his home from Monday
"Oh;
they might destroy a truck or
Associated Press Writer
unsuccessfully to assassinate a
Barcella Is scheduled to try
to Frtday.
two, butthey'renotthekindtothrow
HOUSTON (AP) - Former CIA Wllson In Washington beginning Libyan dissident. He and Mrs.
"I'd be surprtsed if I made$25,!XXl
bricks."
agent Edwin Wilson was convicted Feb. 22 on charges of shipping Bruce have been working on
last year, buttherearenootherjob5
Near Exit 11, Warren drops his Saturday of smuggling explosives explosives to a Libyan terrorist Wilson'scases for years.
to be had," Warren says. "Idon'tget ·
passenger
on the roadway.
to Libya, and prosecutors moved to
·paid any extra for running at night;
"Risky?
I
guess
it
Is,"
he
says.
have
him declared "a dangerous
either. I just keep getting paid."
"But
It
I
don't
work,
my
boss
will
special offender'' beCause of alleged
So Warren keepsoneseto!logs lor
find somebody else who wUI. It all
efforts to hire a hit man to klll nine
the record and another In his head.
coines back to nickels and dimes,
;
people.
"Noonerunslegally.Theycan'tand
my friend. Nickels and dimes."
The written motion alleged that
make a living. You have to
The door closes, and Warren Wilson, whlle ln a New York prtson
understand to start with that a truck
off Into the "bad. neighbor~
roars
In November, soUcited a fellow
driver Is a professional law breaker
hoods."
Jie
stUI
wants
to
play
with
RIO GRANDE - The 1983 Great Winter Skate-a·thon to benfit the
prisoner tohelphlmhlrean assassln
by oc;cupatiOn."
the
big
boys
but
they're
not
·
Muscular
Dystrophy Association held J an. 28 raised $3,301.62,
to
klll
.the
nine,
Including
prosecu·
Warren says he plans to run
playing
kid
games
any
more.
according
to
a Buckeye Iillis Career Center instructor.
tors
·
and
possible
witnesses.
In
through the night to the Mld·
DECA III advisor Becky Rothgeb said more than 100skaters from
. January, It said, "Wilson caused his·
Gallla, Jackson and VInton counties participated ln the 12~hour
son to pay some$10,!XXl In cash to the
.·
hit man,'' an undercover FBI agent.
event, held at Skatesvllle USA in Gallipolis . . DECA III and
U the motion Is approved by U.S.
Skatesville were co-sponsors.
"We were thrilled with the number of skaters and their
Distrtct Judge Ross Sterling, it
would add eight years to Wilson's
enthusiasm," she said. "Also, considering the economic situation of
the area It was especially heartening to see so many healthy people
possible sentence of 17 years in
give a part of themselves to help others ln need ."
prison and $145,000 fine.
· In northern West Virginia, where trtcthas had to lay ot!!our paid staff
The juJ:Y, which deliberated for
Participating in the skate-a-than were McDonald's, the Wiseman.
miners are represented by members, the dlstrtct's offices are
6¥.; hours over two days, convicted
Agency, RC , Pepsi, Gallla County EMS, WJE H~WYPC Radio, and
Fairmont-based UMW District 31, open just four days a week •.and ail
tl1e54-year-old WUsononcharges of
Buckeye Hills Career Center staff and administration .
''
most productiOn Is ln low-sulfur elected officials, lncludlrtg Saund~
conspiring to transport explosives,
steam coill that remains in great ers, are working for half pa~.
' filing false custom documents,
Dtstrtct 6, based in Shadyside,
demand. But In the parts of tile
exportipg without a license and
Ohio, Is stlllbreaktngeven,despltea
distrtct that produce met coal,
transporting h3Zl\fdoUs materials
COLUMBUS - The- Ohio Department of Highway Safety's ''bo~
unemployment Is ·soaring, satd 60 percent . unemployment rate,
Illegally.
score" reveals eight of the 18 traffic fa tail ties occurlng In the sta te this
according to president Ed BelL In
Carroll Rogers, president of the
Wllson, accused of shipping more
past week were alcohol-related.
dlstrtct. In all, about 4,00l of the that distrtct, covering West Virgi~
than ~ tons of a plastic explosive
So far this year, alcohol was found to be a factor ln 37percent of all
distrtct' s 12,!XXl active mtners are nla's Northern Panhandle and most
from Houston to Ubya In October
trafflc,deaths.
of Ohio, about 6,500 miners . are
·
19TI, showed ·flo reaction as the
without jobS.
The Ohio Highway Patrol made 846 DWI arrests, bringing the
working
out
of
an
active
member·
verdict was read.
rn· one area of Nicholas County,
year' s total to 3, 763.
The motion ftled a few minutes
only 60 of 1,500 miners still are ship of 14,!XXl.
Of the 16 victims that had a seatbelt available, none wore a belt at
"We've managed to avoid having
by
prosecutors
·
said
that
later
the
time of the fatal crash.
working, he ~ld.
• to dip into our cash reserves, partly '.
Wllson "offered about $1 mllllon In
There were also seven deaths in tuU·slzed cars, three each In
"We've been relatively fortunate,
bec!luse we've taken step's ali along,
cash" fortheslaylngsOfninepeople.
mld·s\i.ed an~ compact cars and one In a subcompa~t. There we,re
but we are feeling the ctunch, too,"
cutting
out
a
lot
of
tbtngs," Beli sal.d.
He
allegedly
planned
to
.
pay
said Rogers. But oo tar, he said, the
· also two deaths In trucks and twO pedesti'lan fatals. ·
.
.
"Essentially, we're still in good· $250,00) each to kill Larry BarceUa'
·district has not had to dip Into cash
shape.' '
and ·Carol Bruce, assistant U.S . .
grant
reserves.
•
Bell
said
the
dlstrtct
has
tald
off
'
iri the Dlstrtct of Colum·
attorneys
'
"We're llj1ng to lOok ahead so we
CHESHIRE - A $19,010 grant under the Education Consolidation
do!l't get Into a mess, tiylng to see five people, "and we sent on~ . bla, and $®,(XX} each for the
elected official back to the mines,
assassination or the wimesses, the
Act was recently giYen to the Gallia County Board of Mental
where we can cut back.''
'
document said.
Retardation and Developmenfal DlsabUltles to meet educational
Rogers doesn't rntss' any of the because that'swhatourconstltution
says to do when the membership
Wilson gave the prtsoner written
needs tor handicapped chUdren.
·obvious piaces!prsavlngmoney.In
decreases.
descriptions
of
the
desired
targets,
This represents a 2¥.; percent decrease from last year's allocation.
the distrtct's headquarters, evecy
"It's
only
common
sense
that
said.
Among
thoSe
the
document
grant wW be used for a resource Instructor, a speechltherapy
The
vacant room Is dark, Including the
when
your
membership
is
down,
i1atned
as
targets
were
Ernest
position
and a physlclal development program.
n::sttooms. SweaterS luiep off the
your
workload
decreases,"
Bell
Keiser,
Reginald
Slocomb,
Jerome
Guiding
Hand School staff will solicit input from parents,
chill brought on by low themlostat
added. "We !eel It's lmport;lllt to
Brower,
Edward
Coughlin
and
John
community and staff to determine needs for fiscal yPar 1984,
settings.
Heath, all witnesses in the trial or
According to Saunders, his dis- work with what you have."

honor the trucking boycott. And
then the sun went down and the
gunl!re opened up, as strikers
lashed out at the men and women
who, like Warren, kept on truckln '.
"Let's get one thing straight,
.Daddy. I'm outhere becauselhave
a famlly to feed. I have a 3-year'!lld
boy, and my girlfriend's pregoant.
She's due any day now, big as a
house. U I don't work, they don't
eat," Warren says, scratching his
brown beard.
"These people who are strtklng,
they don't want to work. They're
complaining about the nlckel·a·
gallon tax. Well, last year tuel was
$1.40 a gallon. Now, It' s $106 a
gallon. It keeps going down,"
Warren says. "They can pass those

Ex-CIA agent Wilson found
gUilty on smuggling charge

,..._-Local Briefs:--Skate-a-than successful

UMW begins economy move
in face of ·unemployment
By MAI\'DIA BBYSON HODEL
Aeeorfeted Press Writer • CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)'Ill Fairmont, It means lights are

scn1puloUsly turned off in ncb
vacant room. In Beckley, elected
omclals are working for half pay.
Whatever the means, distrtct
. offlclalsduleUnitedMtneWorkers
UJIIon are ' having to cope with
financial problems brought on by
the massive unemployment that
has hit the nation's coal industry.
As employment declipes, so does
the flow of money into the union's
cotterS; since mtners who are not
worktng.payonlyf.okendues~$125

a month. But UMW officials say
they still .must provide the same .
serviceS to their memberS.

.

In Beckley-based Dlstrtct 29,
where 11106tofthecoal produced !sa
hlgb-quallty metallurgical CQal
. used by steel mW•. unemployment
is J'UIIJ)bJg about 00 pe~oent,
ac&lt;.'ol'dllw to ' distrtct pral, rt
Dennll Saunders. He said lllCin1
than e,cm o1 the district's 1UXJ
working members are without jobs ..

'Box score' reports 18 deaths

Retardation board receives

. l,

•I

•

�6, 1983 •..

ONE ecre, 3 bodroom
houoe, garage, 2 bulidlngo,
pt;o,. 895·3466:

Tribune - ~2342 :
Sentinel - 992-2156
RegiSter - 675-1333

::--,--~---'-· lc-

•w

N
lrl-level.
bodroom
with clan
&amp; ' 1 'h 3bath
on 'h
acre. 7 miles from Pt .
Pi•aunt. Coli after 4:30,
304-876-5889.
•

1

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

91!11!2.:.'='

I

1

C ••&lt;&gt; &lt;l l lt\ ~n k &gt; I P.,&lt;l ~a d ¥o~ «l

l ~••&lt;' •n.od~ane o l

''" """""""

J Annou nc•m•nO.

• c ......... v
~

2, a... ~•••0""•"~~·• ¥

51 .,....,..,.oi4Goodo
!i2C: II lY II Rad"'~Q~~mllll

12 M o-w 1o l o..,
2 J P•olu"'o.,.l So"'"'"'

!il
!14 '"'"""""'
MoiC M o o ~rwond • n
!i!fl euotllu&gt;~ Suwh ..
51 Po h lur So lo

....,,,.. llod•

J I Hom,.l(oO Solo
1 W0&lt;&lt;1Soi O I ~' "''" "" ".,"~I

a p , ~~« s"'¥
l!o

51 M uooc; .. lnotr~,..l~l\
~I Ffuno II VO!IIIal&gt;lu

J I MobU Homoo IO&lt; Sol•
l lformolo1Sa11
J 4 8uornuollu~~•nQO

"HI
~' oo
""'\lo.,

2t Ro-' Eouto Won tl&lt;l

Hgu o~ o luo

I ]

Mo~~ ~

II Ofll
Hom.. I"' Ron1

I I toolp Wo~ ~ ~ ~
I l So luoiOO Wo l\1~&lt;1

ll Fo•moio• F'on o

I lin .. ,'""".,

44A_I.,.... Il&lt;llfioM

I t 6u"""" f,,...,,g
I i; k~~QIO
Ill Rodo o I 1111 C:ll ~~~•"

1/ W OfiMI&lt;I I o ll ont

I1

If touopn&gt;Ont tor ll eno

M IIUIIo ~eou•

• ~w.on

.. n ToOo

·~ ~ ...... hd

61 honof q uoponono
62

w ... oed ! 08uy

11 3 t ..... .,.,~
lo (l,.,r&lt;

6.&amp; • HI~

'\&lt;&gt;&lt;•"''

65 S..ed II. Footo!u..,

4t'Sp.CI IooRU I

. , f"'

19 Co"'F"'~E~"'~ "'""'

llll/{1'" r 111

r•r r/u

Can workS to II. SeliAVON.
Work when you want. Cell
448-3368 or 445·2158.

GdieC.,.. noy
..,, •• Cod oll1 .&amp;

·-"

•ta - Gdtp&lt;&gt;l,.
161 - C ,..II'I.. I

9SZ - Muld.... OI:f

J II8 - Yinoon

t iii - C...11•
343 - Poftland
H7 - LIIIMF ....

Immediate occup1noy -!
I ntere1t ratei are down and
probably won't be lower.

17$ l'll'lrt-1

•.sa - L....

M - ....
~G·
7&amp; 7)
_

Home

31t ~ WI&lt;

u~

H a~llng

~on

U ~ lo l5-d l

22 Money to Loan

the accuracy 1nd accou'ntl·

IA-0914-clo_ .... ol

~10M

blllly of the accounting

COMPANION to live In ,
prehrobly olnglo feme .. , to
share ••pen.... 304-175·
7888 lifter 5.

1y1tem and programing

Public Notice

3 Announcements

NOTICE OF
PRIVATE SALE

SWEEPER end sowing

Notrce rs hereby gl'v en that on
February 18 1983 at 10 00
AM a pnvate sale w •ll be held
J: the ottr ces ot The Central
Trust Co NA of Mrd dlepon.
OH to sell for cash the followrng col later.al
To wrt

machine repair, parta, and
supplie•. Pick up and
delivery, Devls Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Goorgoo Creek Rd . Call
446-0294 ..

refundable . Chooae now .

See John Ecker. Riverolde
Terrace. Call 446-1126.

The Central Trust Co . NA,
Mrddlebo rt. OhiO reserves the
ngh t 10 brd at thrs sale

Gun ahoot. Racine Gun

Club. Every Sunday staning
1 p.m. Factory choked guns

121 6 7 B 31c

only.

Public Notice

----~~----ic -

GINGER BREAD STUDIO·
Art lessons . JONI
CARRINGTON-698-3290.
Tho Great Band Hunt Club
spring to• hound bench end
tield trial, Aprll16-17. Call
843 - 2075 for more

NOTICE OF
PRIVATE SALE
Not• ce !S hereby grven t hat on

February 18 1983 at 10 00
AM a pnva te sa le wr ll be held

Da.,dson
Md XLH 1000.
Serral No MC
1HD 1 CAH. 2 4 Y
200228

The Cent ral Trust Co NA

information.
NOW available for sewing
end cake decorating . Call

121 6 7 8. 31c

Wt Wilh to tlenk ell thooe

6 Geman Shepherd puppiea

death of our Mother end them e good home. Call
wife. Lenlth L. Jervis . 614-246-6246.

Special thanka to Dr.Wellcar·
and the 3rd. floor West
Nuulng Stott at Holzer
Medical Center. Also,
special thanks to Rev. Amos
Tillis. Bob Purtell, Judy
Snowden, Rutland EMS.
I

and Ewing Funeral Home.

The Family.
•

1 male puppy 4 mo. old, pert
Hutkie, good home. Call

814-367·0266.

g

Lost and Found

LOST yellow mala cat .
Miosing in the Neighborhood Rd. vincinfty , Reward.

Call 446· 7828 or 448 6688.
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

oneer Rick Pearaon. Estates,
antiquea. farm, housahokta.
Ucen•ed Ohio-WVa. 304-

773 -67811 or 304 -773-

t~w

evohinga.
BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old
furniture. gold. ailvar
dollara, wood ice boxes.
stone jar•. antique•. etc .•

Complete households.
Wrila: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4.
Pomeroy, 0 h. Or 99 2·
7760.
'

llf!portiJnll\

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINl
WE ALSO WORK ON
ALL OTHER APPUANCES

WANTED
GOLD &amp; SILVER

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614-992·2181

•

U.S. SILVER COINS
1964 aiKt Older
Half Dollar. ea. $4.50
Quarter" ..... ea. $2.25
Dime .......... ea. 90'

ClAD HALVES
1965-1970
s1.75 ea.
War Nickles
50' ea.

U.S. SILVER DOLlARS ......... S12.75 ea.
1935 and Older
STERLING SILVER ......... :....... .lb. $160

OTHER ITEMS WANTED
•CLASS RINGS-&amp; WEDDING RINGS
•STERLING FLATWARE
•GOLD TEETH
•PLATINUM
•SILVER CONTACTS

SPRING VALlEY TRADING CO.
. Spring Valley Plaza
GallipOlis, Ohio
Monday lhru Saturday •
10:00 A.M, 'Til 6:00 P.M.

AFRAID OF THE COLD?
You won't be witl1 thos toasty 3
bedroom, 2 story home which
has storm windows, door;, and
add·on woodbumer and extra
insulation. This comfortable
home w1U keep yOII warm in
the w1nter &amp; cool ;n the
summer Attractively pnced
under $30,000 00 with owner
financing avatlab~ Convem~nb located in Dexter.
lAST CHANCE ...
Th1s could be your last chance
to purchase th~ 149 acre Rutla nd farm, complete with farm
'house, bam, garage and outbuildmgs! Mmeral R;ghts
transfer to the lucky new
owner$. Don't l:lse this appor·
tunity, cal for an apponlment
today

"LETS MAKE A DEA(''
That ~ what the owne' says
about th1s new contemporary
bHevel wlh 4 bedrooms, 2
bath~ vaulted ceilin~. family
room, an!! attached garage
Avaiabie far immediate accupa ncy on attractive lease or
sale terms. Located near Pome·
roy, this barga1n only needs
YOU!
,

R.C.S.
REALTORS

Crail Swenson

Ph. 1·614·593-5571

Insurance Co. h•• oHerad
aervicea for fire lneurance

our comprehenalve mobUe
home coverage with
enyon•. Foremo1t ln•u-

tervices and outpatient
clinic services. AppliCIInt•
ahou,ld Mlbmit reeumea and

1-~-.,...-----­

This 44-bedfacillty provldeo
long-term skilled nursing

1

Help Wanted

Serg•nt S,rg•nt Lutton 81
304·1711-39110 or call toll
frae ; ·800·842·38.19.

1------ - - Earn extra Money and
receive free housahold
productl everyone uaea

daily . Supply 3-6 . Cell
446-1988.
' .

Cham Craft Demonatretlona. No leyoffe,
interviewing in the area.

Fob.11,12. WritoTri-Chem,
P.O. Box 221111 , Columbus
Oh 43216 or cell Econo
Travel 446-7071 altar
11 :OOAM the 11th, ook tor
Tri-Chem.
Real Estate General

rance, 448·9340.

1S

448-3882

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Cel Bill Ward for oppolnt·
mant, Word's Keyboard,
448-4372.
PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL- Profuaional
Eiactrolyal• Cenur. Inc .•

A.M.A. Approved. Or.
Referrals. Gift Cenlflcetoo,
n- hourt. By appointment.
304-87&amp;-6234.

Karate the ultimate in Hl·f
defence all private leaaona,
Men, woman. &amp; children .
lnatruction thru black belt.
Alao available Karate
uniform• puchlng and

Modern buolneo'o bldg. li8
Coun St.. Gall1101i1. '
·
- ----- --- --- ---~ -- - - - ---

-------------····--·····

11178 Schult 14x70 very
nice, central air. 2 ful baths.
t13.000 will conolder
owner financing wtth down

payment . Ca11441S- 1842
9:30 to 2:30 or after 6
304-743-3333.

party. MAKE AN OFFER . 30

Good uud 2 bedroom
mobile hom eo. Furnished .

year financing available .

Contact Bank One of Pomeroy. 81 4-992·2133.

lrown'a Trailer Park, At.

1 24, Min oroville, Oh .
814-992·3324.
'

2 bd.rocm home In Racine.'
Fulty carpeted, gas fur'\ICfl,
with aome alr-cond . , full
basement. chain link fence~ 1 •
yard, excellent locatbn. '

----~--------- lc-

1 871 Star 12x60. 2

Aoklng 827 , 600 . Call
814-949·2643 or 843·
4081 .

't

Call 742-2178.

DUPlEX - 1n upper MKidleport an Rt 7 kiop. L~ of remo-

P~.992-2259

delilg. large island kitci81, carpelilg; large rooms. Bricdt 3
bedrooms in RICh on 2kis. Only

$28.501

WOODED 3 ACRES - Uve
;n the cou ntry, have T.P. wa·
ter, natural gas, and enjoy
the fresh aor and pnvacy for
just $500.00 down at 12%
for 5 yrs. monthly. $88.98,
sell;ng for $4,500.
RACINE RURAL - In the
country ori good gravel road.
Bus &amp; mail Rts. near. Has a
two bedroom, II&gt; bath
home, fun basement, centra l
heat and lot 223 ft. long.
Ask;ng $23,000.
INVEST- Here is 2 houses
that need a handyman. All
utilities, balh in each, base·
ments, prages af!d level
lots. Only $21,000.
VIEW'OF RT. 7 - Enjoy the
traffic from your living roam.
Just off Rt. 7 at Bradbury. 5
rooms, bath, cellar and gar·
den spaces. 3 acres. Will
take $15,000.
WISE PEOPLE ARE NOW
BUYING AT A BUYERS
MARUT. FOR YOURS CALL
992·317&amp;. BRUCE, HELEN
01 VIRGIL.

Real Est11te General

CENTURY 21 Southern Hills, Inc.
446-66t0

RECREATION LAND - 25 acres m/1, mostly
~s. fronts on Uttle Raccoon Creek &amp; Slab!
Route 325 near Tycoon Lake. $15,000.
GREEN TOWNSHIP -CENTRALLY LOCATED112 acre farm has frontage on State Route 588.
Faufield Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Feufield Rd
Excel~nt for fllrmmg or development Oilier 5 rm.
&amp; bath also mcluded. Owners Will consider selhng
smalle; traciS ol short term financing. Call lot moll!
information.
COIMERCIAL BUILDING - 82xBO ali steel construction with fireproof &gt;nsilation. Overhead cran~&amp;.
has office &amp; baths. Formerly used for bOat sales
repair. Located across from Silver Brilge Plaza with
access to the Oh10 River Potential uni1ry!ited. Cal
Ranny BlackbtJm at Strout Realty, 44&amp;0008.

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Mobile Home Park with 11 mobile home hook-ups. 9
mobile homes, 40x60 commercial buildi111 with 16160.

shed. Thm's a beautiful brick and frame home

overtoolt.ing the river. -some amenities in the home are: 1
17x30 formal living room, foyer with a marble floor, lqt
stone fireplace. Great investment return. Call for details.
11114·

SEClUDED COUNTRY SETTING. LOOKING FOR
SOMETI\ING SPECIAL?lft us show youth~ new
3 BR, 2 bath do~e garage home with 011er 1700
sq. ft. atl1vong area. Just nght for the large famly
that needs ample space. Olher features are natural
wood siding; heat pump, range, relrig., OW &amp; d~p.
Can be PIJrchased Wtth 2 acres or 40. l.bcated 1n
Green Township.

Real Estate General

Housin!]

Headquarters

NEW LISTING $49,500- Owner; haw moved &amp;
have thet lollely 3 BR brick ranch pnced ID Sill.
Special features are I1\ baths, fa!l111y rm. With WB
fireplace. carpet throughout, full basement ~arag~
covered rear porch &amp;large lot on teh !kllaYtile Rd
BARGAIN RPICED AT $10,500 - l~x55 mObile
home with 10d8 additiOn, several txuldmgs, owr
6 acre of tand on Sarli Hollow Rd. in Green Twp.
Qwner wiM help finance.

.··· 03
''

621 JACKSON PIKE- 9%ASSUMPTION 6 yr. al:f bnck on Rt 35 offer; 3 bedrooms, l 1\
bathS, dining room, family room, eQUipped kitchen,
2 car garage and nice landscaped yard Convement to everything. Only $59,900. Call Clyde
Walker.

Crown C~y. Cell 614-266·

._6_6:...2_0_.~----~-:­

,Furnished apt. 1 bdr.. 920
4th Ave.Gellipolio. Adults.
water &amp; electric pd. 1200
mo. Cell 446-4418 after
7PM.

44

*1149

NEW USTING - Hlda Drive, biiclt tri-level in F~rvoew Estltes.
Features 3 ~. hv;ng rm., modem kitchen, family room with
wuodbllrner, basement Walk to stores, theater, etc. Garage and
storage ooildin&amp; Lots of trees,shrubs and flowers. Beautiful home
that has been wellalten care of. Washington Elementary. Reasona·

MAKE US AN OFFER - Own!ll have moved ID
Florida &amp; would ike their home sdd th~ month.
Ulte new spin level IS located on Debby Drive &amp;
offer; approx. 3,000 sq. ft. of fi~ng area plus 2 car
garage &amp; one of the area's nicest pools. Over
$100,000. Call Ranny IJackblJm ·

I

NEW USTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM lacab!d
approK. 4 m1. north at HMC on old route 160.
Modern fri.level has brick &amp; vinyl constructioo, 3
BRs, 2 baths, equipped kitchen, dining are~
laun!fry &amp; 2 car garage. Can be bought witt\ or
wtthout acreage. ·
PRICE REDUCED TO $55.900! OWNER WILL F~
NANC£ This lovely !~tory home has a l5x21LR.
formal doning. l4x27 family rm., fimshed on knotty
pine, 2fireplaces. fuH basement 42 t screened in
rear )Xlrth, garage &lt;11d large lot :m ft. deep This
home 1s vacant and needs to be sold before the lsi
of the year. l.ocaled in Mils Villgl!.
•

HILLS ESTATE - Stately Dutch Cclon111. Features 4
ba)hs. large bmallivong &amp; dining- rm,~_F• miv
fi~~ MOdem eqtipped kitchen, basement oarge sun declt anq
pool. 3 acres. more or less. Shown by appoonment
'

UPPER RT. 7 - Nice mOdern home. All new 12xl6 kitchen
complete with new buitin range, micro-wave oven, dishwasher
and disposal. New largl! master bedroom and a new bath. 2
bedrooms, upstair; and \4 bath. Full basement arKI single car
prage. Large lot 50x40Q. Ful basement and ~n~e car garge. Fruit
trees, grape arbor Conaete patio and fish pond. Gas heat City
schools, Washinglcn Elemeltary. Priced in the Jl's. •

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Styish 2 story home was

bu;~ '" 1894 and must be seen ID appreciate_
Large open Ioyer and slaorway, LR, din;na rm,
parlor, completely equipped modern kitchen, 4

Brs, 21\ baths, new sidong; garaae, near schools,
shopPing; e4c.
RODNEY-CORA ROAD- Approx. 30 acres wood·
land localed 3 111. from Radney. Coilnty waler
available $12,000
STI'i.E ... ElEGANCE ..: AWAY Of LIFE -First
time on the marltet forth~ like new contemporary,
3 or 4 BR's. 2 baths, large open LR with fireplace &amp;
beamed ceiings. kilchen includes range, DW &amp;
refri~, ful basement. wrap-around deck, cedar
siding. l2x24 abow fPl\Und pOol, garage, bam &amp;
10 acres rear Eurelta. City schools.
PRICE REDUCED TO $32,900- 50 acres more
or less near Eureka, approK. 15 Agrassland, ba~
ance wooded, nicely remodeled 6 rm. arKI bath
home. WF fireplace, stove, refrit. several outbuildongs Owners leaving the area anawouldl;lte a
quiclt sale.

~:EFIJL

COUNTRY SETTING - I.Dvely roll;ng 2,040 acres

more or less, adds a spacious selling b' this lovely ranch Home.
Very well maintained. Features living room, formal dining room, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. large modern kitchen with an island. 624 sq. ft.
i1 garege. Nice back patio. Heat pump and central a~. City Schools
• Green ElementaJY. Priced in the 60's.
36 BUILDING LOTS - In an approved subdtv. Central sew·
ages and all underground utolit;es. City school district
MIDDLEPORT - New log cabin still under construction. Select
your own carpel and decor. Located on Front Street Lovely riVer
VteW. Fealll'es a liVIng room, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, bath. Gas heat
Give us a call for more 'details!
RIO GRANDE - Large brick &amp; stone ranch, over1ooking the
bealiiful Bob Evans farms. Th~ spacious home features 3 bed·
rooms, large fonnalliv;ng roomw with w.b. fireplace, and dining
room. Modern bui~in kitchen Including a m;crowaw oven. Spacious fllmiy roont Many extras. includ,ilg the use of tennis courts
IIIII
.

114350

53 LINCOLN ST. - 2 bedroom home wtth alummum sid;ng.

$8.500.

RT. 554 - Lot with water &amp; sewage, for mobile home $4,000.
10 ACRES - Close to R~ Grande, half woods, $12.500.
ROAMING ROOM - Good building Site, B'A acres Graham SChad
Rd.
'
'
111010

woods. tub. base. Owners wiP

HOLIDAY PARK - 2 campilllf ~ furnished 26
'ft 1Atwood travel trailer, shelter house. Ltility
buildin~ county watllr, sewer, access to Riccoon
Creek. Priced for quiclt sale

TWO MillS OUT STATE ROUTE 588 - Remodeled home Includes 6 rms. and batlt, carport,
stove, relrig;, dishwasher, almost 6 IIC!es of land

a largl! lake. 4
I
room &amp; dimng room. Over 2,500
. Ef'!oy the use of the dub house, swimming

." '.

.

1
/•

•

COIJNTRT' UVING AT ITS BEST - l.ille new sectiOnalllome, 1200 sq. ft. 3'BR. 2 bllhs, cathedral

celinp, 2 water Mlems. All this on 1.55 acre lot
wllh fllllilllf pond ~ Rio &amp; \lnton.$29,900.

arKI ~ for quick sale.

BRAND NEW LISTING -EXCELLENT LOCATION
- You'll find this home to be one of the best
decoraled on tlvl market Quality living space on
over 1900 sq. It 3 mce SIZed bedrooms, 211 baths,
new equipped kllc~en, an overnzed and attractive
fam1ly room, woodbum1ng fireplace d1nmg room,
nat gas heatng and priced well below replacement
costs. Situaled on a l:lvely landscaped yam off Rt
35 in a fine neighbarhoo:l. Call today to see this
home and start
- the new year off right .

over1~~

BRICK HOME -Very well kept home. Features 3 bedroom~ large
kitchen, lots at cabinets. Formallivmg roam, large 11111. room. Ga$
heat and ·i:entral air Has 2 stnrage buildings. l.argl! lot af!(l nice
prden space~ ~ of plants and shrubs. Located in city sehool
district Washington Elemenlary. all this and much more. Priced
only in the lower 40's.

'

9% MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION - 1.5 MILES
NORTH OF H.M.C - Famoly ~zed 4 bedroom
bnck ranch located less than l mie off Rt. lBO.
Has equ;pped kitchen &amp; dmette, family roam is
large and has mce fireplace, full basement 1s par·
tially fin~hed, and a~o has worltsi!Op Utility roam
' and k;tchen,over 2 acres of land 1n nice wooded
setting. Pnced m $60s. Call Clyde Walker.

NEW LISTING - COMMERCIAL BUILDING RESIDENTIAL &amp; RENTALS -Several sour~:es of RT. 588 - 3 bedroom ranch m an excellent
.income. 38x50 bnck bu1id1ng on 3rd Ave Down· location on coty school~ Has full basement family
stm has 2finished rooms currently housing rental roam, fireplace, 16' master bedroom. HI balll
biness. Upsta~rs has 2 apartments rentmg $200 garage, ca r~rt plus 40' x 60' K15' h1gh bu;kl;ng
mo. each. 1973 mabilehame renting $275 mn w/20x40 attached shed. {Excellent far tractor
House has 3 bedrooms, l baths, family room. work), all located an 1~ acres. $60&amp; Call Clyde
woodburner, ~nyl ~d;ng msulatlon, storm w;ndows Walker
and 1n good condition. Will sell house separate Cal
today for details. Call J1m Cochran.
HOUSE SPECTACULAR -One of the oulstand;ng
homes in the area. Th1s large 3 bedroom home
lr1Ciudes a large liimg room with huge bay wond,
spectacular kilchen · don;ng area wtth pat;o door;
ooto a stone ftaored porch, unusual large fam1~
room with briclt walls, fireplace and -bar. 21&gt; bath~
beautiful woodwor~ wrth sculptured doors. Almost
ultimate storage, ~rge utility room and g"ge. This
is a deluxe home and will please the most d1scnmi·
LISTING 8V.%
- Good
nate buyer.
Locatianl 4 bedroom home ;n Pleasant Valle~~
IN TOWN - PRICED TO SEU - Owner has Estates off Rt 35. Over 1450 sq. ft. of l1v area
purchased another home and 5 veJY anxious to ;nciudes d1mng room, fully eq~pped kitchen, l 1h
sell this 4 bed100m brick and frame. Includes 2 baths. util. room. nat RBS, cent aor. over;ized
attractive fireplaces, 2 baths, lormal dmm&amp; n;ce garage
&amp; large yard Owners anxoaus to sel. Call
kitchen and ahuge family room. lfs a great place J1m Cochran
for choldren, lst grader; can walk to school. Good
SPLIT LEVEL - NEffiED IN WOODS - Very
n~ghborhood and the pnce 1s $72,500.00.
attracbve 4 bedroom home 1n a lovely 4 5 acre
JUST U!ITED - POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION - setting near Rio Grande 1n an excellent ~ghbar·
,large 4 bedroom ranch off Rt 588. Th~ fine home hood. Nearly 26 sq. ft of IMng area includes a
offers you 2\1 bath~ equipped kitchen, d1mng huge lam;ly room wtth w.b. fireplace, butt&lt;n kit·
room, famoly room, fireplace, huge rec room, 2car chen, ·3 full baths, plenty of storage and located in
garage, large storage area, new 20x40 in-ground city schools. Can be bought with nearly 10 acres.
pool plus I acre of landscaped yard Much mare. Call ike Woseman.
Call Clyde Walker
TAKE OVER GOING BUSINESS - GROCERY &amp;
COMPLETELY REDECORATED - IN TOWN VEGETABLE MARKEl - Good traffic locatiOn on
This~ a marve~us 32 yr. old stone &amp; frame home
bUilt to last a iffetime 2 stones decorated 1n maon h1ghway. 3 yr. okl 32x48 black buildm~
excellent taste. Includes 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, includes ewryth1ng - stock, coo~r;. sc,ale~ etc.
deluxe kitchen,lormal din;ng, fireplace, den, study • l0lt48 covered porch area Large parking an!a
plus full basement wtth fam1ly room &amp; foreplace O.Vners must sel. Call J;m Cochran.
Nat gas H.W heat 2 car garage has walk-in loft OWNER FINANCING AVAilABlE -IMMEDIATE
{excellent storage) plus ail ctty utilities 8IA% mig POSSESSION - Qua~ty built bnck homein one of
assum~on You must see th;s one at $79,500
the area's finest location 111 At 35 area. over 1600
STONE RANCH - A spac1ous 4 bedroom home sq. ft. of ilv1ng area on main fuar plus aver 500 ~
ovellooking the nver. Owner has pnced well under ft of l;n;shed basement area. 2 w.b. fireplac~
marilet value. Has family roam, fireplace. 3 baths. hardwood &amp; teak floors, plush carpet bu1tt·1n book
dining room, nat gas cent a1r &amp; 2 car garage A shelves formal dmong with wall to wall hutch,
must to see.
breakfast room &amp; buott&lt; n kllchen, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, lam1iy &amp; rec room~ nat gas heat central
IF YOU WANT ABEAUTIFUL HOME SITE- LOTS air, 2car garage and even an 18K36 ;n.ground )XliJ
Of WOODS &amp; WILDLIFE - take a look at thos an a lovely pnvate ~ndscaped yam. Call J;m
You1110\1e ot ff you love naltrre walks, horse r~ong Cochran
hunting and pnvacy. Up to 83 acres of n1ce layong
10% ASSUMPTION - LOW DOWNPYMTS. vacant land in Rio Grande area. Grbwong
Very n;ce 4 yr old bnck &amp; frame ranch lndudes2
na~borhood . Several luture homesites on 2
roads. Price'd WJth 83 acres at 37,500 Ctty schools baths, 3 bedrooms, equopped kttchen, f1repla~:e,
rentral a1r. 2 car garage w/ warkshop plus over l
Call J;m Cochran
ace tree shaded yard Call l1m Cochran Sellers
169 A. -Beef cattle farm, 251\ m/1, crop, 1151\ must sell.
pasture, 2 barns, 2 houses With one remodele; &amp;
own gas supp~ from well on farm. Just off ~R I cLOSE TO TOWN - Conven1ent lacatoon, 1~ mok!s
mile W. Rutland. Call Clyde Walker.
west of town. Attract;ve &amp; spac;aus 3 bedroorn
ranch Has full basement. warm &amp; cozy flreJjace,
1918 CHATHAM - Ranch style home near new fa moly &amp; recreanan rooms, p~nty al storage area.
tMYilTOUnd ara. 3 bedroom~ firepla~:e, living room.
nat gas heat, l0xl5 workshop or small guest Nat gas &amp; central a~r plus garage &amp; fenced yam.
house. 12ll60 shed &amp; fenced yard.Call Clyde Pnced to sell call J;m Cochran.
Walker.
REDUCED $3.400 - MUST SELL NOW - An
attractiVe 3 yr. old home situaled on over I acre
l64AC. -SR 141- Localedon Raccoon Ci~~
yard 1n city school dist 1481 sq. ft. of living area
th~ farm offer; lobacca !lase. approK. 60 ac pas·
wh~h features 31arge bedroom~ 2full baths, mce
illre,.50 crop, b~ance ifl woodland, 40x60 bam
kitchen , dining room, util. &amp; storage room, heat
and 16x60 shed for tobacco &amp; INestoc~ Well &amp; pump, 2 car garage and large storagl! bLM~1ng
rural water available for home site. Less than $450
Pnced to sell at $51.500.
ac. Cal Clyde Walker.
~10 CENTRE ESTATES- Beautiful wooded buold·
lig l:lts from 2 to 5 acres each Ideal location near
cdlege 1n good resklential area. $6,800 to $11,000.
L111d lays very good. Lots of privacy.

trelll finance.

'.

';

NEW LISTING- L~ng for anice home in town? Tllls.ranch has
3 bedrooms, carport, v1n,yt sirl:ling; located ;n Adrian Dr.
'

'

IEAI.TOI

Apartment
for Rant

basketbal courts.
"
NE)V USTING- POMEROY- ROUND CEDAR HOME -lots of
i!lass and a lovely view Wooded lot 3 or 4 bedrooms, kitchen,
&amp;ving room · dm;ng area. AI wooden beamed ceolings. Fulf
basement Select your own carpet &amp; decor. Circled rustic round
deck completely around the home. The only round home in the
area. lake a look al this home!

..

MINERSVILLE - Approximately 41&gt; acres with an older 4
mom house and an old traier. $5,400.00.

Dottle lll'ner ......................"....................... 992·5192

2 bdr. unfumiahad apt, in

PERRY TOWNSHIP- 78 acrs,l5A.SimmsCreek
boUOOt,
balara rolling pasture &amp; wood~ niCe
PEACEFUL COUNTRY-LIKE SETTING. Excellent
buy at $45,900. Owners has ~ ~n transferred &amp; modular home, large bam, several other bu11dligs.
base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
are an~oos to !f1 this lovely bnck &amp; frame ranch Tobacco
Woods Rd.
.
with 3 Brs, la~itchen, LR witl1 W8 fireplace, nice
carpel throu out. attached garage &amp; l acre ptnestudded kt
'ble blended mortgage for quah· GUYAN TOWNSHIP -; Ull acr; mil located·
· south of MercerviHe. Approx. 20 fl. tillable, balara
fM!d buyers.

TRAILER LOT- Approx1matey 2·1/3 acres, of wh;ch most
are wooded. Has aseptic tank. Water and electric ate availa·
ble. $5,000.00.
·
·

A

USED MOBILE HOME.
1178-2711'

5 room unfurnished Apt. In
Middleport. Equipped Nlcloy fumllhad mob. homo
Kitchen. t150. month. Cell In city. Adults only. Call
448·0338.
614-992-5892.

EXECUTIVE CHARM
mthis 4 BR, 21&gt; bath
in
beautiful Charolaos Hills Estates. Complete 1n
every way including a completely equopped
kitchen, large living &amp; dining rms, famoly rm
w;tt\, fireplace, basement &amp; cent. air The 300
sq ft. sun deck overlooks the beautiful 20x~4
pool All this plus a well landscaped 31&gt; acre
lot Shown by appomtment. Call Ranny Black·
burn at Strout Ratty, 446-0008
BEEF CATTlE COUNTRY - 132 acres. mostly
dean hii pastllre, good fences, l'h story 00t11~
• large bam, tob. base, lronts on 3 roads near Mud·
sock. Price reduced to $64,000.

'

Office ......................................................... 992·2259

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart-

manto 1200 per mo. or 11
income II lf0,000 or leu
HUO available. A·One Reel
Estateo, Cer'ol Yeager;
Realtor. Cell 304-676·
6104 or 875 · 6386 or
675·7788.

houoo, lot 80x130. 2122 PARK Drive. Oneotory wl1h
garage. 304-8711- , •.
Uncoln Ave. 304-676-2671 flniohed
4444 oftor 5 p.m.
or 304-876·2924

RACINE - Trailer lot or building lot with approxmatey I
aorw. Has'a new 2 car garage, septic, well and public water
$8,000.00. '

REALTORS
HtnJY E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ............................ 992·6191
Jan T1uss8ll ............................................... 949-2660

Apartment
for Rent

ble

PRICE REDUCED - POMEROY -Twa stray frame home
with 4 bedrooms, large living room and a fire pice. Forced air
gas heat Now $20,000.00.

'

Apartment
for Rant

Settling eatate. 6 roorTI

'

m

304·8711·8277.

•

NEW USTING - CHESTER AREA - Approx;matey 100
Acre farm With an older 11&gt; story frame house, w~h 8 rooms,
'4 bedrooms, and bath. Old barn, shed, and garden spaCII.
Needs some work. $29,900.00.

NEAR POMEfiOY- Sunken foyer, u~a1rs balcony, sewing
room, front &amp; rear porch, &amp; a two car garaae makes this·3
year old home w1th 3 bedrooms, di1ing area, and large living
room a n;ce place to live. Approximately 20 acres, mostly
wooded . $52,000.00.

Ike W1seman, Broker, 446-379'6'1V&amp;.
lim Cochran, Associate, 446-7881 be

on Rt. 2 about 5 minu1Ba
hom town . Call after 8 .

5 rm. hou• &amp; bath. lnquirw
It 91 B 2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis.
Oh.

LOCATION. PLUS QUALITY should desc~be th5
lovely 3 BR brick ranch. Special features are a
large LR &amp; dming rm.,equip~ kitchen, II&gt; bath~
laundry, quality carpet cent a;r &amp; an 011er;~ed 2
car prage. Located on U.S. 35 Wrst &amp; shown by
appoontment

RUTLAND - Sits on a rollin&amp; bank and has a nice front sit·
ling porch. 3 bedrooms, large utility room, 2 baths, set up for
a woodburner, gaFage, and storee building. $28,500.00.

PHONE 446-3643

r

TWO mobh hom01 for rent

STROUT REAL TV

VIRGIL B. SR. Wl.lOI
Phone
1-(614)·992-3325.

(·

Real Estate General

CENTRAL
REALTY
Residential Investments

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Very nice 2 bdr. duplex
homo, turni~hed, Main St.
Cheshire, Oh. Call 614·
245 -6818 .

bd.room with stove, refrig .•
a.c .. LP gal. porch and
•wning . Very gcpod cond.
Set Ufl on ren,ed lot.

•8.600. Coli 614-949·
2123 or e14·992 -6841 .

6 roo mo. carpon, beth, brick
and tile. 830,000. 31218
Bowlea Rd. Dexter, Ohio.

3 bedroom Mobile Home .
Appro•lmately II miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport .
814-99~·118118. -

In POmeroy. 7 roomo.
buement, 4 lou. good
location. Aoking U7.000.
Call 614·992-7284. '
•

TEAFORo(BI~~~~~
.

HaYen, cloee to bank,

schools &amp; atllreo. New
kitchen, dlohwaoher. carpeted, 2 car garage, largo
gordon . No peu. t100.
deposit. t2110 month .
304·273·81118 •

44

Real Estate General

a

R£AL ESTATE. AGENCY

THREE bedroom. New

'

CaN 992-3267or8711-21111S "
evef)in p .
' •
-:-1:-:N-::T:-:0:-:W=N-3-b-'d-r.-.-.-c-w-11...,.: '
garage. quiet locetlon. LoW. · '
molntonence. 148,000 With•
11% FHA to quaIIIIIad bUyer:
Cell 448-4431 otter 6.
•'

Generol Houllng ond Traoh
removel Service. Ralloble
and dependable. Call 448·
31118 after 8PM 258·1987.

MOBILE HOME - w;th large add-on building, also asphall
dnveway. Locatd on,qu;et clean street out af h1gh water on
Racine The hv;ng room IS extra large. There IS cement walk
and large covered porch , also ametal storage building. You
can be ;n this Olle' in two weeks far only $16,900.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843-2075

WISEMAN

"'"'"

A•aoclatH karate Studio.

Rentals: $175-$220 - Racine
'200-Middleport

THREE bedroom houu for
rwnt, nice location. 304871·1080.

.

3 bd.room home, stone hoH
woy up front. with yellow· •
vinyl siding. Approx. 1 mIa • • •
out
of Reudovlle by Forkect ' ' •
approved. Doctor referral a.
Run . $16,00 . or 83,000.
•
By IPIIOintment. Telapmno down
with f1 60. month ·'
304-875-5688. Bonne
land controcil. Sits on 1..,..
Handley. Electrologist.
ground. 10 percent lntarMt.
Call 423-5967 onytlme.

kicking bogs, and protective
equipment. Jerry Lo-ry &amp;
143 Burlington Rd .. Jack·
son, Oh. Cell 814-288·
3074 or 81'4·384-8150.

Real Estate Ge'neral

112+ ocr01 with 2 hom•,.'
Gellle County.
• •

MID-TOWN Proteuional
Electrolysis Clinic. Permanent hair removal. A.M.A.

Schools
Instruction

448-3437.

~

1its on· 3 acre• of land :
Excellent term• to right

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
T.. Returns &amp; bool!hoplng

446·4416 after 7PM.

Clean &amp; Cozy conveni•nt
localion. Utillt.iel paid. dep
&amp; ref. req . t1 95 mo. Cell
'•
446-7482.

B. J. Hairston, AS'OnJC. - '14b·4l4U Eve.
Clyde Walker, Assoc . 245-5276

3 bedroom houae for aale.' •
N- carpeting throughout.•
Located on Buhlin Rd. and' •

Profeuional
Services

Fu tnlohed apt. 814 6 no 3 rm . and 4 rm. unfumiahed
utllltie• pd: 3 room• . 701 apartmentt. Ut ilttiu paid.
4th Ave .• Galllpollo.
no peu. no childnn. Call

f

ceah bonua.

more in formation call

216 E. 2nd !\1.

Real Estate General

SANOY AND BEAVER

hoapltal or health ••rvlcel.
or bu1lnest admlnlstretlon.

qualify for

worklng7 Give uo a try·Trl·

Phone 882-31?.1
New Haven. WV •

rafernceo. Call 445-8087.

The Welt Vl•elnle Dapen- coveroge In GoUla County
mont of Health Ia -lng a for almoet a century. Farm,
full-time Hospital Admlnil· home Md per10nal property

Contact the West Vlrvlnla
Army Notional Guord. For

11

23

Carol Neol

old wicher booketo. Cell
eppllcotlono to: L. Clark
l---·---,----- 614-387-013B.
Hensbarver. M.D .• Director
Auction every Fri. night at Buy raw fur and baorl hides. of Health, 1800 Washington
the Hertford Community George Bucklay, 814-854· Street, East. Charleuon.
Center. Truckload• of new 4781 . Weekdays IS to 9, West VIrginia 253011, by
merchandise every week. weekends 12 noon to 9PM. December 16. Sol'ary nogot·
Contlgmenta of new and dnr hldoo ond gln•ng end iable. Equal Opportunity
u•ed merchandise always trapping ~up plies. Rt. 2, Employor:AA Plan·M·f -H
welcome. Richerd Reynolds Athens., Oh.
Auctioneer. 275·3069.
LOOKING for a pen ..... -.•::Tobacco poundage. Call that hu good poy,
AUCTION every Saturd·oy 814-268-11411.
in1u r8nce. retirement plan.
night, Mt. Alto. WV. 8 p.m.
that will tisch you ovoluable
ConalgnmQ&gt;nts welcome . Gold : silver, sterling, job skill, pluo help with a
Emma Ball auctioneer.
jewelry, ring•, old colna 6 coli-sa or Vo· Tee educa--:::;:;=:::;:;:::;== currency. Ed Bwkett Berber tion? There'a qnly one
Shop, Middleport. 992· eroundl High echOOI11nlort
-=g W · d T
3476.
or graduetea, 'you may even
ante
0 Buy
9186

Ohio

for lndivlduala &amp; buaine•••·

Valloy Trading Co.. Spring tretor for ita Fairmont coverage• are avalleble to
Valley Piau, 446·8026 •or Emergency Hoopltol, Ia· meet Individual needa.
ceted In Folrmont. Wall Contoct Noallno . Agency;
446·8028.
Virginia. Requirement•: -nt. Phone 388-1180.
We pay calh for late mocJe&gt;i Bacc.laureate degr• plu1
two yura of experience in MOBILE HOMES Compare
clean u•d cer1.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene John1on

In

1· 800-992·23 61, out of
Ohio 1-613·268·0112.

home at anytime, have

num. Gold and Silver prt:es eam good •• •· meet nice •·

Old coina, ·•crap ringt &amp;
ailverware. Daily quotes
available. Alao coiu &amp; coin
auppliea for aale . Spring

aour1e1 .

Will do bobyolttlngln my

6

1---------

Bualnen '&amp; Second Mort·
gago loans. Equity Ro·

Employment Servlcea not

are the highest in two.,..,., people. Call 814·843·
check our pricee on gold &amp; 2 9B2. 614· 388 ·9046,
silver, scrap j-elry. Buying 614-992 -3890.

~~=;===;:;===::;­

.Are you aariou1 about

F.qualllntJ'•"III

Situation•
Wanted

EOE·M·F-H.
~~i=~~;;;;~;:==
HAVE FUN paying your 1"13
Buying Gold. Silver, Plat!· Holiday bills. Sal Avon and 1_ _ _ _..:;_~-.....:--

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 446·3169
kind1, call Kenneth
Swain,
or 268-1987
in

Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment
units. rentong for 30 percent of your ad·
justed income under the Department of
Housong &amp; Urban Development Sectoon B
program. All utiilt;es included

12

HOME LOANS 12% fixed
r•ta. Leader Mortgoge.
1-li14-lll2·3011. '

Submit an eppUcatlon to the
President. Boord of Dlrec·
tono. Gallla-Melgo C.A.A ..
8o• 272, Cheshire. Ohio
46620orthoOhioBwOiuof
Wanted To Buy

Part Lab. puppy to give
away. 4 moo. old . To goOd
home. Call 446· 7137 after
5.
1---------~-WANTED TO BUY Old
furniture and Antiquel of all

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY

bai_.,

SMALL brad puppy. part
Dachshund, house dog.
female . 4 months old.
304-458-1690.

Old ttoneware Jars, juga,
crocb &amp; milk pitchers. alao

helpful during the illn 111 and ' to anyone who will give

Car &amp; phoM rwceo...,.. Frwo
kit avolloblo. Now book lng
partleo. Call
II o.m.
&amp; 12 noon any day except
Wednaodoy. 304·882·
29114.
•

later t)lon March 3, 1983.

anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to

Puppie• part Doi;Jetman .

who were ao kind end

SEVEN pups. mi•ed breed,
should be smell dogs .
304·676· 744,.

446-0089

Cell 446·3797.

No dellveri••· no quotaa.

education and experl .. ce.

ANY PERSON who has WVaStetoChempionAuctl·

may place an ad in this
column There will be no
charga to the advartiter.

CAMEO llngarlo perty plan.

trenoportrotlon and phyroi·
celly ebla to perform dutiM.
Salary ,.gotlablo ba!lld on

Langavilla -Salem Center
area .

Giveaway

offerany other thing forsele

manag6mont of tie Agoncy.
Qualifications: Bachelor's
Degree end II v-oro ad minis·

tratlve experience or en
equivalent numtter of v•r•
of compar1ble work experience in bu•lneiS, account·
ing, public administration or
a clo•ly related aNa. Must
ilti:'"'""'CI have valid drlver'a llcenae,

Initial shots. Cell 949 -2656
for Info. After 5 p.m.

:3~0=4=·=67:5;·;78:7:9:.==== 8

14

Mrddleport Ohro reserves the
rrght to bid at th rs sale

i

Smell hou•a dog, 8 week•
old, female to 1 good home
with no amell children. Hea
been wormed, and had

6 month old black &amp; tan
Collie. Good with chlldreQ .
$100 down reseNII con - , Had all shots. No phone.
dominium. Depoolt Is 100% Conuct·Kimmy Pierce of

One In I 9 7 6 Oldsmobrle
Cutlass 2 door Sena1 No
3J57R6M461178

at the off1ces of t he Cent ral
Trust Co NA of Mid dleport.
OH to sell for cash the fo ll owrng colla teral
To w• t
One (1) 1 982 Harle y -

LAFF·A·DAY

Giveaway

4

207 acto farm. longovUio.
Mineral rlghto Included. No
~ou ... $12,000 down. Will
carry rwot. 814-388-9348.

For rent-3 bd.room hauae.

Eu•rn Local 6choo1Dio·
trtct. Tuppers Plelno wa~er
Dlotrtct. 10 minutes from
Pomeroy, t1711. par month,
eoourity deposit required .
Coli G. Welton. 814-992·
3548 after 7 p.m.

and or rental'

Broadway-Middle110n.
----___ ____ _,:_________-

'J
H~

for

E•cellent condition &amp;
location--ell rudy for

EXECUTIVE Dl RECTOR·
FFI&amp;CAL OFFICER . Tho
IU ..... H _
IM - LIII...
6U - Aoo l&gt; .. o,.,
ttl - 'l•E•eoutlve Dlrector-Fiaoal
9]7 - 8vlto.lo
7tZ - IIIIIo ...
81
.......
Officer Is rw1110nllblo for the
82 ~l.,mb•~glo H.. IInt
E•c•••""9
·rI ---,.---~~~----'~-~ ovaraH planning, odmlniatra8• Eiol&lt; lo.,ll &amp;.. H. I,GRI•IIon
G.,ROat
oo 1 t - &lt;1• On doy .......
13 00
tlon and direction of anti·
Th,.. dlo,,..__
f 400
BB ill\ to flu•h
proverty ectlvltlu lnduding
U11 1&lt;1 1 5 W&lt;&gt;rclo Slorcl&amp;. lnMrl• "
1 1'00
117 Up h&lt;llot••v
fi .......... ~... ..... ....

1 ;J3

·3&amp; Lots &amp; Acreage

31 Homes for Sale

18 Wanted to Do

Help Wanted

:1~1~4~2~6:;8~-1~7~8~5~.~~;==

j .. l/ flll 'llf 11- rr•l ''1/ lff m •• t • n ·hlflfl£'' ~

lU - Iha0• •11o
2MI - G"'y.,. O,.!

1 -~

CC!
II

7lVon •• • w o
74 Mol&lt;&gt;rt ¥cl•o
7!1 lloeooll MoiO&lt;O
711 A~oo ,.IIli i. At:e .. IOIOII
l1Awtj&gt;llepo•

59 f &lt;&gt; •Soto o• Tn6oo

3 ~ l o lo II A&lt;• -•

~Wont

«'ln ~ ~•fu d

71 ......., .... . s ...
7l l f uclll '"' s•••

11

1981 Ventwa ViHa14x84, 2
bdr .. •••· con d.. t13, 000
financing. available. Call

LOAN ~SUMPTION- io/;INT.- $3,9oo DOWN
Monttly payments $348.24 including taKes &amp; In~ Nee
ranclt. La11e IOOdern kitchen. This home wo!Jd be an excellent
starlet' home.
'
•
lARGE SP~IOUS HOME - This home ·6- new. Featu~ 3
bedroom~ 21&gt; bath~ living room, formal dining 1111m, famiy room,
modem kill:lien and 2 car garage ;n city school district

'

MODERN RANCH HOME - 3 or 4 bedrooms, nice living room,
eat-in litl:hen, fllmly room, ful basement Th1s horne has been
very Willi kept 2 car prge. Prii:ed only in the 40s.

ON 1ST AVE. - 11 BLOCK F!IOM PARK - Th~
handsome 140 yr. old home 1s ready for you. Just
recentfy rebuit - new roof, new 3 phase-hli
wa"r system. new wi~ng; new ~umbing !2 bat~s),
new kitchen, new carpel 111d completely
deoorated to please anyone. One of the best
locations in the area, and a fine home filr any szed
family. Call Ike ~seman.

ALIFETIME - RESIDENTIAL 1'1!0·
OR BOTH - Attractive 2h
l w~~g~: OFFICES
house' on 2nd Ave. on the heart of
1

i

CHEAPER THAN RENT - Payments of $242ma
1nclud1ng taxes &amp; msura nce 9~% mortgage
assumptoan with $4500 down pymt. 2 bedroom
home located ;n the c1ty school d1sl Has firepia~:e.
eat&lt;n ~otchen, new pamL \1 acre yam and pnced
al $26.500. Call ~m Cochan.

I:· .
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r·
11-.
I~-

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1..
II··',..;;
I

1:
I
I

1:·
home. Approx. 10·20 acres crap, With balance 1n 1
woods and pasture. Hassome buildings and barns. ·· I
Home has fireplace, carport and garage Off At
554. Cal Jim Cochran.
·
1
GRADE A DAIRY - 2 homes - 238 acres m/l 1
located I m;le west of Rutland 90 Ac, m/1, good
crop land Modem milk parlor &amp;milk house wottt al 1
equip. 60 free stalls. l6x50 C. STV stlo with unloader &amp; feed' bunk. Tastefully remooeled older 6 1
room brick home With full basement Also 2nd
168 ACRE FARM - $48,500- Excellent buy on

lh~ large acreage wrth a remodeled 4 bedroom

II
$34,000- N1ce 3 bedroom home located on · I
:southwestern School D1st Has an equopped
chen, dining area, II&gt; baths, lull basement 2 I
carports l'" acres. Call Clyde Walker.
I
rem&lt;ideloo frame home w1th new kitchen &amp; batli
Full lone of larm eQUIP included 1n price. Financmg
ava!able. Cal Clyde Walker
~t­

'prol'essi•ooal buSiness community. Includes 2
~
baths. lull basement 2 car garage.
construction when bu;lt and good ' COMMERCIAL lOT IN RIO GRAND£ -Excellent
location at comer of Maple &amp; East College Ave.
this a sal;d
invrstment
~ provided
by lhe
large rooms,A Restricled bulldmg lot zoned commercial. Cal
floorn, fireplaces, etc. Call ike W;seman Clyde Walker lor info.

~=~~:::ma~~k:es

I :.
I :.
I·
I .

I :_

........._,..•.•....-.......____.....

I :.

�---

_____,....,

I

•

Plea111nt, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
44

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT
600 block of Third. Ave .•

Go lllpollo. 2 rmo. and both.

$12 &amp;. p lu1 u.t ilitiu . Ca ll
446-422 2 between 9 and

6PM.
POMEROY - 2 bedr-oom
un furn i ahed, apt. , 11.60 . 2
bedroom h ouse $186 .

Oopo11t $100. Call 614 992·2288.

!t.pt .. fo r rant . Half doubla-2
bd .room Apt . Adulfs pre ~
tarred. No pats.. 614-992-

2749.

54 Misc. Merchandise
&amp;. Vegetables

Firewood delivered 180 . a
c.ord . Co1l delivered $45 :
SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE ' t"on . Cal.l Tom •Hoak i ns

62 Olive St., G111ipoll1. King

co al It wood heatera w ith
f"'n $469. sat box spring 8t
mattre11 t1 00, firm •120.
sofe -lovea••• &amp;. chair $199,
love seats $70. new coal 8t
wood heaters •• low al
t399 w i th blowen, used
co al &amp; wood heatera, new
din at sets 176 &amp; up, refriger ators. ranges , bunk bad•
complete $179 , bunkiat
mett r euea $40 . chana.
dreaaera. TV's: Call 446-

POfATOES ... 00 100 lb.

814·848· 2180 or 614·
742-2834.

Firewood. 1pllt, UO .OO o
truckload . *36 .00 doll·
vorod. Ph. (8141 992· 2770
or·(3041882·2194.
Warm Mornin_
g o.. heater
LP or Natural gaa. Stove

p i pe Inc . 85 , 000 BTU

bag No. 1 WIICOnalft RUIMt,

Coli 441·8247 or 876·
3782.

I
CKJ ()

output. Sliding gl1e1 patio
door. lneide door and other

mi1c. Coli 814·992·7294.

3169.

fiTZPATRICK ORCHARD·.
·'l!ou con ·otlll buy oppl11 ot

I NUMIS

I I K I

2 bd.ruom Apt. with 2 full
bathl. 86 South Th i rd St ..

JOHN Deere 730 dleoel.
UIOO. John DMro10· 10
ga1 troctor, 12410. Moine
M·ll goa, t21110. I·H 47 h.oy
b0 1er. •eoo. I·H 8 row com
plonter •2 . 000. Sldera
Equipment Co. 304·175·
7421 .

64

~~~~~~~==
Reg . Red Angua breeding
otock for ..... Cell 1011·
821-40711.
1 - - - - - - - - l c..:
Aigl1t1red Querter Horae.

horae bl•nkete . Weat•rn _

11

69 For Sale or Trade

APARTMENTS . mobile

2 room effic i ency apt .

•

1·304-882 -2668 or 1·614·
992-7206.

UNFURNISHED apartment
for rant. 1 bedroom ,
$180 .00 Call Automotive

8 -6. 304 -676 ·
2218. 876· 6763.

IIIFIATION8Yt% ASSUMmON
Price redwd to $31,500.00.
Charm &amp; qually will be yours
City walar. Close ID lire hydrant
in th~ all br&lt;:k 3 bedrOOOI
Basemert Well btl« house.
horne. Ur~e iving room and
Carport !Aitbuldi~ Good in·
lormal din11g room w/ picture
swtion, trees, ~space.
windlows o~e~oo~ng the Ohio
Very quiet area.
· assubaths, lamiy room, 2
mable mortage at low interest
car garage with door OP'ner, rate. Phone lor d!Dils.
31tt. 2 fireplaces, central air,
#566
large basanent and over I
acre of beautiluly landscaped
grounds. aose to the ely . For
more dlhils can today .
#523
INVESTIIENT - INCOIIE - INVESIIIEIIT
'71 12K65 furnished mobile home, '68 12x50 furnished mobile
home and 4 extra ~ for rerrtal, septic systems, al on Sllle Route.

Unfurnished upstairs apt for
rent, good location. 304-

676-1302.
FURNISHED apartment. 3
rooms and bath , utilities
paid . Adults preferred .
304-67~·4361 '

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room $126, utili ties pd. ainglt;t male. share

46 Space for Rent

54 Misc. Merchandise

KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of

For sewe lump coal &amp;
firewood . linn Coal Co .•

tiller, 6 HP, new $200 .
Columbia electric range,

puppies. CFA Himalayan.
Peraian and Slam••• kit·
tens . · Call 448·3844 after

$75. Bunk bad.l20. Saddle
S30. 304· 676·6788.
4PM .

'

Pomeroy ._Largo lots. Coli , _ln_c_.c_oi_I_4_4_
6-_1_4_08_._ __
992-7479.
' Firewood split , scut to

48

cord1 . Coli 614-266-8246.

Backhoe andloader diga 8
ft .. large bad pick up
hautable, operlte _yournlf.

t90 . per day. 304-896·
3841 .

Slab• cut-up t16 full length
$10 PU load. round wood ,
large truck load. Call

614·246· 6804.

Chrome gl111 coffee tabla &amp;
an4 tables with matching

lomp1 for sola. $226. Coli
446-1066.

.

••• heedlwa
51 Household Goods
NJtW 1983 Nicchi uwi.ng
machine free-arm, dial-omatic. Equipped to zig zag.
monogram; ~ew on buttons,
make button holea . Cost
new 1439 . 96. year and
clearance .. Ia $126 . Cell
614-386-8918, out of town
cell collect. Frue delivery to
your home .
Meytag wringer washer
tSO. Whirlpool wuhar &amp;
dryer 1226. other wa1hers
&amp; dryers extra nice. Guaran-

teed. Call 614-266-1207.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

6x8 utility trailer e300.
Homelite chain uw 18 '

•1211. boys 20' bicycle $36,
snowmobile engine t60 .

Call 446-4426.

Used Norge refrigerator
$16, Polariod camera $6 ,
complete fondue set $6, car

Real Estate General

WOOD REAlTY, INC.
446-1066

4149.

ONLY 6 WEEKS UNTIL SPRING -Loolc at this modern 3-bedrm.
home overlooking the ~utiful Ono River. Over I aqe of land with
large In-ground swimming poot. En10y this suml!lel in comlort
Pnce $75,000.00. (Owner may h~p finance qualified buyer!)

.

, WELCOMING AIID SPM:IDUS RANCH - Exceptiroal
zoning makes ~ iXJssible for an active lamiy to fi..e in ttl~ horne
without having to tiptoe aroond each other. Fam~y room ~th·
fireplace is well separated !rom formal di ~nt iving room and
bedrooms. Everyday traffic erler.i lrom the garage to the famly
room and kitchen. Master suite has private bath, there are 3 oilier
bedrooms on fim floor plus bedroom and mage on secood ftoor.
2 tar gagage. 16x32 pool. Near city. $78,000.

LIFE
IN SURANCE

L·SHAPED RANCH - Super size (~Jni~ room. uving room has
beautiful stone lrep~re. 3bedroom;, I II baths. Kitchen has ran~
dishwasher, lots ol cabinets. fenced back yard. lg. paw. Storage
bldg. Near city. $54,500.
APPEALING BRICK RANCH- On one are gently sloping .suburbans~e. 4boorooms, I I' baths, family room, central air cond.,2car
garage pus 24x4{) btJiding lor workshop or garage Gas he It
. $38.00 gas budget. ttlmei~ only 12 years dd, mellent cond. I 'h
.m1les ~om crty. $69,000.

BMR 422 -Nice ranch located on Roush Lane is priced to sell at
$38.00J. Large LR. 2 BR, kitchen includes range, eye-level oven.
dishwasher and disposal. Call to see.

BMR 425- E.xerulive type brick home, in fre:J_c~.. Pr'!f!~~.
teaturing 2,100 square feel ol living area on the main floor plus a
lull walkout basement. This fine home is one of tkind in th~ a\ea.
Be the. first to see this one. Ca,ll now.
BMR 426 - Priced right al $37,500. It has an assumable ~an
with only 9\7% interest We are talking about a very clean, 3 BR
home situated on njce flat lot in a family oriented, neighborhood.
Call tor complete details.
BMA 398- PRICE GREATLY REOUCWGOwner transferred and
m~st sell this 3 BR ·s-~l·
1ludes d~uxe 18&lt;36
inground .iXJol. Red, " .. ¥~•""" - n.US owners Will pay
F.H.A.·VA · points and closing cost~
.

(PEt401t4

BIIR428- Steel ~ding, 3 BR ranch situated on la~e flat lot Qty
School Dislrict l'liced at $37,500.00. Call lor appontmenl

iMR 429 - All electric bHevel in Kyger Creek School ~strict

. ,;wated on 1.21 acres w~h assumable 911% loan. Cal for complete

details!

'

BIIR 4Jl- NEW USTING - Excellent buy at $38,500 Lovell'
tnme ranch 'rit13 BR's. la!J' kitchen with carpeted dining area, 2
baths. Beller see th~ ooe D:lay!

3 BEDROOM COTTAGE located along Mil Creek Rd. wnhin city
~mils. Good localioo and easy to access. Price $25,000.00. .
LOOKING FOR A RENTAL? We have to ha..e two nice apartments
overlooking the Galipotis go~ course. Adults ooly no pels! From
$200.00.
'
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN KAMAUGA- 100' frontage on Rt. 7, corner lot. 150' deep. Has concrete block buiklin&amp;
Call lor more details!
.
INVESTMENT. or residential properij ideated within city limits. Has
been con~erted to two a~, however, can be.modified as one lg
residence. Hot water heat lot eKiends from 4th Ave. to 5th A~e.
Price $65,000.00.
NEW LISTING .- 3 bedrm., ranch style, carpeied home within cit)'
limits. Fenced 1n yard, In-ground swimming poot, electric heat with
wopd burner chimney. La~ carport Buy now lor $46.900.00.

1114·388·9080.

77 Chevy pld&lt;·up. Cullom
doluxo 10. Auto ., V8, P.S.•
P.S .. Radio, holvy duty nur
bumper. fog lights, 2 tone
point, goodtlro1. 8 foot bod.
e1 ,895. Coli 814·992·
2708.
1872 DA·TSUN truck with
toppor and boot rock.
Excello9t co.ndltlon.
01,650.00 firm. 304·676•
1146 onytlmo.

73

Vans&amp;. 4 W.O.

von •2. 760. Coll446· 7322,
8&amp; D Motoro.

1878 GRAND Prix SJ. good
clnn cor, phone 304-676·
2128 alter 6:0(!.

bo aold for caoh at public

76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

.4t76

calls Invented Dy Oswald
Jacoby back in 1&amp;31 ·and In
common expert u~ today.
North's. double was· rtegative
to ask partner to bid and
with a near guarantee of
four spades. Alvin Roth

+QJ9171

WEST
.7 3

EAST

•as2

·~110111
• A 8 52

.A9 762

inven~

tK

+4

'50s.

.106S3
'rK
' tQJlltU

+AK
Vulnerable: North-Soulh
Dealer: Soulh
North

2•

Dbl. .

PasS

Pass

East

out. He· went

3137.

to five

spad~ '

opened the queen of hearts
to 'East's ace. Now, if East

Sou1b
10

shifted to a club.
South won and ·cashed two

Opening lead: •Q

high spades. Then he did
some high-powered thinking

led a diamond. East took his
king, but had no diamond to
lead to West 's ace.
He had to play a heart.
South discarded his last
diamond, ruffed in dummy
and had successfull y coun·
teracted East's pre--empt.

lhem guess whal lo do and
not give them a chance to

rl.,:;;;!!!~,!!in~f::_:or;::m::a!!ll:!:on:;,..:_.:..~IN:E:WS~P~A!:PE~R~EN=tER=PR:••:•~•~ss:•·;'.

Auto Repair

Byerly and Faits Automatic
Trai1aml11lon Repair. NOW
OPEN. Corner of Kamper
Hollow· &amp; Kerr Bathol Rd.

evy engine . Miller' s UNd
Auto Partl, Evanavllle-

Horri1burg Rd. C1ll 614·
246·9102.

[H .
REALTOR"

Judy DeWitt, Broker-388-8155
J. Merrill Carter. Broker-379-2184
Becky lane, Assoc.-446-0458
Don Blake, Assoc.-675-1460
.

.·
"4 '

,·'

·.

..,,
.,

SOUTHERN HI~LS ' R.E., INC.

,•

siding

General Hauling

.

Howmet Patio covers

Howmel screen rooms

Mobile home awni ngs

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Colls614·367 ·
7471 or 614-367-0691 .

Aluminum utility

buildings
691 Miller Drive

446·2642
Free Es1imates

Need something hauled
away or something moved7

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lonior, 304-675·
7397.
.._ -t -

87

Upholstery

HAMUN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-lAW

'

Dissolutions or UnconDivorces $350.00
(Costs included).
Wills $25.00
Sma II Estates $350.00

•

tested

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

F 8&amp; K Trae Trimming, stUmp
removal. Call 676-1331 .

1 1 63 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.

446-7833 or 446-1833 .

RINGLE'S SERVICE ox-·

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt .

""
rlenced roofing. including
hot tar application, carpen-

.•_.

We 'll do it. Coll446· 3169or
814· 268· 1987 alter 6.

houoe collo. Call 676 -2398
or 446·2464.

446..()855
512 Second Ave.. Gallipolb
Servinglltllia &amp; Mti15

1 Box 124, Pt. PleaiBnt ,

'

Counties

304-676-4164.

tar, electrician, mason. Coli
304 -676-2088 or 676 - ~------::--::::-:--:-~:::-::-------4660
.

SOLUTION

Water Wells . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes .
Pumps Sahis and Service .

I

304-895-3802.
Get your karpet in ship
shape. Water removal, FREE

ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-446·2107.

Plumbing
llo Heating

82

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446·3888 or 446 ·
4477

SUNDAY PUZZLER

AMERICA'S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER, CENTURY .21.

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Coli 448-1839.

446-6610

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SJb!~-.ltMJITitWMfNJl
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Marcum Roofing &amp;. Spout ·
lng. 30 yearasexp.erienca.
specializing In built up roof.

Bill's

Nu-Prime replacement
windows
Stot:m windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl

exp. .Coli 614-388-9862.

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola , Quarilr. and

of clubs while discarding
four diamonds. Finally, he

In "Malchpoinls," author

r:

304-676-2608 .

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~~IMPROVEMENTS

SERVICE call City F-urniture

814 -949 -2263 or 614 ·
992-2791 .

' club. Next cam~ a spade to
dummy's 10 and four rounds

Kit Woolsey recommends
jaMming your opponents
when you know they have
m~;&gt;st of th(&gt; cards. In other
words, you should make

EO'S APPLIANCE ·REPAIR

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Pomeroy. 992·2284.

Outtara-Down•pouti· New·
Repalr·Gutter PAinting Storm Ooora • Windowe.
Free Estimates . Phone

and cashed his second high

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Ja~oby

textured ceilings commar·
clal and residential. free
eatlmatll. Call 614-266·

HOW.ARD L. WIIITESEL
ROOFI,NG COMPANY .

gone down one, but East

Pass

Call 446-85 15 or 446·0445 '
after 4:30p.m..
tf c

STUCCO PLASTERING .

exterior. plumbing:. roofing.
aome rem~deling. 20 yra .

All Type•

Elet:trir:at

Wiring~ .

SEWING Machine repair4 ,
service. Authorlred Singer
Salas &amp; Service Sharpen
Sc lu or s. Fabric Shpp ,

Coli 814 -388-9867.

had returned his king of dia·
monds South would have

s•. s•

Insulation

PAINTING· Interior and

and everyone passed. West'

76

Tennealill trailer. Auume
loan . call anytime 304-676-

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North-South had a game and .
jammed· them witfi a jump
to five hearts.
South refused to be shut·.

.KQJ9

Home
Improvements

1182.

this bid in the early

East was pretty sure that

.SOt!TH

Wemt

81

of those weak jump over-

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1978 18' 8ojo. 1978 160 1-:-U-s-ed-.-.-...w-l-ir_-.-s-+
14-.-1- 6- 1-n.,
HP Mercury Motor. 1978 Ch

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COST EFFICIENT SPACE ~us pleasing 'appearance!
amazed·at the low heating and cooling costs 'lor this all
horne. 3 bedrti&gt;ms, Ill baths both have ceramic tile. Work saver
k~chen with dishwasher. disposal, range and hood. lots of counter
space, TV room or lormal dining oft kitchen.Twin windows in li~ng
room allow the right amount of ight lor plants . .Attached garage
with aublmatic ,opener. Near cit)'. $49,500. Possible ,Morlgage
. Assumpbon. .
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CLASSIC CAPE COD ,.;, Has all the timeless ippeal II its New
Enaland bebeanrs -gJble mel, dormen, horilllnlal lap sOOa.
large front porch. Bit lacks none ol the modem !eMu~ !ll
nece~Mry today. Traditional entry haM with open Sllimy, lormal
iving and dining rooms. Work saver kit:hen, 3 bedrooms. Ill
baths.
air OOI!d .• fireplace .•basement and prage. Beautiflj
view lithe Ohio. Excellent cond $n ,500. CIU Oia111 l'ea!1m.
DUPl£X -Two story. EaCh- ape~nt h.S 3 bedrooms, baih,
iving room, dining room. IGII:hen, plus private porth. Garage,
carport Income producing property. $45,00J. Call Diane Peamn.

een.

horne ned door there were many
disappoinled bujlrs who wWd too a. and missed out. This
home is in the same elll:!lent neithborhood and is Jlric:ed to Sill H

WHEN Wl RECENTlY sold the

you 1re ;n~e~esll6, betlll' hurrv! One story lrame with SIMI:~
eat4n kit:hen, !Ofmal dlnin&amp; l .bediooms. (liCIIBd 11154
.
Ave. Walk to grocery, downtDwJI shop!Jitt. $31,900. ·
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IAIID LOS Of ·IMD - Kygar Cleek SChollli!lrid. apPrr.x. 9
oaes; $9.300. Apprnx. 51 ·acras, $25.000. Some 'wwlllnd, peslu~ _,. IIIJOCI buildili sites.
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ACROSS

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M83

NEW LISliiiG - Lovely modem home located in the
city .schod distirct Home has 4 bedrooms, 1~ baths, .
family room. kit:hen with dmmg L This home ~ prM:ed
m the 50'~ Possible lofn assumption.
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',NEW USliiiG- BARGAIN Of THE YEAR- Subur·
: ban 3 bedroom ranch. Family room 'rill fireplace plus
':wooct bumina stove. Fuly carpeted. 2\! car attached
: garage, \! acre lot lenced in back yard. Priced tor

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232 ACRES MORE OR LlSS
8 room brick hone - approKirllllely 157 acres timber 32 acres
tilable, 43 acres pastureland. Has a gas well Rural water system
and a well. Nl111ineral rlllltts goes. Bam and storage buidings
Owner w!l help financing on ~nd conlract.
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t .quick sale.
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ff264

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; ;375 DEBBIE DRIVE -Ownerisbeingtranslerredand

• , is am&lt;ioos to sell this lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath bricl&lt;

' .ranch. Ful divided baseonent l.arie 2 car garaae.Nice
~· level landscaped

,.

lawn. Priced in the

60'~

Cit ixlay!

mo

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; • ENJOY EASY UVIIIG Within yaur budge! with th~
•: ba~in priced one lloilr iOn 2 bedroom hOme. folod·
; em kkhllt, forted air heat sam doors, tltermopane
· : llindows. Possible land contract. Eveiereen area.
Priced mid twettes. 1

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~ ' KYGER CREfX LOCATION - 3 bedroom lrarne home

' , wiltt bath, iving room. kilctlen. Cotinty water alii I
, acre olland. Naural gas fine tD house. but not hooked
• : up, Owner needs msel. Malle us an oller: ·

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payment you

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•• OWIIER

FIIIAIICING - 2 aaes level lol Fenca:l,
: : aledric. driled well, electric pump. County water avail•' able. SOpite system. ApproK. one 111ie !If State Route
•; 775. Hannan Trace Road.
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:: BEAT TH£ PRICEI 42 Acres,' more or !lsi wti!S room
•. hoos8 and ~ outbtJidi~ Most al wooded, some
timber. Morpn Twjp.Unbelievallle price at $21,000,
Poslible land contract. 25% dOwn, 10 yeats A.P.R,
·~ $2111.15 monthly.
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#554

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~42

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NEW OfiiiAIKfT -::.7 acras, mil with im~
on the lanll. County Wltlr, 18Ptic•llnlr and eledric.

~.=:,ed~~um. t;k"'Jt~:

MdntyreM

*225
IF YOU LIKE a very livable horne, a good n~ghbor·
hood, a coo~nient location, this home ~ lor you.
Fealunng 3 bedrooms, I \1 baths, fireplace, large co~ll!d paw, aluminum sitJing, 16'x32' in ground poot.
Storage build1ng, Possibility ol owner financing.

FINISit THIS OIIEI Have a beai.Citul home at the edge
II woods. 5 kres. more or less. 3 bedrooms. 2 firepla·

11260

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#204

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C~LlBRATE

THE HOLIDAYS with this lovely brick
ranch horne. There ~ 2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen com·
pletely bui~ in. The living room is spedal with a
beautiful chandelier and stone fireplace. 211 acres in a
lovely rural area ol Mddleport

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11230

11229

.67 OF AN ACRf, more or less. Older garage. Rural
walar tap included. No restricfi&gt;ns. City schools.

JUST USTED - 1 ACRE LOTS - Frontage on Stale
Route Uill. EKcel~nt home site. Rural water available.
Restricted.
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9 ACII£ ESTATE -Ranch style briCk 3 bedrooms, 3\1
bllhs, besement. Caretaller.; buiklint trees, shrubs,
bellutifullandscapng. Large dean stocked pond. Wa
wil\ show you the rest' Failfield Vanco Rod. Green
Township.

ATT.RACTIVE BUY! - 205 Kineoo. Ct~&gt;;e to city con·
Well cared lor 3 bedroom ranch. living
room, forme! dining, workshop. Gara~ with electric
opener. N&lt;iural gas heat, central air. N1ce lawn. priced
in the 40's.
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11203

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Priced in the 20's.,

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11497

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FAMILY DEUGHT - Be the proud owner of th~ 3
bedroom ranch. Uving room with woodburner, dining
room, doltlle cer garage. Large level lot Con..enient to
shopping and hospital. Priced in the 40's.

#961

.PICTUI£ 11001( SETTING -New frame one ftoor plan
home with 3 bedrooms. large kitchen, living room and
main baHt This home and .58 of an acre ~ located off
Bradberry Rd. in Mkkleport Ten minutes from town.

·lt201

~: more or less

. NICE BAtC.K UKE NEW CLOSE 10 EVERYTHING
Beautiful surrounding;. 7 rooms: all brick. twCKar garage, lariJ!
l!i. famiy r-oom 14'x28', IMng roan 14'x28'.Nl::emodem kitchen :
And the best part about this proeprty is the 1()11, low price. Phore •

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': restriction~

, • water. storage .buildotg. Silvera! lee! of fronta.., No

11236

ACREAGE - 2 acres, more or less. Nice pace for your
new house or mobile .home Rural water available.

ces. Ws ~ possibililiet

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#550

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3 BEDROOMS - ~ ACRES II. OR l.
Mobile home 14'x70' 1976 Freooom. I ~ baths; 111derpn~in~ ~
of buiR·in cebine4s, range, retrl!erator, dinette set foir clllditioner
and other furriture. Rural water., nice land lor garden. AI this b'
ioo~ SZZ.500:
'11425
39 ACRES IIOIE OR LESS
.
T'tllalie pastUft lllil, som_e limber, pierCy o( sprilg water, \!mil!
lrmtaflll on l'rGipect Clllrch Road. Phone lor lull detiH$.

n45

DREAMS OR IIEIIOAIES COULD Ill YOURS when
you move into th~ eKCiling brick ranch. Over 2500 sq.
fl 4 bedrooms, 211 bath~ bti~in IGII:hen. Garage. Full
basement, fireplace. Blacktop drive. Approx. 4 se·
duded acres. Pond. City school~

SACRIFICE - 3 bedroom oome, bath, kitchen ·
dining combination. FA. fuel oil furnace, partial base·
menL Aluminum sidin&amp; Storm dooo and windows.
Storage buikling, Sl!pic tank. Level lot. \1 acre, more or
less. Joins Terra Estates.
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11231

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t! 21&gt; ACRfS, .more or !lsi in the 'village oiBidwell. Rural

' 1can assume tlle.llesanl VA loan oo the remodeled 2
t• bedroom home. Wat illltMied. !Aitbuifdln&amp;l, I acre.

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WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT
.
Cou~ be 4 or 5 bedroom~ .La•!!! iXJrches, bath, livin room
!replace with gaws log;, dnng room. krtchen '"lh gbtllt-in
cabinets,_lull basemmt.. storage building and garden spot · "' ·
school d~triCl Call lllr more details.
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35 Policemen:

NEW LISliiiG - 2600 SQ. It 4 bedroom bi.fevet.
~ ~~m, deluJ&lt;e kitchen. dining area, mmily
room,
2\1 baths, heat pump, central air. 2 car
gaage, concrete drive. Swimming poot 18'K36'. Lots of
living on 14 acre corner lol ·
11259

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~. UINI ASSUIIPTIIIIf:... wtli a

POSSIBLE ASSUIMBLE IDNI

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#535 .

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bks.

term

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error
21 Core
23 Allowance
for waste
24 Bellwether
26 Aleutian
island
:27 Parts of
birch family
30 Expires
31 Monster
32 Soft food
33 Elctinct bird
34 Pinochle

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$2 500 DOWN -Aoobw interest rate on ba~nce wkh ()liner, 2 bectroo111 collage
withm 5 m1nutes of Sifller Bridge Shopping Plw.
DREAM NO MORE
POSSIBLE ASSUII'TlON IDAN $26.900
The Amerl::an dream cl owning your own home is po,;ible today
with the financing on llis ~I kept home. 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs
country eat·in klchen, large cheerful tiling room dining room'
shEll , patio plus cherry, app~ and plum trees. Prbd lo sell '

20 Printer's

29 Tree ot the

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BUY THIS

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*271

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Be sure to see th~ clean, remodeled home with large open iving
r0001; dililg room , eat·in klchen, uliily room, garage, §b'age
bu1klni. with gas hiBI &amp; cen~al air. Firm roowd price at$25,000.

now.

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BUSINES$-HOIIE RENTAL
Busmess eQuipment building, 6 room home- Central air modern
kitchen, I II baths, al city Convenience. Nice horne. Rental - 3 ·
room~ All lor one price. An excellent investment Get started now
In bu~ness and a near-by home.
'11529
8\1% ASSUMPTION
5 Room~ 3 bedroom, large modern eatin kit:hen lull basement
with 'large family room and woodbumer that does an eJCelent job
heating, thiS home. Garage, summer air cooditioned. A down
payment and loan as:;umable, Payments of $292.00 P'' montb.
!tee large lot Phone lor IIIII information.

CHARMER AT $25,900

NEW USTIIIG -LOOKING FOR A NEW HOllE- The
owners have priced this heine ID sell. 4 bedroom~
large kitchen and dining comb., iving room, clooble
vanity in bath. N&lt;iural gas heat 4 extra fols.. Mobile
horne hookup. Pricel) in the 30's. City schools.

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1 Frolic
6 Jaekel pari
11 Fall back
18 Sharp and
harsh
19 O.d World

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#539

WANTING TO GO INTO BUSINESS! We ha~ approK, 4;00J SQ. It
of oornmerc~l property located across !rom the city parking lot
Owner Will either lea!e or sell. Call today tor more inlormation. Good
location!!!
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304-87&amp;·1117.

r;oRTH
+A 1064

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. 1ra AV£..1.\WPOUs

Beth Null 245-951Yl

BMR 424 - 2 plus acres with a very nice 3 bedroomranch style
home. You will love the country atmos~XJhere. Possible loan
assumption.

ft . floor width, eke . cond.
,Both for 1- prlcJ . Call

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ENERGY EFFICIENT

TIRED OF THE SNOW, cokl and bad driving condlions Purtllase
· th~ ·handy home located across from Food land Groc. and leave the
driving to someone else!_Located close to everything, gas furnace,
modified for wood bumtng healer. Price only $25,00J.OO..

1977 Chevy PU 4x4, 360
englno, 4opd .. mochonlcolly
A·1 . 17ft. flotbad trollar 7

1974 MERCURY Couger
XR7. good condition ,

South bad a very strong

Moton .

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5 ROOMS, 3 BEDROOMS
ApproK. lacre. Nice yard . Garden space. Nice comfortable home.
Large lrorit porch. back patto deck modern country kit:hen large
bathroom. On State Highway. Phone lor more details.
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CaU 446-0552 Anytime

iiMR 423 - In town location. Walk 'to school. Large two ~o~
home includes 4 bedrooms, living room, dining room, lormal
entrance, lg. country kitchen, full basement With fam1ly room. 2
fireplaces, plus more. Reduced to $53.000.00. Cal lor detailS.

7&amp; Chevy Luv. *1,500, 78
Subour PU *1.800, 78
Dodge *3.000 only 38,0(!0
mi. Coli 446· 7322, B 11o 0

Condltion i~D·

Electrical
&amp;. Refrigeration

84

diamond opening. West's
jump to two hearts waa one

1917 GMC tilt cob llo chll·
Ilia, t800. Cell446·1900.
1877 Ford ExPlorer pld&lt;up,
302 englno, good cond. Coli
814-25&amp; -8532.

lennox Heating &amp; Air

Shrewd South ·e vades jam

Trucks for Sale

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11559

BMR .414 - 12x60 mobile home s~uated on I acre plus lot
Includes furn~ure, has rear patio w/crwer conve~ed front deck
l2x24 garage w~h storage.
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76 Ford van $1 •.360, 78
Ford van .2.1500. 79. Ford

rlgllt to wlthdrow tho vehlclo 1976 MALIBU, 304-676·
4437 or 304-8811-3319.
fr~ the aole.

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DRIV( A LITTLE. SAVE A lDT
3 BR. f;.jl basement, while aluminum sidin&amp; fuel oil FA furnace
30'K40' bam, shingled roof, lois II young peach and apple trees. Ali
th1s ll!dwd to orjy $14,900.
11452

Broker-Aucti oneer

BMR 389 -This fine home has 4 bedrooms and is located close
to town. You Will hba~ alarge lot w~h a country atmosphere and
have alllhe city conveniences. Call now!
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door. t!IOO. Coli 304-876·
2285 or 876 · 1304 .
Relloble.

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

#562

Real Estate General

BMR ~27 - $30s, maintenance free Siding, lenced back yard,
(amity onenled neigh oorhood. This IS avery clean 3 BR home. Call
for appointment

4

HARTS U1ad Caro, Now
Hoven Woot Vlrtlnlo. Over
20 ltll IJ~;penliYe Clrl In
1tock.

Ohio. GMAC reaer.uvea the

COUNTRY UYIIIG Al ITS BEST
84 ACRES lilliE Ill LESS
.
(Fret Nat. GAs)
Step 1nto one of the c~est larms in an oeall:x:ation. Three ROOd
!IZed bedrOQm;, ~'II! IMng roan, sumy eat-in kich111 and bill\.
TQbacro base, gas I!Bse and tree gas alii'! with it larg! bam
celar hll£e an&lt;! chicken house. Call today lor many more ex~as:

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph."446-0971
Mose Ca!!i~ury, Realtor 446-3408

For Sale Thompaon and
Francit coal and wood cook
stove made In Gallipolis in
·1918 . Custom furniture
built to your apeciflcation.
We al•o· plana lumtier and
repair furniture . Bidwell
Country Furniture. acroaa
from poet offi ce Bidwell.
Oh . Open 9-6, Tuesdeya
through Saturday.

condition ,

19'73VWSuporfleetle. Coll
81&amp;·2411."9238.

11le Februery 21, 1983, at
11:00 o.m . ot Gollipolll
M.ptor Selu. Galllpoll1,

BUSINESS PROPERTY-1312 EASI£RII AVE.
,r.ce buikling. Lots o1 picture windows. Slone troot Ike new
30'K80'. Lots of uses -Two lliS. Appro~ 92' lrontage. Ws ol
concrete parlling spaces. Phone for all detlis.

aoot s3. Coli 446-4680.

- washers. dryan. refrigerators. r~nges . Skaggs Ap - 20 gauge Remington 1100
pliances. Upper River Rd .. auto . &amp;: dual wheels for a
beside Stone Crest Motel . Grav;ely tractor. Call 446·

448-7398.

Coll446·2109 .

clean

1:;;:::;;:=;::;::::::::;;:::

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BEAUTIFUL WAT£RFRONT AU BRICK HOlE
CllY SCHOOlS
.
kl!!&lt;ll tor boabng, fishing and pickniclung at your back door. Enjoy
thiS spaoous cheerful house wilh 3 bedrooms; I ll baths, large hvma
room, ei!lin kitchen, 2 fireplaces, lull basemenl, 2 portheS. chain
l11k fence, t*Js moch more. Ca! today mmake an atJIX)intrnent to
see th~ kM!Iy year around home.
ft505

. Australian Blue HHier

72 OLDS Delto 88, good llo

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BRIDGE

Autoa for Sale

FOREMAN'S USED CARS·
For l111 bpollllw coro. On
SR.1:Z4in Long1vllle, Oh.
Phono 814-742-2734.

·::;~~ :,~~~~Jm8~

BRICK HOME AIID 2 ACIIEs-$47,000
3 bedrooms, I ll bath home with ~ of extra nice teatlm, bti~-in
cabinets •. self-cleaning range, dishwasher, garbage disposal an:!
large d1mng room, KY&amp;el Creek Schools.
HSOI

CANADAY
REALTY

71

71(eordobo excen.n, cond..
Al'( AC, AM-FM. cruiM.Iow
mll .. ge, •2 .900. Coli
6U-3711-2741.
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78 More. Zopher*1.800, 76
cr..vy Impale t760. Coli
448· 7322. 8 llo 0 Motoro.

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length. you pick up . We
deliver. We accept HEAP

Equipment
for Rent

Real Estate Genaral

&amp; p.m.

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8221 '

Suppl~ .

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holne of eqUol voluo. Coli Auto for Hie Or trode-1977
. Oldo Omogo, VI. 4 door,
44$,4537.
- ' - - - - - - - - ' - outo. trona .. P.B .. P.S..
1171 FordLTD*800orbaot A.C., reordefogger,om·fm
offer. 1871 Chovy M.Ubu redlo, allvor and blue, now
stiilonwagon •3.99&amp;. Call radlels. 1 ~owner(. 31.000
819118·1785.
mllu.
7()0 . Accept
trodo. 814' "7·3081.
B~ owner 1982 Dodge
Mll'ltdo ex. cond. 13,00_
0 1874 Lincoln Town Coupe.
m~ea. 318. V·B, crui1e,
Allpower, oir.~2.000mlloo.
m.,IY extr11. t8,832. Cell A·1 1hopa. 12,800. Phone
444(-0047. ·
· · 8815·41111.

homes, hoUHI. Pt. Pl8aunt
,nd Gallipolis . 614 -448 -

ORAGONWYND CATIERY
by oldo, $75. Murray roto· · KENNEL . AKC Chow

any gu. gurentMd 30 miles
per gallan. Tli·ea like n1w.

farm •qulpment. or nioblle

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AMANA refrigerator, side

'Autos for Sale

11';'150 or trade for cattle.

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bath. 919 2nd Ava .. Gallipo·
Iii. Coli 446 -4418 after
7PM.

1871 Hondi LX. lapel.. uie1

For ' aale

good pickup. Phone 304·
875·7148.

6648 .

.46

1872 Ford Bronco 302 Y·8,
3 apd., ex. cond .. U ,OOO.
Call 1114·388·871 3.

~r · tr•de-82 VW
Rebblt Dle.. l. 4 door, II
IIPMCI~ •·c. IUft roof. black
tie pockogo, om·fm 1.......
19.7 1 Buick Electro 2 bdr., 11. 0 0 0 m I'll a· 11 k I~ g
PB,:PB. AC , AM·FM itero f7881. Coli 114··882·3517

19711 Buld&lt; Electro 2 bdr..
PS, PB, AC, AM· FM otero

Comet. fair condition, for

Apartmentl . 304 - 876 -

mi.. very gDod cond .•

Cell 882·5480.

72 DODtlE Demon, good
condition, 72 Mercury

992·2879.

71 Plymouth Vollont 3 apel ..
alent I englno, 47,000 orlg.

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bo0t1. &amp;14·898·3280.

448·4137.' .

Middleport . Avaihible
immediately . Ph one 614-

Au101 for Sala

Hay &amp;. Grain

•t.. 400. Coll ,-448·22117.
·Round bol• of hoy for 11le.
1878 Pontiac Grend Solon
Welood. Coll44il·1878.
at1tlonwegon . Ex. cond .
CORN for 11le, t:Z .IIO Coli 448·3541 or 448·
bu1hel, 304·876·2~88 ,
40114 '

Ruth Reevu . Alae gredo.
Soddlu , brldlea, wlnt.-r

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Good dry oar corn, t2.60
bu. Coli &amp;14-241·1151 5.

•1 .110 or tr•d• for catt ...
farm equipment, or mobile
~me of equal value. Call

()

) I t

Farm Equipment

Locoted on St . Rt . 888.
Phone 818-37811.

2 bedroom furnished apart-

mont. Call 992 ·5 434 or
304-882·2666.

61

our orchard •nd atorage .

_ WHA'T YOU HAVE
10 DO IN ORC'Iel&lt;:
iOMAI&lt;EMONE.Y
I.AST.
.

1983

1983·

11263

ven1ence~

112!i1

11243

Y.A. LDAII ASSUIII'IIOII - Ranch style britl&lt; horne.
G~n Twp., 3 bedrooms. I\! baths, la!J!! livin~ room,
lormal dining room, deluxe kilch!!fl, utlity, patio, heat
pump, central aw, 2 car illfiJ!. Private concrete St
Extras large level lot Luw siidies.

.
.
I·A um.E' ~AR OUT I

•m

,

But priQid right at $25.000.
Owner will sell on land contract with $4,000 down:

10% APR. IS years, monthly payment $204.ta ttlme
has 8 rooms and ballt. Siluited on 3 acres. ·

.

\

011£ YOU IIUST SEE TO APPRECIATE - Clean and
attractive 2 bedroom home. Forced air furnace. CountY
water system. 2.75 Acres of pasture and woocts..Priced,
in the lower 20'~

11208

.

LAlliE SHADE TREES sulfOUnds this older 2
home. 3 bedrooms, living room, family room
bedroom, dining room. kitchen, 1bath, utiity roonund
·• room. Home in process o1 being restored.
·acre lol
.
.

.

FRIIIGE BENEfiTS - Buy ttis home and en~ tree
natural gas far helting 81d a montbly check !rom
roylllies. This linn home b in llliCIIIIant condlticrl with
" modem factliles and 48 ms ri land.

• 11275

·
. . . . . . . . d~ViiiD&amp;..rol'iUnD.
·· ·
© 1982 Century ~lllal Eltl!it eorpc.atton attrustu for ttw NAF. ®and TU-lradltmarkl or

'.

Cantury

Zt lloll- ~.uoil

r;.q.., Hooiol"l Oppootunllyliil

Slang
36 Emus vapor

36 Slay

40 Pre-hOliday
time
41 Olltllt

4:2 Warehouso:

61 Household

pet

62 Evaporates
64 Note of
scale
. 65 Paid notice
66 Reject
6T Peeled
69 Quarrels
71long flsh
73 City In
Washington
74 Paradise
76 Writing , 1
tablets
79 Representative
81 Soak
82 Enemy
84 Muse of
poetoy
85 Choir voices
87 Skelton and
olhera
90 Darted
92 Latvian coin
93 River ducks
95 Stage play
97 Columbus
caraval

98 Exlsl

symbol

101 Social
beasts
103 Shade tree
104 Size ot type
108 Bllter vetch
110 Tidiest
112 Partner
113 Sesame .
114 Zeus's

shelter
49 Stitched
51 Orie
opposed
52 Near

115 Mickey and
Minnie
117 Slips
118 Sheet of

54 Slender
55 Callings

57 lamprey
58 Flower part
60 Animal coat

126Lafr ·

127 Glossy
rabrlc
129 Thongs
131I01a
132 Dispa tch
133 - aboyl

105 Rough

beloved

glass

119 Source of
water

120 SymbOl ct
lutecium
121 Summon
forth

21 TV stud io

139 Compass

3TSeedod

136 Greek letter
137 AntiVred
animal
point
140 Mideast
bread
141 Be In debt
142 Spare

143 Neodod
144 Citizen
146 Lance

148 Ch9p llnely
149 Smell quan~
titles
150 Labors
151 Put up stake

DOWN
1 Taper

8 Stroke
• 9 Oz aunt
10 Bigger
11 Recall
12 Campara~
live ending

13 Snare
14 Detecting
del/Ice
15 Public

storehouses
16 Diving bird

1Tlogo,

usually

100 Enlisted

man

102 Mixes
104 Gasp for

brealh
105 Sword
handle'
106 Qulalude
107 Pursued
109 Highlanders
111 Issues of
a paper
112 Church
service
113 Trial
116 Piece out
118 Dad
119 Fish trap
122 Weirder

56 Clqsed
securely
59 Pan of PTA

124'Newest

69 Bose
61 LA's State

gods

dance

49 Surfelled

63 Heavenly

body

66 Brother of

Odin

67 Hebrew
letter
68 E)(p!iclt
70 More vapid
71 Ship chan-·

nel

72 Mature

T3Exert
75 Polite attention
77 Airline abbr:
78 Tippler
80 Christmas
carol

83 Sicilian

volcano

86 Wild plums

..

99 Retrlbullon

50 Falls in
drops
54 Hunting c1og
55 Solicitude

2 Performed

.·

98 Formal

39 Barnyard
sound
___4JJJiver duck
42 Narrow
opening
44 Prophets
47 Conduct
48 Apportioned

3 Nobleman
4Sin
5 Rubidium
symbol
6 Househoid

7 Matures

earth
90 Note ol
scale
91 Diphthong
94 Viper
98 2000 , In old
Rom a

28 Roorlng

138 Flinch

134 Decay

88 Frock
89- of the

devices ,
22 Raise
23 Gratu!Ues
25 Macaw
27 Hunting dog
. piece
30 Terriers
31 Western
Indian
33 PirleTree
State
35 Chesterfield
36 Stalk

99 Neptunium

Abbr.
43 Genus ol
cattle
45 Canonized
person
.46 Sun god
47 Meadows
48 Toward

53 Raid the
fridge

123 Silkworm
124 Final
125 Direction

1

125 At what
time?
126 Having
fender scars
128 Memoranda
130 Tier
131 Has on
132 Subsequently
135 Domesticate
137 Transaction
138 Need
140 In favor of
142 Aloha
wreath
143 Take a
• ribbon
144 Abbr. on a
rad io dial
145 Jolson
147 River In Italy
148 NeW Eng.
State

,

'..',
'•

••
'

'
'
••'
••
••

.

�•

•

..

'

Page-0.8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

February 6, 1983

Crown City resident given jail seritence

Area deaths

GALLIPOLIS - A Jail sentence
· was meted out to a Gallla County
man on two charges brought
agaJnst him by the sheriff's depart·
ment Friday in GalllpollsMunlclpaJ
Court . .
Stanfonl E. "Eddie" Fulks, 29,
Rt. 2, Crown City, was cited for
prohibition of conveyance of certain
Items onto the grounds of a
detention or mental health facility
and resisting arrest.
The conveyance charge- Fulks
allegedly carried a. knife onto the
location in question.:..: was reduced
by prosecution to attempted con·
veyance and he was subsequently
fined $25, received 10 days in jail and
one year of probation.

their children, Dr. Emmari Yost
Hoy, of St. Mary's, Dr. Peter Resch
Hoy, of Dublin, Mllllcent Ellzabeth
GALLIPOLIS - Shigeko {Mary)
Hoy,
Cuyahoga Fall, and JosWh
McDougall. 59, Rt. 2, Patriot, died
Voyles
Hoy, 'Florida, and four
f'riday in Holzer Medical Center,
grandchildren.
havi)lg been in failing health for the
Also suJVIvlng are four sisters,
past nine months .
Mrs.
Roland Viger, Vera Beach,
Born June 10. 1923, in Miyazaki.
Fla.,
Mrs.
f'rancis Link, Sprtng·
J apan , daughter of the late Kesafield,
Mrs.
Charles
Harvey and Mrs.
suke and Shina Murayama, she
John
Versrtell,
both
of St. Louts: Mo.
married Angus McDougall, who
He
was
preceded
in death by one
suJVives. in 1969 in England. They
sister and three brothers.
had resided in Gallia County s ince.
Hoy was associated in business
July 1979.
Also surviving is a sister, Mrs. with his father in the French Colony
Aylor (Meiko) Stauffe r o!Syra cuse, Furniture Manufacturing Co. of
Ga llipolis. He also volunteered time
Utah, and a nephew .
Funeral services will beheld at 11 to handicapped individuals as a •
a .m . Monday In Willis Funeral teacher of upholstery and furniture ·
making. Hoywasalleutenantinthe l
Home, with Rev. Gomer Jenkins
United States Air Force during
officiating. Burial will be in Nebo
GALL !POLIS - The following
World War II where he served In
Cemetery. Friends m ay call at the
couples flied for marriage licenses
Italy.
funeral home from 6-9 p.m. today.
Plans for a memorial service to be this past week ln Gallla County ··
PaJibearers wW be Keny BlanProbate Court.
held at a later date are incomplete.
ton, Scott Wood, Wayne Johnson,
W!Uiam N. Wooldridge, 21, Rt. 3,
Chuck Gore, Jimmy Carpenter a nd
Bidwell, U.S. Army, and Cheryl L:
Kevin Knapp.
McCombs, 20, Rt. 1, Northup, at ·
Albert W. Shoemaker
home.
W!Uiam D. Edwards, 21. Rt. 1,
POMEROY - The location for Bidwell, electrtclan, and Rethel
EmmartHoy
funeral services for Albert w. Sho- Hunt , 22, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
Emmart Yost Hoy, 63,ofNewark, emaker, 69, Rt. 1, Cheshire, who
unemployed.
died Friday at Licking Memorial died Thursday has been changed
John C. Stevens Jr., 20, Rt. 1,
Hospital. Newark, following a brief from Rawllngs'Coats-Blower Fun·
Gallipolis, mechanic, and Donna R.
!Uness.
era! Home to Ewing · Funeral
Sizemore, 23, Galllpoll,s, teacher.
He was born April 26. 1919, to J. Home, Pomeroy.
Michael E. Ellis, 19, 554 Jackson
Raymond Hoy a nd Lillian Resch
Funeral seJVIces will be held at
Pike, builder, and Martha J. Smith,
Hoy.
Ewing's Monday at 1 p.m. Friends
20, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, waitress.
He is survived by his wife, wanda · may call at the Ewing Funeral
Timothy L. Dayton, 24, 1112
.J. Hoy, a nd a stepdaughfer . Mrs. Home Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Adrian Ave. , car salesman, and
John Hart. He is aisosuJVived by his p.m. Burial will be in Pine Street
Juanita J . Arriington, 21, 544
first wife, Bette Faulkner Hoy , and Cemetery, Gallipolis.
Jackson Pike, registered nurse.
Brian D. Taylor, 18, 552 Jackson
Pike, Donelll'sP\zza employee, and
· Carolyn L. . McCombs, 19, 552
Jackson Pike, grill cook.
Samuel D. Smith Jr., 24, 155
Lower Garfield Ave., unemployed,
and Rhonda J . Hanis, 26, 155 Lower
Garfield Ave., unemployed.
"It's a shock to all of us," said her
DOWNEY, Calif. (AP) - An
William L. Hawks, 21, Rt. 1,
autopsy shed little light on the publicist, P aul Bloch.
GallipOlis. alarm technician, and
Miss Carpenter died at 9:51 a.m.
sudden death at age 32 of Grammy
Tammy L. Harris, 17, Gallipolis,
award-winner Karen Carpente r , as at Downey Community Hospital,
waitress.
stunned friends remembered the said spokeswoman Julie Levesque.
Michael L. Saxon, 22, Rt. 2,
"extraordinary performer" whose She had been brought to the hospital · Gallipolis, mechanic, and Wilma A.
fresh. romantic voice captivated about a haJf·hour earlier after
Cox, 29, Rt. 2, Gallipolis ,
collapsing at her parent's nearby
listeners around the world,
unemployed.
Lab tests were continuing after an home and died of cardiac arrest,
Anthony Cemini, 61, Patriot Star
autopsy failed to show what caused said Bloch.
Route, retired, and Carol G. Atha,
Her brother was at the hospltaJ
Miss Carpenter's heart to stop
43, Patriot Star Route, Robbins &amp;
beating early Friday. said Los wit h their parents, Agnes and
Myers employee.
'
Angeles County coroner's spokes- Harold ·Carpenter, when she died,
James R. Klru!ett, 53, 495 Maple
Bloch said. Funeral arrangments
man Bill Gold.
Drive , maintenance supervisor,
f'riends said they thought she had were pending.
and Betty A. Foss, 51, Rt. 5, South
Downey Fire Capt. Paul Cook
won a lengthy battle with anorexia
Point, unemployed.
·
nervosa, a debilitating condition said.the singer was given mouth-tomarked by a compulsion to diet and mouth resuscitation by her mother,
a loss of appetite.
and then cardiopulmonary resusci·
Emergency runs
Miss Carpenter, with her brother, tation when paramedics arrived at
Richard, utilized mellow hanno- B: 56 a .m. Cook said ltwasnotknown
POMEROY :-Three · calls were
nles and sentimental themes in their how long the singer lay on the floor
apswered by local units Friday, the
popular music of the 1970s, selling60 before her mother found her.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Miss Carpenter was 5 feet, 4 Service reports.
. million albums worldwide. The
Carpenters' romantic, overdubbed Inches tall and weighed 100 pounds
At 3:40p.m ., theRacineUnlttook
'style spread from Top-40 radio to at her death, said Gold.
Ralph Webb from his Racine home
easy listening and . some country
Bloch said she had suffered from
to Veterans Memorial HospltaJ and
anorexia for the last 12 months, but
stations.
thesameunltat4:39theRaclneUnlt
He r death brought an end to the was believed to have overcome Uli!
took William Morris to Veterans
duo that rose to stardom with their eondition after treatment and had
.Memorial. The Middleport Unit at
first back-to-back hits. "Close to planned a new albUill this month
4:00 p.m. took· Gene Vance from
You" and "We've Only Just and a summer tour of the United
Village Manor Apartments to
Begun," In 1970.
States.
Veterans Memorial.

Shigeko McDougall

M

•

For resisting, Fulks was !lned$25,
·got five days in jail and one year of
probation.
City pollee Friday charged Lester
0. Williams, 42. Rt. 1, Crown City,
with DWI and aggrayated rnenac·
ing. On his appearance in court,
Williams was fined ~. sentenced
to four days In jail, had his driver's
license suspended and was put on 18
months probation for drunk driving.
He was also fined $100, received a
three-day Jilll · sentence and .18
months of probation for menacing.
Trent D. Harrison, 20, 2216

Eastern Ave., charged with DWI,
pleaded not guilty and was put on .
$500 recognizance bond. His case
was continued to Feb. 21. Charged
with speeding, Russell. B. Scaggs,
25, FlatwoOds, Ky., had his case
continued iint~ Feb. 25.
A charge of Insufficient funds
against Kathy J. Massie, Rt. 2.
Bidwell, was dismissed when evl·
dence was shown cosis were paid.
For driving under suspension,
Wllllam W. Widger, 61, Pomeroy,
was fined $100, drew a Silspended
six-month jail sentence and was put

on 18 months prohattori.
In other ~lc cases, Troy E.
Bias, 36, West Hamlin, Vf.Va.•
forfeited . $00 oond for failure to
display fatlure placanls on the side
ll'bdrear of his trailer, an&lt;l artanK.
Canter, 22, Rt. 4, JackSon, forfeited
$l&gt; bond for failure to display valid
registration.
.
Forfeiting bond forspeectlngwere
Wayne J. Mannette, 38, Hamers·
VIlle, $l); Donald L. Wan!, 18, Rt. 2,
Vinton, $35; Scotty L. Jones, 19, Rt.
1; Thur;man, $36; · Charlotte Mar·
riner, 46, Rt.1, Crown Clty,_$36.

CLEARANCE SALE

l"

arnage lCenses

LADIES'
SLEEPWEAR
'

Quality brands like Katz,

I

-

Lonaine and Philmaid.
Long gowns and robes,
Waltz length· gowns and
robes, pajamas and night
shirts.
I
Sizes: Petite thru XXL

lf2 PRICE

Autopsy fails to show
singer.,s death cause

A guide to local
television ·programming
February 6 thru February 12
I'

Includes complete

listings .

Showbeat
Page 3 .
·"Channel 23 listings included

in

198l BUICK SKYLARK

0. FUhRTHER MARK-DOWNS
ON

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.

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SWEATERS Pullovers-Vests-cardigans SAVE 50o/o
SPECIAL .RACK .SPO,RTSWEAR
.

.

1.982 PONTIAC J20'00SE

E LOW PRICES

--- &amp;tc. o

Till: t111BiJ COABI' - Pill L&amp;JI 1t, tile dlredGr ol tile TeiUI n e Film, Tape and Mul!lc
Commlllllaa. ~ tlult ~- .. becleldlll -re and more a&amp;Vaellve lo
producem aa a
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.

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AM·FM cassette, rallye stripes,' sport wheels, and deluxe bucket seats.
'
'

WAS '6795

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. $}9713 PER MONTH
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Based on ~ale pricce of '8250 with 1750 down,
finance 17500 at 11.9% for 48 months.

Choose .From Over

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&amp; Customized Vans.

Hollywood
·Pages 5, 8

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J

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3~

':

Winter and Spring Styles

'

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trans., factory air, cruise control, power steering, and power brakes.

WINTER MERCHANDISE
DRESSES

th~

. ''

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