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                  <text>Pa~-12 -The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 11 , 1983

Conviction doesn't close case
BATAVIA, Ohio (API . - The ·
Bllly Stevenso11 family murder case
remains open despll!l th~t;!Onvlctlon
of Richard Weston, officials say.
Weston, 43, of BrookvUJe; Ind. ,
was convicted Thursday by a ·
Clermont County Common Pleas
Court jury on four counts of
aggravated murder In the July 1981
slaylngs of Stevenson, a Bethel
fireworks dealer , and three •
members of his family.
Judge John L. Watson planned to
pronounce sentence today.
The victims. besides Stevenson,
were Stevenson's. wife, Lynda; the
couple's 5-year-old son, BIUy Jr.:
and Mrs. Stevenson's brother,
Edward Dowell.

Pollee salq all four were shot at · used, a .22-caliber and a .38-caliber.
close range and that the Stevenson
"I expect there to be .further
horne was set afire.
charges in the case in t1te near
Pollee believe an estimated future. The case is not closed. It Is
Sffi,OOO to $8),001 may ~ave been very active. V'{e might get a break
taken from the Stevenson house.
now that then! has been a conviction
Weston and his-girlfriend, Dru- In the case," Pennington said.
cllla Merida, were convicted In late
"What we need is more evi1981 tn Indiana for lntersta te dence," said ' Gregory Chapman,
transportation of property- cash, a
assistant prosecutor.
.
ring and pistol - stolen froni the
"I could have presented enough
Stevenson house:
evidence to win an lndldment a long
"We have two shooters In the time ago, " Pennington said. "But
Stevenson home that night.'' said there's ll big dlfference between
Deputy Inspector Clarence Pen· getting a n irtdidment and having
nington of the Clermont County enough solid evidence to win a trial.
Sheriff's Department.
And I wouldn't get an indictment
Pennington said two guns were merely to please the public.··

WesfA)n guUty of four aggravaled murder charges In
the 1981 slaying of fireworks dealer BWy Stevenson
and three members of his family,. ( AP Laserphoto).

WESTON GUU.TY - Richard Weston, 43,
Brookville, Ind. , listens to the verdict In the Clennont
County Court room Thursday afternoon. A jury lowtd

Strike will cause
changes in taxes

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--John Metzger, Middleport: Paul (Bob) Houdashelt,
Pomeroy; )"au line Taylor, Middleport; Virginia Thoren, Racine;
Betty Gearhart, Shade; Carden
Randolph, Racine; Martha Wise,
R~tland ; Mildred Zahl, Pomeroy;
Shirley Frazier, Middleport.
Discharged--Harold Dewhurst,
Ralph Webb, John Nicklnsky, Jr.,
· Thomas Scally, Amber Davis.

Thursday to their violence-marred
protest strike alter they won
assurances from nearly three dozen
congressmen that their complaints
would be examined.
The head of Ohio's independents
said the strike was a success.
Applegate was one of three
congressmen instrumental in working out a compromise under which
the independents agreed to call off
the strike .

By TI1e Associated Press
A nat ionwide &gt;trike by independent truckers that the highway patrol
blames lor 123 shooting incidents
and damage to 481 trucks in Ohio
will cause congressional changes in
taxes that touched off the strike.
says U.S. Rep. Douglas Applegate.
D-Ohio.
In Washington, leaders of independent trucker s called a halt

I

~rtha

Game off

Eight calls were answered by
local emergency units Thursday,
the Meig5 County Emergency
Medical Service reports.
Middleport at6: ~7 a.m., went to
795S. Third Ave. forPa ulineTaylor ,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racineat12: 17p.m. tookSarlita
Rosenberry from · Letart Falls to
Veterans Memorial; Rutland at
2:57 p.m. , went to Langsvllle for
Norman Cummins with no transportation necessary ; Pomeroy at
3:16 p.m. took George Staats from
Flatwoods to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 6:37p.m. took Mildred
Zahl from her .home on Mulberry
Ave.. to Veterans Memorial; Porne"OY at 6:48p.m. took Teresa Pierce
from 311 Wetzgall Sl., to Veterans
Memorial; Racine a t 8:27 p .m .
treated Doris Miller a t her home but
provided no transportation a nd at
9:12 p.m . Middleport went to the
Stonewood Apartmenrs for Shirley
Frazier who was taken toVeterans
Memorial Hospital.

Tonight's Athens-Meigs basket ball game has been postponed unlit
Tuesday evening.

Boat claimed
The 14 foot aluminum boat found
floating in the Ohio Rlver Sunday
has been claimed by its owner,
Alfred Roush of NewHaven, Sheriff
J amesJ . f'r()ffitt reported.

A marriage license was issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to
Ralph 13€nton Wells, 33, Pomeroy.
and Mary Elisabeth Wells, 28,
Pomeroy.

Meets Tue:&gt;day
Salisbury PTO will meet Tuesday, Feb. 15, at 7:30p.m. Fathers'
night will be observed. Andy Lyles,
Meigs County Game Protector, will
be the guest speaker.

Booster speakers

A luncheon by Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolulion. scheduled
for 1:30 p.m . today to honor essay
contest winners was postponed due
to the weat her. The luncheon will be
held at the Meigs Inn at 1:30 p.m .
next Fridav.

I

Carl Hysell and Cindy Schneider
of tl!e Meigs County Juvenile Court
will speak on child abuse at a
meeting of the Tuppers Plains
Boosters to be held at the school at
7:30 p.m Monday. The public is
Invited.
·

Athens U.""""'k Sal"'
Saturday, Feb. 5, 1983

Feeder Steers: Good and Choice 250 to 300

Ills. 54~2.50: 300 to 400 lbs. 57-65; «XX w 500 Jbs.
SG-&amp;1.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 55-63.50; 9.X) to 700 lbs.
52.!il-62.5fr. 'lOO to 8Xl lbs. 5(}.61.50; !IX) and over
4\l-58.50.

CATTI.E PRICES:

Feeder Steers: (Good and Choice) .'1)().500
Jhs. 54-58.25: 500-700 Ills. 44·52.7&gt;.
Feeder Heifers: tGood and Choice) :nJ-500
Ills. 15·55.25: 500-100 Ills. 4J.52.

Feeder HeUers: GoodandChotceZilto:Dl

Ills. 48·54.50; 300 to 400 Jbs. 47.5053: 400 to 500
tlls. 49-54.50: 500"' 600 Jbs . 48.5056: liXl to 700

Feed.C'r Bulls: (Good a nd Choice) :l)0.500

Ills. 52-57.7&gt;: 500-'IOo\lls. 42-51.

ltli. 48-...1.50; 700 to

~

o.ver 45-50.50.

Slaughter Bulls: (Over l,cnl lbs.) 44.10.

lbs. 46.50-51; EO&gt; and

5Ul.
Slaughter Cov.·s: UUIItles 41-4fi: Ca nne rs

Feeder Bulls: Good and Ololce, Bl tet Dl
lbs. 52.00. 300 to 400 lbs. 5.HI.50: «XXJoOIIO Jbs.
52.5()01; ,500 to 600 Ills. li.Hl.50; tDO to 700 tbs.
51-81.50; . 700 to flXl Jb; , 44·50; ~ · and over

and Cutters 29.25-40.
Sprtnger Cows: t By the Head ) 285-335.

Cow and Call Palrs (BythE!Un!l) l30-467.50.
Veals: 1Cholce and Prhne) 79&gt;-88.

Holstein Steers and Bulls 300 to
10.51).1&amp;50.
Bull~ 1.001 lbs. a nd up 4.1.50-49.

HOG PRICES:

H ~s : /No. 1. Barrows and Gilt s I D)..2:KJ
Ills. 58-59.25
Butcher Sows: 53-55.85.
ButctK&gt;r Boars 42.1045.
Feeder P l.,.. · tBy the. Head) Xl-49.50.
Oluo V.U.y Llveolo&lt;k Co.

I
1

SAVE

500Al

_
ON WINTER CLOTHING FOR
MEN, BOYS, LADIES, JUNIORS
AND CHILDREN

'

.

.. · .

.

l~e such as love, courtship, marriage, law suits.and business spe&lt;:u~tion. Tels you
who and when you wil mall'/. She never latls to reunite the separate~. cause
speedy and happy marriages oven:ome enemieS and bad .luck of all k1nds.
CALL FOUPPOINTMENT (614) 2116-1729
339 E. MAIW ST., JACKSON. OltiO.
'5.00 WJ1h lllis Coupon
Tlb 35 W. !Jcn Gollipoli1 to JacbonDillctly ..,... flvm The Rod Applo llote!
·
in .llcbon on llin Stntt.

l

1
.I
1
1
I

I
I
t'

I·

t .:

.·

It' aiso carries a temporary 0.5 percent boost of the
utUity excise tax, to bring in another $54 rnllllon.
The package includes $282 miUion In spending cuts
for an overall revenue gain of $582 rnllllon .
Bowen said he wants to hear testimony from aU
groups affected by the tax increases and spending
cuts. .
The utilities will get their chance to testify Tuesday
morning. Other groups will follow later that day and
on Wednesday.
Celeste said Thursday that some of the u tllltles,
which he did not. name, had lobbied him in an attempt
to get their tax boost - whlcll tl)ey ~auld be

.

tttfint
9 Settionl, 60 Pag" 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc: . N•w•paper

Sunday, February 13, 1983

prohibited from passing along to consumers deleted from the bill.
The governor said he told them the state is in a
financial crisis arid that everyone must sacrifice to
solve the problem.
"I think you could say we !lad an exchange of views
instead a meeting of the minds," Celeste said.
Democrats hope for some Republican support In
the Senate to make the bill more palatable to the
public.
However, it appears Democrats will be on their
own unless Celeste agrees to a temporary increase in
the Income tax w]1lle giving long-range financial

hil~e

needs further srudy.
In the House, Republicans offered ame ndments in
the Finance Committee and on the floor to make the
tax temporary. They were voted down along party
lines.
Bowen will open his night and d&lt;!Y hearings
Monday night with presentations by Celeste's fiscal
advisers. Taxation, education and utillties represen·
talives will appear Tuesday. Health care and public
employee representatives a~e scheduled Wednesday.
Bowen scheduled another hearing Thursday,
Indicating his committee might take a final vote on
the bill at that tjme.

on
Progress
$1.9 million elderly housing
locks,
dam
project awaits HUD approval
•
proJect up
.to Congress
POMEROY ~ Pending approval of the completed plans by
HUD, construction bids on the ,
1.9 mllllon elderly housing complex on Mulberry Heights will be
sought wlthin a month .
With that phase completed,
the Meigs Elderly Housing Corporation anticipates ear!y
surruner as the time when actual
construction on the complex which wlll Incorporate the old
children's home and a new brick
structure - . will begin.
Fred Schwab, architect. presenlell completed plans to the
Housing Corporation this week
and at the same time advtsed
that the century-old building
which houses the Meigs County
Children's Home for many years has been accepted for regis·
try In the National Register of
Historical Places.
'That cleared the way lor ren~
vatlng the county-owned buUdlng and incorporating It Into the
complex which will have a total
of 46 Jiving units, laundry facill·
ties and a commwtity room for
lawer Income elderly arid handicapped persqns.
'
The orlglnal architectural de:· ··
stgn of the former children's
home wlll be retalnect in the renovating proCess. The architect
described the new structure as
one which wUI have a brick exterior, "sympathetic In design tD
the existing children's home."
1n the old bulldlngtherewlll be
stx et!lclency apartments on the
lower level, three et!lclency
apartments and two onebedroom apartments on the
main level, and one one·
bedroom and the manager's
apartment on the upper floor.
.The one-bedroom apartment
and part of the efficlencles wUI
be designed for handicapped

HOUSING COMPLEX PLANS COMPLETED
Meigs Cowtty Elderly Ho1181ng Corporation
members ani! Eleanor Thomas, Director of the
Meigs County CouncU on Aging program, sponsor of
the ltouslng project, met tbla week wlth Fred Schwab,
architect,. to revtew the completed plans for the el·

home building on the land adjacent to the Meigs Muitl-purpose
Building.
According to the plans, covered walkways wlll be the ad. joining feature of the two
buUdtngs.
Each noor will have a covered
walkway extending from one
building to the other, and an elevator wlll be Installed In the new
section. This wlll entirely ellml·
nate the necessity for the elderly
and handicapped residents to negotiate stairs.
Aiso Included tn the plans Is a
covered walkway between the
housing complex and the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center. This, explains Eleanor Thomas, Center
Dtrectnr, makes the many servi·
ces such as hot meals, health,
recreational, social and thera-

derly housing complex to be buUt wlth $1.9 million In
HUD fwtds. Revlewlog the plans here are left to right,
seated, WUUam A. Yowtg, Richard Jones, and Man·
nlng Webster, and standint;, Paul A. Barnett, Eleanor
Thomas, and Schwa!), the architect.
·

peutlc programs easily accessible to the elderly and
handicapped who will be resld·
lng In the new houstng. The Senior Citizens Center
transportation program will
also serve the residents.
"The Important thing about
this subsidized housing - and
that doesn't mean It's free - Is
that the elderly who are functionally Impaired or socially deprtved, but otherwise not ill, wlll
have the resldenthil accomm~
datlons and supporting services
they need · to maintain an Independent lifestyle \hereby preventing premature
lnstltutlonallzatlon," Mrs. Thomas stressed.
·
She explained that many of
the elderly need decent afforda.

ble housing within a concept of
assisted residential living,
which combines shelter and services, so that they can maintain
their independence.
"Why should they have to go
to a nursing horne, when with
some assistance they can llve
alone?"
Wlth the plans for the housing
complex completed, the architect will now present them tD
HUD, provlderofthe$1.9mUllon
bi fundlngdor final approval be·.
fore securing bids on the actual
construction.
This Is all e~pected to be com·
pletell In about :ll days, accordIng to Schwab; and residents
can look forward to a ground·
breaking ceremony In early
summer.

·-

By KEVIN KELLY
Times&amp;ntlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Prospects for
construction of a bypass canal
system at Gallipolis Locks and Dam
hinge on congressional action being
taken this year. '
lfnot , an administrative assistant
to Rep. Clarence E. Miller, R-Ohio,
said It and other projects planned by
the US Army Corps of Engineers
could grind to a hall.
"You reach a certain point and
then you move to second base, but to
get all the way to home plate, you
have to gel congressional approval," noted Phil Strawn.
Strawn said M!Uer has c~
sponsored in the past week a bill
speeifically requesting action be
taken on Gallipolis, primarily
because of potential in creating.
additional employment in the
tri-county area.
Other bills, incl~ding proposed
work on the sm aller but aging
Winfield. W.Va. faclllty ori the
Kanawha River. have also been
Introduced Into the new congres·
slonal session. but Strawn feels
these bills, once in committee, wlll
be combined Into one major
appropriation bill.
After a four-year .study , several
congressional tours and vocal
support , the bypass canal project
has made Its way to Congress, only
to be held up in the federal
governmenl' s present conserva tlve
spending mood.
In recent hearings and meetings
with federal and White House
officials - lncludlng SI&gt;Cretary of
the Treasury Donald Regan and
David Stockman, President Rea·
gan's budget director - the point
Gallipolis and other projects could
be a boost to a depressed local
economy was made.
Strawn said these officials
showed an apparent interest and
noted the project's importance.

"Philosophically, they agree that
rather than establish short-term
work projects, we s hould invest
dollars and get jobs," Strawn said.
'.'We pointed out Gallipolis as an
example, but there are thousands of
Ciallipolises a ll over the country.
There are all kinds of poor facilities
needing renovation."
Gallipolis was determined inadequate lo handle future barge traffic
now and ill lj)e future after the corps
completed its study in 19~ and
recommended the construction of
larger locks on the dam's West
Virginia side.
All construc tion is ex pected to be
complete by 1994 if construction
begins next year.
Earlier this week, the corps'
Huntington, W.Va. office an·
no11nced it would buy swampland
near the dam for the project. But the
$1.5 million earmarked for the
purchase can only be approved by
Congress.
"J'he significant point to us Is
authorization," noted Bill Brown, a
corps spokesman; who noted the
Huntington district is "no further
along than we were a lew months
ago."
Strawn said some of the project' s
opponents believe it would be
unnecessary expenditure, but the
cost-benefiT ratio has been setatl-12
-or, for every dollar spent, $12 will
be gained.
Strawn said Miller's office is a lso
eoncerned about the safety !actor,
particularly in light of several
navigation accident s at Gallipolis tn
the past several years.
"If anyone is opposed to it, I'm
sure they'd change their minds if
they rode through Ga llipolis on a
dark night in F ebruary with 15
chlorine barges in front of them,"
Strawn commented .
While the bill has been introduced, hearings may be held in the
near turure.

County outlines courthouse payment plan

RAVENSWOOD, W.VA.

'lbn~lnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallla County commlssloners
sent a letter to local banks friday outltnlng how they
.would pay back a $1.3 mUllan loan to build a new wing
for the county courthouse.
Through a comblnatlop of methods Including
cutbacks' ln county department budgets, savings In
. rent and utilities and the use of the cuJTent county .
sales tax the commissioners hOpe to pay ott the debt
' .
.
within ~ years.
. Tllm! local banks .;,. Ohio Valley Bank, Central
Trust and Ci:lnunetclal &amp; Savings - hiwe expressed
lntere~t In loaning the county money.
·
However .. banking officials saki they needed more
tnfonnatlon about the county's financial situation and
Its means for paying back a loan before they rnade a
decision. '
The letter sent to banks Included thls information,
the rommlssloners said.

SPECIAL SWEETHEART EATS FOR

l/2 PRICE
SUN., FEB.. 13th
MON., FEB. 14th

11:00 A.M. To 8:00 P.M.

~------------------------------J
1

By ROBERT E. MilLER
Associated Press Writer .
aJLUMBUS, Ohio (API ~ Hearings begin
Monday night In theSenateon Cov. Richard Celeste's
House-approved bill tO raise taxes and cut spending
to balance the state budget.
Senate Finance Chairman William F . Bowen,
D-Cinclnnati, said he wlll conduct seven l;learlngs,
extending though Thursday, 1wlth the hope of gelling
the proposal to the floor the week of Feb. 21.
The blll, approved by the Democrat-controlled
House on a strict party line (61-37) vote, permanently
Increases the state Income tax by .90 percent to help
eliminate a projected $528 rnlllion budget deficit.

MOM PERRY'S BOUNTY TABLE

.

.

.

Senate .sets plans for state tax

of which are designed for the
handicapped, wm be Included In
the new section which will set to
the rear of the present children's

Top Hogs 210 to 130 lbs. 58.5().59:25.
Boars 043.
Sows 400 lbs. and up 5~.
Pig5 by the Head 2l . fi).~.

.

~on~M

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.i~~;i=~~~~~~~~ Pleasant

By JEFF GRABMEIER

Will read your ertire ile wnhout aslong any ques1tons, gNes advtce on ailaffaJrsot

'I wlll stay in the Cahinet'--Sharon

tmts

Thirty one-bedroom units, two

Cows arxi Calves Comblnatlon 365-475.

Cows$: to $1.50 hl~he r.

Story on Page IH

•

use.

Sprtnger Cows 290'360.

~---:~~~~~:~~Y~T~L-------~~-~~.j

1
1
1

WINTER c··OTHING
L
CLEARANCE

Veal Calves. choice and prline 42·ft

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11

~-~~~~~Ca~r~ds~A~c~ce~p~te~d~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~

Baby Calves 40-65.

Trends: Veal Cal ves steady; Fet'der C&lt;tMie

BALL READINGS &amp;ESP

LENSES
Insurance and Medical

Slaughter Cows: utillHes :fl..43.Zi: caMers

Market Report

:

HARD &amp; SOn CONTACT

an&lt;l cuners 34·37.

Saturd~. Feb.~.~

steady:

1m lb&amp;.

Featured on Page IH

Gov. Celeste defends the tax hike

~elStalf

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

~'l-49 .50 .

Babv CaJ"'eos: (By the Head ) 26-53.
BabY Calves 1By the Pound ) 27-il.

F.dliorlal .•.........•..•..•.••.••.. A-2
Fartn .......... ."................. C-'7..S
I..ocal .............. ' .•.... .••.•.• ,J\+8
State-National •••• , •...•••....... ·D-1
Sports ..•....•.... ·······" ........ C.I~
TV guide ..... " ............... lnseri

Colwnn on Page A-2

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

I

Market reports

I

Richard H. Billman II, 0.0.
I 13 Court Stree)
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PH. 992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS

Edith D. Hougland

I 0 . . . . . . . 0 ••••••••

~1913

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

Genera1 T e1ephOne
calls off request

Marriage license

Luncheon postponed

A. Varian

B"''"ess ............ :............. D-2
Ciaelllfleds ....
D-3-i

Art Buchwald says recessions hurt

V.A . 16 No. SO

Terry Hutton, Rutland, speed, $10
Kauff, Long Bottom eluding an
and costs; Dale Lawson, Portland,
officer, $43.55, reckless operation,
posesli an untagged and unchecked
$68.55.
deer taken dt.~rlng 1982 deer gun
season, $25 and costs; Bruce
Runyon, Bidwell, Insecure load, $15
and costs; Barry Staats, R;lclne,
disorderly conduct, $:;ll and costs;
Carol Baker, Racine, passing bad
checks, two years probation, 10
days confinement, restitution and
&gt;Jt JACKSON PIKE · Rt 35 WEST
. Phone 448·t624
costs; Robert DeM6ss, criminal ·
aMQAIN MATINEES SlT &amp; SUN
mischief, l&gt; days confinement,
ALL SEAlS $2.00
ADIIIS310N l!VERY rutSOAr S2.oo
restitution and costs: Gloria Eble,
Pomeroy, no opera tors licen~. $75
and costs, unsafe vehicle, $10 and
·
costs.
. Forfeiting bonds were Glenn W.
Bowers. III, Gallipolis, speed,
$44.50; James Erskin, VIenna,
speed , $.li.50; :Jack Fulbright,
Springfield, no operators . llcense,
$66.50: Rich Kautt, Hemlock Grove,
disorderly conduct, $43.55; William

I

- · Funeral services for Mrs. aertha
Edith Davis Hougland, 81, of
Adams Varian, formerly of Meigs
Chillicothe, a former resident of
County, were held monday at Leetonia. Mrs. Varian was a daughter
MeigsCount)i, died Friday morning
of the late Quincy and Sarah
Adams of Antiquity. She Is surChillicothe.
at the Harland Nursing Home ln
vtved by a daughter, Lucille EwShe Is survived by her husband,
Ing, and 3 grandchildren. · Chester of Chillicothe, a brother ,
Preceding her tn death were her
WorleyDavis,Dexter, andseveral
husband, Carl, a son, several broth·
nieces and nephews ln Meigs
ers and her parents.
County.
tn Leetonia to attend the services
Funeral arrangements are
were Mr. and Mrs. Eob Roy, Ra·
incomplE'te.
cine; Mrs. Florence Thornton , Letart, and Mrs. Mildred Spencer of ·
Antiquity. Mrs. Varian . was a '
slster-ln-law of Mrs. Spencer and
an aunt of Mrs. Roy and Mrs.
Thornton. Mrs. Addle Currunlns of
Melgs County is also a niece. While .
aJLUMBUS- For the first time
In Leetonia, the local group were
in at least five years, a major Ohio
guests of Mrs. Spencer's son-In·
utility has voluntarily withdrawn a
law, William Jackson and sons,
rate hike request.
Daren and Bmy.
Because of what General Telephone Co. calls "basic economic
Emmett M. McClaskey
factors," its customers will not be
asked to pay an average $3.00
Emmett M. McCaskey. 70. Rt. 1,
Increase in theii monthly bUis.
Rutland, was dead on arrival at
The phone company, which
Veteran Memorial Hospital early
serves parts of Meigs County
this morning.
advised the Public Utilities ComMr. McCaskey was born Dec. 19,
mission that It would not pursue a
1912 at Kyger the son of the late
$31 million rate increase, saying It
Elmer and OU!e Conkle McCaskey.
no longer needs the money because
He was a farmer and employe of
of declining interest rates a nd lower
Rutland Township. He was .!.
operating costs.
member of the Buckey State
Sheriffs Association and Farm
Bureau.
He is survived by his wife, Evel:tn Meets Saturday
Maye McCaskey; two daughters,
Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM will
Betty Oliver. Rt. 1, Rutland arid
Gloria Hutton , Rt. 3. Albany; five meet In special -session Saturday,
grandsons, Vincent Oliver and · Feb. 12, at8p.m. Therewlllbework
in fellowcraft degree , All master
Randy Oliver ol Rl. 1, Rutland;
Stanley Hutton, Gary Hutton and masons are invited.
David Hutton, Rt. 3. Albany; one
great grand · ·,ughtcr, Ve ra Hutton Fire numbers
Smith, Florid;&gt;.
Funeral services will be held , To report a fireintheBashanarea
Sunday at 2 p.m . at the Rutland persons are to call 949-2226. 949-2801
Bible Methodist Church with the or 949·2486. If persons are unsucessRev. Amos Tillis officiating. ful in reaching anyone at the abOve
Friends may call at Ewing Funeral numbers persons are to call Meigs
Home Saturday from 2to4and7 to9. Fire Control at 992-6663.

Meigs County happenings
·Squads kept busy

Area deaths

Along the river ... ~···········:B-1-8
Area deaths ...................... A4

a

·O'Brien completes 21 cases
Sixteen defendants were fined
and five others forfeited bonds ln
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Terry Chapman, Crown City,
speed, $:ll and • costs; David
Coppick, Portland, aid and assist tn
. the illegal possession and transporta lion of an un.t agged deer, $50 and
costs; Lisa Schneider, Tuppers
Plains, speed, $26 and costs: James
Gartner, Rutland, failed to transfer
ownership of registration, $:ll and
costs; Charles Gatten, Loulsvllle,
Ky., speed, Sal and costs; James
Lemaster, Athens. DWI, $:nJ and
costs, fine s uspended, three days
confinement, two years probation,
license suspended for one year,
ordered to complete alcohol program or serve and additional f&gt;l
qays In jail.
Other forfeits were Jo~ph
Henry, St. Clairsville, speed.$21and
costs; Glen Pawloski. Marietla,
s peed , $~ and costs; Mark Parsons.
Parkersburg, speed. $22 and costs:

Today's
Times-Sentinel

. \•

-...- ---~--'-'---·

Included were the county's approprlatlohs 1and
year-end flnaclal situations for the past three years.
County officials showed three sources from Which
they planned to pay back a loan:
'
-Money raised from 5 percent budget cuts In most
county departments;
-Use of funds over $.Dl,OOI raised QY the countY's •
(:urrent .5 percent sales tax.
-Savings ·realized from moving some county,
·offices out of rental property and into the completed
courthouse.
The· commissioners sald the 5 percent budget cut
would raise $&amp;'1,694 a Y!!ar,
.
The cut would most
the sheriff's department,
which would lose $23,256 a year. Children's Services
would be next, with a cut of $12,722. All other
departments would receive cuts o!- Jess than $7,001 a
year.
o
• Not all courity offices would be affected. The

al!eq.

·---'

'.
I

commissioners said the welfare department and
some other offices could not be cut because they
receive state and federal funds or levy money which
the county does not control.
The conunlssloners told ' bank officials all funds
over $3XJ,&lt;XXJ generated by the county's sales tax
· would.be used for debt reduction.
In 1983, the sales tax wUI bring In about $375,1XXl,
Conunissloner Verltn Swain estimated.
When the economy improves, the conirnis·sioners
noted the tax will br.tng In more money and the county
wUJ. be able to pay more on the debt.
The commissioners do not plan on raising the sales
tax .5 percent because of opposltlon the proposal has
received.
·
Begb1ning In 1984, the county wUI start saving
money on departments which were displaced by the ·
Jan. 1981 courthouse fire and are currently renting
office space.
Sometime 'In 1984, commissioners hope these ·

(

departments will be able to move into the new wing.
The health department has been noted as a m~jor
example.
Swain estimated the savings w ill total S50,00J a
year.
The commissioners agreed these ligures are just
rough estlma tes...
"The economy has a 'lot to do with it, " Swain sa id.
" Although county officials have said they plan on
paying off a debt within 20 years, the corrunissioners
feel it can be retired EliWJier if the economy Improves.
"Twenty years ls ~rvallvE' figure," Commls·
stoner James Saunders said.
Howe ver, lf It ls
necessary, the commissioners said they may ha.vP to
make more budget cuts to pay off the debt. ·
The commissioners are currently planning to build
a $2.4 million four-story addition to the courthouse.
· The bank loan Is necessary to supplement Insurance
funds the county received because of the the 1981 fire . .

,)

�.

.

Februaty 13, 1983

.
Page-A-2'

Commentary and perspective
.

•, '

'-'lei'O'f

A Division of

~'---r•~=·a==l
8%5 Third Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio ·
(614)446-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614 ) 992-2156

ROBERTL. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

'·

A MEMBER ttiTht~ ASiitK'illkd Pn'tlt~, lnland Daily Pri!SS As!i4)('iatiun and lhll Amcric11n
Assoriatlm1 .

N~W!ipapt'r Publi sh~ni

LETTERS OF OPINION ttrt&gt; w4·1~'tlm t:d. They s huul~ ~less lhan300 words lung . All
lt:lkrs an&gt; subj l'fl 1t1 ~Ui n!( and mu!ft bf si~nl"ti wll't. namr, .addrf's.~ nd M~unr
number. N~1 unsii{Ded lettrrs will br publlsht!d. lA'tkn; lihould bt! In ~ood task', addressln~
l11sues. nul pt:l'liODMiitit."S.

Dangerous
•
Ignorance
At a time when the country desperately needs national leadership to
guide Its transition from an Industrial to a technological society, Washington's pollciUans generally remain oblivious to the Importance at that lss)le.
Many members at Congress refuse to even acknowledge the fact that
uncounted thousands of jobs In the auto, steel and other traditional '' smokestack" Industries have been Irretrievably lost whfie employment opportunities In high-technology fields are becpmlng a vallable at an
accelerating rate - but can be filled only by those with the required
training and skUis.
The few farsighted legislators who have sought to focus public atten·
tlon on the subject are derisively referred to (by members of both polltical
parties) as "Atari Democrats."
President Reagan's lack ofunderstandlngoftheprofoundchangenow
undetway In our society was embarrassingly obvious early In his term
when he professed to be perplexed about why so many people were unemployed at a time when newspapers abounded with help wanted ads.
After belatedly discovering that the vast major)ty of the positions
advertised required technical expertise not poosessed by many jobseekers, the president made a special trip to the Boston area In late
January to tour high-technology Industries and job retraining centers.
But whatever concern the pres~dent may have expressed about what
·he accurately described as "a great transition period'' was almost totally
obliterated by his Impromptu - and highly controversial - suggestion
during the tour that the_federal tax on corporate Income ought to be
abolished.
To fUrther divert attention rrom the day's serious business, Reagan
made a staged-for-television appearance at an Irish pub In Dorchester. As
a result, the moot memorable visual Impressions of the trip wen;! photos of
the president hoisting aloft a mug of beer.
Reagan was absent and only a few members of Congress were present
just a few days later when the Government Research Corp. held a day-long
conference here on "High 'l'echnoklgy Industries: Publlc Policies for the
1980s."
In a paper prepared for that conference, Dr. F. Karl WUienbrock, a
member of the. engineering faculty at Southern Methodist University
!
'
warned:
'The weakness of the U.S. educational system, the !allure of U.S.
companies to use their teclmologlcal workforce etflclenUy and a lack of
public understanding of the teclmological basts of the U.S. economy can
make the United States decreasingly competitive In the global high technology race."
In another paper prepared for the conference, Pat Choate, a senior
policy analyst for TRW, Inc., noted:
'The nation has no strategy or policy to Identity and fUI a number of
key critical skill slxlrtages ... (or to l stimulate businesses to Invest more In
training of Its own workers or to assist the three to four percent of the
workforce that wpermanently displaced from their jobs because of technology and trade-Induced change:"
A 19&amp;1 survey of member firms conducted by the American ElectronIcs Association Indicated that by 1985 there would be a need to fill more
than 113,000 new engineering positions and 140,!XKl paraprofessional engineering jobs.
But a recent report from 'a special commission established by the
National Science Board found that "as many as one-third at (the nation's
21,000) secondary schools do not offer sufficient mathematics to quality
their graduates for admission to accredited engineering schools."
Even more striking In the report on "Today's Problems, Tomorrow's
Crises" was the finding that fully 25 percent of au mathematics offerings at
the nation's four-year publlc colleges are remedial courses.
In addition to adequately preparing new entrants to the job market, it
Is crucial to retrain current members o~ the workforce because today's
adults wUI comprise ~percent of ·the workforce In 1900 and 75 percent In

.

~.

Those education and retraining challenges must be met, warns Choate, because what's at stake is·nothlng less than "the longer term fate of
the U.S. economy and the well-being of virtually all citizens."

Letter to the editor
Drug, alcohol abuse
An alcohol and drug abuse meettng at the Meigs High School II·
brary was well attended Monday
night. Another such meeting wUI be
held March 7 at 7 p.m.
Approximately 90 adults attended and several children. Most
churches at Meigs County were represented. Several topics were discussed and suggestions were aired.
TheSe meetings are for aU roncerned cltlzens, .not just churches
and parents.
Let's try to flU the Meigs gym at
the next meeting. Evecyone was
given a chance to speak his or her
feelings on these matters. The prln- •
ctpal, James Miller and Dan Morrts disCussed these problems and
the stepS taken In the school to dis- .

courage the students participating
In such abuses.
Let's do our best to.help In any
way we can. Ninety-five letters
were malled to area churches that
are Interested. As CIU1sttans we
can put this prayer request at the
top at our list dally and not uhderestimate our God on the power at
prayer. After all, He moved mountalns and parted the sea, so why
wouldn't He answer our-prayers?
Let's get behind our juvenile offleer, Carl Hysell, and help him to
help our youth. Your suggestions
would be appreciated at the next
t:neetlog.
' Dolly Woods
Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church

Today in history

Jaf!ree complained repeatedly How come? Thlslsbecausethe14th
that his non-believing chlldren . Amendment somehow "IncorpowereJett embarrassed and ISolated rated" or ~~absorbed" the original
by these prayers. When his com· Bill of Rights; and because the 14th
plaints went unanswered, he prohibits the states troll) deprtvtng
brought suit for an Injunction to any person or "Uberty," therefore
stop the_ practice. Last month the states cannot pemilt prayers to
Judge Hand dismissed Jaffree's be said In publlc schools.
This bizarre reasoning has
suit, on the grounds that - never
mere laymen (and many
amazed
mtnd what the Suprene COurt says
lawyers)
for.years, It Is beyond dis- the Constitution leaves regula·
pute
that
the original Bill of Rights
tion of religious practices to the
had nothing whatever to do with
states.
This sort at thing amounts to judi- restraints upon the states. The first
cial heresy. Low~ court Judges are 10 amendments were demanded by
expected to fOllow their appellate the founding fathers as a restraint
superiors slavishly. In this area at upon the national g6vernment day.
eQnstituUonal law, the Supreme It was the "Congress" that could
Court has spoken repeatedly and make no laws abridging, and so
·
emphatically. The high court has forth.
At one time In our jurisprudence,
held that the First Amendment,
which says plainly that ''Congress" the ·pole star of constltutkmal conshall mal(e no )j!.w respecting liJI stru~on. was . slmply charted: ~
establlshment at religion, applle;s Intention of the framers and the un:·
With equal strength to the states. derstandtng of the ratlflers - these

Inches of snow fell In the soutbe!ISt.
zanesville reported 4 Inches. Five Inches fell In the Chesapeake
are$ and around 10 Inches was reported In the Martelta area.
Elsewhere around Ol)lo 1 to 3 lnchEiS of snow was common.

matter

were to guide us. In the
at
hand, there Is not a scintilla o! con{
vtncing evidence to show thatbaclt
In the 1860s the framers and ratltl'
ers of the 14th Amendment ever In;
tended to extend the First
Amendment's proscrlptl,ons to 1h1i
states. In his oplnlon-last month,
Judge Hand rwnded up an lmpres~
slve volume at documentation oq
the point. The Supreme Court, 1111
sald flatly, ''has erred In ltsreadlni
of history."
!
Judge Hand leaped fearlessly
Into a continuing controversy: Ani
constitutional provisions to IN!
construed today acccrdlng to ortgl;
nat Intent and understanding? Or Is
the Constitution a llvll!g doeument,
''which changes to suit the needs ot
,the times and the wblrns of tile
interpreters?"

I&gt;

The ncition's weather
By '1be "-iated Preis
One of the biggest Northeast bUzzards lh history swept Into New
England Satun!ay, dumping up to 3 feet of snow In some areas and
shutting down major cities, airports and highways. At least seven

WEATHER FORECAST - 'lbe JIIR"""al Wealber Service foreCIIllta ~~bowen for parta of the PacUIC Nortbweltand rain ilr tbe lower
Florida Pf'nlnPtla for Suuday. (AP ~).
·

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY TIIROUGH WEDNESDAY: Cloudy Moflday. Chance
of rain or snow Tuesday and Wednesday. Warmer Monday and
Tuesday With highs mostly In the 40s. Wednesday highs In the 30s.
Lows In .the 20s early Monday and Wednesday and low to mid 30s
Tuesday.

n

"The only proper approach, ~
said Judge Hand, "w to lnterp~
the Constitution as Its drafters and
adopters Intended. The Constttu:
Uon ... contains • provisions foi
amending it. Iftheeoun!iy decided
that the present text of the Constlj
Uon oo longer satisfied contempor·
ary needs , then the onl)i
constitutional course Is to amend
the Constitution by following Its for;
mal , mandated procedures:
Amendment through judicial flat IS
both unconstitutional and Illegal

q oz.

ternal struggles on rellgtous differences between secular .(reform)

Jews and those who practice varIous degrees of orthodoxy. For example, l!egtn won crucial poUtlcal
support from a small coaUtton or
orthodox parties by promising that
El AI, the state airline, would not fly
on the Sabbath. This le&lt;l to em·
ployee strikes and several unpleasant confrontations.
In the past, some rigidly orthodox Jews have stoned vehicles
driving on the Sabbath and attacked bathers on Tel Aviv's
beaches for their Immodest attire.
As the State Department analysis puts It, the orthodlx parties' "Insistence on the preeminent status of

WASHINGTON (API - A congressman wants the FBI to watch
over Envlrorunental Protection
Agency documents, amid the growIng Investigation Into the agency's
handling of a $1.6 billion toxic waste
cleanup program.
Rep. James Howard, D-N.J.,
c,halrman of the House Public
WorksComrnltteecalledFrtdayfor
the FBI to protect documents
su~naed by his Investigations .
subcommittee.
Howard said he was '"dtsturlled
and shocked'' to learn that what the
EPA called "excess copies" of
S!J~naed documents were destroyed by paper-shredders at EPA
,
headquarters.
. While the EPA says originals of
the subpoenaed documents were
maintained, the subpoena ISsued by
the subcOmmittee also sought
dupilcates.

religious law In Israeli clvU Ufe Is a
recurring problem (lor Begin), a$
It has been for all his
predecessors.''
The positions of the orthodox pa'rUes that have supported Begin. !n

return for a share of polltical powet
are "further stiffened by press~
from the smaller, .ultra-orthodoll
parties, which constantly takt
them to task for sacrificing relt'
glous principles to remain In theCa''
binet."
~
The secret analysis also notri
that "the long-simmering controv;
ersy over 'Who Is a Jew?' pits 1!0'
vernmental against religious
authority In determlnlng crlterllj
for the state's legal definition of

tee, had plllnned to receive a White
House compromise offer on congressional access to EPA docu-

ments, but was prevented from
returning to the capital from a trip to
Atlanta.

-----

--·

FINANCIAL
PLANNING

l'.'Ill~~~

INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS
If the government were giving away
money, would you take it? Of course you
would. One needs only a basic unde ..tand- ·
ing of an individual retin~ment account
(hereinafter refen-ed to as IRA) to
appreciate the monetary gilt "Uncle Sam"
ha1 bestowed upon us. If you are in the
"II'
30% tax bracket a $2 000 contribution to Wt tam 0. Smeltzer
'II '
' $600 . fede I CERTIFIED PUIUC ACCOUNTANT
an IRA WI save you
1n
ra
income tax.
You have set alide $2,000 lor reti....,_,t; however, it only aKh
you $1,400 of your cash budget to do so. Whqt's more, the intereot
eamed on your IRA funds O&lt;Cumulate tax flee. If you withdraw funds
from your IRA prior to age 591'2 there is a I O"lo penaltY. Many people
avoid setting up .., IRA becau.e they don't want ta tie the money up
until they're 591/, , The fact i• an IRA can be a superior 10vings vehicle
P"'ll if the . money is withcbawn before retirement and the 10%
penalty is incurred. Far example, assuming ·a 10% interest rate and a
taxpayer in the ~ brocket, an IRA 10vings plan is superior provided
the funds are left in far at least five yea,.,

Chamber of Commerce Building
16 State St.
Gallipolis, Phone 446-4471

100kOFTHEMONEVYOU EARN
IN INTEREST IS GOING TO

'(
~ - ._ ·~

a

llecessions hurt~========·=A=r=t=Bu=ch=wa==::lJ:
$1.6 trtlllon defense bUI by 1986."
"I don't see what all this has to do
with ·us. We love each other and If
we don't get married soon we never
. w111."
" Of course we'll get married.

President Reagan's advisers eXpect the economy to turn around In
1983 or '84 or '85. We could even
have a mild recovecy at the end of
this year. The July tax cut might
spur the consumer to go out and
spend money again. Wlth.luck we
could get married In any one of the
·
next fiscal years."
"And If all these wonderful things
don't happen?"
"Then marriage Is out of the
question until Reagan gets his
. house In order. Honey, why are you
.ge!~~mad? Did I know when we

started Hvlng together what the
MX missile ~stem would cost?"
"I don't care what an MX missile

costs. I want a home and children
and a husband who wUI take care of
me. I'll continue my job If you're
worried about the recession."
"Who said I was worried about
the recession? I'm worried that I
can't give you everything you deserve as a wl!e. I want the best fOr
you and my children. When we Hve
iogeiher no ·one cares about our 11fescyle .. Society accepts us now for
what we are - two people living
happily In stn. But once we take the
marriage vows we'll be ludged by
much more matertallstic stand·
ards. Do you think your parents
..wuld let you live like this If you

were married?"
. "I think you're full of it. If y~
don't want togetmarrted I'm go~
to pack and move out."
"You can't do that. You have tO ·
stay the course. Everyone has to
suffer some palo If we ever hope to
right the mistakes at the past 40
years. Look, I'll tell you what I'll do.
If Reagan can get the budget down
by a lousy $80 btlllon without endangering our national security, or Increasing personal Income taxes, I'll
go down to city hall and we'll take.
out a license the next day."
"You really play If sate, don't
you?"

LOCA'l10N PWSIIES- A 11111111 fealureolthelll&amp;e ilrtbe eldll!rly
haiMial co...,Jex 18 liB proximity to 8elllor ctu.a. Cl!llllll!ll' wllldlprovldea a mdrilloa ceater, heabb, IIOelaland ~ M'VIIlel, the
·dation medlcallwdkllal, 111111
M-..w B 1111h' Aa llftiPI!a118 Ill. the ·b!JJJibl1 wiD be to pi'O\'Ide deeel!t, d!II'JiaiJie bouJt1ni wMh
medical ud IOclalllli'Yicel ll!lll'ed to help older people mt!nhm an
ln6epend.... lfNyle. 'l'tle old cblldren'• bome balldllll (1) wll be
N!I!OVMM and •U•..W by covered walkwa)'a to tbe- Mradure (2)
· located on c....ty1IWIII!d land IIIIJ~~eenl mtheSealorCkl "Cenler (8 ),
tbe medical bulldlll1 (f) and Veta-au)Kenm.l .,..,..., (I).

v•-

-

.

"What do you mean safe? Jack
Kemp, a leading supply-sider,
vecy optimistic."

1s:

. :~.-- ~
·"'

.'

IN TODAY'S
FOODLAND ORCULAR
IDAHO POTATOES
READS
20 LB.
BAG

$159

IT SHOULD READ .

10 LB.
BAG

.$159

WE ARE SORRY FOR ANY· INCONVENIENCE TO OUR

•·

.

Recently, Congress quietly passed a withholding law
that will cost American savers and investors the use
of Ul% of their interest and dividends.
In simple terms, effective July 1st, 1983, this
new law requires banks and other llnancial institutions to deduct Ill% of the interest or dividends you
· earn on your savings and investments. :I'hat money
then goes to the Internal Revenue Service in much
the same way aa payroll deductions are now handled.
The aP.,nsors of this law have told us it was
designed to catcll a amall minority of Americans who
evade t.axea on their intereat and dividends. But the
truth is the law penalizes the great ~ority of
America!a ~~avera and iJ!vestora who pay their taxes
faithfully. What's illore, the federal govemment is
now recelvingall theneceesaryinformation to curtail

tax cheating.
Though the law does include exemptions for
some low income and elderly Americans, if they go
-through the red tape of llling an application, most
savers and investors will forfeit some of the money
they could earn·in compounded interest.
-~urge you to join our efforts by writing letters
to your representative hi ~ongress and to the two
senators from this state. Thll them you want the 10%
withholding tax repealed, because it would impose
an unfair penalty on savers like yourself.
· For assistance in contacting your representative and senatOrs pleaaeask any of our bankers. If we
all act now, Congress will get a clear message from
the voters back home, and they will work to repeal
this needless law.

CUSTOMERS

I would marry

FOODLAND

bus._

-

"'The gravity at the situation Is
self-evident," Howard said In a
letter to Attorney General WUilam
French Smith.
Howard wrote to Smith as the
Senate Environment and Public
Works Committee on Friday became the sixth congressional panel
to enter the Investigation of how the
EPA administers the "SUperfund"
for toxic waste cleanup.
Meanwhlle, a predicted compromise on documents Involved In
contempt of Congress charges
against EPA Administrator Anne
M. Gorsuch was stalled because a
key figure In the deal was blocked
from returning to Washington by
severe weather that struck the
nation's capital and other parts of
the East.
Rep. Elliott Levltas, D-Ga.,
chairman of the House Public
Works Investigations subcornmlt-

members to the agency while tile
state development and commerce
directors wUI serve as statutory
members.
Appointed by Celeste were Cru:ol
Braddock of Ctnclnna tt; Ronald
Pizzuti, Upper Arlington; Almon R.
Smith, Marysville; MUan Marsh,
·Girard, president of the Ohio
AFL.QO; Fred Rzepka, South
EucUd; Roger McCauley, Glouster; a·nd Dorothy Ryan ,
Youngstown.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
Richard Celeste has appointed
seven members to the Ohio Housing
Finance Agency which will Implement a new state housing program
approved by voters last Nov. 2.
Legislation Implementing the
ballot proposal, Issue 1, calls for the
group to Issue tax-tree bonds to
make low-Interest housing loans
available through financial
Institutions.
The governor appoints seven

Je'IN "

Recessions affect everyone, even
people who are In love.
"I would marry right now, but
where would we live?"
"What's wrong With here?"
"I wouldn't want my wl!e to llve
In this squalor."
"I've been living here for eight
months."
"Yes, but It's one thing to Hve
here because you're so In love you
haven't noticed the squalor. Once
we get married the romance Will go
out of the squalor, and you'll want
to move to a place I can't afCord."
"You're just using the recession
,as an excuse for not marrying me.'.'
"How can you say such a.thtng? I
told you when I met you I was a
romantic supply-sider. How did I
know that Interest rates would go
through .the ceUtng, the .economy
would stagnate, and unempJoy.
ment would be at an all-time btgh?
How can a man contemplate wed·
lock when nothing ts trickling down
from the top?"
"Men are doing It every day."
'Yes, but what kind of men? The
big spenders wlxldon'tcare.about.a
balanced budget, or the vtabUity at
the Social Security system or the
tight money pollctes that have
driven 'down Inflation to five. per·
cent. Are you wtlllng to go to the
altar at a time when steel produc·
tiQn Is at the lowestlthas been sinCe
the 'depression?"
"I'm starting to think that even
we were In a ~::;~~~'llli
wouldn't
I get

Ohio Valley
Rt. 35,

.. . ..

Page A-3

to housing agency

5

you tomorrow If the GTOI!Is National
Today Is Sunday, Feb. 13, the 44th day of 1983. There are 321 days left In
Product
went up by oiJJy 10 percent.
theyear. .
,unemployment
was down to .six
Today' s highlight 'ln.~~!story:
per
cent
and
automobile
sa1e1 In·
On Feb. 13, 1633, the astronomer GaUleo arrived In Rome and was
creased
to
their
19'
1
9
levels.
Mar·
detained by the Italian Inquisition.
·
rtage
Is
a
very
sert0111
and
On this date:
·
'
people
shouldn't
jump
Into
It
when
'In 1542, England's Quee!l Katherine Howard was executed.
they know we are 110tng to have a
In 1689, the English Parliament adopted a Bill at Rights . .
. ""

deaths were blamed on the stonn.
· Thousands at homes lost power as the massive storm, spawned In
the South and pUnctuated With thunder and Ughtntng, swept
oortheast Fnday, practically closing down the federal ~ernment
on Its march. Needle-like flakes driven by winds up to 70 mph along
the New Jersey coast created near-whlteout conditions.
The storm dumped nearly 20 li\ches at snow on Cape'Cod ot1 the
Massachlllletts coast before It headed out to sea this morning. In
Connecticut. the snowfall surpassed the 16.91nches recorded durtng
the blizzard of 1978 and hospitals appealed for four-wheel drive
vehicles to substitute for ambulances.
Phlladelphla's21.31nches of snow surpassed the aU·tbne record of
211nches set In 1909.
Suburoan commuters fied early from the cities of Washington,
Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York, but many round themselves
bedded down In pollee stations, airport termlilals, train stations or
all-night diners as the snow kept falling before tapering off early
Satunlay.
At least seven people died In the storm, Including an Altoona, Pa.,
man who 'was struck by a car Whlle crosikountcy skiing on a
highway at 3 a.m.
"What we got Is generally a mess," sald AI Coates, spokesman for
VIrginia's highways and transportation department.
Interstate 95 though Philadelphia, littered with stalled cars, was
closed whfie vehicles were removed. "It's like a parking lot out
there," sald pollee officer Jake Foley.
A 605-foot coal freighter sank early Saturday 30 miles off the
Vlglnla coast In gale-force wirlds and seas of 6 to 10 feet, and Coast
Guard and Navy vessels were sent to rescue 34 crewmen who
abandoned ship, the Coast Guard said.

FBI asked to protect EPA documents

Challenge ~0 BegmQ==·=· ======Ja=ck=An=d=ers::=::;on.
alerted U.S. lotelllgence experts to
the potentially volatile j!thnlc spUt.
It. brought Into the ~ the smol·
dertng resentment at the Sephar·
die, or "oriental" Jewish
community, which has been eConomically depressed and underrepresented even though It
constitutes a solld majority of Israel's population.
Most Americans tend to think of
Israel as a homeogeneous slate.
But In fact, Its relatively small population of 3.4 mUIDn may be the
moot diverse In the world. By one
scholarly count, Israelis speak 81
languages and trace their recent
origins to 1trl dlfferent "'"'Titrles . .
The most publlct. off .el's In-

.,

By The ASilllCiated PmJs'
Ohio skies are expected to begin clearing Saturdday night,
following the departure of the weather system that brought Friday's
snowfall.
·
The clearing Is due lrom high pressure that was located this
morning from Wisconsin through Texas.
A sootherly flow wUI be d~?Veloptng over the Buckeye State on
Sunday. Skies wUI be inostly sunny with temperatures In the 30s.
SIIOWfaU amounts from this storm were quite variable, ranging

Washington warned In 1$ farewell
address against chan&amp;e by USUfllll·
tlon, but for the past 50 years ·successive Supreme Courts have
embraced the flawed theocy of "In·
corporation." Bit by bit the judges
have extended their power by blotting up the Bl'l. at Rights Into the
14th.Amendment.
There Is no reason to hope that
Judge Hand' s·opinion wUI af!ect the
process. Justice Lewis Powell already has stayed the order of dis-'
missal In the Jafftee case. The high.
court wUI swat the 59-year-old Alabama jurist as If It were swatting a ·
ny. But lei It be said that Judge
Hand, If only Cor an hour, raised a
beacon that shed a guldtng Hght:

WASHINGTON ,.:.. Intelligence
reports from Israel have raised the
posslbUity that epldent Yltzhak
NavOil will resign his ceremonial
otttce to challenge Prime ~ter
Menachem Begin for the country's
pollttcal leadership.
The reason for such a confronta·
tion Is not generally understood In
the West. A secret State Depart· ·
ment analysts suggests that Nav·
on' s challenge reflects the
longstanding ethnic division between Israelis of European background, like Begin, and those
whose roots were In· Asia and
·Africa, Uke Navon.
In late Decembe, an outbreak of
violence In the Tel Avlv slums

,.

·Ohio ski.es clearing

"
'l'ha t Is sound doctrine. It hali
been sound ~octrlne since Ge«g_e

,.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Plea..nt, W. Va.

from nothing In the northwest to tO Inches In the southeast Fourto10

Forecast FOf 7 a.m. EST
February 13

inAlabannua=·===========J=~=e=s=l=K~il~==trre~~

WASHINGTON .:... Down In Ala·
bama the other day, a U.S. dlstrtct
judge provided a personal profile of
courage, and doubtless a profile at
foolhardiness also. District Judge
W. Bervard Hand ofMobllehadthe
audacity to rebuke his superiors on
the U.S. Supreme Court In this mat·
ter of prayer In the schools. He sald
some things about the Constitution
that canmt lie sald too often.
The.facts In the case before him
were not In dispute. Ishmael Jaffree, an agnostic who liveS In Moblle County, has three' chfidren In
the public schools. One of his chfid~
ren attended E. R. ·Dickson Elementary School, where the chlld's
teacher, Charlene Boyd, regularly
led her class In singing the famlllar
prayer that begins, "God Is great,
God Is good, let us thank Him for
our food." The o~ tw9 ·cblklren
experienced substantially the same
activity In their schools.

Oh~Point

r.----Weather:-------------. Celeste names seven

,february 13, 1983

onn:&gt;v

liebel

Middlepart-Gallipalis,

~

Pt. Pleasant

252

Jackson Ave.

675·4889

Comlnercial &amp; Savings Bank
Ohio Valley Bank
.The central Trust Co.

�Pomen~y Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

flage-A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Nbrvary 13, 1983 .

Economists foresee slight rise in inflation ·
By ROBERT BURNS
AP Business Wriu,r
The 1 percent drop In wholesale

prices last month was a victory for
the .Federal Reserve Board, and
Inflation is expected to Increase only
moderately In the months ahead,
analysts said.
The Laoor Department said
Friday its producer price index,

measuring the wholesale price
moves of a variety of goods,
declined 1 percent In January.
The Index had risen 0.2 percent In
December and 0.6 percent . !Jle
month before. For the past 12
months, the price Index has risen 2.1
percent - the smallest such gain In
15years.

Economists at Morgan Guaranty
Trust Co. In New York said the
recent slowdown In lnflatlon reflects
the "Increasingly apparent success" of 'the Fed's eHorts to Umlt
mQney growth. Those actions also
contrtbu ted to the prolonged rise of
Interest rates.
Morgan Guaranty analysts said

as consumer sPending picks up. But

they expected prices to rise only
sUghtty the rest of the year, with the
direction of prices In 1984 and
beyond depending t~f. . the Fed's
future actions.
1n a forecast published Friday.
the economic research department
of Chemical Bank In New York said
It expected prices to resume rising

It stressed that It dl!) not expect a big

surge In prices.
"A . serious re-emergence of
Inflation Is not In prpspectforl983at
least," It said.
1n other developments:
-ln Geneva, Switzerland, a
leading U.S. financial executive
said he believes the American
recession has ended. Roger airk,
chairman of M~ Lynch &amp; Co.,
said he expects the U.S. ec;onomy to
expand at an average rate of
between 2.5 percent and 3 percent
this year. The economy shrunk 1.8
peroent last year.
- Roger B. Smith, chairman o(
General Motors Corp., said In
Pontlac;Mlch., thatGMandT!IYota

American protected Barbie from French
PITTSBURG, Calif. lAP ) - A
former U.S. counterintelligence .
officer says he protected an
arrogant, ta unting Klaus Barbie
!rpm French interrogators who
wanted to kill the Gestapo chief
alter World War 11.
John Willms says he escorted
"the Butcher of Lyon" to three days
of interrogation by French agents in
the spring of 1946, and stood by,
armed, to pre:.;ent the French from
killing the man accused of torturing
and killing resistance leader Jean
Moulin and thousands of other
people.
He said French officers grilled

Barbie to reveal who betrayed
Moulin, but Barbie wouldn' I break.
"They were ready lo tear hlnn
apart," Willms said.
"I'd say the guy was taunting the
French," Willms said of Barbie,
Safe In thecustodyoftheU.S.Army,
"he felt so secure he would give
them smart answers."
·
Barbie, the Gestapo chief of Lyon
during the German occupaUon, was
expelled Feb. 5 from Bolivia, where
he had lived since the war, and was
flown to France for trial on charges
of crimes against humanity. He is
accused of ordering 7,591 Jews

deported to concentration camps
and of executlng4,00lother French
Jews and anti-Nazis.
W!llms, who recently retlted
after a career as a mUitary and
civilian Intelligence officer, said
that at the time he prevented
Barbie's death he was a special
agent to the special Investigative
squad of the Army's 97th Counterintelligence Corps.
Wlllms was contacted Thursday
by The Associated Press after he
discussed the events with an AP
executive who knew him in the
service.

PLO cites 'positive· elements'
in Reagan peace proposal
By The t\ssociated Press

Possible solutions to political
stalemates in the Middle East are
under -discussion In Lebanon and
among the leaders of the Pales tine
Liberation Organization.
A Pales tinian spokesman said
Friday that President Reagan's
Mideast peace initiative contains
several "positive elements" and
will be debated seriously at next
week's meeting in Algeria of the
Palestine National Council.
The counci l. the PLO's parliament. is to open its 16th session
Monday for a review of future PLO
policy toward Middle East peace
mOves. Ahmed Atxlel Rahman said
in Algiers, Algeria, that all top PLO
leaders participated In preliminary
meetings Thu rsday and Friday and

approved next week's agenda.
Reagan's proposal calls for a
Palestinian "entity" In association
with Jordan, which ruled the West
Bank until 1967. Israel has rejected
the plan, saying the Reagan
approach would lead to formation of
a Palestinian state, which Israel
opposes.
Rahman said the council also will
discuss three other Middle East
peace proposals put forward in
recent months.
Also Friday, U.S. presidential
envoy Philip C. Habib returned to
Beirut, reportedly carrying a plan
for a three-stage withdrawal of
Syrian, Israeli and PLOtroopsfrom
Lebanon within 10 weeks.
Four Beirut radio stations said

~baron

says · he~ll
stay in Cabinet

TEL AVN, Israel (API- Ariel
voted unanimously
Thursday to
Sharon says 'his departure as accept
the judicial conunissidn:s
defense minister is part of a recommendation that Sharon
"reshuffle of portfolios" that will should quit or be fired.
allow him to retain a Cabinet seat
There was no official confirmadespite calls for his ouster.
tion from Prime Minister MenaThe government said Friday that chem Begin that Sharon would stay
Sharon would leave the Defense In the Cabinet after leaving the
Ministry because of a Cabinet vote defense post Monday.
adopting a panel's finding that
Sharon, 54, told reporters: "There
Sharon bears personal responsibil- was a reshuffle of portfolios, and
ity for the massacre of Palestin ians that's the end of the problem. I am
last September In Beirut.
·still in the Cabinet. Begin did not fire
The Cabinet, apart !rom Sharon. me."

IOHN A.·WADE, M.D., INC·.
.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

the government of President Amln
Gemayel had accepted thes$hablbproposed plan, but Habib made no
statement on his arrival in Beirut.
There also was nocommentfrom
the Israeli government, which has
been in turmoil this week because of
the publication of an .Inquiry
commission's report on Israel' srole
In Sept. 16-18 massacre of Palest!nianretugeesmBetrutbytebanese
Christian militiamen. ·
The Lebanese radio stations said
the plan calls for the phased
withdrawal of foreign troops. The
newplanalsocaHsforatxlostofthi!
multinational peacekeeping rm:ce
1n Beirut to 10,001 men !rom its
present level of 4,700, Lebanon's
state and privately owned radio
stations said.
·Reports from Washlngion suggested that Habib was seeking a
compromise that would persuade
1srael to settle for Informal ties and
a non-belligerency pact with Lebanon In exchange "'r the withdra-.
walofltstroops.lsQWlhassoughta
formal treaty, free trade and free

Wllhns said Capt. John Whiteway, a French Foreign Legion
officer, was his contact during the
Interrogations by two French
officials.
.
After the first day of questioning,

..•'

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Half Slip In
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The LaSalle Restaurant
CLOSED SUNDAY

OPEN MONDAY·THURSDAY:-11 A.M.-9 P.M.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURAY- 11 A.M.-10 P.M.
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

SERVICED 11 A.M.·3 P.M.
MONDAY-PAN FRIED CHICKEN .WITH NOODLES
TUESDAY-HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES
WEDNESDAY -LASAGNA
THURSD~Y-MEAT LOAF
FRIDAY-BAKED FISH WITH RED SAUCE
SATURDAY-CHICKEN CROQUEnE

VALENTINE SPECIAL

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SLIPS

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Ra ~ cd on o.clusivc int e rview~ wi th sllrvi,·ing offic~rs nn hoth ~ (d e , . ~~ ~ wc:l l a' every major
a rchivul ~o ur cc, th i~ is the majeslic ~t o ry of the R~lllc of Midway hl11nd , the turninH point for

naval dom1nance in the l'acifi c Theater.

The Alcove
42 Court St.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

AMERICAN~,CREETINGI

. , r

In J u ~ of 1942. ~&gt;evt• n mon ths a fttr t he infa m y of Pearl HarOOr. Adm iral YamllmO IO prrp11rai
hi5 la rge and [)Owcrful Japanese flecltn do bat lie with an i nf~ rior 1/nit cd S!lll tli force under the
command of Admiral Nimi11. But , bit by hit , the Japanese nava l code Was br oken, a nd Nimitl
u t in motion the f1exi blc and opcr:nionaluct ics hy which t he Uni ted State ~ neet fa ced the over·
con fi dent J apa no:se Navy, and plunged it into the ~.:a

fl~s ·

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P·S-M·L

~rted.

\!~port

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PubllshPd each Sunday, 825 Third
Va~y Publl,hlng

A)ff&gt;nue, by the Ohio

,,

C. 2746-ANTRON Ill NYlON SLIP
cascade of lace daisies. Semi-Tailored
doobled self fabric with scallop stitching fin.
ishes neckline and hem.

pootage pold at GaDipolls. Ohio 4ilti31.
as S('{'Ond class maJ.Ung matter
at Pomeroy, Ohio, Posl Office.
Erltered

.

As~laled Press, Inland
Doolly Press Astoclalloo and the Amerl·

MPmber: The

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(Net pictured) - IIOOice of Lycra ~n­
dex molds to your shape for superbly
smooth fit Edpl in narrow stretch lace.
$11.00
Size 34 to 42, Avg. aJI(I Tall.

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Pldured) - Alluring tailored
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to lit your ciwn shape. Shirt-tan
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Cfn Newspaper Publishers Assocladon,
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2805-ANTRON

accident

PoMEROY - SnoW covered
r'*" are blamed as theca use of an
accident t!lat occurred at 9:45a .m.
Friday on Ohio 1.24 near the
Pomeroy village limits at
Minersville.
.,
~ccording to Pomeroy pollee,
Ruth E. Crouch, Syracuse, was
traveling west on 124 when she slid
19 ;the right of the highway and
struck and broke off a utUlty pole
belonging to Columbus &amp; Southern
Oltlo Electric Co.
"'f.lle car alsO scraped a concrete
w~ •. causing extensive damage to
v.elucle
and no injurtes.
,.
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B. 2726-ANTRON Ill NYLON SLIP
Subtle embroidered applique and hand cut
blossom lace borders the shaped bodice and
lavish hemline.
$15.00 ~es 34

l

•
!f'OMEROY -The Meigs County
S~lH' s Department Is InvestigatIng the reported breaking an!l
eQ;tering of Salem Center School
tl!at occurred early Friday
mQrnlng.
According to the sheriff's depart- .
nrent the custodian, Clair Swan,
Dexter, arrived at the school at 4
a.in. and noticed a five-pound txlx of
cHeese lying on the counter.
Swan left the kitchen to take care
of other duties. When he returned to
Ute kitchen, the txlx•of cheese was
ll\JSs\ng, There were tracks In the ·
snow leading from the kitchen door
to: Ohio 124. No other Items were
rejlorted missing.
Frederick D. Thomas, Rt. 1,
cheshire, notlfled the sheriff's
dePartment of a minor accident that
O¢urred at 11: 45 p.m. Thursday on
121.
'
Thomas reported that as he,.. ,
traveling south he sUd Into a
g$rdrail below Gilbert's Exxon
slation, causing slight damage.
1rhe sherltf's deparlment also
~lved a report of an accident that
O¢Curred Friday at iO: 10 a.m. on
' U.S. 33 at Druwln.
• According to the repori, John
Clark, Bexley, was traveling south
w~ he met an oncoming vehicle.
Clark was reportedly tooclosetothe
edge of the highway and sUd Into a
ditch due to lee and snow.
There was moderate property
damage, ahd no lnjurtes were

''•
.

contract "for as long as we have to
and no longer."
Ljn!)ner said theunlon's negotiatlng committee accepted his recommendation to re]ect the company's
offer. And he said the union
committee and officers would

with telephone calls.
London Is a destination for
runaway youngsters from all over
thecourttry.
Scotland Yard said 6,683 people
currently ~ reported missing In
the city, Including 2,00l boys and
girls between the ages of 14 and 17.
Undertakers Friday removed a
coffin from Nllsen's apartment In
north London'sMuswell Hill. Later,

'.'
'I

one Wft'k ....... ............... ........... .. Sl.oo
:tine Month ........ .. .......... ............. $1.40
Qr.1e Year
••

35 Cents

THE NEW FEDERAL LAW PROVIDES
ANSWERS.

box wrapped In plastic.
Three mlles away, In the Crlcklewood dlstrtct, another police team
pulled up floorboards, searched
cupboards, explored drains, a nd
dug through a large garden outside
a house where Nilsen used to live.
Nilsen, who is unmarried, is the
son of Norwegian army officer,
·Olav Nilsen, and a Scottish mother.
Police said his father is now dead.

BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13

Call for Information
1-221-5379
LeeC.M ~ n

Pamela N. Maggied
Attorneys-At-Law
8 E. Broad St.

Columbus, OH. 43215

r-;--:==::-·-:-"-::==============:::::===========:...,
r-;:::=::::;;~~=====~i
·--- ..
I
pollee C?lficers brought out a large

~~
-M

STORE HOURS:
9 am til

_ ........ Thurs.

•

46 Court St

No subscriptions· by ·mau J)ermiHf'd In

Fri.·Sal 9 am li 10 pm

446-1m

SUNDAYS
Sat., Feb. 19, 1983
CLOSED

,.'

I'

,I

,.
,.
•
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,.

•,1

'•

T-BONE
STEAK

89

Valentine's Dey is
Monday, Fcbnwy14.

·.,

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-~ c ·~·· "--·.,, ._

j,;&lt;;$,_ .,

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The ~utiful look of~
!Iowen. The beautiful
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FTD®FJ'IIIIIICt 'n
FIOifti'S '" Bouquet.

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Tokens to keep
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·of thee" whether given or
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t 2K Gold Filled or
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Other Valentine
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Teleflora

STRIP
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Seent with Love flowers in

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'17.50

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OPEN DAILY

FRESH SLICED

LB.

FRESH HOMEMADE

SAUSAGE

BEEF LIVER - r J
A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

COKETAB, SPRITE

TOILET
TISSUE

-

WAGES AND GIFTS

$}

MR. PIB

39

'for the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord" (Rrn. 6:231.
All know the difference bel)l&lt;een "wages" and a "gift". Paul mentions both in
the above verse. Your etnployer hands you yrur paycheck at the end olthe week
and yru accept~ as "wages," because you have worked for il and earntJI t That
same etnployer may also give you a ''bonus" at the end of the yf!\lr. This is a "gift'',
for you have not wOIIttJI for ~ but receive it as a resuM of his gracirusness. SO
"wages' are what we work for, a "gill" is.what we receive because of another's

Plus

Deposit

gener~ily.

Our 1ext says the "wages" of sin- is death. The man who dies and is
consipd meternal death in. heN is there because that is what he worked foi1 Yet
many do not consider their life in .this light He is then ·simply receiving his
"wages," so he wil have no r~IID complain about it; no more so than llle man
who works b ~ysical wages shruld complain of his wages, knowing how much
those wages are to be ~and. He goes inlo such an arrangement with his
eyes wide ~n and therefore ~hou ld accep his due w~hout comJitint.
But "the ~ of God" is life ell!rnal. This is a gift in the sense thatthose who
wil rereive rt wil not have earned it The only way thai eternal life might be
consileted as "wages" is if a man were to keep every cammand of God perfectly!
One mi;rt then say that God woUd owe man etemall~e; God would owe man the
wages for having per1eclly kept the law. But "allhave sinned" (Rm. 3:23). ~ man
keeps God's law petfectty, and since all men sin, those who will receive ell!rnallile
as a "itt" receive ~ because of the graciousness of God. These are Jtey who keep
God's law'.to lhe very be!t.of their ablily (Christians) and God "reckons" (CQunts;
consilersj lhem lis righteotl!l as he dkl Abraham (Rm. 4:3). Abraham was ntt
perfect, yet he obeyed God, and God "counted" him as righteous. But the man
·who ftaW~ntly disobeys God, or does nothing If all shall n~ be so counted. Hewil
be rewardtJI according to his works (Rm. 2:5-11).
·
II yo~ stand before a just God in judgment and he says 1o you, 'Depart from.
me ye lhal work iniquity; I never knew you" do notcomplan. You win IE receiving
eiUicUy what you have earned!

PEAK

BRAND

PINTO
BEANS

avallable. .
,.

T'bo SUnday . TI!nes&gt;Sentlnel 10111 not be
telponslble for advance paymeilta made

to carriers.
M.UL~ONS

I' .

(For free Bible Correspondence Course Write ...)

..

· ~1.~1 ·~ -'l~l\ _of ~t..iJ .
· llul•vll.. Rood • P .0. llox 301

GALLIPOLIS, OHIOU63t

0,., )II'Br

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Six months ......................... ....... $10.40

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recommend utat the membership
reject the contract and seek strike
authorization.
American delivered Its "last and
final offer" at 2 p.m. Friday,
Lindner said.

FINANCIAL QUESTIONS?

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Pretty and PracticaLbce bordered
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third of American's 35.500 empl!)yees, hal) said It would go on
strike beginning at 12:01 a.m. when
a 30-day "cooling oft" period
expired.
U n!)ner accused American of
failing to bargain fairly, and
predicted that union members wW
reject the contract proposal.
He called the lack of a contract "a
temporary setback, but goo!) things ·
don't come easy," and said the
union would work without a

Cheese theft

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AI Becker, a spokesman for the
postponed a nationwide walkout
airline, said "our people will
threatened for today and would let
contlnuetoworkasfarasweknow. "
the10,500affectedbaggage,malnte- ' He declined to discuss details of the
talks.
.
nance and flight operations workers
vote qn the final company offer.
Union President William Lindner .
As part of a deal to avert a strike,
said It will take "several weeks" for
the company agreed to . Immemembers to ratlly or reject
diately give workers a txlostln pay American's contract offer. Union
and change work rules the union officials scheduled meetings today
opposed, union spokesman John . to plan tactics, which currently do
Kerrigan said. He did not offer not Include astrike.
specifics.
·
The union, which represents a.

-.
By MICHAEL WEST
apartment, and Scotland Yard said
AssOciated Press Writer
't\Hicers expected to find "13 or 14"
LONDON (AP) - Parents of more bodies when a former
missing youngsters are flooding residence of Nilsen's Is searched
&amp;!otiand Yard with calls, after thoroughly.
PQ!ice said they expect to find
The British domestic news
~I!Cked-up parts of as many as 17
agency Press Association quoted
bodies.· at the current and former detectives as saying the. three
r'$ldence of an ex-army cook.
victims found at the apartment had
;J)ennis Andrew Nllsen, 37, has beenstrangledandchoppedup,and
~nchargedwlth themurderofthe . the pieces apparently bolied.
only victim yet ldentlfled. He was to
Pollee headquarters at Scotland
be arraigned today before magisYardsaidltsswltchboardhasbeen
·~tes.at a court In London.
swamped with calls from worrted
-Nllsen was an army cool( for 12
parents asking If their missing
y6ars and served briefly as a
chlldren could be among the
P!pilationary London ponce officer.
victims. Officials said the the pollee
:Pollee said parts of three bodies station near where the three bodies
~refoundinNllsen'snorthLondon
had been found also was swamped
•

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talks. But union leaders said they

Ex-policeman arrested for 17 murders

WILD BIR
SEED -

AS LOW AS

OHice Hours by Appointment Orily

~no little

, BySCOTr McCARTNEY
A880Ciated Press Writer
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) More \han 10,500AmericanAirllnes
employees continued working today after a ml!)nlght strike deadline, peudlng a rank-and-filevoteon
a contract offer rejected by union
leaders.
Leaders of the Transport
Workers Union . rejected American's final contract proposal Friday'
nlght after .seven straight days of

Motor Co. of Japan probably wW
start building a historic, JaPanesedesigned subcompact ln-Cailforilla
In thelatterpartofl984. The venture :
would be the first time U.S. and '
Japanese automakers joined to ~.
build a car In the United States. ·
-Finance mlnlsters from around
the world agreed at a meeting In "
Washington to boost an emergency .
lendlngfundby47.5peH:eut to keep ·,
, debtor nationS !rom !lefaultlng on :·
huge loans. The settlement, representing a compromise betWeen the
United States and other major:
ln!lustrlal powers, means more :
than $31 billion could be avaUabki for lending by the International ,
Monetary Fund· by the end of this
year . ..

KEROSENE HEATERS

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page A-5

Contract runs out, airline.employees working

'

1::==========-~::::::::::::::"'1

leave BarbieWhltewayurgedh!mto
In French custo!)y and 1
Wllhnssald,
claim "a misunderstanding had
taken place.
·"The French representatives
al!;O said that once Barbie was In
their custody, thE world \V(luld not
have'toworryabouthlnnany more,"
Willms added.
"When I refused to go along with
their bidding, Whlteway asked that
they be allowed to take Barbleoutto
the hallway. It could be arranged
that Barbie was shot whlle trying to
escape."
Instead. Barbie made hls way to
Bolivia In 1951, reportedly assisting
the government there.
Another former counterinteUIgerlce officer, Erhard Dabrlnghaus, said this week that Barbie had
been a paid Informant for the U.S.
Anny after the war. Wlllrrts said he
dl!)n't work for the branch which
held Barbie and coul!)n't conunent
on how he might have escaped !"'m
U.S. custody.

. TREAT YOUR VALENTINE 'TO A CANDLELIGHT
DINNER AT THE LaSALLE

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

'

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Paint Plea•nt, W. Va.

February 13, 1,9 83

MAIL 8VIIIVRIPl10N8
,
• t.ldeOIIID
1111 Weeks .......... .... ,.. ................. !ll1.41l
:II Weeks ............... .. ............... .. 121.:11
I) Weeks .................................. $14.01

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'i ll Weeks ..................................!llt1.18
lli Weeks ............................. ..... $l9.N
1.1 Weeks :.. ...............................$152:1

WICIMid•y
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1:11

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Olllr·WUEM
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WAGNERS

ORANGE

DRINK

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�Ohio

13, 1983

Point Plea111nt, W. Vo.

'tell-all~

•

Bar associati"ln niXes

West Germans honor Wagner's anniversary.
FRANKFURT. West Gennany
I AP)- The100thanniversaryof the
death of Richard Wagner, who
wrote some of Germanv 's most
famous Romantic operas·. is being
observed with concerts and symposium s across West Germany.
Wagner' s works will be performed in every majot· opera houSC'
Sunda)·. A spec ial tribute will be
'held in the city of Bayreuth. where
thC' compoSC'r founded Europe's
oldest summer music fesli\•al a nd
turned the theater into a major
cultural ce nter.
Bay!l'uth festiv al director Wolfga ng Wagner. thf' compoSC'r's last
surviving grandson. will lead a

SNOW - Pomeroy Chamber ol Commerce President Joe Clark
was one ol many residents laced with the snow problem Friday. Clark
cleans several inches ol snow from his ~on wagon Friday evening
before calling it a day.

Gallia enforcement
report many mishaps

memorial serv i('(', and Frf'nch

grounds at S; 11 p.m.
PoliC&lt;'men trim um;uccessfull y to
driv&lt;' thC' anima l out of the ;.if'-•
limits.
Police fina lly shot tb('COW at 10;(l;
p.m. on HenkleAv('nUC'. Th('owner
was locat&lt;'CI and he picked up the
rema ins.
II newspaper ruck owned b) the
Gallipolis Dail)' Tribune was also
rC'poned stolm from Th(' Jones
Boys storP on PinpStJ'f&lt;'t som&lt;'time
Thursda)·.
ThP rack was , ·alued at $XXI.
PoliC&lt;' ciled thf' fo llowing persons
Frida y and par l)· Saturda)·:
K('vin T. Wise. 21 . Rt. 1.
Chesapeake. resisting an'C'st: Ha ·
n:ild W. Flinl. :;[), Rt . 1. Gallipolis,
drunkm driving: Carlos R. Stf'phms. 26. Gallipolis. no driv&lt;'r's
licf'nS&lt;:'.

conductor Pierre Boul€'7 wiil dirC'Ct
the Bayrt'uth 01'chestra in S('lC'Ctions from Wagner's wo1'ks.
West German i('levision was to
broadcast a 1'100 produetion or
Wagner's "G()('tterdaemmerung, ..

one of the composer's most cell'brated operas.
Wagner is ·hailed bel'{' as a genius
who changed the rourseof classical
music. bu t thPre also has been
discussion of the romposer.' s stong
nationalist S£'ntlments.
Some historians have Said that
Wagner was one of Adolph Hitler's
favorit(' music romposers, adding
that fhe German dictator ordered
WagnH's music used In Nazi
·
propaganda films .
Wagn('J' wrote on social topics
throughout his life and bcgan
espousing nationa list idms in his

writlngmusicthatwasinc!l'asingly
stormy and romantic.
He strived for a union of music
and drama , maintaining that full
musical expression should bc
achiE'VeP through a sYnthesis of the
arts. Muchofhisworkwasbasedon
medil&gt;val German myths and
lo:&gt;gends.
Th£' composer joined .. in the
unsuccessful German !l'volution of
1849 and was later forced to flee to
Switzerland. where he began work
on "The Ring of the Nibelung,"
considered his greatest work.
Wagner eventuallv returned to
G£'rmany. becoming an advis£'r to
King Ludwig of Bavaria in 1864.
With ttw king's h£'lp he built his
now-famous theater in Bay!'('uth
and hf'ld its first fest i''al in t876.
H(' died at his villa on V('nic£''s

lalel~ years.

City man was found guilty of two
traffic offenses in Gallipolis Municipal Court Friday .
Ben jamin Shenefield was found
gu ilty offailuretoreport an accident
on private property and reckless
operation.
He received a six-month suspended jai-l sentence on thefailureto
report charge a nd was placed on
probation six months. He was fined
$25 for reckless operation.

ingmoo('rawdamag('to htscar.
In othf'r law ('nforccm('nl npws.
GaU ipolis Cit)' Police shot and ki lled
a cow which was !OOSC in the cily
3
on mut in&lt;' patrol first
obscJVed the 700-pou nd cow on the
Gallipolis !X'vPlopm&lt;'ntal (:mtf'r

F?~n ~tfic('r

WANTED

Admissions ~ Ron Capehart,
Pomeroy: Hilda Schmoll, MiddlEport: .John Norman, Pomeroy:
Jacq u ~line Petrie . . Ru tland: Ka thryn Felter, Middleport; Milford
Frederick. Racine; Jotmathan Double, Middleport .
Discharges- None.

ground. Pools, equipment;
supplies in stock. Down East
Spas.
Call Us Now &amp; Save

HOUDAY
POOLS, INC.
304,-429-4788

___________

NOT A MORTGAGE

Two persons charged with
drunken driving pleaded not guilty
and had their cases continued:
SamuPl E. Bennett, 41. Gallipolis:
and Ra lph S. Wilfong. 49, Rt. 2.
Vinton .
James F . Chandler, 50, Gallipolis,
also hadhis drunkendrivingcase
CQntinued.
·
A case against Carmen Kruskamp. 3'2, Rt . 2, Vinton, was
continued. He is Charged with
failu!l' to yield half the roadway.

-&gt;. ·.

FroterftaL L'i/e fnnronce

HOME OFFICE

•

ROCK ISLAND. ILLtNOtS

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T' ed or Rent•1ng.n·
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reiftdtedl w,ltkh will Mtltlt JM to pvrch••• tl\e CI4MrtitM IMm .. tM
ool...tl...t ,.k. wllllhl !10 ....,..

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COI'VIIGHT 1"' - THE ~IOGll CO. ITEMS AND I'IICES GOOD SUNDAY. FR. tJ. THtiOUGH SATUIOAV, ,II. tt, t,.,, IN
GAUIPOUS UD POll lOY SlOIIS
WI IUIIVE THE liGHT TO. liMIT OUAHTil•s. NONI SOlO TO

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Kahn's Salutes
Kroger On Its
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Kahn's

KEEPING AMERICA lHfN
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NOW WE WILL BE IN ·YOUR AREA WEEKLY

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I ~~~~~~~GS,~ft~e~!who~!~yhadonly

Madison Stewanl

NITRO, W.Va. - Reva We~
Balch, 72,Nitro, W.Va., dledFrlday
· night In Thomas Memorial Hospi·
tal, South Charleston, W.Va.
She was the daughter of the late
Lenza and Allee Carney Werung.
· SuJVivlng are a sister, Mrs. Jay
(Isabel) Stone of Rt. 1, Leon; and
two brothers, Russell and Ray both
or Given, W.Va.
' ·
Funeral arrangements will be
.announced later by Parsons Fun- .
erai Home, Ripley, W.Va. ·
.

Edith Hougland

VINTON- Madison Steward, 77,
Rt. 2, Bidwell, dled Thursday at his
residence.
Born April 5, 1905, at Wllkesville,
son of the late Brown and Irene
(Rellle) McDaniels Steward, he
was a member of New Hope Baptist
Church.
SuiVivlng is a son, Richard of
Columbus, two ni~es and severql
cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m . Tuesday in McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton.'with Rev. .
Vance Watson o!ficlatlng. Burial
wUl be in New Hope Cemetery,
HaPrisburg. Friends may call at the
funeral home from . 6-8 p.m.
.Monday.

CHIT.LICOTHE- Funeral services for Edllth Davis Hougland, 81, of
Chllllcothe, fanner Meigs County,
_resident who died Friday morning,
wW be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the
·Presbyterian Church in McArthur.
: Friends , may call at Blowers
-Funeral Home, McArthu~. from · Robert W. Vance
noon today IUitn l p.m. Monday. The
·body will lie in state at the church
GALLIPOLIS Robert W. .
.()ne hour prtor
. to services.
Vance, 73, 400% Pike St., Kanauga, ·
dled at 10: 15 p.m. Friday In Holzer
Medical C€nter .
.Jennie Morehouse
Born Dec. 13, 1909, in Kanauga,
'"'
I son of the late Edwin and Mary Cox
" LOGAN- Jennie Morehouse, 82, Vance, he was a retJred painter,
'Voris Road, Logan, a former Gallia
World War II Air Force veteran and
:County resident, died at her
member of White Oak Baptist
'residence Friday after an extended
Church.
~Ulness.
He married Helen Arrowood, who
: Bom June 5, 1900, in Galila suiVives, on Aug. 4, 1981, in
,p!unty, daughter of the late Frank Gallipolis.
·!lJIII Christine Brothers, she was a
Also surViving are a stepdaughmember of the People's Church of
ter, Mrs. Eugene (Jean) Yates of
Logan. She had resided in Bidwell
Kanauga; three sisters, Gladys
until 198!, when she moved to
W~ tklns and Inez Kearns, both of
Logan.
Columbus , and MarjorleTroutof
· SuJVivlng is her husband, Iiror
Kanauga; two brothers; Alfred of
Mo!l'house; two daughters, Mrs.
Kanauga and Earl of St. Albans,
Peter (!delle) Gernavage of Fort
W.Va.; a nd severa l nieces a nd
Lauderdale, Fla., and Mrs. L.inny
nephews.
(Arlene) Tripp of Logan; eight
A brother also preceded him in
grandchildren and a greatdeath.
grandcWld; and a sister, Mrs. tva
Funeral services will be held at 1
France of Gallipolis.
p.m. Monday In Willis Funeral
Funerat services will be held at
Home, withR.ev.Arnold Skaggsand
lO:ll a.m. Monday In the People's
Rev. Gene- Skaggs o!ficiating.
Church, with Rev . Roger Fldler
Burial will he In Pine · Street
officiating. Burial a nd graveside . Cell\etery. Friends may call at the
services will be held at 1: ll p.m .
funeral home from 6-9 p.m. today.
Monday in Vinton Memorial Park.
Pallbearers will be E ugene
Friends may call anytime today at
Yates, James Taylor, Russell .
fieinlein-Brown Funeral Home,
Johnson Jr., Roger Johnson, RiLogan.
'ChMa-Johnson and .John Jeffe rs.

.

(AP) - Sharon Fl~nnery wasn't
sure how to react when she met the
young girl who had received her
daughter's heart. Whlle words
between them were few, the
unspokenfeelingswereunderstood.
"I just wanted to see you, but I
never thought I would be able to,"
Mrs. Flannery, or Bad AY.e, Mlch.,
told 12-year-old Fellcia Holland
w~e~ they met ;,ttun&gt;?ay at the
child shome here. You rea special
little_p,irl, you know that?"
The cWld . nodded . but was
speechless.
Kelly Flannery's death in a
motorbikeaccidentinOhiolastyear
offered the gift of life to four people
":'hose llv~ were saved by donalions of the 12-year-old's kidneys,
liver and heart.

I

three months to live, was given new
hope for a healthy l!le when she
underwent the heart transplant
operation Sept. 9.
Mrs. Flannery said the thought of ·
her daughter's heart beating in
another youngster's body was "an
unexplainable feeling.
"I feel sad because I lost my
daughter," she said, " but I'm happy
for Felicia and her parents. It helps
me to see they've done a good thing
with the organs." .
Mrs. Flannery said that of all the
reeipients, thegirlwhogot the heart
is the most special to her
"I don't know If It's ~ause the
heart- you think thefeellngcorries
fromJhe heart," she said. "When I
found out she was just a little girl,
and then I saw her picture, she was
just so very special."

735 2ND AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-2601
STORE HOU,RS:
8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUN., FEB. 13th THRU SAT., FEB. 19th
"QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

A TOT AUY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

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NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS LASTING AS A
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OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT

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

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

Patricia Roush
SCO'IT DEPOT, W.V . - Funeral services were held at 1 p.m.
Feb. 8 in Chapman Funera l Home, ·
Hunicane, W.Va., for Patricia
Roush, 31, Scott Depot, who died of
Injuries received in a car accident in
Winfield, W.Va., Feb. 5.
Burial was In Hurricane
Cemetery.
Surviving are her husband, Tony
Roush; a son, Shane; three sisters
and two brothers; and relatives in
Meigs County. .

Poles
question
Walesa
WARSAW , Poland !AP) -Mill~ prosecutors questioned Lech
Walesafor4\6 hours tOday, thethlrd
straight day of testimOny by the '
lijbor leader In !he case of five
fqrmer Solidarityy advisers facing
charges of sedition.
; Walesa told reporters he exPfCted the day's questioning to be
"the final round."
' Earlier, unconfirmed n-ports
circulated that Wa lesa had been
!4ken from theoffiee in a pollee car,

SKIPPY

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POMEROY - Seven runs were
made Friday by local emerget)cy
units, according to the Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Service.
.
At 3:33a.m. Pomeroy was called
to Lincoln Helgh\S for Ron Capehart
who was· l_!'eated but not transported; at 10:00 a .m .; Middleport
was called for Hllda Schmoll, who
was taken to Veterans Memortal

8-oz.
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to see the five arrested advisers. But
1$ he left the mllltary compOund,
Walesa told reporters. "It's untrue.
!was here all the time."
' Walesa was greeted outside the
proo;ecutor's ol!lce by about 40
supporters of his outlawed labor
union, who gave him flowers and
chanted "Leszek. Leszek." a
nickname.

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Sliced Bacon.......... ~~:

Meigs Inn-Tu•sday Evenings
at 7:00P.M.

MORNING MEETINGS SOON

=~::.~~. . . .
KAHN'S

POMEROY

Gallipolis Developmental Center
Open Meeting
Monday, Feb .. 14 at 6:00 ~. M.
POINT PLEASANT :
Krodel Park - Open Meeting
Tuesday, Feb. 1S at 6:30 P.M.

Kahn's Meat
Wieners

HtllSHIIE I AIM . MEAT otiiiEEf ,

- -f -

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

.

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA

If YOUR INCOME IS BETWEEN
sg,ooo and.SlS,.ooo A YEAR

Veterans Memorial

SWIMMING POOLS
TO SWIMMING
POOL KITS
In ground, ""f type or abov&amp;

LF 4 VE THEIMI
A HOME •••

Found guilty on two ch~rges
GALLIPOLIS _ARt. 2, Crown

WAREHOUSE SALE

He was bom in 1!113 in Le-ipzig. in
what is now East G"rman)' . and
wrot(' hls first comp lE'teopera. "The
Fairies." in 1&amp;'!4.
Wagn&lt;'J' latPr turned a \\'av from
thC' smooth mPlodies and p1~opcrly r~:.!!!!!!.:;;!!!!!!:...._______L
matched kC)'S of mrlier ]9th
c('ntur.v compoSC'rs and began

On Sa turda)·. Ihe pa lmi invesli- ~;::::::::::::::::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:::::::::::::::;;;;:;;;;~;-] . William J . Ashley, 28, Fayete-gated one accidmt on Ohio .12.'\ in \
VIlle. N.C., fOJieited a $3&lt;1 bond for

Gallia County .'
Timoth)' Massie. 26. Ga llipolis.
was southbound al 2: 1~ a .m . wh('n
~w r!'portN:li)' went ofr the right side
of the road !O3\'0id colliding with a
car stuck in lhProad.
He struck an Pnbankmf'nt. caus-

The ABA' s 383-member House of
Delegates, its policymaking body,
did carve out two significant
exceptions tothe"sllenceisgolden "
rule.
They voted to allow lawyers to
reveal 'a client's confidence d!Jring
the course of a trial if the client
perjured himself.

•

\

GALUPOLL&lt;;- .-\ G~i ll ta Countv
Sher iff's cl('puf'-· "as one of m an;•
pt&gt;rsons in,·oln'&lt;l in m inor traffic
JCC'idf'nts on ir' c;utlia County
roads Frida\·.
[)(-put\' Alva Su lli, ·an was travelling on Ohio ltiO at ti: 2.1 a.m . in a
shl'r iff' s cruc&lt;;('r when he obsrrvrd
two cars which had collided on Ihe
road.
!Is Sullivan s lowed to inwsligated. he lost coni rul of his cruiser
and s lid into a ditch.
ThrC'f' oth!'r vf'hic\ps had also
gone off I h&lt;' rood. Sullivan !'('ported .
ThP cruisf'r was nol damagr'CI. .
ThC' Gallia -MC'igspos\ofl hcSta te
Highwa.v Patrolr&lt;'portsmanv r ars
s lid off madwa.vs or werf' involved
in minor mishaps Friday because of
icy roadways. Nmr ly all wer(' not
sPrious.

the Importance of withholding the
names of confidential SOiirces.
Leaders on the other side said the
absolute code of sUence is an affront
"to .common sense and common
morality."

depends upon the right of each
person to the best legal representation - woukl be undermined.
Morrover, according to thls side,
it would bc fatal to even give
attorneys discretion about revealing a secret. Once the code of ethics
says it's all right to breach
confidentiality In fraud cases. this
side argues, an opponent in a
lawsuit could force thl' lawyer
through court order to !l'Veal all he
or . she knOws. Leaders of the
winning side in New Orleans were
· fond of noting that priests can't be
forced to ta lk and journalists stress

winter convention in New Orleans is
. By ,JA.~ H. RUBIN
far from the final word. Legal
AssOciated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The authorities on both sides predict
obligailon "to tell the truth. the further wrangling within the ABA
whole truth and nothing but the and in the state legislatures and
truth" st ill does not apply to the state supreme courts.
Thf.' argument that carried the
nation' s lawyE-rs - at least not if
day
In New Orleans went sometWng
telling " the whole truth" im·olves
likP this:
snitching on certain clien ts.
A lawyer' s first responsibility is to
After two days of dPbate on the
the client. That means the attorney
touchy ethical question last week.
is forbidden from revealing a
the American Bar Association
client's
secrets. Otherwise• . the
rejected a proposal that would have
lawyers
say.
clients would refuseio
allowed attorneys to spill the beans
tell
thC'lr
attomE'ys
the truth ahd the
·
on corrupt clients to head off fraud .
American
legal
·
system
- which
But the decision at ih&lt;' ABA's

\

proposal

~13,1913

Ylftl of Beef.............. lb.

$ 69

'2 79

·

Hospital;

Tuppers Plains was

called at 11: l8 a.m. for Goldie
Boring, who was taliel1 to CamdenClark Hospital, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; at 2:49 p.m. Racine was
cailed for MIUord Frederick, Who
wits taken to Velerans; Middleport
was called at 7: :Mp.m.and9: 22p.rn.
for Fred Kuhn, who was treated by
tl)e squad but not lrtulaported; .
Pomeroy was called at 10 p.m. for
Gene BlankensWp, who was
taken to Veterans.

Bl-tan

'

OUR FULL: PAGE AD

IN WEDNESDAY'S PAPER
J

..'

�\

P&amp;. 11e-A-8- The Sunday
.
-

~

Times-Sentinel
. -

.

Micldleport-Galllp~~lis,

•.

'

Ohio-Paint Plecnant, W. Va.

on theri
A 10

Section
Sunda

1983 -

DEPOSIT

OPENS YOUR LAY A WAY All Ollr-.1

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SUNDAY 12:00 TO 6:00

MEN'S OR LADIES'

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Tton ' tu ue

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liond o111d tia~· tl:tle ~'Vhf'!l

htf' ul

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In search of a Valentine gift

pe111111 " acl!u'-.!tuen! ul htl•fl
dtit lliflll!f ! till!!

lflllf\ Bhlil~r~

live .yudt\

REG. '1.99 EA.

GENERAL

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2 FOR $250

f't&gt;r~ll llt•~ ollliW11itloC h~t1 1 1t'llt V Lp !iUOI \11111 1 \l~fe thi!\\1 \
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ClOTHING DEPT.

M il l!! ~ Port lilt' Tull t' &lt;IIIII •mlllll!ot! ll tiJII'I

II II'H •J

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nt rl 1y Remlv dot tells you 1f s ready

·

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WITH CASE

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Thos l1yht we1Qhr anJ

...... $25.99
. . . $21.99
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cut lltlacr caru era leill ures
t ii \ V to ll~il rl U 0 wnthuh
to• l'l:' h:tt c q ·ll~lllt'
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$14999
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. CASIO I
WAL1£T~ULATOR

5697

8 dtgtts . cftn s lanls .
Jnlfl!pendl!nl memor, ,
IIIIK:ttOn comm.wl ~gns

2.300 hOtJrs on Ofle llltllllm

.... .
'
"

Story and photos
by~bFox

Tbnes-8entlnel staff
GAll..IPOLIS - The rocky economic situation

does not seem to be resulting In a flourish of practical
Intentions over romantic gifts this Valentine season.
With the event to be pbserved Monday, Gallipolis
merchants have noted the traditional gifts of flowers
and candy are doing well and, In many cases, better
than last year.
,
Hallmark Cards Full House of Cards manager
Marian Taylorconunented. "People are optimistic, I
think. There's something about love and wanting to
express lt. .. people are thoughtful and expressing It
this year."
Merchants reported sales are either the same as
la!;t year at this time or better than Valentine's Day
1982. But many said the rush for the event is still to
come.
"Valentine' s Day is one of th6se things people come
In at the last minute to get something for. We'll have
people come In on Monday," said a spokesman for
French City Florists .
Tommie Vaughn of Clark's Jewelry agreed. He
said the sales " haven't really started up yet. -People

are still getting Ideas and they'll tend to walt untn the
last day."
"Just In the last day or so we've seen a spurt,"
explained Dan Davies of Paul Davies JeWelers. He
expected business to pick up through the weekend,
Prices for the traditional presents have probabl~
risen during the past year, but one can still express
feelings of affection for another 1n the form of a gift
and spend less than a dollar . Cards and some candy
items can be. obtained locally at such prtces.
· However. more expensive gifts are also available.
A box of chocola te candy can be bought for from a
few dollars on up. A $3 dollar box of candy heart-shaped and topped with a bow of flowers, of
course - can be purchased for $:!l.50.
Cards and flowers also vary in price. A bud vase,
comprised of a rose or carnation with greenery and
ribbon, Is avr llable for the price of a few doUars·at
local flower shops. For those wishing to spend more
mc'mey, ..Pat Allbright , a clerk at Dudley's Florist in
Gallipolis, explained customers can spend from a
couple of dollars " to as high as they want to go.''
The same is true for those wishing to purchase
jewelry. Most jewelers have items available from
about $10 on up .

•

JEWElRY DfPf.

8 oz.
UQUID

PEPTOBISMOL

L'ERIN
THICK &amp; FULL

• REGUlAR
. • SPECIAl

MASCARA
• 3 SHADES

.

.

•.

--

COSMETIC
DEPT .

..

COSMfTIC DEPT.

16

oz.

AGREE

SHAMPOO
•

8 oz.
ENHANCE

CUTE X
CREME OR FROST

.'

INSTANT
HAIR
CONDITIONER

NAIL

RlCUI.AR ~•

OilY
• B~SAM • PROTEI"

LADIES'

o REGULAR

• OILY
o DRY

~ ~$147

m .

COSMETIC

DfPT. •

COl;METICif En110r&gt;::E'
DEPT.

----

. ...... - ·-·

COSMETIC
DEPT.

100 COUNT

SWEET 'N LOW
SUGAR
SUBSTITUTE

TERRY
KNIT TOPS

Traditional Valentlne gifts of
candy, Dowers and cards are
still popular this year despite
economic co"dltlons. Shoppers
could be found In area stores a
few days befo~ the day's
observance searching for 111111

I o•ml , I Pit y •hurr \1 1'1!111.! IUfl' lo~iil lilt' ~
11)11 1' tJlliol~

•. ll! l '~ t' \

;tlll~ l ' 111111 &lt;II JII III I !~fo \1111'

fl., ~ l ' f ¥

r.l" '"l

lu11~' S•11''

;Ml

.

89C

the right card (top photos).
Roses and carnations are also
available (middle) and as an
encouragement for shoppers to
buy a Dower or plant for
Valentine's Day, Dudley's Florisis noted in their store's window
"love Is alive." (far lefH. CandY
Is popular this year with heartshaped, bowed boxes of chocolates ~ady for purchase (left)
as well as dietetic candy
(below).

IICP-4

Munsey 4 Qt.
Self-Buttering
Popcorn Popper

..
.'
• I

_

; ·'

••

..

Munsey's delu xe 4-qt popper wrth removatle bowl.

REG. 114.99

•

,

"

,

.

·'

d

'•

••

�'

February 13, 1983 -

Page-8-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

February 13, 1983

·-sunday/People
MacGraw to give up acting 'rubbishT .
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A spokesman for All MacGraw says it's
" rubbish" tnat the actress was so upset by her unfavorable reviews in
.\BC-TV's "The Winds of War" that she has considered giving up
acting.
"Sur(', she's gotten a couple of bad reviews," Alan Ne~ said
Ftiday. "But TV Guide gave her a rave. I know she's tllrllled by the
J'a tings ."
.
Liz Scott. a columnist for the New York Pally News, said earlier this
week that Miss MacGraw was So devastated by the bad reviews that
she was thinking of switching careers to publishing or decorating.

Community ~orner

Katie's korner.

Downward versus
upward motions

Newspape~

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Parents must surely have mixed
Tlmes-Senllnel Staff
· emotlons 'wben lt comes tD finger~ME~OY - weu, thank heav- · printing their children, a program
ens, the gas company Is ll!laJiy giv- · which Is under consideration in at
1ng a break!
least 12 s~tes. Including Ohio.
Under the new rate filed this . . Fingerprinting is a new tactic by
week with the
pollee agencies and schools to dlsp UC0 , t h e
courage kidnappers and Identify
m6nthly Iilli tor a
chUdren who run away or turn up
typical budget
dead. The procedure, we undercu st 6m e r stand, would take parent consent
that's one who Is
andtheprlntswouldheturnedover
c h a r g e d I or
to the parents and tucked away in
11,000 cubic feet of gas - will drop the hope of never having to use
from $'10.00 tD $69.73.
them.
Whee!
, I suppose any downward move Is
Richard Chambers was one
l!etter th~ the upward ones we've
Meigs Q;,untian who really enjoyed
all become accustomed to. If my
the many activities at the Serllor
math were better, I'd figure a per·
Citizens Center.
centage decrease, particularly
So in memory of his birthday this
since the Cabinet CouncU on Natuweek, his wife, Martha, made a
ral Resources and Environment
nice donation - enough to provide
jlist recaatly DOted tllat gas prices
special rernembranres tor those
in the past year have Increased
celebrating blrtlidays at the quaraverage nationwide of 25 percent.
terly parties of the center.
~ Old you notice that th~: announceIJ!ent of the 30 tD 65centreductlon in
For !bose of you who contrlbumonthly bills came in bold
tedn memory of Clarence Struble,
headlines?
who .not only served on the first
: Apparently everyone was . fm·
board of the Meigs County Council
~essed but me. The relief this
on Aging, but was also active in the
qo11ntry needs Is more than just many programs, some of that moenoug]) to purchase a couple of posney w1ll be ·used for a memorial
tj.ge stamps. I've had lots of trouble
plaque llstlng the name of deceased
getting excited about the decrease volunteers. Struble was a strong
despite the blast in the newspapers supporter of the Retired Senior Voand on television.
lunteer Program.

_ ,Seymour

MacGraw

auditions

®

Former prima ballerina $eymour weds
LONOON (AP)- Lynn Seymour. 44. a prinna ballerina who gave up
the Royal Balle(to form a punk rock dance troupe, has married Vanya
Ha ckel, an agent for several rock groups.
·
friday 's wedding was Seymour's third and Hackel's second.
The ballerina left the Royal Ballet in 1978 to direct dance at the
Bavarian State Opera House but resigned after two years to return to
!he Royal Ballet
·
·
·
Three weeks before her scheduled return, Miss Seymour, 44,
· announced she was forming her own company which would dance to
punk rock music. '

Choose from this and all the
oiher great looking boot
fashions by Auditions.
Available in a wide range of
sizes and colors.

Values to
$75.00

Court case cancels Osbourne concert
SCRANTON. Pa. (AP) - British rock singer Ozzy Osbourne was
forced to cancel a concert today at the city's Catholic Youth Center
afler the promoter staged a losing court battle with the center's
d[fector.
.
State Supreme Court Justice Samuel Roberts on Friday refused to
grant an injunction ordering that the concert be held. promoter Tom
McKoul of Allentown said.
·
Rev. Richard Czachor, the center director, said an oral agreement
allowing the concert had existed, but he decided to break It when he
learned of Osbourne's "satanlcal worship, desecration of a monument
and cruelty to animals."
,_
The American Civil Liberties Union said the performance should be
allowed. ACLU attorney Frank Muraca of Scranton said the center
opposed the concert because of Osbourne's " past conduct," such as
biting the head off a bat during a performance in Des Moines, Iowa.
The concert's 4,0CO tickets, costing$11 apiece, sold out one hour after
they went on sale. Customers can get refunds Wednesday, McKoul
said.

'.

This spring a smart
herringbone
ensemble: Start with
our crisp blazer and .
belted front-pleat
· skirt of Fortre(•
polyester and cotton.
Now add the perfect
suit shirt with
delicate smocking
and sophisticated
ribbon tie. All
designed for sizes 8
to 20. Shirt in black,
white or yellow .
Skirt
Slacks
Tops
Blazer·

NOW

$4()o0

an

124.00

'21.00
124.00

'37.00

Tops Sitt 36-46
Botroms Si zzt ;o.4Q
•Fort rf!,. is~ trademark of Fibrr lndustri~ .
Inc., a subsidiary of Celanne Corporation

· Sure I'm thankful for the little
things, even this decrease; but I'm
more thankful for the God-given
warm weather which has really
~n a help In this time of high unemployment and recession (or is It
depression?).
! Now that's the real break!

•FULL FIGURE
FASHIONS
•MATERNITIES
•UNIFORMS
CORNER OF STATE &amp; SECOND

•
BELLEVUE. Wash. (AP) Lawyers have accepted a wheelbarrow crammed with 10,001 crumpled
$1 bills as \he first installment of a
propertyl settlement from a woman· s estranged husband.
Burled among the greenbacks,
though, was a message that read,
"No more Mr. Nice Guy."
The lawyers won 't give the
couple'sl Identity for fear the
publicity wUI inspire the man to do
something more outrageous next
time.
'
Attorneys Ted Katterheinrich
and Clay Terry issued a receipt
Wednesday for a "wheelbarrow
apparently tun of money in an
amount alleged to be $10,001," and
promised to return the
wheelbarrow.
They stood guard In thelro!flce all
night, then laughed au the way to the
bank.
.
"I've never been so happy to get
rid of money," said Terry.

.-•
~

-

•

Looking for a wonderful way to let your
Valentine know she's very special to you?

Pomeroy Fbwer Shop offers you cwo very
special bouquets.
The Perfume Bottle -Bouquet is an exquisite crysral perfume bottle with a

.

shaped sropper that's delivered with lovely
Valentine flow~.
.
--··
1
Pomeroy Fhwer Shop also offers a gorgeous Valemine's Day tx:.lcplft that
comes in a romamic redrer!lmic ~art. So ic's a special gift- bealuse .theheart is a
k"'psake vase one that will be cherished long alter Valentine's Day is gone.
Stop by ~r all Pomeroy Flower Shop. Then cake your bouquet or send it
almost anywhe re in the country. Because w1th Pomeroy flower Shop, the flowers
always co~ in some[hing ~ pretty as the Oowers thrmselves

eROSES ,cuT FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
•TERRARIUMS •MUMS •TULIPS
.
eCARNATIONS •AZALEAS
•SILK &amp; PERMANENT ARRANGEMENTS
•DISH GARDENS

~~·~~14.
POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"The Way America Sends Love'

106 Butternut Ave.

992-2039
Pomeroy, OH. .
or 992-5725
We Accept All ,M1jor Credit Cards and

we Send Flowers Everywhere.

c

p •

110 11 DCtklnl Al1llllel ogMiakJft i; llau

COIPIIOCII' ', ....... laW, normai,NghGIIhog. 9M

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insrallmen~

--.
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SINCEI
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PRODUCTS

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"He's got two more installments
to go," Terry said of the couple's
out-of-court settlement. "Possibly
the next one wiU drop from a
helicopter." ·
Placed prominently in the center
of the greenbacks was a single bill
with the words, "God is love,"
printed on it.

115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, OH.
Serving Meigs &amp;Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

SINGI It

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heru:r-

Syracuse-Racine Regional Sewer
District, Issued· a reminder that
sewage bills may be paid at the
Home National Bank, Syracuse
Branch, as-well as gas bUts of customers living In Syracuse and
Minersville:

A r~r:~ t-t,.., - . , ,!J -..J ~

•

•
•

·---

Gary Norris, a memher of the

a

..-.
•

i---------~--~--------------4

This Is dedicated to our grand·
son, Robby, who reached the ripe
age of five on Feb. 10.
A picture ;tppeared recently in
Since Robby lives In Zanesville
The Dally sentinel of a young man we celebrated the event last wee·
who was shown etching the mes- kend. Of all the present&amp; he resage ' 'golng home" on his t~all!i!r at e ,ceivejl I (Ia bell~ve that his'
truckstop in Paulsboro, N.J. Ray "Superman" cake ranked number
Robinson had transported a load of one.

-..
•

Columbus, Is the gr;:mdson of Bertha Robinson and Clara Powell,
both of Racine, and a cousin of
Larry Spencer, clerk of courts. It's
a small world.

From heart to heart, Happy Valentine's Day to each and everyone.
. May all our readers be remembered by those who 44 Ca~."
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!

'Ib Henry and Esther Stanley of 1-------------__;__-----------L---------------------~
Pomeroy, our congratulations! Today they observe their 40th wedding anniversary.

A different kind of first

TAJLLAHASSEE. Fla. (AP) - Gov. Bob Graham, known for taking
odd jobss to work shoulder-to-shoulder with his constituents, is setting
his sights higher for his next "workday."
,
The 4&amp;-year-old governor is scheduled to fly Saturday in the back seat
of an F -106B Delta Dagger jet fighter.
Graham will be co-pilot to Col. Dean Biggersta.ff, conunander of the
Florida Air National Guard's 125th Fight~r Intercepter Group based at
Jacksonville International Airport.
·
Thi! governor will take part ln a training mission in the two-seat.
single-engine fighter .

phot9 shows it's ,a small world

produce tO Seattle and was driving
Being a typical grandmother I
south to shut down as part of the
have to say Robby Is quite a boy.
nationwide strike by independent
He, along with our other three,
truck drivers.
Lori, Meredith , and Wesley, have
What IS so unusual. about the pic- found a place in our hearts that is
ture Is that Robinson, who lives In · beyond explana tlon.

By KATIE CROW
POMEROY - It was .just last
'Thursday that the office staff was
'talking about
vered roads.
Goldie Carson,
who Is employed
In the front office,
Is a lady of great
faith and I truly
believe she sees
good In the worst
of us. Goldie expressool
of
. driving or riding on snow covered
roads.
I stated "with your faith you
should not be afraid."
Goldle..qulpped, "I am not afraid
tD meet my Maker, I just don't want
to get hurt on the way."
Goldie Is forever giving out bits of
.wlsdo!Jl tfu!t sometimes are very
hilarious.

Have a nice week!

Governor sets sights on next 'workday'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 8-3

\

'

O'Brien leaves hospital
NEW ORLE ANS (AP)- Veteran actor P at O'Brien has checked out
of a hospital a fter six days of treatment for exhaustion and a virus.
A spokeswoman for Ochsner Foundation Hospital said Friday that
the 83-year-old actor was headed home to Los Angeles.
O'Brien's illness caused an early curtain Saturday at the Beverly
Dinner P layhouse where he was performing in "On Golden Pond" With
rus wife , Eloise , and daughter, Brigid.
His hospitalization forced cancellation of the rest ofthe engagement,.
which was to have run tllrough Feb. W.

Pome10y-Micldleport-Galllpolis, Ohio-Point Plea~ant, W. Va.

'

MONDAY AND FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

TUES.-WED.-SAT.
TIL 5 P.M.

THURS. TIL NOON

'

-

�'

,

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..••
.

Ohio-Point "-a~ant, W. Va.

Chaplains' meeting
planned at HMC

•

SUPER MARKET- OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

85 Vin! Street
Gallipolis, Ob~ Phorie 446-9593
"We Rese11e the Rigftl .un~ Quan~

Rev. Buchanan
GALLIPOUS - The featured
speaker at Holzer Medical Center's
Volunteer Chaplains' Association
Appreciation Luncheon and Annual
Meeting Feb. 24 will he Rev. John
McCormlfil ~uchanan, senior min·
lster at Broad Street Presbyterian
Church In Columbus. The theme for
his presentation wUI he "Integral·
!ng Pastor al Care and Preaching
for the 'Ills."
A native of Altoona, Pa., Rev.
· Buchanan holds a bachelor of arts
degree In political science from
Franklin and Marshall College,
I..ancaster, Pa., and his bachelor of
divinity degree from the Divinity
School of the University of Chicago.
He was ordained In June 1963.
His ministerial service began In
Dyer, Ind . In the summers of 1973
and 1978, he was an exchange pastor In Scotland and became the senior minister at Broad Street
Presbyterian Church In 1974. In
1979, lie chaired the committee on
the Church In the World of the Future, Synod of the Covenant, and In
19!10. the Pastoral Concerns Committee of Presbytery Vocations Department. He has served since 1979
.as a member of Columbus Bar Association, Professional Ethics and
Grievance Committee.
He and his Wife, Sue, have two
daughters, Diane and Susan, who
are both in college, and three
younger sons, John, Andrew and
Brian.
Rev. Buchanan received the
American Sermon Society Award
In 197/ and holds an honorary doctor of divinity degree from Muskingum College, New Concord,
conferred upon him In 1982.
Rev. James Kuhn, vice chairperson of the Chaplains' Association,
said his lOth annual meeting which
wtll Include, in addition to the program by Rev. Buchanan, the recognition of lndlvl&lt;jual chaplaincy
service, the election of officers and
a clergy representative ·at large,
and reports on the continuing Work
of the association.
Director of Chaplaincy Services
at the hospital Is Rev. Arthur C.
Lund and 44 volunteer chaplains
are actively Involved In the
program.
The luncheon wUI be held at ooon
Feb. 241n the French Five Hundred
Room at the hospital. Reservations
are due to he confirmed by Monday, Feb. 21.

Counsel" sessions
slated at RGCCC
RIO GRANDE- The CommunIty Education Counseling Center at
Rio Grande College and CommunIty College wtll host six sessions
awing March and April for area
persons Interested In stress management through Yoga exercise
and relaxation training.
The sessions wlll be held 6-7: 30
p.m. on March 21 and 28 and Aprtl4,
11, 18 and 25111 the James A. Rhodes
Student.Comrnunlty Center. The
sessions are open to the public free
of charge.
"For the average person, the
question of managing stress and
anxiety can appear to he a complex
one," said Herb Spencer of the
Counseling Center Staff. "The Idea
ar,.yoga and meditation Is often reJected as Impractical In everyday
life. However, a few simple steps, If
practiced regularly, can provide
most people With a statt to the solu- .
tlon of the problem of stress:
· Spencer··added that the sessions .
are designed to teach basic yoga
exercises and a procedure for systematic muscular relaxation.
· For additional InformatiOn, contact Rio Grande College at (614') ·

245-5353..

February exhibit
GALLIPOLIS - On display at
the Rlverby GaUeries, !130 First
Ave., Gallipolis, · are photographs
from The·French Art Colony's recent photography competition. The
title ot the contest
"The Interpretive Lens."
.
'
'lbe galleries are free and open to
the publiC. The exhibit WIU be on
display untll Feb. Tl.

was

'•

•~

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

THURSDAY
FEBRUARY 17, 1983 '

Pleaser
Special

By REI ,EN AND SUE JIOl'TEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:

USDA OiOICE

LB.

USDA CHOICE

STANDING RIB ROAST

LB.

$2 lS

TAVERN
HAMS

Your
Hometown
Supermarket

' -

' .'

Locally Owned ·. ,. .
and Operated :~;
..' '

79

HAM

lB..

EXTRA LEAN ·

GROUND
CHUCK

Special

FlESH

CAI.FORNIA

COOKING ONIONS

SOUTHERN YAMS

ORANGES

Budget
Pleaser
Special

COKE, TAB,
SPRITE,
MR. PIBB

MARTHA WHITE
SELF-RISING
FLOUR

MARTHA WHITE
AlL PURPOSE
OR SR

16 oz.
BTLS.

FLOUR
$ 29

MELODY MAID ·

CHOCOLATE DRINK

1

GALLON

.•
...
.''

:·"We've got a federalllcense for a scratch-of! label," WUilam Boam
qimo!mced Friday. Boam's Ca!lforrila-based company contracted with
~tern Bl'f1Wing Co. here to produce the beer.
·:Nude Beer originally was to feature a different waist-up view of a
Unclothed woman each month, but federal and state authorities balked
11{ the Idea, Boarn said.
·
·
•.Now, the labels wiD show a woman with a special ink printed over ber
ol)est, he said. Consumers Cllll scratch \he Ink off if they care to.
:·'"The reason I think we made It Is because the pubUc wants the

•'
. .,

PORK OR BEEF

VIETTI BAR-8-Q

TOILET·
TISSUE

POT pIES

'

!

Budget
Pleasei
Special .
AUNT JEMIMA .

PANCAKE
JLOUR--

. :~$1 69

GALLON

EX. lARGE EGGS

Sunday 1-6

The Saving Place Slot

(501}

(500)
Our Reg. 9.97

••••
••••
••••

Sale Price

7.97

Solar Calculator

Hot Air Corn Popper••

Powered by sunlight so
it never needs .bolterles! 8-dlgit, with memory and solar cells.

Makes crisp-dry or hotbuttered popcorn, airpopped continuously!
Uses · hot air. not ail.

,.....

M·L-XL

--····
97•

SOld In HOSiery Dept.

78

$

(502)
Our Reg. 1.37

Nylon Pantl·aiJ® Panty Hose
· Sandal loot and

....,.

crotch.

4 97
•

(504)
Our Reg.
5.97

1.58~::~;~r

6 Pair Men's Tube Socks

Women's Knit Slippers

White

Terry/nylon

cotton/nylon. Fit

10-13.

with

rubber

sole.

AC-

CESSORIEs. INVITATIONS BY: CARLSON
.. €R'AFT, MC PHERSON, BRIDE &amp; GROOM.

'•

•'

.

cAROLYN WILSON, PROPRIETOR
AFTER 5 p.m.87$-4211

·'

&lt;

POINT PLEASANT ON RT. 62 SOUTH

I

.•'..

24 oz.

. DOZEN

79¢

"•' i
..,.
•

S&lt;;Jie Price

' f

'

.'

.i ".'

II

•

12•oz: STP'" Gas Treatment
Helps Improve your .
engine's performance.

'

'.

"Fl.

•

••

I:

•

=
..·'

4 ROLL

.• .•'

PAK

IVORY LIQUID

DISH DETERGENT

48 oz.

BTL

J·

·'·'

$259

~·

~I'

;:
. .·

•'•'j

r;

t

••
:1

,,'
'

PANCAKE

.•'"'

MIX

¥

'

%·

POUND BOX

'-====~===

(506}

'

'

CTN.

Budget
Plea.ser
speeiat. '
MRS. BUTTERWORTH

.2i79$

·

'

:CoMPLETE LINE OF WEDDING

\

Special

SUNNY MORN GRADE A

oz.

Open Daily 10-9;

'S BRIDAL
AND CATERING SERVICE
Be A Guest At Your Own P1rtyl . '
..Let Us Cater It For You"

:

''
t

Budget
Pleaser

2o/o M.ILK

BEEF. CHICKEN
OR TURKEY 8

.

t•

:

conAGE CHEESE·

FAMILY
MEALS ~
MORTON

.

'

HAWTHORNE MB.ODY

10 oz.
CAN '

WHITEQOUD

5 VARIETIES ·

Sun., Mon., Tues. Only

·' A

ROYAL CREST

2LB.

'

i

MERICO
TEXAS STYLE

Budget
Pleaser
Special

39

. P.i-oduct." said Boam.

..

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
.Special'

.,., 4 '

..

lllllliilta

..•

~.

. MORTON

WE HAVE EVERYTHING YOU NEED
FOR MOBILE HOMES
PHONE 992-5587

•'

i:
••

~·

.

u

•'
••
~:

.·'..
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Monday onlyl
Assorted ·
donuts, .
· ·-$2.00 a·dozen.

'•

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•'

Get
a dozen of .MiSt.
.
---er Donut's famous, fresh
~ssorted donuts for just Two bucks. Stop in Monday
. at Mister Donut. .
•
~

'

•.

..•'

2322 Jacbon Ale.

,'Poiat Ple•llt

. 675-5159

nliStar "-""
~

..t: ...- ~•

.OII!I!IIPI•N-24-HOIIIIU•R•S--~~
I

.l

,,

,1

•

#

lila/ill liD

'..HAMMONTON, N.J. (AP) - Barllys
.
who want to savor a boUle of
Jiijlde Beet wDl have to undress It first, the manufacturer says.

'•

BUTTERMILK
BlSCUITS ~~·

5-LB.
BAG

.KINGSBURY HOMES PARTS AND ACCESSORIES STORE HAS
MOVED TO ANEW LOCATION AT900 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, FORMERLY THE BOOKMOBILE BUILDING.

Undressing
nude beer
'•

••

RED
GRAPES

YElLOW

I 1111 lllll'lfiiUHIHINI/f/HUHU!NHIIHPHH/IIfHIII#

'

EMPEROR

GREEN
CABBAGE

Budget ·
Pleaser
Special

liS Alli111Je WMTA0J

r-----------------------~----~~--------------~~----------~ .

•. PLA'ITEVTI..LE , Wis . (AP) - A sociology professor has taken
Valentine's Day as the occasion to attempt the Impossible: he's offered
a ·rortnula to tell the difference between klve and mere Infatuation .
·. "Your cupid may be stupid," warns Ray Short of the University of
Wlscoi)Sin.-PiattevWe. "The arrow that pierces yourheartrnayturnout
to have a polson point ''
·. How can you tell?
- Short, llll ordained minister, says here's his acid test for love:
:•"If you love the person so much you want your beloved to be happy,
even If you can't be the one to make him or her happy -even If that
person's happinEss Is with son1eone else - then you really love them.
~~separates the men from the boys and the women from the girls."

Budget
Pleaser

FlESH

10 LB;
BAG

DEAR FATIIER:
Why don't you fof!Tl a Custodial
Fathers' Group In your wellpopulated area? Members
shouldn't be hard to find If you contact single parent organizations,
churche$, schools, your local newspaper (which inlght do a feliture on
''The New Fatherhood").
. Good luck.
.
And may your ex-wife win every,·
thing she deserves! - It

An attempt of the impossible

Pleaser
Special

BAKING
POTATOES

The Sunday Time5-Sentinei- Page- B-5 :

,;1111101111111 11111111111111 1\!. ...,,,

To the teen wbo fears acne:
not help. You, HOpe, could have
When I was near 13, my sister deveheen the type who never develops
loped a bad case of "the zits." I acne. - HELEN AND SUE
swore I wouldn't have that trouble.
A friend adv1sed me to eat one
(GOTAPROBLEM• Or a subyeast cake (!!Very two days. It ~ted · ject tor discussion, two-generation
terrible, but I never had one pimple style? Direct your questions to
.on my face.
either Sue or Helen Botlel - or
Try it. -'- HOPE
both, If you want a combination
DEAR HOPE: (AND TEENS:)
mother-daughter answer - In care
Can't hurt to try, but yeast might
of this newspaper.)

On the .light.side

FRANKIES

U.S. NO. 1
IDAHO

W. Va .

further

SUPERIOR

Budget
Pleaser
Special

'

I've found no guides for custodial
fathers, probably because there aren't too many of us. }fow do we
learn the ropes? Where do we get
.Information that will help us avoid
mistakes(
I want to be the !Jest possible Dad,
but I also need other Interests In my
life without feeling gullty, ·
Where can I go for advice and
counsel? ...,. SINGLE FATIIER,
Hackensack, N.J.

managing. Lucklly I have
a gooc,t ~bysttter, an older women
who alSo belpl wfth the housework. ' DEAR FATilER:
But the problems facing a single
I'm not aware of any books writmale parent are 10rnewhat dlfferten specifically for custodial faent!rom those of a single mother.
thers, but you might try Dr. Jerry
You get more sympathy than you
Cammarata's "The Fun Book of
re8lly want, for starters. And peoFatherhood" which wDl help you
ple, assume the kids are not being .
enjoy your children. Dr.
IJI'IJM!I'Iy raised. Women who hear Cammarata Is the first man In the
·you have three children In the
United States to win a paternity
hoR!e, tend to disappear. Fast! Or leave from 1lls employer; the New
eiH they're mothering types who
York· City Board of Education. try to take over, which turns the
SUE
kids off. Fast!
. HELEN AND SUE:
We~re

Budget
Pleaser
SpeCial

WHOLE

lilly wUe announced out ~ tbe
that _$lie was leaving me lor
another man and slle didn't want
the chUdrell, not even Jimmy, her
son' by a former marrta~.
Jimmy was two when I married
Nelda . t1ve years ·ago, and I'ye
··railed him as my ·own. We have
tw!h daugl!ters, ')&gt;trn and Tracy,
Bllfl three.
I· had . no Idea anything was
wrong, and I went Into a taUspln
which might have been disastrous
except that I had the kids to care
.for.
Eight months later I stlll can't
believe I~ but I now know Nelda
won't be back: sbe'.s living with ber
wealthy bass, has agreed to pay
plilld support, but shows llttle Interest 'In ~lllg her chUdren.

bJut!

oREDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY' .
. SAVING COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V
MD RECEIVE .DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU
PURCHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON
PER ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED.
DOUBLE REDEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY
fO 1'REE MERCHANDISE"; COUPONS OR
COUPONS OVER 49' IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH
R£FUNDS WHEN DOUBLE COUPONS VALUE
·EXCEEDS PRICE Ot ITEM. CIGARETTES AND
CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE EXCLUDED BY lAW.
fO INSURE PRODUCT TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS.
lYE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE COUPON"
OFFER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFU AND ONE
CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
FAMILY. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD
fHURSDAY, FEB. 17, 1983.

SUPBIOR
BONEI.!SS

Plea~ant,

a_~ wants to .be' the best possible father

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget

Pomeray--Midclleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Helen help. us

PRICES
EFFECT.IVE.
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 13
THROUGH
SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 19

DOUBLE
COUPONS
DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

'

,....,., 13, 1983

Ol.

gg

eOurReg.
- 1.68

Toilet lowl Cleaner
Vanish«&lt; disinfects and
removes stains. 48 oz. •

4

$3~~~.
97¢

For
· Ea.
Colorful Place Mats
Easy-to-clean vinyl In
prints and solid colors.

?

Our
Reg . .
9.97
Ea .

• Choice of Tote Bags
.Detachable · shoulder
strap, pockets.

�Times-Sentir.el

February 13, 1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Into
each individual's life there comes , a measure of snow
.
-

By BOB HOEFUCH
Iitto each life some rain - and
snow - must fall. Friday proved
that and .a lso proved that the
weather forecasters
times cmrrP-~1
Well-we've
a gpod wintl!r
are advised
we've save
many dollars
heating costs.
.
never can figure
,to these dollars I save through these
processes.
•
Needless to say, I am "thrilled"
and I know you are too, to Jearn that
0111' gas bllls are going to be reduced
b:t as much as 60 cents a month.
Fantastic!

STORE HOURS:
MiJn.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pin

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 19, 1983

Meigs County hunters will proba·
bly want to know that applications
for the Ohio 1983 spring turkey season permits are now available. Per·
mlts for the entire two week season
will be Issued to the first 2,500 applicagts beginning Feb . .28.
~.r tpe 2/'~lO pm;mi!$ have been

BUCKET

"Services rendered on a nond\scrtmlnatory basis."

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library wlll be
at the following places the week of
Feb. 14-18:
Monday - Ewington , 1: 1:'&gt;-1:45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m.; Adney
Rd .. 2: 45-3:15 p.m.; Vinton P .O..
. 3:30-4: 30 p.m.; Bidwell. 5-6 p.m.; •
Harrtsburg, 6:15-6:30 p.m.
Tuesday - Eno, 2:30-3 p.m.;
Rece, 3:05-3:20 p.m .; Africa Rd.,
3:30-3: 45 p.m.; Kyger I, 3:50-4:20
p.m.; Kyger- II, 4:25-4:40 p.m.; .
Roush Lane I, II, 4: 45-5:15 p.m.;
Cheshire I, 6-6:30 p.m.; Cheshire II,
6:35-7 p.m .
Wednesday - Bane's, 2:15-2:30
p.m.; Smith, 2: 4:'&gt;-3: 15 p.m.; Myers, 3: 30-3:45 p.m.; Mercerv,ille, 44:30 p.m. ; Burd, 4: 40-5 p.m .;
Crown City P.O., 5:15 -6 p.m.; Eureka , 6: 15-6: 45 p.m.
Thursday - Watts, 2:30-2: 45
p.m.;l Blick School Rd., 2: 5:'&gt;-3: 10
p.m.; Addaville Elementary, 3: 1~
3:45 p.m .; St. Rd. 7 (Roadside
Rest) , 3:55-4:10 p.m.; Georges C.R.
I, II, 4:15-5 p.m.; Bulaville Tr. Ct.,
5: 30-6 p.m .; Plantz Subdv., 6: 156:45p.m.
Friday - Kerr, 3-3:40 p.m .;
Buck Ridge, 4-5:00 p.m.; Jay Dr. I.
II, 5:15-5:45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
Rd. , 6-6: 15 p.m.

&lt;#rU

e

IIIII •

$. 49

.

.

'

$ 29

BULK SLICED

~ birthday card shower is heing
held for Garnet. Wise, former resi·
dent, whowUI mark her 81st on Sat·
urday, Feb: 19. Cards may be sent
to 2149 Watkins Road, Columbus,
OH., 4.m7.

Spealdng' of birthdays, Mike Epple wants to extend his most. sin·
cere thanks to the many of you who

remembered him on his 88th birth·
day recently. He hasn't been !eel·
lng all that well lately and your
cards and telephone messages
were quite a shot in the arm. Thank
you!

.

'

· 6AWPOLIS - Announcement
hai 'been made of the engagement
of Kimberly Faye Watson, daughter; :Ot Bobby Watson, Gallipolis,
and:tbe late Audrey Watson, to Micha~i Joe Dennison, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Dennison,
M~e.

the engagement and approaching
marrtage or their daughter, Aflcia
Ann, to Jobn Dale Jacobs II, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jobn D. Jacobs,
Rutland.
The brtde-elect is a 1982 graduate
of Wahama Hlgb School and is enrolled at Parkersburg Beauty
College.
Her fiance is a 198) graduate o!
Meigs High School and is a student
at Hocking Technical College.
A July 2 wedding is being
planned.

The brtde-elect Is a senior at Gallla Academy High. School and em·
ployed by Neal Insurance Agency.
Her fiance Is an 1981 graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center. He is
employed by the City of Gallipolis.
Plans for an August wedding are
being mad~.

5

-........
...
......'"''......
.., ...

in Point Pleasant.
The wedding Is being planned for
May 28,

42&amp;71
Day/date automa11c . 17.

,';

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....
"':".

Brown
Baby face

;;.,

~.,. .

..
•
• .•

..-.•••.

..

¢

.' •
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Roush, Jacobs

.'·
..'·,.·-

.......

HEAD

2% Milk... ~- .:~.~~:!~~~... .
PARKAY

¢

Brown-Clonch
POINT PLEASANT, 'w.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana T. Brown Jr. of
Point Pleasant, W. Va . have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their

Wuerch

: FLAVORITE SUGAR 1
'

·.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon
Wuerch, Gallipolis, have anMr, and Mrs. Roach
daughter,
nounced the engagement and apto MichaelTl!ffiara
Eugene Louise
Oonch.Brown,
He is
POMEROY - · Middleport
A reception was held In tne social . proac hing marriage of their
the grandson o! Ethel Thornton and
Church of Christ was the setting for
room of the church Immediately daughter, Christine Marie, to Jefthe late R.H. Thornton of Flatrock,
the double-ling ceremony uniting
following the wedding. II was decofrey R. Sanders, son of Mr. and
W. Va ., and Erma Misner of Tbe
in mafrtage Jennie WhJte, daughrated with white weddin,g bells and
Mrs. Meriel! Sanders.
Plains.
ter Of Thomas White and 'Thelma
blue and white streamers. The · 'The open-church wedding is
Brown is 'a: 1977 graduate .of El
Wblte, Route 1 Long Botiom, and
tiered cake decorated in blue and planned for Feb. 26 at 4: 30 p.m. at
Modena High School, Orange,
Raymond Roach, son of Carl and
white and topped with the tradi- New Life Lutheran Church. A reCalif., and attended Santa Ana Col·
Dorothy Roach, Pomeroy.
tional miniature brtde and groom ception will follow at the Shrtne
lege in Santa Ana, Call!. Sbe was
'lbe wedding took place on Oct.16
was featured on the bride's table. Club in Gallipolis.
employed by Pacific Telephone
at 2:30p.m. with Robert Mllllc;m of·
The cake was made by Margaret
Company In Orange, Calif., prior to
flciating. A half-hour of music
TUttle, who served at the reception
moving to Point Pleasant, where
p1 eceding the ceremony was preswith Mary K. Holter, Charlotte .
she is employed at Foodland.
ented by Ron Ash, organist. An
Grant, and the mothers of the brtde
Clonch is a 19'15 graduate ot Point
arch decorated with Boston fern,
and groom.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pleasant High School. He Is emwhite and blue daisies and doves
'The couple resides at 39331 S.R.
E . Roush, Mason, are announcing ployed at Carl's Carry-out and Dell
was featured In the decorations.
143, Pomeroy.
Escorted to the altar by her cousin, Wilbur Monroe, the bride wore
an Ivory gown of satin fashioned
With a high neckline, sheer lace
yoke, !itted bodice, an&lt;! long sheer
sleeves. The skirt was lace over
sat!D and the brtde's veil was fin·
217 UPPER RIVER RD GALLIPOLIS
gert!p, She carrted a cascade bou·
quet of blue and white mums with .
ballY's breath and blue and white

SKll..LMAN, N.J . (API- Babies
pay attention to faces, face-like
patterns, prefer patterns to solid ,
colors and enjoy vartety instead of
staling at the same object, accordIng to a behavioral scientist.
Dr. Dorts Welcher, aconsultantto
Johnson &amp; Jolmson ChJJd Development Products Division, says very
young babies can only focus clearly
on objects about 7 to 12lnches from
their eyes. It Isn't until about six
months that they can see as well as
normal-sighted adults .
An older baby, she adds, prefers
pictures that contain increasingly
complex details.

JUMBO

ROU

46315
Gptdtone case. cham·

17 jewel Nurse 's
watch. Goldtone
CCISB, silver dial , 8)(·
pans ion bracelet .
water resistant.

174.95.

pagne dial , textured
link Oracete1. 17
~wets . $1C.95,

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
424 Second ·Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

Roush-Jacobs

PON,.-ZAC4.

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

~~.~ Captain'D's.

·.

46855

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

REG. $453.00

NOW

stre~ers .

Margarine.........~l.

GAL,

¢

$ 59

FlAVORITE

$1.49 ,

Brushed gotdtone

Wuerch-Sanders

~

,

Broccoli or Cauliflower••

5LB . .

.,~···1

.... ~2;

FRESH

$299

~ "'

Warson, Dennison

,.t~

'

. 25lB.

Government spending apparently knows no end. Ho!ficialsdon't
have enough money on which to operate the government, then· it's
merely a case of raising taxes. I
wonder if they ever heard about killing the goose that lays the golden
eggs? Keep smiling, Goose ...

"'1. $79.!1&amp;.

-~

DOG FOOD ·

your own Easter season chocolate
candy.
An Easter candy clinic .will be
held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Satur·
day, March 12, at 102 TUpper Hall,
Ohio University, In Athens. Enrollment is limited and pre regl$1ration Is required. The fee ls
$10 and there's an $8 supply fee
which can be paid to the instructor
at the workshop. You wlllleam to
make solid and hollow pieces of
chOcolate and cream filled eggs.
· You'll have a candy-filled Easter
basket to take home with you at tbe
end of class.
H Interested contact tbe 0. U. Offlee of Continuing Education, con-

case . Silver dial. Water resis ·

.• ...
•
.•....

HYLAND CHUNK .

H you've lost faith In the

~wels .

'

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

Wednesday, Esther Bradbl!ry
Greer, formerly of.Middleport and
now Uving in Miami Beach, will
leave for the Cayman Islands, Brit·
ish West Indies where she will be
staying at the Cartbbean Club one of the finest. This Is Mrs.
G~' s first visit there althoug~
she Is extremely well traveled. In·
cidenlally, Queen Elizabeth will
also be arrtvtng in the islands on the
same day .

ubwmy,"_ you can learn to create

.~ .

BULK SLICED All MEAT .

ferences and workshops, lower
level of Memorial Auditorlwn,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Let's face tt - the "bunny" will
need help - so why not?

'

Slab Bacon .... ~ ...~s•••

r

are Sen. Robert Dole, 2226 Dirksen,
Senate Office Building, Washing·
ton, D.C. 20510; Sen. Howard Met· zenbaum, Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C., :!ailO, and O!flce
Building, Washington, D.C. 20515.
Go for it!

institutions that made interest and
dividend payments to their indlvtdual cusromers will be withholding
for federal iaxes 10 percent of those ·
dividends and interest payments.
NGW, this not only puts a big cost
factor upon those llistltutlons In
handling the .book work involved
Schools of Meigs County have
but you are being robbed of the ad·
done well with this year's weather.
vantage of having this interest or to
Normally, all of tbe schools have
put on rompoundlng or to reinvest
used up their five days allowed. for the period until regular income
without makeup for calamity pur- taxes must be filed.
poses and makeup classes then
It is estimated that you, you and
must be held. This year, one dlstrtct
you will be losing $1.5 billion in
has used two of the five days and
reinvestment and compounding
the other two districts still have
through the advance withholding
four days coming. Frid!ly, of
plan.
course, clooro all of the schools. A
You should obJect to this Jaw
spring vacation break Is scheduled passed by Congress and demand
and In other years that had to go for
that It be repealed. II seems to me
makeup time. This year, however,' that again ·t he hard-worker who
It appears that a spring break will
scrimps to put a little money in!D
happen.
· · savings Is being penalized. Yeahagain! ·
Lending institutions have mne .
Spend a minute and 20 cents to
their best to advise you, but per- advise elected officials o! your prohaps, you're still not aware that be- test. Those who are supposed to
ginning July 1, 1983, all of these carry the most clout on the issue

•'

Warson-Dennison
.

29
, $
Sa
Usage
............
~;
..
.
99

R1b Steak...........L~..

issued, applicants will have the op- ·
tion to receive a permit to hunt only
during the second week of the sea·
son or a refund of their $10.75 appll·
cation fee. All applications must be
received through the mau and will
not be accepted before Feb. 28 or .
after March 31.
The tur~ season Is open in two
segments, the first being April 25
through AprU 30 and the second
from May 2 through May 7. Only
bearded wild turkeys may · be
taken.
. .
Applications ·can be secured
through the WUdllfe District IV
headquarters, 360 East State St:,
Atbens, Ohio 45701.
.

~

$

HOMEMADE PORK

U.S: D.A. CHOICE

.

'

~ngagements

Fryer ·Parts........ ~~ ..

Ensemble performs
ar OU Sarurday
ATHENS - The Western Brass
Quintet, a faculty-In-residence ensemble at Western Michigan University In Kalamazoo, will perform
Saturday, Feb. 19, at 8 p.m.
Tbe performance is free and ·
open to the public.
It will be held In the Ohio University School of Music's Recital Hall.
Members of the quintet include Stephen Jones, trumpet, Donald Bui·
lock, trumpet, Robert Whaley,
tuba, David Calhoon, 'hom, and
trombonist Russell Brown.
Among the selected· works are
·several wrttten exclusively for the
quintet, one of Which is '.Lands· '
capes," a work they commissioned
Pulitzer composer Karel Husa to
wrtte .
The New York Times said, "Tbe
Western Brass gave unremitting
evidence of their individual talents
and ensemble training."

.

MIXED

Meigs bookmobile

Gallia bookmobile

.

Cube Steak...... ~~ ..

notice."

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County.ls provided by
Meigs County Public Library under
contract with the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
The bookmobile schedule tor
Monday is: Carpenter (Laura's
Store ), 3:10-3:40 p.m .; Dexter
(c))urch), 4: 10-4IAO p.m .; Danville
(Church ), 5:20-5: 45 p.m .; Rutland
(Civic Center), 6:30-8 p.m., short
fUm will be shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives.
Tuesday - Portland (Post Of·
flee). 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls
(Effie's Restaurant), 3:05-3:50
p.m.; Racine (Bank), 4: 35-6:00
-p.m., short fUm will be shown 15
minutes after bookmobile arrives;
Syracuse (Pool), 6:20-7:50 p.m .,
short film wlll be shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives.
Wednesday - Tuppers Plains
(Arbaugh), 7:25-7:·55 p.m.; Riggscrest Addition, 8: 10-8: 40' p.m.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-6-7

Beat of the bend

Gallia semor center
GAlliPOLIS - Activities for
t he week of Feb. 14-18 at the Senior
Citizens Center are as follows:
Monday, Feb. 14 · - Cera mics
Class, 9:30 a. m.-noon; Va lent ine's
Day Party, 1:30 p.m .
Tuesday, Feb. 15. - S.T.O.P
Class, 10: 30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11: 15 a .m .; Super Serilors Day, 10
a. m.-3 p.m .: Bible Study, 1-2 p.m .
Wednesday, · Feb. 16 - Card
Ga mes, 1-3 p.m.; Yoga Class, 6
p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 17 - Council
Council Meeting, 1: 30 p.m .
Friday, F eb. 10 - Art Class, 1-3
p.m. ; Craft Mint-Cou rse, 1·3 p.m .;
Soc tat' Hour, 7 p.m .
The Senior Nutrttloh Program
will serve the following mehus:
Monday - Baked spaghetti/ cheese and tomato sauce, tossed
salad, Italian bread, ice cream, but·
ter , milk .
Tuesday - Onion burger, com
•pickled beets, chocolate pudding,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday -Baked ham, sweet
potatoes, peas and bacon, plnea(&gt;'
ple upside down ca ke , butter ,
bread, milk.
Thursda y - Macaroni and
cheese, three-bean salad. jello/ frult, peanut butter cookie, bread,
butter, milk.
FrJday - Fish ftllet/ tarta r
sauce, carrots, colesla w, peach
halves, bun, butter, milk .
Choice of beverage ser ved with
· ·
each meal.
"Meals subject to change without

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

$259

Debl Hensley was matron of honor,• and brtdesmalds were.Trudy
WUUams, sister of the groom, and
Kin! WhJte, sister-In-law of the .
brtdJJ. They wore blue, floor-length

gowns of lace over satin and carned:bouquets of blue and white daisies. with baby's breath and white
rlbbons.
Terrt White, daughter of tbe
bride, was tlower girl and she wore
· a blue and white floor-length gown
and"carried a basket of blue and
white daisies.
· BOb Hensley was best man, and
groomsmen were Mark WWJams,
brother-in-law o! the groom, and
Rodney WhJte, brother of tbe bride.
Ushers were Darin and Randy
Road~, brotlten ot the gro&lt;m. The
11f0C1n and .hi$ attendants wore blue
tuxedos and white carnation . •
boutonnleres.
•
Hawley was riilgbearer,

Ri411

and)Jio wore a blue suit
. CIJII!y A.nctenon registered the

~
·r

SAVE
S194
'

Now, 1he Caploln t&gt;rtngs
vou'lender, iuicv clams,

Regular 12.99

With coupon

••••••••
CLAM

CliP THIS COUPON

. llghnv t&gt;alter-hled and piled
high, served wllh 1he Coploin ·s.
spe,::lal cock!OU sauce. Plus.
our own !Jesh. creamy cole
slaw, hoi crisp hench hies
and two soufhern.5tyle
h usn puppies.
(a! pan.ciPQhno Coot 01~
·

•••••••• =

01fet upores Feb. 21. 1983

'Tender Juicy clams, I8Mid with coelciCJII sauce, fresh
cole Slaw, crisp frenCh Illes ond 1WO IOU1tlern-style hush
puppies. One coupon per cu&gt;lomer per villi.

DINNER
S2A9.::noo;;;;~ D~~ ·=
..... .....
.•••••••
I

7

COR~IN

&lt;! SNl'[)fJ&lt;..
fURNITUR[ CO.
•

986 Second

448-1171

~allipolis,

'

.,

•

Ohio

.. .

�- - - - --.
Pog&amp;-8-8

Pom-v-Middleport~Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.Nbruary 13, 1913

At wit S end .
1

Calendar
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- PresbyterIan men will meet at PresbyterIan Church, Middlepo r t ,
Sunday. Potluck dinner will be
served at 6 p.m . Th~ speaker
will be Hal Johnson.

EUREKA - Providence Missionary Baptist Church on Teens
Run Road will have a guest
speaker, Bert Colvin. Sunda y at
7p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Lee G.
MUier, ector of St. John's EpL~ ­
copal Church, Corbin, Ky . Diocese of Lexington , will be guest
speaker at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 541 Second Ave. , Sunday during the 10: 30 a . ni. service and celebration of Holy
Eucharist. Celebrant will be fa ther Albert MacKenzie, rector of
St. Peter's.

LECTA - Preaching by Rev.
Ernest Baker will take place at
Walnut Ridge Church Sunday at
7 p.m . The Taylor Quartet will
sing. The ublic is welcome.

EVERGREEN - A songfest
will be held Sunday at 7:30p.m .
at Evergreen Westerman Unl·
ted Methodist Church with The

Ambassadors .and Journey's
End. The public Is Invited.

GALLIPOLIS - Pastor of
Fairview Baptist Church In
Point Pleasant arid New ljaven
Baptist · Church , w. Va., Rev.
Archer, will speak at Mt. Zion
Baptist Church Sunday at 7 p.m .

MONDAY
PORTI.AND PTO wW meet
Monday at 7 p.m. John Costanzo
wilt be guest speaker.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Carl
~ysell and Cindy Schneider,
county juvenile court representatives, will speak at a meeting
of Tuppers Plains Booster Club
at 7: 30 p.m. Monday at the
school. Their subject will be
"Child Abuse"; public ts Invited.
KYGER CREEK - Ky~r
Creek Band Boosters wltl meet
Monday at' 7:30 p.m. at Kyger
Creek High School band room.
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO
will meet at 7: 30 Monday night
at the school. Father's Night wltl
be observed and Mlc k Howell
will give a karate
· demonstration.

.Where have ·all the men gone?
RACINE·- Twin City Sluine
Club will meet ln .Raclne at the
Shrlners building at 7 p.m.
Monday evening. ·

TIJESDAY
GALLIPOUS Lafayette
White Shrln~ wW meet Tuesday
at 7:30p.m. Male members will
host the meeting.
VINTON- Vinton Friendship
Garden Club members wW hold
a meeting at 1 p.m. Tuesday at
the lrene Browning residence.
SALISBURY PI'O wW meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Fathers'
night wlll be observed and Andy
Lyles, Meigs County game protector will be speaker.
SYRACUSE PrO wW meet
Tuesday ·a t 7 p.m. Students of
the school wW present a vartety
show.

WEDNESDAY
KANAUGA ~ Fair Haven
United Methodist Women of Kanauga will host an ASh Wednesday service for the Cheshire
charge. A covered dish lunch
wW be served at ·-noon at the
home of EveJyn Rothgeb. It will
be followed by a Lenten service
at Kanauga United Methodist
Church.

. By ERMA BOMBECK
!JI Valentine's Day
· seems as approprlate a time as any
to ask, "Where have all the men
gone?''
It's been awhile since I've
. shopped, but every woman I've encountered doing the ·singles scene
has cont)rmed that ellglble mim
have become as extinct as the
whooplilg crane.
The dating famine seems to have
' hit !be 25-30 age group the hardest.
No one knows Why.
Logistically speilklng, tl!ls ts the
way the figures add up. In 1955,
2,(173,719 boy babies were born. Out
of that number, 872,638 died In war,
accident, or natural causes, leaving
The eve

1,m,oo.

Now. It gets stickY. Sjnce 10 percent of every thousand get married
and five percent of every thOusand
get dlv!Jrced, you can assinne 15
percent of tilts total are rna~
and divorcing one another, leaving
1,010,919.
A survey recently estimated that
homosexuals represented possibly
10 percent of the males, which
brings the eligibles dowri to
1,010,710.
Of the little over a mllllon ellglbles roaming around, five percent
don't know their sign and don't
even care. Another five percent are
tied to their mothers by a food fixation and woul!l never give that relationship up for a girl. They'preter to
hang out with their handball
buddies.
A whopping 20 percent are
searching for a girl In the tradl·
tiona! role who wW pick up hls

clothes, run hls bath, burn her fin·
gers shelling hls th.ree-mlnute egg,

run his errands, bear. hlrn a child
every year, look Uke a fashion
model, tend hls needs. when he Is
sick, and hold down a tun-time Job
outside !be. home to make PIIY·
ments on his boat
··
Twelve percent are pereimlal
schoolboys who take two classes a
semester, have changed their major 13 times and feel they cannot
rtsk a commitment until they're out
of school.
Fifty-five percent of today's ellglble men have gone underground for
lack of money. "Hello" ts a luxucy.
"I'm buying" ts a .line they only remember from an old Bogart movie.
Let's see, what's left? A conservative .. three percent. Hey, that

•Bass
eCandie$
eCapizeo
•Trotten

NEW

oRLEANs, La.

(AP)

·~ =

Bolstered by the success of the 1982·
Knoxville World's 'Fair, this city on·
the banks of the Mississippi River :
has a fair In the works.
Cons1rUctlon Is under way for the:
1984l&lt;l!tlslana World Exposition, a :
$350 mtillon project celebrating,
New oflean's contribution to rt\oer ·
Culture.
.

AII .Zodiac

•9 West

•Maine Woods
•Mushrooms
•Sebago

Boots

2()0,0 TO 5()0,0 OFF

All Remaining
Inventory ·

Remaining
Frye Boots

1/3

The
Shoe Cafe

TO

1/2

OFF

:100 Second r\ ve.
La£ayelte Mall
Gallipolis,

0.

SA.V£

BUSHLINE

(Ottoman Optional)

l

Come on nght now•

• ·~

.

1'/t/4

WITH ANY BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM,
DINING ROOM SUITES IN STOCK.
PECIALLY MARKED FOR THIS SALE.

~rphoto).

Fla. France who has become a legmd ID the world of

Daytona 500 practice begins

NASCAR rule brings·
criticism from drivers
Practice for !be $1 million
DAYTONABEACH,Fia.(AP)Daytona
500, Feb. 20, officially got
Grand National stock cars weigh
under
way
Friday on Daytona
3,700 pounds, but tight now a
Spe!'dway's highInternational
number of the drivers are worrted
about a s(flp of aluminum that banked 2.5-mlle trt.oval. Polequallweighs less than a pound that they tytng for the Feb. 20 race, as well as
belieVe can mean the difference the running of the $220,&lt;Xxl .Bitsch
Clash for 1982 pole winn!)rs, are
between competing and crashing.
scheduled
Sunday.
Defending Winston Cup cham·
NASCAR
officials met Frtday
pion Darrell Waltrtp, who never lfas
after
the
track
closed to discuss the
. been a shrinking violet, led the
alleged
spoUer
problem, but a
chorus of dissenters Friday who
the
sanctioning body
spokesman
for
criticized NASCAR for causing a
safety hazard with their spoiler size said no official announcement
would be made until sometime
regulations.
today.
The spoiler Is a sheet of rigid
The problem ts that the new
aluminum bolted to the edge nf the
rear deck of the car. It sticks upon · Chevrolet Monte Carlo ss model,
whlcfi W9.Jtrtp a'nd ~ny oftheolber
end to catch the air flowing over the
top drivers are in this season, have
car, therebY exerting downforce to
. help keep the car stable at high one Inch less spoiler on their rear
speed.
deck than the other top General
"If they (NASCAR) don't give us Motors cars - t)le Buick Regal,
more spoiler," the twO. time na- Oldsmobile Cutlass and Pontiac
tional champion said, "we're going Grand Prix.
Currently, NASCAR rules allow
to be In for a lot oftroublewhen these
cars get In (race) traffic."
the Monte Carlos - with a new

specially-designed aerodynamic
nose - to have spoUers 3~ inches
I off the fear deck. The Other three
GM models, an basically th!i same
a.S last season's cars, are a llowed
4% Inches.
The Monte Carlo, Regal, Grand
Prix, and Cutlass all have rather
upright rear windows. Models with
sloping rear wtndows are als\l
allowed less rear spoUer area.
The 1981 Pontiac LeMans also Is
llmlted to 3'1, Inches, while the
heralded 1983 Ford Thunderbird
gets just 31nches.
"That little spoiler ts what holds
the car on the grQund when Y.O\\'re
out there drafting at 200 miles per
hour," Waltrtp explained. 'We
were just fine running by ourselves,
but when you get out there with
ottter cars, you can't keep It on the
track.
"AS soon as you run up on another
car, you spin the wheels. But we
can't seem to make anybody believe
that"

hlm. A second-operation removed it. Hayes, often
weighing 220 pounds while coaching, &lt;jwlndled to 158
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - College football's ol'
pounds.
·
Back to 190 pounds,lle reflected on hls operations,
fire and brimestone of three decades turns 70 on
"I was worn out by it. An operation ts a ~hock to your
Valentine's Day.
system.
You lose your appetite, especially in the
Woody Hayes, by hls own admission, Is more
hospital. But I feel fine now."
mellow now than at any time In hts 28 seasons at Ohio
Earller that day, Hayes had been elected to the
State University - years laced with controversy with
National Football Foundation's College Hall of
the news media, Big Ten office and hls university
Fame.
bosses.
"Tile thing It does, It makes you feel pretty small,"
His Infamous temper ultimately led to hts dismissal
he said, "when you reOect on all of the people who
afler the 1978 Gator Bowl. Hayes hit Clemson
made It possible - your coaches, your players, your
noseguard Charlie Bauman near !be sidelines after
family, everybody you worked with. It's a team
Bauman's Interception in !be waning moments of a
proposition."
17-15 defeat.
Amid speeches, Hayes finds tbne to visit
·Asked If he were more mellow, Hayes replled, ."I
hospitalized friends, chat with former players and tell
probably am. I can affonl to be. You don't dare be
students to stay In college. And, occasionally, he slips
mellow as a coach or you pon't win. I don't know If
away to his log cabin in eastern Ohio, completed with
anything wUI beat you sooner than IJeing a nice guy.
donations
from hls football teams.
I'm not as competitive now."
"(Former)
Sen. (John) Brtcker'sin bad shape, but
Hayes lives In retirement, If you can call It that.
I got him to laugh in the hospital," Hayes said. "He's
AS a professor emeritus, Hayes has been provided
one of the· peoptr who brought me here (In 1951).
Wtth (I two-room, second-floor office in the Military
We've remained good friends."
·
·
Sciences Building. By looking out hls windows :m
His speeches take Hayes from coast to coast and
yards away, he can see Ohio Stadium, a constant
Into Canada. He spoke to Iowa tire dealers last
reminder of hls brilliant c~r. ·
weekend, raccoon hunters in Danville, Ohio, on
The son of an Ohio educator built hts ·coaching
Monday night, Ohio State agricultural students on
reputation - 238 victories, 72 defeats,. 10 ties, two
Tuesday
night and was off to Flortda Wednesday for
national chatnplonships and 13 Big Ten 'titles - on
another speech.
. .
hard work, spartan discipline and masterful
His visitor wondered abOut the coach's pay for his
recruiting.
talks.
Now, more · than four years after hls abrupt
"I don't want to gtve you a story or I'll get even
coaching departure, ~ayes may enjoy more
more calls for speeches," he said, balklng again.
popularity than ever.
"I've given away as many as eight speeches In a
His office telephone rings Incessantly. The mall ts
week.
I make some money. I have to; I can't live on
stacked high. Dally requests for speeches range up to
a dozen.
_
my retirement pay."
Hayes works mit of a cluttered office, filled with
· It's more !hap enough to employ a part-time
bookshelves, two desks, a couch, a picture of Pete
secretary.
Rose on one wall and an Ohio State Distinguished
On this day, Hayes has agreed to spend some time
Award plaque on another wall.
with a wrtter who followed the last decade of hls
It was suggested Hayes should have curtatrui or
Coaching career. It had taken · four · months of
.
drapes
to go wiqt the blinds on hls wll)dows. "Why?"
repeated requests to gain approval..
he
challenged.
"I like the view."
. His office visitor suggested the old coach's
Behlhd
the
closed
door, a telephone kept ringing on
:popularity was .at Its peak, maybe because he had .
a desk, left Idle by his .secretary at noon. Hayes was
never spoken a harsh word about Ohio State afjer hls .
reminded of the telephone.
firing.
He picked up a receiver on .hls desk. An ABC
· "I don't want you wrttlng·anything nice about~.!
· Interviewer was on the other end, asking for Hayes'
:might have to Uve tip to it. I wtsh I hadn't let 'you In !be
reaction to hls Hall of Fame selection.
door," Hayes replied.
·
Hayes said he was honored and then added: . "I've
Did he miss football?
alwaysconslderedfootballanequasion.
Youequa,telt
: "At certain times," he answered. "But I'm not
to
an
education.
My
dad
got
hls
bachelor's
degree
"gOing to give you a story on that. I would use Up all my
when he was 39yeanold. My dad made me study and
' material for my next speeches. Now don't start
I carried It over to my ·football players. That was
hatping on that."
.
bammei'Ed lhtO me M years ago.''
.
: Hayea has rebounded tnm May 1981 stmnacll
The caner aot around to !be Gator Bowl Incident. It
~. during which a aurglcal sponge was left In
AP Sporis Writer

Undersold

J{tOfil\LL

at Da~ lnleruatloaal Speedway, Daytona Beach,

By GEORGE STRODE

Not Be

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your personal bustness needs . now you can have one
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motor sporis formed NASCAR In 1M7 and alter holdIng race8 on the beach In Daytooa, he built the Daytona International Speedway In 1969. (AP

Wisconsin, now 7-13 overall and
2-9 In the Big Ten, was led by Brad
Sellers with 22 points. Indiana, first
in the conference with a 9-2 mark, is
19-2 overall.
In another Big Ten contest
Satunlay. Michael Jenkins scored
16 points to lead underdog Northwestern to a 66-55 Big Ten basketball
victory over 18th-ranked Punlue.
Jim Stack. with 12 points and

Gaddis Rathel, who chipped In with

11, helped Northwestern offset a
game-high, 22-point performance
by Purdu~·s Russell Cross,
The victory boosted the Wildcats'
record to 14-7 overall and 5-6 In the
Big Ten. Purdue dropped to 15-6
overall and 6-51n the conference. It
marked the first time in three years
that Northwestern has won five
conference games. The Wildcats
have seven Big Ten contests
remaining.
The Boilermakers jumped to an
early 9-0 lead and tt took Northwest·
ern most of the first half to catch up.
The Wildcats tied the game at 23-23
and then grabbed a 29-27 halftime
advantage when seldom-used John
Peterson made a steal and scored as
the buzzer sounded.
Northwestern scored the first
fo ur baskets of the second half to
take a 37-27 lead, arid the coldshooting Boilermakers never
mounted a serious run a{ter that.
The Wildcats pushed their margin
to as much as 13 points before the
fina l buzzer.
Meanwhile, reserve guard MIchael Walker hit threefreethrowsin

the final 25 seconds of overtime
Saturday as lOth-ranked Missouri
edged Okli!homa 84-79.
Jon Sundvold scored 28 points and
Steve Stipanovich added 26 for the
Tigers, who improved tol9-4 overall
and 7-lln the Big Eight Conference,
solidifying their lock on the league
lead. Oklahoma fell to 18-6 and 5-3.
Wayman Tisdale. the nation's
fourth-leading scorer, had 32 points
for Ok!ah0ma, whose chance to win
the game in regulation play was
spoiled when Calvin Pierce missed
a short jump shot as time expired.
Missouri had taken a . 40-39
halftime lead after a see-saw
opening period lh which the lead
changed hands seven times and was
tied nine times: But the Sooners
scored the first three baskets of the
second half to take a 4540
advantage with 17:20 left to play.
Oklahoma protected the lead
until3: 55 remained, when Sundvold
hit a free throw to put Missouri in
front 70-69. Sundvold had a chance to
win the game with 11 seconds left.
but hit just one of two free throws to
leave the score tied at 73.
The Tigers never trailed · In
overtime.

Blizzard disrupts sports schedules
and Philadelphia. New York City
By The Associated P~•
was hit with 181nches.
The blizzard that blitzed the East
The snowfall forced postponeCoast with as much as two feet of
ment
of two key Big East college
snow disrupted sports schedules for
a second straight day Satun:lay,
iorcing postponements o( dozens of
Games still on
major events.
Among the casualties was the
Despite the postponement of
u.s. Olympic Invitational track and Frtday' s basketball schedule In the
field meet at the Meadowlands
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
and Southern Valley Athletic ConArena in East Rutherford , N.J .,
which was to have featured one of
ference, Satunlay's games were
the top fields of the .year. It was
being played. Games included
reScheduled for Sunday, Feb. 27.
1\leigs at Wahama; Galllpoli• at
, The National Hockey League
Alexander; Miller at Kytter Creek,
game at Boston Garden Saturday . Southern at Huntington East;
afternoon between the Bruins and · Logan at Nelsonville-York; Athens
at Portsmouth, and ,Jackson a!
the Toronto Maple Leafs was
postponed. Bruin spokesman Nate
Miami Trace.
Most SEOAL contests will be
Greenberg said he expected Sunday
afternoon's game between the
made up 'I'Ilesday. No make-up
Bruins and the Vancouver Cahucks
dates had been made as ofSatunlay
intheSVAC.
to be played. .
Today, drawings for the Class AA
The storm, dubbed the "Blizzard
of ;83," powered Its way up the East
and A boys sectional tournaments
will be held around the hi county
Coast along with high winds Friday,
area.
dumping 23 inches In Richmond,
Va., Washington, D.C., Baltimore

basketball games Satunlay Connecticut at seventh-ranked St.
.John's and the game in Washington
between 14th·rated Georgetown
and No.15 Syracuse.
The Metro Atlantic Conference
game in New Rochelle, N.Y.
between Iona and Army, called off
Friday night and rescheduled for
Satunlay, was postponed again.
The MAAC game between Manhattan and Fordham was also put off
a long with an intersectional game
between Dayton and La~lle.
A number of other Saturday
college basketball games were
called off Friday night , when It
became clear that travel was
virtua lly Impossible. Among them
were the Atlantic Coast Conference
game between Maryland at Duke In
Durham, N.C.
The snow even dld in the Harlem
Globetrotters, who had been scheduled to play afternoon and evening
games at the Spectrum In Philadelphia, where 21 Inches of snow fell
Friday.

01' brimestone coach, Woody Hayes turns 70 Monday

We Will

sagggs value!

TWENTY-FIVE YEAU AT DAY'roNA -BID
France Sr. looks out at bla track from lhe lop of the
graadiJtaod u be rdectll back over the Iaiit 2S yean

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MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Randy
Wittlnan scored 26 points and Ted.
Kitchel added 21, sparking fourthranked Indiana to 75-56 Big Ten
Conference baSketball victory over
Wisconsin Satunlay.
Kitchef scored L'i points in the fir st
11: 18 of the game, pacing the
Hoosiers to a 21-10 lead.
Wittman took over in the last8:46
of the first half, scoring 12 points to
help Indiana take a 41-24 halftime
lead before a UW FieldhOuse crowd
ofl0,127.
Gregg Steinhaus hit three jump
shots early In the second half to
bring Wisconsin to withip45-32, but
that was as close as the Badgers
could get as Uwe Blab scored 12 of
his 14 points In the second half.

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Indiana, Northwestern
post Big 10 victories

means there are 17 men out lbere
who are your basic healthy, tradl-. .
tlonal males who still believe In con·
versatlon, time to know one ..
8110tber and are not threatened by ·
new attitudes.
Just sit st!ll', guys. don't move! : .
Have I ·aot 282,000 ~for y'Ou! ·• ·• '

Sale Prices
In Effect
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BltoyiiiAL .

s orts

•

SALE PRia5 END
SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 19th
.MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS
ON SALE THROUGHOUT
THE STORE

triggered Hayes' temper.
"When I made a mistake, I made it before 50
mllllon people. I don't live In the past. That gave you
people something to talk about, to se)l your product,"
he told the ABC Interviewer, raising his vo)ce.
"I don't Uve in the past," he repeated. "!don't give
a darned. I don't care how'they remember me. I'll be
70 next week and I'm stU! living In the future. Too
many times you people in the media distort the

news."

A MELLOW BAYES- Fonner OMo State bead
coadl WOCNI111ayts praetlcee a reclliS perfonnance
wUII tile c.lwnbua SynlpUo wllere lito redied
"Amerlc!a the Beautiful." aa,.. aa. 78 an Monda,y

'

),,

----.....---- ------,...... ..
v

~

With that, Hayes hung up.
His vtstor wondered aloud how the coach deals with
reporters bringing up the 1978 Gator Bowl.
' Hayes jerked off his glasses, stuck his jaw out and
glared. He uttered an obscene remark of such
questionerers and added. ''I'll put my record against
anybody."
The old !Ire still smoldered In one of college
· football's most colorful figures.

. '·
I'

and by hill own llllrnllllo. Ill more melleW now thai.
durlnr Ida 18 tleiiiiOIIS as head coach. (AP

Lue!'PIIoto ).

�W. Ya.

Ohio Point

TirMS-Sentinel

13, 1

Trotter owner must
•
repay some ea-n-tings

'

NORTIWIELD, Ohio (AP) Lauderdale, Fla., duringthewlnter,
Two harness .horses owned by a could not be reached for comment.
Mentor businessman raced under A spokesman at his Mentor office
each oth!i'r' s name by mistake last said Osborne probably Will appeal
year, and the U.S. Trotting Associa· the fine.
tlon has ordered the owner to repay
"The reason for the fine is that
more than $11,00&gt; the horses won.
there may ha~e been some negll·
The names of the horses - Ideal gence on the part of people Mr.
Osborne and Georgie 0 . - were Osborne employed at his farm.';
~Itched , apparently untntentlon·
said Don Pontius, spokesman for
ally, during 26 races last year. They
the USTA legal department.
won five races.
The horses, both 4-year-old pac·
T'he USTA has fined owner · ing geldings · bred by Osborne,
. Jerome T. Osborne S1,07li and
began their careers early last year
ordered him to repay $11,326 in
at Northfield.
purses.
The mix-up was discovered when
"As far as we're concerned, there Ideal Osborne was scheduled to
was no fraud intended by Mr. race at the start of Northfield's fall
Osborne," said Edwin Boyer, campaign last year. Ed Schuster,
presiding judge at Northfield Park who had replaced Carossellt as
in suburban Cleveland. "It bolls
identifier, noticed the discrepancy
®wn to a case of people not doing
in the tattoo number worn by Ideal
.their job."
·
Osborne and the one noted on the
. · After rulings by Boyer, the USTA · horse's eUgtblltypapers. The horse,
suspended the track's former
which turned out to be Georgie 0.,
· ho~f)tifl~ John ~ssellt, for
was scratched.
~S'and' mii1!J
vei!l'rlnartan,
Racing rules req11ire Up tattoos
:nr. WllllamE . Holland, $2i0.
for horSes running In parimutuel
Holland has retained his position. competition. Both Georgie 0 . and
. Carosseut has been rehired for the
Ideal Osborne were tattooed cor·
: 1983 season, but not as track
rectly, matching the numbers and
: identifier.
letters on their eligibility certlf~
. The mix-up was discovered last
cates. However, they took on each
. October, but it became apparent for other's identity early last year
· the first time Wednesday when the before either of them raced.
.two hOrses raced for the first time
It was not clear whether the
thls season at Northfield. The two
mix-up took place on Osborne's
· ran under their correct names in farm, a training center or at
separate races; neither won ..
Northfield.
·: Osborne, who lives in Fort

TAX

-· co-

'

•

'

lront--

lllgn- Ia by VI,.. Knight who
hal 20 .,..,. e~q~lrienol llld Ia 1
grodu.te of BNr Allgnrnont School.
Call lor your oppol- today.

DIP THAT laRIAT 1111 RIUHII WJTH GIDUIMI 1111 PAJITI.

Also, have a flee heldli&amp;ht aim with a lube, oil chanp and
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filter on all cars 1nd V. ton trucks.

. .

These Specials E•pire March I , 1983

PH. 992-6614

SIMMONS

WHEN YOU'RE HOT, YOU'RE HOT - Jlminy Connors
cheers hlmsell on af~er scoring an Important point In hts·Frlday
night match against Spain's Jose Hlgueras Ill Toronto. Connors
defeated Hlgueras 6-2, 6:31n the 5250,000 tournament. (AP Laser·
photo)

OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVY, INC.
POMEROY, OH.

308 E. MAIN ST.

tives, Miss Joyce Bird, will vlllt
Gallipolis, Ohio, on Monday, Feb.

ot the GalUJ)OII$
BowUng A.laoclatton for
its 7 p.m. forum meeting at the Sky·
line BowUng Lanes.
She wUl be available to answer
questions pertaining to rules, tour·
naments, procedures 1111d policies
Of WIBC. Although no &lt;tflctal association business wUl be transacted
at the meeting, she can also assist
the association with any local
problems.
21, as a guest
Wo~·s

after the defeat and said, "With
their schedule, I! they don't sustain

By JOE MOOSIIIL

clriw/lnd or MMPherwon IUIPineion/ IIIQhtly
hi~J!*. 4--allgnment--larJ. K. and
X -bocly..,. oncl oomolmporu.

I

n!pl'elellla-

~xciting race underway

ond -In
~··
T1llo 11110111
lo for 10olt.c101y
Am-..
con
-Choli••and--front--

lioN.

TNdao·- '20.00.
Our olof;~oolc

memberS. One ot the

of

IF REQUIRED.

Mr. Gao-ICI&gt; giYM • compiole front-ond
Ilion- job 'for • -lol prico, He odjulta

Heafner has three stroke lead

'

• GALLIPOLIS - Nationwide,
aimct1oned women bowlers are bedmllng more famlllar with the poiiC)es, pr\)Q!dures and benetlts of the
Women's International BowUng
~ngress. This ln&lt;trease In awareaess by WIBC members Is due in
[!8rl to the work of the organlza.
ii.on•s field representaUves.
·. Traveling tlxlusands of miles evtll'Y year, the WIBC field represen·
tatlves vlslt women's bowling
Bssoclat!ons throughout the United
States offering gul(lance and counSI!I to the leaders its 4.1 riillllon

FRONT-END ....
5
$}4! ~=·~=M

r

. HOLOLULU (AP ) -It's been a might shoot the nfXl couple of days,
fi-ustrating season for Vance but no matter what happens this Is
;Heafner.
going to help me for the rest of the
"I've been playing well. I'm season," Heafner said Friday after
playing the best of my life, thebestT he'd surged Into sole control of the
, ever have. But I haven't made any top spot with a second round 65 that
money, 'causeihaven'tbeenableto included 30 on the back nine aJ)d
put the good scores on the board," . birdies on four of his last five holes.
:Heafner said . ''It's been
"It's definitely the putter," said
.frustrating."
Heafner, who one-putted eightofthe
• He's managed to conquer that last 10 greens.
'frustration in the first two rounds of
At the tournament's halfway
the $325,00&gt; Hawaiian Open Golf point, former Hawaiian winner
'l'ouman\ent, however. He's scored Andy Bean and Larry Rinker
15 birdies through the first two shared second at 134, 10-under-Pa.r.
rounds and, with a 13-under-par Bean took advantage of what he
.total of 131, holds a three-stroke lead called "pertect weather, idea,!
'going into Saturday's third round.
conditions" to shoot an S-under-par
65. Rinkerhada65. Hedidnotmake
· "I'm very excited about my a bogey and did not have a 5 on his
game. There's no telling what 1 card.

HOM ELITE'S
360

National field representative will
••tend local bowling forum ·
~~Skyline I.anes on Feburary 21

•

:·also
:60

The

1983

D~~H~~~k~thy~~A~I~A;_
I i;st;.a;ti;._s;t_i;cs~-~~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
..

lton, a 5-6 guard for the Rio Grande
College· Red~omen is ranked in
scoring and free throw percentage
in the latest NAIA national
statistics.
DetUlton is ranked 17th in scor\hg
with an average of 21.2 points per
game and ts 13th tn free throw per•
centage at 84-1. The freshman sensation is also shooting 53 percent
from the floor, narrowly missing
the top 20 in that category.
Rio Grande ts currently U-10 on
the season, J.3 in the Greater Ohio
Athletic Conference.

l(

AP SportsWriter

Theldeel high production oow. "Fetlllofa" vibration Iaolatlon cuahlano
the hand lea tram the pawor hood. roducu operotar fettgue. •Low naiH
!eve! thenkato Homlllte' o Bottone dualahambermufller •New 3.5aubla
Inch haml-head engine. •Capacity dlochargelgnltlan. •Adjuotablo auto·
mltlc oiler. •Unique chain tenolon iiiiJ. •Rubber Qaoted hondla bar and

lnclude4 Ill the pr!lll'am wtll be
dlaculalonl Of llUUIY WIBC servl·
ces, thi! WIBC Champtonahlp Tourn&amp;mellt, y OUDg American Bowllllg .
AJUance; colleglate and senior dlv·
talons programs, promotion plans
of the National BowUng . CouncU
and any new plans or projects of
WIBC. Sesskms often end wttb the
showing of one of the popular t11ms
available ftom the WIBY ltbr!iry.
1be meeting ts open to all
members Of the women's bowllllg . - - - JOYCE BIRD
association and the Officers of the
,..----t
loCal junior bowllllg association.

in Big Ten
game out of second place but three
games behind Indiana.

a.S If he Isn't that impressed with a
two-game lead, but nobody can
blame Knight whO · obviously
doesn't want his team to become
cOmplacent.
· The fact of the matter ts there is a
gTeat basketball race going in the
Slg Ten with four teams tied for
second place and everyone more
concerned about a post-season
tournament berth than a champion·
ship that appears out of reach.
Indiana, ranked fourth nation·
ally, opened Its two-game lead
Thursday night with a 63-59 victory
at Mfunesota atter the Hoosiers last
· weekend had swamped Minnesota
7i&gt;-51 at Bloomington.
; The back·to-back victories over
Minnesota put Indiana in an
enviable position and left Minnesota, Purdue, Illlnots and Ohio State
in a four-way tie for second place.
"A two-game lead? What dttfer·
'ence does that make?" said Knight.
· • 'A two-game lead with one game
~left would rnake the difference."
' But look at the whole picture.
Indiana faced last-place Wisconsin
"I throws,
felt if wewe
could
made
our
:today with the Hoosiers figured to free
couldhave
have
made
a
.win. After that, Indiana h3s seven
game of tt," said Purdue Coach
:games remaining with five of them Gene Keady. "Whatwerewe.~of9
at home, where the Hoosiers win 90 from the line in the second halt?"
For the game, the Bollennakers
percent Of their games.
: Minnesota Coach Jim Dutcher were19of49frorn!hefleldand6of12
"had said before Thursday nlght:s . from the free throw line.
"We got a break with Purdue's
loss to Indiana that the race would
inability
to hit free throws, .. saki
he over if his Gophers failed to stop
'the Hoosiers.
Iowa Coach Lute Olson, whose team
; Dutcherdownplayedhtsremarks climbed to 5-5 ln the Big Ten, one
~

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an injury, they'll be tough to catch.
Notlmposstble, but real tough."
TheracecontinuedSaturdaywlth ·
a1110 teams tri action.
Indiana and Ohio State were
successful in ihe Big Ten playback
MARKSTEIN, France (AP) schedule this week, butsuchwasnot Yugoslavian Bolan Krtzaj, ranked
the case with llllnots and Purdue.
23rd ln the World Cup overall
Ohio State came back from last standings, won the66-gateftrstheat
Saturday's victory over Wisconsin Saturday in a World Cup slalom
with a 68-65. trlumph Wednesday race in thls fog-shrouded Vosges
night at Madison. lll!nois, having Mountain resort.
swamped · Northwestern 78-62 at
He was follOwed by fourth· ranked
Champaign a week ago, fell at Swedish star Ingemar Sterunark,
Northwestern 58-55 Thursday night. who won his third stalom of the
Purdue was unable to rnake it two season Frlday, and Liechtenstein's
straight over Iowa and dropped a Andreas Wenzel, who had the same
5546 electston at Iowa Qty. .
timeasStenmark.
" A psychological disadvantage,"
Krlzaj's time was listed at 51.41
said Illinois Coach Lou Henson. wlio seconds, while Stenmark and Wen·
added, "they played well down the zel posted times'ot51.66.
stretch and we dldn'l"
Luxembourg's Marc Gtradellt
"We were mad and we wanted had posted the fasted timeof51.35in
revenge," admitted Northwestern the first heat, but was disqualified
Coach Rich Falk, whose team for m1ssing a gate.
outscored the llllnl 8-1 in a closing
The top American was Steve
stretch to seal the'clectslon.
Mahre, seventh at 52.53. His
Purdue fell at Iowa because of brother, Phll, was clocked in 52.55.
cold shooting.

• [ndtana Coach Bobby Knight acts

grip. •Ber l1ngth1 from 18" to 28". •Adv•nced design for h igh produc·

tlon with low operetor fetigue. '

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Before you shop for. that new ('lr new to you) car you want, ·
or pickup, van or 4-wheel drive vehicle, check our auto loan
officers for some good advice.

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

You'll get prompt facts and figures on an auto loan from our
people, including an estimate of payments on a loan of that will
be tailored ~o your budget. If everything looks good to you, you
can fill out an applicatiqn while you're here.

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tFinanting is avaitabk. thfough panicipatihg dealers aM
tender1 for qllAiified buyers. DEALEFI CONTRIBUTION MAY

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,model, interes1 rate , amount financed and loan term. 'Pro-

taction Plan Is a limited warranty on engine and power train,
and outer body ru~ -througn . A deduc,tlble.may be required.

SEE YOUR PARTlCI"ATING CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER FOR PROGRAM DETAILS,

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�.'
Page-C 4

'
Pomeroy- Midcleport-Gallipolli, Ohio Point ,._.. nt, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Indoor miler ran ·with heavy heart

SEOAL cage statistics

who set the world-indoor best of 3 world·indoor best, against East
EA$T RUTI!ERFORD, N.J.
minutes, 50.6 seconds at San Diego Germany's Ke~ Knabe and
lAP ) - Eam onn Coghlan, the
candyYoung.
·
Feb. 20. 198!.
fastEis t indoor miler in history, ran
1n
addition,
Jam~
Butler,
ranked
While the mile, around the
with a heavy heart Saturday night in
Arena 's swill 11).laps-to-the-mile No.l ln the world In tbe200, will face
the U.S. Olympic Invitational at the
track. wlll be one of the meet's Stanley Floyd, holder of the
Mead ow lands Arena.
In the past year,lhreeof them&amp;f featured races, there are several · world-Indoor best, plus Calvin
other events which hold the paten· Smith, Emmit King and Ron
influential peoplc in Coghlan'sllfeBrown, in the men's 55-meter dash.
tlal for world-indoor bests.
hls father, BiU Coghlan; his
Greg Foster, No.lln the world in the
longtime coac h, Gerry Farnan, and
men's
110-meter high hurdles, will
hls college coach, Jumbo Elliott of
They include the men's 5,0Cll
oppose
1972 Olympic champion Rod
VUlanova- have died.
meters, with Alberto Salazar of
MJ!kburn
and Wlllle Gault o( the
In each case, Coghlan has tried to · Eugene, Ore., against Robert de
University of Tennessee In the
gain inspiration from the losses.
Castella of Australia, in the first
55-meter
high hurdles.
After arriving.home to Rye, N.Y ..
track · confrontation . between the
thls week from Dublin, . Ireland,
No.1 and 2 mara thoners In history;
;yhere he had buried his father,
the pole vault, with Billy Olson, the
Jamaica's Bert Cameron of the
&lt;loghlan said he felt he stU! could be
only American to clear 19 feet
University of Texas-El Paso and
competitive tonight in the mile,
indoors or ou !doors; Car!Lewis, the
NQJ. In the world In the men's 400
against a field inciudilig John
only long jumper to reach 28 feet at
m eters, will meet high school
Walker of New Zealand, American- sea level; the women's 55-meter sensation Clinton Davis of Homes·
record holder Steve Scott, Ireland's
dash, with world 100-meter record
tead, Pa. In the 400. And Jim
Ray F lynn, Spain's Jose Abascal,
holder Marlles Gohr of East Helrlng, holder of the world-Indoor
Ross Donoghue and Byron Dyce.
Germany ;~galnstAmerlcan-record
best in the 1,500-meter race walk,
"I will feel more ins pined because holder Evelyn Ashford, and the
will battle fellow American Ray
I· know my dad would have been women's 55-meter hurdles, with
Sharp, holder of the world-Indoor
there walching me," said Coghlan, Stephanie Hightower, holder of the
best in the mile walk, In the 1,500.

Olson's late hour jump establishes·
record at Frisco's Cow Palace
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Billy
Olson and a hardy group of track
and field fans stayed in the Cow
Palace pas t midnight, hoping Olson
could better his own world Indoor
best in the pole vault again .
"I didn't feel good early, but then!
started to get psyched up," Olson
said when his vaulting finallyended,
short of a new record.
"That's the l;ttest I've ever
vaulted . I c ame in ·fi.om Texas,
where it's 2 a.m. when it's midnight
here. Those late hours are tough, I'll
tell you," added the athlete who has
upped the indoor world mark three
times in lhe past month.
Olson established a m eet record
of 18 feet, 6Y, inches just before
midnight at the Foot Locker
Classic , formerly the San Francisco
Games. Then he tried three times
for19-il'):;, equal to the world outdoor

record and a half-inch over his
world Indoor best established at
Toronto last weekend.
On the second jump, he came
close. A foot nicked the bar, which
wobbled and came down.
The pole vault competition began
three hours behind its originally
scheduled time because, as meet
director Jim Terrill admllled, "We
screwed up."
The vaulters wanted to use the
longest poSsible runway, but It was
set up for the triple jump. So the pole
vault couldn't begin until the trtple
jump e nded, and that was 10:30
p.m., when a ll major running
, events had also e nded.
The winners on the track included
hurdler Greg Foster, with a
meet-record 6.50 in the 50-m eter
highs, and Steve Scott with a 3:57.5
mile. Louise Ritter, a tall Texan,

raised the meet record In the
womi:!n' s high jump to 6-4.
The meet attracted only about
6,000 fans, and 2,(0) or less were on
hand to cheer Olson, whose latenight jumping caused him to mlsss
an overnight flight he \1(85 to take
East. · The red-hot vaulter was
entered In tonlght'sOlymplc lnvitatlonal at East Rutherford, N.J., but
he admitted early today, "!don't ·
know if I'll be able to make It now."
Olson plans to compete in San
Diego and New York meets indoors,
then take at least a month off before
starting outdoor competition.
"I haven't done very weU
outdoors the lastfew years. I was aU
jumped out from competing in·
doors," he said early Saturday.
" This year, I'm making some
a djustments, and I'm shoooting for
19-4 ~."

High school basketball results.~.~.
f'rid")''S fksults
Akrort Buchtd GR. Akron Ellet &amp;I

Akr ort Cm -H CM'f'r 62. Akron Gar!leld 48
Akron East 60. Akron FlrestCfll' 4.1!
Akron !&lt;('flrror(' 53, Akron N. &lt;15
Akron St . V·SI. M 61. Aqulrias fl7

Ctn . M cN icholac; Th, Greenhills 00

Cln. Northwest 64, Norwood 5.1
Cln. Oak H!lls 61. Mt. HPalthy 60
Cln. Reading T7. Ha rrl&lt;;On ffi
Cin. Sl . &amp;!-nard 52. .Ctn . Lanctmark 44
Cin . St. X.wk''l" 65, Cln. Baron 54

Allm E. 55. Pauldlni:: 53
Arrw:&gt;lla !\'l. CJprmonl t-.'E :'11

Cin . Summit 8'1 , Cin . Country Day 43

Anna i'!. Houston 51

Cin. Tall 1!:1. Cin . Hughes Tl

Ansonia 70, Nev.1on

Cin. Walnut Hl!IS 58, C!n. Al km 52

Ctn . Sycart"JOCe-67. Milford 43

~

r\nttxln.1 Wayne 76, MaurrK'(' 66
Mlln~"on 95. McComOill

Ashland CrestviPw ~ . Black Rlvf'r i'l

Asht&lt;ibula 57, Geneva 5J
Ashtabula Edgf'Wood 54, &lt;:;onncaut 48
A.&lt;;hu.bl.llll HarOOr 65, Palne&gt;VUIC Rlvrrs lW~l

(1('Ye. Hawken 74,

Avoo 71). Kcv" toll{&gt; 72
A)WSVI!lt•
l!:t.i~wrton f&gt;l

!oli.

Bay 90. Avon La kr- 46
&amp;&gt;;ICh"A'OOd ffi. Hkhmond Ht s.

Cln. WE'SIPI'n Hills 7(1, Cin. Woodward Gl
Cln. Wyomln~ 00. N. Bend TaykJr 53
Clf'ar Fork 71. Mans. Malabar 68
Cleve. Central Cat h. Fl.'\, Chane) 82
CIE.&gt;Ve. CoUinwo:x:l !n. CIPV{'. Hay 66
Cleve. E . TC'Ch 63, Cl('\'c. Kennedy 58
CJeve. Glenville 59, Cleve. East 47
Farmin~on

52

Cleve. Llnroln-W. 74. OevP. H ayes 7{l

CIE.'VP. Marshall 63, CII?VI?. Adams 62,

!;,~

ar

8('dforl1 62, Wlllooghll_\' S. 00
Bt&gt;lltrOOk 6.'),' Day. Northr i~l? 5.2

lndepenQ:mC(' ~- Luiht&gt;ran W. 67
Indian Hlllli Chr. 57. Man.'i. Temple 5&lt;1

Bcli£'\'UC' 60, NonNalk 40
Ek'rlln W. Reserve f:,7; LowdtviliP 52
&amp;;t hl'l ~1. F'ranklln Monrot' -1~
Bc&gt;xiC'V R'l. Mary!;\•Hir- ~
81~ i 'alnut 71, Olr-ntarl gy 71. OT
Blufhon iO, Linrotrl\'i&lt;:&gt;W :B
Bowlin I! Grt"eff 61, Perrysburg 5.1
Rnt:k~v ll l e 71. Cloverleaf 70
Rro:lkfiPid ~- You ng. LIIT'ny ~

JaC'ksoo Center 64. Fort Lorarnk' 62
Jonathan Alder H5, Grandv~· 6J

Dru Rmick li6. Ik&gt;rPa t;.J

Bu&lt;"kryt" Ct"ntral 76. Ri\'('rdalf' ,'"'()
Bucnu.'i 6.'1, Upper !-;andusky ~2
c mrlptx•ll -Mt•Jnorlal 61. Hubbard Iii
Ca ntl('ld 73, St f\llhN.~ 59
C:wt on Gl('nQak 6.1, N . Cant on~. OT
Clinton South 52. Massillon Jacksoo 5.1
Canton Timk('n fil . Canton Cath. ffi

l&lt;alida 8l, Fort Jcnnin~ 48
Kenton Rl~e- 54, Bellefontaine 47
Kettering Alter 78, Day. Cham-.lul 59

Kin land 45. Chanbn 43
l..ancaster

FtshPr 61, Amand.a-Oear-

cr('('k 56
L«::£cmcnt 70, Pymatunlng Val . fil
lA.'mOn·Monrw 69 . Miamisburg 56

Licki ng Vat. 68, Utlt"a

~

Lisbon ~. Stanton Local 61
Lima Cat h. 70, Day . Oakwood 54

Lima Ch.r. 92, Faith Chr. 42
Lima Shawnl'(l5l. Ba't h 4-'l

Lllibon 79, Stanton Lofal 61
London 67, Sprln~ . Nort iK&gt;astf'r n 44

C.1rdlnal ~'l. Grillld Val. 41

Lorain 00, MarlOn Hardin ~ 45

Carllsll' 73, Eatm 00

L&lt;ira ln Cath. 6.'l. Lontln SouttrView $

Carrollton Tl. ca nal F\1Hon NW 76

Loveland 00. [)(ler Park 5I

ChN;rln f a lls 711, r\urora 5.1

Lucas 65,

rhllllrothf' 73. Wl'Sten' llll• N. ~2
Chllllrothc' F I~PI fit. Rlchmond r&gt;a!(l

Ma ~.

Chrl.sl!ail 61

Ltl theran E. 62, Lake RldRc 46
Madison Sl, Aslltat~da Sl. Jotm 42

Cin . An&lt;k'rson 57, F"orcst Pa rk 44

Mans. Marttson 78, CostiX'lon 52
Maple H ts. 73, ClP.r£&gt;. Brush 47

Cin . Qllt"raln 78, Cln . Turpin 72
Cln. LaSallf' 00. Cln . Moeller 62
CUt Mark&gt;lra 71.. Indian Hill~ 64

Mason 4'1, Middletown Madison 45
MassUlon 66. LwlsvUle ~

SE~

Mowery top MOC
free throw shooter
RIO GRANDE '- Standout
guard Jerry Mow~ry of Rio Grande
College leads the Mid-Ohio Confer. ence in free throw shooting, accordtftg to Statistics released today.
· Mowery, a sophomore from WUJIIimsport, Ohio, has connected on
96 of 113 free throw attempts for 84
~cent. Rick Williams of Walsh
College has also connected on 84
plircent, but had done so on fewer
attempts - 63 of 75.
: Threeother Redmen are listed In
tlle tree throw ratings. Guard Rick
P~nrod is fourth at 80 percent, .
guard Kent Wolfe eighth at 77.4 and
f~rward John Maisch ninth at '77.1.
•Mowery ts also ranked lOth In
SfOrlng at 15.1 and seventh In field
goal percentage at 52.8.
· ·
: Bob Shaw Is the only other Redmen to rank In the statistics. Shaw
ts .lOth In field goal percentage at
si;7 and eighth In rebounding at 7.4.

Oppose_Lasix useage
' OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) .Sp,okesmen .for two horse racing
organizations said Friday they
oppose use of Laslx, thought to help
control bleeding, In racehorses.
· Dick Brandt, presldent-oftheOhio
Iiarness Horsemen Association,
arid Bob Ransom, chairman of the
government relations committee of
tilt! Ohio Standardbred Breeders
Airsoclatton; spoke out against
Laslx.

·.

Maplewood !':1\ Brbfol 41

Massillon OU'. 74. Cleve-. H~r1tag&lt;' 45
MassUIOn Pt&gt;ny :l!l, Marllnr;::ton 43
Masslllon1 Tuslaw 48. Uniontown i..U.&lt;'

40

McDonald IB, Petersb.Jrg Spring. 63
Ml'chanksWfX 31. Waynesfleld-Ga&gt;hm

" MC'dlna 79,

F"alr"~

Park 52
Medina Euckeyf' :.0, C\zyaho,11:a nts.
Men1CI' 5'1, Mayfield 39
Miami East 70. Grah am 59
Miami Trace 6,';, Madison PlairL~ 63
Ml(!dl~own 91, Lima 76
Mlckllelown Fenwick 63, LeOO:oo n 61
Ml&lt;Mew ~. Lorain Clearvk.-.11 49 ·
Mlllb.icy Lake 67. Rossford 65
Mlllenport 63, Canal WlncbE'Ster 62
Mllton-Unk)n oiB. 1'lpp City -16
Mineral Rlq;ce 48, S. Ra n ~ t6
Ml116Vil 71. E. Canton firli

~

M lsslsslnaw9 Val. 84. Bradford 72
MogaOOre 74, Rootstc:Min ffi ..;

Montpelk-r :TG, Ewrgreen 6.1
Napoleon m. Sylvania Northvlt&gt;w 63
National Trail 67. AJ'('anum 52
. N('W Bremen 37. M(&gt;f100r\ Union :D
NE'W Kno.-&lt;vll ll? 59, Marion Local fl6, 20'1'
New London 63, Mapleton 56
New Miami 00, Uxtland &amp;I
Newark 118, Lancaster 65
Nl'Wark C8t h. '13, lkktn~ Hts. ~7
Nt'WOOI)' ffi, Berkshire 54
N. CollegE' l-Ull 77, Cin. F'lnneytCM·n 66
N. ~alton 54. M l~k 52. ar
N. Union ~7. N('W Albany 50
Norttunor 66, Marion Cath. 46
Norton 70, Rco.'l"rc !li
Norwalk St. Pau l 61. Edison -IJ
Oak Harbor 79, Genoa 61
Ol:w&gt;rl~ 81. N . RJCfjev We '14
OntariO 55, Frederlddown -19
Onvill&lt;' 74, Akron Manchester 47
Onawa·dlandorf 59, Wapakont1a
Ottawa Hills 65, . N. Ba!ttnvll"(l \1
Cleve. Ora n~ TI, TwinSburg 55

Pomeroy Mlclclleport~lllpolis, Ohio-Point Plea111nt, W. Va.

F.bruary 13, 1983

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Waverly

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Gall!polls
Lolan
Waverly
Athens

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Lopn

Goulpolll
Jacklon

M"'_..

· ~ 6 666 m
3 7 1!116 IIEII
0 9 400 6.'!1

300
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77 133 .579

51· 90 .567

York Melli Ia Ulllu 1111. wldle
with tbe Bravee, 'l1lom. ~
lpa&amp;ed Ill tile "flnWime-lnNitoey" feat ol four« ecullve
bMten bMtfnlllomenu!llll - .

77-11111 .4'11
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61 31 w 11.0
51 15 li7 16.7

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47 39 L13 14.8
31 147 14.7

Morsan, Lo!fan
Mayle, Athens
Fields, Ironton
Rlgp, Meigs
F'nuure, bopn

played.

1,5 10 , . 15.8
1&amp;1 Jl) lli.2
167 lD 1S.7
m;n to·11 11l8.61

;n :II UU7.6. " l.c..t.' Wi\oi!rty

CoWnS, Jackoon

~ 18% )'1!111'11 ~ tile maJOr .
leapee 11taa11ac with lbe Plllabuqb l'lrltel Ill . . . Be IIIIo
tile ()!MinnK! IWII,
Cblcaco Cuba, Milwaukee
Brave~, New Yorll Meta, lllld
l'hnedelpiD Pbtltea. He wu a
mem1Nr e1 tbe ortpaa1 N-

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• aver
l:laoe, G U'f!'ll
Lewts, waverty

~ot Jape bueball star
Frllllll 'lbomu wl1 be fealllnld •
J11Mt I&amp; a t a• elrall cud llbo!r I&amp;
1be Plll'llenl!url, W. Va. Jloll..
c~ay 11111, M.rcb a. 'l'bonuls

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121 9 l3.3

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2311-498

LoiaD

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Zl.1 52! .447
$5!11 .431
236 5'11i .4JI)

Ironton

Jackson

Trans(t Autlwrity
drops fan service
COVJNGTON, Ky. (AP) -After
several losing seasons, the Transit
Authority of Northern Kentucky
has ended Its "Reds Rider Express"
to Cinclnnatt'sRiverfrontCollseum
for Reds hOme games.
"The Reds didn't have a very
good season in 1982 and not many
fans in general went to the games.
We carried just over 4,000 t6 the
home games au ,season," said T1ni
DeRossett, marketing director for
the publicly owned transit system.
He said the system lost $10,(0) last
I
season.
In Cincinnati, QUeen City Metro
dropped their baseball runs in 1981
for lack of ridership. The TANK
Reds Express charged $3.25 for the
service.
Both services took fans to and
from the ballpark.
Reds' attendance dropped below
two milUon In 1981 for the fii:st time
since 1973. 'The 1981 season was
shortened by the players' strtke,
however.
Attendance In 1981 totaled
1,093,700. Attendance In 1982 was
1,326,528.

Be ready.thls summ~r...
. PRE-SEASON LAWN
MOWER CHECK-UP

'

CAMBRIDGE - Laws concernhave undergone sev- .
era! revisions. due to the passage of
1:10use Blll 782. These changes will
affect all boaters In Uie upcoming

ing boating

.

'

1983 ~ason.

: Idle speed and no wake means
' the slowest possible speed needed
~ maintain steerage or maneuver,eblltty, producing no wave,trom bethe boat.
• No watercraft will be operated at
grea ter than Idle speed or at a
, Speed that creates a wake near any
~. boat docking facility, boat
'~llne dock, launch .r amp, re~atlon boat harbor, whether
marked or not. This also Includes
lrea previously marked or buoyed
a no wake area.
. :.
Sid Laws
; Boaters are now able to pull as
~ skiers as is reasonable and
'We. Skiers must wear a U.S.C.G.
• tPProved life saving device, there
must also be an observer who Is 10
~ars of age or older in the boat to
Watch the progress of the skiers.
Flre ExiiDplsber
: To coincide with the federal re-

l"lid

A preventi~fF maintenance check-up can help add to
the life of your mower. Don't put it off. OUr professional technicians can put your Sears mower in
shape now. so it will be ready for the summer season. Call the experts. Cilll~e.
·

446-2902 .

Sears· SerVice

as

' w

-

, : ·HEMLOCK - The Metgs Ma• rallder freshmen, playing without
: the services of two starters, held on
. fo defeat MWer 3!1-:ll in the consola: tlim gaine of the freshman toumament held hene Thursday.
: : Coach · Tim Saunders creW fin: !shed their season at 9-7 and was
• honored with a third place trophy in
• •
lhe tournament. Meigs had been
' Ilea ten by Athens 54-33 the night be• !pre, Shawn Baker paced the little
; Marauders with :!! points. Chris
•· ~nnedy added five, Bt1an Houda-

Sf AilS. •OE-.JC• AND CO

Satisfe~ctlon

GUCiranteed or Your Money Back

C'k_.vt.land Hts. liM, Panna '12

.·..,.cj!:,

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS

•I'I
~

.

74~
Natlonwlse

RUTLAND OH.
TANK RENT FREE
.200 GAU.ONS GAS
...,AND INSTALLATION

$26900

10W40

Kennedy hit both ends Of a one
and one with a minute to go to put
Meigs on top by one.' A bucket by
Baker wfth 45 seconds to·go put the
game out of reach.
The nine wins by a freshman
team ties the Meigs High School record for wins In a season.

'

OFF

~
Original Equlpmant Ignition•
Delco, Moper, Motorcraft

For most o.r.tlc 0.. only.

R81lltor

AC or Chaimpionlll!ll
3
71
Spark Plugs"""'
.... .. •
For ..... lllilelgll tun• Up witt '
3 19 11/;fllc:t.ftpan.
AIIQ. fM• - t ' 18

. . ,.

'NO COUPONS
NO GIMMIOCS
WITH APPROY.ID CREDIT

YOU GET QUALITY SERVICE WI:IEN YOU
DEAL WITH LOCAL PEOPLE.

Reg.99'

26.

40.95
.
.

...__

===!:.":~:::;-.'::....

Starting Fluid
Rag. 1.09

Reg.1.09

Premium 4 ply tubeless whitewalls .
Free replacement lor one year
against defects in material, work·
manship and road hazard.

•r cond., lilt wheel, sliding rear window, AM/FM/8-Track,

17 88

$5995
.''SPECIALS"

I •

.

878x13 Reg. 25 .88
E7Bx14 Reg . 25 .88

,1979 MUSTANG. Was •3900.00 .................. NOW .s~
;1978 VOI 4 1E WAGON. Wa1 53200.00 ... ~~ ... NOW '2800
:1978 COIDOB• Was '3875.00 ............. :.... NOW S3400

F78x14 Reg . 30.88

7" Sc111pan or
Snow SwMpera
. ..... ...... 11138-1173t

1.59

't977 CHEVY LUV. Wat '2950.00 •• :.NOW $2600
1974 BUICK '.SABRE. Waa 1950.00 .. ; ...... :..... NOW S65()

Q78x14 Reg . 30.88
G78x15 Reg . 30:88

Anco
Wiper Blades
or Refllla

H78x15 Reg . 32 .88

L78x15 Reg . 32 .88

MOTOR CAR ·BROKERS

.l'lr MILES FROI HOLZEIIEDICAL CENTER ON STATE RT. 160.

·

PHONE 446-6592 . .

· STORE HOURS;

•o~~~~~1~R~~;:~T~~~.•. ·209 U
_ppe.r .River Rd.
SATURDAY 8;30 TO 6

OR JAY EV A~S

.
j

'

I

•

I ,

'

•

..

Reg . 19.88

A78x13

F.E.T. 33'-63•-

Sale17.88
Sala17.88 · ·
Sale 23.88
Sale 23.88
Sale 23.88
Sale 23.88
S1l1 23.88

·SUNDAY WIN DOW SHOPPERS WELCOME

~EE A~N

'

Reg. 69'

Super Retread
· Snow Tires

2 Vt!leets

.dual tanks. Trailer package. While spoke wheels. One owner local true~

.BOSO-AGRI CENTER,INC., Gallipolis, OH.

'

Snap
Stop leak or
. Wala.r Pump Lube

Qua leo
Lock De-Icer

Save up to s1 0 per set

Your
Choice

1979 FORD F-150 OJSTOM 4X4- Red and silver, 400 automatic,

'

Y'OUI LOCAL COMAI'IIIIIVICI DIALR 1'01 PAIMRS

78.954bbl

1U5.

.

Your

55.952bbl:

Boftl tcr dOI'tiHic ~ lf'ld .. . truckt.
Balfl50,000 ltllll ...... Reg . 8 .15·

WE WANT YOUR
BUSINESS
.

.

Reg.49'

New Brake Shoes
or New Disc Pads

CALL US TOLL FREE FROM OUT OF STATE: 1-800-848-9958
· · .
OHIO COLLECT: 1-614-446-246~
Take 3~0ff your invoice ..
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR NEW DISCOUNTS:
if Plid to drlvlf at dell¥·
BULK CUSTOMERS ONLY
try time: or 2% if paid in

Cllolce

Gasllne
Anti-Freeze

Carburetors ,

8.88 AxioSet

ASK FOR OUR PRICES

Umtt4

77~

l'&lt;llh rebuildable exchange.

$4995

·. \ · . .

Reg. 3.49

69t
Snap

Remanufactured .

.

7 days. .

Windshield
Washer
Solvent

Advance
Anti·
Freeze

Snap

(

matic, lock out hubs, carpet AM/FM/8-Track, sliding, rear window,
, chrome stepbumper, aluminum slot wheels, low miles, one owner.
. ' ' SHARP TRUCK

·We can make a complite feed to your specifications or.supply you wtth a Purrna
Complete.

THIS OFFEFI GOOD THFIU MARCH 12,1983

Snap

29~

-...

kick out hubs,

3.881

25%·.

-- ,

1978 CHEVY C.1 0 '511.V8IADO 4X4 - Short bed, blue, 350 auto-

We can supply you with a 38% dairy concentrate or Master Mix Base Blend and Soybean M..l or sell you Purina concentrate.
·

41.88somonth
47 .88eomonth

lsFt.BoosterCablesReg.s.ss .... :.... .... .. .

•

ARE YOU USING A CONCENTRATE?
.

Or Call 446-B161 for. more informetion.
LEARN: .Salf-DofenH - ll11ica of Teo Kwon Do

Reg. 89'

·•.

.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-Phone 446-8161
COURSE LENGTH: 12 Woakt
TUITION: 86.00 Per Woak (reduced rates for flmiiaol
To Enroll simply come to fi~ or 18C000 clan.

Ali batteries with exch., avail. lor most cars &amp;n~ver needs water under normol conditions .

We can mix it for you, too.

.ARE YOU USING A COMPLETE?

BUOORYU 00.10
346 Lawer River Rd. (1 / 2 Mi. South a! .let. 218 on Rt. 7)

29.8840month ·

shell had three, and .P arker Long
oontributed l&lt;iur. Meigs played
without Chris Shank and Lee PoweU who were promoted to the reserve team.

--·

We can supply you with the Master Mix ·
·Base Blend pre-mix proaram from calf
·starter throueh complete dairy or dairy
concentrate.

NEW LOCATION:

Nationwlse Maintenance
Free Calcium BaHeries

1 bbl.

GET VAWE,. PRICE &amp; SERVICE
AT
.

Thu~y, Feb. 17, 1983
Time: 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Reg. 79'

.l

'

ARE YOU USING A PRE-MIX?
'

,/

Natloriwlse
10W30

WEVE GOT WHAT YOU NEED.•••.

.,•

Mr.
Dairyman

aa- For Beginnen Starting

69!..

. ......----------., lc,t.-......... .
TROUBLE WITH SNOW?
"

SL Ignatius 57, Findlay~
C I eve . St. Jooeph 92. l..akewood
St. Edward 49
Cleve-. SouHt 68, Cl(ovp_ R~ 66
Cleve. Trtnlty 53, GUrrour 47

BUDORYU DOJO .
New

Muff1en
No powercraft can be operated In
Ohlowlthoutamumer,underwater
exhaust or other devices that mufnes or suppresses the sound of the
exhaust at all speeds.
Muffler means an acooustlcal flltertng device containing a baffle or
baffles, Including water cooled exhaust risers, elbows, or both, that
when tnstalled In or on the exhaust
pipe ol an lnterilal combuslon englne results In a reduction of exhaust noise.
If there are any questions conremtnganyolthenewlawchanges ·
or other boating laws or regulatlons, COIIIact tbe Ohio ~ent
of N{ltural Resources, Division of
Watercraft, 1225 B Woodlawn
Avenue, Cambridge, Ohio at (614)
439-4(Jffl.

........ C.,. for

C'kv~.

r~wi~.th;s;lx~W~hil~e~L~lsa~W~I~Il~ou~g~h~by!!led~~A·,~'~ns~~~~--1·3·22·1·6·7-~51!i

qutrements, boats that are less
than 26 feet in limgth, with an outboard motor and of open constructloil are tno longer required to
carry ft.re dlstingulshers. If the boat
has any closed comparments, ,or
decking It Is still required by law to
carry a fire extinguisher.

T.....V, KMI:fot
l c : , t l ¥ • - ..., 4.05

57

"lcJ'/~~AIS 2$U8.
.
.
~ ·&lt;gs
10 s 9 15-42

'

: ~eigs freshmen consolation winners

You can
count on

MEIGS (421 -Crooks t-0-2; swtsher 0-1-1;
Mea&lt;lows 11-5-2'1; Steagall244; Horton 2.64;
Reeves 1-2-4; Gordon 1).().0, TOTALS 17-HZ.
A111ENS tllll) _ Kronor&amp;-0-12; Kytotl-1-17;
MoUJca 7~14; Ball ().0&lt;1; White 3-&lt;-W; Sud-

New law changes
for Ohio boaters

.....

Ex~utive 'dies
MlAMI (AP) - Joe Thomas, who
drafted and traded the Miami
Dolphins from an AFL expansion
team to the NFL championship In
six seasons, died of an apparent
heart attack at his suburban home.

.

r----~Sears,-'

the winners with seven.
The Marauderettes play at Alexander Tues(lay, the sam e team
they drew to open the Athens' sectiona! tournament Saturday, Feb.
15, at 1 p.m.

team

.Jill wl&amp;b 181 bomerwa 111111 881! •
nma bMted IlL Be Ill tlda emilie •
IIIWime bomelua lilt.

lO 10.5
1111 111 ID.:I
1Cij

herMeadowsaddedl3reboundswith
game-high. 27 points. Denise
Steagall helped out with 11
rebounds.
Leading Athens was Kim Kyle
with 17, Angela Mollica added 14,
Krts Kroner had 12, and Karen
White chipped In 10. Ann Sternekert
led the tall and talented Athens five
on the boards with eight caroms.
Coach Ron Logan's Marauderelles, now 7-12on the year, hit on
17 of 56 shots for 33 percent and
connected on eight of 16 foul shots
for 50 percent. Athens made 25 of 73
from the field for 34 percent and
eight of 15 charity tosses for 53
· percent
.

boards by the narrowest of margins, 37-36. Meigs committed 19turnovers, Including 10 In the second
quarter, compared to Athens' 22.
Athens was Whistled for 17 persona1s to Meigs' 11.
Atheris completed a sweep of the
evening with a 27-10 win over the
ltttle Marauderettes In the reserve
oontest. Meigs dropped to 12-7 on .
the year.
Rhonda ·Haddox paced Meigs

. ~ ~·-- ,I"WP ~~,!Uig,, . . ~ ~!If .~, KenDJ JUich.l.e, Y. CCJI!!P.a, ~•• ,;. • ~·)l,:tlienl ,..top~"'Meigs on the
members are, troll&amp;, ScoU Jl1teh, IIUUIIICer;
keeper; eud Coacb George Gaga!.
Todd W0aon, DPIIIIy. Leonard, Paul Headtlx, Breut

11M a lfeilme baHfnl averapel

116 Jl) 11.6
115 lO il.5

Norioll, and Dan Tripp, 11111118Cet. Back row -; Pam
Murphy, e••!Wf'llen; Mitch Barringer, Eddie Col-

.
EA8l'ERN EIGHTH GRADE BASKEI'BAU.
_ Members ol Eel*em's Elpdl p-ade bMketbeD

=~~:!t~-==·~v '~
Ill-. 111111 Joe AlloDclk. 'l'lltaM

No. G A•l·

Lane, Gallipolis '

Former :

AT CARD 8110W -

,_

·-"
Melp
Ironton
Athena

GW, Locan

llldMdual SClGrliiC laden
Name- T....,

ra

~--

w,,...,

Fl'llllk~

3!18 10 :11.8 '
:m
u 3t.3
3211 lO 31.8
3Ql lO :IU
296 lO 29.6
231 9 2!!.7

A,tbenl

w L r. or·

Sl!lO~

No. 0 AYJ,
- lll oJfM.e
o1f11

·-~-

r or

8 2 386
7 3 4119
6 5 391
~ 5 413
5 5 397
4 6 363
0 9 346

ATHENS - With four girls in
double figures, the powerful Athens
Lady Bulldogs claimed a 58-42 win
here Thursday, overshadowing a
brllllant' 27-point performance by
Meigs' Jenny Meawws.
Outscoring Meigs ~-8 1n the second quarter, the 19-1 Lady Bul!dogs held on In u,e second haU. Tile
Marauderettes outscored Athens
24-231n the last hait with the Athens
starters still ln.

. ._

Team

.UWILUI.I

See•"Nittnt OldD
Allllolk·' - " "

Ironton
Jacklon
Melp

Team
Gall!polls

M olp .

'l1l3 111!6

8 2 637 i115j
8 2 !ill 46'.1
6~ 4~ Q
!lf1
~ 491

Ironton

Waverly
jacklon
Meigs ·

961 . 916
9118 1072
9112 !IIIII

a

Athens ladies defeat · Marauderettes

L opn
Jacklon
Atbenl
Waverly
Galllpolll

lO&amp;IIIIOm
9 8lDI3 Jm3

Lo!fan

,.....,

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page--:C-5

446.-3807

�Page

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

C6 The Sunday Tlmft-S.ntinel

Hagler

s~ccessfully

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) Marvin Hagler's punches were so
sharp, so swttt, so damaging, that
Tony Slhson didn't see them
coming. He only saw their results.
After Hagler successfully defended his undisputed world middle-

weight boldng t!tletorthes!xth time
Friday night by stopping S!bson at
2:40 of the sixth round, the
challenger retreated to his locker
·room for a peek at the damage.
"f didn't believe anyone could
ever do what happened to me

defends boxing· title
tonight,'' said the Briton, who had
won 14 consecutive tights since
losing Nov. 6, 1979. "I looked In the
m!rtor lll!d saw what I've never
seen in my Ute."
,
He gazed at a gash beside his left
eye that required three stitches and
led to the end ofthecrowd-pleaslng,
slugging m~h. He wasn 'I sure he
saw the blows that opened it.
"I couldn't see the punches to stop
them, so he was knocking .me all
over the place," said Sihson. "His
punching was so accurate, I
couldn't find an answer to lt."
Hagler had hoped S!hson's eyesight would play tricks on him.
"I wanted to contuse him," said
the 30-year-old belli'r frOm Brockton, Mass. "I wanted to give him a
mirage. He'd look for something
and It wouldn't be there.':
Slhson, 24, looked for the skills
that had carried him to a 47-3-1
record and the No. 1 World Boxing
Council ranking but never really
found them.
Hagler scored with combinations
early In the first round and was the
aggressor. In the second round
Slbson stuck by his charglngstyleof
close-In fighting and landed several
good lefts to the head.

"He shook me up with a,aood lett
hook thai caught me on tbe side of
theeyelnthesecondround,''Haglei- .
said. "1bat got me a Uttle nervous."
The challengercontlllued to score
In the third round, hlttlllg Hagler
with three consecutive blows 2: l5
Into the round. But In the fourth
round, the bout sh1tted decidedly to
Hagler as he bloodied Slhson' s nose
early. In the M:h, be opened the eye
cutthatunleasbedastreamofblood
down Sibson's left cheek.
S!bson's handlers stopped the cut,
butHaglergotltgolngagainearlyln
theslxthround. 'fhen,afteraturtous
exchange of punches, a light-leftright combination floored Slbson-a~
1:47 of the round. He got up and
fought back gamely, only to be put
dowp - -~ t,wo _lights to the head.
Blood covering hlsface,Sibsontrled
to light his mouthpiece as be
staggered to his (eel, but referee
Carlos Padilla ended the battle.
Padilla· scored the first five
· rounds0046forHagler.JudgeTony
Perez had It 4946 and Marcello
Bertlnl0045, both for Hagler.
"I was just going Into my tool
chest and starting to put things
together the right way" when the
fight ended, said Hagler, now 56-2-2
with 47 knockouts.

Here's fmal part
:: of PIK series
.; ; 2 - Farmers who wish to partlci-

Pfite

In PIK and C111'1'81tly have
ll'a.ln under CCC regular or reserve
• )Qan that they have fOIWard del!vI!!Y contracts on or wtJch they plan
to feed to livestock must redeem
their CCC loans on that grain before
tlley sign a PIK. contract. When
they sign a PIK contract, all grain
tllat they ~ve under CCC loan at
Ulat time must be turned over to

q:c.

·, 3 - Participants will receive J&gt;liY·

ment In U.S. No. 1 wheat and U.S.
No. 2corn. U grain of that quality ts
hot available In the area from CCC,
a ·larger amount ot a lower qual!ty
grain will be substituted. However,
a partlcpant who received PlK
from grain that .he has In storage
under CCC Loan will not receive a
quantity adjUstment H that grain Is
not ot No. 1 quality for wheat or No.

ON 11IE &lt;BIN- Ml4dlepori Olampaa Marvin u.pr, rtpt, ·.
lands a lipt to the chin ol Ton;y Sllleoa ol ~~~- clurlq llltb I'OUDCI •·•
aelion FrlciJQ' DIPt lit lhe catnun Ia WOI'Cel&amp;er, Mallo • ..,... relaiDed bill mlddlewetpt title wllh a t.eclhnlc.a lllloduJt&amp; tn the llxth .
round. (AP Luerpboto).

aars

2qu~t¥fpr~
.·4 -In areas where the CCC does

-,q, ' '

not have enough grain under Its
control to make PIK payrlients, It
wt:l ,have to either ship
in
from outside the area or purchase
grain locally. In some cases In
Ohio, where relatively little grain Is
under CCC control, local purchases

uatn

Replace your winterweakened baHery
with a Sears 50 .

USDA seeks
comments on
deductions

3. Oak Harbor, 18-0, beat Genoa ?!Hil.
4, Columbus Bexle't·. 1&amp;1. be-at Mary·

EAS1EIIN CONI'BIENCE
Au..tk Dtv1JUD11
W_ L.Pd......GB
Phllack&gt;lphla
43 7 .800
Booton
:II 12
700 5
New Jersl'\
l1 lR
647 1011,
Was hington
N('W York 'll

~~ tl
.440 21

:Ill

~

l8lf.!

Mllwauk~

11 I R 647 24 26 1 4tll Rt.4
21 'r1 .m
9 •

..

THE VlillOR - Mlddleweilbl Champion Marvin Hagler holds
aloft the World Boxing Association championship bell Friday nlgbl at
the Centrmn In Worcester, Mass., alter defeating Tony SU.On of Englnnd. Hagler defeated Stilson on a technical Jmoclwut In the sixth round.
(AP Laserphoto).

Five chosen to Hall of Fame

•

.
·-

CINCINNATI (AP) - Five
· athletes have been selected for the
University of Cincinnati Hall of
Fame. to honored Feb.19durlngthe
halftime of the Cincinnati-Southern
Mississippi basketball game at
ruvertront Collsewn.
Joining the 65 already In the hall
will be receiver-kicker J 1m O'Brien,
tackle Ken Byers, basketball forward George Wilson, swimmer Roy
Lagaly and Erma Farrell, the first
woman to receive four letters for
sports c6mpetltlon.
O'Brien, class of 1970, was the
major college leading scorer In 1968.
'He holds the ClncinnaII records for
most yards receiving in a single
season, 1,107 and career, 2,285.
O'Brien gained national attention
as a placekicker for the Baltimore
Colts who won the 1971 Super Bowl
by kicking a field goal with thfee
seconds left, beating the Dallas
Cowboys.
Byers, class of 1962, was captain
of the 1961 Missouri Valley Conference champion li'am. He played in
the 1962 College All-Star game and

five years In the NFL with the New
York Giants and one with the
Minnesota VIkings.
Wilson, who graduated In 1964,
scored 1,124 points, 16th on the
all-time list. He led the Bearcats to
their second straight v!ctocy over
Ohio State for the NCAA Championship In 1962.
Wilson played seven seasons In
theNBA.
Lagaly, a 1948 graduate, was
Cincinnati's first swimming AllAmerica after placing fourtli In the
l,:Dl-meter freestyle In the 1946
NCAA Championships. He also
coached swimming here and won 11
Missouri Valley Championships.
Farren competed in women's
basketball, softball, swimming and
field hockey, the only one ever to
letter in all four.
The 1929 graduate has devoted
her life to public service UketheGirl
Scouts, the League of Women
Voters and the Community Chest.
sre founded .the Camp Stepping
Stones for handicapped children.

:u

J7

33.1 16
Jl.l J7 t,oz

:r;

15

O P.:eland 12 :f}
2.1"1 11
MD1ERN CONFERENCE

,. _
"" ;

"\ ~
Mldwett DlvWon
San AntorOO
31 21

Dallas

?! 2*

.510

Denver

!'i l'i
l) '!1
18 34

..alll

Kansas cuy

Utah
HwSioo

an

10 40

41,

.... ,
6

:.!)

•
Pacllk: Ilk hlun
Los An~les
~ 10

Pon land
Phoenix
Sra!t l('
Goh1•n SlHt£&gt;

792 -

29 :l l
ll 22
21! 2l
w .11

:'l1Jl m
577 to
549 llt,,
400 t9 ·

lJ
:m 23
Sunday'!! Glllfle
All-Sta r Gam(' at lngiE'Vo'~ , Cali!.

San Oi('Jro

~1·

54.

G. Akron St. Vincmt St Mary, lJ-3 beat
Akron Kemrore 7HJ. rea~ LoulsvUk&gt;
~ . plays

Alhms Saturday.

17

slown ChanpY s,r,.:w, lai.l lu Youngs,~own
Soot h 61-6)

9. Girard, l 'l-2, tx&gt;at Brookfl&lt;&gt;kt
OT, beat Wan't'h Kmned}' '1%3.

~'r.! .

Sears

10, Wl'li.Wtlll', 1~3. trat Sallnt-\•Jlj(&lt;
SwthE'rn ~~~ . bPal East LJ\•prpcoJ 8.14.1
CLA.....
1. Dl'lphos St. .lo lTI 's, 17 0, br-at Minster

!IJ-52.
2 NPVo Washln~on Buckt')'t' CL&gt;ntral. 17-

X43033

0. bl.&gt;at Mo.J nt Blanchard R.l\'l'l"dak'&gt; ifi.!«&lt;.
plays 11flln Catvrrt Saturday.
.1, St Hmn , H)-1 beat ColdvtatM" 57·54
4, Old Washington

B~t:ke'lv

Sears 50 battery is designed
lo meet or exceed engine
startong requirements of most
vehtcles equtpped with V-B or
smaller engines

Trail 17.(),

tFat 8VP!l\1lk' MroadJ14.'brmk fB.47. p4avs
at Ba111P.iVIlk' Saturdav
!'i, · ~.a llda. . 1~1 . bc&gt;at Fort Jmnlnj:CS Rl
4fl. plavs Btufhon Saturda\'.
6. OttO\ ilk&gt;. L').l. lx-&lt;~1 Van Burt'fl ~7 4..
pla,\ s at Columoos Grov&lt;' S:nun:lay
7, Ractn£1 !iloolhrtrn I~".!. plavs at Hun! ·

COW MBUS OhK:I !API - How !1\P tcp
tc&gt;ams In Tiw;&gt; ASS«'latcd PrE'SS'

ro.~nl\(&gt;(:!

Ohio h.lti!h school boys ba.skf'tball poll fared
flA"'iAAA
1 Lorain K in~ li I. bC'a1 W~llakr m.
47 lOS! 10 Sandusk,V

4~

2, Warrm Western Rf'S&lt;.'r\·r . 1B-fl. bf&gt;at
You~ta.vn MOOl'll'v )2~7. !rat Niles A'i'·

ln~on

tW Va \ St. Ja;pph Saturday
1 ~2. l:ra! North
Robinson CokJIK'I Cre~wford 91 -~1 . plavs at

A. Bun rus Wvnford.

J Ca nton M cKink'v 11·1 brat Ck&gt;veland HeiRhls fi4-l~. pl~vs Columbus Sollth

Saturday
-1 East CI£&gt;Vrl.and Shaw 18-0. tx&gt;a1 La·
kC'Wood K7.0.l pla•s at \\ a rrms,·Uk'
H4:'1,1l"hts SaturdaY
!l Ctnclnn ali M&lt;iunl Hr all hy . J j 1. lost

to Clnclnnatl Oak

Hil l~

61-61

6 Akron Cmtral HowE'r. 1&amp;1. bt•al Ak·

ron Gartk&gt;ld 62 48.
sarurdav

pl~v!'i

Cam on nmkm

7, Da:o1on Dunbar, 161. trat Oav!on
Pitnr rson P4Rl, plavs &lt;~~ t ClndM&lt;~~ ti Wit h·
rrM Sa!urdav
R Mlrtllr&gt;town. 1~ 2 bra! lima Sl:&gt;n iOr
91'\.'/fi . plays Ftndlav Saturdav
9, Toledo St Francis , 1.~ 1 . beal Toledo
Rog(&gt;rs B2·M, plavs at IJcM.tllfl~ Grren Sat·
urdav
10. Bav V l ll a ~r Bay, Jn-2. bl&gt;al A. voo

Lak(l !n46, plays at BE&gt;r&lt;&gt;a Saturday

,

Cl.ASSM

•

Radial constructton
and unique tread de sign for outstandtng
performance on and
off the road . Aramid
behed

9, Con land Ma pktY.tood. 17-1. Ill:&gt;at
Bklomlkld 1(14.42, IX'at Brlslol $.41
10. Pm&gt;k's. I&amp; I. brat McDmnotl
Nrrt lw.f";t ~ XI . pla v~ Sardlnla Eas1em
Saturtl.ay

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Excill! TIX I

BA...;EBAU.
Amerlc ... LP. .e

BOSTON RED SOX-Stp:nt&gt;d Davr
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LOS ANG ELES KtNGS-Rr turnNt P&lt;'
trr Hc-landN . dPfrnsrman to N&lt;'w Hav&lt;•n '
of lh&lt;' Amrrl&lt;'an HO&lt;'k&lt;'V L£"aW.Jf' for ro ndl!i o nln ~

~

FOOTBALL
Nlltlonal Footblll l..ellkUf'
ATLANTA. FALCONs-Named

••
J ohn

Mars hall di'rPnsh.'f' rootd lna tor.

Most merch•ndiM av•lllbMI
lor p.c~ -up With., a lew days

Panasonic Video
Color Camera

2. Willard. 1&amp;1. beat Shl&gt;lbv 9'7·!lol , pta :v~
a1 Moun! BlanChard RJve-n:lalr Sat urdav

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era

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~ · ngle
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auto zoom •ens. mov·

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feature

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NOW RENTING
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. HIRE ARE A FEW ·.
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Officer &amp; Gentleman, Shirkey's Machine,
Death Wlih II, Annie, Quest for fire, Star
BY THE DAY·'·
Wars, Stir Trtk II, Btlt Little Wholthoust

· Boso Agri-Center, Inc.
Srd • lyoamort, P.O. lox 781, Galllpol~, OH 45631

Phono:(614)446-2463

In Ttlll, Allct In Wonderland, Reds, All
fhe Prtsldtnfs ltn.
' ·

.

H&amp;R Block preparers have received special training to
help you this year. Did you know there are two different
short forms. increased deductions fo~ 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.

$6895 .

1980 FORD F-150 CUSTOM
V-8, auto., 4X4 long bed, 34,000 miles.

$6595

1980 CHEVY '12 TON SILVERADO

-

Air, tilt, AM-FM stereo, rear .slider, only 27,000 miles.

1978 FORD F-100 CUSTOM

H&amp;R .BLOCit Z

s5395

The new tax laws.
This year's number one reason to go to HaA Block.

.V-8, auto., 4X4, short bed, white spoke wheels, only 34,000 miles.
'

SEVERAL 1~83 TRUCKS IN S_TOCK

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

YOUR DEALER ON THE RIVER

SIMMONS

OLDS.-:CAD.-CHEW, Inc.
308 E. MAIN ST.

'

PH. 992-6614
MON.-FRI. 8:00 TO 7:00

POMEROY,OH.

27 SYCAMORE STREET
GAlli POLIS, OH.
Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

SAT. 9:00 TO 5:00

THE VALLEY S TflU CK HE A00UARTER S

Isears I

Also In

Soe: George Harris, Mike Anderson, Mork Wheaton, Pete
Burns,or J.R. Bibbee TODAY!

Phone 446-0303

Sears
Mon.- Thur.-Fri.
9:30 'til 5

Use
Sears
Charge
Card

Silver Bridge Plaza
446-2770

Replacen

95

Across from the Sllnr'lrld&amp;e ·Pim

50·Foot Range
Lets You Move
Room to Room!

Dtal from the base untt a nd walk and talk wtthout tangling cords Base adapts to standard
modular JaCk for wall mounting. Auto-Redial ,
"privacy" button Built-in .batteries and autorecharger. Works on any line. #43-266

8995

Department wants to

'

Telephone With 32-Number
Auto-Dialer ouaFONE-140 by Rad1o Shack

DU6FONE"
.TAD-110
by Radio Shack

9995

Switchable Tone
or Pulse Dialing

'

Never miss another call! Caii-Monttor leis you
screen calls when you 're home. Simple twolever operation, fast-forward to bypass unwanted matenal on tape. #43-245

50~Ft . Modular.
11278-365 . . . . . . . . . $5.49
100-Ft. Modular.
11278·366 . . . .
. $10.98
50-Ft. 24-Gauge Solid.
11278-372 . .
. $5.49
100-Ft. 24-Gauge Solid.
11278-373 '
. $10.95

lA! Crimper. Install modular
plugs on 4-c:ond cable

11279-388. $7.95

lSJ Modular Connectors.

Use with above Pkg.ltO
11279-384. $2.49

Modular Wall Plates &amp; Jacks \

~ mg~

1AJ

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EnJOY "hands-free" conversation , family and conlere nce
call5. Mute, volume and senst
tivily controls. Installs easily 1

fit]t· Couplers and _A(japters

~
iAJ Duplex Jack. Converts one Jack to
~ two. 11279-357 . . . . . . . . ... $6.95
~ lnline

1\!1 ." "'\)J

IAl [()j Flush-mount wall plates tor desk
phones Round. 11279·392 . . . $5.95
~ctangutar. N279-352
. . $5.95
LQJ Standard Wall Phone Plate. For
·wall mounting. *279-387 .
$7.95
101 Quick-Connect Jlick. Conven wall
block lor modu\ar plug: Spade termin.ats. #279-355 . . . .
. . ... $2.19
Above with clips N279-386 . . . $2.99
lEI Standard Jack. 11279-353 . $5.95

~tares up to 32 numbers for Instant dtaling One-button AutoRedial. Works on any phone line.
#43-2g4

4-Conductor Phone Cables

Modular Crimping Tool

Coupler. Connects two mod
hne cords. 11279.. 358 . . . . . . . . $2.95
IC! .f. "\. ICl Cord Adapter. Converts 4-prong
• · ""'_ j JBCk Ia modular N279-351
$4 .95
~ '~

Modular Handset Cords
18-Foot Catted Cord. Salin,
H279-361 Brown . H279-378
Be1ge, H279-380. WhilE,
H279-381 $5.95

Auto Dialer With
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One-bunon dialing of important or often-called
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For tone or rotary dtal lines.

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I•IDesktop Rotary-Dial. Whtte, #43-301 Be1gc,
#43-302. $39.95
Desktop Tone-Fone'" As above, wtth tone
pushbutton dialing. Betge. #43-340. $64.95
IBI"Mini" Wall Tone-Fone. Tone dialtng for ac·
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Almond, #43-307. Brown. #43-308. $69.95
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Brown, #43-304. $59.95
ic, French Style. #43-326. $59.95

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J

-

: ; The plant variety protection
;program provides marketing pro: tectlon for newly developed plant
: 'varieties. which are reproduced
seed&lt;!, ranging frOm nowers to
=:netd CI'OIIS••

BOB'S ELECTRONICS
UPPER RT. 7

(AP )

ootbe USDA's Agricultural Marketing
ofier:vice, said the proposal would
:&amp;tng the U.S. protection regula~ions - which arl' similar to
::piternatlonal patents - into line
~lth rules adopted by the hltema,. tonal Union for the Protection of
,.,New Varieties of Plants.
;:: Highley said the Unltl:d States,
• which became a member of the the
l mion In 1981, must meet the treaty
:..tNuirements of the organization if
_.,U.S. citizens "aretorecelveslmllar
privlleges In '!nion , member
1
• taunt ries."
•
rt'
. _,....
.
;~ 'The member countries Include:
.jBelgium, Canada ' Denmark,
· ~France, West Gerr my, Ireland,
'1\Italy, Japan, MeKico, Netherlands,
~l New Zealand, South _ Africa,
.. ~ Sweden. Sw~rlanfj, United King~ dom and.United' States.
· :, Highley said the proposed change
1lalso "would _allow cltizl;'ns of
l •member nat~ to receive the
,:samed protection rights in the
A 'Unlli'd States as U.S. cltlzenr
.nd
: . "would give U.S. citizens pratt Jon
~~privileges In member countries."
'~ ·

I
1.,

·6 cyl., automatic, 4X4 long bed.

;'modify rules lo protect plant
~\~reeders from certain countries.
.;: Vern F . Highley, administrator of

Stop by or call us today and see how th1s new
serviee can beneftt your operation. We can tell you
more about gatn-boosting, profit-building Sup-R-Ltx
with 32 percent protetn.

NO CLUB TO JOIN!

WASHINGTON

~griculture

T-120 BLANK TAPES
AS LOW AS

1983.

$6895

1980 CHEVY '12 TON SCOIISDALE

plement, as ot Aprl11, two COngressionally authorized ~~ per
hundredwelght''·deductions from
1
the sale of rnUk marketed in the
United States will be pub1lshed In
the Federal Register for public
comiTlllnt, according to Secretacy
of Agriculture John R. Black.
The first of these two deductions
was originally implemented on
Dec. 1, but has been barred since
Dec. 21 by a federal district court In
COlumbls, S. C. Block said the decision to seek comments on the prop.
osa!s Is In view of 'the court
Injunction.
"It was the Intent of Congress
that we Implement these deductions," Block said. "They are the
only tools we cunently have to
offset the excessive cost to the taxpayer of the daicy prtee support
· program. These costs now exceed
$2 bllllon annually, and they w1ll
continue heading In the wrong direction as long as there are no Incentives for cutting production.
"Government attorneys will continue to press our position concernIng the legality of the orlg!nal
deduction that was effective last
Dec. 1. U this position Is ultimately
· upheld In court, then we Intend to
collect the first deduction for the
Dec . 1 to April 1 period
retroactively."
Block said the proposal for a se~- cond deduction will also Include
provisions for a 50-cent per hun., dredweight refund to producers
~ who reduce their commercial mar~ ketings frOm quantities marketed
; during a designated base period.
: 'The proposal will he published In
:: the Federal Register next week and
z pubi!C comment wm be accepted
• for 30 days following .publication.

'"-

$49900

PV-5500

We'd like to thank you tor your business In
. 1982. Boao Agri-Center, Inc. appreciates your
patronage and we're proud to add this new
product to tl\e list of what we can offer tor

diversion, but wants to be assured
ot participation In the lo-:JJ percent
PlK In event his tull base bid is not
accepted, he needs to sign two con- ·
tracts with ASCS: one for tu11 base
· bid and one for the 10.30 percent
PlK. The latter will be cancelled by
ASCS H the former Is accepted.
6 - The PlK Program has been
Implemented by executive order of
the President. 'There has been no
fac!lltating legislation. This means
that many rather complicated pro.
visions have been Included In order
to avoid legal problems. However,
unexpected
legal problem• are
'
likely to surface as the program
proceeds, requiring ll)odlflcation In
program provisions. Because the
· participant has a no penalty cancellation option If the program Is
changed, the risk to people signing
up Is low. However, a legal challenge could be mounted regarding
· the entire program which might result In an Injunction and perhaps
program cancellation.

.

(.

Mttc ro
ctose·uP

VldeoLlp•ng rAN 1-'K / IJ

Panaaonlc ·a

Introducing Sup-R-Lix 32% Protein
8oso Agrt-Center, Inc. introduces Purina's
Sup-R-Ux high protein supplement which has
bean developed to meet the needs of any
operation.
· Sup-R-Lix provides superior brood cow
performance by delivering a homogenized balance
of nutrients in a low motsture blend. It's
concentrated htgh energy nutrition!
This "superstar" of liquid supplements features :
· - Superior performance at reduced cost.
- Homogenized balance of essential nutrients.
- Less moisture. ·
- More energy.
- Greater i~gredtent stability without agitation
- Less equtpment corroston.

5 - U a farmer wants to put his
tull tiase acreage up for bid for PlK

27,000 actual miles, diesel, automatic.

•
'
:Department wants .·
:to modify rules

&lt;tblr left or nght ~ •de
mounted eii!'Ctr on •c

SPECIAL BUY '

lhe superstar feed supplement

programs.

1981 GMC '12 TON .

~

1. Columtw Whlt&lt;&gt;hall. IIHI, bf &lt;~~l Pick·
cr ln ielon ~'hl2

~J]!~Irl-------------------------·--------------

.

CUT 26%
RoadHandler
All-Terrain

LP:dn~on Saturda ~·

How they fared ...

seem highly likely. thus, there may
be a positive local market impact
on cash grain prlces during the PIK
deulery period In areas where PIK
participation Is high relative to past
participation In CCC loan ·

GAWPOLIS- Proposals to Im-

AqulnM 61-Si'
7, Porlsrrou ttl, 14-.1, bt&gt;at Hillsboro 86-

8. YourucstCM'n Raym ll-5, tx&gt;at 'r'O.niji·

Cent ral Dl\lskm

Atlanta
Detroit
Otlcago
Indiana

Mllr&gt;aJ.~

5, Coldwa!('(', 16-2. lOst to St Henry

The

THE WAY WITH

·· Agriculture and our community

Scoreboard ...
Na&amp;klnal O.kdhall Aslin.

W. Va.

Ohio Point

1983

,.,...., 13, 1983

'

' ' ""' , ""' m., '"''

�Page-C8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

February 13, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OhiO"--Point Plea10nl, W. Va.

It's planting
•
season
time
Dairy school slated Feb. 24
Meigs County agent 's. corner

By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY -Pesticide Recertification This Week -Anyone who
has a pesticide applicator's card
&gt;houid check their card to see If it
(•xpires in 1!&amp;. 1f it does then you
should pian to attend the pesticide
recertification meeting this Tuesday. Feb. 15, at the Meigs County
Extens ion Office. This m eeting is
only for those who a lready have a
c''fd that Is about to expire. There
11 be two s0sslons. You can attend
'herfromlto4p.m.or7to !Op.m .
Please 0all our office at 992-6696 to
make a reservation to attend.
U you would like to take the test to
bt'come cert ified for the first time
or if you have let your card expire
then you need to attend the pesticide training for new applicators to
be held on Tuesday, Ma rch I, at t he
&lt;;hesh ire -Kyger Ele m entary
School in Cheshire. Once again you
can attend either from 1 to4 p.m . or
7 td lOp.m. Call usa \992-6696!1 you
would like to make a reservation to
attend this session.
Dairy School Coming Up - T he
Dairy Science Road Show w!ll be
coming to Meigs County on Thurs·
day, Feb. 24, starting at 10 a.m. at
the Meigs Inn. This is an excellent
program which has been put together by several of the dairy specialists at Ohio State University.
Speakers and their topics will in·
el ude: Computers in Dairy Herd
Mana gement - Terry R. Smith,
Extension Specialist, Dairy Farm
Management ; Breeding Programs
for Milk Components - Peter W.
Spike. Extension Spetialist, Dairy
Breeding; Increasing Dairy Profits
- Donald E. Pritchard, Extension
Specialist. Dairy Physiology and
Management ; Somatic CeU Counts
and Their Use- Robert M. Porter,
Ex tension Specialist. Dairy Rei:o rds and Harry L. Barr. Extension Specialist. Reproductive
P hysiology.
I would like to invite everyone not
only fro m Meigs County but also
(\ thens and Mason County to come
and join us.
!RAs - Beginning with 1982,
nearly a ny individual with earned
Income can put up to $2,000 Into an
Individua l retirem e nt account
(IRA) and this amount can then be
Qeducted from taxable income for
the year . In addition, If one of the
spouses did not h ave any income of

thelr own, a tota l of $2,250 may be
put Into an IRA and up to $2,000
may be credited for either spouse.
Also, If both spouses have earned
income they may each put up to
$2,000 Into an IRA. In any case the
amount contributed to the IRA may
not exceed the amount of earned
income lor the year.
Some farm families who are In·
terested In having the spouse have
a separate IRA may wish 1Q begin
making payments from the farm
business to the spouse for theE"
work In the farm business. For example, If a wife normally keeps the
records In the farm business, It
may be reasonable to pay her a certain amount each month for the
time spent working on the records.
If this amounted to $2,000 for the
year then she would be able to take
that lull amount and put it into an
IRA If she so desires. However, this
is not considered earned Income for
purposes of the two-earner m anied
couple exemption. Neither Is It subject to Social Security tax.
For the Life of Seed - How long
are your garden seed goOd? Seems
that most of us with a small garden
area In the backyard end up buying
far more seed then we can use.
And, most of us are conservative or
we wouldn't be planting a garden In
the flrst place. So, what about those
seed left over from last year?
First, let me remind you that hybrid seed should be purchased annua ly. Planting saved seed from
hybrids planted last year could revert back to one of the parents of
the hybrid. Many times the selections or combinations that make a
good hybrid are not the best
Individuals.
Leftover vegetable seeds stored
In a cool. dry place may he good for
several years , however, depending
on the type of seed.
Comparatively short-lived seed ,
usually from one to two years, are
those of corn, leek, onion, parsley ,
parsnip and salslty.
. You can determine If stored seed
are stUI good with a germination
test. Use clean, coarse sand ., vermiculite or jllty J;l1ix for the germ!·
nating medium. The medium
should be moist but not soggy wet.
Broadcast small seed over .the germinating medium surface. Seed
medium sized and large seed In
rows and cover. Place the seeded
container In a plastic tent and keep
It in a warm place (70 to 75 degrees

By KERRY MARTIN
District Technician
Gallla SoU and Water
Conservation District
GAlLIPOLIS -It's that time of
year to prepare for the '83 planting
season . For many of you this
means getting out the plows and the
discs to prepare for all those trips
back and forth across the fields, us·
ing up valuable time and using a lot
ot costly fuel. · .
.
But most Important, Is ihat the
top. soU, which is the most lmpor·
tant factor In crop production, is left
In a highly erodable condition. But
when a no-tillage tool IS used, erosion potential is greatly reduced as
is the fuel consumption, and t)lere Is
more time left over to do the many
otber chores that are found around
the farm.
Let's get back to erosion, I would
like to give an example. Suppose
you have a 20 acre corn field that
has an average slope of five percent
and slope length ol150 feet, and you
plant on the contour with conven·
tiona! methods. The soU loss would
be nine tons /acre/year, this means
that 1~ tons would be lost from this
20 acre field. Now If this same field
were planted the no-tUiage way, the
soU loss would only be 1.5 tons/one
acre/one year. So the tons of soU
saved would be 150 tons/ acre/year.
Also. in the last lew years a
monetary value of $35/ ion has been
placed on the nutrients that are con·
talned in each ton of top soU, so If 150
tons of 1Qp soil were saved there
would be about $5,000 In nutritional
value that would also be saved.
So, if you would like to try no-tUI
this year, or lf you are already a
nori-tlller and would like to use the
no-lUI corn planter that the Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation Dis·
trict has avaUable lor use on a rental basts, give us acallat44&amp;-8687or
stop In and see us at 529 Jackson
Pike, Room Jffi.C In the Spring Val·
ley Plaza. We are looking forward
to working with you, and we'll be
happy to a nswer any questions you
m ay have. See you tn planting

BUY NOW.•. GET A
$10 GOLDEN CHECK!
Jack Nicklaus,
the Golden Bear, says:

Gov. Celeste hears
tax hike complaints

"Now's the time to get
your insulation up to'
par with Manville
Gold fiber glass!"
Buy 10 BestPak bags (Fl-19
or higher) between January
· 29 and February 27 and you
can get a GOLDEN CHECK
worth $10 in merchandise at
our store. Get your Official
Application Coupon nowf

CAROLINA LUMBER&amp; ·
SUPPLY ·coMPANY
675-1160

312 Sixth Street

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Monday . Friday 8 a.m. · 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. · 12 noon.

MINGLING Wll'JI THE CROWD- Oblo pver-' state Ualvemlty. Celeste, speaking to a capaelty
· nor IUchard Celeate sbalt.. bands wllh a l1lllll who crowd, spoke on his plan to balance Ohio's budget.
hesrd him speak Friday afternoon ·at Younptown (AP Laserphoto ).

I
I'

.
"CASH IN" ON THESE FEBRUARY CASH &amp; CARRY
SPECIALS AT BOSO AGRI-CENTER
.

15\lz Ga.
GAUCHO
BARB
WIRE

$1705

$2395. $3250

· STEEL FENCE
5 FT ............................. 12.00
S\12 Ft . ............................ 12.20
6 Ft. ............................ 12.40
6\12 Ft. ............................ 12.60
7Ft. ............................ 12.75

By .JAMES GERSTENZANG
A.!l!lodated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) President Reagan,
described as noncommltal on a European proposal
for an Interim arms reduction agreement, says he is
"deeply enco~raged" by reports of allied unity 011
deployment of U.S. missiles In Europe.
, Reagan, V,lce President George Bush and
Secretary of State George P. Shultz conferred Friday
• aboUt the trlp Bush just completed throughout
western Europe and about Shultz' just-ended visit to
China, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong.
"I am deeply encouraged by the report that tlie vice
president has given me," Reagan said In a wrttten
· statement. " We and our allies are as one In wanting
genuine arms control and In our commitment 1Q the
: dual track decision" 1Q negotiate reductions while
going ahe;id with plans. to deploy the new weapons.
The North Atlaritlc Treaty Organization is planning
to deploy 572 Pershing II and cruise mlssUes;
beginning late this year,ln western Europe.
· The president has proposed that If the Soviets
. , dismantle their ss-:m and other medium-range

16 FT.' HOG PANEL

12\lz Ga.
LUNDY
BARB
WIRE

16 Ft. Combination Panel

$2150

#56

48" Electric Fence Post

.WEED
CLIPPER
FENCER

75¢ EA .

$ ""~~·'~

11•

Mile Electric
Fence Wire
'
$725

WARREN, Ohio (AP) - Gov. Fuchard Celeste
and Sl;'vere."
·says he IS willing to "take the heat" whue stumping
Andrew Tu!'Scak of Campbell told Celeste, "I'm a
the slate In search of support for proposed tax
Democrat and I'm sorry I voted for you. You guys are
lncre.a ses and state govermnent spending cuts.
spending money !Ike drunken sailors."
Celeste stopped Friday at Youngstown and
Joseph Doyle of Younstown held up a Celeste
.Warren, where unemployment exceeds 20 percent,
ei}.mpalgn brochure and told the governor, "My
and met with som e vocal critics of his plan to avoid a
children are about your age, and they are having 1Q
$528 mUllon deficit by chopplng $282 million from the
live at home with m e. l don'tthlnk my children will be
general fulld while boosting the Income tax
better off with a 90 percent Increase In the Income
permanently by 90 percent.
tax."
At a gathering of about 130 people, mostly
"I don't ask anyone to like It, or fee! good about" It,
goverrunent and business officials, at the Trumbull
replled Celeste, a Democrat. "I just ask you 1Q
County Administration BuUding, the governor said . understand the realities."
he wUI not change his mind about the tax proposal.
The House, controlled by Democrats and voting
"My best judgment for the future Is that In the next
along party lines, Thursday passed the bill 1Q
two years. we will need this tax," Celeste said. "I'd
permanently increase the income tax by 90 percent
rather lake the heat from saying that this IS what we
and temp6rarUy boost the utility excise tax.
need. I want you all 1Q hold me a ccountable for
The bUI now Is before the Senate, also con trailed by
spending the money weD."
Democrats, but by a slimmer margin.
Ron Glowzlnskl, an employee of General MotOI'S' ,_ ·''No-one has 'ever asked for i~to be easyln'thls (!he•• ,.
P ackard Electric Co. In Warren, urged the governor
Mahonlng) valley, but to get jobs back we have 1Qget_,
1Q make the tax temporary.
back on solid ground," Celeste said.
"I think we are aU willing to pay our falr share to
The governor warned that without the tax Increase,
solve this problem, but to assume It will be an ongoing
current tax and spending levels would mean state
problem is a hard pill to swallow," Giowzlnskl said.
government deficits of $1 biUlon next year and $1.5
At a ''town meeting" on the Youngstown State
billlon In two years.
University campus earlier In the day, Celeste took 1Q
Celeste is putting togeth(;'r his biennial budget ·
a podium beefore a standing room only audience of
proposal lor 1983-85. He said he .wjll seek tax reform.
about 2,500 and said the state budget problem Is "real ·

Reagan ·'encouraged'
by allied unity report

. I

season.

F.) . After the seed germinate, you
can determine if a high enough percentage of the number planted germinated to warrant the risk of
planting them in the garden this
spring.

·

missiles In Europe, the western a lliance would cancel
the new deployment.
The Soviets, in turnn, have offered to reduce their
European arsenal of medium-range, nuclear-armed
missiles to 162, the number of such weapons deployed
by Britain 'and Franc;e.
.
Bush said In London on Thursctay before flying
home that aUied leaders were Interested In an lnterlno
missUe reduction agreement with the Soviets as a
first step toward an overall ban of the weapons.
Asked Friday how the president reacted to this
proposal, Bush told reporters at the White House: "I
don't think he'd rule anything In or out."
The United States Is negotiating with the Soviet
Union In ~neva over both medium-and long-range
missile reductions.
Reagan said Shultz completed " an extremly
succesSful" trip. It was Intended to smooth relations
with U.S. aUlesin the Far East. It was Shultz' first trip
there since becoming secretary of state, and also
provided him an opportunity to confer with the top
leaders, of the Peoples Republic of China.

apcl" by reporta allied unity on deploymeat of U.S.
the trips of SecretOI')' of Slate George Shaltz, ml8811es In Europe. Bush's trip took him to Europe ·
left, aucl Vice President George Bush at the White whDe Shultz traveled to the Far East. (AP
HoWie Frlday1 Reagan said he was "deeply enoolll'- . Laserphoto ).

DISCUSSING TRIPS - Presldenl Reagan dJs..

CIISIIe8

·chessie to .village:
move it or lose it
White Salt Block ............. ~P.l~•..'.3.25
T.M. Salt Block...............~Q.!Q, ..$.4.05
T.M. Salt Bag ................. ~P.JP...$3.70
Special Mixing Salt.. ........~Q .llh. ~3.45
Water Softener Pellet ...... jP.J~•..$.3.45
Safe-T-Salt .................... J.Q .IJI..... .79
.
Safe-T-Salt.. ........ ......... .~.~ .IR-.. ~1.90
Ice Melter Salt .............. J.Q .IP.-.. !2.50
3 in 1 Block ..... ... ..... .....49.!~, ..~6.05
H.E.P. Block ... .. .......... }t~3. !L~5.15
Mol Mag Block ...............40.lb •..'.6.60
Horse Block............... )~t~J~:. ~5.60
Rumensin.Block... .......... AQ.l~,. ~7.95
37% Protein Block........ ~-3~;(3))L ~4.05
R.O.L Block .... .... ... ... ... .~.Q JJI... ~5.55

This sharp sedan has cruise control, rear defroster, delay wipers, wire wheel coversand
custom cloth seats, only 23,619 low miles.

BLUE DEATH
RAT BAIT
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sps

CUTTER PASTE

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This bu~~undy sedan has custom cloth interior, air cond ., cruise control, tilt wheel,
28.080 low miles, compare anywhere.
·

HORSE
WORMER

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Tingley PVC Boot. ................. ~10.95
Tingley Top lace Boot ............~17.95
Tingley' Rain Suit. .....................~ggs
Lacrosse Pull Over Boot. ...... ....!9.95
Lacrosse 5 Buckle Artie. ......... ~22.95

.
60,000 BTU In-line
Space Heater........ ~ ......~28700
Line
97,000
Heater.............. ~ 31goo

; •;unleM IDcaJ efforts to move 1111d preserve It are sue·

SPACE HEATER

By JACK A. SEAMONDS
Asrsoclated Press Writer
TOLEDO, Ohio (APl -The liquidation of a Toledo
· : . ' brokerage firm clOsed ln a ~ million collapse is
1
; ; under way with the naming of a trustee, who told
. customers that aU means of getting thelr money back
' , would be pursued.
· '
' 1
"I feel like I've been robbed by a man with a paper
pistol," one customer told U.S. District Judge
Nlcholas .WaUnskl during a brief hearing In federal
c:ourt Friday. " And he's still walking the streets."
Edward P . Wolfram Jr., the managing partner of
the Toledo brokerage finn of Bell &amp; Beckwith Inc., Is
. the focus of Investigations Into.. the collapse of the .

S54900

DUST

$2.05
$7.95

DYNE
Gal.

$8 95

SUPERSAN
Gal.

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AM

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A¥. $145 -

CASH 'N CARRY

,
'
•

OVER .40 SHARP LATE MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

renehtown Car Ca.
446-0069 or 446-0691

1640
EASTERN AVE

BOSO A.GRI-CENTER, INC.
THIRD AND SYCAMORE

OOMiul. Carol Pamer Ia worldncto secure the buDd·
log from the Chet!Jle System and have It moved to
another}llot. (AP Wirephoto).

from people who want to he lp- enough for plywood
and nails."
Eight years ago, the Seville Chamber of
Commer ce tried to buy the depot and was told it
would cost $1 to secure the contract. The chamber
paid the $1 but lost interest ln the project , Ms. Pamer
said.
In January , Ms. Pamer renewed efforts 1Q get the :
depot.
. Chessie Division manager Robert Guess wid her :
that If she would remove the depot, she could have It :
lor free. Ten days later, she received a letter from :
Chessle.
"The condition of this structure Indicates that it
razed, " the letter said. " For that reason, as weU as:
the closeness of the structure to a live track, we rould :
-not entertain the sale of this buUdlng for occupancy." ·
If Ms. Pamer or the village could guarantee that :
the depot would be removed, the letter said, the :
· railroad would consider a contract to sell the building. ·
The letter said If no contract w as signed by:
Monday, Chessle would have a crew tear down the;
structure.

be:

Trustee.named in
Bell &amp; Beckwith case

150,000 BTU Air Scoop

CATTLE
1 lb.
5 lb.

.
DEPOT CRUSADE- SeviDe, Ohlo'a 119-year, :old Baldmore li Ohio Railroad depot faces demolition

.

SEVILLE, Ohio (AP) - Officials of the Chessie
Systein say they'll be happy to sell the old Baltlnoore
&amp; Ohio railroad depot to Carol Pamer. At one point,
they even offered to give It to her.
All she has to ,do is move it - by Monday.
"I don't know what thelr hurry is," said Ms.
Pamer, who owns a restaurant in the Medina County
vUiage. She hopes to use the 109-year-old depot as a
.
history museum for Seville.
Ms. Panier wants to house antiques, turn-of-thecentury photographs of Seville and memorabilia of
Captain Martin Van Buren Bates and hiS wife, Anna,
who were credited with settling the v Ulage in 1873.
Bateswas 7-foot-9 and weighed 470 pounds. His wlfe ·
was 7-foot-11 and weighed 413 pounds .
Ms. Pamer.said she contacted the firm that moves
old houses Into Hale Farm and Village In Surrunlt
County and was told it would take $15,000 to move the
depot.
.
"If we can get ·a thr~r a six-month extension
Monday, I'll ha ve the building boarded up Tuesday,"
Ms. Pamer said. "We've had enoug h money come ln

•

;

~·

:
'

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

:
•
.,

'

''

company~

.

•• Bell &amp; Beckwith, founded In 1898, was suddenly
~ • shut down Monday by federal securities lnvestlga• tors, who uncovered $21 million missing and one day
later rals€d the total to~ rnUUon. The losses may go
~' higher, Securities &amp; Exchange Commission offtcials
:, said. ·
: Walbiskl appointed Toledo lawyer Patrick A. ·
' .
· , McGraw to oversee the largest Insolvency ln the
' ' 12-~ar hlstoly of the federal Secu_rltles IIIVestQrs
: Protection Corp. The agency protects the accounts of
·',securities Investors.
: , ~U &amp; Beckwith customers got few answers from
•; McGraw, who said It was too early for him to advise
them about the status their accounts.
The
money was In accounts In the name ot

rnJss1ni

or

Wolfram and his wife, Zula, and In the names of
corpora lions controlled by her .
Theodore Focht, general counsel for the Securities
Investors Protection Corp., said BeD &amp; Beckwith wiD
be liquidated arid the assets di~bursed to customers .
He assured them that SIPC covers security
accounts up 1Q $500,000 and cash ·accounts up 1Q
$100,000.
. However, .a question remains over whether cash
placed with Bell &amp; BeCkwith for a purpose other than
to purchase securities will be covered by SIPC.
The SIPC Insure., money-market accountscreated
to purchase stocks .or lx&gt;nds, Focht said. Many
customers said they made deposits Into "money
management" accounts that were pooled, but not for
buying securities .
McGraw said that as trustee he Would go after aU
assets ·In the case, Including personal assets of the ·
partners. If necessary, to resolve the losses.
"We wUl pursue all roads, no matter where they .
lead, " McGraw said. " We are going to pursue this
matter to the end."
,
The personal assets of Zula and Edward Wolfram
are being transferred to Bell &amp; Beckwith, Focht Sllid.
Those assets include a hotel-casino Jn Las Vegas,
property south of Toledo and a horse farm ill Ocala,
Fla.
.
GIVING nw !IPECIFIOJ - '11leodore ........,...
Wallnskl said the 11\!rsonal assets of other general
partners In tile firm may also be seized tc satisfy the
cea&amp;er, - e n qu #0111 followlal a llearlal~
debt.
.
CJII tile baarkupt BeD and Beckwith lllc. brokerqe

col...e.Foda II paenl,c o.-1 lorthefedenl

Securities lnveston Protection Corp. (AP
Luerpboto ).

,•·L-~--------------------------------------------.------.----------------------------~----------------------------------------~
\;
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I

�. 13, 1983

Business

y
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j

I

graduaies. Holding copies of tbe books are, from left,
COMPLETE DISTRIBUTION - Central Tntst
George Woodward Jr., Central Trust consumer loan
Co. recently completed distribution of senior class
source hooks called "On Our Own in Gallia County" to officer and marketing director; Mlcltael Hunt,
representing Gallia Academy IUgb School; Mary
high school seniors in cooperative special needs
worksludy programs of G aliipolis City and Galli a Clagg, Southwestern lfigh School representative;
and Jim Williams, Central Trust president.
County Local school dl!;tricts. The sourcebooks
provide per1\JI&lt;'nt, independent Uving skills data for .

Son ·o f GAHS graduate ·
tries career in Hollywood

CTNCINJ"ATl (AP) .,... Xavier
University is looking for a dean fQr
Its business school and officials hope
to lure someone from tbe business
world, even though taking the job
likely would mean a pay cut.
A nine-member search commit·
tee has placed an ad in Forbes, the
business magazine, seeking a dean.
The$6,600ad covers a thirdofapage
in the bi-weekly magazine, which
has about 700,tnl s ubscribers.
The Rev. Charles Currie, president of Xavier, a private Jesuit
institution of 7,001 undergraduate
and graduate studenls. said the
school wants a business leader to
run Its College of Bilslness
Administration.
Currie said it's not unusual for a
business leader to leave his finn for
an academic role and tbat he
wouldn't be surprised if someone
took a salary cut to become college
dean, a post that pays $40,001.
"But the main purpose in
contacting business executives Is to

see if they know of anyone who
might be Interested in tbe dean·
ship," he saki.
The university also has placed
ads for a dean in tbe Chronicle of
Higher Education and has notified
deans or major business colleges
across the rountry, said John
Minahan, academic vice president.
"We are searching nationally for
someone with a proven record who
can understand the needs of this
business community as It relates to
the needs .of education - somone
who wi)l carry on the tradition of
partnership at Xavier between
business and education," Minahan
said.
"We have a recru'ament strategy
of bringing a first-rate dean to carry
on with a first-rate tradition of
business education," he said.
One of the new dean's major jobs
will be studying the posslbl!ty of
gaining accreditation from the
American Assembly of Collegiate

Schools of Business, Xavterofflclals · ·
said. Altbough Xavier Is an asso- ·
elate member of
organi2;1tlon, ·
It is not accredited because Its
faculty Is too small.
·
"We are trying to find a person ·
who can help us get tbat accredita· ~
lion, someone who will do tbe idnd of
studies- the pros and cons- to get
us into AACSB," Minahan saki.

that

There are 1,001 undergraduates
enrolled in Xavi~r·s college of
business "dminlstratlon and 1,1Qlln
the graduate program. Ninety of
those In the graduate program are ·
full -tln\e students, witll the rest •
holding jobs In area businesses
while attending night and weekend
classes.
Thomas Hailstones, who was
named chairman ofthedeparbnent
of economics and business when he
arrived at Xavier in 1952, has
announced his retirement. Hallstones became dean of tbe business
college In 1961.

Business Briefs:
Autlwrizes stock distribution
GREENVfLLE. S.C. - Multimedia, Inc.'s board of directors
have authorized a 50 percent common stock distribution. ·
One addi tiona! share will be issued for each two shares of common
stock owned on Feb. 1. The distribution will be made Feb. 15. ·Cash
will be paid in lieu of fractional shares.
The previously announced dividend has been adjusted to 13 cents
per share to account for the stock distribution and also will be
payable Feb. 15 to record holders as of Feb. 1. The dividend rate
represents an 11 percent increase over the former dividend payout
as adjusted for stock distribution.
·
Multimedia publishes the Sunday Times-Sentinel, Pom~roy·
Middleport Daily Sentinel , Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Point
P leasant Register.

Foote reports $1.4 million loss
EXTON, Pa. - A net loss of $1,405,tnl for the fourtb quarter of
1982, compared with a net profit of$1,891,001, or 22 cents per common
share, in unaudited earnings reported by Foote Mineral Co.
Sales were $24,:JJ9,001, compared with $38,738,001 in the 1981
quarter.
The year's net loss in 1982 was $3,730,001, compared with a net
profit of $9,556,tnl, or $1.19 per common share In the same period in
1981. Twelve months · sales were $124,813,001 in 1982, compared with
$1&amp;'&gt;.297,tnl in 1981.

. Enters development agreement
FORT WORTII . Texas - Radio Shack has entered into a
devlopment and marketing agreement with Science Research
Associates of Chicago, Ill., for the production of microcomputer
courseware products for elementary, high school and college
markets.
Radio Shack will assist in preparing instructional materials for Its
TRS-80 m icrocomputer and Color Computer, as weil as assisting
SRA in educational demonstrations and displays at major
educational shows and conventions.
. I

-IRS to answer. tax question$
GALLIPOLIS · ~ As part of IRS' tDutreach program, an IRS
representative will answer taxpayers' questions and Instruct
taxpayers In tbe preparation of their own tax returns at tbe
Gallipolis Development Center Activity Center on Feb. 17 and
rylarch 17.
· The following forms will. be discussed at specified&gt;.times: 1040EZ,
1j) a.m:'; 1040A. 11 a .m .; 1040, noon. '
ScheduleS C and F will not be prepared at this location.

· J.,umber firm expands operations
EIGHTY -FOUR. Pa. - A capital budget of $24,203,&lt;XXI has been
planned by 84 Lumber Co. In 1983, with funds targeted for
development Jt 40 new 84 Lumber stores.
·
In 1982, the company opened 28 new stores, raising Its operating
company up to ·a total of 364 stores In 39 states. The expansion
program wUI gmerate a 38 percent over 1982.

·'

programs in 14states. The company
employs more tban 700.
Goodyear engineers. produces
and sells a wide range of rubber,
metal and plastic products as well
as high technology lines for aerospace, defense and nuclear energy
applications.
If the m erger is approved by the
shareholders of both companies,
Celeron would become a wholly
owned subsidiary of Goodyear. The
m erger also Is _subject to federal
approval.
. Goodyear officials said management of Ce!Pron would remain
intact and that Gale L. Galloway,
president and chief executive
officer of Celeron, would become a
member of Goodyear's board of
directors and report to Robert E .
Mercer, chief executive officer of
Goodyear. Sales and earnings for
Celeron were not immediately
available, a company spokesman
sai d.
Goodyear, which employs about
l31,00J people worldwide, announced more than a year ago that It
had created a task force to study
divers ification. Officials said the
merger with Celeron is an out-growth of the task force and follows
the company's plan to continue as
the world's top tire producer while
cutting dependence on the automotive field.
GoodYear' s worldwid~ earnings
of $264.8 milllon were 1. 7 percent
higher than the $260.3 mlll!on
reported in 1981. Earnings per share
wereequalwlth tbe$3.59reported in
1981. Worldw!d€ sales for the year
dipped 5.1 percent from a record
$9.15 billion in 1981 to $8.69 blllion in
1982.
Earnings for the fourtb quarter of
198:1 jumped 8.2 percent to $49.7
million or 67 cents a share,
compared with $46 mill!on or 63
cents a share In the year-ago period.
Sales of $2.09 bill!on in the fourth
quarter of 1982 were off 7.3 percent
from the last period of 1981. when
sales of$2.25 bllllon were reported.
In the United States, Goodyear
posted higher sales and earnings in
the · fourth quarter. despite a
widespread recession.
The company reported earnings
of$55.2 million from U.S. operations
for tbe fourth quarter. That was 86.8
percent above the $29.5 million in
U.S. earnings reported for the
fourth quarter-In 1981.
U.S. sales in the fourth quarter of
$1.25 billion were a record and were
' silghtly higher tban the $1.24 billion
reported In the same period of 1981.
Fqr 1982, Goodyear's U.S. earnings rose 38.2 percent to a record
$233.6 mililon, compared with $100
mlll!on a year ago. -Included In the
1982 earnings were 'tlje proceeds on
the sale of the Goodyear Bank and ·
the effect of reduced pension costs.
sales for tbe year were$5.24
billion, compared with 1981 sales of
$5.27 billion. ·
· ,Mercer said two chief .f actors in
the solid U.S. sales ·and earnings
were tbe strong replacement auto
tire market and !be performance by
the subskl!ary Goodyear Aerospace
Corp., which achieved Its highest
sales ever.
He said Goodyear Aerospace is
. working on two of ItS 'largest
contracts in postwar history. It Is
providing Captor mines for the U .S.
-Navy 1111d centrifuges to the
Department or Energy.

u.s.

By J. SJ\MUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - He's the grandson of a ·Galllpolltan. His mother
was grl\dua ted from Galli a
Academy High School. He I$ Lance
Duebea, stili trying to break into
the movies.

page is almost full of Ph, D''s .
There's one Doctor of Musical
Arts; all otbers are Ph. D's. She got
her B. S. degree from Rio Grande
College, and her M. Ed . degree
from Ohio University. The major
for her Ph. D. was education. ·

LANCE IS 'IHE grandson of
Mabel Saunders of Gallipolis ,
Lance Is the son of Earlene (Saunders) Dullea, the GAHS graduate
who lived In Gallipolis until she was
graduated from high school. She
and her husband, Raymond, and
daughter, Marsha, now Uve in La ·
fayette, Indiana.

FRANK HILL contributes this
fact:
Believe It or not, we could lose the
land in IInne where the old courthouse stood If we don 't eventually
rebuild. Unless tlie deed has been
changed when Samuel F. Vinton
and J . P. R. Bureau gave.the lots to
the county, tbere was a clause
· which read tbat if the land was used
for anything other than a courthouse or jail, It would revert back to
VInton's and Bureau's heirs. Therefore, we had better get busy and
rebuild soon.

A CLIPPING COMES with the
notes - a cUpping from John Nor·
berg's column In the Lafayette, In·
diana, Jourrial and Cdur!er. And
there's a _two-column photo of
McCutcheon Grad Lance Dubea.
Norberg writes about how this
young man happened togotoHollywood. He quoted Lance Dubea
thus:
"IJUSTPACKEDthecarupand ·

went out there," to Hollywood, he
said, ·" and my Dad drove out wltb
me and flew back. My parents have
some friends out there: We stayed
with them for a few days. Then I
· found myself an apartment and
moved lrt _"

Goodyear expanding through
• •
•
gas transmission · service
pressed worldwide economy.
Each outstanding ·share of Celeron common stock will be
exchanged for 1.15 shares of
Goodyear common stock under the
terms of tbe merger. Goodyear
currently is paying a dividend of
$1.40 a year. Celerot\ Is paying 68
cents.
The transaction is designed to be
tax free toCeleron sharehofders and
be accounted for by Goodyear as a
''pooling of interests," Goodyear
said.
Ceieron operates natural-gas
transmission systems, principally
in Leu is lana, and also is involved In
oil and naturall-gas related activities and exchanges in onshore and
offshore exploration and production

.

'

''

DUBEA HAS .BEEN in Hollywood for only six months, tbe clipping reads. But he's had some
success. He's represented by a
good talent agency, whk:.h Is trying
to get him jobs In commercials.
A,ut he's had a walk-on role on a
daytime soap opera.

J

HE WAS ON "Days
Our
Lives" eating a turkey sandwich In
a hospital cafeteria Thanksgiving
Day. The odds are stacked against
his making it big In Hollywood . Ta"i. entalone is not enough.
CHRIS~

FRALEY Epling
has won her Doctor of Philosophy
!Iegree from Marshall University.
Sister of Larry Fraley, who made
all-Ohio lineman at football while
he was a Blue DevU at Gallla
Academy High School, Mrs. Epling
lists her home .a s Huntlnglon. It 's a
xeroxed · page - page seven from Sdme publication, sucl\ as a
cor'nmencement program, and the

DOUGLAS J . Wetherholt,
former Gallipolis and former City
Cdmmissioner, was recently honored by professional journalists
and journalism students in Baton
Rouge, Lculs!B)UI, where he Is assistant professor in the Louisiana
State University School of
Journalism.

THE SOUTIIEAST Lculsiana
chapter or Society of Professional
Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi, recently elected Wetherholt president
for tbe ensuing year. This chapter
is comprised of professional journalists in Baton Rouge and the surrounding parishes or
approximately 70 journalists and
media executives.
AT LSU WETHERHOLT was
elected by the students to Kappa
Tau Alpha, journalism honorary society. Wetherholt Is also president
of the LSU High Twelve Club, a Ma.
sonic service club, tor the current
year.

The

Times-Sentinel

AT&amp;T acquisition
new data move

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary

Catholic university .searches
for business school chief

AKRON. Ohio (API - The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.. the
world's largest tiremaker, said
TUesday that it will acquire the
Celeron Corp. of Lafayette, La .. an
operator of natural-gas translilis·
sian systems.
The transaction is valued at about
$825 million, based on Goodyear's
stock closing price Monday of
$.13.37 \2. Trading on Goodyear
stock was temporarily halted Tuesday on the New York Stock
Exchange, pending the armouncement by officials of Goodyear and
Celeron.
Goodyear also reported record
earnings of $21&gt;4 .8 million for 1982
despite lower sales and what
company officials called a de-

Ohi-Point Plea10nt, W. Vo.

By JAMES PEL'IZ

AT &amp;T OJX•n&lt;'l.i lll&lt; • fir,;T IPl! ol- its
pla nnf'\1 77~· mil C' \ YStt'm thui will
NEW YORK (AP) -Theopening
connect lh&lt;· rloston. )'\(•W York.
of American Telephone &amp; Tele·
Philadelphi a . w;IShin &gt;.~on a nd
graph Co.'s fiber-opt ic t ransm isslon
Richmond. Vu .. met mpolitun arms
system a long the East Coast this
by 19H4 . Thl• nrst connec tion.
past week marks a ma jor step in the
cover ing 372 mi!('S, &lt;·xtmds from
rap.idly expanding use aflightwaves
Washington to New York.
to mo ve voice a nd d a ta
Although AT&amp;T and some other
comm unications.
telephone companies ha ve used
F iber-optic systems tra nsmit
fiber optics hcforc. AT&amp;T's latest
voice and data through rapid pulscs
hookup is the mos t a mbitious.
of light that travel through hair-thin
system to da le. MCI Communicaglass fibers. They arr cons idered
tions Corp.. howeve r. also is
better than traditional copper
planning to connec t New York a nd~
cables beca11se they arc lig ht er,
Washington wilh a fihcr-optics line. ·
smaller , can car ry subs ta nti a lly
The prospect of using fihc r optics
more signals and are more immune
has excited potentia l users for.
to interference.
severa l years, but an advance in the
A s ignal is trans formed into the
technology last year spurrcd com light pulses a t the start of the
parties Ia adopt the system more
transmission line, a rid then con- ·
quickly than earlier I hought.
verted back to imelectli ca I signal at
Initia lly. !ibN-optic system s
'the other end through the use of a
· m ainly used " multimode fibe rs"
device called a photodetector.
tha t transmitted several modes, or.
The va lue of fi ber-optic comporays, of light a t once.
nents sales·in the United States last
But last year a narrower ·:single·
year totaled $.135 million, says
mode" fiber emerged !hat "preGnostic Concepts Inc., a research
vents the worst limitation to fiber
firm in Menlo Park. Ca lif. But that
opt ics, the dispersion of the signal
will grow to $1.3 billion in 1986 and
after il travels some distance," says
$2.8 billion in 1900. it estimates.
F'rank W. Dixon. who covers the '
The, telecommunications Indusindustry for G nostic Concepts.
try now accounts for about 69
In addition . the s ingle mode fiber
percent of those sales, with the
ca n car ry nearly 10 times as much
government -military sector next
informal ion a nd in less time than its
wit h about 18 percent. the firm says . .
predecessor. Dixon says.

AP Business Writer

. "

.

' tt: ,,...,.
i ~'
"""".
.......

""'"

!J .
""'.

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.....
.

.

WINTER SCENE - The bandstand in the Gallipolis cJiY park
appears almost as an apparition early Friday morning as snow
continued blanketing the area in the first significant storm of the winter
season. (Photo by Keith Wilson)'.

Shareholders file
•
suit
over assets
DAYTON, Ohio !API - Attar·
neys for djsgruntled sharehold~rs of
the Oayco Corp. have asked a
federal judge to ous t company
Chairman Richard J. Jacob, alleging "misappropriation and embez·
zlement" of corporate assets. .
Dayton Newspapers Inc. reported in a copyright story Saturday
that pc.pers filed in U.S. District
Court in Dayton contain an exien·
sive list of allegations of improper
and illegal conduct by Jacob and

other Dayco officials and seek at
least $240 million in compensatory
a nd punitive damages,
Denis G , Daly, Dayco vice
president and general counSel, said
late Friday that the company could
not comment because it had not
seen a copy of the new filing .
Douglas G. Cole, the attorney for
·the shareholders, also declined to
· elaborate on the charges in the new
complaint.

1N HIS FIFTH year of teaching
at LSU, Wetberoolt has four classes
of Typography and Graphic Arts
witb a total of168 students. His wife,
the former Janet Brown, a former
teacher In the Gallipolis City
Schools, Is a nutritionist and supervisor with tbe East Baton Rouge
Parish School System. She is reponslble for food service admlnlstra·
lion In 36 schools throughout the
parish.

· BUU.T IN 1685 by Marcus Moses were the'two rooms that today
house Peddler's Pantry and Clark Jewelers. Moses Moses, Marcus'
father, came to Gallipolis in the 1850s from Lorraine, France. The
buDding on tbe right has been a jewelry store for aboutOO years under
Emstlng, Hall, Unrlg, Merriman, lfixon, and Clark.

I

S-19ck market staying
ro6ust .after 6 weeks
'

.. -..r:'"''&gt;::
... ..'\ ' .'.'
·,

ByCHETCURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK lAP) - Wall
Street's. bull market is six months
old this weekend, a nd st ill looks as
robu st as el'er.
Seve ral m arket Indic a tor s
climbed to new highs in the past
week as evidence continued to
accumulate that the economy had
begun . a recovery from the
recession.
Fears'of a reviva l o!.inflatlon
were soothed at least temporarily
when the government reported that
producer prices of finished goods
fell at a two-digit annual rate last
month .
Bond prices. which had lately
dropped about !i percent after a
prolonged advance last year,
s nowed some renewed strength Ia te
ln the week.
---; But however much there was to
celebrate. many Wall Streeters
warned that the stock market was
overdue for at least a brief setback
:.... or ' 'correction, "In theparlanceof
the lnveslment world.
' Prominen t among these was
ROger Birk. chairman of Merrill
Lynch &amp; Co. The recession is
apparently over, and more good
times seem to lie ahead for the
securities markets, he told a
meeting In Geneva, Switzerland.
But he added, "My view Is that we •
are due for what might be termed a
lniermedlate-te rm correction before long."

machines which he has collected IUid n!!!lored to tbelr
original condition. Five different tumol·the-centucy
shops are near completiOn. (AP La...erpboto).

PRESERVING 111E PAST- John Ballog relaxes
in the barbershop he recentiy reconst~ on tbe
second floor of his office buDding In Decatur, pl.
Ballog, who sells office furniture Wid huslliess

Old office furniture never
dies
it's in his museum
By ROBERT LEE ZIMMER
A!IIOC!ated Pres.~ Writer
DECATUR. Ill. (AP)-Whenold
businesses die, their furnishings can
go to heaven In John Ballog's
private museum.
Ballog has made It his business to
save the interiors or failed enterprises like Michl's Cigar Store and
the Williamsv ille Barbershop from
the trash heap.
Then he restores tbe look and feel
of the old companies in displays on
the second story of his office
building.
His exhibits are complete with
brass cash registers. oak display
cases and dusty 60-year-old
prescriptions.
"I just enjoy the original beauty of
old things," said Ballpg, who began
his collection In 1980.
Ballog, who sells office furniture
and busines~ machines for a living,
5\IYS restora tlon of five businesses is
nearly complete. But he has no
timetable.
"It is a labor oflove, and I haven't

thing at tbe store's original down·
set any deadlines because that
town Decatur location. Using the."
would make It work, " said Ballog,
pictures
as his blueprint, he
who has invested more than $15,00J
reassembled
Michl's in a room just
and 3,&lt;XXI hours in the project.
six
inches
larger
tban the original.
The hallway where Ballog J;"eIncluded with the purchase of
buUds tbe boslnesses resembles a
Rqth Johnson Drugs were pill·
tum-of-the-century sidewalk, lined
making devices, old chemicals and
with now-defunct businesses like
medicines, and drawers containing
the cigar store and barbershop.
more than 300 prescriptions dating
Also on his restoration list: the
to tbe 19:als.
Hotel OrlandQ, Roth Johnson Drugs
In an adjoining room, is a
.a nd the Williamsville Barbershop.
three-chair
barbershop that opened ,.
When the stores are finished,
in the lobby of a Chicago hotel, w~
Ballog says he may rent them to
moved to Springfield, and later to
people who sell antiques and
WilllamsvUle,
where It closed. The
collectibles, or he may turn tbe
mirrocl'.
in
etched
glass frames
second floor into a museum of early
reflect
tall
bottles
of
oily hair tonic
20th century commerce open to the
and
sweet-smelling
aftershave
public.
lotion.
On Ballog's secOnd floor. a visitor
Bailog enjoy.s restorinf( the big
can find the original store acquired
pieces of a business, but his real love
for the collection, Michl's, founded
are all the tiny details, like the '
in 1858. It served as a recruiting
center for Union soldiers during the . canceled checks and bllls that came ·''
with Michl's.
·
·
Civil War.
· "Someoftbe things that areofthe
Ex~-ept for Its location, Michl's
most
Interest to me," BaUog
stU! hasn't changed. Ballog photoadmits,
"are juni:&lt; to other people." •·
graphed, tben disassembled every-

Blrk sa!tJ ·he believed the Dow
Jones Industrial average could faU
to ' the r'nid-to upper·900s "before
continuing some time this year to
new highs ."
A couple of days earlier, Greg
Smith, research director at
Prudential-Bache Securities, declared in an lnvesiment strategy
report: "The recent uptick In
futerest rates suggests a lull in the
reroveryby spring. WestUiexpecta
correction of about 100 Dow Points."
At Friday's close, the average of
30 blue chip stocks stood at 1,CII6.50,
up' 8.59 for the week and only a few
{~Dints shy of the record closing high
of 1,002.3511 reached Jan.10. ·
The New York Stock Exchange's
c;omposlte index rose 0.89 for the
~k to an all-time high of85.18,and
the American Stock Exchange
market value Index gained 11.56 to .
·377.li~.

Instructor says · second language
••
i~portant to business ex pansJon
CINCINNATI (AP) - Foreign ·
language teacher Francese a Lipton
says American businesses can't be
content to look no farther than their
own backyards.
Ms. Lipton, who teach~!!&gt; execu·
tlves of someofC!nctnnatl'stargest
firms, said a second language Is a
necessity for many business leaders
even tOOugh Enllllsh is one of the .
.world's dominant languages.
"Up to now American busllless
has served tbe American market,"

she said. "But times have changed.
The worklls shrinking."
Her company, Systems International, helps business leaders to ·
better fit into tbe customs of foreign
countries. Baldwin-United, Procter
&amp; Gamble, and Allis-Chalmers are
among cornpallles whose executives have !liken courses at Systems
International since It was frunded a
couple 1!f years ago.
"We help companies 'b ecome
international through teaching Jan.
')

guages and cultureS," she said. "l "'
tblnk It wlll help Ohio get Into the
world."
,. ·
Ms. Lipton's courses are intensive, designed to teach a foreign "
language in seveml weeks: Stu- " '
dents are expected to study a ·."
minimum thf'e(' l)ours dally, and "
some courses require eight hours a
day, five days a week. '
. Business executives make good ....
students but worry too rrtucl!'" '
"'
sometimes, Ms. Lipton said.

·~

,,

Marcus Moses built couple
of buildings on Second Ave.

.

Big Board volume averaged85.47
million shares a day, against 78.ro
million the week before.
Since the Dow Jones industrials
reached what turned out to be a
historic tUrning point at 776.92 last
Aug. · 12, cautiou s analysts have
r epeated ly warned investor s
against expecting smooth salling
conditions to prevail indefinitely.
And indeed, the rally has run into
some brief squalls - a 36.33-point
drop in the Dow last .Oct. 25, for
example, and a 19.50-pointdeclinc in
the first·trading session of 1983.
But to date there has been nothing
close to a classic "~rrectlon" - a
retracement of, say, one-third to
one-half of the market's previous
gains.
Thus, the market has refused to
accommodate investors who
.missed the initial surge in stock
prices a nd have been hoping for a
decline to give them a second
chance to get on board.

REI'IRING JNSPECI'OR. ~

warner Halley, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,

a buDding Inspector with tbe
Ohio Department of lnduail1al
Relations for tbe past 15 years,
recently retJJied from that [1081-

tion. Bailey served several
yeRI'!I in Columhits Blld Franklin
. CouDiy will the depanrnent
untO hllllranlller toiiOUtheutern
Ohio, covering Atbena, Gallla,
Jadlaon, LaWftllllle, Melp and
VInton countlea. llaDey 111111 he
lntendl!llll keep &amp;dive In 11!\'eral
local orpntiatlons to wlllch he
belongB.
•I

.

UP IN FLAMES - The Apple Tree Country store, Hender.son, was
gutted by fire Friday afternoon. Point Pleasant Fire Department
responded to the scene, bringing the blaze under control in an hour. The
fire apparently started around a woodburning stove, causing
approximately $40,000 to Sl!O,OOO in damage. (Photo by Lee
Kampmeyer) .

Henderson store
damaged by fire
PO~PLEASANT(OVP ) ­

scene.
The Apple Tree Dell, located
A fire that gutted the Apple Tree
Country Store ·on U.S . 35 in· · next to the country store buil(l·
lng, was not damaged by fire.
Henderson and a .three-car
Traffic was delayed for 2~
accident on W.Va . 62 near Point
hours near Camp Conley. Road
Pleasant occupied Point Pleasant firemen late Friday following the accident tbere, tbe
Mason County Sheriff's Depart.
afternoon.
The fire department had to ment reported.
A tractor trailer northbound
use Its "Jaws of Ltfe" device to
on W.Va. 62 and a vehicle
free injured passengers In the
traveling south apparently
accident.
The Apple Tree, ·closed since struck each other head-on, the
department said. The accident
September l982, was the residence of the Libby. Dav,ld family. Occurred at 4:35 p.m . The car
was driven by TracyS. Kitchen,
The building was Us ted as a total
37,
Rt. 3, Proctorville, and the
loss by the fire department.
truck
by Jack DeFarmer, 53,
Fire apparently started
Ashland, Ky.
around a woodbumlng stove in
The fire department used the
the dining room area, Fire Chief
Jim Wood said Saturday · jaws device to remove Kltc.hen,
who was reportedly pinned in
morning.
the vehicle. Point Pleasant EMS
Upon arrival, firemen found
took him to St. Mary's Hospital,
the house blazing. Wood said fire
Huntington, W.Va. , where Kit·
spread to the ceiling, to the back
chen
was llsted In satisfactory
of tbe store and then moved
condition Saturday with a leg
forward. The second floor at tbe
Injury.
store's.rear was destroyed and a
· A pasSenger, Roy Archer, 32,
dog was found dead upstairs by
ProctorvU!e, was taken to.Plea·
firemen. Estimated Harnage to
sant Valley Hospital, where he
the house · was set at between
W,OOJ to ~.em. Damage to was reported In satisfactory
condition.
contents Is unknown.
After tbe truck hit Kitchen's
Power was out at the building
ear, (t struck another car driven
because the Henderson area had
by. Gregory A. Dunkle, 21, Point
been affected by a power
outage.
Pleasant, which had sUpped off
the road Into a ditch. Kitchen's
The fire .departmeni was
car was demolished, while
notWed at 5:0« p.m. and it took
'Dunkle's car received severe
firemen nearly. an hour to bring
damage.
the blaze under control. Twentyone IT)ert took ti11Cks to tbe

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - The two build·
ings at 340 and 342 Second Avenue
that houses in 1983 Peddler's Pan' try and Clark Jewelers were built
In 1885 by Marcus
·
Moses, the son of
Moses Moses
woo had imrni·
.· .
grated to Gallipolis in the 18:&gt;is
from Lorraine
(which Is today a
Moses often took advantage of his
name in advertising his dry goods
at 34042 ·Second. In 1885 his ad
read : "A word to the wise Is sufficient, but cash will buy. Moses has
made no mistake."
Anothei· ad commented on
Moses' low prices on overalls:
"Even Moses is not infallible.''
Later that year there appeared In
the Gallipolis Bulletin Moses' Ten
Commandments:
"6. Thou shalt rot commit the
crime of purchasing thy underwear
any place else. .
"7. Thou shalt bear in mind that
. on six days thou shalt make purchases fom Moses; on the seventh
day thou . shalt admire thy fine
clothes.
"10. Thou shalt not covet thy
neighbor's fine clothes but sha lt
take the counsel of judges of these
good things and call on Moses."
IN 1889 MARcUS Moses sold hJs
. dry goods store to a family named
Zeigler and moved to Tacoma , Washington. Zeigler's remained here
. until about 1891 when the building
was divided into two rooms as It
today appears.
Ninety-two years ago tbe 342 Se·
cond address became a jewelry
store and has remained in that ca.
paclty almost exclusively sjnce.' In
1895 Charles Hall bought out Mr. ·
Ernstlng whom Hall had worked
·
with for 12 years,
HALL WAS f\D optician as well as
jeweler.
ln ti\e Bossard Pu bile Library
one can see the inside of the Hall
store as It appeared In 1897ln a hook
called "The Railway Reflector."
For a brtef time around the turn of
the century the address became a
mllliDery called Gebbait-Cook. It Is
. Interesting that In this peMod the
town had slx or eight stores that
sold almost nothing but women's
.h ats.
L

0'

~· · )

a

Today one scarcely ever sees a
woman wear a hat and certainly no
m er chant could make a li ving from
only _hats. In 1899 hats could be
boug ht trim med with flowers, c hlf·
fon, molines and wings.
IN THE 1905 - World War I period
Charles Uhrig had a jewelry store
at 342, giving way to A. K. Merrl·
man J ewelry who in 1934 sold out to
Virgil Hixon J ewelry. The most
popular bargain at Hixon's45years
ago was Fostoria Glass. It was
about 1947 that Neal Clark bought
out Hixon a nd ever since 342 has
been home to Clark .Jewelry.
The room a t 340 Second after
Zeigler left was known as the ArtKiln room where pottery was m ade
a nd sold . C. B. Hanson then held a
dry goods store here under the
Globe sign which was Hanson's
trade mark. It was about 1895 that
Frank Bell moved his show store to
340 Second from the F rank building
at Third and Court..
FOR 50 YEARS Gallipolis would
have a Frank Bell Shoe Store, selling Walkover Shoes in later years:
In his early years Bell either m ade
his own shoes or sold Dages Shoes
which· were made in Gallipolis on
Court Street. Tn 1925 Bell sold his
shoe store to Stanley Lanier who
continued the Bell name for
a nother 11 years, a ll at 340 Second.
It was In 1936 that Lanier merged
his store with W. W. Sigler who that
sa me year had bought Mach's Clothing. The result was Sigler-Lanier
which continued to about 1957 at 328
Second .
When Bell Shoe closed in 1936 at
340 Second the business room was
taken by Den Thrley and Bill Deardorff who operated a store called
Den and Bill's here for a few years
whereupo n . T he . Sty le Center
moved in during the early 1940s.
. THE STYLE CENTER was
begun by l'v)'ax Altman·, who also
had operated from 1941 to 1957 ·a
departrllent store down Second
Avenue .. Even after Altman gave
up his department store to Arthur
Darnbrough in 1957 he operated
The Style Center untll1962 when It
was taken over by Fre(J Koopman:
In later years the name was
changed to Amy's Style Center
which moved out only a few years
ago when the Peddler's Pantry
came ln.
Mal!lng address of James Sands
Is Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 431l5.

'

�The

1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

23

junbaJI ~imts • ientinel

1-Card of Thanks (paid on advance)
2-ln Memory
(paid in,advance)

21·Busmess Opportunity

22- M onev to loan
23- Professional S erv1ces

3 -Announcements
4 -Giveaway

5-Happy Ads
6-los tand Found
7-Yard Sale (paid in ad van ce I
8-Pubic Sale

32- Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Far m s for Sale
3 4 -Bustness Buildings

&amp; Auction

9-Wanted to Buy

51 -Household Goods
52-CB. TV 8o Radio Equopment
53-Antiques
54-MisC M erchandise

57-Musical Ins truments

58-Fr uots 8o Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

41 - Houses for Rent
42- M ob li e Hom es for Ren t
4 3- Farms for Rent

pages cover th,e
following t elephone exchange.~ ...

Public Notice

44-Apartment for Ren t
4 5-Furnished Room s

46-Space for Rent
4 7-Wan ted to Rent
48 -Equopment for Rent
49-For l ease

'fljfji'-\fiffi'il .jj:i-THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAIIE

3 Announcements

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC NOTICE
The R1o Grand e Village
Council will hold a spe c 1al

co un Cil meet1ng on Feb 1 5
1 9 83 a! 7 PM

&lt;l l !h e R10

Gra nde Mun1C1pal BJd dmg
On agend a wdl be t he d1scus ~
510n of th e Vdlage M arshal
POS iti On

Feb 13
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
B3-136.GA-COL

The Pu blic Utd1t1es CommiS ston o f Oh10 has ordered that a
management aud1t of the gas
purc hasmg pr acnces and po l1c1es of Colu mh1a Gas or Oh10
"tnc shall be conducted Th e
public and any bus1ness or o rganization w1sh1ng to su bmit
wn tten comments w1th regard
to 1ssues or concerns related to
th1s aud 1t are sohc1ted to do so

Wr1t1en comments must be

docketed w1th the CommiSSI On
vnder Case No 83- 135-GACOL not later than Mar ch 4
1983. Further mformat1on may
be obta1 ned by cont ac ting the
CommiSSIOn

SWEEPER and s ew mg
machine repair. part s, and
supplies . Pick up end
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call

446-0294 .

For God so loved the world
that be gave his only begotten son . that whosoever
believeth 1n him should not
perish but have everlasting

life.

GINGER BREAD STUDIO·
lessons . JONI

CARRINGTON-698-3290.

Special on Curly Perms
Monday. Tuesday.

Wodnoodoy.(1 4 -16 - 161

110.00 only Also spactal
sale on all dresses, pant
suits, and blouses. $5 .00 ea.

Monday only. AUNEWEAVER 'S a1 6th &amp; Vine St.
Racine

2666.

Call 614-949 -

Alcoholics Anonymous. Cell

THE PUBLIC UTI LITIES
COMMISSION OF OHI O

By Dav1d M Polk,

304-676-3547.
BINGO trip, Cherokee North
Carolina. 20 games at

Secretary

04,000 . plua 4 jackpot
games . Final jackpet a

$60,000 Coverall. February 19th . &amp; 20th . 1983 .

Belloona for all occasslons .
Say Happy Velant1ne's Dey,

$75. par person includes
transportation &amp; motel Call
Lucas Tours, Charleston,

Happy Birthday. I Love You.

wv.

Gat Wall. It's a Boy or It' • a
Gtrl . Anything you wish in a
different way. Delivered to
hospitel or home for almost
any occe11ions. Balloons &amp;

Club. Every Sunday otartlng

304-346-7542

Gun shoot, Racine Gun

1 p.m. Factory choked guns
only
lc-

Co .. 446-4313.

Giveaway

4
1

Card of Thanks

Cigarette packages to give

away. Call 614-246-9161 .
TO FRIENDS FOR
60th ANNIVERSARY
Tl-.ris for the beautiful
cants. the flowers, telephone
calls which we will always
IJNSUre.
Mr. &amp; MB. Haskell Wets

The Family of Hazel
Helen Hardi11t wish to
express their Heartfelt
Thanks to each and evetyOOe who helped in
any WZf during our

3 white pupa 7 wks. old. Call

614 -367-7773 .

2Yz yr old female 1/a Britany
and Y2 Spaniel , sprayed,
good with children Call

446-0466 or 446 -2910.

wishes to thank all those wlto
wert so kind and thoughtful
at the time of her death. Special that*s to Rawlirws·
Coats·BI~Mr Funentl Home.
Rev. Mark McClunE. and all
tltose wlto sent food and
llowerSDouclas E. Thomson Family
Robert M. Thomson Family
Bemice 0. Winn

press our tmitude towards the Pallluers and

Rev. Robert Miller and sinpr, Joanne Spencer Clark.
Special thinks is extended to Dr. James Withnil and the Pomeroy
Helllh Clre Center. Also a
Tlllnk YOu' 'o Ewinc Fun. nl Home for the fine job
they did. Special thana to

the hlir stylist.
lllny, Toby,

J•n.
Bo. Bob

Auction House . 1 p . m .
Sunday. February 13th. At.
2 S. 33. Valentine Sale . We
will be selling a wide variety
come out &amp; spend the
everiing with us&amp;. bnng your
valentine .

9

Wanted To Buy

Call 304-896-3621 .

MATTRESS &amp; sprongo .
ueable condition,

304-773 ~

6794.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

-----Auction av ery Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Con1igments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Aaynokle
Auctioneer. 276-3069.

AUCTION ovorv Saturday
noght. MI . Alto. WV. 6 p.m.
Consignments welcome .
Emma Bell auctioneer .

In Memoriam

In loving memory of
our mother and grandmother (Cora Denney)
who passed away Feb.

12. 1981.
The Angels carried her
away
Two years ago this very
day.
Her sad gray eyes will
shine no more.
Not till we meet at Heaven's door.
But this world' s loss is
Heaven's gain
For she is without suf·
fering, sorrow or pain ,
Sadly missed by daughters, Mrs. Violet Arriaga
and Vir&amp;inia Casto and
Grandchildren.

Writtan by Granddatebter

Patti Ann Arriaga

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square,.lo form
tour ord1nary words

I YADDD I

I.......K]

-~L~L~E~B~IE:p.-j-r[
I V

I

I. ; .

l-OOK_, L. IKEA

~ ~ ~L..

WIIH "'-JO"THIN6"-

J

~FOISSY

MAY MAKE A
GOOD CATCH.

I

Now arrange the cirded letters to
tonn the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

u

Prmtanswarherv:

num . Gold and Silver prices
are the highest m two years,
check our prices on gold &amp;
silver, scrap jewelry. Buying
Old coins, scrap rings 8&amp;
silverware Dally quotas
available . Also coins 8a coin
supplies for sale . Spring

(

Valley Tradon g Co •• Spring
Valley Plaza. 446-8025 or
446-8026 .

Jumbles· GNOME JUAOR CANDID BENIGN

Yesterdays

I Answer:

l::::::::::::ii;:::::::E:=
Can't work 9 to 6. Sell
AVON Work when you

want. Call 446-3 368 or
446-2166.

ATTENTION LOG PRO·

time help . 0115 . weekly,
10-12 hrs. weekly . If you

Used tandem wheel boat
trailer . any cond . Call

514-246-5386

REALTY. Box 100, c-o
45631.

insurance, retirement plen.
that wil teach you a valuable

Men , women, &amp; children.
Instruction thru b.. ck belt .
Also evell1ble Kerate

oroundl High ochool -loro

uniform• puchlng ond
ldd&lt;lng bllgo, Md protective
oqulpm-. Jllt'ry Lowery &amp;

or greduates. you may even
qu11ify for 1 c:e1h bonu1.

A11ocietes Karete Studio,
143 Burlington Ad., J.ck·

304-171-3950 or coli toll
free 1-800-842-3819.

oon. Oh. Coli 114-281 3074 or 114-384-8110.

18 Wanted to Do
1--------,-:::---;Generel Hauling end Tresh

11 Help Wanted
Basic swim instructors
wanted immediately for
evening cleases . Must be
experienced. have curr.,t

W S.l. Apply immadlotely ot
Galllpollo Municipol Build·
ing, 618 Second Avo.,
Gallipoll•. 446-'.'89.
Ledy to live in . Mu1t be

beautiful . good looking,
1inglo, 36-40 year• old .
Children or no children .
Children welcome. As many

have spare time and can uae
extra money, we may have a
position for you in the
Mason, Gallie. Meig1 area.
Showing a safety film for
our company. 2-part time
management positions
ava1\able. Must be married
and employed in erea.

304-273-5676
The West Virginta Department of Health 11 Making a
fulf -time Hospital Administrator for its Fairmont

Hospital. lo-

cated in Fairmont, Waat
Virginia. Requirement•
furniture . gold. silver Baccalaureate degree plus
dollars, wood 1ce boJCes, two years of uperienca In
stone jars, anttques , ate . . hospi1al or health sarvicea .
Complete households . or busineu administration .
Write : M D. Miller, Rt . 4, This 44 ·bed facility provides
Pomeroy. Oh . Or 992 - long -term skilled nursing
7760
services and outpatient
cltn1c services AppliCIInta
Gold , silver, sterling, should subm1t resumes and
jewelry. rings. old coins &amp; applications to ; L. Clerk
currency Ed Burkett Barber Hansberger. M. D.• Director
Shop . Middleport 992 · of Health. 1800 Woo hlngton
3476.
Street. East, Charleston.

Rewleigh Oistributore
wanted . Full or part time.
Excellent opportunity for

oxtrolncome. Call304-6761090

The New Sara Coventry Ia
here! Be the first to earn
excellent money. Full or part
time . For i ntervlew and
mora information call

304-175-4831.

TEACHER in Pt. Pleuant
afea needa babysitter In my
home for 7 month old .
Reference required . Phone

304-676-6357.

Wo1t Virginia 26305. b1'

614-992-3110

Employ0&lt;-1\A Plan-M-F-H

FARM EQUIPMENT
AUCTION
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1983
10:00 A.M.
LOCATIO.~ :

Follow State Route 243for 2'/o moles from the
lawrence County Fairgrounds.
followtng wrll be sold:
135 Gas Tractor (New Rubber/ · Ford 200 Gas (low Hrs.).
780 Davod, Brown Diesel Far mal M. Ford 2DDO lndustnal
w/ Loader (gas). 8N Ford. Ford 800, 15 Sets of I to 3 Bottom
Turning Plows, 3 Pull Type Drsc, 5 3 Pt Drsc, New Carry Ails.
2 Tractor Posl Hole Diggers. 6 Grader Blades. I 3 Pl Dort
Scoop, 2 3 Pt Tub Fertilizer Spreaders, JD Ma~ure Spreader,
JD 8' Wheel Disc. Gravoty Bed Wagon w/Runmng Gears, Ford
501-7' Mowmg Machme, 2 Hay Conveyors. liay Elevator, IH
Hay Baler, Nl Cutditiower 7', JD Hay Tedder, Rotary Hoe, 2
One Row Cultivators. Horse Drawn D1sc. Garden Plow. ToSetter 4' &amp; 5' Bush Hog ,-Ford 5' Bush Hog w/Hay
• Tractor Bumper, Bell Pulley, Come-a-Longs, Third
raw Pms.lynch Pms. Draw Bar, Stay Bars. Cha1n Bon,
Chains, Dear borne loader. 5 Boom Pcjes, Nl310
Pocker, Nl 10 One Row Corn Pocker, lnl TR-1
Picker and Many Other Poeces of Machinery
Mis,~ellaneou s Items.
lunch AYIIIable

RAYMOND &amp;CAROL GORBY ·
OWNERS
lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER

Crown City. Oliio
Phone 256-6740
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property.

Ohi O': :

1-800-992·2361, OUIO''
Ohio 1-513-2111-0112. ;:

clol purpoM. Coli Rlchora1
Joflero ot 583-811311 until I •

.,

klt available. Now booking

1917.

----~--~~----,h

ev1ninge. R.ternces evalll·

12

Situations
Wanted

blo. Coll814-441-1147 ook

Have vacancy in Boarding
home for elderly. Ae1onable

rotao. 114-992-6022.

13

Insurance

•

SANDY AND BEAVER
ln1urance Co. hat offered
•ervices for fire inaurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a centwy. F.rm,
heme end per1onal property
coverages are evailable to
meet individual need• .
Contact Neal ln1. Agency.

SPECIAL

FREEZER BEEF
U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED

PREMIER SIDES

Wll de 1yplngln my homo.

MID-TOWN Protuolono ,
Electrolyolo Clinic, - n
ent heir removal. A .M.A .:,

Would lite to bobylit In my
hom• ST. RT. 141 . Coli
614-379-2701.

Jan. 31-Feb. ll, 1983
HANEY'S CUSTOM
BUTCHER SHOP

cer garage. On I .CNI whh
out bulclngo. 2 mUu from
NII'W H1ven on Union Ad.

448-381t.i '

approved. Doctor ret.rrela
By oppoln-t. T..IPhon

t74,000 . Dick Lorch,
713-735-9392 oltor 5:30
p.m.
. .

32 Mobile Homes

304-175-51118 . Bonno'~-:
Hondley. Eloctrologi~t.
":

tor S81B

Jock'l Locklmlth Servlca.
C ommerclai·Domesttc -

Aulllmotlvo. Cell 304-8822079.

WILL do houoo
Monday through So1urdoy.
H1ve reference If ne•ded.

304-875-7263.

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT
WE ALSO WORK ON
AU OTHER APPUANCES

ll.25 LB.

Cut. Wrapped &amp; Frozen
(250-300 lb.)

-

PRICE .. -don t.au~ful
briCk, 4 bedroom. 2 both. 2

for lndtviduala&amp; buMftea..._ . :

Corol Nool

Cell 441-91311.

POMEROY

lANDMARK

614-992-2181
&amp;1
--

MID-WINJER SPECIAL

4 IIONlHS REliT FR£E

chased

thzou&amp;ll

~

.

'

...

Feb.

28th.
"
Fir-.ncing Milable up to •

16% A'PR on Usid Homes
JOHNSON'S .
MOBIL£ HOMES. INC.
2110
Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

ustem

..

..

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
NEW USTING - MIDDlEPORT - Corner lot, beautifully remo3 bedroom home, equpped kitchen. cet1tral aor. many OCher
featuteS. Will sacrifice at $36,500.00

d~ed

NEW USTING- MIDDlEPORT- River voew,large lot, 3 bedroom home. Must have only $16,000 00
NEW LISTING - PEARl ST. - MIDDlEPORT - Remodeled 4
bedroom h0111e with many leatures. New plumbing, rool, and
sidNlQ; Remodeled batlt, lots of new carpebng.lnsulated. N.&lt;i heat
lui basement $50,500 00.
PUT AN EIID TO HIGH GAS BlllS!Th~ 3 bedroom home 6 et1erm&lt;
elfiaent wfth a woodbumong set up ard firnplac~ Fully insulated,
I ~ baths. pretty k~chen. In lown. $45,000.00.

FREE GASI ApproxomaleiY II beautiful wooded acres. 3 bedroom
home, full basement. Your own pnvate water 1nlel 2 car garge
Several campsitEs with utiities. $68.500.00.

LDART FAIIII - 75 aaes. lots of level nver !rootage, 3 ~room

house. bam. oUter bu11d1ngs. Oil and gas rights. Call on th1s Ofle!

REALTORS
Htrwy E. Cleland. Jr.• GRI ................................. 992-6191
Dottie Turner ..................... :... ........................ 992-5692
_...,Trussell ......................................... ......• 94~26e0
Office ........................................................... 992-2259

m
IEJI.IOI

Real Estate General

•

BIIR 427 - S30s. maontenance free ~dong, fenced back yard.
lamoly oroented n~ghlxlrhood. Th~ rs a very clean 3 BR home. Call
for apJI(Intment

: REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

..
..

NB1 LISTING: 7 1'000\ 3
bedrooms. bath. frillle house.
wdh"maal roof. Nice corner 0t
on 4th St, Racrne Oh10 Priced

..
,

' '

' •'

at

BMR 414 - 12&lt;60 mobile home situated on I acre plus lot
Includes furniture. has rear patio w/cover, comerted front deck.
12&lt;24 garage witll srorage.

Bill 425-E&gt;ewlove type brock home. on French ~r&lt;!'!~~!!l.
teatunng_.2.100 square feet of lovong are. oo the maon ftoor plus a
full walkout basement Thos fine home os one ol a krnd on th1s area.
Be the first to see th1s one. Call now.
·

., '

.l

....
'

.
~·
.,.•

'

' '
"'

•'I

"'

n

,I'.

I

~

'

'

p

-·

. .
..
.. .
.
'

.

Pass

I
I
I
I·
I
I

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
PHONE 446-3643
Ike Wiseman, Broker. 446-3796 Eve.
Jom Cochran, Assocoale, 446 7881 Eve.
B. J. Harrston. Assoc. - 446-4240 Eve.
Cl1de Walker, Assoc. 245-5276

lHREAlTOR

I•
1:
1:
1:
I'
I
II

dia monds . Everyone fol·
lowed to rea ch a three card
ending.

The king of spades picked

and James Jacoby

Soilth decided that East
couldn't hold the spade 10.

North tried to figure out
some brilliant way to bid 11is

went up wt th h1s ate and lost
the slam.

18 hiGh-card point hand woth

BEST BUY ON MARKET - You can't beat
proce ol thos2l00 sq ft brock ranch located mlown
on a very gooo n ~ghborhood Has 3 bedrooms
(16&lt;22 ·master suote), 3 balhs, 24' l1 vmg room,
fireplace. 25' fa moly room. formal donrngroom very
noce equopped kotchen nat gas heat. cent aor and ~ ­
large landscaped yard Call ClydeWalker 169.500

1.

up East's deuce and West's
Jack and the hve of spades
"produced the seven from
East.

I
I
I
I
I
I

tNt:WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN}

~2~~~iiill
I

I HOUSE SPECTACUlAR- Oneof lhe oulslandong
I homes 1n the area. Thos large 3 bedroom home
Includes a large lill1ng room With huge bay w1rd.
spectacular kitchen - domng area woth pat~ doors
onto a stDne Hoored porch, unusual large famoly
room with brick wans. fireplace and bar. 2\1 bath ~
beautiful woodwork woth sculptured doors Almost
ultimate storage, large util~ room and garge. Thrs
IS a delu•e home and woll please the mostdoscromonate buyer

•

;
_: . _!,

AFRAID OF THE COLD7
You won't be with thiS toasty 3"
bedr~. 2 stJry home wh~h
has storm wondows. dooB, and
lidd-On woodburner and extra
,1nsuatoon This comfortable
hom8 woll keep you wann in
the winter &amp; cool on the
· summer. Attractively priced
under $30,000 00 with owner
financ111g avaiabte. Convemenly located in Dmel.

"llT$ liME A DEAL"
That is what the Qviner says ·
about Itt~ new conll!mporary
bHelral with 4 bedrooms. 2
bllhs. vallilld oe'rlinp, family
roam. and ttllached pnee.
Avaiable for immedille occufllriCJ on attractive lease or
sele linn~ Local8d near Pomeroy, th~ barpin only" needs
YOU!

R.C.S.
REALTORS

CIIIJ SW.Son
Ph. 1-614·593·5571

I

HOME WITH A
LOVELY VIEW
RETIREMENT OR
ASSUMABLE
STARTER HOME
LOAN liV.%
Comfortable, neat home with
H1-ftoor hvong swts your l!eslar~ lovmg room. eal-on kotchen
woth bUok-on cabonels. 2 bed- tyle thos bnck &amp; frame rancher
rooms, stDrage room, bath and os for you 3 bedrooms. I \1
carport Very convement loca- bath~ dimng area. well
equopped krtchen with buottin
bon. Call !of further detaols.
cabineis, lovong room with br~k
fireplace. garage, redwood
#533
porch, and a large above
ground pool, with an acre ot
land more or less. C~ schools
#563
WHAT A DEAl!! $27.000
Come see for yourseff. Cozy 6 rooms and bath. washer. dryer.
drshwasher, telrogerator, woodburner, and al hke new. Storage
buolding and 2 car carport Kyger Creek Schools.

11552
GRACIOUS LIVII«l IN A COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE •
Truly gracoos lvong can be yours on th'~ beautiful 4 bedroom
home aPil&lt;Ox 8 mo from GallipoiG The kite~etl ~ a goormers
d9rghl Unb9revable domng room and famiy roorn Built for the
moll d1stnmma11ng home owner. 20 acres. Pasture land. Horse
stable. Another 73 acres available Many, many amenmes ,
li542
WOW! $39,900.00
WOY/1 9% owner fonancong Wow I 3 BR, 2 balhs. central air. garage.
storage bUIIdon~ all furnoture oncluded 5 monutes to downtown
Gallopoli&gt; City schools Large level klt

11407

SPRING VAllEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. nrce ~ze bulidmg ~Is wrth all utolibes there lot ~ze
101.8 by m 2 Better get-'um now

#456

DUTCH STYLE COUNTRY HOME

4 bedrQOms. 2'h baths. fullv eQutooed P.t~f tn kitr:hPn

fnrm~l

rtm1no

room, lamolr room wrth woooburner. lwo car ~ra~e woth auto.
opener Sty!~ beauty, charm &amp; comfort- all descnbeslhos home
Pnced $74,900.
#322
25 ACRES - 8-ROOM HOME
Noce remodeled home. Blown-10 insulation. 2 storage buildings.
chickenhouse. Mrno farm. Cheshore Townshop New country
kitchen .

6.95 ACRES VACANT lAND OFF RT. 35
Rolling land - besode Okl US. Hil!hway 35 In an area that 6
developong fast. Rt 35. short dislance west of Gallipol~ Get~;:

Reel Estate General

', '

. ..

••
uo- •or um• - Exoe~ent buy •t $38,500. L~
filme 1111ch will 311l'a; *It litdlen with carpelf.d diNnt •"!'·

Pass

and the king and the ace of

6 NT

11543

6tiiYi

.
.

dellils!

~.000.

• Pllone 742-3092
l.emlly, A$soc.
• Phono 742-3171

' ' ,.
BMR 426 - Pri:ed roght at $37,500 It has an assumable loan
r
with only 9'h'li&gt; inl!rest We are talkong about a very clean. 3 RR
I'
-·
home situated on noce flat lot in a famoly orienl net borh~
•
Cal for complete detah
_ •
~
. ,, ,,..'
'
BMR 391 - PmcE GREATLY REDUC£fll Owner
tned and ' ' 1 •
'
must sell litis 3 BR l'li c""pEMO\ftG,:Iudes d xe 18x36 ~
irwround poal. Red\~ • .,,...,., - n.US ow
wtH pay '
"1, ,, • . •
F.HA-VA ·points and closilg costs.
•
111428- S1ee1 sidrrw, 3BR ranch noat!d larJe ftatlol. City
• •~' •
School Districl Prilad at $37.500.00. C.ll appOOrtment
•
•
'
BIR 429 - .Ill electric bi~evet 1n KJger reek School listric) ••
'
• litUalld on 1211Cres with assumable 9\1% loan Call for complete •
'

ril,

1 NT

Pass
Pass

COUNTRY HOME &amp; 40 ACRES M. &amp; l
B rm. country home - 5 bedroms, bath. shower, some carpet
driled well with pump Noce tobacco barn. Two com crobs Garage.
~I moneral roghts goes Several natural spnngs, s0111e 11111 trees.
locatd on State Hoghway. Priced only $30,000.00

vtlma Nicinsly. Assoc.

BMR 422 - N~e ranch located on Roush Lane~ proced to sell at
$38.001. large LR, 2 Bfl, kllchen oncludes range, eye-level oven,
doshwasher and disposaL Call to see
"'

BMR 424 - 2 plus acres wrth a very noce 3 bedroom ranch style
home. You will love the country atmospohere1 Possoble Joan
assumjXion.

Soulh

PACKED WITH POTENTIAl
HOME &amp; 6 ACRES SITS CLOSE TO TOWN
Just a sllip and a hop to Green School. 2 or 3 bedrooms. IMng
room, dining room or'detl, large country k~chen with applrances.
bath, utioty room, and slorage room You wolllke lh1s one! Only
$26,900 ~th a land contract avaolable
#564

Goorp S. Hobsteller. Jr.
Broker
· Offoce: 9'J2-5739

Beth Null 245-9500

BIIR 423 _ In town locatoo Walk to school. large two story
home mcludes 4 bedrooms. ~wing room. donong room. fofmal
entrance 11 country ~tchen. full basement woth fam~y room. 2
frreplaceS, plus mote. Reduced to $53.000 00 CaB for delarls.

Eas1

11558

HOBSTETTER REALTY

.

bl1hL 111t11z see tilts me blayl

I:;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;

.

can WHl552 Anytime
.

BMR 389 - Th~ fine home has 4 bedrooms and os located close
to town. You woll hbave a large lot wrth a country atmaspilefe and
have all the c~ convemences Call now'

South failed to solve them
due to a brilliant and wen
conceived raise-card by

NEW LISTING - 1973 trao~r m Middleport, 2 bedroom. ~undry
room underponnin&amp; insulation. total electric hookup oncluded,can
be mOved to your lot or rental at present locatioo Appraised valr.e
more ·than aslung proce. $6,950.

I I Pork Eototoo 12x85.
2 bdr., walher·
dryer. AC, gee turnence.
oxc. cond .• fii ,IOO. coli
448-9380.

Real Estate General

Broker·Auct•oncer
LIFF

with the no-trump slam.

North

By Oswald Jacoby

MOBilE HOME - with large add«~ buildon&amp; also asohak driveway. Local!d on quiet clean street oul of high water on Racone. The
Irving room 1s extra large. There~ acement walk and large covered
porch, also a metal sorage b"ldong. You can be mthos one on two
wee~ for only $16.900.

of anything and while SIX
clubs would breeze an, there •
were considerable problems

West

Opcnong lead •10

CENTRAL REALTY

There was no play for seven

With the queen and Jed a
heart.
South cashed the hearts

Real Estate General

tl8ED MOBILE HOME .
571 -2711

..

INSURANCE

po11. Coli 614-256 -6606.

Englond . Coli 614-3792408.

.,u

Raal Estate General

+KJ 74

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South

garden . Reference• . no

distribu tion, but

tonally decoded to settle for a
simple raise to six no-trump.
It was well that he did so.

East
South ran off the clubs to
start with and East discard·
ed two small diamonds
while West chucked a heart
Now South led his three of
spa de s and st uck In
dummy's etght East won

+6 3
SOUTH
+A 9 6 3
• AJ 7
t K7

Newly redeco r8ted 6 rma .•
balh, Off llroet porking. nlco

RIGGSCREST - 2 acte lit with a beautiful 3 bedroom ranch. 2
baths,lam!y room. formal Oonon1 24 fl pooloncluded. $55.001.00

1973 Neehua 2 bedroom .
furnished , freezer fridge.
c:ur•lns, carpet-'.ltow,
crockery , cooking utensla.
MIIU offere owrwr retumg

.'

(614) 446-3547

•a.•
tJB 63

6Jl

+ t09 8

convonlont plon1, $260 ~r
mo •• 304-882-2405 or
304-175-6640. '

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KEBBEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE tii)ME SALES.
4 MI. WElT. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 311. PHONE 441-7274.
expando~

15 yws with 1!)% down.
14% APR on New Homes

PORTER. OHIO

388-8801

TRI-STATE MOilLE
HOMES. USED- CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL4411·7672.

,

.

At G111t1 TetTace IIGbilt
Home ComiiMiity on lilY
in-stoc:ll new home Of lilt
model used home pur-

~

Z.l 2•83

+KB 5
.KQ 10
t A9 2
+ AQ52
EAST
• Q 10 7 2

• Q 10"

garege. good location,

NEW LISTING - 3 or 4 bedrooms possible on Ills one. Trao_~r witll
large add-on on nearly an acre lot Includes stDralll! bu~don1 lit
can have second traier as extra oncome. CaU for more detaols.
A.s~ng $12,000.

fi,.p loc•. b.. utHul wood
work, coal furnace. atoklr
flrad. STARKEY FIEALTY .
814-849-2281 or 1141192-2419.

b'.

for lynne Pl...e.

.00 per pa ... 20 yeara

•

New Haven 3 or 4 bdr .

•nd contract. 9 room1, 7

C&amp;L Bookkooplng
.
Tox Aoturno • -k•llini: •
'

+J 4

home, Fomlly room. 2 bathl.

3 bedroOm hou •

moved
locatedat i'lColumbus.
Reclna·ownar
want ..
lng toul •• ., boo bought..,

-=··...

Profeulonal
S8rvlc. .

WEST

5 rm. hou11 &amp; botll . Inquire
ot918 2nd. Avo .• Gallpolla.
Oh.

room • beth. cerpet thru

for ule.

NORTH

Unlumlohod hou•. 3 bdr .•
t21D. Aodnoy Villogo II .
Coll448-4418 oftor 7PM .

locotlon. Aoklng t17,0GO.
C.H 1114-892-7284.

term, bu1lneu or commllfio •

p.m.

Smlll unlurniohod hOu• In
town . 2 bdr"1. pay own
utlltl ... No ~to. Dap. req .
t180 mo. Coli 448-7886.
eftor I coil 448-4041.

WISEMAN

CDMPLffilY REDECORATED - IN TOWN Thos os a marvelo us 32 yr old stone &amp; frame home
built ID last a loletime. 2 ~ones decorated on
excellent taste Includes 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
deluxe kotchen, formal domng foreplace. den study
plus lull basement woth fa moly room &amp; loreplace
Nat gas H.W. heat, 2 car garage has walk -on loft
(e•c~ le nt storage) plus all cdy utilities. 8%% mig
assumptoon You musl see thos one at $79.500.

In POmeroy, 7 room1 ,
baaement, 4 Iota . good

Loano ovolloblo rronr,:
115,000. ond up for ony.

23

2964

33 Farma for Sale

4 -3-3~3

The

1

Settle tor the simple

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

NEW LISTNG - 4 bedroom home 1n the country, vonyl s~m&amp;
stonn wondows, on 3 acres. lots of hut trees. plenty of good water,
assume loan of $18,500 with monthly paymentof$258 or arrange
a new loan.

corpotlng thro~hout.
loco1od on Bosh on Ad. ond
alts on 3 acre1 of lend.
Excellent tarma to right
J111rty. MAKE AN OFFER. 30
year fin en clng available .
Contoct Bonk On• d Porno·
roy. 814-892-2133.

·~
B,.ln111 • Second Mort,,:
gogo loono. Equity Ro' .

BEDS -IRON, BRASS, old

Wanted to buy. Good used December 16. Salary negot10 or 1 2 1nch tablesaw . iable . Equal Opportunity

~· -

end dep•endabll . Call
441-3159 elt• IPM 256-

Wodnudoy. 304 - 882-

' In Country'.

out, 1 yr.loo• anddopoolt.
Coil 4 41· 3046 doy or
448-2802 •-lngo.

-

· 22 Money to Loan

No deliveri••· no quotes.
cor&amp; phonenecosoory. !roo

Boby1lt1in9 In your homo
TuMdoy. Wod. or Thuroday

;rm. hou11

mi . from 1-n •t-In
kltchon, L. .Room, w·wood
bUrn•. 3 t.droonw, utllty

ramovol Sorvlco. Rolloblo

partlu Call between 9 e .m
&amp; 12 ooon 1ny day OXCI!Jt

loto. CoH 448 -1240.

~

choln -llnkod tonce In Rio
Orondo. Will con11dor lond
controct. Coli 614-241111034.
I

In

water. •t up with 2 or 4

FOr eale hou1e. 2 Iota.

2~

1ourse1.

Mobile home &amp; loto tor ule.
1917 Buddy mobile homo
14xl0, 2 bclr. gu hoal. Nl81

l'low 4 bdr brick In Rio
Orondo. f85,000. lond
contract 8" lo1n . Call
114·241-6438.

CAMEO ling•lo flllrtv pion.

.. 1 .... 1111"· 114-992-aont. Phone 448-11194.
2624.

Accepting applications. part

Emergency

Konto the ultlrn.oto In oolf
defence all private looaono.

•1

Tribune, Gallipolis. Oh1o

Barlow, Oh 614-678 -2960

LOOKING for a part timojob
that hu good pay. lila

AXJIII~nco .

Cash for used mobile homes
or travel trailers . Will
consider damaged or bum

DUCERS : We need grade
logs and veneer, we are
paying top pncesfor quaillty
material delivered to our
mill . in the following
species ; The oaks, Ash ,
Cherry. Hard Maple, and
Walnut. Blaney Hardwoods
of Ohio, Sr. Rt. 339 North ·

Schools
Instruction

oo be-UNOEAGONE

Real Estate salea penon
wanted . Full or part time·
You muat heve or get a
license. We'll help . Send
resume to STROUT

outs. Call 446-0176 .

16

Help Wanted

What training for service in submarines has

We pay cash for late model
clean uaad cars.
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson

446-0069

11

for Sale

1:

Pt. Pleasant
leon
Apple Grove
Mason
New Haven
letart
Bulfalo

Up to 15 words .. One day Insertion ......... $3.00
Upto15words . Threedayonsertion ....... $4.00
Up to 1 5 Words .. Six day insertion .. ......... $ 7.0D
(Average 4 words per line)

l. I I)- D" :~:-=;;:::::;::::===(o\n1W0111 Monday)

Buying Gold. Silver. Plati-

Gpllipohs
Cheshiro
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guyan Dist.
Arabia Dist.
Walnut

Army National Guard. For
more lnformetlon call
Serveant S•rv.. nt Lutton at

tNAUSED
~
.

the evenings.

6 75 468 676 773882895 937 -

Contoct tho Welt Vlrglnl•

f..._

446-3169 or 256-1967 in

446 367388 245256643 379 -

992- Middlepon
Pomeroy
985~ Chester
343- Portland
247-letart Falls
949 - Racine
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolville

tlon? There ' a only one

~. -

L1

Meigs County
Area Code 614

coUage or Vo- Tee educ:a·

'""" '.._e- •.. •1"""'" -

~

Gallia County
Area Code 614

Mason Co .• WV'
Area Code 304

lob 1kill, pluo holp with a

furniture and Anttques af all
kinds, cell Kenneth Swain ,

Old ant1qu-e pool table. Call

38 yellow Freestone peach
trees. First come first e:erve.

~ ~ ~~~~

WANTED TO BUY Old

949-2420

2

CARD OF tHANKS
We would like to thank
till friends and Relatives
of ALMA L YOUNG for
sympathy and kindness
expmsed durinc the loss
of our Mother.
The prayers and flowers
were apprecialed.
We wowd like to ex-

SPECIAL Auction. Mt. Alto

446-2300.

§:::::::=:::::::=:::;la
CARD OF THANKS

773-6785 or 304 -773 9185.
•

3 year old female tiger cat
Female. Daclawed front
paws. Neutered . Call 614-

SOifOW,

The Family of Hazel Thomson

WVa Stllte Chomp ton Aucti oneer Rick Pearson Estates.
antiques, farm , households .
licensed Ohio-WVa. 304-

of now &amp; uoed morchandloo

John 3:16

Art

81 -Home Improvements
82-Piumbing 8o Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eiectricall!o Refrigeration
85-Goneral Hauling
86-M .H . Repair
87-Upholstery

61 -Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
6 3- lovestock
64-Hav 8o Grain
65 -Seed 8o Fertilizer

--.

r------

BRIDGE

32 Mobile Home•

21 1crea. mo1tly lever,
drastically reduced was
fi4,00D now f45 . 000 .
Muo1 1111 by Fob. 3 bdr .
'- '
.
home, new furnance .
~··-···"
county water, new bat h.
carpeted. new alum. li(lng.
31 Homea for Sale
coal a wood bwning stove,
good barn •nd other out
buildings.
. Locotod
I '100 down re1.-v11 con ~ on Old 110gorogo
nMr Portlit'. Coli
clomlnlum. !lopoo~ lo 100% 114-388-9010.
rotundoblo . Choooo now.
Sea John Ecker , Riverskle 207 ocra form . LongovHio.
Torroco . Col 4411-11211.
Mlnorol rlghto Included. No
houM. f12,000 down. Will
I rm . houH, 1 omall houoo. corry root. 814-388-9348.
ocre lond, f10.600. Coli
1- 114·2411-9211 .

Cla~sified

Mswnals
11 -Help Wanted
1 2-Situated Wanted
13-lnsurance
14-Business Tramtng
15-Schools
1 6- Radio. TV 8o CB Repair
17-Miscellaneou s
1 8-Wanted To Do

P-ERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL - Profooolonol
Eloctrolyolo Contor. Inc .•
A . M . A. Approved , Dr .
Roflrrolo . Gift Cortlflcoloo,
r\ew houn , By appointment.
304-175-1234.

.'

3 5-lots 8o Acreage
26-Rea l Estate Wanted

Seru h;iili

-

~.

71 -Autos for Sale
72-Trucks lor Sale
73-Vans 8o 4 WD
74-Motorcycles
75-Boats &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

55-Buildong Supplies
56-Pets for Sale

3 1- Hom es for Sale

-

PIANO TUNING • REPAIR
CoH Bill W•d for oppolnt·
mant. Word ' o Koyboord.
448-4372.

446-2342'
992-2156
675-1333

Trancpvrcatlvn

Mershaedi&amp;H

1!111 itA Bill

Annvwesentvnut

Tribune
Sentinel
Register

Profellional
Service•

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

TIRED OF R(IITING? Buy lh1s home ike paylflg tent Owner woll
oay po111ts and all closing costs lor VA or FHI\Ioans. NO down
:oayment on VA. $900 down on FHA. Cal today, see how easy you
can buy this home
412800
SUPERtOCATION - Noce ranch With 3 bedrooms. ~nyl ~d1n~
close to gall course. lf11rnedlate poseSS!on
#4350
IIITEREST FRE£ LOAN - Owner will carry with oo onterest with
down payment or Land Contract at 12% onterest. Two story Golan~ I
on IDwn. beautiful entry, foJmaLdinong, br~k patru
#1149
OUTSTANDING BUY - Frame home woth alumonum sodon&amp; 2
bedrooms, bath, located tn town. Only $8,500

H0085

IIEW USTIIIG - Noce 2 bedroom home, new b"king for slqo or
storage, garage, close to hospibrl Only $26.500
_
11562

IAII£ MOM. IUILDIIIS - lltildirc is 3Zx70', good !Of comnmial ar • • · iocllld on 1 ecre II Bidwell.

ONE ACRE PLUS - HAS ASSUMABlE LOAN
Kyger Creel( School D~t 4 room home with lui basement With
small down payment possoi:je lo assume the present loa~. Phone
for detai&gt;

11556
'
I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTIAGE
Nice comfortable llome with rice large shade trees. Concrete front
porch, lots of frurt trees (apple, cherry, plum and peach). grape
arOO(,.raspbeny vines, good garden lend, all iellel In Green Twp.
Rural waler, 2 car garage, fuel oi FA furnace. Basemen~ bam,
approx. 16'x24'. Priced to Ute $20's
#491

·
8 ACRES
Witllin 10 min. drive to downtown GallipoliS. City Schocj System
Has hookup for the molile home. Galia Rural Water. electric ard
septic tank, rite l~&amp;ht oo pole, 200 It frontllge on Graham Schod
Rd. Timber. Buildng sites. Can Now.
11-471

OWNER WIU FINANCE
Walk into formal entrince with open sta1rcase to thiS Iovett
~ootplelely rslecorated home located 1n the cty. v.11hin wal~ng
distlnce tl Sho[IPI~ area. 3 bedrooms. 21ull bathS; and charmong
llrJI! ldtchen. SpiCIOUS ivng room will woodbumng fireplace
Tlis pcious home has a nabHII ps FA furnace hke new.
lmmediale
We're wailirc CVf your call.

pos_.._

11146

ASS UMPTION

Very

I JUST LISTED - 9%
attractive cdonoal br~k home located 5 moles from
I town 1n Galhpois School Dosl Over 1700 SQ ft of
tastefully decorated loving area rncludes 3
I bedrooms (master surte has walk-on cloself&amp; ~th).
2 lui baths, large equopped kdchen, ore~ace ,
woodburner. famoly room and 2 car garage 1.7
1 ti $65 000
Acre settng on quret oca on.
NEW LISTING 8Va% ASSUMPTION - Good
I Lncation' 4 bedroom home on P~asan\ Vallev
Estates off Rt 35 Over 1450 sq It of lov._acea
I oncludes dW11ng room, fully equopped kitchen. 1II

1
I

I baths util room. nat ~as, cent aor. oversozed
garage &amp; large yard Owners an•~us to sen Call
Jom Cochran
ASSUMPTION _ lOW DOWNPYMTS I I""'
,.,
&amp;1
h lndutles 2
Very
yr old brock
ramekdchen.
ranc · lore~a
"' ce,
bathsn~e
3 4bedroom~
equopped
I central aor, 2 car garage w/worflshop plusover I
ace tree shaded yard Call Jom Cochran Sellers
must sen.
2 YRS. OLD - WITH MUCH TO OFFER Attractive 3 bedroom home woth I ~ baths. efficoent
klchen area. 1~1 basement (could be easoly
fm~hed). large garage, 1acre yard and manyolher
features that you must see Call Jom Cochran Iosee
• th one today
5
eRICK &amp; CEDAR - PINE TREE SETIING - A
lovely 5 ac. pocturesque seltmg really enhances the
I beauty of this 4 yr okl home. The home has over
1750 S.F. wth 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, noce cozy ,
foteplace, large equopped kotchen. 2car garage plus
a 9l;, assumable mortgage. Located on Rt 160. 7mo lrom town Cal Oyde Walker
I CHANCE OF A LIFETIME - RESIDENTIAL ~-uFESSIONAl OFFICES OR BOTH _ Attractove 2\\
Slory 12 room house On 2nd Ave tn the ~eart of
.
I the professional busmess communrty Includes 2
krtchens. 2'h baths. full basement, 2 car garage
Top quilhty constructoon when buolt and ll!JOd
maontenance makes thos a soi1d onvestment. A
I
ed b lh 1
stalely atmosphere os provod
Y e arge rooms.
hardwood floors, fireplaces. etc, Call ike Wlsemcan
NO INTEREST CHARGED FOR 5 YEARS - an
yoo beal that' Sellers anxoustooqu~k saleand woll
I finan ce woth reasonable dow n payment and payments of $375 mo Brock and lram eranch located
wrthon walkong doslance of downlown schoo5. etc
Has 3 bedrooms. f~mly room to replace, den or 4th
I bedroom, 2 bat hs. deluxe kotchen. domng room.
nal gas heat. cenlral aor. 2 car garage and large
wooded 1ard 1 Year Buyer Proleclon. $65.000
Call ike Woseman
l6'h ACRES _ Anractove remodeloo home
located 1 mole soulh o( Roo Grande 3 bedrooms.
I :moly r00t11. 2 batl"s. ~rgedomn g roiJTl . Fla rOIJTl,
luU basemen!, woodburner, 2 car garage, plus
sOO.e scene rollong land wrth 600' h~hway
I friJltage. sloe ked pond &amp; large barn Will consoder
sellong less acreage Call B J Haorstop tOOay'

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lOW INTEREST ASSUMPTION
SELLER FINANCING
The lerms are excellent on thos most aMractive
brck home on Oak Dnve but lha!'s not all Thos os
an energy eff1c1ent 3 or 4 bedroom home wrth
lhoskeesstpeh c~al loouoctshtae;}hnat ptlhaeceowtonlers aTdhdeedyatdhast
rna
os an
""' g
ove
r 1
large and provale woth exceptoonal landscapong,
large In-ground po~ and a lovely ~ew The home
ha s 2 lire~aces, woodburner. finoshed basemenl,
fully equopped kotchen, do non~ 2 baths, hardwood
floors &amp; wall to"wall carpeting Nat gas. central aor
&amp; much more lmmedoate possess1on Let us show
you one ol Spnng Valley"s finest
CUSTOM BUILT _ NEW USTING - Just about
everythong you'll ever need on a home. 7 yr. old 4
bedroom brock ranch off Rt 35 2 balhs, formal
drnon&amp; sunken il~ng room. ~one fireplace, deluxe
kotchen, full f1mshed basement famoly room.
fireplace. wet bar. 2 crysta l chandeloers and much
more Call for mfo '
115 A
edC.b FARMGood beePos9&amp;bleb land conlract to
1 to acco 1arm approx
qua 1or1 uyer
50 ac crop. balance in pasture &amp; woods large
lobacco base 60x90 barn 24&lt;38barn, L8x65 solo.
concrte Hoor on barn woth appro• 4,000 sq fl
loafi ng area Hoghway frontage on Rt 75 Also
ondudes an attractove 4 bedroom home wrth pool.
Call Clvde Walker for onfo
CHEAPER THAN RENT - Payments ol $Z42 mo
oncludong taxes &amp; onsurance 9'h% mortgage
assum~oon woth $4500 down pymt 2 bedooom
home located on the coty school d1st Has fore place,
eat-o n kotchen, new paint 'h acre yard and pnced
at $26,500 Call J1m Cochan
PRICE REDUCED TO S55.000 - Owners aoe anxoous to
sel &amp; ~avedroo!X&gt;d ~·ce over $10.000 Love~4t.droom
colon1al on40 aoes mi l Hoosehas "lu•PP'd kolchen. 2

I
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1·.
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II ·:.,~
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full baths. !trepla:e. basement. m3Sier bedroom Ga huge

14'x21" woooburnong lurnnc~ tl'ermo W"i!lw;elc Also
~as 30x50 bam smallloiBu:o IBse and 30 ac wooos
Seclu&lt;;,dse~n g wolha lovely "" Call Clyde Walker

CLOSE TO TOWN - C&lt;Jnven1enl localoon. I ~ moles
west of town Atlraclove &amp; spacoous 3 bedroom
ranch Has full basement. warm &amp; cozy lore place,
fNa
amlly &amp;&amp;recreatrtioln rooml s. plenty o&amp;f sltoraedge areda
t gas cen a aor Pus garage enc yar
Pnced to sell call J1m Cochran
2VaACRES- 1 MILE FROM HMC - Veoy noce 3
bedroom brock 10 Charolais H1lls Thos brock ranch
offers over 1650 sq tt ov livong on a quality
neoghborhood Has Iamoiy room With woodburner.
equopped kolchen, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. heal
pump, 2 car garage and over 2 acres yard.
$69.900 _Call Ike Wose man

1...
1-

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''Will TRADE FOR FARM'" - PRICED UNDL~
MARKEl VALUE - Sellers anxoous lo move to
country Wolltrade lor Your larm or sell al on ly
$43,500 4 bedrooms 2 baths. famoly room,
fireplace, full basement, lormal donong, nat gas
heal plus 3 car garage and extra largelol w/rnohole •
~~~a~ook-up Rt 7, 1 mole lroon bndge Call Jom

lm:RYTHINGYOU'llNEED-T-APRICEYOUCAN
AFFORD - Yoo must sre all the eKtras lhos fine3
I bedroom home offers. Located on crty school dostnct,
Ill~ ranch has a beautifrJ kitchen wlh qua!y ca~neb, range &amp; oven. dishwasher · oompactor, Ireplace in IM!og room. I \1 baths, lui basement lamoly
room, garage and 1Bx36 on-ground pool,hug!l CO'/·
ered decl\ and ll ac Only $53.900
ACRES_ MOBilE HOME - II you en1oy lois
of woods, plenty of woldlife. slreams. spronl:\ a
• large cover and 1ust plain elbow room, then you'll
want to see thos lndudes 12x64 mobile home
w/ wooo stove Call Oyde Walker for rnfo
$25 000 _ Not a bad proce to pay for a4 yr old3
bedmom home with vonyl srdong, woodburner,
I patio doors. .12x24 carport and a large yard
_r
l localed oft Rt 35 on Jackson co. ~I Clyde Walke

PlEW LISTING - Seller woll pay VA FHA po1nts
closongcost on thishome so you can assume seller's
present mortgage 3 bedroom brock and frame
ranch on Moll Creek Has equopped kolchen, bath.
cent air and garage Good localron $49,900 Call
Jom Cochran
MAPLE DRIVE - Very artmciiVe 1 ordt oom
ranch on Spring Vallev Walk •o slores. lheatre
r.rgrounds, etc fhos l~c,t'i:J ' has deluxe kotchen, 2 baths, 1'*-t'i:J - "'· lamoly room lire
p~ce, bar. nat g,o, tent au garage, large dec k
and corner lot Pnced to sell Call ike W1seman
BEST BARGAIN EVER ON A FIX IT UP SPECIAL
- 7 room, 2 baths, postage slEmp lot - Needs
roof repaor and k!chen cabonets Pnced al
$14.000. We need an oller E&gt;eellent locatKJn rn
RKl Q:ande Make a ·pertect renlal Call Ike
Woenoan
590 JAY DRIVE - You'll be p~ased when you
ook insode this 10 yr old bo-level oil Rt. 35.Attracbvely decorated lhos 4 bedroom home oilers a
15x24 fam1ly room. 211 baths. fully eqUipped kit
chen, domng room. nat gas heat. cent air - 2c~r
garage. Assumable mo~age woth reasonabl£
down payment pr~ed at '69.900
BRAND NEW liSTING - EXCELLENTLOCATION
- You'll find thos home to be one ol lhe best
decorated on the market Qualoly lovong space 'n
over 1900 sq. It 3 nice sozed bedrooms. 211 baths.
new equopped kotchen. an oversozed and allracllve
family room, wood burning hreplace, dl mng room.
nat gas heatng and priced well below replacement
costs. Situated 011 a lovely landscaped yard all Rt
35 in a fine netghborhood Call tooay to see thos I

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I on$26.000
- 4 bedroom home-~tualed on I\\ acres
Bidwell . Rodney Road Has alum sidon&amp; new

I roof, rural water. cellar. plus 3 outbuoldrngs, cellar
house and tra~ler pad and hook-up. Call Oycte
Walker
,;J.

I
I $12 000- Located in town 4 rooms &amp; balh Nat
I gaslocated
'heat. ~orage bldg and tree shaded yard.
011 deaderd street. Could
good lor
• rental or starter Home Call Clyde Walker.
I 91'1!1&gt; FINANCING - $4,000 00'1111 -Owners
home on Lower RNer
1lad setlHas anew4 bedroom
furnace, fireplace eat-on kit&amp;hen,
I hi basement and lllrll! An
I ~ buy a home·anil have· klw monthly payments.
be~

mus~

th~

excel~rtopportunity

~m

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~~~~~The~~~~T~im~~~~~~~n~ti~n~el~===l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~~~~~~-~n~t~~~~m~n,t,~W~.V~a~·~:::::::::r:::::::::::::::l~~~~~~~19~83~ ·
41

Houses for Rent

44

Apartment
torRent

47Wanted to Rent

Deposit required Call
614-266-1413

private both. 1st floor B45

Haute

448-1225 .

10

Evergreen Call

446-3624.

Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, 2

bedroom houae . bath .
basftment all carpeted .
Adults preferred No peta.
Oepo1it rquired Call 614~

w i th

2nd Ave , Galhpohs Call

992 -7409 or 614 -9926182

POMEROY - 2 bedroom

Furniohed Aportments '"

51 Household Goods

appointment If no answer

coll814-949-2121

446-2223.
2 bdr . mobtla home fully
fum11hed Adults only. Call

446-4110
2 bdr Mobile home Bullville
Porter 1160 mo • 1100
dep , water included Call
446-7624
3 bedroom Mobile Home

Approximately 6 mile• from
Pomeroy or Middleport
814·992·6B6B
2 large Mobile Homes on
mdividuallots near Hani•onvilla Heat furnished 1 3
bedroom, 2 full bathl, other
70x1 4, 2 bedroom 614742-3033
5 room mobile home for
rant Antlqutty Rt 338
814-949-2424.

Apartment s
5548 .

30 4 -675 -

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houses Pt Pleasant
and Golhpoh s 61 4-448 8221 .
2 room affi cienc y apt
1·304·BB2-2566 or 1·614·
992-7206

UNFURNISHED apartment
for rent, 1 bedroom ,
1180 .00 Call Automotive
Supply, 8 -6. 304 -675 2218 , 875-6763
Unfumtshed upste1rs apt for
rant, good locat1on, 304876-1302
. . . , . - - - - - --- lcNew Haven TWO bedroom
fum1shed apartment, utilitin paid, 8250 00 per
month , $100 .00 depos •t
Ca ll 814-448-7526

on Rt. 2 about 6 mmutes
from town Call after 6
304·676-6277

VERY nice unfurntshed
duplex apartment, down town. rea so nab1e rent ,
304-676-4824 after 5 p m
or Saturday anyt me

43 Farms for Rent

45

Pasture for rent Call
304-676-6110

Sleeping room $126 , utili tiel pd. single male. !hare
both. 919 2nd Ave , Gallipoilt Cell 446 - 4416 after
7PM.

TWO mobile homes for rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnoshed Rooms

46 Space for Rent

2 bdr . Regency Inc. Apart·
menta $200 per mo or 1f
tncome is $10,000 or less
HUD available A·O ne Aaol
Eatates. Carol Yeager.
Realtor . Call 304-676 ·
5104 or 676 - 6386 or
876 -7786
2 bdr unfurnished apt. in

Crown City . Call 814-256·
6520 .
Furnoahed opt. 1 bdr., 920
4th Ava.Gallipohs. Adulto,
water &amp; electric pd, 1200
mo Call 448 -4418 slter
7PM.
Furn11hed apt $145no
ut1lit1e1 pd. 3 rooms. 701
4th Ave .• Golllpolla. Coli
446-4418 after 7PM.

3 rm . and 4 rm. untuml1hed
eportmonu. Utllltlea paid ,
no petl. no children Call
448·343'7.
Nicley fumiahed mob. home
1n caty. Adults only. Call
446·033B.
For rent unfurnished apt , 4
rooma and bath Inquire at
87 V1ne St .. Gollipoht

KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy Large lots . Call
992-7479

EAFORD(D
VIRGIL B. SR . IILILTOR
216 E . 2nd St.

Phone
1· (614)·992·3325
JUST LISTED - Very mce
ot!er home on Pomeroy Walk
to lt)e 11ore SD&lt; roo~ III
batto, furnace. full basemen~
garage and large klt Want
$32,500
JUST LISTED - 1970 Cardonal mobole home and over
2\'1 acres on lellort Townshop
TP waler, root celar. workshop and garage Asl11ng
$13,500
REDUCED - 6 room frame
home 1n Pomeroy. Balh, fur·
nace, basemen! and near
stores. Only $13,000
80 ACRES- Racone area 111d
ia)s mce Good renovated 3
be:lroom home, bath, iXJ!Ches
and not far out Asl11ng
$60,000
REDUCED - large 7 room
home near Midd~port scl'ools.
Noce carpeton~ formal d1rnn~
large liv1ng, swom pool and new
2 car garage $47,500
WIU TALX T£RMS - Noce
renovated 6 room al elec
home. Plush carpetilg, n~e kitchen, mod bath, patio,
porches and prden Only
$28.500
RACINE - Small new like one
home above all
ftood1 Balh, ftirnac~ oak fuors
and tarae level lot Only
$14,500.
~room

97 ACRES - Near E.islern
schod. Bank bam, free gas
with oncome, warm room
llorne. II! baths. nabJral gas
furnace
other building~. AI
m~nerals. As~ng $70,500.

r

ana

REASONAIL Y PRICED

HOlES FOI THRim P£0.
Pl£. CAll HEWI, IIUCEOR
VIIIIIIL AT ttz..311&amp;.

Housing
Huaclqu, 1r t ers

Whirlpool electric 1tove,
Kenmore heavy duty
weaher, 304-676·7573

Now 1983 Nlcchl lowing
mach1na free-arm,

dlal-o-

matic Equipped to z1g zag,
monogram, sew on buttons,

535 Algid 81600 Thread·
ing machine with attach·
menta. Homelite pump 100
G.P.M 2 hoaet and ICCOI·
aoriea, 8344, 1972 Hondo
360 8250. Phone 304-675·
6420 .

make button holes . Cost

now $439 96 , year end
clearance sale $126 . Call
614-386 -8918, out of town

. ~ )',__
l)flltttf

call collect. Free delivery to
your home

(} l(lll)b~NEA IIII:

Tlo4AeQU S PIIlollo40t1

~=====~~~===~~~=~===::::1

Color
23 TV
in console
$96,
ZenithTV
color
23 in $95,3
tablemodei'TV's,Magnavox
color TV console 8150, 30
in alectnc range self clean
oven Harvest gold $175.30
1n. electric range almond
$150. 30 1n. electroc range
white $65, 40 on. alectroc
range $96. Whirlpool auto.
washer $96, Mavtag wr1nger washer $96. dmette set
With 4 cha~rs 876. Skaggs
Appliances Upper Rover Ad.
Gallipolis. 446· 7398

51 Household Goods

64 Misc. Merchandise

Bar &amp; 2 stools, 8125 Call
446 _977 B
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
washers. dryen. refrlgerators. ranges. Skaggs Appllances. Upper River Rd.,
be soda Stone Crest Motel.
446 -7398

For sale lump coal &amp; fire·
wood. Zinn Coal Co. , Inc.
Cell 446 _14oB.

Whirlpool washer and drver
coppertone pair, vary nice
$225 Good used dryers
also Cal 614-266-1207
ClOSE-OUT
Ool,lble dresser wtth mtrror
Reg $320 -- now $175
Smgle dresser wrth m1rror
Rag $220--now $155 N1te
table Reg $90-·now $60
Corbm &amp; Snyder Furniture,
965 2nd Ave , Gallipolis,
446-1171

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
TRAILER space for rent 1n 62 Olive St , Gallipolis K1ng
Mason Located on Horton coal &amp;. wood heaters with
St. Call anyt1mo 304-773 - fan $469. set box spring 8a
mattress $100. f~rm 9120,
6150 .
sofa-lovenat &amp;: chair $199.
love seats $70. new coal &amp;
wood hearers as low as
47 Wanted to Rent
$399 with blowers, used
Wanted 2 bdr. trailer in coal &amp;. wood heaters. new
Gallt polls area Have 2 dinet seta $75 &amp; \fP. refriger·
children. prefer natural gas. ators. ranges, bunk beds
complete $179.., bunkies
Ct. H :t1t:~ •ve references &amp;
depoau. We take e.~ecellant mattresses $40 , chests.
dressers, TV's Call 446·
care of trailer &amp;. property
3159.
Call 446-2031 .
Real Estate General

STROUT REAL TV

LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should descnbe th•
lovely 3 BR brd ranch Spec~al features are a
large LR &amp; dining rm, eqUipJ:ed kitchen 1'h baths
laundry, qu~~ carpe~ ce~~t a1r &amp; an over.;11ed 2
car garage l ocated on US 35 West &amp; shown by
appoontment
PERRY TOWNSHIP- 78 acrs, 15 A S1mmsCreek
bottom. balance rolling pasture &amp; woods, mce
modular home, large bam, several other bwlcilngs.
Tobacco base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
Woods Rd
BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY - 132 acres, mostly
ctean hll paslure. good fences. I \7 story home
large barn. tob base. fronts on 3 roads near Mud
sock Pnce reduced to $64.000
RECREATION lAND - 25 acres m/1, mostly
woods. fronts on Uttle Raccoon Creek &amp; Stlle
Route 325 near Tycoon lake $15,000
GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY LOCATED 112 acre farm has lrontlge on Slate Route 588
faorloeld Centenal)' Road &amp; Vanco fairfield Rd
Excellent for farmong or deveklpment Oder 5 rm
&amp; bath, also oncluded Owners wolf cons1der selling
smaller tracts of short term ftnanc1n~ Call lor more
onlormatlon
NEW LISTING $49,500- Owners have moved &amp;'
haue the1r louely 3 BR bnck ranch proced to sell
Special fealures are 1\1 baths, fam1ly rm woth WB
fireplace carpet throughout. full basement garage,
couered rear porch &amp; large lot on teh Bulavolle Rd
ROONEY-CORA ROAD- Approx 30 acres wood
land located 3 rro from Rodney County waler
auaolable $12,000
HOMESTEAD HERE or use a hunting lodge,
uacabon home; etc Rustoc log home IS built from
nand hewn beams and has a sleepmg loft. modern
bath, large stone ! ~replace and approx 27 acres of
woods on the Wayne Naloonal foo est Extra land
ava1iatle Easy Terms
STYLE .. : ELEGANCE . . A WAY Of LIFE - Forst
time on the markellor lhls like new contemporary,
3 or 4 BR'~ 2 baths, large open LR w~h fireplace &amp;
beamed ce1llngs, krtchen 1,ncludes range, OW &amp;
refrog, full basement, !Nrap-around deck, cedar
sK11n~ 12x24 above ground p(iol;gil\age, bam &amp;
10 acres near Eureka City schoo~

1- - - - - - - - - -

Locuat poll for •ale. For
further Information call
614 -266 - 1146 or 614·
256-1656.

82:~~50 ~-:~~~~~·:·•J367-'746B
=---:--:--:-------

$110 up
andtoup.
I
8550.
finish Bunk bed
w1th mattresses.
. and
up to S396 Baby beds.
s 110. Mattresses or box
sprongs. full or twon. S58..
flrm. $68. and $78 . Queen
sets, $195 4 dr. chests.
$42 . 5 dr chests, $54. Bed
frames, S20.and S25 • 10
gun- Gun cabinets. 8350 ..
dinette cha~rs $20 and S25.
Gasoralectricranges. $325
up to S376 Baby mo·
tresses. 826 &amp; S36. bod
frames f20. S25. &amp; S30.
k1ng frame 850 Good
selection of bedroom su1tes,
cedar chests. rockers, metal
cab~nets sw1vel rockers
Uietlllai.ntor"r-'"'B&amp;oRt~h"a,
ranges, chairs, end tablei ,
waahera. dryers. refrigerators and TV's 3 mrles out
Bulavllla Ad Open 9am to
6pm. Mon thru Fri • 9am to
5pm. Sat
446-0322

Mavteg auto coppertone
$120, Whirlpool dryerwh1ta
$110. both real nice and
guaranteed Call446-8181

SECLUDED COUNTRY SETIING LOOKING FOR
SOMETHING SPECIAL? Let us show you thiS new
3 BR, 2 bath double garage home woth O'ler 1700
sq ft of liVIng area Jusl roglit lor the large lamoly
that needsample space Other fealures are natural
wood sKimg, heat pump, range, refrog DW &amp; dosp
Ca n be purchased woth 2 acres or 40 Located '"
Green Townshop

Slabs cut-up t16 full length
, 10 PU load. round wood.
large truck lold . Call
614·246·6804.

Potatoes,
$8 per
lb.
bog, e3.26.
60 hundred
lb. bag,
U . S. No . 1 Wlaconaln
Ruaaett. 304-67&amp;-3762 or
448 -8247.
-.,..----..,.----'
DAB IT SHOP PRE·
ANNIVERSARY SALE on
bioquo &amp; ploator craft 10
percent to 40 percent off
most merchandise. 2101
Jefterson, Pt. Pleaunt, WV
304-876-7720.
74 Super Beede e1 ,300. 30
1nalectricrangoUOO. Harry
D. Grimm, Broad Run, WV.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, onomen. 3 tobias, (extra heavy
by Frontiar), $685 Sola, 1- - - - - - - - - ' - - SAM Somervilla 'ssurpluo
chair and loveseat, $275. Dining table. chairs, buffet. army clothing. 7 Miles east
Sofas and chairs priced from and cfline cabinet •250 full Ravenewood. New 14 oz.
S2B6. to 8895. Tables, $45 11 ze mattreu and box denim panu $10 .. A F.
and up to $125. Hide-a- spring• S60. Round table flight Jacket; $20., dambeds.$440 and up to w-4 captains chairatJ5 . aged used rental surplus
$626 .• Recliners. &amp;176 . to Moving must sell. Call clothinge&amp;.dozen,previous
8350 .. Lamps from 928 . to 446-6936 .
advertiao&lt;l Item a 11mo
$75 6 pc . dinettes from
prices indefinite. Open
899 .. tof436. 7pc., 81B9. Bellyarcadevidoocomputer 1 : 00-7 :00 P m . Frodoy,
and up. Wood table with SIX and 16 games. real nice. 4 Saturday, Sundav (Used
chairs t426 . to 8745 .
poddlu, f260. Call 614· covarallo t6.) 304-675 -

Twin size walnut bed with
mattren and box springs.
matcntng 5 -drawer chest
and night stand . Call 4469438 after 6:30 PM

Real Estate General

•

304-896-

~ ~~~~~~~~~~
Uwrabencllew

pott. 1 814-423 -8257 for

/

Firewood delivered 860 . a
cord . Coal dallvarod U5
ton . Call Tom Hoskin•
614 -949- 2160 or 814·

$90 per day
3841

forrod
potsAdults
614-992bd roomNoApt
pre ..
2749 .

3 rm1. &amp; bath. furnished . no
pets, no ch1ld ren Call

lo Ar.ffal.

hault..Jie. operate yourself .

2 bdr furnished 1 child ,
$160 permo , New Haven

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Zigler upright LP or natural
911 furn1nce reuoneble
Coli 114·3B8-9387.

h'tATl!#IU-"&gt;

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Styl~ h 2 story home was
bUilt '" 1894 and mul1 be seen to appreCiate
large open foyer and sta~rway LR d1nong rm,
pa rlor, completely eqUipped modern Mchen 4
Brs, 21? baths, new sid10~ garage, near schools
shopping, etc
ASSUME 81h% LOAN -Lovely ranch at the edge
of town ISpnced to sell at $49.900 Features are 3
BR 1\\ baths, large LR w1th WB fireplace modern
krtchen &amp; d1mng area, laundry rm garage &amp; gas
heat Call lor appointment
STYLE ELEGANCE A WAY OF LIFE - f 1rst
lime on lhe market for thiS like new contemporary,
3 or 4 BR's 2 baths large open LR w1th lo replace &amp;
beamed ceohngs, krtchen InCludes range. OW &amp;
relng full basement wrap-around deck, cedar
Siding, 12K24 above ground pool, garage, barn &amp;
10 acoes near Eureka C1ly schools

Whirlpool wnhor and dryer.
t125 Maytag gold auto·
moUe waoher . •1 00. 2
electric dryen. •a&amp;. each .
40 ln. oloctrlc range, •e&amp;.
30 in alactrlc range, 1100.
Call 614-742-2362.
TROYBILT ROTOTILLERSDiscounts . Free hiller
mcluded. Immediate shipment. Patti, enginea.
703·942-3871 Hickory H1ll
Nuraory, At. 1 Box 390 A.
Fiohertville. VA 22939 .
Trade-ins accepted.

66 Building Supplies

63

• Livestock

For 1111 new diamond

Firewood. 836.
load.
•e&amp; . 1 cord . Split and
delivered. 814-B43·3803.

Apt for rent Half double-2

Racine. 1 or 2 bedroom N o

Be1'!'e2.

~er-r. ANI)

unfurnished apt , 8160 . 2 1- - - - - - - - - bedroom h ouse $ 186
Backhoe endloader digs 8
Dopooit $100 Call 614- ft
large bed p1 ck up

992-2288

~

64 Misc. Merchandise
engl .,. ' - ,.nt ring . 1i1e 6
Call 814-S67-7584, ask for
Tom

1~ 1o &amp;~;ve 1.-effcA/ek

Equipment
for Rent

992-3064

304-8B2 -2468

I Si-\001.-D

1 --::-::--~-----------

48

by larry Wright

r-~------------------~--~--~--~

Want to rent hay fields or cut
end bale on shares. 614-

2 bdr houee on Lowe~t 7

Furn i•hed 3 rrn s

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

3334.
•
6 \'1 FT · alate pool table,
good condition . $360.
phono 304· 875 -6026
FIREWOOD-call 304-875546B or 304 -458 - 1769 .
Now Perfection hooting
atove. burns number one
fuel oil .
FIREWOOD for sole. aplit.
130 . truck load. $36
delivered. pho~o 304·676211B. 304-676-5596
HEAT WAVE "'(ODd burner.

304-676-3626 .

Firewood. spht , 830 .00 a
truckload . $36 .00· dolo - Quilted sofa wtth blue and
verad . Ph . 1614) 992·2770 beige print After 4 . 304676·62B9
or (304) 882·2194.

Building matoroala
block , brick. aower pipea.
wlndowa , lintell . etc .
Claude Wintero. Rio Grande.
o. calll14·246·6121 .
56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeda . AKC
Reg. Doberman• pups afd
Doberm1n Stud Service .
Coli 448· 7796 .
POOOLE GROOMING Call
Judy Toylor II -814-367·
7220.

''

..

71

•

.
~

446-6610

Roglatored Polled Horefooc(.}
herd bull . Will bo 4 yro . old. • ,
Coil 446-0B71.
• - ••

-----'-'--"---1&lt;-'
Ragletarad Ouertar Hon•:

~
~

64

.•

Hay !Jo. Grain

I

PRICE REDUCED TO $32.900 - 50 acres more
or less near Eureka approx 15 A grassland balance wooded. mcely remooleled 6 rm and bath
home Wf f1re~ace, stove, refng . several outbuoldongs Owners leavong the area and wouldlike a
QUICk sale
NEW LISTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
approx 4 m1 north ol HMC on old roule 160
Modern tn-level has brd &amp; vonyl construction, 3
BRs. 2 baths, equopped krtchen donong area,
laundry &amp; 2 car garage Can be bought wrth or
w1thoul acreage
PEACEFUL COUNTRY-LIKE SETTING Exceltenl
buy at $45,900. Owners have been transferred &amp;
are anxoous to sellth1s lovely bnck &amp; frame ranch
With 3 BRs. large kitchen. LR woth WB hre~ace.
noce carpel throughoul, attached garage &amp; J acre
pone sludded k&gt;l Poss1ble blended mortgage lor
qual1hed buyers
OWN YOUR OWN CAMP SITE - 1n the wilderness
of the Wayne Natonal Forest 5 to 9 acre tracts of
wood~nd now avaolab~. adjrnmng thousands ot
acres of government land Publoc hunting, fiShing
and cam~ng ):ermitted Proces start at $3500 w1tto
fonanc1ng avaolab~

Conditioned "ay. ear corn.
Coli 614-949 -2870.

SOUTHE!IN HILLS R.E.,

•

1968 Cougar No damage.

no rust. 58,000 mi .. always
hangar$d. org1nal ow•ner.
$2 , 500 . Cell 446 - a•r-.~
after 5PM.

I~C.

Judy DeWitt- Realtor- 388-8155
J. Merrill Carter-Real1or-379-21 84
Elecky Lane- Assoc.-446.0468
Don Blake- Assoc.- 676-1480

'

Second cutting hay. Square ~
balea. Coli 614-992-7431
1-----'-....:..____ or 614-992-7308.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY --.,..--....;._ _ _
· KENNEL . AKC Chow Hay for ulo·E'xcellont :
pupploa, CFA Himalayan, excou ot Loahor
In . ~
Persian and Siamasa kit- Rutland . for more
. _,
tono. Call 446-3844 after tlon call F Go
4PM.
Coolville . 1 ·81
I- - - - - - ' - - - - 383B.
AKC Doberman pups 8 50
...h. 448-7795
Straw.
dison Mave
304•876-1868 . . . _
Ferrets
pair of Chinchillas. 1--'-------'--....;..:, · .,'
Call 448-0198.
1-'------"--....:.~---'-i'
AKC Reg . Dachahund and
• ;:
Poodle puppa . No Sunday
Autos for Sale '
uleo, no checks. Call 71
304-896-396B.

;_,:.,·&gt;

TOP SELLER, CENTURY 21.

1---------57

1976 Buick Elo~trJ 2 dr., :
PS, PB, AC, AM'F-M· - o ,·
81 ,850 or tradeJ!lr Cll'l'e, ; •:
farm equipme"t of eq"el • ~ ·
voluo. Coli 446-4637. • · .; .-

Musical
Instruments

Gibson Hummingbird guitar
w-case 8460. Tapco 120
P.A. amp, (otero) 1226 Call
614-256-1332
MAGIC Gen i Organ with
double keyboard. 1 yoor old
Poid 12.000 will aell for
$1200 00 304·678-2911
58

OLD TIME CHARM - 2 story wotto some remooel COUNTRY COMFORT - Excape to peace, 1
10g, 3-4 bedrooms, I bath, lrl10g room. d1nong room and carefree iung 10 th~ fantastoc contemporary

.Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
You can lttll buy applaa at
our orchard and storage.
Located on St At . 6B9 .
Phonl 889-37B6.

69 For Sale or Trade

..

and lamoly room Large garage with carport Stor home Beautiful Quaker mode cabrnets 1n k"chen,
ageouoldong, Cellar house. Property could be used so1nken IMng rnom w1th hreplace and cathedr~l
for "'""" and bu~ness. Stualed on 4 large lots. ceolong Formal dononr. 3 or 4 bedrooms. dell. 2!-1
. !'f'"'"
' 11232 baths, famoly room, basemen~ 30'x60' garage Approximately I 0 acres Owner 1M II conSider IJnancrog City schools
1124l

•

• The following ducrlb~Jt : ·: :
1tem will be offered fo f . ·,
public 1afe to the highest -' &gt;
bidder on tho 25th of : .
February, 1983 at . ·.
10 OOAM.
:
• 1978 Mercury Bobcat • •
Serial Number -:
BT02Y6142HI. Sale of t~e • . •
oecurlty lilted above will bo :
held at The Commerc1al and ~ ·;
Savinga Bank, 26 Court~·&gt;
Street, Golllpoh. Ohio.
· .•
TERMS: Cooh
• •:
Sellar reserve• the reght to :
bid and the roght to r&amp;JOCI '
any and all btds. Prior to tht~ "' •
date of the 1111, arr•nQf· ~ ,
menu may be made to ~ •
mspect this merchandise by : ,
callmg 448· 0682 betwaen ,. ~ •
the houra of 9:00 AM and ', ·
3·00 PM .
: .1

197B Gremlin X, 4 cyl., ·- ~
1976 BUICk EIOC!rl 2 dr .. auto
. PS . PB, good gas
PS. PB. AC. AM -FM otero
miloogo, e1.200 . Coli
81.860 or trade for cattle. 446
-1B35 or 448-98B3. ' ,
farm aqutpment of equal
value Coli 448-4537
74 Chevy Camaro. runs
'
good 11,000 Coli 448- ..
ONE Doberman tom ole w1th 0782.
pup1. one male Wanrto buy
1980 Cheveno Call 446wh1te dre1aer or vanity
4179.
304-675-7693 .

1975 Aabbot. 4 cyl., 4
speed . am - fm cassette
radio, radial t ires. $1,150
Call 614-992-2735 .

Must sell 1980 Z-~B.
loaded. new tires. Call
304-895 ·3505 .

79 MUSTANG, 4 cylindor,
good condition , 48,600
miles , 304-BB2 -2089 or
882 -2247

, #m

PLUS ADDITIONAL IN·
- Ide~
your bugness, plus 3
mobile homes. ~I rented for extra 1ncome Two lots.
Off street park11g Formerly a ftoral shop Owners
anxllus to sell Call for more onformation
11233

72

Trucks for Sale

1977 Cheuy PU 4x4, 350
engine, 4 IPd , mochonlcelly
A-1 17 ft. flatbod troller 7
ft. floor width, axe. cond .
Both for 1 prlca . Muat oell,
moke offer. Call 614-3889060.

CANADAY
REALTY

CROWN CITY frame and bnck ranch home weN
maontaoned SpacMlus lawn woth lots ol frurt trees 1n
back 3 bedrooms 1 full and 2 haW balhs. large
kill:hen. hu11g room, lamoly room, lull basement
and overSIZed 2 car garage Appro&lt; 1\'1 acres'
11240

446-3636 ANY HOU
Ron Canaday, ReaHor, 446-3636
· Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

Diana Pearson, Assoc.
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio
·-·-- ::- - ------

OPEN SUN., 2 TIL 5
LOCAT£0 AT CENTENARY ON RT. 141 approx 3 moles from
Galhpol1s Drove oul Sunday afternooo and voew th5 spac~us brick
ranch 4 or 5 bedrooms .. master suite has prouate bath. formal
d1nmg and liu1ng rooms, famo~ room with fireplace 16x32 pool 2
car garage Owner must relocate and has reduced lhe asking prce
to $75.0001 LOOK FOR OUR "OPEN HOUSE" SIGN

1 ACRES

FRAME HOME wrth finoshed basement, located on
c~ school dostnct Home has ~um sKirnr. lo111ng
room, ktchen, 2 bedrooms on maon level Basement hnas lamiy room aoo 2 bedroom&amp;
.
#187

CONVENIENCE os the word for this 3 bedroom 1i?
story home 1i? bahs, i vong room, formal donon&amp;
basemeqt Garage 8 nver front lots. Priced 10 lhe
kiw AO'&gt;
11261
ClOlY1 ~ the word lo describe th1s darl1ng 2 bed
room hoooe Newly remodeled, one car garge with
attached carport and summer IOtchen, alum1num
sidon&amp; lhermopane windows and storm doon
~(ice laflllly home
11228

.

POSSIBILITY OWNER FINANCING - Two story
wei ronstructed home 5 rooms, balh, lull basement fuel oi lumace, firepla&lt;le. Good lot approxo
(!lalely '.1 acre B~cktop road, close to wade schorA
&amp; grocery store. L~t $29,000, $5,000 down, 10

~t&gt;,:&gt;&lt;ou ."'u .

MODERN 3 BEDROOM RANCH - All electnc wotto ohomney for
woodburner, mce carpet 75'd2(1 lot An excellelt buy lllf ,
S3l,!ll000.

LOG HOME ... be.a~ful setting over seven acres Pine lrees, on a
hill ..th a )lanormatic voew of 1t1e surrouM1ng counlry~de Nearly
finished except onterior. 'A great do rt .~ourse l protecl" 3
be:lrooms, atli!ched garage Kyger Creek area Call soon lor an
appointment . of you have always wanled a log home don't wa~t
and nloss out on lh1s one' $55.000.

'

-

hts

'

WANTING TO GO lllfO BUSINESS! We have approx, 4.000 SQ It
of commercoal property located across lrtom lhe c~ park1n/i!i
&lt;Mner w!l either lease or sen. CaH today for mO(e Information
klcatKm!'

.. ,

3 BEDROOM COITAGE located ak&gt;ng Moll Creek ~d. with1n city ·
lomrts Good location and easy to access Pnce $25,000 00
lOOKING FOR ARENTAL? We have to have two mce apartmenls
overtoolung the GalopoiiS Jltf course Mutts only, no J:etsl From
$200.00.

'Cal for more detaols!

TWO STORY FRAME - New comb. wood/electric furnace. 3 BR.
dininl ruom, fulblleiiWII,Iqe dll:k with IIIII YIIW Kyaer Creek

IIMSJIIIENT. or rusidential prOjlerty located )'loth on c1ty hmols Has
been converted mtwo apts, however, can be modified as one lg_
residence. Hot WIIBf heat. lot extends from 4th Ave to 5111 Ave.

'

- su.aao -

1hree I1IIIIIIS Ifill llllh
Hll'llum.!kllw Ifill llrae-.

'

.

YfS . IU'I\ A.P R

TIREO OF THE SNOW, cold and bad drov1ng conditions Pu~thase
th1s handy home located across from Foodland Groc and leave the
drovong to someone else! Located close lo everything. gas furnace:
mod1fied for wood bum1ng heater Pnce only ~5,000 00
''

32 ACRES - Very pnvalf loca1ion. 2 fiOOI!s,
and lois of trees.
Spac10115 3 bedroom hane, formal dir1ng, famoly room, large liVIng
room aM librllry, deck, carpelid lhrougbout Home has fu111nce
but present ownen heal with woodbumer Best buy we have seen
for $55,000.

Schools. $42,WJ. POISi1te 1!10ftlll! IIIUII1jDin.

11235

COIIIEICIAL PROPERTY LOCAT£0 IN KANAUGA - 100' frontaa!i on Rt 7, comer lol, 150' deep. Has concrete block buoldon11.

Prte fl!S,OO(lOO.

'

.

LET THE SNOW FALl' You II be cozy warm th•
\\1nter 1n thos cute, easy to hea~ 3 bedroom home
Bath, den partoal basemen~ unattached 2 car
garage, small worl&lt;shop, rural water and much
more. Close to schools, church and grocery store
Call today'
11215
VICIORIAII STYLE WITH LOTS OF ClASS Home has been partly restored Coud be a beautiful home New krtchen, new bal~. formal domng
rOOf11, fam1~ room. l1vong room, 3 bedrooms, Basement and attoc Approx J acre Proce on the 20.

.

,

73

Vans &amp; 4 W . O.

1977 Plymouth window
Van. AM-FM 8 track. For
sole or trade for 4x4 .
82.100. Call 614-949 2288.
79 JEEP CJ5 111ver anniversary edition. 6 cyl .. roll cage.
AM -FM ca11etta. other extras. excellent conditiOn.
304-676 -3121 after 6 p.m

STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ceilings commer~
cial and residential. free
est1mates. Call 614-266·
1182.

23

UPPER RT 7 - Noce modern home All new 12x 16 ~tchen
complete woth new bwfi on range, m1cro-wave. oven, dishwasher
and disposal New large master bedroom and a new bath 2
be:lrooms, upstlors and '.4 bath full basement and gngle car
garage Large lot 50x400 full basement and ~n~e car garge frurt
trl'fs, gra):e arbor Concrete pabo and fish pond Gas heat City
schoo~. Washington Elementary Poced on the 30's

11 1 l982 Ctmury

#185

21 Rul Esta·• Corpqration.as trusl~l! for tht' NAF (Mh&amp; nd TM lrad«!Jfl4rksof
Century 21 Rtal Estal~ Corporation Eq u11l Hou5Jni Opporlumty (i)

,.
'

Sarcasm

24 AII8V!81S

26 Ogre
28 aaggage

carriers

29 Shoemak er's tool
30 Mother of

Apollo
32 P1gpens
33 Sohc1tude
34 Tomd
35 F1sh trap
37 Decays
38 Tran sgress
40 Short nole
41

Melhods

42 P age ot
a book
44 Pmc hed
46 Cu t of meat
47 Nothmg

48 Fireplace

part

50 Flower

PEACEFUL COUNTRY SETTING - Lovely r~hng 2,040 acres
more or less, add? a spaoous settong for th5 louely ranch home
Very well mamtloned Features liuong room. formal d1nong room, 3
bedrooms, 2 bath ~ large modern krtchen wtth an island 624 sq ft.
1n garage N1ce back patio Heat pump and cenlral aor C~ Schools
· Green Elementary Pnced on lhe 60's
36 BUILDING LOTS -In an approved sub.d!v Central sewages and all unde rground ul1ht1es Coty school dostrocl
MIDDLEPORT - New log cabon stoll under conl1ruction Select
your own carpet and decor Located on front Street lovely rover
voew features a INmg room. 2 bedrooms, kttchen, bath Gas heat
G1ve us a call lor more detaols'

52 Care for
53 ArtifiCia l

language
55 Halt
57 Negat ive
56 Soak s

59 Tn a l
60 Phlll y s

Stat e
62 Campara
t1ve en di ng
64 In a stew
66 Brother of

Odm
68 Near
69 LIQUid

measure
RIO GRANDE - large brock &amp; stone ranch. overlookong lhe
beaujoful Bob Euans farms Th~ spacMlus home leatures 3 bedrooms
formal liVIng roomw woth w b fireplace, and donong
room
buo~-m kolchen mcludmg a microwave oven Spa
Many extras, oncludong the use of tennos cour1S

. #269

' IDiri.OI.T1TOWitiD . . . OPIUTID.
UCII ORJCa 15

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE Cella614·367·
7471 or 614-367-0691 .

Need somal:hing hauled
away or something movad?
We'll do it. Cell446·3169 or r-.-:-,.~-;I~Mc:P:-:R:-,O:-V-E~M-E_N_T"'-S-,
614-266-1967 after 6.

?"'":

overlooking a large lake. 4
1bOO rooms, 2
I o room &amp; d1J1ng room Over 2 500
sq It of loving space E~oy the use of ttie club house, swommong
pool and basketball courts
NE)¥ LISTING- POMEROY - ROUND CEOAfHOME - Lots of

g~ss and a love!Y UilW Wooded lot 3 or 4 bEdrooms kotchen

liv1ng 100m donong area All wooden beamed ceol;ngs Fuli
basement Select your own carpet &amp; deeor. Circled ruslie round
deck completely arouoo lhe home The only round home on lhe
area Take a loo~ at this home!
LOAN ASSUMPTION - 8Yo INT. - $3.900 DOWN PAYMENTfttlnttoly paymenls $348 24 oncludong !axes &amp; In~ Nice 3 bedroom
(&lt;Inch Large modern kitchen ThiS home would be an excellent
starter home.
lARGE SPACIOUS HOME ~ This home os new features 3
bedrooms 2~ balhs, l1vong (00111, formal dmong room. family room,
modern kttchen and 2 car garage 1n c~ school dostrict

'

'

MODERN RANCH ,HOME - 3 or 4 be:lrooms, niCe hvong room,
eat-1n krtcheQ, famiy mom, ful basement This holl)e has been
uery well kept 2 car garge Priced only on t1oe 40s
I
I

---

JIMS WATEfl SERVICE
Call J1m Lanter, 304-676·
7397.
87

Upholstery

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Aue .. Gall1polos.
446-7B33or446-1B33.

'~'

B'1 ll's

f

Pr~me replacement
Windows
Storm w1ndows &amp; doors
Alum1num &amp; yonyl
sidiMI
Howmel Patoocovers
How met screen rooms
Mobolehomeawn1ngs

Nu

SUNDAY PUZZLER

19 tnsn seaport
21 Solo
22 Pitcher

'repla2clle_baths, large lormal lovong &amp; donong rm1&lt; r,m,lv rm with
"'
Modem equop):ed kttchen, basement arge sun deck
pool 3 acres, more or less Shown by appoonment

511 Second Aw , Gallopols
Seov1ng Galloa &amp; Mei&amp;S
Count1es

Spaclallzing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
houao callo. Call 576-2398
, •
or 446-;1!4!14.

d8'JICC

~n~01_uuooo HILLS ESTATE - stalely llutcli CcAomal features 4

General Hauling

RON'S Television Service.

10 Ma)onty
14 Detectmg

NEW LISTIM; - Small 2 bedroom home located
tust InSide c~ lomrts Present~ used as rertal
property Home has huong room, dinong room, krtchen, batto and utihly room Pnced al $14,900

ml

Uncon·
$350.00
(Costs included).
•
, W1lls $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

HOWARD L. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Alum~numuliloly
Gutters-Downspouts-NewbUildings
Repair-Gutter Pointing - MOWAEYS Upholstery At
691 Moller Dr~ve
Storm Doors a. Windows. 1 Box 124. Pt Pleasant.
446·2642
Free Eatlmat .. . Phone 304-676 -4164.
Free Estimates
614-949 -2263 or 614- ,.
1;:::::::::::::::::1----~---=:::::::::
992-2791.

NEW LISTING -Holda Drove. brick tro-levelm faorvoew Estates
Features 3 brs, hvong rm , moolern kotchen, fam1iy room w1th
woodburner, basement W~k to stores, theater, elc Garage and
slorage bu1ldon11. Lots ot trees. shrubs and fklwers Beautiful home
that has been well taken care ol Washongton Elementary Reason a
ble proced

#189

1~ ACRES 1ncluded with the sale ol tillS older COMMERCIAL RETAIL BUILDING located down
hOme With basement 30&lt;40 barn Tobacco base • town bus1ness d~trrt 3 story, 011er 6.000 sq It
Priced 1n the md 21)&gt;
#188 Buidong dMded for extra mcome Use part ~ase
- ttoe rest Call for more delail&amp;
. #253
liVEST IN LAIID - Y011'll be ahead on~he future
acre~ approx 3
from Galipolis 6 room ENJOY REAL LIVING on th~ spacoous 3 be:lroom
hiiuse, 2 barns, tool shed. farm shl)ll COunty water bJjevel 1 lull batto, 21\ baths. Large famo~ room
~n Twp We onurte offers now , Listing proce woth wb ' fireplace. Plenty of cabinet space 1n
~.000
'
k~h!ln Garage Large lawn Assumable mortgage
·:
•
t-11248 Pr~e reduced $5,000.
.
•
#257
MIDDLEPORT - Solid older home on -~xdeflent
~ondition 2 story wth 3 bedrooms 111d large batto
NEW LISTING - Located at up):er Route 7. 2
up. Maon level foyer, lov1ng room, all modern k~­ story hori1e woth separate prage and noce s~e lot
(hen and a beautiful donong room This home has a 2 M.H spaces At present there ~ a small barber
U basement 3 car prage and n~e bifi log.
shop 1n front and one room has been used as agun
•
11247 shop
11270
~NJOY EASY LIVING wilhoul destfll~ng your 6 ROOMS and bath, 2 or3 bedrooms, woodbumer,
bpdget bedroom older horne. Remodeled. 3acres aM fore~ace. Drifted well County weter avilla~e
plus mobile home hook-up. Just off Rt 160
1.50 acre~ Close to Wayne NatiOnal Forest
'
112~ $24,900.

to

..••
,.
,,..
.
:·.
.

#181

86

Improvements
88 Ford S-600
good running
576 -2882

S22.!ll0 IS THE ASKING PRICE of this 3 ilfi!room
home on Rutland LIVIng room :lormal d1nong room,
bath, kotchen, encklsed heated lrnnt porch Basement Natural gas large storage area Owner 11nanang avaolable
11209

#265

or
tested ll1vorces

Dissolutions

446.n855

#256

RENTAL PROEPRTY - Needs some fiKong bul
would be a good rentalonveslmenl Small 2 bed
room home woth hu1ng room. k1lchen atloc, basement aoo niCe soze lawn Located on c~y

HAMUN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-lAW

SEWING Machine repa1n.
se rvice Authortzed S1nger
Sales &amp;. Sannce Sharpen
Sctuora . fa br1c Shop.
Pomeroy . 992-22B4.
ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City &gt;u,rnilturol I
304-676 -260B .

or starter hom&amp;
of lh~ 2. bedroom home
of town full basement Garage En8r!IY
nalural gas lurnace lnsJjated
slorm doors and wondow&gt; Proced to sell

1II STORY FRAME w1th appro• 2\1 acres Home
has 3 bedroom~ large lotchen, iuong room With
fireplace 2 bath and part basement Th1s home
overlooks the nver and proced at $25.000

#252

COMMERCIAL- SUPER BUY
PRICE REDUCED FROM $69,900 TO $45,000! OOWNTCYfiN BUSINESS BUILDING O'IER 1400 SQ FT BUSINESS AREA FRONTING
ON COURT STREET PLUS OVER 1300SO. FT. BUILDING SUITABLE
FOR STORAGE, AUTO REPAIR, ETC FRONTII't3 ON ALLEY 2 BR
APT ON SECOND FLOOR THE PRICE IS RIGHT •. CALL FOR A
SHOWING

COIIIMEI!CJAL BUILDING - 82x80 all steel ron·
struction w1th fireproof Insulation. Ouertoead cr111~
has office &amp; bathS Formerly used for boat sales &amp;
repaor located across from Silver Bridge Plaza with
access to the OhMl Rover Potential unlom"ed. Cal
Ranny Blackburn at Strout Realty, 446-0008.

Byerly and Felta Automatic
Tranamt..ton Rep.e.r NOW
OPEN. Corner of Kemper
Hollow &amp; Kerr Bethel Rd.
Coll446, 6639.

Get your karpet In ship
1hape. Water removal, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-446-2107.

BRICK RANCH - COMPLETELY FURNISHED Lovely 3 bedroom r.ooch leatunng a hvong room
den, dinong · kitchen comtxned, 2 baths Yermopane woll:lows with marb~ wondow gl~ and many
more extras A lovely horne woth manv line features CALL NOW
11227
RIO GRANDE VIUAGE - Sjt back and enjOy the
contort of lhos well maontaoned brock and frame
bijevel 3 bedroom~ 1i? baths. kiche11. romplele
woth disposal, range, relngerator, &lt;!Shwasher low
heating til&gt; Woodburner Garage large dec~
Alire fan Assumable mortgage
11220
BUILD NOW wh!e onlerest rates are droppon&amp; 10
Acres vacant land to do as you !)ease NO restnc
tions Oty school dostrict
- Located along lower ROute 7 Noce
land for buol&lt;lng a home land lays Hat and over
looks the nver

Electrical

SUPERB
acres of wooded area
surrounds th1s natural wood sKied ome 3 bed
rooms, 2 fuM baths Foreplace, calhedr~ c~hng and
wood beam&gt; Tastefully decoraled M1nutes of
Ho~er Medocal Cenler Proced to sell

SMAll FARM - 25\1 Acres, house, bam, bush
hov. tractor and wa~n 2 story home has 2 bedrooms upsta1r.;, lovong room, d1nong room. krtchen
aM batto down Land m1:6tly pasture, so me tiltab~
aM a noce soze tobacco base Property IS located at
fneMiy R~ge
11266

unno• Healin1 &amp; Aor Condo·
t1ononc All lypes Insulation
Electhcal Winn1.
Call446-8515 or 446-0445
After 4 30 p m
"'

&amp; Refrigeration

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, otump
romoyol. Coll676-1331 .

#268

'

Auto Repair

Connelly

11273

burner, located
1
ground swommong pool

77

AND MAX

ELLIOTT

CARTER'S PLVMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Phone 446 - ~ 888 or 446·
4477

76 Toyota 2 TC engine and
transmiaaion , Pinto or M~s­
tang 4 ~' · heads , VW engine
port• Cell 814-246-9436
or 614-245-6087.

COUNTRY
bedroom remodeled ranch w1th 11 acres
I
barn Mobile home onduded lor extra oncome
PriCed on ttoe 40's

#196

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
RUSS

AC ROSS
1 Fragment
6 Playwnght

CoURAGE. My !lear Are you tired of looking althe
same ol:l hanl to maontaon overpriced homes Then
see th~ lovely brock ranch woth 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, loreplace. central aor 2 car garage with
etectr~ opener NICe lawn $59,500

82

Auto Parts
llo Accessories

1972 Ford Bronco. 302 . V8. 3 speed. excel cond PAINTING · Interior and
exterior. plumbing, roofing,
$3 .000. 388·8713 .
aome remodeling . 20 yrs.
1977 Blazer 4x4 low mile'o. exp Call 614-388 -9662 .
'77 Pontiac Bonneville , need some bodywork. Call
brogham, p ~ wlndows , 446-026B.
Marcum Roof1ng • Spoutp - sea ta, p · d - I o ck. c I ot h1 1;&lt;;-;;;;;--;::::-7.:::;;:::::=;;- ing 30 vearuexperoence,
interior, good condition "'
Jeep . Excellentcondl · specializing in built up roof.
Black 614·992 -3647 Coli 814-388-9817 .
304-882 -2BB6 .

alter 5.00, 304-675-8843 .

I

1973 Olda Cutlou Su·
pre me. good work car. C•ll
814-949-2870

76

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West V~rginia Over
20 less expen1ive cars In
stock .

79 Volkswagon Rabbit, call

home, 5yea1Sot!
with 3 bedrooms and
baths large separate
garage Coal shed Tobacco base Approx 5 acres
clealed. This property 1s m1:6tly wooded and loc&amp;ed 1n Pefl)\ Townshop
,

Autos for Sala

The

1979 Honda LX. 6 spd • use1
any gas, guranteed 30 miles
per gallon Tires like new.
Call 992-6460

1976 Chevy Blazer. Low
mileage. 4 ~ WD. new paint
job , new !ires, will sale or
trade. 614-742 -2075.

1----,------"'"""

·~ REALTY, Inc.
. I 446-1066

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST - Uke new sectonal hOme. 1200 sq fl. 3 BR, 2 baths. cathedral
ceolmgs, 2 water systems Alllhls on I 55 acre lot
w1th foshmg RQnd between Rio &amp; '11nton. $29,900

EXECUTIVE CHARM -That's what you' ll fond
10 thos 4 BR, 2 ~ bath Dutch Colonoallocated on
beaut1ful Charola~s Holts Esta,tes. Complete 1n
euery way oncludong a completely eqUipped HOMESTEAD HERE or use a hunting 1'"
kotchen, large living &amp; don1ng rms , lamoly rm vacation home, etc Rustic log home IS bUI" lro111
woth f1replace, basement &amp; cent aor, The 300 hand hewn beams and has a sleepong loft. modern
sq ft sun deck overlooks the beautiful 20x44 bath, large stone fireplace and approx 27 acres of
pool All thos plus a well landscaped 311 acre woods on the Wayne Nat1onal Forest Extra land
lot
Ranny Black- av~olat&gt;e E.Asy Terms

REALTOR'

w....

'••

Buy owner 1982 Dodge
Mirada &amp;.IC . cond 13.000
miles , 318 . V -8. cruise.
many extras e8 ,93Z Call
446-0047

71

W. Va .

WOOD

Enormous lamoly room woth custom buolt
brock fireplace
fan, equipped kitchen has diShwasher.
range an11 refrogerator Snack bar separates kotchen from domng
area 3 bedroom~ 1'h baths Exira large utohty room woth ample
storage 2 car garage Narly an acre Kyger Creek area ThiS hom•
1n excellent conditon $o2,000

'

'II __._____,___ _

Autos for Sale

t97B Buick Century 2 bdr.
auto .• P's, AM · FM stero
cassette . ex cond Call
446 -2133

lB.

t

Ruth Reave• AIIO ur•d•.
Saddlee. brldlu. winter :
horee blenketa Weatarn +booto. 614·698-3290. • ~

BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE - Approx
511, acres located on the Graham School Rd
counly water, oveo 300 fi road loonlage Green
Grade School and Galloa Academy H1gh Schad

$10 900

Ohio-Point

70 Pasture
demzen
71 Toward
shelter
73 Yeas t, for
example

75 Follow1ng
first

77 W1ld plum
78 Substance

eo Boot h

B 1 Before

62 Cores

84 F1gures of

speech
86 Brook
87 Child s toy
89 Employ
92 Babylonian

abode of
the dead
95 Baker s

product
98 Fa lsehoods
99 Type of
fastener
10 I Vacafl::m
p l a~e

1n
heraldry
Unusual

103 Grafted

104
10 5 Stalk
106 E1ther s
compan 1on
10 7 Th ree ~ toed
sloth
108 Saucy

1 10 London
meal
1 11lhe two
ol us
112 Wmter

135 Ooze

13 7

Secluded

.... alley
139 H!gh , ln

17 Wat er
course
16 Takes lrvc
29 Word w1th

where
or when

mU SIC

140 Call

141 Propor!IDn
143 S1amese
natives
145

23 C lass ify
25 Shan jacket
27

Number

146 Spotted
ammal
148 Course

150 Feels reg ret
101
152 M1stakes

153 Depress1on
154 Mon ster's
loc h
156 Iterate
157 lawshed
fondne ss on

158 Feedbag
fodder

159 Bnslle
160 Legal d ocu-

men ts

DOW N
1 Stalk ot

gram

2 Type at
embrOi dery

3 Arouses to

actmn

4 M oham-

veh1CIC

medan

11 3 Egypt ian
sacred bull
11 5 FL s ne 1gh·
bO'
11 7 Red and
Yellow
11 9 Symbol
tor tm
120 Coconut
fiber
121 Salutations
124 Soapstone
126 Burst fc rth
127 Edges
128 Features of
some maps
130 Weav1ng
mach1ne
132 Tle
13 G1rl ol song
13 Anc1ent

name

5 Ston ollru1t
6 New Eng
State

7 Lrmo
B The Ebro
and Gra nde
9 Posl
e~tc.h a n ge

10 Metn c
measure
11 1slndeb t
12 We•ght of

lndta
13 26th Pres
14 Unusual
15 S1amese
com
16 Extreme
conservaUve

lnd•an m111
tary ofhcer

28 Ache
3 1 Auncular
33 Facta!
feat ure
36 Knock s
38 Bndge
40 Cnes hke
a dove
41 Departed
43 Sutl s
45 Co nfirm ed
46 Bug of a
messy sort
47 Gusto
49 Ins trument

5 1 Plague
52 Frag 11e
53 Pape r
men sure
5 4 Heraldi C
bearmg
S6 Gave
59 T1nges
60 1nd1gent
6 1 Overwhelms
63 Co lomzed

65 Otnes
6 7 Goal

69 R1ver 1n

Italy
70 Lenlenl

72 Noblemen
74

NC's ne•gh·
bo•

76 Symbol lor

cenum
77 Ogle
79 Game at

83

cards
B~rd 's

beak

85 Placard
66 S o ft mud

87 Putt up
88 AS SIS\an t
89 Above

90

l ncli n ~

91 We1rd
92 Macaw

93 Go-werns
94 - a rule
96 The sweet-

sop
97 College
ofhc1a1
100 Be tore

noon Abbr

102 Allowance

for waste

105 Narrow

...

opening

109 South Afn .

can
11 2 Marketed
113 M1htary

"

..

group
114 Longlegged b~rds
116 M atur es
I 18 Plod
thr ough
mud

120 TWISI
12 1 Young
woman
122 Nalive

Amencans
123 l e t1t stand
125 Army Of11cer
126 Span1sh
dance
127 Foray
129 Scorc h
13 1 Ol th e m1nd
132 Bundled
133 Planet
134 Kilns

t36 Dock
t38 8 1tdS
homes
140 Difficult
14 1 Rage
142 S-shaped

mold1ng

144 Pour forth
147 Am en ca n
au lhor
148 Soup of
a so rt
149 SuperlatiVe

endmg
15 1 Slender
ftn1al

153 Not e of
scale
t 55 A contment

Abbr

. I'

-·

"
"

�Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

r:

j

SAFETY - Safety packaging ol over the county
under tbe lid. Three medlcallonl on tbe left are new
medications has arrived In Meigs County In acool' packaging. The boxes are sealed ratber thin bavlng
dance with new safe packaging laws following tbe Oaptops,thecapscrlldsaresealedaadundertbelds
Tylenol problem of several months ago. On the left are loll seals. WbDe some CODiulllon does exist 011 the
are three medlcattons which are pennltted along new safety packaging required In regard to pills aod
with slmllar drugs to remain on shelves ol businesses capsules wUh some feeling thai tbe law does not refor one year. They are packaged In Oap type boxes quire safety packaging for plDs, pbannuclst Kenneth
with cotton under the Hds ol the bottles. The bottle ol . · McCullough states. that aD medications, lacludlng
kaopectate, fourth from left, has only a piece ol tape both plDs and cap8111es, wDI he required to he_In safety
over the lid, an approved new packaging process. The . packaging.
·
next bottle, Tycaps, has a taped Hd and a loU seal

Gold heist "very professional job'
NORTII MIAMI, Fla. (AP) Two masked gunmen used professional skill in making off with an
estimated 875 pounds of gold from
one of the largest gold-smelting
firms in the Southeast, officials say.
The robbers sUpped through a
barbed wire gate where a guard
usually stands, authorities said
Friday.
Then they broke open an electronic door usually kept locked and
overpowered three men inSide
before anyone could trip an alarm.
Finally, officials said, the bandits
vanished duiing a fierce thunderstorm that had cleared the streets of
potential witnes-ses.
"Their quickness and their

smoothness, how they knew exactly
what to do and how togoabout it ... it
seemed to be a very professional
job," said Metro-Dade robbery Sgt.
Sandy Guttman.
The gold stolen Thursday night
from Golden Door Jewelry Creatjons was worth $6 mlllion to $9
million. officials say.
Metro-Dade police spokesman
Tim Davis said the FBI was calling
the robbery the biggest gold heist in
''recent meemory.
· The thieves wa lked into the plant ,
forced owner Shaul Credinclosu to
open three safes then blindfolded
and bound him and two other
employees with electrical tape,
Davis said.
1

'

'

Credlnciosu was kicked in the
back, officials said, but there were
no other injuries.
"They got away clean" with bars,
chains and other Items made of
gold, said Sgt. William McArthur.
FBI agents were called In
because of the size of the theft and
the likelihood that the stolen gold
would be taken to another state and
sold, FBI spokesman Dennis Elich
said.
Investigators were trying to
determine why the door was
unlocked, Elich said. " It may be that someone had just
come through and brought something or was In theprocessoftaking
something out," he said. "We want
to obtain an explanation.''

Paint plet

nt, W. Va.

W estQn senteneed for four deaths
CINCINNATI (AP) - Richard
Weston has been seQ.tenced to four
consecutive life terms In prison for
what a prosecutor said were
execution-style slaylngs of a lireworks dealer and three others,
InCluding a 5-year-old cblld.
Weston showed no emotion when
Clermont County Common Pleas
Judge J&lt;&gt;hn L. Watson sentenced
him Friday.
· Weston, 43, of BrookvDle, Ind:,
was convicted of four counts of
aggravated murder In the July 5,
1981, shooting deaths of. fireworks
dealer Bl.lly Stevenson; his . wife,
Lynda; their 5-year-old son Billy
Jr.; and her brother, Edward·
Dowell.
"ibis ls as vicious and as brutal
an act that will ever come before
this court," Gregory Chapman,
assistant prosecutor, told the judge.
"Mr. Weston stlll maintains his

Innocence," defense. attorneys R.
Daniel Hannon and Carl Zugelter
said In a prepared statement.
After the shootings, the Bethel,
Ohio, home was set afire. Investigators say they bellevealargeaJTXl\lllt
of cash was taken.
Clennont County Prosecutor
George Pattison said he could not
ask for the death penalty because

boywasshot~hllelaylngface:doWn:

on a couch, probably hiding his face,:
In fear."

•

'

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

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOUS - Flllng for marriage Ucenses this past week In
Gallla County Probate Court were:
Jeffrey R Sanders, 19, Rt. 2, 1
Crown City, construction worker,
and Christine Wuerch, 19, 5 Glendale Drive, studerit.
Sid Vance, . 58, Rt. 2, Vinton,
retired, and Frances M. Tucker, 47,
Addlson,hou~.
James TI!ornton, 23, Rt. 2,
Patriot, unemployed, and Olive L.
Swisher, 16, Rt. 2, Patriot, student.
Paul D. Laney,36,Mason, W.va:,
government employee, and Judy
M. Roach, ~. New Haven, W.Va.,
American Electric Power
employee.

OR. GEORGE W. DAVIS

_,;..__ _ OPTOME-TRIST----,--

How Contacts Remain In Ploce
To understand how a contact larly lrtlportant to make sure
leJ!S stays bl place without fal· that the lelllJeS you get are pel'·
Ung oft, take a clean flat piece of . fectly fttted to YOW' eye.
finn plastic (such as a ncense or
Only AFTER thls has been de· credit card) moisten It and place termined Is the proper prescr~P,
It against a clean window. It will tlon to correct near-slghtel!ness
cling to the glass, yet sUdes or far·slghtedness Incorporated
about easily as long as there Is a Into lt. You thua wear on YOW'
bit of moisture between the two CORNEA practically the same
surfaces.
prescription yoil have been
1be contact lens does the wearing In your spectacles.
same. However,lnsteadofbeblg
fiat, like a window, It Is CIU'Ved to
match the shape of your eye. U
the curvature Is notconectly su/11 1/1e 111t e r es r of beuer vision
Ited, It wDI not stay on propes ly
fr om (he office of
or may be un~ortable. Since ·
corneal curvatures are not tbe
Geerge W. Davll, O.D.
same In all people, It Is partlcu- ·
458Second Ave., Gallipolis

*******

A guide to local'
television p
February 13 .thru February 19

Phone WI-~

ROOM SIZE

CARPET SALE

Epidemic leads to pet_ inoculation
areas last year when a landscape
By LINDA DUFFIELD
cases of rabies were reported
Associated Press Writer
workertrappedadozenraccoonson
throughout the state, said CrawHAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP)- A . a suburban Washington estate and
ford . ibis year, 75 cases of the
widespread rabies epidemic in freed them 30 miles away. , disease have been diagnosed- 71ln
Maryland earned principally by
The freed raccoons "came out of
raccoons.
the Chevy Chase area where we
raccoons has prompted an extenThe Centers for Disease Control
sive drive to inoculate thousands of have had a Jot of rabid raccoons,"
In Atlanta have assigned a staff
Dr. Kenneth Crawford, state veterlpets against the deadly disease.
doctor to monitor the situation.
Health officials fear the epidemic nar ian for the Maryland Depart"This type of art episode Is not
was spread to previously unlnfected ment ofHealthandMentalHyglene,
said Thursday. .
.
going to cure Itself and disappear In
,No cases of rabies have been
a six-month period, because we
reported In the counties where the
have a fantastic nwnber of patenraccoons were freed , Crawford
tlally rabid animals," said Crawsaid. But It may be too early to
ford. He speculated rabies would
determine whether rabies was
remainaproblemlntbestateforas
long as five years.
MIDDLEPORT - A Valentine spread to these locations because
party honoring Rotary Anns was
Maryland's epidemic Is the result
the disease has a two-year lncubaheld when Middleport-Pomeroy
tion period, he said.
of an outbreak of rabies In raccoons
Rotary Club met Friday nigh! at
The health department has or- In Florida, Crawford said. From
Heath United Methodist Church.
ganized dog and cat vaccination
there, the disease spread up the
Dr. R.R Pickens. president, and clinics In areas where the disease
Atlantic Coast, he said.
Roger Luckeydoc participated in
has cropped up, and expects to
In Chicago, an apparently unre_ the program.
vaccinate75,000petsduringl983. - lated outbreak of rabies has
Pickens spoke on love of country,
• And the state expects about 400
·
community and fellowman and ·
weeks, according to county health
Luckeydoo read a Valentine's Day
treatmenttoforreceive
rabies . officials.
post-exposure
Maryland
residents
this year. Crawford $aid figures
verse'
Each lady attending was pres- were not available on the number of
ented a red rose. Following the
people who already have been
dinner meeting, members and their
treated following expasure to rawives were invited to Pickens'
bies, which attacks the central
home, where they were entertained
nervouse system.
with organ music presented by
Officials date the current outJenny Sheets.
break to Sept 10, 1981, when rabies
Dinner was served by the iadiesof
was diagnosed In a raccoon found In
the church.
Allegany County. During 1982, 152

tbe crimes occwTed before ohiO
reinstituted capital pwilshment. ~
"I don't bellew a person whci.
corrunltssuchacrmeasthlsshould:·
ever be released," saldPattlsoll. "It:
was a brutal execution. Everyone,
was shot In the head. A 5-year-old- -

Includes complete

-Many different colors and piles
jute backing
~Bound on all sides
listings

Ill&amp;. 't&amp;.OO 9'x12' ......We 163.99
Ill&amp;. •121.00 12'xl2' .• We 115.99 '
R... '160.00 12'xl5' .sale 11116.99
... '192.00 12'xll -~ 1127.99
R... '224.00 12'x21' .S.Ie 1149.99

Rotary hosts .
Valentine party

PHONE
Jl!ft2-3671

. I

Donald Sutherland
Pages 3, 4
"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

.FREE
OEUYERY

r~st~rl~ck~e~n:l:O:do:gs:a~nd~ca:ts:ln~r:ec:~:t~!~~~;n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~====~

Showbeat
Page4
Country Music
Page5

THE MONEY MARKET DEPOSIT ACCOUNT

A DIJI1i'ERENT BOLE FOR A BOUJNG ~ -llodi.W Mk* .Jager, playing "'11te
Empel'GI'," .. cwfill J by KJWeullllld ButMiralf-' ' Ia '"DDe Jl."'....l n..... wlllclnrlli air
lliellda yeu • ~. 1be eable-TV Miww., ·" • :' 'fnlm llle a- Cbrl
Andenon
11'-* by .J- ~ Siver, lbe llliDw II a prmmt ..... of 11be11eJ Duvall's "FMI'Ie TaJe
'nn Ire." (AI' • • 3' ••·
,
.
II

-

Hollywood
Jlages 6, 8

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
_,

$11995
Twia

PER SET

;

.,

.. • $1 00,000 F.D.I.C. Insurance
• . Check Writing Privileges
• Dally ·Interest Rate
• No Withdrawal Penalty
• $2500 Minimum Deposit

Promises, oonfusioo, ~miCs, bonuses .: you'Dhear ~ al blay ... what some financial
inStitutilns are png to do for )'Ill. But once again, ()1iJ V*Y Bank. tie Tri-Qxmtys
innovm li tte best in 11*11 banking semce, is one *P aheld. Easiy proven when yoo
chid .our ~rbmaoce reconl since we mltmlllaiy lnYeslment l way ~- ~
• 1981, when many insliluiDis eilher iln' koow what consumer~ iri!rest
iiMISimenl savings were fJ simjly diln' e11e " *this ruslooler Slnb.ft. oor ·
Daly lnveslmetlllllttney Mait.et 1ccoult ~ rd mag new, lfs sim~ soo6g
~'
..'

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~

hio Valley Bank
Four location• to Hrve you better.
Member: FDIC

.

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--

..
"

.,

_

'
·I

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