<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13697" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13697?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T17:50:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44671">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/753a298db3d53a941781f258cd375734.pdf</src>
      <authentication>28de4d35547ee9b50e6204235aeb031e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42868">
                  <text>Ohio

Attorney~

EXAMINES - Laurie Wayland examines the retina of the eye of
James L. Schmoll, OD, Middleport, as a part of a class conducted by
Dr. SchmoU at the Pomeroy Elementary School Thursday afternoon.
Dr. SchmoU el&lt;plaloed the working of the eye, eye care and safety steps
1n regard to the eyes bt his lecture to the sixth grade class of Darlene
Amolt. Laurie uses an ophthalmoscope to examine Dr. Schmoll's eye.

Meigs County happenings

New pumper ordered

extreme cruelly.
Marriges dissolved were Nancy
K. J elfer s and Ric hard K. J elfers;
Dav id Lewis Chase and Alice Jane
Chase; Bobby Lee Kuhn and Dessie
Mae Kuhn.

Emergency runs .
Three emergency calls were
answered by local units Thursday
and on Friday morning, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice reports.
Friday morning at 3: OJ a. m. , the
Syracuse Unit lookCharlesGrueser
10 Veterans Memorial Hospital. On
Thursday at 9:04a.m .. Racine took
Joyce Hoback toSt. Joseph Hospital
in Pil'rkersburg · and Middleport
treated Jim Nelson at the Middle·
port Village Hall but provided no
transporta tion.

(Continued from page 1)

and a dishwasher to Eloise Boston.
There were two bids on a wheelhorse being sold and those bidders
will be asked to resubmit bids.
The board extended thanks to the
medical staff of the Holzer Clinic
which will be providing a $200
scholarship to senior students in
area high sctioot'who are tops in the
field of scieiice--one for each high
school--and will be pursuing higher
education in the.field of science. An
awards banquet will be staged each
year to honor these students.
Supt. Roberts and Principal David
.Janson attended a meeting on the

Meets Tuesday
A meeting of the Middleport
Chamber of commerce will be held
at 12: 15 p.m. Tuesday at the LaSalle
Restaurant.

Boat licenses available

The Middleport Fire Department · wlll be sporting a
new pumper in the near
future.
Fire Chief Jeff Darst reports the department has approved the purchase p! an
Initial attack pumper to be
paid for with department
funds. The department has
signed a contract with Dill's
Mountaineer Supply to bu!ld
the truck for $29,000 and has
ordered the chassis from Slm·
mons for $12,000. The depart·
ment has also ordered
equipment for the truck .at a
cost of $14,000.
During January the department answered a total of 42
calls including five fire and 37
rescue 'm issions . All vehicles
were driven a total of 829.8
miles during the month .

The Ohio Depa rtment of Natural
Resources, division of watercraft,
has announced that 198;3 beat
licenses have been released and ca n
be obtained at the Davis-Quickel
lnsurance Agency. 114 Court St.,
Pomeruy, across from the court· .
house, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . through the
week and from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
Sat urdays. Boat registrations now
include the motors and are issued Meets Sunday
for three years. Anyone wishing
Meigs County Genealogical Sofurt~r information may call 992·
ciety will meet Sunday at 2 p.m. at
6677.
the Meigs'Museum.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted -- Delia Ro seberry,
Pomeroy; Velma Luckeydoo. Le·
tart, W. Va .; Andrew Lambert.
Rutland .
Discharged--Paul tBob) Houda·
shell, Bennie Spears, Betty Dill.
James Nelson , George Greene.
Charles Grueser.

Phone rep to speak
A representative of the General
Telephone system wm be at the
Pomeroy Village Council meeting
Monday night to respond to ques·
tlons about service. Village officials
are requesting tha t residents with
complaints contact village hall
prtor to the Monday night meeting
so that complaints can be compiled
and presented to the telephone
representative.

$568
WITH COLOR

Two divorces were granted a nd
three others were dissolved in
Meigs County Corrunon Pleas
Court.
Granted divorces were Hazel
Darlene Weimer from David Lee .
Weimer on charges of gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty a nd
Donna Marie Malone from Arlie
Elden Maione on charges of

TRADE IN

· Preserving

the past

Fifty arrests were made by
the Middleport Pollee Depart·
ment during January, Chief of
Pollee J. J. Cremeans reports.
The department investigated
1l accidents and vehicles : ·
were driven 4,120 miles. Mer·
chant pollee collec(lons for the
month totaled $64; parking
meter collections, $872, and
386 parking tickets were
wr! tten.
·

0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 I 0 00 0 t U

Sends Love"

c.PI'osht•

Seven defendants were fined
when they appeared before Judge
Patrick O'Brten Wednesday.
Fined were Bill Davis, Hemlock
Grove, speed, $21 and costs: Robert
Pickett, Jr., Pomeroy, speed, $22
and costs; Carl C. Morris, Long
Bottom, improper turn, $10 and
costs; John Pickens, Portland.
possesS an illegal deer, unchecked
deer taken during l~ deer gun
season, $50 and costs; Melvin Duff,
Rutland, assault, $50 and costs,
destruction of property, $2:), barred
from a Middleport 'tavern for one
year, and restitution, disorderly
conduct, $25; Stephen South, Grove
City, 'speed, $24 a!!d costs; John
Anderson, Racine, failed to display
valid license plates on tra!ler, $10
and costs.

PRESIDENT'S SALE
CONTINUES

BeHer Homes and
'I;,. .,

Gardens~

. LISTENING TO CONCERNS - Gov. Richard
Celesle, .Oanked by University of Toled&lt;l students,
lhllens to their worries about reduction lit the state's
hlghel' education fuming. Celeste spoke Friday at the
university, campaigning for a 90 percent bike bt the
stale's btcome lax. (i\P laserphoto)

Richard H. Billman 11, 0.0.
113 Court Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PH. 992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; SOIT CONTACT

1 \ \ '

I

By KATIE CROW
'l'ln1e&amp;Senllnel Stall
POMEROY - Two years· of
work by the Meigs County Commissioners wlU be culminated
with the opening of a new county
landfill sometime In April.
The new 136 acre landfl~ is located In Salisbury Township, on
township road 2f!l. leading to
Howell HlU Cemetery, directly
off the bypass on SR 7.
One parcel of the 136 acre
tract was purchased from Man·
nlng Webster and the other par·
eel from Charles, Albert and
Avery Goeglein.
Funds for the landfill and its
development are dertved from a
block grant through theOhlo £Je.
partmenl of Development. The
grant totals $89,00!.
From the grant money $47,500
will be paid for ttre land and
$9,500 will be used for development. Any cost above the $57,00!
will be absorbed by the county
commissioners.
The balance of the grant will
be distributed to Rutland and
Racine V!Uages, Tuppers Plains
and Chester Fire Departments
and for-Bedford 'lbwnship Road
236, which will be resurfaced
and ditched. The road Is used as
a flood route when U.S. 33 is covered by high water.
Expense to the-county for an
access road, to the site has thus
far cost the county approxl·
mate!y$15.000. The commission·
ers have set aside a portion of
their revenue sharing money to
cover the county's expense. The
commissioners are not sure at
this point what the total cost of
.the access road w!ll be.
The present landi!U began operation in 1975 and Is locatectoff
SR 143 also in Salisbury Town-

MORE BIG NEWS!

11.9%

fl!'b!uar y 28

Vo111 when~

Annual Percentage Rate prof'1.,b•ted Deeter COntllbu

I t:II.&amp;VF'IY WALK BEHIND WITH

Qualified buyers
can now f i ntlnl:~ any n'!w

SULKY

A,ll,ance il l 1t1e new lo"'
ra te ot 1\ 9 % . AppiH~) 10
v~hid~s del• w~ r ed

1h1ouqh

Marc h 3 1 o r or dered by

8 · HP MASSEY FERGUSON
WITH 36 IN. MOWER

BUIU'IN
AMERICA.

12 HP MASSEY FERGUSON
WITH 42 IN. MOWER

loon may ('l lfect pr ice,

Ren• ult !l ll• ance com ·

bines Eu r ope ~t n lt'C:h no l og~
and affordab •l •ty A Eu ro
~ an·dU•gned

5 P" S!&gt;I"nge r
sedan for the pnce ol a 4

paSsen!Jer eq&gt;nobo•

Wll h

frol'l! ·wheel drive Full.,. •n ·
de~ndem sus pe n~•on

Power front diSC brll k E'S

Rack and pm1on 3lee rmg

Electronic luet '" Jl'f1!0n
.-..nd much more

52 ... ~7 "'
I 'oi

I -.1
" Ho•

11.9% A.P.R. APPLIES TO

AMC.JEEP·~~~~H!T01~!JTOMOBILES

V-6 Engine, air cond., AM/FM radio.
1978 CHEVY IMPALA STATION WAGON ............ :.......................... ,..... $2,995

PS, PB, Air Qlnd. .
1979 PLYMOUTH HORIZON 4 Oil : ··S0\.0 ........ :............................... $2,995
4 speed, 4 cyl.
·
1977 FORD F-100 PICKUP ................................................. ;.... ............... $2,995
302 V-8 engine, PS, Local owner.
·
1977 UNCOLN TOWN CAR .............. ........... ............ .. ......................... $2,995
. All of lincoln's Finest Options.

--

...... ..• .'"
,,

t1Qu'. '' ..,•'"

·

sep~.,.,ts

·SIMMONS
OLDS.~CAD.-CHM, INC.
.
.

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH.
992-2641

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Faced with a sta te
government budget deficit of $511 million, Gov.
Richard celeste Is pushing a solution familiar to
residents of states surrouru)lng Ohio.
OH!c!als of Michigan, Indiana, West VIrginia.
Pennsylvania and Kentucky all have imposed or are
cons!deriiig tax increases, spending cuts or some
combination to deal with budget deficits.
An Associat.ed Press survey shows the income and
sales taxes ~ chief revenue producers in Ohio and
other states - are common targets.
Ohio raised its sales tax rate from 4 percent to 5
percent in November 1981 and innposed a temporary
50 percent income tax surcharge In July 1982.
The Senate votes next week on Celeste's
House-passed bill raising the income !ax ·surcharge to
90 percent and making it permanent. The:s:nJ million
package also Includes a four-month public utilities
·
excise tax surcharge.
Mi&lt;;higan, also staggered by chronic double-digit
unemployment In heavy Industry, reflects Ohio's ·
problems.
1n 1982, Midiigan cut $778 million from its budge!;
raised its personal income tax rate from 4.6 percent
to 5.6 percent ior six months; and permanently

Mon.-F.;. 8:00 to 7:00: Sat. 9:00 to 5:00

•

•:r

increased its cigarette tax from 11 cents a pack to 21
cents a pack.
Gov. James Blanchard, the Democrat who
succeeded veteran Republican William MUllken in
January, projects a bupget deficit of up to$900mllllon
by the Sept. 30 end of the state's current fiscal year.
Blanchard has asked the Democrat-controlled
legislature for an increase In the income tax from 4.6
percent to 6.35 percent for three to five years. It would
drop to 6.1 percent of taxable income once the state
had paid off its deficit. He has also proposed $225
million in budget cuts.
.
.
Solutions to the financial crunch vary llttlewhether
Democrats or Republicans are in· control of the
statehouse.
Indiana 's Republican Gov . Robert Orr and the
GOP-controlled legislature faced a projected $452
million In red ink by J une 30 in the state's general
fund.
1n December. the state's 1.9 percent income tax for
individuals was raised to 3 percent of adjusted gross
income and the state sales tax jumped from 4 percent
to 5 percent.
·
West VIrginia lawrruikers are considering possible
in~reases in the personal and corporate income taxes
to help deal with a potential $91 million shortfall by
Jurie 30. Gov. Jay RockefPller also imposed spending

'

'

j' .

• 1''

/ '' ' . ! I'

....·"

If

•

EAR'l11MOVING - Acees8 road tG the new
county owned landfill is being built by employees of
the county highway department. 'nte new landftll,
which is scheduled to open sometime In April, Is loCated on Salisbury Township IIAJad 2m tl1at leads to
BoweD HW Cemetery directly off lhe bypu&amp;on SR 7.

n.e road to the slle bas thus far cost the county
approximately $15,000. The conunlssloners are not
sure at this pobtt what the total costofthe a.ccesos road
will he. Although lhe county highway Is doing lhe
work the county commissioners are billed for the
·
work performed.

new site would be acquired by

ship. 1n 1!111 the commissioners
were informed by the Ohio EPA

1982.

that they could no longer operate
the present landflll due to lack of
space and lack of adequate
cover material.
During the same year (1!111)
the commissioners were advised by t\te Ohio EPA that a
new site would have to be acquired; but they were given a
permit to continue to operate on ·
the present loca tlon providing a

System · Technology Corpora·
tlon suggested sites in the west·
ern end of the county which the
commissioners felt were not
suitable because of their loca tion, ·due to the distance from
major populaiion centers.
The commissioners then took
·it upon themselves to locate a
site thl!t would be more advantageous to the pubUc and accep-

POMEROY - Parents of some. Meigs chlldren
attending the Gallla-Meigs Head Start program
slioke out Frtday In support of the program and Its
:director, Christopher Zimmer.
The parents appeared to agree that Zimmer lUis
~nly done what is gooil lor the program In the seven
:Snd one-half years he has served as director.
'
It was also pointed out that according to Information the Polley Counctl received !rom Chicago and
.Washington funding willoot be lost unless the Com·
.munlty Action Agency Board of Directors take 1m
:tllegal action, such as !Iring Zimmer.
Ac&lt;;ording to Joyce Otto, Leverna Katlff and
&amp;taron carct, all d. Meigs County, the ineeting held
;Friday was to Inform the parents what charges
brought agaltlSt Zimmer aitd also to Inform them
wl!at the CAA board has done.

S2995 '·

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

•

table to the EPA. The new site
was chosen by the commlssion~rs due to lts central location and
.convenience to all people in the
county,
The commissioners are opening the new landflU on 10 of the
136 acres.
1n order to use the other
acreage additional tests WID
have to be made to see what portions of the baiance of the
(Continued on page A3)

•

•••

cuts of 13 percent.
Pennsy lvan!a needs $M9 million by June 30 to cover
a projected deficit of $235 million and the cost of new
programs.
Gov. Dick Thornburgh has proposed a tax package
baSed on broadening the 6 percent sales tax to include
cigarettes, entertainment, non-prescription drugs,
cable television and liquor sold In taverns.
. Kentucky has faced a series of projected deficits
over the last · three years, inc.!uding a $102 million
problem forecast by June 30. Gov. John Y. Brown Jr.
responded with spending cuts -the la test totaling 3
percent - but has avoided broad-based increases In
the sales or income taxes.
Ohio has a reputation of being a low-tax state, but
statistics used to demonstrate that can be
misleading.
The Ohio Public Expenditure Council. a plivate
non-partisan lax research group, said Ohio ranked
46th out of the 50 states in per capita state government
taxes in fiscal year 1981. But when local government
taxes were included as well, Ohio's ranking rose to

35th.
And In a comparison of per capita state and local
government individual and corporate net income t&amp;x
collections for fiscal year 1981, Ohio was ranked 26th
among the states.

Board studies
•
•
action agat~st
uniform utility
property tax
•

•

•

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia ·
County Local Board of Education
will consider adopting a resolution
Monday protes ting a state panel's
recommendation to create a uniform utility property tax.
Should this recommendation . in
the form of a constitutional amend·
ment, be made law , 11 wlii
"drastically affect the financial
stability of many school districts
throughout the slate and the Gall!a
County Local School Dist rict in
particular, "the resolution says .
The resolution Is a response 10
concerns that the proposal means
reapportioning revenue earned by
the district and the county from the
Gavin and Kyger Creek power
plants to other counties.
The resull, distrtct officials disclosed last month, coold mean a 79
percent los~ of that revenue.
The resolution also says the
proposal means ellmina lion of local
growth revenues, failure 10 relieve
Inadequate elementary school facil ,. ities because revenue would not be
available for capital improvement ,
and promotion of state control over
the district.
The resolution asks that the
school district support other state
taxes to provide adequate rcvenue
for all distlicts under the present
formula .
The proposal grew out of a joint
legislative panel study of Ohio's tax
structure, recommending several

improvements.
In a letter written in December
1982 to Sen. H. Cooper Snyder,
R-Bianchester. Ohio Tax Commissioner Edgar L. Lindley sa id the
present method of determining
utility personal property tax value
to political subdivisions is "archaic,
obsolete . and totally inadequate"
due to c hanges in technology .
As an exam ple, Lindley cited the
fact one-fourth of all public utllity
'property in the sta te is owned by
telephone companies. The lax is
determined by the amount of wires
'strung through a particular county.
With new development s allowing
telephone service to be conducted
via microwave transmission, "the
obvious question is hpw or where do
yqu apportion the value of a
company that operates In numerous
counties but has no wire?" Lindley
wrote.
The problem faced ln Ohio he
explained . is that several ('[~tric
companies have generating facUlties in Ohio. bul with nooverheador
underground wires in the state. ·
"These apportim\ment problems
are becoming more severe every
day and . cannot be resolved by
subjecting public utility prop0rty to
both state and local taxes. or
developing new formulas," Lindlev
said. "Our proposal removes the
neces$ity for apportionment formu ·
las and this pmblem disapp0ars."
In a related 'matter at Monday's
board meeting. a schedule or work
sessions on a building program in .
the distlict will be discussed .

Parents
vOice
support
fOr
director
Zimmer
.
.

THAT'S RIGHT, ANY .OR ALL THE ABOVE LISTED·
VEHIOfs AT ONLY
EACH .

• _A
__

83 MILL ST.

. 1978 CHEVY MONZA ......... ;............................................................... $2;995

PS, PB, Air cond. Local owner.

..,,

iiiiiiiii

New Meigs County landfill
will open sometime in April

LENSES

Insurance and Mediul
C;uds Accepted

9 S.Ction1, 60 .P aa•• 35 C•ntt
A M"ltirnedla Inc.

States target Income tax Increases

'TIL 8
SATURDAY
'TIL 5

1978 OLDS. 88,4 DR............................. ,........................................... $2,995

'"••' •••,.,., ••~ I '-

tntint

•

IOF,EN FRIDAY

Air Conditioned, AM/FM/Stereo

Books

'

Sunday, February 20, 1983

SAVE 45%, 50%, Even 60%

CHESTER, OH.

Middleport Boo Store Has In Stock

.

tmts

1983

Tel!lendous Savings on Men's and Boys' We~~r
Women's Fashions - Junior Wear and Children's Clothing

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

'

•

Ann

1V &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

985-3307

992-2039 or 992-5721

'

story 011 Page C. I

Vol. 16 No. 51

MODELS CLB 240 SERIES

RIDENOUR'S

Daytona '500' preview

unba

•Sylvania GT·Matic'" Color System
•E-300TM Chassis
•Electronic VHF/UHF Channel Selector
•Dark-Lite'" 100 Black Matrix Picture Tube
•4" Round Speaker

Pomeroy
Flower Shop
'1he Way America

. !:.?..!!.~· in gangland-style murders

oo 0 ooo

J.A)eal •••• ,., ••••• , ... ............. A..f..S
state-Natloraal ................... D-1
SpOrta ................ ~ ............ ~l-8
TV gUide ............ ........... Insert

Marriage licenses were Issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to Earl
William Thomas, 63, New Straits·
ville, and Sarah Marie Smith, 65,

Judue O'Brien
seven court cases

•

Fann ....... ....................... 1).3

Rutland, and Patrtcia
Smith,
endsrM~aso~n~:
:Jo~se:p~hS:te:p:he~n~M:org:an:
, 48:,JJ~!~~~~!~
24, Rutland.

e

Colwnn·on Page A-2

Times-Sentinel

Buab:lesi ............ .............. D-2
CJ.a.llleds
1)..3..7
Ed.ltorlal ,,, ..••.•••. •. ,., .•••.•... A·!

Marriage licenses

new program in GallipOlis earlier
Thursday.
The next board meeting was set
for Tuesday, March 15.

...... patrick on the U.S. Supreme Court

Today's
Along lhe river ............... B-1-8·
Area deadas ...................... A~

_50 January arrests

MID - REAR MOUNT MOWER

ONLY

law

first-time offenders to certified
·alcohol treatment programs "in
lieu of" jail.
"The question is, which section
takes precedence?" Bender asked.
''That's a question you're going to
have to decide on your own."

13 HP YANMA~ DIESEL WITH

THIS WEEK ONLY

End marriages

•
ID

!ind holes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The anyone Whose blood alcohol level!.$
state's new drunken-&lt;lrlving law,
hlgher'than .10, and anyone caught
said to be among the natlo)l's doing so Is automatically guilty of
toughest, may stlll have enough . drunken driving.
The law also imposes a manda·
holes In it for some defense lawyers
to get through.
tory 72-hour jail tenn for first-time
Judge John Bender of Bucyrus offenders, increased penalties for
warned judges at a meeting of lhe
repeat offenders, immediate pretOhio MUnicipal ,Judges Association rial license suspension for anyone
Thursday that they wlll face a new
who tests .10orhigher,anautomatic
set of legal conflicts and unans- one-year license suspension for
wered qul!stions when the law takes anyone refusing to take a test and
effect March 16.
!Hetime license suspension for
"What we're going to have to do is anyone convicted of . vehicular
see what higher courts do with it,"
homicide while legally drunk.
-Bender said a major question in
Bender told the judges In the first of
three days of leCtures and demon·
the new Ia w is whether the
·stratlons regarding the drunken- mandatory jail term is really
driving law.
mandatory. One section of the new
The riew law orol\lbits driving by law says judges. can sentence

Eastem...

1983

Friday,

PH. 992.;&amp;614

we"'

'I

The disagreement · between the two boards re. suits from Zimmer's arrest Nov. :.J at a roadside rest
on IJ.S ..33 near Lancaster.
Zimmer was on!! of 60meil arrested by Fairfield
County sher!f!'s dep)Jtles between Nov. 22 and Dec. 3
for a varlety of S4!x-related offenses.
On Dec.1, Zlmmerplead~ nocontestlnLancaster Municipal Court to a misdemeanor charge of pul&gt;
lie indecency. He was found guilty, tined $100 and
given a ;!(klay suspended jall sentence. Zimmer has
stated he was not guilty. It was pointed out.Friday
that the parents of Meigs chlldfen do not believe that
Zimmer Is guilty.
The Head Start Polley Cwncll voted 10 to 1 Jan.
20. to suspend Zlnuner lor 00 days withoUt pay and
place him on pi'obatlon 90 days !oDOIYI!Ja bealuse of
the Indecency charge and &amp;·related charge of falsity·

..I

.

lng records .
It was stressed thal'the CAA board of directors
could not !Ire Zimmer ullless the Head Start Polley
Coulictl and the CAA both agreed. The CAA would
have to have the approval of the Head Start Policy
Counctl.
According to Otto, Kauff and Card, many par·
ents of chtlctlen attending from Gall1a County are of
the same opinion and wisb to have Zimmer remabt as
director.
·They also charged that the statement made by
Hazel McKelvey, acting executive director of the
·CAA, was not true In that McKelvey had been rnisin·
formed concerning the defunding or the Head Start

Piograrn.
Bob Halk!r, acting assistant director of the CAA,
was asked at the meetlni of the Gallla-Me!gs Head

'K

Start Polley Council on Feb. F why McKelvey's Incorrect statement was not corrected.
Haner reportedly replied that they had only re- .
oelved·the correct. Information on Tuesday, Feb. I~.
The Polley Co\111Ctl made a motion at the Feb. 17
meeting to have McKelvey issue a corrected state·
ment to the media.
It was the opinion of tbe Head Start Polley Councn that there is a feeling among many parents tha,t
tbe CM board. would rather lose the head start program and all the services It provides the ch!ldren of
tbe two cowlties iban admit that the Policy Counc!!,
by law, has certain powers- that Is, that they must
approve the Dring of the head start.d!rector, they
ellarge.
It was pointed out that 79 children from Meigs
and Ill chlldren fron) Gallla attend Head Start School.

.,

..

w

�I

'

•

February 20, 1983

Commentary and perspective
•

~unllal! ~imts- $entintl
A Division of

B!m~

r"'T"'-' ..__
- , - , r-T"''ii!Bc::::ttt===t

~v

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 44S.2342

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

HOBART WilSON JR.
E ~t·•t· ulin!

Editor

i\ Mt:!\JRF.R uf Tht• ,\ ssiH·iall'tl P r··~ li . I nlantl ()all\• Pn&gt;ss Assudatiu11 and tht· A.nll'rintu
Nt'\1.~(1-aJW r Puhlisht·r~ AsstM·icttimL
·

l.t:TTERS o~- OPINIO~ :Jrt• \l.t•lt·nmt&gt;d . Tht· ~ ~hnuld k lt·s~ than lOO vourd~ lttn)( . All
lt •Ht•r!&lt; :trt ' suhjt·d In t·d itinJ.'. ~ml must ht· si)(nrtl with namt•. addn·ss and \t"lt"phom·
numht"r . Nu urL~ it:m·d !t'llt·rs "i ll Dt· J)uhlls ht-d . l .t•ltt•n; shuuld bt• in J!.uud t.a s lt•, ;~dtlrt&gt;tis in,~t
iss Ut'"• nul pt'r.\t)nalilit•s.

The lender might
be indebted to you
As an unemployed, heavily mortgaged homeowner, you may have a
relationship with your lender similar to that of the less developed nation
lhat cannot meet its repayment. schedule.
Thlit is , you may be sufficiently in debt to the lender that, in a sense, the
lender might be indebted to Y?U, a nd grateful for the opportunity to
renegotiate less stressful repayment terms.
Earlier this month, the U.S. League of Sav ings Associations, whose
· members hold about 16 million home mortgages, advised homeowners
: with recession-related difficulties to ccome in and talk things over.
. ; The league's stra tegy is designed to keep problems small. So far, the
_league's membership, numbering about 4,00J associations, has
. experienced surpnsingly little trouble from late pa}ments.
·
_ In December, only 1.26 percent of accounts were categorized as
:· delinquent, or overdue by two months or more. Even in healthier times the
.: rate ranges between 0.85 and 0.95 percent.
: · Delinquency figures kept by the Mortgage Bankers Association of
: • America even s howed an improvement in December, to 5.48 percent from
:. 5.56 percent. The association uses one month rat her than two In
.; determining delinquency.
· _ Rates on actual foreclosures badly lag the actual experience, but even
·· old figures give some relative indication. The Federal Home Loan Bank
.: Board reported a 1982 first -ha ll rate of 0,274, or about one-quarter of 1
.• percent.
·
But William B. O'Connell, league president, said, "Most forecasters
: expect unemployment to stay high, a nd many Americans are discovering
: thai thetr unemployment benefits will stretch just so far."
: If a borrower has a good credit rating, said O'Connell in an Interview,
· "the S&amp;Ls wut break their backs to take care of them."
.' The best approach, he advises, is for the borrower to take the initiat ive
: and talk with the lender at the first sign of trouble. ·:They'll beonyourside
.' nine times out of 10," he said.
Even H they have to accept diminished payments for a few months or
. even a year or so, said James Kendall, a league official. that procedure
represents an alternative more acceptable than foreclosure.
_ One condition would make a lender more willing to foreclose. If intereSt
. on the loan is ala rate so low it tepresents little profit- or even a loss- the
; lender might decide to conclude business, a possibility that wou ld be
; strengthened by a poor repayment record.

Rising fuel prices cut
deeply into incomes
Rising natural gas prices are leaving the elderly and jobless with little
money from Supplemental Security Income or unemployment checks to
pay for housing, food and other necessities, a government -financed report
·
says.
The study shows that natural-gas price increases of 20 to 40 percent this
winter will leave Supplemental Security Income recipients in 41 states
with less than $50 a week afto;&gt;r they pay their heating bills for the three
coldest months.
In three states- Maine, New Hampshire and Delaware- recipients of
SS!, the principal "safety net" program for the elderly and disabled, will
have less than $25 a week after paying their home energy bills.
• Heating bills will eat up all but $50 or less per week of the unemployment
: checks received by the jobless in six states- New Hampshire, Delaware,
• New York, Maine, Vermont and Rhode Island. In another 12 states
; families relying on unemployment checks will have less than S75 a week
• for other expenses after fuel bills are paid.
·
; The study was conducted for that National Consumer Law
a
; non-profit group that provides legal assistance on consumer and
gy
_ problems to the poor. It was paid for by the Community Services
• Administration.
: The Low-Income Home E nergy Assistance program established by
: Congress to help the poor pay utility bills "doesn'teven begin to make up
; the dHference" In higher natural gas prices, said Carol Werner. a
•. spokeswoman lor the center.
: .' The study said energy assistance benefits will cover less than 20 percent
: of the annual home energy bill for low-income households in 13states. In 35
: other states, eligible poor families will have to pay $.100 to$1,00J for home
• . heating costs this year despite the ass~tance program.
• The report's conclu~ions were based on information produced from
; computer model using data from the Census Bureau, Energy
; : Qepartment, Social Security Administration, National Weather Service
• ·and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
_· The center reported that another study not yet completed shows
: dramatic increases in utility shut-offs and unpaid heating bills among the
• elderly and unemployed.

Ce::::M

a

.

•

~ Today In

history
.

.

.
Today is Sunday, Feb, 20, the 51st day of 1983. There are314 days left ln
&gt; the year. Today' s highlight In history:
• Oti Feb. 20, 1962, John Glenn became the first American to orbit the

• Earth.
• On this date:
; : In 1437, Scotland's King James I was murdered In the Scottish city of
&lt; Perth.
.
.
;. Ii11792, President George washington signed an act creating the U.S.
: .Post Office.- In 1972, President Richard Nixon arrtved In Peking for his historic
• meetUigs with mainland Chinese officials.
• And in 198l, the United States fol'll'1jllly announced it would boycott the
• Summer · Olympics · In Moscow to protest the Soviet. presence In
;7Afghanistan.
.
. .
.
·
• : Ten years ago: The U.S. government announced the cost of food was up ·
; between 2 and -3 percent- the biggest monthly Increase In more than 20
: years.
.
• ; Five years ago: Cyprus agreed to free 57 Egyptian commandos who
: : survived an airport fight with Cyprtot troops while trying to tree hoslages
: ·on an alrUner In Nirolla, Cypru~.
·: One year ago: Democratic party leaders met In Washington to discuss
.
·
: :President Reagan's proposed federal budget.

•

J

•

High Court's load

'

A~

•

WASHINGTON - In his annual .
address to _the American Bar Assocla tion earlier this month, Chief
Justice Warren Burger sounded an
old theme with a fresh note of urgency. He wound up by making a
specific recommendation that mer·
Its prompt action In Congress.
Burger's theme was famlllar:
The high court is swamped with
more mitigation than it can handle
judiciously. Thirty years ago, In the
1953 .term of court, the court had
1,463 cases on Its docket and Issued
65 signed oplnlons. In the term that
ended last July, the court had 5,311
cases on Its docket aild Issued 141
signed oplnlons.
The tidal wave that has Inundated the Supreme Court has
flooded lower .c ourts also. In 1953
the.federal District Courts reported
99,000 filings, and the Courts of Appeals about 3,200 iUings. Last year
the District Courts grappled with
240,00J filings and the appellate
courts )Vith 28,00J- but there was a
significant dHference. Over the 3().
year ~rlod, Congress more than
doubled, the number of federal
judges, from 279 to 647. The Supreme Court's membership has remained at nine.
The causes behind this judicial
explosion are well understood. The
past three decades have seen more
than 100 federal laws enacted that
have created new causes of action
-for example, the Civil Rights Act
of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of
1965. The high court Is compelled to
hear cases of environmental law
and tax law that Involve questions
at once novel and complex. The
court has contrtbuted to Its own
problems by Its dramatic expan·
sian of the tights of an accused In a
crtmlnal proceeding.
Chief Justice Burger spoke
bluntly to the bar association. Perhaps he may fO'rgive some blunt
speech .in return. The strain is tellIng on the court. For the past sev.e ral years the overall quality of

Paglt-A-2.

abundant reason, the court stays
tired. There never Is time lor
thought and reading and reflection.
On the average, a hundred petltkms
for review airive every week. Each
of the nine justices is supposed to
look carefully at each of the petitions. The task is manifestly
impossible.
What can be done?-For the first
time, Burger got specific: "I propose that, withut waiting for any
further study, a speclal but temporary panel of the new U.S. COurt of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit be
created." The panel would be com'
posed of two judges from each of
the 13 circuits. From this pool, a
smaller panel of seven or ·nine
judges would be drawn annually.
Their task would be to hear and decide all intercircult conflicts, and
possibly, in addition, to resolve cer-

Extended Ohio forecast

The nation's weather

. MONDAY THROUCH WEDNESDAY:
' Periods of rain Monday and Tuesday and a chanC&lt;' of rain or snow
east Wednesday. Highs In the 40s Monday, upper 30s to mid40s
Tuesday and mid·30s to low 40s Wednesday. Lows In 30s Monday,
upPf'r 20s to mid-:lls Tuesday and in the 20s Wednesday.

By The Associated Press
A cold front swept across the West Saturday, bring1Dg locally
heavy snowfall to parts of the Upper Plateau. Utah and Arizona had
high winds.
Meantime, skies were clearing overt~ Pacific Coast sta tes but
remained cloudy over the Rockies.

only.

a

acreage will be suitable for new
dumping siteS'.
There are two employees at
the present landfill, adozeroper·
ator and helper. The same
number of employes will be employed at the new site. The com·
missioners at this tlme do not
anticipate hiring additional
help.
Prior to the county having a
legal landfill there were numerous illegal dump sites throughout the county. All of the illegal
dumps have been abolished.
However, abuse of dumping is

will

Nahonal Wi!aiher

u.s Dept ol

" .

••

Fronts ; Cold..-.

"'

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service fore-

'·

casts snow for the Great Lakes Re&amp;lon for Sunday, Feb. 20. Flurries are
predicted for portions of Montana and the Great Plals wblle a band of
rain Is forecast stretching from the GuU of Mexico to Mlchlpn'slower

·'

.

homes.
levied Wednesday in Common
Pleas Court.
"My point has been made. My
"I have affixed my signa tu res to intentions were .to bring to light a
those deeds that were part and grave and serious situation in
parcel to the hear ings in the court,
Youngstown," Traficant said, C'Xami I must abide now by therullngof plaining his previous refusal to act
that lower court." the 41-year-old on foreclosures.
The Mahoning Valley, once a
Traficant said .
He had been sentenced on 10 , thrlvingsteelcenter lnnortheastern
counts of contempt because he Ohio, has been hard hit by plant
ignored a court order requiring him closings and layoffs ,
"Throughout all of this, regard·
to sign. deeds on 10 foreclosed

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio tAPI Even as he signed deeds carrying
out foreclosures on 10 homes,
Mahoning County Sher Hf James
Traficant vowed. to continue the
fight ~gainst foreclosures Ihal cost
him ttu·ee days in jail.
The s heriff was I'l'icased from ja il
Friday after the 7th Ohio District
Court of Appeals temporarily
suspended the rcmaindcr of a
" ' 1QO.day contempl of court scntcnce

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21st
11 A.M. TIL 9 P.M.

less of what people are saying and
the critics are saying, people of the
valley supported me, and I think the
people are tired of losing their
homes on technlcalltil'S," Traflcant
saki.

CHERRY PIES .

15~ACH

from Japan? What would thcy do In
rt'tallation?"
Oxley said because of the
deprcssed state of the American
agricultural economy a nd the world
recession. international marketing
.will become Increas ingly important
to farmers. "Be wary" of support·
ing a bill that could lead otht'r
nations to impose trade barriers,
Oxley said.
Another speak£•r, thl' acting
director of Ohio's federal Farmers
Home Administration, said tight
credit will probably bet he rulPinth£&gt;
agricultura l industry during the
19&amp;.1 planting season.
.Jack Hcrtzler said thP FmHA Is

BUCYRUS, Ohio !API - U.S.
Mike Oxll'y, R-Ohio. has
cautioned farmers about supporting domestic con rent legis Ia t ion for
the a uto Indu stry.
Speaking Friday at the second
annual farm forum in Bucyrus,
Oxlcy said that If farmers back
\ ',proposa ls to require cars sold in thc
United States to have a percentage
~- of American-made parts. it could
~ backfire on thosc who have a stake
~ in interna tional t r-dd~.
::, ''What wUi it ml'an to farml'rs?
The first thing it will ml'an is that th&lt;'
• price of a car will go up from $750 to
".$1,101." he said. "The second thing
r ts, What ca n we realist Iea Hy t'xpect
I'

~p.

Fortunately for AmeriCan strategic interests, the prospect of this
Soviet dagg~r poised at the soft un·
derbelly of NATO is probably remote, at least as long as Hoxha
survives. And through a secret
State Department report has him in
"deteriorating health (with) ad·
vanced diabetes and a debllltatlng
circulatory problem," he is a tough
old buzzard.
Indeed, 11 is Hoxha's toughness
that will likely cause him to spurn
Andropov's friendly advances. Unless Andropov shows that he is a
hard-core neo-Stallnlst, his chances
of winning Hoxha over with sweet
talk and economic ald are probably
no better than . Khrushchev's or
Brezhnev's. Hoxha will be in Iron
control of Albania untll he draws
his last breath.
Like Stalln in his final years,
Hoxha is "an increasingly paranoid ·

aild doctrinaire despot, " according
to the State Department study. He
is "possessed by his role as 'father
of the new Albania.' "
·Following hts revered mentor's
bloody example, Hoxha "orders
purges the way other people order
pizza," in the WOrds of ODe Albania'watcher.
slightest .deviation
from Hoxha 's personal interpretation of the gospel according to Marx
Is enough to cause a subordinate's
terminal fall from favor.
Although U.S. lntelllgence agen·
cles have admittedly skimpy Information about Albania, secret
reports seen by my associate Dale
Van Alta suggest that Hoxha either
had Shehu killed or forced him to
commit suicide.
Shed no tears lor Shehu. He was
Hoxha's enthu5lastlc sidekick dur·
lng the last previous purge, which
lasted from June 1973 to May t975.

Tllf

The Nig~rian storyel=.=======·=Do=n=Gr=aff
hood. The many peoples who are
called Nigerians - although they
may not so call themselves - are
not. Yet.
Nigeria, like much of the rest of
Africa, remains an accumulation
of ts:lbal societies confined within
artificial lines drawn on th~ map by .
go,)lernments In distant European
capitals for the convenience of colonial admlnistralton, not for any
likely benefit to those confined.
Even so. Nigeria had more going
for It than most former colonies
when It achieved lDdependence In

1960. It inherited a British-trained
civil service, a functioning administrative system and oil reserveS that
quickly made It one of the world's
major exporters .
The new government launched
ambitious development programs
that 11 thought could ·be floated
forever on that sea of oll. ·T hey
couldn't.
The weakening world oil market
and OPEC's consequent demon·
stration 9f inability to control.pro- •
ductlon and fix prices have cost
Nigeria probably more than any

other memberofthecartel. A Saudi
Arabia -With some 10 million people and a per capita Income of
$11,500 - can adjust to the decline
tn income. Nigeria - almost oo rniJ.
lion aild a per capita Income of $523
-cannot.
OU, as it turns out, bas not powered Nigeria's economy but dislocated it. From a one-time food
exporter, the country has become a
net Importer, at an annual cost of
more than $2 billion.
The Nigerian gQVemment' s re• of dislocation
'
sponse to the aspect
most apparent to most of the popul!ition - unemployment - has
been the headline-making deportation of foreign workers, possibly
two mUllan or more.
Speaking of slrnllarttte5, It's a response that may strike sytnpa- ·
thetic chords · In some American
quarters, . although the preferred
method here would be more restrictive imn;ligratton legislation.
And it Is ironic that most of the
expenees are from another former
Brtttsh colony that also once
showed great promise - Ghana.
That promise was rapidly dissl·
paled dumg the reign cit strongman
and would-be world statesman
Kwame Nkrumah. Ghana has
never recovered from the decade of
his misrule. Bankrupt and demoralized, It Is governed by a process of

..,

'

stepping up monitoring of delinquent loans becauSl'ofthcpoorstate
of the agricultural economy. Low
grain prices and high production
costs havc plunged many farmers
into bankruptcy, he said.
The fC'deral credit program is nol
achieving iis goals because of rising
delinquency rates. he said.
He11zler sa id no longer will
loans be available to
bail farmers out. The loans will be
limited to crop losses, he said.
Severe limits will also be placed on
government-backed loans to family
farm ilperations. Hertzll'r said.
~mC'rgency

..

,,,.'

' '
L90421

Cut $50 ... 52-in. ceiling fan

'.

3-speed reversible energy-efficient fan circulates
warm air in winter, cool air in summer. Textured
brown. wood blades.

..

•
'

tftft99
""77

cAPITAL AccouNTS .. ........

•

,..:

X34277

Cut $110

..

_

Water softener with
bypon valve

Sears Gas
heat extractor

Sean premium
· 24-in. dishwasher

·-·

$36995

Cut $100

$39999

X!021A

.r

Power MiHr 8
gas wate~ IMaler
1'
•

Cut $145

$29999

El

"·,•,,'

'I

Common Stock ..... .... ........ .. ....... ............ .. ....... .. , ... ........... ..
a. No. shares authorized 1,500,000
b. No . shares outstanding 1,270,237 (Par Value) .. ..... ..... $ 12,702,000.00
Surplus ........ ........ : ' ··· ................. ............ ........... ... ... ......... .46,447,000.00
Undivided profits .......................... , , .. , .... .. ... .. .. ............... .. .. 46,927,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ........................... ....... . ....... $ 106,076,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .... ....... $1,593,534,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Standby letters of credl t:
Standby letters of credit, total ...... .... .. .... .. ................... $ 74,933,000.00
to U.S. addresses (domlcllie) .... ....... .. .. .. .. $67,390,000.00
to non-U.S. addresses (domicile) .. .... ....... . $ 7,543,000.00
Time certificates of deposit In
denominations of $100,000 or more ..... ...... .. .................... 200,134,000.00
Other time deposits In amounts of $100,000 or more ................ 145,000.00
Customers' liability on acceptances outstanding ... .... .. .. .... .. 11 ,020,000.00
l! .S. addresses (domic ile) ..... . ........... .. .. . , .... ..$2,217,000.00
·
Non-U .S. addresses (domicile) ...................... $8,803,000.00
Average lor 30 calendar day·s ending with report date:
Cash and due from depository institutions .. .... ...... ......... 288,655,000.00
Fed. funds sold ........ . , ................ ....... .. .............. ............ 134.141,000.00
Total loans .................. .................... .. .. .. ..............
715,658,000.00
Time certificate's of deposit In denominations
of $100,000 or more ..... .. ......... .. ..... .. .... .... ......... .......... 211,743,000.00
Total deposits .. :. .. .. ..................... ....... .. .... .. .......... .. .. .... 1,040,135,000.00
Fed. funds purchased and securities so ld under
agreements to repurchase ................. .... ., .. ...... .......... 252,624,000.00
Other llabillttes for borrowed- money ......... .. ......... .. .. .'.. ... , .. .... .3~000. 00
Total assets .. ........... ....................... , .. ...................... . $1,444,921,000.00

'

......
-'

Cut $40

Chain link fence fabric
t/2 price when you buy
tram~we&lt;k at regular price

$17999

1

36¢

ft.

Fashion lntlrior Latex

12 PRICE

1

fill or ceilinl .... 17 .24
Seml-1loss ......... 17.74

I, Fred H. Gardner, Vice President &amp; Comptroller of the above-named
. bank do hereby declare that this Report of Condition Is true and correct to
the best of my knowledge and belief .
· ·
Fred H. Gard ner
January 17, 198.l
We , the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this statement of
·resojlrces and liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and
to the best of our knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Joseph D. Landen
James K. Lewis - Directors
James E. Mountjoy

coup and countercoup.
A point In Nigeria's favor In the
present troubles ~ aild it's a very
strong one - . ts that It has not repeated the Ghanian story, There
have been ~ps. but the Nl&amp;ertan
leaderiblp has made a conaldera·
ble effort to develop a workablepolttlclll l)'ltem,_ however short rl
democratic perfection; slllt.ed to
Nl&amp;erla'a diversity.
(

1715 EASTERN AVE•

ASSETS
Cash and due (rom depository ins titutions ....... ...... ........ $ 341,525,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities · ........................... ... .. .. ... ... ............ 87,399,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies
and corporations .... .. ... ..... ................. . : ..................... ...... 54,770,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdi visions
In the United States ......................................... .. .......... 151,293,000.00
Other bonds , notes, and debentures ................. ....... ................ 590,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate s tock ...... ................... 1,914,000.00
Trading account securities ........... .......... .... .. .. ...... ............... 8•,116,000.00
Feder a) Funds Sold ............ .. ................... .. ............ ........ ... 134 ,900,000.00
. Loans, Total (excluding unearned Income ) .. . $678,002,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loa n losses .... .. .... 7,447,000.00
Loans, Net ............. ... ....... .......... .. .. .. .... ...... .. .......... ......... 670,575,000.00
Lease financing receivables ... .......... .... .............. .. .............. 77,068,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtu res, and
other assets representing bank premises ................ ......... 23,922;000.00
Real Estate owned other than bank premises .................. , ... 2,151,000.00
Customer's Uabillty to this bank on
acceptance~ outstanding .. ...................... .. .......... .... .. ....... 11,020,000.00
Other assets .... .. ................ .. .. .. ............................ , ......... .... 28,291,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ... ....... ...... .... .. ............ .. ..... .... ............. $1,593,534,000.00
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of indiv idua ls , partnershi ps
and corporations .................. ........... .................... .. ... S 314,738,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
partnerships, and corporations ..... .. ... .... .. .. ................... 622,001,000.00
Deposits of States and pollticial subdivisions
In the United States ........................................................ 93,130,000.00
Deposits of commercial banks ... ...... .. .. ...... .................... .... 23, 700,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ......... :....... ..... ... .......... ...... .... 15,131,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES .. .. .. $1,008,700,00J.OO
Total demand deposit s ...................... ... .. .... 360,414,000.00
Total time and savings deposits .......... ....... 708,286,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN FOREIGN OFFICES . . 47,850,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS ......... ... ...... ... ... .. .. .... ... ... .. .. .............. 1,116,550,000.00
Federal funds purchased a nd securities sold
under agreements to repurchase ......... .. .... ........ ............ 306,85:1,000.00
Interest-bearing demand notes (note balances)
Issued to the U.S. Treasury ...... .......... . .. ... .. ......... .. .. ... .. .... 29,151,000.00
Other Uabilltles for borrowed money ....... .. ..... ........ .. .. .... .. .... .. 364,000 00
Bank's Uablllty on acceptances execut ed
·
and outstanding .. .. ........ .. ........ .......... ...... .. ................ :..... 11,020,000.00
Other Uablll ties ............ . ... ........ ... .......... .. ... .. ..... ... ... ... .. ..... 23,520,000.00
TOTAL LIABI~TJEs ...
$1 ,487.458,ooo.oo

'

.,

AT •••••

of Cincinnati IJI the state of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31,
1982 publshed In response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency,
under Iitle 12, United States Code, Section 161 , Charter numer 16416 National Bank Region Number 4.

\U·,
~'

CElEBRATE WITH US

The Central Trust Company, N.A.

sears

f.~.

LIMIT 6

REPORT OF CONDITION

~Oxley cautions Ohio'f armers

Jack Anderson

still occurring.
A Utter control grant In the
amount o! $25,000 received
through the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources wUl ald the
commissioners, enabling them
to clean up all Illegal dumps.
The commJssioners are presently reviewing the present
rates for dumping. It Is indicated
that they may be forced to in·
crease rates at the new site in
order to . operate in the black.
The present landfill has not been
self-supporting under the pres·
elit rates, thry say.

us ....

Sheriff Traficant freed, vows to fight

'NOr ON MVTREE.YOU'R£ N01!

,_c_on_t_in_ued_f_ro_m_p_a'-ge_AI_l

CELEBRATE WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY WITH

1 ': ~~--------~~~~------------------~------------------------~----------------J

1

A-3

n'

' •"

WASHINGTON- While the spawas a remarkable overture for the
. tllght has been focused sharply on
ruler of the mighty Soviet Union to
the Kremlin's relations With West·
make toward a poverty-stricken
em Europe, the new Soviet leader,
nation of 2.5 mllllon.
Yurt Andropov, has been quietly
But there's JIO doubt that An·
trying to secure a foothold In the
dropov would dearly love to bury
strategic eastern Mediterranean.
the hatchet with Enver Hoxha, the
His target is Albania the
74-year-old dictator who has ruled
Maryland-sized, super:Stallnlst na· ' Albania In Stalin's lt11age slnce
tion that sits 50 miles across the
1944. There are two reasons: ·the
Strait of Otranto from the heel of
Albllnlan deep-water ports of
- Italy.
Durres and Vlore on the Adriatic.
What has U.S. Kremlin-watchers
The Soviet Navy was ldcked out
blUng their nails is the warm mes- · of the two naval bases in 1960 when
sage of c.ongratulatlons sent to AlHoxha broke relations with the
bania by Andropov iast November
Kremlin in a fit of Marxist pique
on the 38th anniversary of the little
over Nlkita Khrushchev's decountry's IIbera tlon from I tallanStalintzatlon campaign. If the
·German occupation.
Kremlin could regain access to
.Andropov proposed "honest,
Durres and Vlore, the Mediterraequal and mutually beneficial" re- . nean would become, if not a Soviet
lations between Albania and the Solake, at least a lake that would be
viet Union. Discounting typical
shared between the Soviet and U.S.
communist rhetorical flourishes, it fieetll.
·

a

peninsula. (AP Laserphoto).

By The A.••••odated Press
A high pressul\. centered over thP East Coast wUI dominate thC'
Ohio weather pattern Into Sunday. Low pressure wUl be developing
In the Central Plains. The high wUI weaken and move off the Eas t
Coast Into the Atlantic Ocean Sunday.
Simultaneously, the Central Plains low will e~ its way east into
the Mississippi Valley area. A southerly flow in advance of the low
wUI continue a slow warming trend Into Sunday and make for a mild
weekend for this time of the year. .
As the low approaches from the Wl'St, Cloudiness
gradually
Increase from west to east across the Buckeye State during the day
Sunctay and Sunday night with a chance of preclpita lion on Monday.
A band of rain and snow flumes mixed moved across northern
Ohio overnight. Clouctlness extended as far south as a
Findlay-Mansfield-Akron line. Precipitation was less than a tenth of
an Inch. Three hqi'idredths of an inch was recorded a·t Cleveland
Hopkins Airport wtth only one hundredth measured at the Toledo
airport.
Teml&gt;eratures overnight were for the most part in the :lOs. In
southern Ohio, where skies cleared, rPadlngs continued to drop Into
the upper 20s in some areas. The cloudlness and preCipitation moved
cast into Pennsylvania this morning with mostly sunny skies In the
south and partly cloudy conditions in the north in the afternoon.

taln cases of statutory interpretation. The new court would . be
created for a period of five years
The proposition makes sense. By
Burger's estimate, such a panel
would relieve the Supreme Court of
35 to 50 full-blown and argued.cases
every term. Colifllcts among the
clrtults have to be settled somehow. It is plainly Intolerable for a
proVIsion of the Tax Code to operate one way In the 5th Circuit and to
operate another way In the lOth. It
is .Important only that the Issue be
resolved· uniformly. .
Burger's plan would require vir' tually no additional expense or additional bureaucracy. It would
avoid political Infighting over the
oomlnatlo~ of additional appellate
judges. Nothing In the Constitution
would prohibit such temporary
panel.

Page

,&amp;.-_ _

..

opinions ha~ not been high. Matters
that should be dealt with succinctly
often are dealt with verbosely. For
.r easons known only to themselves,
Individual justices constantly feel
compelled to dissent In part, or to . ·
concur in part, and they do t)Ielr
dissenting and concurrtng at interminable length.
·
·
Not content with exhausting their
energies in skirmishes over signed
oplnlons, several of the tustlces .
cannot resist the temptation to
sound off futllely In chambers. On
Jan. 10, for example, Justice Thur·
good Marshall unloaded two long
oplnlons in whlch.hedlssented from
his colleagues' refusal to review a
couple of criminal cases. The Intellectual labor may have gratHled
Justice Marshall, but It accomplished nothing elSe.
The court· is tired, a:nd with . ,

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs landfilJ ..

Februor.Y 20, 1983 .

James J. Kilpatrick

Andropov courts Albania

The United States and Nigeria
have a lot In common.
Both are economic magnets,
powerful draws on less affluent
populations beyqnd their borders.
Both, however, are eurrently suifeting slumps with high unemployment. Foreign workers, rather
than contributors to the economy,
have become burdens.
Both have large, ethnically heterogenous pop\llatlons.
But here the resemblances end. ,
The diverse American population
is held together liy sense of nailon-

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

Prices are catalog prices • Now available in our "X" catalog and "L:' cat.atog
supplement • Shipping and installation extra • Ask about Sears credit plan•:

Each of these advertised items Is readily
available for sale as advertised

..,.,., ~lUCK -co.

'

;

�Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleamnt, W_ Va.

Pajle- A-4 - The .Sunday Times-Sentinel

February 20, 1983

February 20, 1983

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

Sudan claims Libya puts forces near border
C \IHO . E1-" pl ti\P I - l. i b~·-• n
tx)llil\.'r' .\nd ! J\.10 p...:

was monitorud by Egypt' s Midd!P

J~'tfighh'r' .

E a s t NPws AgC'ncy.
ThP Suda n&lt;'SP broadcast did nor
say when o r whPrc thP a liPgPd

··cti rN 'It'fL .lg,ti nst Surt . m " Wf'l'l '
ma:-. sing nl'~ ll tlw 't wo cminlrif-s '
bordrr, ~ud dn r: H1t~) cl.iinK'lt bu-1
l .i hy.m \l'.:ulC'r J\1 oa.rnm.1 r K htJ d a f~
d i'ni ~ '(i

subvf'rsivr·s wen.., art'C'S IN:I" or how
ma ny proplf' W &lt;'I'C' involvf'd.

tlw IV!)I.)r ts .

Khadaf)' de niPd rc port,s that
had movro war planes and
Itoops to air ·bases nmr its southPa &lt;l
bord er with Sudan .

· Suct. m ·~

nff lCl.li l"{ad )U Omdur
· rna.n .1 1~{1 cb imod l-"'r ict.t_\ th;ll

Li b~a

:-:t"l'urit,v .l gPnts nllta inPd collk s:o;ion... from .1 n \ ' :O: Ii.x1 " tY'\'Olut ion,lr:.· ·· fo\lt)Wt'rs of Kh; l da r~· who ha(:l
infi ltra lt'1:i Suda n. T hf' r adio n •port

" lt Is not truf', but thf' nrws.said

Egypt is concentrat ing it s air fore&lt;·
nc-ar thC' bord£'rs of Suda n .. . It m a :v

Congress~
!l ou ~

t•\P t - T he
a nd a k p~· eongr Pss-

rC'fuS&lt;'d lo turn over lh£' documpnt.s.
d&lt;'spitr a HouSC' subpo&lt;&gt;na .
L.Pvltas. chairman of the HouS('

rn~t n. pJ\'ing t hr W; l\ ' for ;1n r nd to a
co n:-.tituti o nal
d bq.&gt;u tr.
hnvr .
l'C\.tchf'd ,t C'Omprom isr th&lt;JI would
~) !l ow som f' li.lwma k('rs to S('( '
I; tl\' i hmmpnJa I Prot("('fi011 Agency

Public Work...., irivcs t igat ions sub-

co mmi11"\ announcPd thr sctt lrm pnt in a news confcr&lt;'nCf' Ia If'

Friday with White HouSP counsel
Fred Fielding and Dcpu ty AttornC'y
r .Pncral Edward C. Schmult s aft er

d ocum &lt;~n t:oo .

T llP (' nl orcPm('nt d&lt;X'um0n1 s.
w hlch &lt;kal with F: Pi\ · ~ hl.l ndlin ~of a

; t four-hour mepting.

$1.1&gt; billion "supcrfu nd " tox k•
wastPS progr am, wf'n ' prr v iousl.v

LC'vit as ca lled the agreement a
" his toric document I'PSolving a
hi storie eonstilutional confrontation ." Schmulls sa id thccomprom ~
isC' "strikes an appropria te ba lancP
bPI wccn thP ll('('ds" of CongrP% and
1he White Ho uS&lt;'.
Reagan sa id in a sta tr mPnt hP
was ''Vf'ty pleasPd " with thP
S&lt;'lllmwnt. adding that it "is
cons istmi with the doct rine of
cxC'Cut ivC' privilege' whil£' it al so

w ithhL•Id on P rl's ick' nl Rraga n 's

rla im of I'X('(' Ufi\'f., pr iviiPgf' .
ThP ogr&lt;X'mmt o lso rcquirPd
RL•p. Ell iot t Ll'vitas, D-C;a .. to win
Hou." f' pass&lt;Jgf' of a n -solu t ion
elt&gt;arin g EPA administ ra tor A nne
Cu r :-;ut'll of ;J C'oni f'mpt of Congress

char JZP.
Th&lt;• Hou se a pprovPd lhPcit J tion
lust

aft f'r

,VI'LJ. I'

Mrs.

C01·such

assu r{'s tha t n(l{'r ss.:Hy informa t ion

is made availablp to the Congress in
the legitima te pursuit of it s
responsibilities.··
The agr&lt;'l'mcnt specifiC's tha tthP
com prom iS&lt;' is not binding 00 otlirr
HOUSC' panels .that are invPsligating
EPA's ioxic wasiC' ciC'anup program . The supctiund is facin~ six
HouS£' probes, plus invc" igations
by a Senate panel. thP .Juslicl'
l)('partmcnt and the FBI.
ThP administra tion still will havP
to dC'a l with other HouS£' subcom·
mittPCs st'C'king EPA documents.
In thP agrremPnl bC'twPCn l.!'vi·
las and the White HouSC', LC'vitas '
mmmit ll'l' sa id it would limit it s
initial inquiry to " a reasonable
number" of waste sitPS rathet· than
dPmanding documl'nls on a ll. ThP
inquiry mu lct bC' broadcnPd at

S\ IRSCR.II"TION RI\TES
, Om · Wt~ ·k .................. ........... . .... $1.00
Om ' MonTh .
.. ..................... .. . $4.40
Onr' Yl'at' ............................... $:l:l.OO
SIN(a.E ('01'\'

618 E. Main Street
419 Main St.

T hP Sunday T imf's·Sf'nlin&lt;'l will not IX&gt;

n 'Spons ibll" for ad va nr(' paynw nt s mad£&gt;

to eatTir rs.

."\unda~

Twia

PER SET

Pomeroy , Ohio ·
PI . Pleasant

675-1632

9-5 Sat.

Phone 446-0303

Veterans Memorial
Discharged--Della Roseber ry,
Hugh Leifheit, Virginia Thoren,
Mae Brewer, J eanette Diles.

m oriting.

· The first was reported by . a
cusiodian at Meigs High School at
~ : 10 a .m . when t he custodian heard
footsteps in a hallway followed by
the sound of breaking glass. Officers
arriving found a window In the audio
visua l room broken out but nothing
appeared to be missing. Entrance to
the building was gained by knocking
out a panel in a door.
The second Incident was reported
at 7: 55 a.m . at the Jim Rickman
store at the Cross Roads near
pradbury. Entry to the sto're was
gained by knocking a padlock from
the front door and b~aklng out a
glass In a second door. Cigarets,
watches, knives. socket sets,
wrenches and a number of power
·tools were taken. The store had
:closed at 5::ll p.m. Friday.
: • The department is also invcstiga·iion the des!ruction of a mailbox on
!,he Flatwoods Road

.Mon.·ThUIS. 9 am tn.9:30 pm

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~li

Fri.-Sal 9 am bl 10 pm

CUiSED SUNDAYS

HOTPOINT REFRIGERATORS
HOTPOINT ELECTRIC. RANGES
HOTPOINT WASHERS
HOTPOINT DRYERS
HOTPOINT FREEZERS,
GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVISIONS

OUI TOWN'S fiNEST SUPEI MARICIT

,..._~

GO TO CHURCH £V[RV SUNOAV

TAVERN

HAM

BONELESS. FULLY COOKED
LEAN , NO WASTE

79

POMEROY LANDMARK
614-992-2181
YOUR HOTPOIHT AND GENERAL ELECTRIC
HEADQUARTERS
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
CHECIC WITH US BEFOIIE YOU BUY!!

U.S.D.LCHOICE .

PRE-SLICED
RINDLESS

SIRLOIN
STEAK

SLAB
BACON

59

59
PEPSI

MT. DEW

String Sets: Guitar, Banjo,
Electric Bass, Mandolin &amp; Uke

PEPSI FREE

49

$139500 KIMBALL
TWO KEYBOARD ORGAN

21 7 UPPER RIVER RD

$99500

CONVENIENT
CREDIT

GALLIPOLIS

PAR-KAY
ARGARINE

ALL SPECIAL SALE PRICED
FOR THIS ONE WEEK .

'

USED LOWREY, HAMMOND '
AND THOMAS ORGAN.S-STARTING AT

Now, ftle Captain l:lnngs

.

lighlllf botter-fned and piled
high,$erved wirtl the Copta tn 's

special cocktail sauce. Plus.
our own tresh. c reomv cola
SIO\il!. hOI cri sp french fne s

and two southern style
huSh puppies.

WHit coupon

.

(OI DOri.Coohno

Coot

CLIP TH IS COUPOH

UPIIOS

feb 27. t983

!ehder /Ulcy clams. SBr'led with .cocktoll sauce, ~esh
cote slow. crtsp ~ench ~res and two souttoern-stytellusl'l
puppies. One coupon pet cusiOmer pet visit.
1
OtferuprrtsFeb 27. 1983

ft

$2A
.
7t
DINNER
~~~~.
•

with

coupon

l

OPEN Monday and Friday Night Till 8:00

Dl 1

••••••••

Offer

Captain D's.

•

•

•

• •- • • • • •. -

BRUNICARDI .MUSIC, I·Nc

EXTRA LARGE

EGGS
DOZEN

Fantastic' Buys On Our PEAVEY EQUIPMENT
you lender, ju1cy clam~.

ALLISON
GRADE A

rKRAFT

SIGMA &amp; ODESSA GUITARS 30% Off
MARTIN GUITARS ............. 25% Off

PIANOS &amp;ORGANS

••••••••
CLAM

~~p5osit

TWO ONLY-KIMBALL PIANOS ·sll9500

........ .. . $2-! .M

Regular 12.99

1

STORE HOURS:

Oeputies check two break-ins
. POMEROY --The Meigs County
Sherifrs Department Is lnvestigat·
lng two breaking and entering
Incidents reporteii · Saturday

.

-

............ , ............... $1!'l:l1

'

BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN
CENTRAL TRUST
COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS
GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
OHIO VALLEY BANK

REG. OR DIET

....................... .. $5ti.Hi

•••• •

MIDDLEPORT--Terry Miller
will be the featured performer at an
tllusion show to be presented at 2
p.m. today (Sunday) at the Meigs
Junior High School under the
sponsorship of the Meigs County
Jaycees.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, FEB. 26

JACap~!n D's~

I

THE FOLLOWING FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY, FEB.
21 IN OBSERVANCE OF PRESIDENTS'
DAY.

9:30 A.M. Monday, Feb. 21

Also In
Seirs
Mon.-Thur.-Fn.
9:30 'til 5

ln.Jdt• Ohio
.......................... ..'li~J1 .4R
ii:l Wt'('k s
2ti Wl'&lt;'ks ... ..................... . ......... $27 . :~)
p W('f'k&lt;l ........... ........... . ...... .. .. . $14.114
tta~'"" Oubl_., Ohio
',!l i ~ k s

contest was held In the fourth grades of the Southem
Local District through tlie encouragement of Joyce
Thoren, district scliool nurse.

Gallipolis; Carl R. Preece, 30, Point
Pleasant; Fannie V. Roush, 50,
Letart, W.Va .
.
Drunken driving: 'Timothy S.
Murphy, 19, Gallipolis; Donald R.
Fe r rell, 27, Woodward, Okla .
Mike Sommer , 42, Gallipolls, was
cited for domestic violence . .

SALE STARTS

27 SYCAMORE STREET
GALLIPOLIS. OH.

Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

. .. ... •$~ 1 . 14'1
.... $10All

MAD. Sun.~ ·ttn•1·ioNs

rt'WPI' b

$11995

Lrv itas· discrC'tion. howrvcr .
In rPtum, thP administmlion

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

MAIL SUB...:.CRIPTIONS
Sunday OnJy

fi2 Wt•e ks

Will perform today

owned by Columbus and Southern
Ohio E lectric Company.
Teaford 's vehicle s us ta ined
heavy damage.
Gallipolis City Police cited the
following persons F riday and early
Saturday morning:
Speeding: Carol A. Workman, IS,

PHONE 992-3 795

i-1 V&lt;-IilaiJIP.

naily and

·.

.

11_1'1ze provided by John j8cobs, health depariment
admlnlstrator; Chris Hannon, Portland Elementary, $5 third prize, provided by George Collins. Honorable mention went tq Heather Roush, Syracuse
Elementary, S2, donated by Nonna Torres, R.N. The

:""?•

9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00A.M. TO $:00 P.M .

, K o ~ uhsr r i ptior.&lt;&gt; by m; tll pt&gt;r m!t!t'd In
tov.:n o; whf'rf' hnnlf' ('lll' rl Pr sPrv lcr Is

... .

· ' · PRIZES - · Winners of a poster coolest, conducted by the l'felgs County Heallh Depanment dealIng wllh tooth care, were presented prizes at ·the
department quaners Friday afternoon. They are, 1to
r, Mayla Yoacham, Racine Elementary, Drst, SU
:provided by Howard Frank with her poster now to be
, entered In dl8trlct Judging at lJJgan; Valerie PatterLetart Falls Elementary, no, second place,

OPEN WEEKDAYS

I'Rict:
:lf10•nt s

.:

~

f lu o rid e

This year. there are more than 100 changes in the
uix laws and forms . But at H&amp;R Block, one thing
hasn't changed ... lair prices! Just ask. and we ' ll
give' you a free estimate of the cost lor preparing
your return. You get a complete interview . Plus we
doublecheck your return for accuracy .

Hy ('arrh·r or Mowr Hoult•

monrhs ............. .

l

~

witllheld. thPn unPditC'd versions II
lhP rommittcc still qeslrcd them.
The committPC would tx-·a nowed
to " rpviPw" the documents inclosPd
S('s~ion . but not necessarily to ki'Pp
copies.
Although the compromise was
conditio n"! on thP resolution clear·
ing Mrs. Gorsuch, LC'vitas said hC'
PX pPCled document s to begin arriving on Capitol Hill early next week ,
befo re any -HouSC' action could he
ta ken.

i\ i\lu ltlnwdla :'\lt'W!'P I~Pt'r
' Pu !Jti.s hC'd C'aC' h Sunduy . B2r1 Third
A~ ·f'n ut'. b.v !hC' Ohio VuiiP.V Pu blb hln,:;
Companv Mul! iTTl('&lt;j ia , lnt·. Sn:: o ndt: la ~s
JXl.'ltagt' paid at GaUi polls. Ohio &lt;I~H .
F: rt l(•f('(i as S('('() nd d ass mall j n~ m a lf(&gt;r
at Pomr my , Ohio, Pos t OfflcP.

~ix

I

,. •.,.

PRESIDENTS

Mc mb('J : T h0 fl.ssoc iat f'd P rrss, Inland
Dn\l v Prr'!'s 1\.&lt;&gt;sol'lalion and thP 1\m l'l'i ·
ean ·Nrwspaprr Publ!shC'f's Association.
N &lt;.~ t i on a l
1\rlv..rtis lng Rl'prt'st'nl a tlvt:' .
Bn tn ham , l i1i WC'st Nlrx' MUC' Road ,
SuiT £'~~ . f )(&gt;troil. M ichigan . .Jffi'T ~.

GALLIPO!,.JS - A 1&amp;-year-old
Racine youth claimed Injury after
he was Involved In a single-car
wreck oo Ohio 338 In Meigs County
Friday morning.
However. Dennis Teaford was not
immediately treated , the Gallipolis
post of the State Highway Patrol
reports.
Troopers say Teaford was westbound on0hio338about3mlles east
of Ohio 124 when the accident
occurred at8: 10 a .m .
He reportedly lost control In a
cuiVe, .went off the left side of the
road and stryck an electric pole

.v&lt;:'r sions with briefingS on what was

USPS 525-MOO

' ti nt• VP&lt;I I'

Khartoum.
hl'lghtC'nPd bv Libya's thrmts this
Kufra is 21i0milcs northwPsl ofllx'
week to challenge any . foreign
Sudanes&lt;' bordPr and 100 miles west
sallies into lh&lt;' Cull of Sidra.
Of Egypt.
Libya claim• thf' gull a s 11&lt; own,
Pentagon officials said Friday
but the United States savs most of
thar Ass istant D&lt;&gt;fenS£' Secretary
thr gull ronsl,ts of iniPrnat ion a!
Francis J, West will begin lwo days . waters. In August l!IXJ , U .s . Navy
of talks with Egyptian officials on
aircraft shot down two Libya~
Sunday. The Pcntagonsti'PSscd that
flghtC'r planes which chaUengPd .t h&lt;•
American planes owr thC' gu ll.
. the talks were planned months
before Libya groupeq its aircraft
1lle U.S. aircraf.t carrier Nimitz.
along its soutlx'astern bof(lpr ncar
guardPd by warships, t'PmainPd off
Chad and Sudan.
.Ill&lt;' northwPSt Egyptian coast nmr
tbP gulf.
TC'nsions in thC' region were

would makP IlK' disputed docum e nt s availablP - first edited

j'unlta!! 'limn, - .rnfintl

• I

Racine youth hurt in Friday mis.h ap

White House resolve conflict

1 \. AS HI ~CTON

\Vllil&lt;.'

be- prt'paration .for a J!gressio n
AmPrica has no right to Interfere
against Sudan. " h(' said in a
ln ... Ara b ma ti C'rS .... America must
trlr phonr int&lt;'rvicw with Pt'l&lt;'r
lx&gt; outsid&lt;' of this arm. It Is
.Jennings of ABC NPws.
aggression. It is international
Khadafy also was lnte rviewPd by
IC'ITOr ism. ''
IPirphon&lt;' by CB.&lt;; NPWs' Dan
Sudan radio quoted an unlde nliRathC'r. who asked if h&lt;' has
fiPd Suda nPSr official as saying
intentions of "stepping tip activit iPS
Libyan i&lt;'tfighters. lonJ!·range
against tht&gt; Suda.n . or thad or · bomlx&gt;rs and ground troops w&lt;'re
TunL,ia ."
massed all he south Libyan oasis of
RPpliPd Khadafy: "Of cou=. we Kufra and were "directed against
Sudan .' ' .w id thc . Egyptian ni'Ws
havp no lntPnt ion of war .... against
agPncy in a dispatch from
thC'SP nl'ighbors .. ..And anyhow.

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-A-5

BAKER RJRNITURE
N. 2ND AVE~·, MIDDLEPORT
,..

�February 20, 1983

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

Veterans Memorial has strong ties with EMS
J&gt;?MEROY - Veterans Memorial
Hospital's commitment to high
I
quality emergency medicine is havIng far-reaching effects on all of ·
Meigs.County.
"The emergency medical personnel are happy that Veterans
Memorial Hospital's Emergency
George cut down too many cherry trees
Department now has 24 hour coverand we had them made into water beds.
age. We a lso have notk'tod a significant Increase in the number of
patients brought to our hospital by
the Emergency Medical Service,' '
says Walter S. Lucas, Administrator of Veterans Memorial HospitaL
LARGE MIRROR STORAGE
Lucas added that, "Dr. Brizendine,
NAMED ASSOCIATE ~ Dodirector of the group which proON EACH SIDE
nllld Blake, Rt. 2, pt, Pleasant,
vides emergency room coverage
was recently named an assoJOINS STAFF - JeH Henry,
for Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Gal)lpolls Fen-y, has joined the
ciate with CenitD"Y 21, Southern
Bob Eyer, Administrator of the
lfills, Inc., at %1 Locust St., GalliMeigs County Emergency Medical
•,- staff of Head-Quarters, by Juanpolis. Speclallzlng In farms,
Service; and I are In the pr!leess of
•~a. Gallipolis, He is a graduate
.commercial, and rentllls lor the
Huntin'gton Beauty School,
heavily lncorJX&gt;rating the emerCOMPLETE
past 23 years, Blake has been a
gency medical technicians In the
{:!;)nd has been trained In adAND SET UP
member of Columbus &amp;ard of
hospital's In-service training pro·~vanced hair styling, perm wavRealtors since 1900.
gram to help keep everybody up!:~ 'l!tg and hair color.
,&lt;l-4&gt; ~
d ated in their paramedic training."
t" ~"
Bob Eyer, administrator of the
Emergency Medical Service, has
23 years experience in emergency
treatment in the field. Byer says of
LIGHTED HEADBOARD
the new system at Veterans MemDon Lipscomb of Cottageville; two
!'Emerson
Jones
HEART SHAPED FOOTBOARD
orial Hosltal , ' 'the cooperation and
,..
grandsons
and
one
granddaughter.
communication
between
the
Emer•
ABE'S
Funeral services will be held at 2
• POMEROY--E merson Jones,
gency Medical Service and the hosSALE
p.m . Monday In Crow-Russell FunMiddleport resident who has been in
pit a l 'has Improved and Is
1
eral Home with Rev. Louis A. Hus- . continuing to improve."
• ~rristown, N.J., with a daughter,
PRICE
!tf;ed in MorriStown Friday. The sell officiating. Biuial will follow In
Byer also felt that the emergency
thefamUycemetery. Visitatlon.will
: ~Y wUI be brought to the Ewing
AND SET UP
·department s taD' at Veterans Membe held at the funeral home after 4
orial
Hospital
has
become
more
rewill an
p.m . today.
sponsive to the needs of the
LARGE SELECTION
'.t•"'·
Emeru:encv Medical Service.
BUBBLE STORAGE
Since April, the emergency pny;~homas L. Lipscomb
.
slclans at Veterans Memorial HosWATER CONDITIONERS
'
Marjorie
Maize
pital
have
been
provided
by
' : lETART ~ Thomas L LipsRAIL CAPS 2 &amp; 3 PIECE
Medical Emergency Associates,
!:tignb, 54, Rt 2, Letart, W. Va ., was
HUNTINGTON - Marjorie MaInc. , an emergency physicians'
! fatally
injured Friday afternoon
1• coMPLETE
'
lze, 70, Huntington, died Saturday
group based In Louisa, Ky.
' ~en mauled by his own Hereford
bUD at his farm on Plain VIew Rd. morning at her home.
___________j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•Jle was a farmer and former em- Surviving are a son, Wlllla m M. 1
~ _ployee of Kaiser Aluminum R.aMcWhorter, Point Pleasant; two
Plant. He was a veteran sisters, Helen M. Copley and Mary
&gt;tt; the U. S. Martne Corps and M. Bums, both of Huntington and
;~ in the Korean Conflict.
two nephews, Keith Fitzpatrick,
Miami, Fla.. and Michael M.
!~~.Survivors include his mother.
~ '!!rs· Pearl Myers Lipscomb of
BUms, Annandale, Va.
.
i·~go. Fla.; his wife, Edna BucGraveside services will be held
~ Llpscol)lb, a son, Charles of on Monday at Kirkland Memorial
; tlitart; three daughters, Mrs. · Gardens in Point Pleasant.
~~nda Blackston of Syracuse;
In lieu of Dowers, the family rePeggy Jackson of Parkers- quests memortal contributions be
,,~g and Mrs. Joann Cullin of Marmade to the Cabell-Wayne Easter
gantown; a sister, Mrs. Dorothy
Seals Society, 601 9th St.,
if~ker of Largo, Fla.; a brother, Huntington.

Presidents'Dav
FRI.-SAT .-SUN.-MON.

WAYSIDE FURNITURE
241 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS

KING SIZE WATER BED

GEORGE'S
SALE
PRICE

!

•·:•PI

r~

Area deaths

95
$449

KING SIZE WATER BED

sssa~.~.,

~~~:~~~:r: 1:~~~h

..

noun~

,

BUY GEORGE'S OR ABE'S WATER

BED AND GET A 6 DRAWER. PEDESTAL FOR S59.95.

..
'

.

Other Waler Beds Starting AI ~ 199

;...,mswooo

fl'4rs·
"

.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC•.
ETERANS MEMORIAL HOSP.ITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

February 20, 1983

Ohio-Point Pleamnt, W. Va.

Do~tors establish new ~cience award program
GALLIPOLIS - Physicians of
Holzer CUnlc Ltd. are establlshlng
. a new high schOol award program
·that wUI recognize area students
for outstanding achievement in
science according to an announce·
rnent Saturday by Robert E. Da·
niel, clinic administrator.
At a lunchron attended by educa·
tors from 16 area high schools in
Gallla, Jackson, and Meigs Coun·
ties In Ohio anct Mason County in
West Virginia, Dr. Dan Whiteley,
Vice Chairman c1 tre clinic's Executive Committee, Indicated that the
clinic has been remiss In not recog·
nlzing the pursuit of excellence In
science by our area young people.
He commented that the clinic has
an obligation to try to encourage
high school students to gain more
knowledge. In the flel&lt;! of science
an,d to pursue higret education.
The clinic's program will recog'nize an outstanding graduattng
science student In each high school
each year. The students will be
awarded a $200 momtary prize at a
Science Award Banquet sponsored
by the clinic and wUI receive a certificate at graduation.
High schools coverect by the program are: Gallta Academy, Gallla
Christian, Hannan Trace, Kyger
Creek, North Gallta, Ohio Valley
Christian and Southwestern High
Schools In Gallla County; Jackson,
Oak Hill and Wellston High Schools
In Jackson County; Hannan. Point
Pleasant and Wahama High
Schools In Mason County; and
Eastern, Meigs and Southern Hlglt
Schools in Me~?s County.

i

I
735 2ND AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-2601
STORE HOURS:
8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUN., FEB. 20th THRU SAT., FEB. 26th

t

"QUANTilY RIGHTS RESERVED

-.fi111
J

r

ATTEND SESSION - Educators from four
oounlles, Gallla, Meigs, Mason, and Jackson Thursday partilipated In a luncheon at the Holzer Cllnlc

DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
SERVED 11 A.M.-3 P.M.
MONDAY-Beef.Stew with Noodle and Biscuit
TUESDAY-Roast Turkey Sandwich and Mashed Potatoes
WEDNESDAY-Roast Pork with Dressing
THURSDAY-Baked Steak with Mushroom Gravy
FRIDAY-Deep Fried Shrimp &amp; Fish Tail
SATURDAY-Porll Chops and Wild Rice

Cheese distribution set
.RACINE -Government surplus
cbeese and butter wUI be distributed at the American Legion Post
in Racine on the following dates:
Wednesday, Feb. 32, and Thursday, Feb. 24, noon to 4 p.m. The
surplus iooct is for needy families
only and to receive It recipients
must show evidence of need.
Plans are aJSO Delng made for a
community Good Friday service on
the evening of Aprlll at the center
with Mrs. Stewart and Rilbert Eads
to be 1n charge. All Joe~ churches
will be Invited to participate. ·

1----__;;.---------------------1
A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...
W,iiliam B. Kughn

$26995

SALE PRICE
19" PORT ABLE SUPER COLOR

$21995

REG. S399.95

$27900

Now $49800

LOUNGE ENTER.TAINMENT
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY:-CHARLIE LILLY
WED. &amp; THURS.-BILLY MARSHALL &amp; LENNY TENNANT
FRI. &amp; SAT.-BILLY.LEE SOUNDS OF COUNTRY
ENTERTAINMENT NEXT WEEK IN RESTAURANT
IS GEORGE WESTERMEYER

QUACK - QUACKERY

REGULAR PRICE

REG. ss9soo

. NOW ENJOY EASY LISTENING MUSIC
FROM 7-11 AND DINNER SPECIALS
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY EVENING

DR. DANIEL WJUTELEY

FEBRUARY '83 SALE

' MAGNAVOX 25" COLOR CONSOLE

field.

CLOSED SUNDAY
OPEN MONDAY-THURSDAY 11 A.M.-9 P.M.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 11 AM.-10 P.M.

Committee
buys 200
chairs" The
tables
rutland Civic

RlmAND Center Committee voted . to purchase an additional 200 chairs and
12 tables for tbe ~nter at a regular
business meetlng.
Dona tlons or memorial contributions tor ·such Items will be accepted and should be sent to the
Rutland Civic Center, c-o Reva J~
Snowden, treasurer.
Joan Stewart, president, was in
charge of the meeting durtng which
time a discussion was held on the
various Improvements made to'the
center over the ~ast two menths.
1bese Included . refinishing · the ·
main floor, seaUng the root lor
leaks and new down SJX&gt;utlng presently being Installed. An electric
advertising sign has been placed on
the lawn.
Activities planned lor the coming
months Include a dance each weekend during the remainder of February and during March and
skatlng to be held on the first Sunday In March from 2 to 4 p.m. ·

'

Ltd. wbere plans were o.-Jined for a new high school
award program for students excelling In the science

The LaSalle Restaurant

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

NOW

Tirnes-Sentinei-Page- A.7

Trying to save for retirement is never
easy. Because for every dollar you set
aside, Uncle Sam asks for a contribution.And sometimes that contribution
·can leave your savings with something to be desired.
But there is a way to keep some
of that money out of Uncle Sam's
reach.
. .
·
You can open an Individual
Retirement Account from Centr,al
Trust, even if you already have a
' retirement plan where you work. And.
you can open the account wi: h any
amount you like.
· You can deposit up to $2tl00 a ·
year..or $4000 ·if you're married and

both hold a job. All your contributions
up until April IS can be deducted from
your taxable income for the previous
year, which adds up to a big tax savings, year after year.. ·
You never pay Uncle Sam a
penny until you retire and withdraw
from the account. By.then. you'll probably be in a[llUCh lower tax bracket
anyway. And the added protection of
FDIC insurance makes your IRA a
safe. secure investment for the future.
It's a lot ea!&gt;ier to save with an
IRA because you don't pay taxes on
the principal or the interest'. That
means you can put money that would
have gone for taxes into your savings.

And you'd be surprised how fast it
can add up. For example, at a 10% interest rate. it's possible (or a :10-yea·r-old
couple to contribute $4000 a year and
retire at age 6.S with well over a million dollars.
And even after allowing for
today's inflation, that's still a nice sum
of money. ·
Central Trust has a variety of
flexible IRA plaps. aJI at very competi·
ti·ve rates. And we would be glad
to help you decide which one's right ·
for you.
Every one of them can help you
put more of your money in savings. and
less in Uncle Sam's pocket.

TIIECENfRAL
TRUSfCOMPANY
lVur Rnancial Center
"'""'"')/(,
.

-

30 .tbs.

A physician that makes pretentious claims of having slull and knowledge in
administering a cure for a malady is a "quack". We want to be protected from the
"quackery" of such a fradu\ent practitioner, who without medical skill and knowledge,
dishonestly, but zealous~. administers his so-called remedie~ We desire to protect oor
loved ones and frieoos from such "quackism". Why' Because the results of such a
"quacksalver• is harmf\.4 and deadl~
,. In The Physical Realm
We do not justify the fraduient practice of a "quack" in th~ medical field on the
grounds that he is honest and sincere. Neither do we co~sole his patients sa~ng, ''Well, t
does not realy matter what he says, just as long as you are honest, ~ncere, and believe in
him."
· Knowing that a tending phy~c~ n is a "quae~·. and 1defend him on the grounds ot
h(llesty and ~ncerity, and encourage my loved ones to continue as his patient convincing
him that t does not matter just as loog as he honestly and sincerely bel~ves In the
·untrained physician, and then he dies as a resutt of such "quackery", what would you
think of me? You would regard my act as being criminal. aoo brand me as an accesSJryiD
the crime. You woold let me know in no uncertain term~ that you had lost respect for me.
therefore. neither you nor any member in your tamiy woold no loo~r seek my advice nor
using the physician whom I had protected.! became your enemy because i dil not tell you
the truth!
In The Spiritual Realm
We have many "quacks" in 'the spiritual realm. The scriptures call the lradulent
practitioners '1~se teachers" (II Pet. 2:11). They have not the "wisdom of Goer' but the
"wisdom of lhe wo~d" (I COr. 1:19, 20). They have •rwt the knowledge of-God" 11 00r. l5:
34). They are ze~ous, buttheir zeal is "not according to knowledge" iRm. Ul2). They study
energetically and are "ever feamin(, but "never able to come to the knowledge of the
truth" 01 Tim. 3:7). Wth much enthus~sm they exatttheir own "imagination (reasoning~
against the koowledge of God" (II Cor. 10:5), ~~u~y adiTinlstering their so-called
remed~s for s~. saying, "One faith is as good as another, it does not matter what yoo
be!~ve just as ~ng as you are honest and sincere."
Jesus, the true aoo great Physic~n. has ~ainly wamed, ''If the bind lead the blind
both.shaR fall into the dtch:' !Mil 15:141. th3ti~ they will both suffer the' consequencesci
doom. Peter makes d very clear that their doom is "swift destruction" Jll Pet 2:11.
·
Know1ngthat there are many 'quacks" or "faOe teachers" in the reigiousworid who
teach "contrary to sound doctrine" (I Tim. 1:10); who "will not endure sound doctrine; but
after their own lusts (evil mi1d) shall heap to ltemselves teachers, having itching ears
(eagerness In hear false doctrine);; (II Tim. 4:31; and who "shai tum away their.ears fmm
the truth, and shall be turned unto fables" (II Tim . 4:4), t is my duty to sound the cry of
warning. But, w.hat do you think of me, when I do? You call me a narrow-minded,
egotistical, fau\1-finding pre&lt;! cher who thinks he ~ the only one pleasing In God, aciing as a
rudge. You ~t me know in no uncertai1 tenns that.you have lost respeet klr me, and that ·
you will continue to respect the "false teacher", for~ he was good enough for your loved
ones, he is good enough for yoo, and that you wil conlnue to accept his 'quackery" and
encourage the rest af your family to do so. In the ph~\ realm, IM~wd bean accessor}~
a criiTinal act. In the spiritual realm, I am the criminal. -Why? I 'become your enemy,
because i tell you the truth" (Gal. 4:16)..,-continued ·

27"

181'4'
8"

ft
i \
I
'

COME IN FOR FREE DEMONSTRATION

I

' I

!for Free Bible Correspqndence Coorte Write ...)

~/,afUI . KJI ~~"
.
.

Of

Bu141vllle RNd • P .0 . Box

~luM .

301

GALLIP.!ll IS, OHI04Ul1

sunca.-, Mornlnt
Bibla StiiGy t : lO
~Orthlpii ; )O

!undoly EvMiftl
Wonhl~•=•

, Wednud.1y

Evenlnt

.....
~=·

'"Mn.... ,,...
tttti;Mr'
DllfW•W.IIH
11:SSAM

OUR FULL PAGE AD
.IN WEDNESDAY'S PAPER
j

'I

•'

.

'

.

.

-.
•

�· Pomeroy-Midcleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleotant, W. Va.

Page-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Point woman .seeks
POINT PLEASANT-APointPlea· . Februa~y. 1982 to move out of the
sant woman has fUed a $2.4 ml!llon mobile home she had purchased
lawsuit against a Gallla County mo- from John Swain at Tri.COunty
bile home dealer and two other Mobile Homes, 2013 Eastern Ave.,
corllpanJes, charging that her per· Galllpolls, a year earlier. Also
manent dlsabUitles are a direct ·re- named as defendants In the suit are
suit of "a dangerously high Victorian Homes, Inc., Indiana,
formaldehyde content" in a trailer maker of the Victorian Deluxe
she purchased two Ye&lt;!l's a~ro.
Mobile Home Pierce purchased,
Ruby L. Pierce,.in the suit filed in and Champion International
· Mason County Circuit Court, claims Corporation, Champion Building
she was advised bv · doctors in ProdUcts Divisi9n, Connecticut.

theri

$2.4 million
a1r in her moblle home revealed a
high formaldehyde content.
She charges that the defendants
were negligent in Using mobile
home building products which ·
emitted dangerously high levels of
formaldehyde, In failing to use due·'
care to use protective coating on the
building products which did emit
formaldehyde, in failure to warn
the conswner and in marketin11
such prodUcts: · ·

Pierce said. lli the suit that aner
several months of Jiving In the
home, she became ill and suffered
from "severe asthma and bronchitis and become completely and
totally disabled."
She w8s
hospitalized in October, 1981 and
has been hospitalized on occasions
since then at both Pleasant Valley
Hospital and Holzer Medical
Center. In March, 1982, Pierce
said, lab tests she had !'!lade of the

~im.es ...

'

'

j'.entin:el

Section [ID.
1983:

...

~

~--

.

EAGLE -John Chapman, poandJion r#. MarceDa Chapman 1111d a
nephew rJ. Joe Cahpman, both of Mlddlepott, recently received lheBoy
Scout highest rank, lhal of E&amp;~~le Scout. He Is pictured llRftll congratulated by his scoutmaster, Eugene Kohles. Jolm Is a scout In Troop 48,
Glenside, Pa. Hels lhndtsone oftheynungestmembersofthetroopto
receive the tank of Eagle. Yo111111 CIJ&amp;Pman also received the Delno
Suplee Award (or completbtg the JT10St merit badges In his troop this
· year, 1111d the Edwanl C. Coley Award .,r doi11g the most to adv1111ce
scouting In his troop.

THE MONEY MARKET DEPOSIT ACCOUNT

.~oolittlt

nrmat~
(FORMERLY PRICE &amp; SONS PHARMACY)

"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER"

400 Second Ave.

446-1883

[)
....Plo .....l
, .. I.

• $100,000 F.D.I.C. Insurance
• Check Writing Privileges
·• Dally Interest Rate
• No Withdrawal Penalty
• $2500 Minimum Deposit

Promises, confusion, gimK:s, bonuses .. you'll hear ~ aiiOOay ... what some financial
institutions are gcing to do for you. But once again, Ohio Val!y Bank, the Tri-(Dmty's
innovator of the best in total banking service, is one si!p ahead. fJSiy proven when you
check our ~rfoonaoce ~rd since M! intnxltml Daiy Investment I wry biCk in
August 1981, when many instilutions either didn't know what am~mer daily ilielesl
investment savin~ were oc sim~ dKln~ care 1D r&amp; !his cusiX1Ief ser.ice.lll. our
Da~y Investment II Money Market Account is not something new. lfssim~ SOOlelhing
lEier.

_

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

CONSTRUCTED IN 1852 - The Grant house in Mlddlepott was lhe first cement
home In the valley. 1be walls of lhe original part ol the two-story structure are rJ. solid
concrete, two feet at the bottom tapering to 18 inches at the top with a foot-wide center

Historical buffs restore
Ohio Valley house

;

11 you are a smoker genuinely interested in ridding yourself of the habit you've alre~d'J
taken the lirst important step. ~ou have a sincere desire to overco111e your addict1on
Without your comm~men t, no program of smoking control would work.With it, there are
a number of paths you can l~low to reach your goal. The patented BREATHE EASY lormula is one of the best jet found. Because it is simple and ~easant, the BREATHE EASY
methOO has attractEfl an enormous folloWing in Europe and across the U.S.A. in its se~ten years on the market. Thousands of former smokers testify the beneficia! etfec.ts of a
·BREATHE EASY program began the very fir~ day they started.

~

hio Valley Bank

I

Story and photos
by CHARLENE HOEFUCH
.

Four locations to serve you better.
Member: FDIC

••
•

..

1982 HALLCREST
..

EMPIIIE
SALE .
PRIC£

FULL

Ea. Pc.
QUEEN

S239.95

$119.95

S289.95

Sl59.95

'699.95 $369.95

2 pc. set

HALLCREST II
NATIONAUY
ADVERTISED
PRICE

•

EIPIRE
SAlE
PRICE

-

TWIN
Ea. Pc.
FULL

Ea. Pc.
QUEEN .

-

2 pc. set

S269.95

Sl49.95

S3J9.95

$189.95
'

'799.95

$43•.95

'

KING SIZE AVAILABLE
,,

,,

,,

..•
I•

GRANT STREET- Duringtheselgeof
VIcksburg In the CMI War, WWiam Huil
Grant used his boats to transpolt slaves
from the South to freedom In Ohio. For that
service, considered 'an outstanding contribution to the cause of the Union, he was given
recognition bY Middleport 1111d the name of
the street on which he Jived was named
Grant Street.

CANE COLLECI'OR ~ Mike Gerlach, a Meigs
lflgh School history \eacher, is a coUector of canes.
Among his most prized In this cane which was used
by several members of the Grant familY,

done."

wm.

..

d.

1lmes-Sentlncl Staff

MIDDLEPORT - Preserving the past for the future Is an admirable goal, particularly when It's a house of historical significance In a community.
But It's neither easy nor inexpensive, Mike and Debbie Gerlach will tell you rather
emphatlcaliy.
Since 1976, the couple - both history buffs - have put Jots of time and money Into
restoring the house built by William Hull Grant in 1852 with wealth he gained in the
Callfornla·gold rush.
Not only Is the Grant house one of the oldest homes in Meigs County, butltalso has the
distinction of being the first of Its kind built In the Ohio Valley. _
The walls of the orlg!na:l part of \he two-story structure are of solid concrete, two feet
at the bo!lom tapering to 18 inches at the top and with a foot-wide center retaining wall,
·
also of concrete.
Cement was poured over a field stone foundation Into large wooden forms .
To be sure !hat the construction method would work, Grant built an experimental
cottage with cement walls on the same plot of ground, and the family lived in It until the
big house was built.
The second part of the house, which has 13 rooms, was fra~ and was added
sometime before 1884 . An outstanding feature Is a five-sided bay window area where the
Grants' daughter, California, a graduate of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, had a
·grand piano and taught music.
Originally there was a balcony on one side of the house, but In later years It was
enclosed. The porch and pillars were added about the turn of the century . .
Many of the original doors and windows, recessed Info the thick cement walls, are
_still In place. The baseboard, door and window mouldings and the crown ceiling mouldings_in most of the rooms are the original wood.
The Gerlachs purchased the house from the Stansbury family, who bought itfrom the
Grants in the early 195Qs. TheStansburys converled It Into apartments, so the first step for
the Gerlachs In their restoration work was to tear out the additions made by the former
owners.
Their goal Is not only to restore the house to Its original design, or nearly so, but also to
furnish and decorate it appropriately for that period.
Since It Is listed In the National Register of Historical Places, which qualified the
Gerlachs for a restoration grant, It Is now protected from the possibility of destruction.
Once the Gerlachs got a lew rooms into a liveable condition, they moved Into the
house and slowed their restoration work - time and money were no small consider a ton
- until now they have as their goal to do one room a year.
Two furnaces are used to heat the house, one down, the other up, with ceiling registers
since regular duct work for one major system was hindered by the cement walls. Drilling
Into the walls was 'necessitated to handle the new electrical wiring, no small task.
The Gerlachs have replastered ali of the walls In the completed rooms, which are now
painted white and deep cOlors in golds, greens, blues and reds are used on the woodwork.
Their parents, Mr. and Mrs. BUI Grueser and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Gerlach, have helped
with the work. Mike tags his father, Wendell, as the "chief architect and carpenter" In the
project.
Not without humor, he says It will take "200 years, more or less, to get ail the work
The Grant Family
Pioneers In the development of Meigs County, John Grant Sr., his wife. Sarah, their
son, Samuel Grant, his wtfe, Hannah, and their seven children, migrated to Meigs County
from Maine in the summer of 1881.
They made the long journey from Maine to Wellsburg, N.Y., by wagon, and there
built a flatboat on which they float~ dowri the Ohio River. The trip took 11 weeks.
The Grants were millers and operated mills all around the county, Including the
Higley Mill on Leading Creek, the Stedman MUI on Shade River, the Chester MUI, and the
one in Middleport.
.
•.
· Samuel's son, William HWI Grant, born after the family came to Meigs County, built
the Grant Street house which Is now undergoing restoration.
During the Civil War; he served with distinction in the selgeof VIcksburg and tt was
during that' lime that he used his boats to transport slaves from the !nuth to freedom in
Ohio.
·
He was cited for his service and in recognition of his ootstandlng contribution to the
cause of the Union, the street on which his home was lo'cated was named Grant Street. It
bears that name to this day.
William Hobart Grant, born to the Wililam Hull Grants In 1848 in Middleport, ml·
grated by covered wagon In 1971to Kansas, settling near Ellinwood oo a homestead i1160
acres.
. ,
.
"~
He retumed a few years later to Middleport to marry Ella Jenette Logan and after a
time In Kans8s where they lived, she came back to Middleport to give birth to her son,
WUIIam Thomas, In the homeplace.
.
·
William 'lbomas Grant, who died in 1954, was foonder of Business Men's Assurance
Co. in Kansas Qty, a national 16 bUllon dollar Insurance company today headed by his
son, William Downing Grant.
·
About four years ago Grant re!W11ed tO Middleport to view the home ct. his ancestors,
ilO do tombstone markings and some genealogy research.
.
The Grants, described by local histories ,as a family of noted Intellectual force and
unusual business abWty,"make a mark In Middleport's history.
.
The Gerlachs' workAn J'I!Siorlll(l· the hlsilOrlcal struclju'e built by the Grants more
than 1.'l) years ago
undoubtedly, preserve their past for the future.

HALLCRf!ST I
NATIONALLY
ADVERTISED
PRICE

TWIN
Ea. Pc.

retaining wall. Cement was poured over a Deld stone foundation Into large wooden fonns.
house Is being restored by Mike 1111d Debbie Gerlach who purchased II In 19'76.

The

ORIGINi\L RI!:TAINED - Mally of tbe ortlllnal doors 1111d windows, receMect Into
the thick eement walls are 11&amp;11 In place, 8l!d mofll Gllhe baseboard, door 111111 window
moukllnp and the crown cellq IIIOIIIdlnp are the orl&amp;lnal. Here Debbie and Mike
Gerl.eb, bolh teachen, atand beaWe the Uvlng. room llreplacle which was put ln&amp;o the
hQuae wbea It W1l8 COIIMructed In J8U,

',.

'
'

.

l

�•
P(!ge- 8-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Febrvary 20, 1983

"''*~'~r=-Mid••pDrf-·Gallipolis, Ohio-P'oint Pleatant, W. Va.

~~====

\\ illi:.tms released, will host tournament

Sunday/People

't ,t\ .roU..A, Calif. (AP! -

Parr of Pennsylvania Avenue renamed
ATL\..'-IIC CITY , N.J. (API - Entertainer Dann,,- Thlnt,~&gt;
smashf'd a oonlc or champagne over a Boardwalk railing to d!'dlr.ltt' ~
portion oi Penns)•h·ania Avenue renamed In his honor.
Although df'dicalion ceremonies were held Friday, Danny Thonms
Boulc,·ard was named a lmost a year ago _to thank the entet1alner lor
having app&lt;'ared at a 1976 Convention Hall concert.
The tx&gt;ncfil raised· more than $56,lUI ror a campaign to bring casino
gambling to Allantic City.
.
.
· Casino gaming was approved by New Jersey voters m Novemtx&gt;r
1976. the law was passed a year later, and the first gaming hall opened
in l9'i'S.
.

-A birrhday without Koo
J ACKSO!\"\'lL LE. Fla. 1AP 1 - Prlnce Andrew sailed Into Mayport
~aYal Station ror a four-da y stay, but there was no sign of KooStark, the
; 26~ vear - o ld .-\mer lea n actress who reportedly planned to visit him
, clu ;ing his birthday weekend.
·
. ,
, The prinet'. who turns 23 today, and Stark created a sensation m
: Dctob&lt;'r when they vacationed together In the Caribbean and British
• newspapers revealed she once starred in erotic films.
: Severa l London newspaper s had reported that Andrew and Miss
:Stark. whose mot her and stepfather live in Venice, Fla., would stage a
: blrt hday reu nion herf\.

Stnger' Andy Williams, who was
l'.~'oltall:\'&lt;1 with a mild stomach upset, was released "!n excellent
I~'~'''' •'&lt;llldltlon" and was to host the fina l rounds of the Isuzu-Andy
\\'\U~UI\\1 S.1n Dk'l!l) golf tournament this weekend.
Wllll~unt 52, "h&lt;ld a thoroogh evaluation by Dr. Allen Johnson, the
h&lt;'-'ltl
d!,·lslon or cardiovascular diseases at Scripps Clinic !n La
,1\&gt;ll.l, mid wns foond to be in excellent physical condition, " said Mary

or ,.,.,

Bill,

I ~link SpC\Nll;\1'00'\(ln,

Borgnine 'bothering the nurses'
ARCADIA. Calif. (APl - Actor Ernest Borgnine, star of the old
teJP\•ls!on set'les "McHalE''s Navy," was up and around amd "bothering
the nul'SIE'S'' aftl'r eleclive surgery to correct a crooked thumb, his
secrl'tary sa id. ·
·
· "He's doing great. He's up, he's bothering the nurses all day, running
around, )'('adlng scripts. He should be ·home tomorrow," Donna
Alfassa, Borgnlne's personal secretary, said Friday.
The 6!&gt;-year-old actor underwent surgery Thursday at Methodist
Hospital o! Southl'rn California In Arcadia.

Hayes honored at 'Angels of Madonna'
LINCO'"N. Neb. (AP) - Actress Helen Hayes will be the honored
guest at the Madonna Foundation's annual "Angels of Madonna"
fund-raising dinnl'r he)'('.
Proceeds from the April18 event will go to the Madonna Professional
Care Center, which Is celebrating Its 25th anniversary this year.

======

Febnlary 20, 1983

The Madonna Foundatlon runs nursing homes for the elderly,
Miss Hayes, 82, began acting at the age of 6. She has won two Oscars
for ' her roies In movies, has appeared !n 70 Broadway plays and has
written two books.
She has been active In advocating the rights of elderly and disabled

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleamnl, W. Va.

..

Beat of.the bend
,_
.

people.

.

.

Membership opens for Meigs County Beef Cattlemen's Association

Actor Soul enters diversion program
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor David Soul of 1V's "~tarsky and
Hutch" has been admitted to a two-year program, similar to probation,
after being charged with misdemeanor wife abuse and battery.
Soul, 39, was allowed Into the diversion program with the &lt;Jpproval of
c!ty prosecutors Thursday. The program places first-time offenders
under ,the jurisdiction of probation authorities, and Soul will have no
conviction on his record.
·
Soul's wife, Pa tricla, 31, previously had asked a judge to drop charges
that Soul slrtlck her Oct. 25.
·

·,
•.
By BOB HOEFUCH
casual."
•
Tlme•8eatlnel Staff
. POMEROY - Tomorrow ·- Is
There's a new organization !n
{'resident's Day - a national hol!- Meigs COunty - It's called Meigs
'lay - so you
will have to County Beef Cattlemen's Assoclapostpone any
. t;lon and all residents Involved !n
you wanted
. any way with the beef cattle Industake ca(e ol.
try are being Invited tq join.
.. Banks, post ofThe board of the new group Is
flees, the Meigs
composed of Lloyd Blackwood,
County CourtWarren Pickens, James Huffman,
house and other
James Sheeto; and James Merepublic offices lndith. Thursday night, the board
. eluding the
of elected oatcers and they are BlackMotor Vehicles will be closed In obwood, president; Pickens, · v.lce
. ~rvance of the holiday,
president, and Sheets, secretarytreasurer. Chairmen · of commitRutland High School Alumni ban- tees are Sheets, program; David
quet and dance has been setfor Sat- Gloeckner, projecto;, and Roger
urday, May 28, (yep, It's getting
Gaul, membership.
· that time already) 'and will be held
Some of the purposes of the new
at the Rutland Ovic Center which group are to sponsor and present
Seems an \deal place.
educational prograiJIS !n regard to
: Because of the size of the crowd . the Industry, proVtde a communlc;~- .
e:~~pected the banquet will be catlon link between producers and
l!!red this year. And, by llie way,
feed lot operatlgns, provide comthere Will even be a dress theme for
munication between the state assofhe occaston ... it's "country
ciation and Meigs County

Not 'hot news'
NEW YORK (AP) - When former President Gerald R. Ford told
how be pardoned former President Rlc)lard Nixon In his memoiri; five

years after the fact, It was not "hot news," a federal judge has ruled.
The ruling wlll cost The Nation magazine, which publ!shed an article
based on a draft of the memoirs obtained before the bQok was
published, at least $12,500 for copyright Infringement.
' U.S. District Judge Richard Owen granted the Initial damages to the
plaintiffs In the suit, Harper &amp; Row Publ!shers Inc. and Reader's Digest
Assoclailon, owners of pubUcatlon rights to' the memoirs entitled, "A
Time To HeaL" It represented loss of a pre-pubUcatlon rights deal
which was canceled by Time magazine.
·

COLOR PORTRAIT SPECIAL! .

•

You could cut them Into strips,
spray them with clear acrylic and
make placemats out of them. You
could even Iron them amd use them
for blotters when cooking fried
_
foods.
! said to myseH, "I can do that.
I've got a million brown paper bags
under the sin)&lt;. It would be my way
ot pitching in and recycling."
There was nothing under my sink
except a scowing pad In a saucer, a
bottle of llquld detergent and a pair
of black eyes.
what happened to all the brown
paper bags that used to stack up?
As It turned out, there's no mystery. It's just a matter of dealing
with the economy logistically. Five

"•

l
'

I
.I

years ago I went to the store and
bought $52 worthofgrocerleswhlch
wa5 put into 10 large brown paper
bags. (Sometlmes, they doublebagged. )
I used tbree bags a week for garbage, leaving me with a surplus at
the end of the year of 364 bags.
Today, I go to the store and spend
$1ili which Is putlntotwo bags. I use
three bags a week for garbage,
leaving me with a 52-bag deficit.
I wondered lf anyone else was
sending out more garbage than
they had bags coming ln.
My best fri~nd said she was havlng the same problem. Not only did
her groceries f!t Into her glove compartment, the carry-out boy
warited to know H she wanted to
take them with her or eat them
there.
Another friend of mine said
brown bags were at such a pre·, mlum in her house that her daughter had to buy a mask · for
Halloween.
I got a household hint for you.
Take several old newspapers, tape
them together, paint them brown .
and wUa, you have a brown paper
bag. I'm going to make six or seven
of them and carry them In each
week so the neighbors will think
I've Invested wisely. ·

STATE FARM

-

INSURANCE

®

FOR INSURANCE CALL

··'~ ""i
?.'II d

I

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446·4290 ·
Home 446,.511

INauoes

-

~--~

4-3V2x5

2-5x7mm 1~Wallets

PHOTOGRAPHER WILL BE AT

PIC-PAC
SUPERMARKET

Stare ~ 1 rm Insurance Compan•ts
B lt~om. n, t Oft ,

.

2-8x10

P.ACKAGE }

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.
Home O!l rt u

· ATHENS -'- Ohio University Perfprmlng Arts Series wfll: present
· The aeveland Orchestra In Athens
On March 4 at 8 p.m. In Memorial
.tudltorium a t 8 p.m. The orchestra
wfll be led by their resident conductllr, Yoel Levi.
: Tickets for the performance are
available at the Memorial Audlto~um box office Monday through
Friday from noon to 4 p.m. and on
the evening of the pertonnance a 17
p.m. For reservations, call594-68J7.
The Cleveland Orchestra was
1
tpunded in 1918 by Adelia Prentiss
~ughes. It quickly became a prim~ concern of the Musical Arts As·
soclatlon, · the parent organization
ci! the orchestra. The first concert
was In 1918 under the direction of
~lkolai Sokoloff at Gray's Armory,
Cleveland. .
; The per!odll!1946-1970wasa time
dt rapid exj&gt;anslon and growth. The
qrchestra's personnel was enlarged to 104 and the length of the
Season grew from ll to 52 weeks . ·
New series were inaugurated to
fl'leet audience.demand and family
programs and chUdren's concer!s
were added. Recording activities
local and national were expanded.
~ In 1971, Lortn Maazel was appointed music director and condnued the orchestra's domestic
and International touring program.
'l'he orchestra recorded with Telarc Records as well as London
11ecords.
: For over 60 years, The Cleveland
&lt;)rchestra has provided educa~nal concerts for chidren. Work.lng In close cooperation with area
!Chools, the ' orchestra presents ·
more than 20 educational concer!s
4ach season to over 40,000 children.
:tach year, the orchestra holds a
c:pncerto competition lor young ln~entallsts through grade 12.
FlnaUsts receive scholarships from
lite orchestra.
: The Cleveland Orchestra lnaugu~ted Its broadcast service In 1965
Jbr the prupose of leasing high fidelIty stereo tapes of concerts to some
~ music stations throughout_' the
c:puntry. The broadcast se!VIce Is a
J!'lnteffortofthe MuslcalArtsAsso:~tlon and WCL V, Cleveland's fine
'IUts station.
; : In 1982, Chrlsoph von Oohnanyl
·~as named successor or Maazei.
Qorn !n Berlin, Dohnanyl studied
ltlano at age f!ve. He then studied
.l§w at the University of Munich

111•no $

PORTRAITS BY RUTTB PHOTOGRAPHY

30 SfYLES OF SHOES

sgso

Lifestyle

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

PRESENTS: FACTORY AUTHORIZED

STEARNS &amp; FOSTER
SALE

HISTORY ESSAY WINNERS- Brenda Zirkle, llfth grader at
Elementary, and Jay Reynolds, sixth grader at Chesler, were
first and second place winners, respectively, In the American Illscontest sponsored by Retum Jonathan Meigs Chapter of Daugh~n ·•of the American Revolution. The two are with Eleanor Smith,
~mtest chairwoman, and their parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle, left,
Mrs. Nelson Reynolds. 'lbe students' essays were on the theme
;11':Ev•ery&lt;day .Ufe in Colonial America." They were preseniOO pins by

:~acll&gt;e

KNITS

200/o OFF ·
LARGE

OF
FABRICS

-¥2 Price

. · SPRING FABRIC ARRIVING DAILY
CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY

l~ilS~ .THE FABRIC SHOP
SINGER
I ACCIUCTS·

115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, OH.
.Servin&amp; Meies &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Appmved Dealer

In observance of Valimtlne's
Day, the Bradbury Elementary

exhibitors !rom the trt-state area.
If you would like more lnformatl.on on being an exhibitor write William Whited, general chairman,
Athens Lions Club, P .O. Box !145,
Athens, OH., 45701.

for the two weeks !hat P , C. is ex,
peeled to be confined.

a

And to wrap !t up. Janet Korn Is
surgical patient at Veterans Memortal Hospital; Allie Simon has had
health problems since December
but says she's beginning to feel a
l!ttie more " perky," and Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Shuster observed their .
51st wedding anniversary on Valen- :
tine's Day. What more can I say? ·
Oh, I know ... you keep smiling. ·

Eight-year-old P. C. King, son of
Linda and Curtis King of Route 7, Is
confined to St. Antbony Hospital in
Columbus where he underwent rna -'
jor surgery again Tuesd ay. Linda
and Curtis are staying In Columbus

liFESTYLE FURNITURE SHOWCASE ·
CORN fR Of THIRD &amp; OliVE
GAILIPDUS

FEATURES:

The Ohio University Convocatlon
Center will be the loca t!on of the
f!rst annual arts and crafts show,
April 30 and May 1 sponsored by the
Athens Lions Club.
The two day show will coincide
with the annual Mother's Weekend
activities at University and is for

.

HI DE-A-BEDS

·

®
by SIMMONS

ATIRACTIVE SOFA BY DAYCOMFORTABLE BED BY NIGHT

ON SALE NOW
•SALE '699

.

WED., FEB. 23rd ,
NOON 'TIL 6:00P.M.

WOOL

Quite a hoHday coming up for
Bruce Johnson, sOl) of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Johnson of Portland.
Bruce , left Saturday via plane
from Charleston, W.Va., for Montreal where he wllljoln .h!s uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. -BID McKelvey
and farnlly of Boston. The group
• will do some sightseeing In Montreal over the weekend betore ~olng
to Grey Rock for a week of skiing.
Grey Rock Is known as quite a
place in skiing circles. Bruce wfll be
gone for some eight days. He's been
skllng for some four years now and
loveS tl)e sport.
.•

School PTA sponsored a poem con·
test and I'm told there were some
excellent entries submitted by the
fifth and sixth graders of the school.
Selection of a winner was difficult
but coming out on top was Scott
Melton, a sixth grader and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Melton. He
received a $5 gift certificate from
Dan's Boot Shop. His winning entry
follows:
Love Is real, love is true;
You should have !t close ID you.
· There's a land call love for you,
There's a place where dreams
come true,
So far away, yet .so close to you.
.Can you Imagine what things you
should do,
If everybody had love for you?

tleveland Orchestra· to perform
.
at
. Ohio University next month

GAWPOIJS, OHIO

CORDUROY

producers aud provide a better understanding between the consumer
and the producer.
..
Meetings are to be held every two
mnths and If you're Interested In
joining just contact one of the board
members. They'll be pleased to
colin! you in.

..

735 2nd AVE.

FEBRUARY FABRIC SAVINGS

The Sunday Times-Sentinel . Pag-B-3

SAVINGS OF 20 TO 50% IS BEING OFFERED ON
THE INCOMPARABLE QUAUTY OF STEARNS &amp;
FOSTER MATTRESSES AND BOX SPRINGS IN
YOU~ CHOICE OF FIRM OR X-TRA FIRM.

ShoneySNew
Count Fried
Steak inner
$4.29

• TENDER.STEAK, UGHTLY BREADED, AND SMOTHERED IN
OUR OWN SPECIAL-RECIPE .COUNTRY MILK GRAVY
• FRENCH FRIES (OR BAKED 1'000'0 AFI'ER 5PM)
• TOASTED GRECIAN BREAD
• AU. THE SOUP AND SAlAD YOU CARE TO EAT
• FFATURING SHONEY'S
OWN HOMEMADE CAIIJIAGE BEEF SOUP
'-

~
Dio.'lible.

-LOOK AT WHAT YOU CAN SAVE-

FIRM.
Reg:

Poillt Pleaant. W. V-.

1129.95

FULL
169.95

1

OUEEN

'3~9' 5

set

KING

1599.95

toured Europe, the Orient, the
South PacHic, and Latin-AmeriCa.
It consists of 87 men and 17 women-:Thelr program !n Athens will be
Beethoven's '"Overture to Coriolan,
Op. 62," Slbellus' "Symphony No.
2" and Beethoven's ••symphony
No. 7."

X-TRA FIRM TWIN

1_159.95

Reg.:

FULL

1199.95

QUEEN

. GARLAND M. DAVIS

Comer of Third &amp; Olive, Gallipolis •.

,,r

•

•'
••
•
=

Comer of Third and Olive, Gallipolis

Rock Island . 111mo1s

FROZEN CHICK'N QUICK
CHICK'N STICKS OR

Tyson
Breast PaHies

ION. &amp; FRI.
TIL 8:00 P.ll.
TUES.•wt:D.-lHUIIS.AT.

TIL 5:00 P.l .

12·0Z.

Pkg •

$ 39'-----==l(titdCIIiJ'

Tyson Diced
Chicken Meat .....

Sportswear

•Free Parking : :
•Free Delivery,
'

446-3045

'

MEN'S &amp; LADIES'

Jogging Suits

Velour
Shirts

VB.OUR

. $25 00

$1QOO

''

I

.

1

Chick'n With--·
Cheddar PaHies ..
FROZEN CHICK'N QUICK
TYSON
~

. Tops
$5.$6.$8.$1 0

Chicken With
Swiss'n Bacon .....

'-:::;;:::;:;---.;;,.____;:=

$249

:k;~·

·FlO ZEN CHICK'N QUICK
TYSON
'

ASSORTMENT Of
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

Milliron Motor Sales

•

Upper Rlvtll' 'Rd., Gallipolis, OH.

I

·:,.~:· 3

$239

:k;~·

1

WHERE NEW IDF.AS
COM£10 UFE

.·

.

1

$239

:k;~·

.·

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY.

'I
I

'

· • SO'· AT
"thut'·• ft\·'1S '16 .
feb• '}.4r

Phone 446-3045

'

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT
QUANTIIIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

MEN'S
. . &amp; .WOMEN'S
.

$1200

OPEN DAILY TIL 5:00
liON. &amp; FRI . 'Til 1:00

26 , I"'· ~~ G~Lllf(IUS Afj0 P&lt;lMEROT.

DIRECT -FROM RORENCE, S. C.•
R!ECE

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

COPYRIGHT 1tl!l • THE KROGER CO.
IYIMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
FEI. 20, tHROUGH SATURDAY, FEI.

.

.

,.

'

liFESTYLE

Fraternal Life Insurance
Home Office

A~e_na

SALE ENDS MARCH 5TH •

I

.

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

KING

Quantities ~re limited on this special offer, so
hurry in today and .save on quality bedding at
.a super savings!!

...... -·· ...
.I'

Special Olden witt be owiloble 01 ulo pricoo with ov.IIO fllbrico to
choo• hom - So order 8lOICtly whit you w.rt 111111 • - on quality Hido-A-Bodo. PlOW OPI SALE

FROZEN CHICK'N QUICK
COOKED

''

\'
'

SALE 1799

Breast Fillets. .... .

NOW YOUR CHOICE OF SIZE
FOR ONLY S129.EA. PC.

wtv.1 .

or a tan polyester cordurov. Reg.
11 ,199.

i;;~;ICK'N QUIC~

'469.95 set 1699.95 set

FURNITURE
L;Jlestylv SHOWCASE

..-.u.~ In • bMutHul bin ~dot

512 Second Ave .. 'Gallipolis, OH .
Ph. 46-8235
Ho'me 388-9691

••

set

Traditional ltyle IOfa YA1h kio• cUihlon
, beck and flM arms . ~ bot-... Thh
IOfl mt~kellniO I QUICII'I-tiEt bfNI ind it

. GUARANTEED RETIREMENT
11'/COME FROM
MODERN WOODMEN

ALL SIMMONS HIDE-A-BEDS• COME STANDARD WITH THE
FAMOUS BEAUTYREST INNER SPitiNG MAT-TRESS
AT NO EXTRA COST

NOW YOUR CHOICE OF SIZE
FOR ONLY sgg EA. PC.

II

328 Viand Street

TWIN

, while continuing his music studies.
After winning the Richard Strauss
Prjze for Composition and ConductIng In Munich, he came to the United States to study with h!s
grandfather, Hungal'llln composer
Ernst von Dohnanyl.
The Cleveland Orhcestra has

llldt ol then e4.eot!oooll-• 11 ,....n.~ te 1M rtedlly o•oHolllo for ,...
In ..t. K..... Sll&lt;o, oxcttll 11 -Micolfy lllllod lnrhlo Ill. Hwo do'""
1111t of on
JOIIr cholco of o compo.....

.,.._.,.-·we wll..,.,,..,

- · wloon IYOdoWo, rolloctlat rho 11Y11111 01 o ..tocllock wllkh
will entlllo flU to purch11o rho odYolfl•lll at rho odY-111 p•lco '
within :Ill doJo.

I

1•

�The Su

Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point

'20 1983 ....
'
.

W. Va. :

·LADY
VICTORIA
· FINE

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

CRYSTAL
STEMWARE

298 SECOND ST.

IMPORTED
FROM.

POMEROY, 0.

Feb!uary 20, 1983

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag~t-B-5 ~

==~==~========~========~~==========~~==========~==~======,·'

Helen help us

'

Writer's best friend's husband may conclude gay relationship

...'''
~ ~

..

By HELEN AND SUE BOITEL
DEAR 'HELEN AND SUE:
We were best friends all through

here. - HELEN
P .S. At ll!aSI you don't have this
man's problem:

ge_ttlng pretty serious. I believe
they could make It together If both
tried harder.
I guess I'm pretty ril!xed up.
What I wa n~ Is to be Rob's best
friend, Cindy's lover, and have
things exactly as they were before
these complications started.
Is this possible? - GEORGE
DEAR GEORGE :

school. Then Mary Beth married

this utter creep. s~ tll)nks he's ' DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
ueatbut I can'tstand hlmandlllce
We were a great threesome my
versa. .
. best friend, his wUe and L Then she
He thinks he's an Intellectual and and i dis!:overed we were In love
Is always trying to put me down. He
kind .or.
hates It when Mary Bntll and I go.
I have to admit my friend Isn't
bowllng or to a show, but the way I
the perfect husband. Maybe Cindy
figure she nee&lt;ls time otUrom him. was thinking of divorce before .we
It Ia ba,d 'tor couples to be together
. constantly.
work). meeting (while
. Rob was at
started
Lately she's been making ex·
· But I stlll !eel like a traitor. Also,
cuses when I ·Call her tor an evening whlle I care about Cindy, I'm not
out.
ready for marriage at 23, and she's
Though I'm a guy., he couldn't be
jealous, 'because everybody knows
I'm gay. Mustidropawornanwho 1,
Is like my sister only closer, just
because her husband resents me.
He doesn't understand about the
v~ special fl1endshlp that can develop between a homoSexual tnan
and · a straight female. ADDISON
DEAR ADDISON:
25 O IAM O N O~
Why not continue the i'rlendshlp
Retail Value
1700
(by telephone at least ), but stop the
evenings out. Only the most l!ber·
a ted or h~bands could accept.this
sort of " dating," and I suspect
Mary Beth's guy doesn't qualify

,,,

FRANCE

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 26. 1983

•
Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea111 nt, W. Va.

Outside of a menage a trois,
which proper advice columnists
couldn't recommend (and besides
It wouldn't work), what you crave
isn't possible.
Your wisest move Is exactly that
- get away from this mix-up before you trade a great fl1endshlp for
a Ualson you don't really want. HELEN AND SUE

I'

who conducted the proverbial "re- ·.:
cent survey." - HELEN AND : ·

RAP:

How much does It cost to have a
baby these days? - MR. AND
MRS. HOPEFUL
DEAR MR. AND MRS. H.:
Average cootror a baby Including
doctor and hospital fees, plus
layette, crib, etc., Is $3,000 and risIng (about $4,000 If tt:s a Caesarean
birth). That's the word from Health
I,nsurance Assoc!a tlon of America,

SUE

.. '

(Gar A PROBLEM? Or a sulr
ject for discussion, two-genera ton
style? Direct your ques_tions to
either Sue or Helen Bottel - or
both, If you want a combination
mother~a ughter answer - In care
or this 'newspaper .)

&gt;

r::::~~::~~~~~~~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~iiiiww~~~;.;; ,•
'

39
Chuck Roast.. ~~ ..

l

$ .

USDA Ct!QICE BONELESS

Chuck Roast ..

~8••••

... ·----·
69 ·-_
·
......
.......
...................
._.._
...
..................
.......
..,.......
.....,.._
....
... .........
__,

·-

¢ Sandwich Spread .•••• ~~.

Whole fryers.....~ ..

eludes texWes, weavings, embrold·
ecy, traditional Moroccan clothing,
basketry, jewelry and metal
works, pottery and works In wood.
Tile exhibition Items were loaned
f r om private c ollections
nationwide.
Tile exhibition wW be on display
at Trisolb)l Gallery at Ohio University from Feb. 21 through March 25.
Gapecy hours are from noon to 4
p.m. and admission Is ftee and open
to lhe public.
A catalogue ol the.exhibition wW
be on sale at the gaUery during the
exhlb!tl.on. Docent tours can bearrar\ged upon request by caUing the
ga1Jecy at (614) 594-5664. For additional Information, contact Kim·
Sciunder at Trlsollnl Gallery, (614)

·a..-~

HOMEMADE

GRADE A WHOLE

c

SAVE OVER

40%

Your table set with elegant
European crystal •tern·
ware doesn't have to be a·
mere dream anymore. Beca~

SAVORY SLICED

now, for a Hmitad
time only, we are Offierlr11Q

¢

Bacon·... ~ ..............l!·.

genuine Lady VICtoria
Crystal Stemware ... an elegant French crystal that
will bring the beautY.
charm and romance of the
Old World to your ~ at
prices that wiH eaally fit
your weekly budget.

$ 29
Pork Steak/Roast •.•}~~ ..

FRESH BUTT

.

.

0nlons ........ u•••••••

tabletop accessory Item,
will be featured
special
sale price with coupon.
During non-feature we alta,
Items wll be available at
their . regular pr'.ca1. AI
items in the Lady VICtoria
Fine Crystalline are Cllt'ried
in open stock, so .,Ou can
add or replace pieces long
after the promotion has
ended.

·

·

3LB.BAG

¢

FLAVORITE .

Margarine ........~.

I
I

.
I

•

¢ FLAVORITE

WGE 15 OZ.

SOUP

ROUR
5 LB. BAG .

·79¢

' 10.75
.

0;~

4f$1

Umit Four Per Customer

Good Only At P0111ll's
Offer Expins Feb. 26, 1983

%
OFF HECK'S REGULAR
PRICES ON ALL

19 OI~MONO S

S79.g·

1 CARAT

.

Retail Value
'1250

Tawney Jewelers

FALL &amp; WINTER
CLOTHING

424 Second, Gallipolis

(BLUE TAG ONLY)

Save the valuable coupon
below. and start today· on
your very own collection.
· genuine fine European
crystal.

. '•·
· •
' '

..... :..

.
.. ...

.

.~ :

.
.
' .

TIDE DETERGENT
84

oz.

.S29.9i

' FIAVORnE

PINTO BEANS
LB. BAG

19¢

DB.UXE All SPORT

EXEROSE
SUIT

OVIR40o/o
anCI bring the beautv

bnothlbiily.

agitator

REG. '14.99
DEPT.

Deep-cleaning action
refreshes and revives
your !:&gt;eautiful carpet .·

-

I qt. bag
dltpoi. ' le bag

I

M!PJ~Jl~!! M~~oftYE
CDSMfTIC DfPT,

$129

REG. 11.19
HARDWARE DEPT.

KODAMATiel

50 COUNT
9 OZ. SOLO

4'poeltlon
GENERAL ELECTRIC

Cl!lrpet 1elector

AM·FM
RADIO
WITH WUTHERBAND

Shifts instantly 'tor
shag, high, normal or
low pile carpet.

Slide-rule dial wr th
swi tch ing
lis tening

FUI-tlme
adgedeanlng

JEWELRY
DfPr•

.

.

f

~8995

$5697

REG. 79'

69(;

Au1omatic f\oshMIY time bloods flash with dly·
li_,t or any II&amp;M. Flash twns itsel on and off
IU!on'ltically. Lone llfl botllty lasts up to 2 years

with

~I

use. Set Htoclly.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

.Ill -~ rINS~auo
•

r/

,. _ _ __

/ ~tu~s ~

l

I

AUTOMATIC
R.UID

MODEL 114331-t

l

REG. 163.99

.

_..,

1 QT. TRADCO

•, 3-position handle

I

auromatr c ACIOC

Handsome portable for good

REG. $33.96

Helps get dirt and dust in
comers and along baseboards
'
wh!le you olean a wider path.
oi Dirt finder headlight

COMPLETE WITH
:6PC . ATIACHMENTS

••
t

·11 OZ. NOXEMA

WILD
BIRD
SEED

c ..... -

ZiJ!Perad outer jacket
conceals bag, makes
ctwnging easy.

r
'•

$999

\

• Wid~ tread wheels
Com~ortable grip

j

4 LB. BAG

Sleell; cood-IQDkinc !woiJiece surt ;,
tJik&gt;red of waterjlloof, windponof
vinyl and featwes special pinel in
bact willl thlW- for comtoruble

.

1·

&amp;eiiQanc;e Of genuine·
European crystal to
your table wltn .. .

CUAN·UP

Steel

' ' ! •

SAVE

•ALL SALES ANAL •NO EXQ-IANGES •NO RERJNDS
•SORRY, NO LAYAWAYS ON CLEARANCE MERCHANDISE .
CLOTHING DEPT.

Upright with
.-eadlight

I

NOOil.E

$249
S499

CONVEfiTIBLE™

I

~Ell'S otiCKEN

· ClUSTER

HOOVER.

'

I

79
. Homo. Milk~~.~~
TREET
EXTRA TOPPING
.
09
.Lunch Meat .. !~~~ - ·Jeno'.s P1~ ......•..
MEDAL

UPTO

'

at.

UUII.U

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH TUESDAY,
FEB. 22, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

.•
.'•..•

the program a sat of tow
place lllltllng gl•••• or a

Crae kers .......... :~-.

Specials

LADIES DIAMOND

59«-5664.

Over the coming waalta,
we will be offering this fine
European crystal on a simple, convenient Item-aweek program at sevlngs
of ovar 40%. Each·week of

ZESTA

SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY

Moroccan arts
show opens Monday
An exhibition entitled "Moroccan
Arts" wUl open Feb. 21 at Trisoijnl
Gallery, Atllens. The exhibition In·

R£G. 89'

69~

'

I

I SAVE $40.00

LUOTE
12 Ff. COPPER

BCMJSTER
• REG. 17.99

SPRAY PAINT

~BLES

$499

SET

Donl pi stllnded with I doad llottlty. 8o
- - with UMso ._, "" boostll
ClbloL

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, IIGR.

"We Will Not Be Undersold"

992-2181
"

I
'

ll~T'
l:oM1el.
.....
~

REG. '2.79

.AUTOMOTIVE

,.'

'·
'
:

·•.

S495

$

·;
::
:;
:•
· :.
: ';
' •,

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;-1

USDA CHOICE

&gt;.

)

'·
''

o,
~

�,,
-

F.bruary 20, 1983
The Su

ATHENS - Dr. Herbert L. Scoville Jr. , president of the ArmsControi Association, Will deliver a
public lecture,, " The Present Nuclear Danger," Thursday, Feb. 24,
at 8 p.m . In Irvine Auditorium on
the Ohio University campus.
Former assistant director for
science and technology at the U.S.
'. Arms Control a rid bisannament
Agency. Scoville Is the author of the
recent book, "MX: Prescription for
Disaster."
His lecture Is sponsored by the
John and Elizabeth Baker Peace
Studies Pro gra m at Ohio
University.

Nursing program
information session
set for Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE -Aninfonnation
session for anyone interested in enrolling In the Rio Grande College
a nd Community College- Holzer
School of Nurslng will be held on
March 18, a school spokes m an said.
Detailed information about the
institution's two-year Associate Degree Nursing Program, application
procedures, and Financial Aid will
be discussed during a general session from 1-3 p.m. in the Fine and
Perfonnlng Arts Center. Tours of
the campus and the Nursing Skills
Lab will also be providing following
the session.
For additiona l information, contact the Office of Admissions and
Records, Rio Grande College and
Community College, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674 (614) 245-5353.

Docu-drama on
Hiroshima will be
shown in Athens

GAWPOLIS- The next preparation for breastfeeding class sponsored by Holzer Clinic Ltd. for
expectant mothers interested In
nursing their infants wUI be held on
Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. In the
ct~nlc classroom.
• This class is taught by a registered nurse and consists of literatire and films on preparation of
!feasts for breastfeeding; as well
as Information for women who deltVer by way of Caesarean section.
'I;he fee is f7,
:;For Information. contact Karen
vt;tmsley, Clinic Business Office, at
~5278 or Becky Sanders at 446-

2509.

Window
display
.

;{:HESTER - February is Scout
MOnth and In observance the Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 featured
scouting in a window display at the
FQdenour Supply In Chester.

~Iosee! Monday
POMEROY - Both the Middleport and Pomeroy Libraries will be
closed Monday for the observance
ot.Presldents' Day.
:cHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
COmmunity Action Agency will be
closed on Monday In observance of ·.
1)\e Presidents' Day holiday.

Sight in space
Callf. ~(AP)

.-A

new light valve Is helping astronauts look Into space with greater
ciortty without taking their feet otf
!lie ground.
:The device - liquid crystal light
valve - was used In training by the
fQ\11' astronauts assigned to the llfth
space Shuttle, as well as all other
shuttle astninauts,
-Dewloped by Hughes Aircraft ,
the valve Is the heart of a liquid
ctysta1 projector that forms part of
d astronaut tllgbt training stmulatll" In Houston.

ce..

Irby-Plams

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

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

THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 24, .1983

Your
Hometown .
Supermarket
NO DOUBLE (:OUPONS
ON WEEKLY
ADVERTISED
S~ECIALS

Mr. and Mrs. Bissell, 50th

.
.I:.QNG

Budget
Pleaser

S.pecial
USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

5

CHUCK
ROAST

LB.

$}79

SUPERIOR

POLISH SAUSAGE

LB.

LB.

99¢

Budget
Ple.a ser

Special

Budget

Budget

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

GRADE A
MIXED

¢

FRYER
PARTS

lB;

$!99

USDA CHOICE

BaiTOM - The 50th
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
M~·- Charles Bissell, Long Bottom,
will· be observed on Sunday, Feb.
27; at Meigs Senior Citizens, Mulberiy Heights, Porneroy.
Qjssell Is the son of the late Hiram and Sofrona Bissell and Mrs.
BISSell is the former Margaret Singe~. daughter of Henry G. and Iva

FRESH LEAN

Sl~er.

GROUND
BEEF
$}49
LB.

EXTRA LEAN

STEW BEEF
LB.
GROUND CHUCK
'~~~~~~R-----------------9~9~¢CHUNK BOLOGNA
LB.
SUPERIOR FRANKIES

Budget

Budget ·

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

l

.

~ - and Mrs. Bissell were marriel! on Feb. 28, 1933, in Minersville

byJl.ev. E.H. McCormick and have
lived ail their maiTied· lives In
M9igs County.
the open bouse will be observed
from 2 to 4 p.m. for relatives and

¢

HEAD'
LmUCE

'

GAWPOUS - ~ Activities for
the":week of Feb. 21-25 at Gallla
Coubty Senior' Citizens Center are
as ~llows: :
Monday, Feb. 21 -Closed.
'tiiesday, Feb. 22 - S.T.O.P.
Cla5s.-10: 30a.m.; Physical Fitness,
ll:l5 aa.m. ; Super Seniors Day: 10
a.rn;-3 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 23 - c n
Games,l-3 p.m.; American Literature Class, 1 p.m.; Yoga Class, 6

HEAD

RADISHES

~K~- 4~ 99¢

IDAHO

BAKING ·
POTATOES

I

10 LB.
BAG .

$ 39
$1

RORIDA WHITE OR PINK

5LB.
BAG

GRAPEFRUIT

FRESH
BROCCOLI

I

Thursday, Feb. 24 Blood Pressul'j! Check at Vinton Site, 11:30
a.m.; Bible Study,1-2 P'-m.
Fttd~y.;,_ Fe\'&gt;. 25 - Art Class, 1-3
p.ni:; Cralt"Mlni-Course, 1-3 p.m .;
So&lt;!lal Hour, 7 p.m.
'!'lie Senior Nutrition Prog&gt;·am
wilf :serve the following menus :

BUNCH

ROME BEAUTY

lLB.
BAG

APPLES

Mr. and Mrs. Livengood

friends.
Mr. and .Mrs. Bissell have 13
children wl\o are bostlDg the reception. They are Mrs. Sheldon
(Helen) Garverick, Lexington;
Mrs. Franklin (Frona) Rlffle, Long
Bottom; Mrs . Curtis (Ada) Randolph, Kenard; Mrs . David
(Karen) Grate, Porney; Naomi
Price, Parkersburg, W.Va .; Roger
and Glenn Bissell, Long Bottom;
Douglas Bissell, Tuppers Plains;
Dwight Bissell, Reedsville; Delbert
Bissell, Columbus; Robert Bissell,
Racine; David Bissell, St. Albans,
W.Va.; and Dannie Bissell, at
home.

CHESTER - Chester United
Methodist Church was the setting
for the June 12 wedding of Rachel
Lou Hunter, daughter of Mr. and
MJ&gt;. Henry L. Hunter, Chester, and
Mark James Livengood, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ned E. Livengood, Berea.
Rev. Herbert Grate officiated at
the 5: 30 p.m . wedding following a
program of prenuptial music by
Jennifer Macblr, organist, with vocal selections by Teresa Davis.
For her wedding, the bride chose
a gown of qulana knit ·fashioned
with an empire waistline, bodice of
lace accented with pearl, Queen
Anne neckline and long fitted
sleeves. The A-line skirt extended
Into a chapel-length train and fea tured a pleated center panel in the
front. The bride wore a derby style
hat with veUing accented with lace
Monday - Closed.
Dowers and pearls which she deTuesday - Fried / baked
signed. She wore a diamond pendchicken, mashed . potatoes, green
ant and pearl earrings, gifts of the
beans, mixed fruit or fresh fruit,
groom. She caiTied a cluster boubread, butter, milk.
quet of white roses with starbursts
Wednesday, -Hamburger, corn.
and carnations tinted In shades of
tomato slices, lettuce wedge, fruit
lavender 011 top of a lace covered
cherry cobbler, bun, butter, milk.
Bible.
Thursday- Pork cutlet, fried apThe_ bride's · attendants were
ples, greens, jelly cubesd]hlpped
Jayne Vall, Athens, matron of hocream, biscuits, butter, milk.
nor; Klin Heath, Pennsville. N.J.,
Friday Chill con carnemaid of honor; Teresa Courtney,
/ crackers, celery sticks, apple · Shade; Beth Migliore, Bolivar, and
sauce, chilled peaches and cookies,
Elfrieda Rebllnger , Broadview
cornbread, butter, milk.
Heights, bridesmaids. Ann Katherine Livengood, sister of the groom,
was flower girl.
Choice of beverage served with
The attendants wore gowns of laeach meal ,
vender fashioned with full sieeves,
Meals subject to change without
front pleats on the bodice, peter pan
notice.
'
collars and lace accent trim. They
"Services rendered on a nonwore wreaths of dried baby's
discriminatory basis."
breath with lavender .ribbon and
carried two long-stemmed white
roses tied with lavender ribbon.
The flower girl was In a lavender

Gallia
Senior Citizens Center
.

p.m:.

ICEBERG

?OINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Wooding plans for Dltha Irby, Huntington, W.Va ., and Dorsal Edward
Plants Jr., Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
have beel) completed for Feb. 26.
The open-church wedding will be
at Grace Gospel Church, corner of
West 12th St. and Adams Avenue,
Huntington, at 2 p.m. with reception to follow.
lrby is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack lrby, Huntington, and
Plants Is the son of Dorsal and Mable Plal!ts, 3223 Franklin Avenue,
Point Pleasant. An engagement
party w11J be held for the couple on
S1111day from 3 to 5 p.m. at Bellemead United Methodist Church
Fellowship Room. Family and
friends are Invited.
Bridesmaids will be Donna lrby,
Huntington, sister of the bride, and
Coraletta Plants, Point Pleasant,
sister of the groom. Best man for
Plants wiiJ be his father.

.

oREDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEYSAVING COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V
AND RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU
PURCHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. OME COUPON
PER ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED.
DOUBLE REDEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY
ro 'FREE MERCHANDISE". COUPoNS OR
COUPONS OVER 4!1' IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH
REFUNDS WHEN OO~LE COUPONS VAlUE
EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM. CIGARffiES AND
CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE EXCLUDED BY LAW.
ro INSURE PRODUCT TO All OUR CUSTOMERS,
NE ARE UMITING OUR "DOUBLE COUPON"
OFFER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE
CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
FAMILY. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD '·
I'HURSDAY. FEB. 20, 1983.

· DOUBLE
COUPONS

.

Meigs
Senior Center's events
.

carnations in lavender and white
and candelabra tied with white
bows . .
Serving as best man . for the
groom was Eric Willford, Findlay.
Ushers were Tim McCilntock, Columbus; Kevin Iceman, Berea; Mi·
chael Neiswander, Rochester,
N.Y., and Michael Bruno, Cincinnati. Thomas Preston Hunter,
brother of the bride, was the
ringbearer.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at Meigs Senior Citizens

Budget
P/easer

Budget
Pleaser

Special.

Specia-l

Pleaser
Special

THANK YOU

ROYAL CREST

MORTON

CHERRY
21 oz.
PIE FILLING CAN

VITAM.IN D
MILK
~~~

FROZEN
DINNERS

CARNATION

13 OZ. CAN

EVAPORATED MILK

~R

2

99¢

Budget

ROYAL CREST

HALF
GALLON

..BUTTERMILK

99¢

Pleaser

Pleaser

Special

Special

Pleaser
Special

INSTANT
COFFEE

BOZ.

JAR

$ 39

120Z.
CTN.

COTTAGE CHEESE
Budget

PEPSI-DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW

oz.

ROYAL CREST

Budget

FOLGER'S

11

69¢

POMEROY - Richard and
Esther DeMoss are announcing the
engagement and foribcornlng mari-tage of their daughter, Kim, toEddie Fife.

49

IPEI~I FR~

FREE
PEPSI FREE

:tU\.I'AII

Plus

CAKE
MIX

PRESENTS!
18 oz. BOX

COFFEE-MATE

160Z.
. JAR

$}79

NABISCO

RllZ CRACKERS

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleoser
Special

Budget .
Pleater

HEINZ
KETCHUP

3-DIAMOND
PINEAPPLE

VAllEY BB1 ·

32 OZ. BOmE

SLICED, CHUNK,
CRUSHED
20 OZ;

CAN

DUNcAN HINES

Special

REM. QUALITY
ICE CREAM

T.S. F
.-

Budget
· Pleaser
Special

· Budget

'

SCOT
PAPER
TOWEL$

~80

69¢

p!e!:J,.,
Special ·.:
WALDORF

TOILET
TISSUE

NGS

WEDDING PHOTOGRAPH OF YOUR CHOICE
(A sgo Value) ·
This Offer applies to any Wedding to be photographed ..
during 1983. A deposit to reserve the date must be paid
between Feb. 20 and Mar. 31 to qualify.
Every wedding will be photogmphed by Dale E. Lear,
C.P.P., a Certified Professional Photograp~er, who has .
personally photographed more than 600 wetldings.
CAU NOW- UMITED DATES AVAILABLE

Dance
·and Exercise Classes
'
'
.

CARNATION

16x20

(UPPER RIVER RD., GALLI POLIS, OH.)

DUNCAN HINES

/ INSTRUCTOR: MIKKI CASTO

Isoz.$}19.
CAN
·:

6:00 ·P.M. SOCIAL DANCING ·
(Slow Dancing,, Swing, Polka)

.

7:00 P.M. CLOGGING

PUFFS
FACIAL
TISSUE
2(10 CT.
BOX

(Thursday)

•

Budget
Pleoser
Special

.

(~reestyle,
I

.

11'

.

"The Gilley", Cotton-eyed Joe)
•

P+tOIOGRAPIIY

(lose Inches! Gain Energy!)

446-7494

' .

t .t
•~
I.

FO~.

MORE INFORMATION _CAU:
.
675-6664 or 675-2693

.

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA-GAWPOUS
Q.OSEO MONDAYS .
.

aaaaaaaaa&amp;&amp;aaaaaaaaaaa
'
'

.,
I

''

l OR

ANa.PI'OII'OI~ I NI

446-9510

·.

A NEW OIREC TION IN HAIR 0£ SIGN '

*******

'

TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
FEBRUARY 22nd &amp; 23rd
7:30 PM NIGHTLV

.•

WITH
T.V. EVANG.
R. A. WEST

LEA~

-·

8:15 P.M. EXERCISE CLASS (Men &amp; Women)

7911' ~

WAl~tft()A I "t l

WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY

French Quarter

..

Monday thru Frida-y
9AMto9PM
Saturday 9 AM to S~PM

Center in Pomeroy. A buffet was 1-------------------~--­
followed by the traditional wedding
cake. The cake was a gift to the
~--------------------------~ ,,, \
couple from Patricia Hand and featured nine separate cakes tiered
,,
and connected with five bridges
with a center fountain .
The bride's uncle, Homer Hunter
of Belle, W. Va., . ;md his bluegrass
band, The Flat Top Pl_ckers, pro_OR . GEORGE W. DAVIS
r,
OPTOMETR I S T - - - vided .. entertainment "during the
,,
evening.
Serving at the recepllon were
Kim Hunter, Iretta. Hunter, and
Can Crossed Eyes Be Beautiful?
Cheryl Mathias, all cousins of the
bride, and Debbie Chevalier. .
Among the ancient Mayans, It
sume many forms: one .eye
Mr. and Mlrs. Livengood reside in
·was a sign of beauty to be crossturned up or down, In or out, a
Lakewood. He is employed by Be"
eyed. Mayan mothers would
·combination of the two. It may
rea CbUdren's Home and attends
hang beads in front of their childbe constant or occasional. But
Baldwin .Wallace College, where he
ren's eyes to make them pereven if your child onl;t exhibiis
is a senior. Mrs. Livengood is em. manently cross-eyed a nd
this symptom rarely, It is unwise .,.
ployed by Culinary Cupboard and
consequently, "more beautiful".
to ignore it because It might lead
attends Cleveland State University,
Needless to say, tastes have
to amblyopia (lazy eye) where
where she wll! receive her master's
changed significantly since
early detection Is crucial for sucdegree in business administration
then. Modern parents are concessful treatment.
.' '
in August.
"
cerned about correcting this
in our age, beauty and good
condition, not inOicting it.
vision go together.
What does It mean to be
"cross-eyed"? To begin with,
the technical term is su-abismus, and it applies to all abnortrofT' lht.' o HKC' ot
malities in coordination of the
movements of the two eyes, not
r.eorge W. Davis. O.D. ·
only those which are deviated In..•.
453Secuml Ave., GHilipulis
ward (convergent). It can asPh nne ;;b-t.-..Ri

-.
/

DeMoss

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

POMEROY L Meigs Oxmty Se-.
The Senior Nutrition Program
nioi-' Clttzend tenter, Mulberry
serves a hot meal at noon each day.
He~hts, Porileroy, Invites a11 el- Call 992-2161 to make a reservation
for a meal no later than 9 a.m. the
der:ty of the c0unty to take part In
activities at the center. The center . day of the reservation . The followPlans have been completed for
Ing menu is planned for the week of the open-church wedding of Andrea
is &lt;il!en tb!S week, Tuesday through
Feb. 22-Feb. 25:
Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m .
Cook and Scott Miller, both of Rio
The schedule of activities tor the
Tuesday - Tuna/ noodle casse- Grande.
role, mixed vegetables, cole slaw.
week of Feb. 22-25 is as follows :
The wedding will be hPid SaturMonday - Center closed -Pres- chocolate pudding.
. day, Feb. 26, at 1:30 p.m . at SimpWednesday - Soup beans/ ham, son Chapel United Methodist
ident's Day holiday.
lettuce salad, pineapple half with Church In Rio Grande with Rev,
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
11:00 a.m.; Chorus Practice, 1-2 cottage cheese, cornbread, pears.
Donald Watson officiating. A recepThursday- Creamed chicken on tion will follow at James A. Rhodes
p.m.
biscuit, peas, fresh tomatoes, pea- Student-Community Center on the
Wednesday - Bingo, 10: :ll-11: 30
a.m'.; Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
nut butter cookie.
Friday Liver/ onions with , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Bloodmobile, 1: »5:30p.m.
Thursday - Ceramic Instruc- gravy, mashed potatoes, spinach:
'IJ'IJ'IJ1J'IJ'IJ'IJ'IJ1l'lf'lnl111l1l1111111l'IJ1111
tiob. 10 a.m.-noon; Physical Fitstrawberry jeno with
ness, 11:30 a.m.
Fttday -Physical Fitness. 11: 30
Choice of milk, tea, coffee avaUaa.m;.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
ble daily.

:!ce::.·

The bride-elect Is a 1982 graduate .
of Meigs High School and is ·em- '
played at Pomeroy Burger Chef. '
Her fiance, son of Clarence Fife, ·:
Union Ave., Pomeroy, and Martha
Fife, also of_Pomeroy, Is a 1972 . ,
graduate of Meigs High and Is an -.
employe of Federal Mogul of .
Gallipolis.
Wedding plans are lncompil!te.

DeMoss-Fife

gown with a shirtwaist and gathered skirt. It was accented with a
bib of white lace. She wore a white
picture hat accented with lavender
ribbon and carried a white basket
of rose petals.
The church was decorated with

Cook, Miller finish wedding plans

Budget

"

FULLERTON,

.

.

Engagements

.

BONELESS CHUCK STEAK ·

Breastfeeding class
offered by clinic

.

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 20 .
THROUGH
SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAllY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
SATURDAY
85 Vine Street
Galipoli, Obio Phone .446-9593
FEBRUARY 26
'We Reserve the RigM to Uii ~ Quantity"

USDA CHOICE

ATHENS - "Ghosts oi Hiroshima," a documentary drama
currently touring Ohio, will be performed free of charge Saturday,
Feb. 26, at 8 p.m. In Morton 201 on
the Ohio University campus.
The multi-media program features stories from survivors of the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki woven together with current perspectives on nuclear w~r.
"Ghosts of Hiroshima" is produced by the Lantern Theater Co.
of Oberlin and written and directed
by Deborah Lubar, one of the four
actors In the performance.
The actors mal&lt;e extensive use of
masks, and the action takes place
in front \)f four large banners flanking a rear projection screen on
which more than 200 documentary
s lide~ are shown.
,
The tour Is made possible by a
grant from the Ohio Humanities
Council and the sponsorship of
Oberlin College. Support for the
Athens J?E'rlormance has also come
from Ohio University's Baker
Peace Studies Program and the
Center for International Studies.

.

...

Times-Sentinel

Nuclear danger
· lecmre slated
at Ohio University

'

."

The Sundqy Times-Sentinei- Page-B-7

o '

ALL SEATS MUSIC AND SINGING
'
FREE ANOINTED I»REACHING

EVERYONE WElCOME/

.,

..'
·-·

...

�.•
'

Page-8-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinei

'
C
alendar
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. John
Fellure will speak at Bailey
Chapel Church, S.R. 218, Sunday
at 7 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS - The Sargent
FamUy of Point Pleasant, W.
Va . will be guest singers Sunday
at 7 p.m . at Elizabeth Chapel
Church, six miles south.of Galli·
polls off S.R. 218 at Raccoon
Creek Bridge.
GALLIPOLIS - Youth Sun·
da y will be observed at Tried·
stone Baptist Church Sunday.
Artus Hurt will preach at 10: 45
a.m . At 3 p.m. , Gallia Sub·
Distrlct youth and Triedstone's
children wtll·present a program.
Ha r ry D. Scot1 Jr . will speak.
. EURE KA - J ay J arvis will
speak a t Providence Missionary
Baptist Church, Teens Run
Road, Sunday at 7 p.m.
G ALLIPOLI S - Ga lll a
County Historical Society will
meet a t St. Peter 's Episcopal
Church at 2:30p.m . Sunday ·
POMEROY- Meigs County
Genealoglcal Society will. meet
at 2 p .m . Sunday at Meigs
Museum.
PUBLIC DANCE party Sun·
day, 7 to 11 p.m. at Meigs Senior
Citizens Center sponsored by
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority; music
by George Hall at organ; admis·
sion $10 cou:::pl::"
e ·---,,...
SYRACUSE- Syracuse Naz·
arerU' Church wi ll have their
alabaster box openin!( SundaY. a t
the 10:30 a .m. service. Debbie
Powell will have special m usic.
The Rev. Janies B. Kittle,
pastor, invites the public.
POMEROY - Cou n try·
western dance lessons. Texas
style, will be taug ht from 2 to 4
p.m. Sunday at Roya l Oak P ark
recreation building by Gerald
Powell, 992·2622.

MONDAY
DEXTER - Meigs Coun tv
Churches of Christ Men's Fci·
lowship will meet a t i : 30 p.m.
Monday at Dexter Church of
Christ.
POMEROY ,- Bosworth
Council 46 Royal and Select
Masters will meet Monday at 7
p.m .
HANNAN TRACE - Hannan
Trace Athletic Bosters will meet
Monday at 7:30p.m. at the high
school.
GALLIPOLIS - Southwest·
ern Alumni Association will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday in eo.
lumbus and Southern Ohio
Electric meeting room . Ali in·
terested alumni are urged to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS - French Cjty
Garden Club will meet Monday
.at 2 p.m. with Mrs. Willa
Saunders.
GALLIPOLIS - St. P eter's
Episcopal Churchwomen will
hold a luncheon/ business meetlng Monday at noon In t~eph rish
hall. ·
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Busines s and Professional
Women will hold a dinner meet·
lng Monday at Holzer Medical
Center.·
GALLIPOLIS - St. Louis Ca·
tholic Women's Club wlll have a

w. va:·
February 20, I 983
Meigs CDunty bookmobile route Gallia's bookmobile schedule
PomervY-Micldlitpart- Gallipalis; Ohio---Point Pleamiit,

lasagna dinner at 6: :Jlp.m . Mon·
day In the church hall. Table ser·
vice wtiO be provided. All parish
women are urged to attend. A
meeting will follow the dinner .

GALLIPOLIS - Cub Scout
Pack 2lJol's Blue and Gold Ban·
· quet will be held Monday at
Grace United Methodist Chw-ch
basem ent, 600 Second Ave., beginning at 6:30 p.m. Families
are invited to attend and take a
covered dish and table service.
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepori Bus iness a nd Professional
Women's O ub will meet at 7: :Jl
,.p.m . Monday at Middleport Ll·
brary.

POMEROY - Bookmobile ser· Reedsvllle (Reed's Store) , 5:20vlce In Meigs County Is provided by 6: 10 p .m ., short fti.rn will be shown
MeigsCountyPubllcUbraryunder ~minutes atter bookmobile ar·
contract with . Ohlo Valley Area
rives; Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's),
Ubrarles.
7: 10.7: 40 p.m.: Baum Addition,
No bookmobile schedule for Mon· 8: ).().8: 40 p.m.
day due to hollday.
H
~
Bookmobile schedule for Wed·
ousewares 10~as1
nesday- Chester (Fire Station),
ClnCATO (AP) -Smallel~trtc
2: 15-2: 45 p .m ., short fti.rn wt10 be appliances should rebound from a
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile flaf .19112 and have a six percent
arrives; Keno (North Side of Keno sales gain this year, according to a
Bridge), 3-3:30p.m.; Success Road
manufacturP•
(Near 39060), 3:45-4:15 p.m.; Long · Thcv- ·" J. Alban! of Gelll!ral
Bottom (Post Oft!ce ), 4:25·5:10
ElectrlcsaldGEexpectsitsbtggest
p.m., short tllm will be shown 15
gains In can openers, drip coffeeminutes after bookmobile anives;
makers and Irons.
·

Feb. 21·25:
Monday- Lewts Dr. noon•l2:15
p.m .; C&amp;S Bank (Rt. 35), 12: 15.12: 30 p.m.; 35 West Apl$., 12: 35-1
p .m .; Meadowbrook, 1:05-1:30
p.m .; Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
1:35-2 p .m.; Gallla Metro Estates,
2: 05-3p.m.; PlnecrestCareCenter."
3: 1:;.3: :ll p.m.; Rodney Vlllage,
4: 1.54~ 45 p.m.; Crousebeck Rd., 55:30 p.m .; Northup, 5: 45-6: 15 p.m.
Tuesday - Spring Valley, 1: 3Q.2
p.m .; Spring Valley Apts., 2·2: 30
p.m.; Sun Valley NurSery, 2:30-3
p.m.; Bldwell·Rodney Rd., 3: 404:10p.m.; Rodney P .O.. 4:20-4:50
p.m.; Qual! Creek, 4:45-5:20 p.m .;
Porterbrook, 5: 30-5: 50 p.m .; Fair·

POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden _O ub will meet at 7: 30
p. m. MondayatMeigsMuseum.

field Acres, 5:51Hi: 15 p.in.
Wednesday - Lake Dr. (Rio
Grande), 2·2::ll p .m,; Copley·s,
2: 45-3: ~ p.m.; Rio Grande Est·
aies, 3: ~ p.m .; Valley VIew
Apts., 44:30 p.m. ; Centervtlle,
4: 45-5: 15 p.m.; Centerpoint, 5: :J&gt;.6
p.m.
Thursday - Cora, 2: 4!&gt;-3: 10
p.m.; Raccoon Tr. Ct. , 3:15-3:45
p.m.; Patriot, 4-4: 30 p .m.; Gallia,
5-6 p.m.
.
Friday -Vinton Baptist church,
12:3().1:30 p.m.; VInton, 1:30-2:30
p.m .;· Clark Church Rd., 2:45-3:15
p.m .; PQrter, 3:30-4 p.m.; Children's Residential Center, 4:15-4: 45
p.m.; Children's Home, 4:45-5: 15.

Open Daily 1 0-9; Sunday 1-6

SYR ACUSE - Syracuse
Board of Publtc Affairs will
meet Monday a t 7 p.m .

·The Saving Place ...
Sunday Thru Tuesday Only

POMEROY - Bible Study
Monday from 7 to 9 p.m . at the
home of J oan Wolfe
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Chapter Order of DeMolay and
· Mothers Club will meet Monday
at 7' 30 p .m . at the MiiSOnlcTemple, Middleport. All mothers of
D eMola y are welcome to attend
the Mothers Club meeting.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - American As'
sociation of University Women
will m eet Tuesday nJght at
Meigs Inn.
POMERO::::Y~-.-:Mrs. Arnold
Richards will speak on Americ·
anlsm at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Amer ican l..egton
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
.19, Pomeroy, both junior and
senior m embers. Members are
asked to take donations for the
emergency fund.

Our

$109 .97
Assembled

(700)

(701\

92 97

Boys' 19" Tube Socks

IO·speed Bicycles

While with stripes. High
bulk acrylic/nylon. Overthe-calf length. Sove.

Men's, women's models
with front and rear ~v~~

•

POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday a t
7:30 p.m . at Meigs Inn .

POMEROY - Ladles Auxll·
iary of Veterans Memorial Hos·
pita! will meet Tuesday all p.m.
in the conlerence room. ·
MIDDLEPORT '- OAPSE
Chapter 17 will meet Tuesday at
7: 30 p.m. at Meigs Junior High
School, Middleport.

:S ports

Our Reg. 1.97

2.~3

Polyester sluffing. Washable.

25°/o Off

POMEROY - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter, OES, will
have a polluck supper at the
home of Evelyn Lanning, Tuesday at 6: 30 p.m. ·

(703)

Name four to ·hall-of-fame
By TRUDY TYNAN
Associated Preis Writer .
SPRINGFIELD, Mass ..(AP) -FormerNewYork
Knlcks teammates BUl Bradley and Dave DeBus·
schere have been named to the Basketball Hall of
Fame along with university of North Carolina Coach
: Dean Smith and former Cincinna tl Rdyals star Jack
Twyman.
: Also to be enshrined In ceremonies May 2 In this
clty where the game was invented, will be the late
Lloyd Leith, a referee for four decades, and Lou
'Wllke, a: fonner president of the Amateur Athletic
Union and an Olympic administrator, who died In
·· 1962.
.
Twyman, one of . the game's grea t ,shooting
forwards with the University of Cincinnati and later
with the Royals, characterized the Hall of Fame
commtttee' s selections in one word: "Te11mwork."
"Bradley and DeBusschere epitomized the giveand·go style of play which you don't see so much In
the pros today, and,' of course, Dean Smith has
always coached team play," said Twyman, now a
supermarket executive in Cincinnati.
.
Braclley, a U.S. senator from New Jersey, agreed,
saying he was "particularly happy" to be elected ln
the same year as " my close friend and former
teammate, Dave DeBusschere."
.
" In a way," Bradley said, "we helped each Other
get here by setting as our goal maxlmum effort and
complete dedication to our team - a group of
extraordinarily talented human beings.
"That teamwork, at Princeton (University) and
with the Knicks, still provides me with a model for
what we need more of in our society," he said. ·
"I am ver:y excited that I w.as fortunate enough to
receive this honor," said DeBusschere, now the
Knicks' executive vice president and director of
basketl)all operations. "I know there are many
worthy recipients who have not received tlh1s
recognition.''
Smllh, only one of two coaches to win NCAA, NIT
and Olympic titles, credited the young men who
played for him.
"lt'snot the coach who accomplishes things, it's the
players, " he said. "All of the players who havepl&lt;!yed
for me have contributed to this honor and it ls great,
great (lonor." .
Twyman was not only an outstanding player but an ·
ou !standing humitarian. After his teammate,
Miiurlce Stokes, was stricken with encephalitis In
1958, Twyman became his legal guardian , and untll
Stokes' death In 1970 raised funds for his
rehabilitation through benefit games. ·
"!was just the coordinator," Twyman sald. ·~There

were many people, Dave DeBusschere being one,
who gave of their time to assist Maurtce. lt was quite
an experience to be associated with Maurice. There's
no question he would have been In the Hall of Fame if
he had not been stricken."
If Twyman, who averaged 19.2 points per game
with the Royals from 1951&gt;1966, ·epitomized the
offensive forward, DeBusschere was the defensive
forward. In his ll·year pro career, six with the
Detroit Pistons and five wlth the Knicks, he was
named to the National Basketball Association
All· Defensive team siX straight seasoirs.
With Bradley at the other forward, the Knlcks·
madE! "Qee.fense, Qee.ferise" the rallying cry for
New York fans when they won their first NBA
ehamplonship in.1970 and repeated in 1973. Will) the
Installation last year of ·center Willis Reed, three
· members of those championship teams are In the
Hall of Fame.
·
·
·
• A b;lseball as well as basketball star at the
University of Detroit, DeBusschere also pitched for
the Chicago White Sox for two seasons. H;e gave up
baseball In 1961 when, at 24, he was named
player·coach of the Pistons, the youngest coach In
NBA history.
.
DeBusschere also was commissioner of. the
American Basketball Association, before four of Its
teams were absorbed by the NBA In 1976, and general
manager of the r-rew York Nets.
·
Bradley was the first basketball player to receive
the Sullivan Award as the nation's outstanding
amateur athlete. A two-time All·American at
Princeton, he was tbe 1965 NCAA tournament's
leading scorer and rebounder and on the gold
medal-winning 1964 U.S. Olympic Team.
Before beglnlng a 1Q.year pro career with the .
Knlcks In 1967, he spent two years as a Rhodes
Scholat at Oxford.
·
Smltl}, In his 22nd year as coach at defending
national champion Norih Carolina, is one of two
coaches to take teams into the Final Four of the
NCAA tournament seven or more times. He played
on the 1952 University of Kansas team that won the
national championship.
Leith, who coached on the high school Ievelln San
Francisco from 1931-1972, Including 28 years at
Mission High, was· a referee in the Pacific
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference ·for 25 years.
When he retired In 1972, at age 70, the NBA hired him
as supervisor of referees. He died In 1979.
.
Wllke. fonnerly of Denver, was a national leader in
amateur sports during the 19:Ils and 19&lt;1();. He worked
for many years on the national AAU tournament and
chaired the 1~ Olympic Basketball Committee.

.

AIRBORNE- Rodney Howard (08) takes to the
air In tum four beaded for the.front straight away on

Saturday during the 2:Jth nmn!ng of the 300 Late
Medel Spottsmen Race. (AP Laserphoto).

'Will need patience,'· Allison
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Spotts Writer
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. ( AP)Bobby Allison says it wlll take
considerable patience and a reasonable amount of racing luck for him
to claim his second consecutive
Daytona 500 victory .
Patience he has, and those who
believe In the law of averages would
have to figure he's had more than
his share of bad luck in the week
preceding the 25th running of stock
car racing's most prestigious event.
"I don't think I'm starting too far
back to win," Allison sald Friday
when asked lf 35th position In
Sunday's 42-car fteld had aU but
ellmlnated him as a serious
contender for the winner' sshareofa
$1·mllllon purse.
And history ls on his side. Allison

came from 33rd position to win the
race ln 1978.
"I just have to muster up all the
patience I can," he said. " I'lthaveto
try to move up wherever I can and
hope to get close enough to win . I
think you'd have to be in the top
three on the last lap."
Allison, who say! longtime protege Neil BOnnett should rate as a
slight favorite, knows he faces a
formidable task. He Is starting far
hack because he wrecked two cars
early in the week and lost a chance
to move up In the starting grid when
he cut a tire and lost a lap in one of
Thursday's crash.marred qualify·
lngraces.
.
Bruce Jacobi, whocrashedlnone
of those races, remained ln critical
condition today with a brain injury.
His was the most horrifying or.

several mishaps. Rusty Wallace,
who also was Injured In a spectacu·
lar accident Thursday, was released Friday from a local bospltal.
The rash of accidents began
Monday with Caie Yarborough,
whose car flipped over after he set a
course qualifying record with a lap
of 200.503 mph over the 2.5·mlle
Daytona International Speedway.
His newChevroletMonteCarloSS
was withdrawn when lt could not be
rapalred, and the pole position for
the500went to RickyRudd, who was
tlmed at 198.864. Yarborough will
start eiglith In his backup car, a
Pontiac LeMans.
Allison lost his new Monte Carlo in
the Busch Clash sprint race that
same day . On Tuesday he wrecked
the Buick Regallnwhich he won the
500 last year.

7. 97
•

Solar·powered Calculator
Powered by sun or indoor light.
Needs "no batteries. B.diglt _
readout. Has memory. Save.

"'PINBALL" LOOK
- From this poinl
above lhe artificial turf
of the Richfield Coliseum, lhe players in a .
recent Major Indoor
Soccer l.ague game
appear lo resemble
~Is
in a pinball
machine. The Cleveland Force is close to
.the fin!lflcial break·even point and has
increased its average ·
attendance to about
6;400 per game. (AP
Laserphoto)

OUR REG.
·LOW PRICE

Polyester Filled
Pillows

POMEROY - Ali coaches
and those Interested In assisting
with P omeroy Baseball Youth
League program are asked to at·
tend a meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the home of Mike
Wright, 285 Mulberry Ave,,
Pomeroy. Teams Include pony
league, ltt1Ie league , pee wee,
minor league, T·ball and girls'
softball.

20 . 1983

Our Reg. 9.97

12·oz. · SoH flb·eriC)fl'!l
Our R~. 7.471andec:l Polyeater
~~.~~ latHng, llll96" ........ $4

~imts'" i'eutint! SectiE

t

a

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Chamber of Commerce
meetling will be at 12: 15 p.m.
Tuesday at LaSalle Restaurant.
GALLIPOLIS
Pembroke
Club members will meet at 8
p.m. Tuesday with Mrs . Michael
Corbin.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire
Chapter OES will meet Tuesday
at 7:30p.m. at Cheshire Masonic
Hall.

...

"

STANDARD, QUEEN, KING SIZE

3 $1

3 Fof1

Rebate

PRICE AFTER REBATE

For

.

Solid Air Fresheners

(705l

.,

'

Bathroom Bouquet. Super .Odor
Killer. Powder Room, Country Klf.
chen. SOlid Rose. 7Y. oz.' each.

•'

'Net wt

li'eOOtft limited to mlr 's ttlpulotlon

_1

A. ,.

'"

. 1£::'~

MEMORIAL DINNER
IN HONOR OF
"THE FOUR MEN OF GOD"

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21
6:30P.M.
.FRANK CHEESEBREW

(707)

(706)
Sole Price

87

.,.100 Paper Lunch Sacks

•Package of 100 brown paper bags
made with convenient flat .bottoms.
· . Dimensions: 5Y.x3Y.x10W'. Savings .

2 $3

Our 1.97

.

For

.

Peanuts For Snacking
111-1-oz." lavern nul&amp;. 12Y.·
unsalted or 12-oz:
salted dry-roast peanuts.

oz:

GUEST SPEAKER

MEMBERS OF THE AMERICAN LEGION WELCOME
PRESENTED BY THE AMERICAN LEGION POST 27
Bob McCormick Road, GaHipolis, Ohio

I~door

soccer on verge of 'breaking·even' in Cleveland

By CHUCK MELVIN

Clark V. Poling-Alexander D. Goode-John P. WashingtonGeor&amp;e L Fox
THEY GAVE THEIR AU.
Eany on the morning of February 13, 1943, ·the U. S. troop transport
"Dorchester" was wallowing through l:y seas off Greenland. Most of the 900
· troops on board well! asleep in their bunks. Suddenly atorpedt)smashed into
· the DORCHESTER's flank. Frantically ~urding up the ladder~ the troops
miled in confusion on the decks. ·
In those dark moments of panic, the coolest men aboard werefourU.. S.
Army Chaplains-first Lieuts. Clark V. Pr.ling (Reformed Church of America),
AleKander D. Goode (Jewish~ John P. Washington (Cathotic), George L FoK
(Methoo;1). The four chaplains led the men to. boKes of lile jackels, passed
them out to the soldiers with boat-dril precision. When the boKes were empty,
the four cha'ptains qLietJY sllpJEd off their own precious life preservers, put
them on four young Gls and tdd them to jump.
.
The DORCHESTER went down 25 minutes later in a rumble of s'eam.
Some 600 men were lost but the hero!: chaplains had helped saw over 200.
The last anyone saw of them, they were standing on the slanting deck, ther
arms lin~ed, in prayer, to the ooe God they all served.

•

Film Developing
Special

. Color

Enlargement

Sale
SOic:lltl OUr

-Gooo.Dopt.

SotePrlce

1.77

K marP Air Filler .
In sizes to ftl many U.S.
and foreign cars. .

... our Reg. 2.27-2,47

·

1.48Ea.

Lantem ar lloltery
Floating lantem,
6·V tJ)rlng terminal bonery..

· WITH COUPON

Color
enlargements
made from any Focale
or KOdak® c;:otor nega.
live or slide. Sovel
COUponGoOdTrvuFeD. :Z2, 1913

· resembling a hockey rink, is to kick the ball past slx
AP Spotts Wrller
.
opponents into a goal.
CLEVELAND (AP) - In a city where two of three
That's all you really need to know; aithough you can
major franchises are losing money, a fledgling
get as Involved as you'd like wlth the finer points.
The game Is Intriguing enough to have Increased
professional spor1 that looks a, lot llke a human pinball
game is on the verge of breaking even.
MISL aitendance each season since Its Inception as a
. That accomplishment, says Scott Wolstein, vice
stx·team league in 1978- from4,453peoplepergame
president of the Oeveland Force, ls not particularly
that season to 8,154 per game in 1981-82.
remarkable. Rather, he says, it is a testimony to the
The Force's attendance has grown from 3,08) per
game
during the Woistelns' first year, 197!4l0, to
g8111e of indoor
Wolstein's father, developer Bert L. Wois(ein,
about 6,400 so far this season. There a~ now 14 teams
bought the team four years ago - one year after It
ln the league, and the St. Louis franchise has been a
became a charter member of the Major Indoor
phenomenon al the gate, often drawing 18,000 or more
fans.
·
.
Soccer ~ague. ·
.
• ''I think soccer In general has an obstacle to
"Indoor soccer got off to an auspicious start In
Cleveland/' Wolst.eln said. "There were over 11,000
overcome in that it's an International s!iort, and
America Isn't very good at lt," Scott Wolsteln said.
people at the opening game, and Cleveland won in
· "Americans won't get behind anything until they are
overtime. But from there, things went steadily
good at it." ·
downhill. Cleveland was the worst team In the league.
For that reason a.lone, Wolsteln said he belleves
"The ultimate humiliation came when Oeveland
Indoor soccer, as played in the MISL, may be the best
hosted the Russian national team and lost something
way to Introduce any kind of soccer to the U.S. sports
.
like 21·2."
ran.
·
The Wolstelns bought the iranchlse· from Eric
"It was Invented ln America, and it's a simpler
Hen.d erson the following ~ason. after. their offer to
game than outdoor soccer," Wolsteln said.
buy the Pr:o basketball Cavalters from Nick Mlleti
was turned down.
·
Certainly, the rules are quickly understood. The ·
subtleties of the game, the offensive an~ defensive
Though the Force's record has since had its ups and
downs, its financial picture has ·steadily improved. ·
stnitegtes, can take more time.
• · The object of American Indoor soccer, played wit11
"To show you how had it was the~ year - tron1
. the first year ·to the second year, we trlpled our
.an. orange ball orl a green artl!lclal tur1 court
~enues," Wolsteln saki. "From tiie second year to

soccer.

.

•

1

the third, we tripled our revenues again. This year,
You don'rhave to be to play soccer ."
we should double our revenues. If we double iast
While Wolstein sees the American·nessand novelty
year's revenues, we'd-jUst about break even."
of the sport as items to be promoted, players who
He estimates the Force would have to draw 9,IXXI to
grew up playing outdoor soccer In Europe and South ' ·
lO,IXXI fans per game this season, however, to turn a
America are sometlmes slow to accept the new
profit.
game.
The MISL' s season runs roughly parallel to the ·
"This is soccer? This is crazy! " Was the first
National Basketball A5sociation' s, although MisL
react)on of Brazilian J'ticardo Rodrigues. now a Force
teams play 48 games, to the NBA's 82.
forward.
.
"Outdoor soccer has one major problem - I think
Gradually, though. the forei!(D players who c lutter
the Ul)lted .States Football League wlll find it out MISL rosters have coine to accept and even enjoy the
baSeball Is still No. 1," Wolstein said. "You don't
game- if only because lt gives them one more way td
compete wlth baseball In this country.
earn a llvlng.
"Our eompetltion l.s really basketball and hockey,
"The biggest adjustment is the board (the walls) .
neither of which has any of that kind of following.
The ball slays in play so much," said Force Coach
They're more cult sports. They're both good gaines,
Tltno Llekoskl, a native of Finland and a former
but they're not awesome competition.
eoach, of the year in the outdoor North American
.."And we have something they don't have. We have
Soccer League. "Players who play very slowly have
the kids playing it."
trouble adjusting. You need to be very direct ln indoor
Wol.steln cites . reports lncllcatlng that more
soccer - fo11r or five passes a nd then you shoot .
youngsters play soccer today than play Little League
There's a lot inore contact (among players) indoors,
baseball, and he says children and women make up
but !here's a lot more ball conlact. which makes it
an important part of the MISL's audience. ·
more fun."
"Mothers, for one, don't llke to encourage children
Wolsteln said he Itkes the pace of the game, and he
to play football, because It's such a dangerous sport,"
. also likes to be able to select his players from a
he said. "Another reason (forsoccer'spopularlty) is,
worldwide pool. ·
· women can play it. And another reason ~ sex
The glut of quality players make.; it easier to keep
aweaJ.
Nlartes at reasonable levels. That may help keep the
"The indoor game Is played in a small enough area
Force from suffering the financial troubles that have
that you can see the players. The players are
plagued the c;:avallers and the baseball Indians in
generally good·looklng, and they're not behemoths.
Cleveland, he sald .

�.I

Page-=C-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pome.oy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, VJ. Va.

February 20,

198~

Southern slaps 90-44 defeat on Southwestern Highlanders
By SCOTr WOI,.FE
· RACINE - Despite a close
l)eglnning, Southern's Tornadoes
produced lour strong offensive
quarters to bury the Southwestern
Highlanders 9044 here Friday
evening at Charles W. HaYJ1lan
Gyinnaslum.
The victory left Southern Valley
Athletic League champion South:ern wtth a 17-2mark, lnSVAC play,
the Tornadoes upped their mark to
9-0. SHS played a makeup game
o/lth Hannan Trace at MerceiVUie
last night. Southwestern finished ,
regular season play with a 6-14
tnark. The Highlanders were 3-7 in

loop action this winter.
Southern has now...won the SVAC
cage title seven years In a row.
Southern, which won Its 40th
straight home game, not only
exhibited a blltzmg offensive display, but mounted a sturdy defensive surge that shut out the
Highlanders in the final round.
Zane Beegle and Rod Littlefield
ledSouthern'slntenseattackwlth27 .
and 20 points reSpectively.
Rnger Wells sparked the High·
lander offensive game with 17
markers while Paul McNeal ~dded
11.

Southwestern controlled theopen·

ing tip off and settled into its pattern
offense where Jeff. Meek broke the
scoring ice at the 7:ll mark.
Southern's Nick Bostick quickly
retaliated at the ~:05 mark to knot
the score. Moments later Rod
Littlefield made a hasty theft and
raced It in for a 4-2 score that gave
SHS.a lead it never relinquished.
Nick Bostick hit two more corner
jumpers, giving SHS an 84 advantage and from that point on it was off
to the races. The Tornadoes,
although pressured by an agresslve
Southwestern five, opened up a
rapid-fire attack, capped by a
Littlefield jumper at the buzzer that

gave them a 27-16 edge.
Opening the second round
Southwestern stayed close, but In
the latter phases of the canto
Littlefield . took control of boards,
Whlle Beegle unleashed a lorrW
shooting spree, giving SHS a 45-28
advantage at the half.
Both clubs battled evenly through
the first part or the third frame,
before Beegle gave his club a 58-38 .
lead at the3: 41 mark, SCX)ringoffthe
patented Tornado break. Beegle
had 21 points at this pOint, ending the
frame with 25 as SHS led 7044.
Southern was a blazing a 20-of-22
going into the flnal frame, and

quickly assumed its pace In that
final round. With thescore84-44and
5 minutes remaining Coach Carl
Wolfe emptied his bench for the
remainder o( the game, resulting in
the 9().44 trltimph.
Southern canned 35 of 68 from the
field for 52 percent and rip~~ of
23 from the line for 87 percent.
SWHS had a good percentage from
the field, hitting 20 of 40 for 50
percent, buthitjust4of12attheline.
Southern won the battle of the ·
boards 37-231ed by Chris Bostick's
11 carorps and Littlefield's 9.
McNeal was the leader for SWHS.
In the reserve contest, Coach

.Howle Caldwell's young reseiVes
rolled to a 51•29 triumph as
freshrnanToddAdamspouredin14,
Darin Roush 12, and Scott Schultz
10. John Woolum and Mike ijalley
each had 8 for the Highlanders.
Southwestern plays Eastem
Monday at Rio Grande In Sectional ·
Tournament play.
S0ll'I'IIWE8TEIIN 144) - McNeal5-1·ll:'

Bakel' 1-1&gt;2; Wei'• 7-3-7; La)'Uln ~ Ca!T
2-G4; and Meek 1-1&gt;2. Tololo IN-44.
llOUTIIEIIN (10) -Beegle 12-3-27; Little·
DeldiH-:111: BosUck4·1-9; C. Bostic~: Brinager 1-&amp;a; C\IJfman 1~: Deem 2-M;
Tealorcl3-2.8; C&lt;lnnolly J.Q-2. TOtolo · - ·
By quo,ftero: •
Swth-iem ..................... 16 14 H 0-41
Swthern ......... .. .. ............... 27 19 24 27-00

.North Gallia upsets Hannan Trace 50-49 on last-second shot
.

· VINTON - Mike Mays' jump
shot with one second left here
· Friday night gave Coach Bruce
Wilson's North Gallia Pirates a
fhrllllng 50-49 SVAC victory over
flannan Trace.
• With 12 seconds to go, the
Wildcats' Rick Randolph was
fouled, but missed the first of a one
plus situation. Mays grabbed the

rebound then dribbled over the
midcourt line before calling time.
Following the timeout, North
Gallia took the ball to the foul circle
where Mays conneCted for his
winning basket.
The victory gave the Pirates a3-7
league record and 7-13 mark
overall.
Coach Mike Jenkins' Wildcats
were 10-9 ll?lng Into Saturday's

SVAC finale against Southern.
Win or lose, Hannan Trace will ·
finish third in the league behind
Southern and Kyger Creek.
Both teams played on even terms
during the first period as the quarter
ended with a 10.10 tje. North Gallla
gained momentum in the second
stanza as the Pirates outscored
Hannan Trace, 2H6. Jackie Glassburn, a sophomore, brought up from

'

~agen

Rob Brumfield with 17 points while
Randolph added.10.
Shooting-wise, North Gallla hit 18
of 46 field goal attempts and 14of21
at the foul Unes. Hannan Trace was
15 of 21 at the charity stripes.
NG grabbed Tl rebounds with
Mays getting eight.
,
The Little Pirates also won the
reserve contest, 4()..28. Tim Smith
and Brian Hawks led the winners
with 12 points each.

the reseiVe team, canned 11 points
in the second quarter.
Hannan Trace got back into the
cont~t in the third canto by
outscoring the host's, 12-8. In the
fourth period both teams 11 points
apiece.
Glassburn led the Pirates with13
points including seven for seven the
foul line. Larry Lee and Mays
finished with 10 points each.
Pacing the Wildcat offense were

North GaiiJa meets Southern In
the Oass A Sectional Tournament
Wednesday, Feb. 23. Hannan Trace
plays Ironton St. Joe Wednesday in
the Class A Sectional at Rock IHll.
HANNAN 111ACE Ie) - Rossiter 2-04;
Barnes 1-2-4; 'Baney 2-04: Brum1Jeld 5-7-17;,
Randolph ~10; Swaln 1-:H; D. Barnes 1'W.

Tololo 1'1-!J..tl.
NORl'JI GAinA Ill)- Mays 4-2-10; Pet·
lck3-2-B: NeaiH-5; Leel-2·10: Kemper:M-4:
Glassburn 3-7-JJ. Tolali 18-JW..

ByQ11111&lt;n:
North Gallla ............... .. ..... 10 21 '8 •U-50
Hannan .T'race .. .. .......... .. .. ..10 16 12 11-49

named All-American

· RIO GRANDE - A 'standout
guard on the Rio Grande College
Redwomen has been named to the
pistrlct IV Academic All·
American Basketball Team by the
College Sports Information Dlrec·
tprs Association of America.
· · Robin hagen, a 5-7 senior guard
irom South Webster, Ohio, is the
aectwomen ace earning the laurels.
The District IV consists of all colleges and universities in Ohio, Indi·
ana, Michigan, Minnesota, Illinois,
~nd Wisconsin.
: By being selected for the district
honors, Hagen wlll be included on
the ballot for national laurels In
.J)11d-March. Hagen ts the first Rio
'6 rande College athlete to recetve
$uch honors.
'
: A four-year collegiate starter,
{lagen is averaging 17 points, lour
reboundls and five assists per game
this season whlle shooting 45 pereent from the floor arid 80 percent
:t;om the free throw line. She scored
:a season-high 23 points her second
game of the season against St. Jo!IE'Ph College.
.: "Robin Is indicative of the type of
'student-athlete we have In our program," said Rio Grande head
roach Jamie Ia1!11a. "She's a
leader, an outstanding student, and
an all-round gpod person. It has
been a pleasure to coach a student·
athlete that ts as fine as Robin."
Hagen has averaged over 16
points per game during her two years at Rio Grande while shooting
nearly 50,percent from the floor an&lt;!
82 perceht at the free throw line.
She was the team's Most Valuable
Player last year.
In addition to being a dean's list
student, Hagen was runner-up for
homecoming queen and has served
a resident assistant in the dorms.
She was honored last year as being
the school's top female athlete.
Hagen came to Rio Grande from
Shawnee State College where she
averaged 17 points per game. Her
squad went 51-6 during her two ye-

ars there. She was the recipient of
the Michael Welnerecht Award for
outstanding achievement In
academics-athletics.
The 21-year-old physical educalion major has been a catalyst on
this year's Rio Grande squad that Is

12·12 overall, 34ln the Greater Ohio
Athletic Conference.
Here is the 1982-83 District IV
Academic All-American Basket- .
ball Team as released by the Col·
lege Sports lnformljtion Directors
Association of America:

1tii!U3 CoSIDA Dlslricl IV
Academlc All-American
BasketbaD fiam

.. ............ 5-7 Sr .
Gd-V. WUUarns, Fen1sSt. ................. .. ..... .. ..... .... ...... ........... ...... ... ....... ... . 5-4 Sr.
Gd-T. Sender, MW1kanCol........................ ...... ........ ..... ... .. ............... .... ..... 5-4 Sr.
Gd·C. Dorsey, Ashland ('&lt;J!. ... .................................................. .......... ........ . 5-7 Sr.
Fwd-J. Clark, U. of Wisconsin .. .. .................. .. ... ........ ...... .. ..... ... ................. 5-10 Sr.
Fwd-J. Martin, Wrighi St .................................................... ..... .. ....... .. ...... 5-10 Sr.
F\vd-S. Blackburn, Capttal UnJv .......... ........ ............. ................... .. ....... ....... 5-10 Sr.
Fwd-E. Purvucts. Butler Untv.5-11 Jr.

"HERE ARE A FEW OF
THIS WEEK'S NEW LISTINGS"

ATHENS, Ga. lAP)- Heisman
Trophy winner Herschel Walker
squelched the swirling rumors that
hewas about to accept anoffer!rom
the United States Football Leagu~'s
New Jersey Generals by announc·
!ng he was remaining at Georgia
and would play with the Bulldogs
next season.
"As I already stated at the
Heisman banquet lin December),
I'm planning on . -returning to
Georgia for my fourth season," the
three-time All-American tailback
told a crowd of more than 100
members of the media at a news
conference Friday.
The hullabaloo that had much of
Athens - and Georgia Coach and
Athletic Director Vince Dooley near shock was a publisbed report
that said Walker, a junior from
Wrightsville, had been· offered as
much as $16.5 million for six years
by the Genera Is.
· However, the Boston Globe,
quoting two unidenti1ied sources,
reported In Saturday's editions that
Walker signed a contra.ct with the
Generals and then backea out. The
Globe said Walker signed a three- .
year contract for about $5 million
Thursday night with the stipulation
that he would have a 24-hour grace
period to think It over.
The newspaper said Walker
walked around the Georgia campus
for two hOUrs and.then changro his
mind.
.
"Signing a contract would be in .
I violation or our rules," NCAA
President John Toner told the
Globe, "and that would makeany
student athlete Ineligible. The
student athlete couW appeal."

•3

'

BY TIM DAVIS
into the final canto.
· ·. POINT PLEASANT - The HunThings got a bit wild In the fourth
't!ngton High Pony E1Cpress used a quarter with a total of 3 personal
· 28-point second quarter scoring fouls being called between the two
~purt Friday night enroute to a 66- teams. Three technical fouls were
victory over the Point Pleasant also whistled and two players were
ig. Blacks in a Pioneer Athletic ejected from the bizarre quarter.
~nference battle.
Point Pleasant's Shawn Nibert first
: Although the final tallies may not was hit with a technical at the 1:41
;Htdlcate It the PAC-8 game was a mark and ejected from the game.
~-fought affair through the first Following a PPHS timeout their
~ eight minute periods. Lennie bench was nailed with yet another
~rnetle's cagers tolk an early lead
technical foul to give Huntington
jilt 17-9 by the end of the the first two-two shot technlcals whlcb even:Jleriod.
tually led to four Huntington points.
~ In the second frame, PPHS ran
With only :54 second remaining
Jhe score to 25-14 at the midway Huntington's Kenny Phillips was
:inark only to see the Ponies run off hit with the third technical as he
" 1 un~swered points and take a
jumped on a pile of players After a
If"'
'~~7-25 lead at halftime.
scramble on the floor. A jump ball
'1'
) In the third quarter the lead . was called as Phllllps was charged
&lt;t;ha nged hands several times. with the foul after the officials
:PPHS cut the lead to eight points whistled the play dead. Phillips was
~hlle the Ponies opened It to 12 at also ejected for giving an elbow as
pvartous times In the period. The Io- he dived Into the pile of players al~als were' able to cut the margin by ready on the floor. Under West VIr"'"o, maidng the score 48-38 going glnla Secondary Schools Activities
~~
~
·

1981 COUGAR XR 7

.

~.":-r~':l·. ~··- .·~ ~ ~.~.
.

' '

- = · ----

.

1980 FORD LTD
Two-tone yellow &amp;gold, cloth sea ts, 302 automatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, air cond ., cruise control, AM/FM stereo remote control mirrors
38,000 low miles. ·
'
'

ONLY

$4995

1979 CHEVY, C-1 0 CUSTOM DELUXE 4X4
Short bed , red, 350 automatic, body side moldings, AM radio, rear step
bufllper, new mud &amp; snow tires, only 14,7891ow; low miles! This truck is·
like brand new!
·

It's the lowest bank financing
in the
Gal.lipolis .Area
•Any make, any model new car!
•Ask abc&gt;ut this special offer at your newest C &amp; S Bank office or .
ask your dealer to arrange it!
•Used car rates have also been reduced accordingly!
.Pick out the car you want then come in or have your dealer call
I.IS.

Lower Interest Rates
.
.
·are 1ust.one more way
it pays· to be a
·C &amp; S. Bank Customer!
.

1981 CHEVY C-1 0 QJSTOM DEilJXE TRUCK
Short bed, brown, 6 cyl. engine, 3 speed standard w/overdrive, AM/FM
stEreo, rear stEP bumper, body side moldi'lgs. radial bres, power steering &amp;
brakes, 31,000 miles. "Great Economy Truck".

$49.9 5
"WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF QUALITY USED CARS &amp;
TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM. SUNDAY WINDOW SHOPPERS
WELCOME."
.

a·A.M.-12

NOON

~:

~~~~~:ri

ch:~;:B\:~~!rd

now -8
7
on the year and 3-7 in the PAC-8.
Huntington raised Its overall mark
to 7-8 on the season while upplng
their PAC mark to 7-4.
In the reseiVe contest Rod Ed·
wards' Point Pleasant Little Blacks
knocked off the previously unbeaten Little Ponies by a hard·
fought 49-45 margin .
Guy Morrow and Brian Wedge
both scored 16 points for the Little
Blacks as they ended a five game
losing skid. The victory u(lpe!l their
season mark to 4-7 on the year.
15

H-6; Wataon 1.Q-2. T - :15-1H6.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (API _
i:ooperatlon among hoxlng com~lsslons tn rules and mediCal
:)&gt;rocedures, not just talking abOut It;
;IS needed by the sport, says Dr.
otDnnleL.Hammargren,theneuro:'surgeon who operated on Duk i&lt;oo
;',j{irn, who suffered fatal brain
.ilamage in a fight here Nov. 13.
.~ 11 was cooperation that was
) tressedbyHammargrenandother
;l&gt;hysiclans Friday during a one-day
wnterenceat CaesarsPalaceonthe
~
'ITJedlcal aspects of boxing.
~ The conference was sponsored by
;ihe American Medical Association
.!)nd the Association of Ringside
rhysiclans and was attended by
J:lbout 200 doctors and o!hers
:lJlvolved in boxing.
• Dr. Jack E. Battalla, a physician
the Porlland, Ore., Boxing
~:~~e~~:n~ pointed out that the
~
was scheduled before
death of Kim, knocked out In the
round of a lightweight title bid
~~;;~1. Ray "Boom Boom"

ceptedbysoc!ety," thepanelsaidln

a story In the January edition ofthe

AMAJournal.
"The ·AMA is very pleased with
the attention given to this matter
(boxing safety) which they feel is
just another pubUc health matter
they should be Interested in," said
Dolan. "Boxing is not going away,
but It can be controlled."
He also said anything discussed
Friday was not the official position
of the AMA, which will issue a

statement representlng ItS official
stand a! a lat. er da te.
Buthe5aidhefelttheAMAwouid
provide for the various states model
ieglslatlonthattheymayormaynot
adopt.And,hesaid,theAMAwouid
cooperate fully in the area of safety
standards.
.
Among the topics discussed
Friday were eye injuries, various
types of head injuries and how to
spot these injuries as soon as
possible.

Score b)' quarten:
Huntlngfon .... .. .................... 9 281118-ffi

r

MEMPHIS, Tenn. tAP) -Center
Charles Jones and guard Milt
Wagner led the ninth-ranked Louisville Cardinals to a 75-66 Metro
Conlerence victory over 13thranked Memphis State Saturday.
The Cardinals broke open the
Dr. William Dolan of Chicago, the
in the last seven minutes with
game
11-h:&gt;lrnMn of the AMA's Council on
Wagner.
Jones and· Rodney
l;cientUic Affairs, noted 'that Kim's
McCray
hitting
from the free throw
and Howard Cosell's reportline.
Jones
finished
with 24 points,
of Larry Holmes' one-sided
most
of
them
coming
on dunks, and
licton over challenger Randall
Wagner
added
14
as
Louisville
ran
• ·~·-v Cobb in a heavyweight title ·
has sparked Interest In the Its record to 22-3.
Keith Lee paced Memphis State
of improving boxing safety.
with
26 pOints, while Bobby Parks
The AMA Journal, in editorials,
addewd
18, llln the second half.
called for the abolition of the
"'"'"". but that is.not theofflclal AMA
Villanova Wins
The Scientific CouncU's Advisory
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -Led
!Pa,nel on Brain Injury In Boxing
It was not realistic to call for a by DwaYne McClain's 19 paints,
eighth-ranked VUlanova defeated
~J&lt;ing ban. "Moreover, the sport
not seem any more dangerous Connect leu t 75-68 ln a Big East
other sports presently ac- basketball game Saturday.

season games remaining returns
home on Tuesday night when they
host visiting W!!lton. On Friday, the
White Falcons visit Duval before
closing out the regular season on
· March 1 at home against neighboring Hannan.
Tuesday night's WHS-Walton
clash has a starting time of 8 p.m.
with the Walton freshman going up

aRalnst the Wahama freshmen in
the preliminary RBme at 6: 15 due tp.
the fact that Walton has no junior.
varsity squad.
WAIIAMA 188) - Embelton J.U-29:
Bradley 6+18: VanMeter 4-1·9: Klmea

»e:

Mltchelll·:H: Roush ~2-2 . TOTAUI . .JHB.
BUFFALO ISS) - Chrts!y ij)-16; HW ~
16; McCoy
Harts ~ Bowles 14-2;
We&amp;ver ().().0. Tutall !S-1·5!.
Scoreb)'q~
··
Wahama ...................... .. .... .14 II 18 25-&lt;11
Buffalo ... ..................... ...... &amp; 176 .14 ~53

:&gt;-1-11;

MR.

FRONT-END AU
5

$14~ "'=·~~
TAX

IF REQUIRED .

Mr. Goodwrench gWe1 1 complete front-end
1 tpecial price. He adjustt
Clltter, camber and toe-in to factory apecifice1iono. Thlo opoclot lo lor ell American . -

alignment job 'for

except Chevettetand compact with fi'Qnt·whHI

drive/and Of MICPheraon tutpenlion/ ..lghtty
higher. 4-whoelollgnmont ovolloble for J . K. and
X body Clrt and tome lmpona.
TNdll- '20.00.
Our modern eMctronic front-wheel
ollgnmont lo by Vtnco Knight who
hie 20 veer• experience and 11 •
gradulte of Beer Alignment School.
C•ll for your •PP?~ntment today.

XIIP THAT GRIAT GM nEUNCil WITH GINVJNI CIM PAJITI.

Also, have a free headlight aim with a lube. oil .chal9 1nd
filter on all cars and y, ton trucks.
. Theoe Specials Expire March 1, 1983

PH. 992-6614

SIMMONS
OLDS.-CAD...CHEVY, INC.
308 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH .

~~:ln:I~P~Ie:au:n:I~...~...:...:..:...~...:.. :17~8~JJ:1:~-=j_--------------------------------~-------------

PUTS A
mGETHER LIKE .
CARROLL NORRIS

Louisville drops Memphis
State for Metro League win
Villanova, 19-4 and 11-2 in the
cOnference, took the lead after two
minutes of play and never relln·
qutshed it as John Pinone added 16
points and Stewart Granger scored
13.
Connecticut's Karl Hobbs and
Earl Kelley led aU scorers with 22
points apiece as the Huskies lost
their sixth in a row. Connecticut is
9-14 overall and 2-10 in the Big East.

0
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
FINANCINGt

I

'

Dayton Defealed

•.

ON ALL NEW '83 AND REMAINING '82
CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH CARS.

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - Mark
West's rebound follow with 12: 29 left
gave Old Dominion the lead for good
alld the Monarchs went on to a 61-53
basketball victory Saturday over
Dayton· s Flyers as Charlie Smith
scored 23 points.
It was the fourth straight triumph
and the eighth in their last 11 ",tarts
for the Monarchs, 16-8. Dayton fell to
15-9.

Once again Chrysler comes through wrth help
for new.car buyers. Now, 1t.9% financing on all
of our cars. No exceptions. Get the car you
want at the financing you can afford.

ISHEBI

..

, .1

.

-1

PROTECTION PLAN

IT'S THUNDERBIRD
FOR1983 ..

5/50 PROTECTION PLAN ON EVERY
NEW AMERICAN-BUILT CAR.

BOLD.
BEAUTIRIL·
WHEN YOU

"Always on your side."

FIATURES

GOING .

I

You could save evan \~lore down the road w!th
Chrysler's Prmection Plan for five years or
60,000 miles, wJ1ichever comes first.' Chrysler
protects your new car investment long after
most other car warranties have run out.

AND STANDARD

1

tFinanc:lng is avaMaDie throu.gh partlcipati ng dealers and
lenders lor qualified buyers DEALER COfiiTRIBUTION MAV
AFFECT CUSTOMER PAtCE . Finance savings depend on ·
model. intereSl rate, amount financed a~ loan term . "Pr'!"
18C1ion Plan is a limited watranty on eryg1ne and power tra1n,
and outer ~ rust·t!'lro~. A deductible may be required . .

UKETH~
• 3.8111111' ~ enatne and :MJtomattc
transml!!lon wtlh toctctng torQUe

WANT IT!

c:onw; . . • ViW'1aDtl ratiO gower
i'actc ancl gtniOn -rill • frOnt diSC brakeS • ReClining !font

SEE YOUR PARTICIPATING CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER FOR PROGRAM DETAILS.

bUCket !NtJ • IHumlnated quam

lY2 miles from Holzer Medical Center on State Rt 160.
SATURDAY

==

were T!Jdd Simpkins With eight,

IIUNI'INGroN IDGH l•l -Jackson :H!-

MOTOR CAR BROKERS
HOURS: MON.-FRI...il AM.-5 P.M.

wlth17 points on the night.
Shawn Nibert led the PPHS attack with 15 points, whlle the
team's
son,
wasleading
held tD scorer,
talliesTodd
in the Glbcon·
13
test. lilso scoring for the locals

. f
,. r

Tan color, velour seats, 6 cyl., automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, air
cond., cruise control, tilt wheel, power seats &amp; windows, rear window defog , AM/FM cassette stereo.

..v~--&amp;11

sant's Todd Simpkins had seven for
PPHS.
.
Chuck
Crawford
The
Ponies'
claimed game high
scoring
honors

'

~

&gt;•-'''"

Commission rules both Nibert and
PhUllps will have lo sit out their re- .
spective next game. .
The Ponies were able tD pull
away ln tbe final period with the
Cabell County school scoring on
two unanswered· scoring spurts of
five points to c1a im the 66-48
triumph.
.
Team statistics show Pt. Pleasant's downfall. Huntington hit 50
percent from the field (25-50), wfhlle
converting 16 of 21 free tlu;ows or a
76 percent cllp at the line. Point on
the other hand shot a poor 35 per·
cent (21-60) on the night from the
floor and managed only s!Jt of 18
conversions at the charity stripe for
a 33 percent mark. The Big Blacks
committed 18 turnovers while HunUngton had 16 miscues o!their own..
The Express also dominated on
the boards as they hauled In 29 rebounds with the Big Blacks grabbing 19 caroms. Huntington's Sly
Hartfield was the game's leading
rebounder with 14 while Point Plea-

~

;

$6995

period to set the stage lor the final
Rouah seven and Donnie VanMeter
six. Buffalo was paced In the
quarter.
In the final eight minutes . rebounding department by Eddie
Waharna ·received a balanced
Harris with nine whjle, Shawn IHll
scoring effort with their leading ·and Greg Bowles each netted seven
caroms.
scorer on the year Ron Bradley,
The reserve game was an action
dropping in nine markers In the
packed
contest that saw Coach Tom
period to lead Wahama to a 25-18
Cullen's Little Falcons squeeze out
advantage in the final stanza. Tim
a 56-64 overtime win over the Baby
Christy totaled eight points for
Buffalo in the quarter but It wasn't
Blsons.
The White Falcon trimnph was
enough II$ the White Falcons scor~
their biggest margin of victory of
their seventh straight victory as
the seBBon at 68-53.
they Increased their season record
While Embelton and Bradley
to 9-5 on the year. The 'Little scored in double figures for
Falcons were led in scoring by their
Wahama the host · Blsons placed
one, two, three punch · in Bill
three men In double figures with
Clendenin, Matt Dawson and Boyd
Tim Christy and Shawn Hill each
Northrop with 16, 15 and 14 poil)ts
nett~ 16 points while Darrell'
respectively. Dawson scored all
McCoy totaled 11.
four points for Wahama in overRebounding
totals
show time.
Embelton taking game high honors
Buffalo received 16 points from
with 12 while Scott Kimes notched
John Hardwick and 14 from Mike
10, Darrell Mitchell eight, Mark
Keeney.
Wahama with thre.e regular

Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks drop 66-48 tilt

"

as

Walker will
• •
remam
m
school

percent mark (16 of 23) from the
By GARY CL.\RK
charity
stripe. While BUffalo
BUFFALO - Eric Embelton
converted
100 percent (7 of 7) from
picked a opportune time to break
the
fr~
throw
stripe the Blsons
out or his late season scoring slump
with a 29 point 12 rebound perfor· managed to connect on a poor 31
mance In leading the Wahama per~t from the field.
Wahama also held a decided edge
White Falcons to a convincing 68-53
in
rebounding 45-30 and committed
hardcourt victory over the Buffalo
20
turnovers while Buffalo turned
~lsons Friday evening on the Putthe
ball over on 16 occBBions.
nam Coun\l&lt;lns' home floor.
The
White Falcons opened up a
(In addition to Embelton's season
first
period
lead of I U behind
high 29 points, was Ron Bradl~y
.who also scored ln double figures Embelton, Donnie VanMeter and
·Friday night with 18 markers as Scott Kimes but saw · that lead
-Wahama raised their season record dwindle to just two points at the
"to l&gt;-12 on the year. The White half, 25-23. Tim Christy and Shawn
Falcon trimnph also avenged a 41).. Hili led the Bll!on comeback with
season opening setback to six point efforts each during the
J'luffalo who fell to 7-11 on the year · second stanza.
Embelton led the bend area
after appeartng in a number of preFalcons in the third canto with 12
season Class A top ten polls.
· . Once again Wahama experienced points as Wahama outscored their
a good shooting night with a 45 hosts IS.I4 to extend their lead to six
Percent showing from the floor on points at 43-37. Shawn Hili kept the
26 of 58 attempts and a warm 70 · Bisons close with eight tallies in the

)1\JI

t~ · · -

Page--&lt;:4

Wahama White Falcons roll over Buffalo Bisons, 68-53

d
d
e
b
eng
~,.ore cooperation .nee e . tn ox1
:oi-9~~-~c:,·~.:;~~\4~~:.:
egulations and medical procedures e]f~6;M~~ESi!~~

. l :f',~ '~ l

The Sunday Time..Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midcleport-Gallipolis, Oh'-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

=

C&amp;S Bank

Ht. Yr.

P08-Piayer-8cbool
Gd-R. Hagen, RGC ........ .. ,......... ...... .......... .......... .......

•

~ry 20,1983

CIOCI;.

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court ,S treet

Silver Bridge Plaza

Member FDIC

Spring ';I alley

AT

,,

PAT HILL FORD

.. v ... ,. ..

Thunderbird

461 S. 3nl Ave.,

for
Mkll~le1110rt,

OH.

CHRYSLER

CARROLL NORRIS, INC.
Gallipolis, Ohio

.'

�Page-C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Fellruary 20, 1983

Ohio-Point

Trevino blames poor showing
on Cincinnati's pitching staff
pt"&lt;'tty good ability . You don't have
TAMPA, Fla. lAP) - Catcher
to
be thHt smart to figure that out. .. .
Alex Trevino thinks he'll play better
1 think pt'Ople looked at the films and
if the Reds are a winning team and
sa id hi s poor showing last season realizl"d it wasn:t all my fault ."
was P,rtly the fau lt of the pit chers. · Reds otfici.a ls ha\'e said pitchers
'll·ev ino, who ca me as part of the nee&lt;fpractice in holding runners on
trade with the New York Mets for base and speeding up their motions
George Foster. hit . .251 but had a to the plate.
"A lot of times. by the time 1got
league-leading 17 errors at his
ready
to throw the ball. the rumier
position. He also had nine passed
was already into his slide. I starled
balls.
to rush. too much. I was hy ing to
Trevin o was hea,~ly criticized for
throw the hall without having a good
h.is ina bil ity to tlu·o"· out stealing
grip sometimes. "
rurmers on the base paths.
Man ager Russ Nixon, himself a
"When they sa,· )OU were traded fonn&lt;:&gt;r catcher, said he noticed a
forGt'Orge Foster- somebody who gradual deterioration in Trevino's
makes $2 mi llion - people think you throwing as the season progressed
must be something out of the last year.
ord inar)·. I'm jusl a 6-foot, 17().
"[ th.ink how he got into it wasn't
pound ca1cher." Trevino sa id
quite h.is fault . Once he got into it, he
Friday. the da)· before Reds '
couldn't get out of it. You could
pitchers a nd catcher s open spring
blame him for that, but I doh'! think
training.
you can put the blame on one thing. I
"''ve got the talent but people
think it was a combination of things.
have gal to be patient sometimes.
We just did a bad job" as a team,
Bull lovP to deal with all that. I love
Nixon said.
10 get responsibility. If I've got to
Trevino said there was tremend·
ta ke I he bla me. l'lltakc it," sa id the
ous pressure on him and other
2~-)·ear-old Mexican.
young players last season when the
Reds Pr!&gt;sident Di ck Wagner has
Reds sank to a record 61-101.
frequcnti)' said that ot her reams
Trevino said the Reds didn'l
hm·e shown an int erest in Trevino.
assign him to a regular catching job
"\Vhat thai means is I've got at first. Later, when the team began

losing regularly, other catchers
were used.
"We got into a situation where
you've got to tiy people. When
you're losing, you have to do tl),at.
That's why 1 didn't complain about
not playing as much. I've always
played with a loser. I can't walt to
find out what it Is to win," he said.
In other ·Redsland developments,
Cincinnati finished its arbitration
season Friday with a 1-2 record. The
Nationa l League club said an
arbitrator ruled In favor of pitcher
Joe Price.
Price, 26, was 3-4 with a 2.85
earned run average and three saves
in 59 appearances in 1982. The
arbitrator ruled that he should get
the $210,1XXl he was asking'for the
1983 season, ra ther than the$130,00J
the club had offered. He made
$85,00J last year, the club said.
In arbitration, each s ide sul;lmits
a figure, the arbitrator chooses one
and the decision is binding.
Price was the last of three Reds·
pitchers to go to arbitration this
year. The club won its case with
Bruce Berenyi, but lost with Mario
So to and Price.
Pitchers Ted Power and Bill
Dawley have signed 1983 contracts
with the Reds.

Oak Hill, Symmes Valley girls advance
Southwestern.
GAlLIPOLIS - Oall HUI eliminated Southwestern and Symmes , Christi Howard led the Oaks with
14 points. Terri Toland added .11.
Valley ousted North Gallla In FriTonya McNeal paced the High·
day night's Class A Gtris Sectional
landers with 15 points. Dianna Nlda
basketball tournament in the Gallla
added 10.
Academy High School gym .
Oak Hill led S-6, 19-14 and 31-23 at
In the first contest, Oak Hill
scored a ·45. 35 vtctor'y over
the qUllrtennarks.

Athens undisputed
SEO cage champion

HORSING AROUND - Clncinnall Reds' manager Russ Nixon Is nuzded by his eight-month-old
lilly, Clela, at hiS fann outside of Williamsburg, Ohio,

Thursday momlng. Nixon got down to more serious
buslnessFridayastheRedsreporiedforsprlng.iraln- .
lng In Tampa, Fla. ( AP Laserphoto).

LUMBER &amp; HOME CENTER

. BLOCKS SHOT- Symmes Valley's Deanna McCarty (23) blocks
• !lbot attempt by North Gallla's Diane Shllot (12) In Friday's Class A
• strb' sectional tournament game at Ga1JipoUs. On left Is Pirates' Tana
• · George (32). 'lbe Vlklnp advance&lt;l wltha53-30victoryoverthe Pirates
, : Ladles. - _M ary RoWns photos.

SPECIAL CLUa.ll

SAVE 55%

off manufacturer's suggested list prlct!
84 is closing out this quality
kitchen cabinet style to make
room for all new cabinet styles
... and that means you have
a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
to own a new Saxony I kitchen
at an unbelievable price.
THE GOOSE IS AT fi' AGAIN - New York

1n

: Yankees' pitcher Rich "Goose" Gossage hurls a pitch
• from the mOIUid at the Yanks' spring training camp

junior
high champs
·a re crowned
CHESHIRE - North Gallia and
Southwestern reign as the champions of the Gallia County Junior
High Boys and Girls Basketball
Tournament completed Thu rsday
evening at Kyger Creek High
School.
North Gallia, behind Mike
Kemper' s 24 poipts and a 1!&gt;-point
effort by Dayle Ca llihan dumped
Southwestern. 55-52 boys action
while Southwestern's gals edged
Hannan Trace, 15-13. Sean CoUey
had 21 points to pace the Little
Highlanders in the junior high boys'
~!lm pi·.oru;h.ip game. In action
involv ing the girls, Vicki Hammond
:Paced the Highlander gals with 11
·points. Angie Caldwell canned eight
:tor Hannan Trace.
· Following the games, two aU
tourna ment tea m s were announced. Members of the girls'
team were Kelly Roush, Kyger
·Creek; Joyce Campbell, Nor!h
:Gallia; Angie Caldwell, Hannan
·Trace: Sabrina Thornton and Angle
' Lambert. Southwestern and Hammond of Southwestern was named
· the Most Valuable Player.
Chosen on the boys' all touma·
ment team were Bryan P~rter,
Hannan Trace: Tim Gordon. Kyger
Creek; Sean Colley. Southwestern;
Justy Burleson. Southwestern;
Shane Glassburn. North Ga llia, and
Doyle Callihan , North Gailla.
Kemper 'w as chosen as the Most
Valuable Player.
The most outstanding cheerlead, ing squad award went to Hannan
Trace.

'

,'

..'.

College scores
Frtdo.ly's ( '"llt'll:t' ftal.;ktothull Sc..'OI"f'loo

t;A.•H
n1own ~. PMJ n !i2 ·
Dm1mou1h H. for rx'll +l
nn'Sf'l :.;, AJtmtCM' n :111
Ha rva rd tili. Cotumblil 1'11
" '"""'

•·

J~ &lt;JVNl 71!. N!'ll ' ttarnp-;hi t't' ~

P J'IJU'I'tOn "PP , Yi!iP

~~~

· sm:n1

M ul'rll\' Sr. !41, M iddle Tm n. 1&gt;\1
N.('. Wl lmln~ori:OO . N . Ca rollrm A&amp;:T ~~~~

MIJM'FJiT
E. Kmturk~· ~. You~trMi n St . ~
Morrtll'"d Sl . K!. Alu'9n ~
Fi\R \\'En
N«"'·.-l..a5 V&lt;'li!!l\i H&lt;l, San .la'iC' Sl. Ill
Pt'PJJI'I"dlnC' fti, Sl . Ma ry-'s, Call!. M
SantO! Clara !rl. ~·ol a. Calif. R-1

f:t. Lauderdale, t1a. Pttchers and catchers re-

Coming Soon Saxony II

• Low and One-Way Low Rates
'top Maintained Trucks
'Right Size1 Right Equipment
'hand Truc151. Furniture Pads
'Nationwide Koad Service
'Moving Tips &amp; Insurance

Rusr. chip and stain resistant
Brushed finish .
Stock Butcher Block Pauern ·

Suony I
• OUSic beauty ot !!Qilt Oilk
• Ralsecl Nk tneaai!IO!' oocr-s

3 '9 ••

COUifTER TOP.

F« replacemerts or new k1tchens.

CiOSintl """"'

NautiiiS Ductless :.r

• J·point nyton roller ariWff
sysl!fTl

RYD.I'IOl -

ONE-WAY

KITCHEN SINK

~ock

R~

RENTAL

Oouble Bowl Stainless Steel

Salt Is IIITli!td 10 tabtneiS tn

JACKSON - The Athens BuJ.
· !dogs reign as the 1982-83 SEOAL
basketball champions today followIng a thrilling 7~ victory over the
Jackson Irbnmen Friday night.
Steve Bruning poured in 36points
for the champs, who outscored the
Ironmen 38-27 in the second half to
clinch their 16 t h loop
championship.
· Through the first 22 minutes of
play the score was deadlocked 12
times and the lead changed hands
16 times as the Ironmen drilled 2().
25 foot jump shots while Athens
scored on rebounds and iayups.
Coach Jeff Hudson elected to
play his five starters !he entire con·
test against the taller Athens team,
but they couldn't hit the long
jumpers in the final 10 minutes of
play.
Bruning kept Athens alive in the
first half as he scored 20 of his
team's 37 points.
A goal by Jackson's Jon Clay tied
the ~re for the last time at 5().50
before the Bulldogs ran of! six
straight points to ease into a 5S-52
lead after three quarters.
An AI Collins goal with 1: 221eft in
the game reduced the AHS lead to
68-59, but JHS could get no closer.
Joining Bruning in double digit
searing was Carl Matheny with 17_
and Woody mayle with 11 for

.·~~~

~h ·

HURRY!

• SOli

ported to camp and worked out Thursday. The full
squa:d Is expected to report next ibursday. (AP
Laserphoto ).

RIVERSIDE V.W. INC.

U.H-~28.84 ...

446-9800

Odorless heat +Touch 'N Glow l)ush Dunon etectrtc trgh1tng Sell cteamng cet amtc wtck.

6800 BTU (GRW6) Rellecllng REG. 124.84
9300 BTU (GRW8) Reflecting REG.144.84

t 12' x4'x8' COX Plywood

SHEATHING_ 7~.
5 1 8" ~t4 ' x8 '

9300 BTU w/lan (GRF9-A) Rellectlng

PARTICLE
BOARD

84~n

en
REG. 189.84 _1 e n
1

7116"x4'x8'

Winners will meet on Feb. 24.
Two teams (upper and low!!r
bracket winners) will advance to
the district tournament at Waverly.
Friday's box score:
(FDISTOAME
OAK HJLL 1451 -Melinda Burnside 2-2&gt;6: .
Ctuistl Howard 5-4·14 ; Ter ri Toland 4-3-11;
Sheila Leedy 1-2-4;_ Rhonda Swann 3-4}6:
Jeana Stone 2.()-4. TO'I'ALS 11-U:..U.

SOlJ'J11WllSTERN (351 - Sandra PatriCk
().U; Ton93. Adkins 2~9 ; Tanya McNeal1·1·
15;' Carr-Ie Walker 0.0.0: Dianna Nlda 4-2-10;
Tracy Huff ()..()..(1; Sandra Cclmrut-n ().{).(};
Penny Tobert ().{).{). TOTALS 13-t-31.

By quarters:
Oak HW .. .......... .................. 8 11 12 14-45
SouthWestern ......... ; ............. 6 8 9 12-l5
(SECOND G.u!E)
SYM)IIES VALLEY (11.'1 ) - DeniM&gt; John·
son 9-2-20: Karen Dornan 2-2-6; Marte Roche
8-3-19: Deanna McCa rty J..0-6; Renee Ross
IJ.2-2. TOI'!US :IZ-!H3.
. NOR'lll GALLIA 130) - Michele George

6-5-17; T1na Blackburn().().(); TanaCeorge 1·1·
3; Dawn McMeechan 1.0.2i Gina Rutan 1..(}.2;
Diana Shllot Q..O.O; Mary Pickens J.0.6 . ID
T!US IU-30.
By quarters:
Symmes Valley .. ................ 16 12 l3 12-53
North GalUa ........................ 9 7 9 S--:.1

THIS COUPON WORTH

S2QOO

A'DIENS (751- BUI Fennearty 0-1-1; Leon
Allen 1.().2; Brad Baker 2-2-6; Marc Whaley
D-2-2; Carl Matheny 7-l-17; Woody Mayle ~1 11: Steve Bruning 11·2·36. 'IDTAIB :12-11-'15.
JACKSON (65) -Pat Srevens J.&lt;H;; Frank
Edgington 7.().14; Joo Clay 7-3-17; Todd Davis
4.().8; At Collins 9-2-10. TOI'ALS 311-U~
Score-by quarten: ·
Athens .......... .. .. .. ...............20 17 21 17-75
Jackson .............. .. .......... .... 20 lB 113-60
Reserve soore: Athens 54, Jackson 35.

Off

ON ANY SIZE
CO-OP SPACE HEATER

r

WANT TO BE
A MILLIONAIRE
· FOR A DAY?

t

f
f

PASSBOOK INTEREST ON 2112
MIWON OOLLARS WIU BE GIVEN AWAY
.,
IN PRIZES AT: ·

t
t
t
.t

WAFERBOARD6~

I
\

Pick up 'your Free Game riCkat at any of our offi~es. You may be a
millionaire for a day. You must be present to wtn.

Ohio Vatley Bank

t

Gallope lot Oll•v

l

each

INTERIOR DOOR
Bored for Latch Set. WllhOut

CONVENIENT CREDIT TERM$ AVAILABLE

Casing.

we carry our own accounts

24"

26 M

_ .. - - - - · ...-

Logan f&gt;'onument Company, Pomeroy, Ohio

--·'•h

I a PlooM

..nd ... Fl!f booklo" .....ing
ptl"ted in fwll c~r wfth Uze• and priCft ltse.ci.

I
I

to,;,. &lt;oil

Of

I

-B· . . .

I

my " -·

a tiGn
- .....nd ...

MolltOie........

~- obligo·

White Fibert;~lass

34'! 54f!n

One Piece

Leader

Model SO

17'x20' White

1i•20" White

19.!:'

II

I
I
.L I
'I
I
I s..... .,. ...... - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

TUB/SHOWER
,)

,,.,_
:

Citrat ' - • - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Oes~gned lorre"modelfng or new

construction. narrower width !its
through u isting doorways.
Seamless no-leak construc! ion.
warm 10 1he 1ouch.

COMMODORE
VANmES .

~h

42 Gallon Electric

HOT WATER
HEATERS

e Gotttn Ill.___ 129.84 ""

All Com11'toelore vanities include
cultured marble top with swirled
while and gold veininQ .

Glass-fined tanK Insulated to nell)
reduce costly heatless. Thermos,
tat with energy-sa . . ina Sill ina .

2' ~4 ·

BIID SYSTEMS Wn.te
2'CrN1 Tn

rrou

SIMPLY MAI.LUS THE COUPON FOI FUITHEIINFOIMATION
O"N IVININGS AND lUNDA YIY APPOINtMINT

LOGAN MONUMENT, GO., Inc.

,.....

VI NTOII, OHIO

....,. Str•t

CATUTTIIUII.IEW

-

IL!IOitO

......

~lrl

e!iiLTDI
k •

_...,_ ...

-

.

.ILxiiiW

1·11.1- orliO

eat.ALIAI&amp;
,_ ..... ._. · .-~~~~
IALUNUI
FillY
- - I I Z·IIIl
ILU-Iiolo

m-

==

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

Wllltdayl7:00 u. 1111:011 IJ.•.
too ...: IIII:OIIIJ.•.

lila....,.

TILE

No Cllrpping or break1ng .
Insula tes too! Tne tHQhe l the
A-Value. tl'le grealf~ l the
insulatmg power. R-Value taCt
sheets on !tie.

12'

10% clepo,li tincl balance In convenient low,
ln10111thlly ·payment•. ChooH from the larg..t
In antral ancl Southeaatern Ohio.
have the 1ame lnter..t rate a1 we cllcl In
1969. Order now for aprlng delivery.

La y·m Terra R-2

CEI.~ING

==~~------------­
~------------~ ----~

POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy-luon Bride•
992·2588

I

&gt;'liTH

rRAOE

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

1

I a Kindly ho¥1 an owthotia~ logon Monv....nf Co . rtplftef'· I

I

.

.34c ucn

· With· three seconds left, Tony
' LOGAN - A. pair of free throws
Keith hlt a drtvlng layup to make it
;:by Jeff Morgan with just elgh! se. :COnds remaining Friday night . 55-54.
As Larry Conrad prepared to in::ufted the Logan Chieftains to a 56-54
bound the ,ball and Ironton player
, -BEOAL triumph over the Ironton
: 'rlgers.
.
crossed the line to slap at the ball
and was called for a technical foul.
·; The victory enabl~ Logan to tie
, ·Ironton for second place In the final
D.oug Dicken madethe technical
; :standings as both teams concluded . foul shot with one second left and
the Chiefs upped their season re·4eague play with S-4 marks.
cord to ·n-9.
: : The Chieftains led throughout
· : most of the contest ranging from a
.Morgan with 23 points and Fra·
sure with 14 paced the Chieftains
: 'six point lead in the first half to a
whUe Ryan Ainsworth taJited 15 for
• :Steady one to three point margin in
the Tigers before fouling out with
; ,:the second half.
; Alter building a .33-25 lead early
three minutes remaining.
•"mthe third quarter, the Chiefs saw
Ironton drilled 25 field goals to
Logan's 19, but the Chiefs con: 'thiS evaporate to 38-37 with 19 severted 18 of 2.'1 free throws while the
. conds remaining in the period.
Tigers
were four of six at the char~
Logan's Chip Patterson fined a
ity stripe.
: lastsecondjumper, which boul!ded
• up; and was slam-dunked by Jeff
The box score: .
IIWI1II'Otli (114) -Tony Keith 2-6-4; Ryan
, 'frasure as time expired with LHS
Alnaw&lt;rth H-15: Kevin West 6-1-13; Mark
. atop a 40-37 lead.
Fields 2.().4: Frank Mcaellan 4.()-Si Pierre
Ironton's Frank McClellan
'llsrno 3.().£; Ed Rawttns 1-2~ . ror!US II+
14.
.
.
: tipped In a miss with 11 seconds
LOGAN·(ill) -ChtpPat1mon !).()&amp;, Lany
~ ·remaining to ~uce the lead to 53Coonod H3; Jlm Gut 4-3-11; !lou8 Dicken

•'.52.

WI riiiiYt lflll'lllliiii•H .,..atlll.

• , Three seconds later Morgan con; ·verted the two free throws for a 55• 52 lead.

0-1-1; Jell Morpn 9-~23; Jamie Van Voorhta
1-2-4; Jell Frasure t-6-ll 'IVI'ALII 11-JHI.
score by qua ..
lrol1lllll
•
9 16 12 17-M
Logan
- 11 1l 16 1&amp;-!6

=

{laerve score; Logan 49, Irooton :l9. .

~.

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

Popuiar-siza Oetco FreedOm D
Baltllrtet Ire also avatlab.le with
toP post tarirnnais.

\.----1\1---SALE ENDS 2/26/~3-..IJf---....

One of the worst things that can happen to you on a
cold winter morning is th!lt your old battery is dead.
Before trouble strikes. see us and save.
The never-add-water. no-worry Delco Freedom II can
be a true foul-weather friend. So get to us now before
wjnter sets to you 1 and save.

240 Third Avenue
446-1113

1704 Eastern Ave •.
446-4204

AC.Delco is the way to go

PT. PLEASANT AUTO.PARTS

G&amp; J AUTO PARTS
GALLIPOLIS

'

t

'

POMEROY
119 W. 2nd
992-2139

MASON
Route 33 (
773-5511

• Parts Plus autoalot•• ... n.t'a ... ,_you!

515 Main St.
675-1520

t
.,t

..... - - - ___ ..._ _

95

.:Chiefs earn tie for second
~place after win over Ironton

·Ir--------COV,ON---------,I
1

••
GOOD DEFENSE- 'Diree Oak HID defenden! surround Southw·
, e81em'sTonyaMcNeal (42) iathlsactlonphotoduringFrlday'sClassA
:; strb' sectional toumament game at Gallipolis. The SW aee stlllllWl'
• • aged to 8COI'e 15 pollits for the IDghlaaden~. Oak defenden~, left to right,
,; : are (/luis Hankin (32), Jeana Slone (21) 1111d ~hrlstl Howard 00).
•

t

_ _ ,,.. ' K

J
&amp;

t

t

.I
30" Pre-Hung

f

OHIO VALLEY BANK NIGHT
i
RIO GRANDE vs. CEDARVILLE ·'
FEB. 22, 7:30 P.M.' AT LYNE CENTER

SUB-ZERO 'HERO.
N WDEL
LE • SAVE $25.00

19.500 BTU (GC19·Al Convecllon REG. 229.84 _ _ ~n

5~..

A.tllens .
· Collins led Jackson with 20 with
Clay adding 17 and Frank Edging·
ton 14 points.
Jackson finished .with a 48 per·
cent average on 30 of 62 attempts
while Athens hlt 32 of 67 for 47.8
percent.
Woody Mayle claimed 18 of the 41
Athens rebounds while OllUns
grabbed 11 of the Ironrnen's 26.
The boJ&lt;I score:

Oak Hill will meet Ohio Valley
Conference foe Symmes Valley In
semifinal play (upper brac(&lt;et) at 7
p.m. on Thursday, Fel;l. 24.
In Friday's second contest,
Symmes Valley defeated North
Gallla, 53-30.
Denise Johnson led the winners
with 20 points. Marta Roche added
19.
.
Michele George paced the Lady
Pirates with 17 points,
The VIkings led 16·9, 28-16and 41·
25 at the quartermarks . '
The tournament will resume
Tuesday when Southern, 17-2, will
take on Hannan Trace in a 7 p.m .
contest.
In Tuesday's nightcap in lower
bracket action, Federal Hocking
will battle Eastern at 9 p.m. Eastem won its tournament opener last
week with a 61-23 victory over
Kyger Creek.

._....-':e:=l!l. .~ ...-

GALLIPOliS, OHIO

FEBRUARY SPECIAL

is beautiful ever-lasting grey grani
paign memorial is 62 inches long with
lovely genuine white marble'" flower

W.Va.

2611 Jackson Ave.
675· 2731

�Pog&amp;-C6-The

Ohio-Point

W. Vo.

Febructry-20, 1983

1983

Gallipolis tops Meigs 58-36 .i~ loop finale

LANE SHOWS GOOD FORM - Gallla Academy's senior center
Jamie Lane scored 20 points and picked oH IS rebounds lo paceGAHS lo
a 58-36 victory over Meigs Friday night. Marauder defenders are Greg
Taylor, left, and Nick Riggs, right. - Keith Wilson photo.

By KEITH WISECUP ·
ROCK SPRINGS - Jamie Lane
maneuvered his IH&gt; frame for a
game-high 20 points and 18 rebounds in leading the GalUpolls
Blue Devils to a 58-36 win over the
Meigs Marauders here Frid~y
night.
The Devils' smiling senior center
garnered all of his tallieS on 10 field
goals Inside of four feet. Lane, Who
sat out the final five and a half minutes, moved his third-place SEOAL
average to 17.l'a game.
Galllpolls stuck with Coach Jim
Osborne's game-plan of getting the
lnslde shot as 16 of the Devils' 26
field goals were within the five foot
range.
"We just had too much size on
them," said Osborne, explaining
the reason for the successful DevUs' Inside game.
"We capitalized on a lot of their
turnovers for some easy shots
also," added the dean of SEOAL
coaches.
Nick Riggs, a 6-0 junior guard,
led the Marauders with nine points,
his lowest output In over a month.
Riggs Is lOth In SEOAL scotillj( at
12.5' a game.
The only other Devil In doubledigtts was senior guard Lynn
Sheets with 15.
After gradually bulldlng a 30-16
lead at the half, GAHS dumped In
the first 11 points of the second half
to put the game out of reach.
"We didn't execute anything well
at all," commented Meigs' firstyear coach Greg Drummer. "We
let a few little things upset us early
and never did recover. Gallipolis
sure has some horses inside,"
added Drummer.
Gallipolls upped its record to 13-6
overall and completed league play
at 7-5, good for fourth place. Meigs
dropped to2-16inallgamesand0-11
ln SEOAL action. The Marauders
compIeted thelr r eguJar season Iast
·rught against' Jackson as did GAHS
with Pt. Pleasant.
The Marauders, limited to only
nlne field goals by the SEOAL's
stingiest defense, hit on those nine
In 34 attempts for a cool 'J:/ percent,
but canned 18 of 32 free throws for
56
t GAHS d llled 26 f 53
percen ·
r
o
shots from the field for 49 percent

I

and netted six of l3 foul shotJ for 46
percent.
The Devils ruled the boards,
grabbing 45 to Meigs' 19. Lane's 18
led GAHS while Meigs' scrappy G.o
senior foiWard Greg Taylor !Qpped
the Marauders with seven.
Each team committed 22 turnov·
ers. Meigs was whistled lor 12 fouls,
GAHS 26. The Devils stole the ball
17 times.
A couple of substitutes from each
school made the best of their
chance to play as Gallla's 5-10 juntor Ray Tope brought the Gallipolis
fans to thelr feet with his first ca·
reer bucket, a 17-foot jumper from
the.corner.
The Marauders' Mike Kennedy,
a 5-8 junior, native to spot action In
previous games, scored six fourth
quarter pdlnts and hUStled his way
Into several bumps and bruises,'
crashlnglntothewallsonbothsldes
of the court.
Imps Frost SEOAL Catre
GAHS' SEOAL champion reseiVes added a little Icing In flnlshlng loop play with a 54·33 win over
the Meigs reserv!!§.
From late ln the second quarter
to midway lnto'the third period, the
Blue Imps outscored the little Marauders 16-3 to take command at
36-20.
Smooth sophomore Brent Bostic
paced the winners with 19 whlle
Todd Bergdoll added 11. SophO'
mores Jackie Welker and Nick
Bush tapped Meigs with eight
·apiece.
GAHS hit on 22 of 47 shots for 47
percent whlle making 12 of 23 free
•thr~s . Meigs connected on 10 of 00
from the field for 33 percent and
canned 13 of 'J:/ foul shots. GAHS
had 25 rebounds to Meigs' 19.
GallipoUs ls now 16-3 on the year
and 1G-2 in the league. Meigs ts 3-15
overall and 0-11ln SEOAL action.

OP
10!12
1~

975
1042
1073

1179
1256

1100
1112
1110

'

SEOAL VARSITI'

TEAM
W
Athens .. ........... ........... ...... 10
Ironton ........... , .... ............. .. 8
Logan .................... ........... .8

L
2.
4
4

P
768
6811
7i8

OP
600

WavE&gt;rty ................. ....... ..... 5 7 TIS

m

5!ll
7tll
Call !polls ........ .... ... ............. 7 5 683 573
Jackson ................... ..... ...... 3 8 &amp;31 639
Meigs ............................... 0 11
749

m

TIJI'AL'!
Frlday'S re§u1ts:
Atherut 75 Jackson 65
. Gallipolis 58 Meigs Jji
t.ogan 56 Ironton 54

41 41 4683 4683

a,q-..., .

..

Galllpolls ........................... 12 12 ]!I 15--54
Meigs .. .................. ;•,............ ? 10 610-,131
I

u

I

play) .

SEOAI,.RESERVI!S

TEAM

WLPOP

f:~~ls.

.

::::.:~

:::

;

~~ ~

Athens ............. .. ............... 7 s 523 ;so
Waverly ............................ 7 5 423 413
Ironton ... . .... .. .................... 5 7 458 481
Jackson ................. ........... 4 7 398 455
Metgs .. .. .. .. . . ..... ... .. ,.. .... 0 11 422 553
TIJI'AI.'l
41 41 :IU7 3247
Frtday's results:
Athens 54 Jackson l&gt;
Gall polls 54 Meig&gt; 33
Logan 49 lrontoo 29
Tuesday's same:
Shelidan vs. Meigs. Oass AA Sectional at
Athens, 7 p.m.
Wednesday's games:

Washington CH vs. Wellston, Class AA ,:;ec.
tiona! at Unloto. 7 p.m.
Pt. Pleasant at Hundngtoo High

'l'lmnday's cames:
Ironton vs . Jacksoit, Qass AA SectlonaJ at
Portsmouth , 7:30p.m.
George Wa shington at Pt. Pleasa nt
(makeup)

Fdday 8 games:
1

N()rthwest VS. Portsmouth West. aass AA
Sretional at Portsmouth, 6; 30 p .m .
Athens vs. Marietta , Oass AAA Sectional
at OU, 6 p.rrl.
Lancaster vs. I..ogan, Class AAA Sectional
at OU, 7: 45p.m .

Hov. th£1 top-

rnnk('(l tram.-&lt; in 'Thr 1\s.~iatM Pn'''
Oh io hl.c:h. s&lt;'hoOI tlq\·~ llds kC'tball !XJ1l
farrtl :

•

Gallla's Steve Slddmore, who had several steals . in Gallla's

58,'16

I. Wm ·r·m WC'sl&lt;'rn H.N;f'rw EW. t_. •m
Wurrm H:l!'din~ n!l -liJ. ]ll ilv&lt;'d YounJ?SIOI\ O
Boankllilll Sa turda \·.
:!. F.u ..r l lrn •Lund Shuo.~·. J9.n. pla~'f'd nr
Cl!"'.'C'Iand HM,e:hls Sututdu \·.
, :1. C'a nton MrKLnlrv. Jfi.J. tx•at Cmuon
Timk1•n ~1-17 .
·
~ - l.ora ln King. 1!1·1. IX':1t 1\mh('l·-:t
'iR-~ .
!il('{']{' ~:~. l'x'al Fr(mOnl
.1. i\kl'Ofl CC'nlra i·I!Cl""i' t'. IK·I. l"ll'ill A~ ·
11on Kmrmr" n. .:ii.
fi. Da.\' ltil Dunl1tr. J)O.J, IX'&lt;tr \i n(•lnna11
Wnodward If ().~ . p i a~·~ na.1·1on MPaOOU·.
da lf' S.rrurd&lt;w.

n,,l'·"

Local bowling
Team
I'lL
No. 8 ..... .............. ... ..... ........................ 30
Tony's CarT)' ()ut ..••••..... ..• •....•••.... . •••••.. 30
Dde's Sport Shop .......................... . , ...... 28
SmMh-Nel!on Motors ..... ........................ tl
Feay's Tree Stn1ce ........ ... ... ....... ......... l9
EacJeo Ctub·..., .....:!" """
........ 14

. IDgh series - Bob Couda 541, Pat Canon

~: Cba~le Van

Meier 514, &amp;l1y Wbltlaleh

492.
llllh game - Bob Couch

A.:1 \

Fal l~ lfi.~

Vlllt~CC' O.t\".

·roUGET
WHAT YOU
PAY FOR

'.

11GER WRE8'JU;R -Mike
Rowan, a Wltteaberr; U~venlly
sophOIItOI'e from G•I!JpoHs, Is a
· member of the 1983 Wiltenbers
wreaUing team. Rowan, a graduate of Gallla Aeadelll)', 1s wresWng In the 1110-pqunct division.
The Tigers hope lo bnprove on
last year's elghtll place llal8h In
the Ohio Athletic Conference
under the direction of lOih-year
head coacb Dick DeDaplna. Rowan Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rowan, 335 Debby
Drive.

The Stil11' 028 Wood Boss • plenty at muscle tor any cutting
chore large or small. Easy to
handle. Wood Boss'digs its teell1
in and won't let up until you do.
There aie lots of chain saws on the
market, so why buy Stint? Simply
because you get what you pay tor!

RIDENOUR

Summer coaches
sought in Pomeroy
POMEROY - Coaches or
anyone Interesting In helping coach
with the Pomeroy Baseball Youth
League are asked to 11ttend a meet·
In g Tuesday. Feb. 22, at the oome rl.
Mike Wright, 285 Mulberry Aye.,
Pomeroy, at 7 p.m. ·
· The meeting is tn l'!gard to pony
league, llttle league, pee wee, minor league, T-baJi and girls' softball. All interested persons are
W'ged to attend.

SUPPLY
~ESTER,OH.

tiS-33M

ST/HJ:.

,
1

EAST MEIGS - In the Eastern
girls' junior high basketball tourna-

Ill~

Pat Canon

123: Charlie VanMeler 188, &amp;l1y Whlllaleh

189.
Team series - Zlde's Sport Shop 11161

Team game - Fetty"a Tree Service tm.

i. ToiMo Sl. Fnm1· i ~. r; . J. tx'ut Drtrolt
df' L.u~tlk• ill.:!i. pla_
, ·rn s~ · ]\·nniit [\;orlh
,- ]~· Sat urdu ~ · .

M, Cllwlnnall M()IJ nl Hf'alth,·. 1~1· 1. t.-;11
Clnrtnnutl Fna·i osl Purk ~-16. ·

~. Mld:llr'!w·n. IK-1. ix';.n """"'t th~lr~
l..;:tkolu ~~~ iii. hi'al Hamilton Ml-i:.!.

2. O.tK Hll rhOr. 1~ I), hfor11 Elmurt' Wood·

:l. C'nlumf"J.J ~ 1\-&gt;xl• "'· 1'1·1. fl •ut l\:l'\4.· AI ·

·

Wlll:lfd . 11&gt;- .l.JO!'t to Al:•tlrVIJ(' ti!H'I.

.''"o.

Akron S1. Vlnll'ni ·SI. Mary. 11{..1. tJ •uT

lx:-at St(l'.l' Wal~ h ~J~u l t

71-11:1.
pla,\'('fl l roruoo Sat·

urrl&lt;l\·.

7. · ColdwutC'r.

lf&gt;.:l.

lost to f)r •tpJn:.;

Sl. .Jotvf .~ liO :I;.
~ . rarn rd. lfl.l IX'ut !'imHt"t&gt;rs 9ti-a&lt;J, ktsl
lo

lnmplx-11 MC'mo•·taJ !(\.71
B. Wl'llsvlliP. l'i·:!. llf'al MlnflO .Junrllon

Minge ;,.H,J . pla:;·rd at Stf'uben\'1111' c·uttv•·
Ike n •iural Sa turd:~,·.
tn. Strulll!nll lllr;. JOH, tx&gt;ar Welnoh ,
W. Va . fl'l.f1l I'X'al Mm1lns FC'rl)· il~74 .
brut Cambrldi:!f' 7!1·72.

•'

••
J

CONSTRUCTION

THINK SPRING

~sk~-·
Special Spring Prices On All
ROOFING
VINYL SIDING
ALUMINUM or GALVANIZED SPOUTING
Call For Free Estimate 446-8253
SATISFACTION GUARANTEEO

W~NTED

!!!

Potential Home Owners
Are You Tired or Renting?
Would You Like to Own Your ·
Own Home??
IF YOUR INCOME IS BETWEEN
sg,ooo and s1s.ooo A YEAR
CALL NOW!!
' 992-7034

ROCK SPRINGS - Give credit where credit is due, and give
ex-Meigs High eager Mike Sayre credit for a reporting error by the
Sentinel last week.
It was reported that the current Meigs freshman basketball
team had tied the school record of nine wins in a seasiln with a 9-7
v
ledger this year.
·
,
In a polite letter, Sa}'l'e pointed out that his ninth grade team
(1970) po5ted a brllllant 14-1 record, losing only to undefeated
Ironton.
That MaraUder bunch went ori to have winning seasons in each
of tllelr final three years. Sayre Is best remembered as a junior wh~n
he banged home a 22 footer at the buzzer to beat Ironton 58-56.
Members o! that Meigs ninth grade team Included Blll and Andy
Vaughan, Mark Werry, Jim Boggs, RlchBaUey, Scott Walton, Jim
Birchfield, Jon Dlllard, Randy Cbatln, Blll Chaney, and Sayre. They
were ·coached by Blll Wickline~

Meigs ·girls win tournament

rnm• 14-!'1.'1.

1;1~1.

..

J

AI\
I. ColurnbJ ~ 'Nhlt•·h.tll. :.n o. tw•;.1t WP!&lt;t

n. Pm1,.rnJurh.

GAlLIPOLIS - The first Bowla-than In memory of Sam Levine
wlll be held March 12 at Skyline
Lanes. The event Is sponsored by
Century 21 Sou them Hills Realty to
benefit the Gallla County Easter
Seal Committee. ·
Ju,dy DeWitt of Century 21 said
the Easter Seal Bowl-a-thons all
over Ohio this year are honoring
the late Cleveland resident ·who
was execu tlve director of the Ohio
Bowling Proprietors' Association
and publisher rl. "The Cleveland
Kegler." Mr. Levlpe's death · oc·
cuned last July.
Participation 1s open to . all, regardless of bowling ability. School
grOups, clubs and organizations are
encouraged to take part
Participants are asked to sign up
spmsors for eacb point scored in a
three-game series. Sponsor klts are

available at Skyline Lanes or at the
Century 21 office.
Bowlers shoukl take their sponsor sheet to Skyllne Lanes between
1 p.m. {llld 4 p.m. on March 12.
When ·their series Is completed,
bowlers collect their sponsors'
pledges in order to be eligible for
'
prizes
.
Each bowler wDI receive a souvenir bowllng towel or wristband, a
t-shlrt or jacket, depending on the
number of sponsors obtained.
Bowlers participating in the
Bowl-a-tlx&gt;n will be bowllng for
more than just a prize, their efforts
will help provide services for disabled children and adults In Gallla
County, Ms. DeWitt pointed out.
"Wt: rope dozt!nS of bowlers, of
all a!!"S and ·levels &lt;i ·ability, wlll
make this a truly broad- based community effort," Ms. DeWitt said.

1970 frosh were 14-1 ...

·

Mo.~sll l o n 7t~lil,

TandyvisionN One by Realistic

ltl·:l. !raT Olrw.rrd

.a.

·-·

.

Lowest Price Ever on Our
Finest Video Game!

•

(1.,\."\.~

ban.' ' !r.-.11.

cage statistics

___. ::.. .__

Savesgo

..

rrvlll(• North·Jo.v,;J. br-at ('hilllc'Ot tw· ilf-4!1.

CHANCEY SCORES - Meigs' Rick Chancey (15) scores on short,
jumper over the reach of Gallla's Lynn Shets In Friday's SEOAL cage
game at Rock Springs. Chancey taiUed six points for the Marauders,
Sheets had 15.

Early Wednesday Mixed League
February~ 1983

X1.

high in

°

Skyline Lanes to host
Easter Seal bowl-a-thon

RIGGS WOKS INSIDE- Meigs' guard Nick Riggs (21) looks
IDtJide for teammale durin&amp; Friday's GAHS-Melgs league game In
Morrison 1)'111. In center Is Marauders' BIB Holcomb (4I). On left Is

How they fared
COLU ~ffiUS. Ohkl tAP 1 -

Eastern hlt 20 of 46 field goal
Moles was fouled and awarded two
Probert 2·1·5and Mal sat 4-0-8. Totall 211-lfl.a
CHESHiRE ·- Coach Keith the seconcj stanza.
Kyger Cl'f'ek faces the winner of
KYGER CREEK ( 12) - Clarl&lt; w.;; Malet
attempts
and 10 of i9 foul shots.
Senior
forward
JeH
Moles
led
the
free
tosses.
.
He
connected
on
the
Carter's K;yger Creek Bobcats had
that game at 7 p.m. Wednesday,
8-2-18 Bradbury 1 ·2~: Stroug 1.0.2: !me J.J.
The
Eagles
ptay
Southwestern
at
period
with
four
points.
second
ltlvlng
the
Bobcats
a
5248
Bobcat
first
to put on a late surge here Friday
9: D. Msrtlnl-1-.1; R.Mar11n2-2-6: VOIII'1 2.0.
Feb. 23.
advantage. Eastern quickly took 7: ~ p.m. Monday In the first round
ard Wa!Jih ().0.(), Totall2l·ll).•.
• '
night to defeat the upset-minded Bob Malson and Dave Gaul led
Box ICOI"e:
.
By~
Eastern
with
four
points
each.
the
ball
down
court
with
Colllns
of
the
Class
A
Sectlonat
Tourna·
Eastern Eagles, 52-50 In the regular '
· JWITERN (!10) - BJ.sseii6-J.l!l: Carpenter
Eas&lt;em .............................. 8 18 10 1~.
ment
at
Rio
Grande's
Lyne
Center.
Action
picked
up
in\
the
second
firing
a
jumper.
He
missed,
but
the
2-1·5: Guthrie~ Gaul ~13: CoDins 2.().4;
K. Creek ................ ............IO 19 H 10--!!lo
· season finale for both teams.
,.
rebound was grabbed by Gaul he
Kyger Creek l!nlshed with a 164 canto as bothteamsconnectedfor18
overall record, the best ln the points.
puttttnJustbefqrethebuzi.er.
~nk
~OC
c
Moles led all seorers with 18
school's c~ history. Last year, the
Kyger reek'soffensewasledby p&lt;ilnts. Httilng double figures for
RIO GRANDE -Three Rio from 'Racine, Ohio, and forward goalaccuracyat53.9percent.Hels
BobCats were 14-8.
· ·
Moles
and
guard
Keith-Clark
with
th
d
Grande
College basketball players . Bob Shaw, a &amp;8 sopbomore from atsoflrstlnfreethrowshootingwlth .
The victory also provided the
foW' points each while Ron Marttn· Eastern were Bissell wi 15 an
have been tanked In the latest Mid- Wheelersburg~ Ohio, are the Red· an 85.8 mark.
Bobcats a Second place flnlsh In the · and Brent Love had three points Gau! a· deled 13·
w If is ra nked n1nth In tree
. to the charts • Kyger Ohio Conference statistics.
men ranked In the statistics.
Aceo rd mg
SVAC behind champion Southern .each. throo e
76 2
Guard Jerry Mowery, a 5-8 soMowery 1s ranked seventh In
. w percentage at . .
f
th
C
k
ted
21
f49
Tonladoes. KC completed league
Pacing Eastern were Ro=r " ree connec on
rom e
Sh Is h In reba din tth
..fl ld d10 f16fro th f
scoring with an average o! 15..9
aw eig1th
un gw
play with an &amp;-2 record.
Bissell with eight.points an.d Mlk"
e an
m e ree throw pho.more from WUllamsport, Ohio,
69
~
lin
.
guard
Kent
Wolfe,
a
5-9
freshman
.
points
per
game
and
eighth
In
field
a11
average
o
..
Coach Mark Hartman's Bobklt- .Collins added four.
,::.·:::,:::es:;_·~----------=:::..:..:.:.:::---...:.::.~------=--..:....--=.
~----------tens won th~ SVAC reSeiVe chamWith 2: 35left In the third quarter,
pionship with a 9-1 record following
the game was tied at 36-36 before
Frlday's59-35vlctoryovertheLittle Kyger Creel&lt; put on another spurt
Eagles. In capturing the champion- for a 42-36 advantage.
ship, Kyger Creek's reserves deMoles and Love led the Bobcats
throned Southern's reserves which
that period with four .points apiece
have dornl)la ted In recent years.
whlle Malson and Gaul each had
Pacing ·the, llobkltteps Friday · four for the vlstors.
night were Steve Waugh and Kevin · Eastern got back Into the contest
Napier with 12 points &lt;!Piece hUe midway through the fourth quarter
Kevin Barker and Royce B!sseU as the Eagle defense continued to
canned nine points .each for East- apply pressure while Eastern's
•ern. Overall, the Bobcats complied offense stood by lt.s deliberate pace.
a 15-3 record.
A basket by BisseUand two by Jay
Varsity aCtion
Carpenter cut the Bobcat lead to
Friday's first period was a 5148 with 22 seconds remaining.
preview of things to come as both
Despite a tight defense, Kyger
teams traded baskets until the Creek managed to get the ball up
BObcats took ·a 10-S)ead going Into floor with 12. seconds remaining.

..

7 1336

(Ja ckson played at Meigs In makeup game
Saiurday night to com plete 1982-83 SEOAL

Kyger Creek ·surge tops Eastern, 52-50, in loop finale

°

MEIGS &lt;:Mil- Riggs 2·5-9: Edwards J.l.J:
Tayloe 1·24: Charcey 2·2-6: Evans 2-1-5:
Ken nedy 1-4-6; Hobson 0-2-2; WelKer 0.1·1;
Fisher~. TaWs !l-IS$.
By quarter"'
Gallipolis ..........: ...... .. ..... 12 18 17 11-58

)'letgs ................ ...... ......... 5

The Sundoy Timesi:ntinei-Page-C-7

Three Rio players

~.J:.i'~~:1: Duncan I.Q-2: 'foiJe 1-0-2 . ro-

,.

Wheelersburg 86 Northwe!\t fi1
· W!Im.ington 4l6 Washington CH 51
Alexander 69 Vinton County 46
Ponsrnouth 66 Greenup 63

n.;.,.,
.

Welker 3-2-8; Gheen 2-1-5;
~
Fisher 1·0-2: Bush H-8: Powell 0-1·1· Shant
~. TOTAU11f.IHI.
'
'

(Vanity!

907

llg)
1194

I ••)

GAU.IPOUS (58)- Madloon2.cH: EUces50, 142: Lane ~~: Sheets 5-5-IS: Sktdm a ce 1.0·2: Cartee 1.Q-2; Clack 4-0·8:
E delmann ~: Wolle OM: Garber ~

Cage standings

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Wheelersburg ._............. ...... .17 2 1ID7
Portsmouth ...................... ..l6 3 1315
Gallipolis .............. :.. ......... 13 6 1002
Athens .................... ..... .... , 13 .7 1263
Logan
...... , ... 11 9 1215
Pt. Pleasa nt : ....................... ? 8 989
Ironton ......... .
. ........... 9 10 1061
Northwe;t ... . . .
. ........ ..... 9 10 1070
Alexander ......
. ..... .... 8 U 119tl
Waverly .. ,....
. ............ 8 12 U!ll
Jackson .......
. .. ........ , .... 7 12 1176
W9.:5h1ngton CH ............... .. 6 12 996
Meigs...... .....
. .... 2 16 860
Ncn-8EOAL results:
Huntington High £6 Pt. Pleasant 48
Waverly 00 Southeastern 56

(P

OAU.II'Ous (N) - Be.PD 3-5-il; Boi·
tic s-3-19: Carty 2-2-6~ l'li8MI '-1-9; FeUure
1.().2; Beavor ~ P ... ualo()M; SpJete l.Q2: MacKI!azle 0-1-1: Woodnun 1.0.2: Owens
I.Q-2; Maeb OW. 'I'OTAUIII·!Hl
MEIOII cal - w1ae 1·1..!: 01ucey 1.u;

7·~ ..Late

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-PQint Pleasant, W. Vo.

• Fits alcoves up to 64" wide and 32" deep. Walls are 58"
high .
• High-impact copolymer plastic is easy to clean and
mildew resistant.
·
• Two molded-in soap dishes-one positioned for bath
and one for shower height.

$

NOW ONLY

'·

.
'

2~''

..
)'

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND

SUPPLY COMPANY

I'

312 Sixth Street 675• 1160 Point Pleasant
·
Store Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m ., Sat. 8 a.m.- 12 noon

:I
~

.'

"'
(~

'
'

'

t

ment at Eastern High School
Thursday, Meigs claimed a convincing 23-11 triumph over Federal
Hocking thus claiming the tournament championship.
Eastern .rolled to a 36-22 trtumph
over Southern in the Consolation
event to take third place In the Eastem Athletic Boosters sponsored
event.
In the cbamplonship thriller,
Meigs darted Into a &amp;2!irSt period
lead, then maintained a close g.7
advantage at the hall
A strong second hall by the hustling Marauderettes teyelled a
strong Federal Hocking etlort that
gave Meigs a 14-8 lead after three
periods. Six points by Marla
Musser In the last round burled the
Lancer~.ttes' hopes and Meigs
coasted home with the 23-11 win.
Musser led aU scorers with 14
points, Jen Mlller lt8d four, J.

'

Couch three, and R. Zirkle two. J.
Cuckler had six for Federal, Motley
DeLaval two, K. Cbapman two,
and D. Bennett one.
In the opener Tanya Savoy tossed
In 20polntstolead Eastern toa36-22
win over Southern. EHS led 14-10 at
the half then blew the game open In
. the third round to take a 26-15lead.
In tile last round Eastern coasted
home for the 36-23 final.
Besides Savoy's 20, Beverly WIgal had eight, Janett Werry four
and Erica Kessinger loW'. For
Southern Rachel R£'lber had nine,
Karla Smith five, Joyce Foreman
lOW', Donette Talbott two, and JenDlter two.
Jenny Miller and Marla Musser
were named to the all-tournament
team from champion Meigs. Jennie Cuckler was named from Federal Hocking, Rachel Reiber from
Southern and Tanya Savoy from
Eastern.

159

95

~attel l;lectronics, Inc. • • TM Sears . Roebuck &amp; CO .

Our Best Pocket Computer Cut 29%
TRS-SQ® PC-2 by Radio Shack

""'

""'¥'""

SUPERTAPE®by Radio Shack
VHS T-120 (Up to 6 Hours)

0

1295

199!~79.95

""

([J~EIJ(!JUJI::JCiilOJW{!JDDDDD

m ill m w m ill !;'HD 0 a a a a at

CIJ[jJ[DGJIDGIG1CDciJGJDDDD

arn ac=:~ =i!l~cbaaaa

Reg. 16.95

... :

..·...
-..
..•.'-.'.
..
.- .-.

.

•,
"

.·
.-

24%

Ott

Computing power !hat goes
anywhere! Add optional
cassette recorder and inter·
face for our ready;to-rtjn
· • Programs in Extended Pocket BASIC
software. #26-3601
• Typewriter-Style Keyboard

....•.
-' -··.

Digital-Synthesized
Stereo Receiver

-.-..
.. . ...

.-.·

STA-111 by Realistic"'

.-:...:.·.--

lll tl! t! !1j! i lII \\\\ \\'X•m·~~~~-.

.
...
.. ......
-..
•••
.. I ,.'\"

30 watts per channel, minimum rms iolto 8 ohms
from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.02% THO

Save
$140

219

95

Reg.

Reg.

199.95

359.95
• Time-Saving Automatic Search Music System
• Dolby"B NR • 2-Coior LED Level Meters

• Programmable 12-Station (6 AM/6 FMI Memory
• EO Button tor Enhanced Bass With Mini-Speakers
• Precise Tuning With Digital Frequency Readout

Soft-touch tape controls make .it easy to use. ASMS
senses silence between songs to automatically advance to the next selection or replay a previous one.
Selectors tor metal, CrO, and normal tape, record and
search mode indicators. #14-620

No tuning dial-just hold a pushbutton to scan stationto-station, locking-in each perfectly. Recall any stat1on
in memory with the touch of a button . LED Signal
strength indicator. #31-2002

'T M Dolbv LabOratories licens.ng Corp .

High-Performance CB
With PA Cut 40%
TRC-421A by Rea,listic

Oplimus®T-11 0
by Realistic

Save·s4o
Help and info are just a button
away! Jack tor external speaker lets
you use CB as a mobile PA. Lighted
S/RF meter, LED channel display.
#21-1502 With mounting hard'!Vare

59!.5.... ~

The Origioat Weatheradio® Phone Extension
for Instant Forecasts Cords By Radio Shack
1.

I

By Realistic

28°/o
Off
.
'

VINTON ~ Scotty Marcum set a
Vinton Elementary Rlnky Dink sin·
gle game scoring record as he

'

·Save 54 on VHS and Beta
Video Cassettes

Save sao

Pirates, Knicks win RD cage contests

=! '

Poker/Blackjack Cartridge Included
Enjoy the most exciting graphics,
sound effects and color available . ·
38 games available. Attaches l!asi!y
to any color TV. #58-1 000
.

Uses tntelllvlsion • and Sears Super
Video Arcade • • cartridges

'

the Pirates rolled past the Blue
Devils 25-5. Pirates - BenJI BlackbW1112, Steve Geo1'8" efght, Cbester Hess two, Bradley Mlller IV!&lt;&gt;.
~~asai~ Knlcks de- and Ron Petrie one. Blue Devils This game was. close tl\i'ough . Ricky Spears three, and Jeff Ratlltf
three quarters but the Knlcks h8d a two:
'
16-2 scoring edge 1n the fourth quarFlaal Standings
ter. Knlcks - Scotty Marcum 21, ~
W.L
Earl Bennett six, and Tommy Piates ............................. 6 0
CampbeU five. cettlcs- )31Uy WWI- \ Kittcks ·.............................. 4 2
UI1IOl1 10, Kevin BaUey two, and Ceitlcs ................ : ..... i.. ,. ..... 2 4 .
Dewey Hunt two.
Blue Devils ........ ;.............. 0 6
BenJI BladdJurn had 12 points as

Reg.
249.95

Buy any 3 game cartridges and II 4th cartridge of your choice
wfll be sent to you by
Mattei Electronics.
Hurry-offer ends
314/83.
Get Details at Your
Nearby Radio Shack or
PartlciPfllhtg Dealer

*1295
leg. 17.95

No commercials, no interrup1ions. just continuous ubdates from VHF National Weather
Service stations. N12-181 Battery••"•

25·Foot Modular

:; 488
.

Reg. 5-95

Half
Price

...•

'o

I

'

..

...
'·..
••

.

~

••
'•

..
•

89!! ·
Reg. 179.95 Each

• 8" Woofer and 10" Passive
Radiator Deliver Solid Bass
25~ I)QQ
Off , - - • 2" Liquid-Cooled Tweetar
Reg. 3.99 Buy two at the regular price of one!
Tweeter has acoustic lens for improved
Tatk from anywhere in the
room. Instant plug-in connec- dispersion . Genuine walnut veneer.
35 1 /ox12 1 /2X11 1 12~N40-2037
.
tions. N279-35612'79-1261

"

.."'•

~ ·

•

30-Foot 4-Prong

•

l
PRICES MAY VARY

STORES

DEALERS

...••

�.. '
.

.'

•

'

Page-CS- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pome,Oy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasa~tt, W. Va.

High school cage scores
Ohk,

1\dtTl . t

IU ~t h

Sdnol n. ,,. ~ ll:...,lo:toth:a/1

K} 'lltl• \.•I'•HI'I~~'Cl l"rt'h!oo
t'rld:ty',. K.,.uko;
IT i'.•m•' Tt-.n · 7~

Crow-port til , Col. W~lland ~
Ca ch m. M{'adowh~k ~
Hamil!on Rm~ :l.'l. K i n~ l4
Hardin N . fili. Cocy - Raw~ton -Ill
Hlclcsvtlk' '\1, AV('I"Svil)(l !'\2
Hilliard r.1. w ,;ro·rv Uir 1'\. 4fi
.1oM Glmn 91. W. Mu:;klnl!\lm R'l
.JohnStown ~7. f. ranviUC' M
./

\

Akn •n C'o\{111" 1:1, Mrdlnil IIJghland

:r.

Akron S1. \ ' !'it M 71. wat.h ./('sui! fi.1
AJ • · "mdl ~ ~. \ 'imon Co ·Mi
A\flfl Lillo.t • tfl. Wr--tl.ilttl •n

B,.rt••t1fln 'IR, Ck'\'1', St IJ.;n&lt;1riU' tit'
lil'd\'1'1\' l'f'f'k 11. Spr-ing L\tll'lh -t'-1
lh!fnn.l Chanpl ~ . Lllit• l"mh Ill
Brl prt• "&gt;! . Wo.~rrrn Ux:al ."ll. :n i'
lil--rlut Hlland 7:!, Kidron ( 'hr. :t2

Kullda h"i, OttQ\111_11' ~
Krn .~ t on ~. Aunra h1
K_\'~Cr l')-(o(o-k 52. Rf'Cd~'\' llll' Easlt•rn ''II
Llf:llr~t CmtC'r 6ti.- Montj)('IWr 'ii
Llrk l n~ Val . 7R Uddn ~ Ht.&lt;i. ffi
Li ma 7'!. W. ChNiTC'r I.W&lt;ota !*
Lima C'hr. ~1 . !\1 arJnathn Chr ~I
Llrl ril ShnwrKl• il'l, Crl ina :'i l

ll•JI. u·lt• tnt;. nuckP.·f' s . '1'2
ll ·llt"\1K' fJi Wil t.utJ
l~ ·~ k-..

-~

~""' '"barn II
Ui~ W.dmlt Qt. G rand\' ~' iiU

117.

l..ot'kland 6.1, C'l n. LandmarkS:!
I Jli;!M ~ . I!'Or) ton ;-.1,
LL~an El m 71. l.an('asl{'r F isher

Canton McNnlC'\ ;~ 1. CantOO Tim~.;,,, ~i
C'h t~rln F~tl ~ ~ 1 .

l ol Mi fnir.

'

fij , Col. W&lt;d nur l'tidJ!P

II
Dl ' lp ln~

Sl. .John rill. ( oltl\l'Utf'r 'i7

Dt •lrii ti.'l. A rtt1b.old ft.1_ O T
Oublln t~i. .lonurhan flldC'r t'.'l
E. Pa lcsii11C' li2,· Uni1N::I Loe;1l -~
N. ffi, Ma Vflf'ld fil

7:!. P rC'Iit· Sh;tWilH' 1?1
Elldu 71. Ottawu-Giandorl h'..!
Fu&lt;'l ld Rl . lhlfonl ':{1
F; tlr fkld K l, f'ln . Prinn' IOn
~-u lr l('l;-. ~.

ll

Tern piC' C'hr. fH. Mkldlf'I O\\·n Hf'rlr a.~:,-. fi~
T iffin Catvrc1 ffi. Frm;ont Sl . ,J()S(l)h .'14
Tlpp CIT:\' i:.!, Slctl~· L('hman &amp;l
To! . Bow~r ~- Woodv,;urd ~• I
Tol. Cm r r&lt;~ l R'i. T o!. Sta11 \1
Tal. DI:&gt;Vtlbl s.~ Iii, T ol. Wail £' -~~
To! . Maromlx&gt;c· il. Tol . Lllb'\· 46
Tal. ST. F r;rnC'I~ iR [){-lroit d,, Lt&amp;tllf'

Hlllsboro Ill

Man&gt;~ .

S!. Pf'll"'" ~'1, Strasbu r~: ~!+
Mapl1• Hr s. ~- Wllk/UJ,thb_\• S .-i
Mr'dina ti7. N. Olm!oi!t.:l ~

Mrnlor i:l. C'lr..-c•. RN~ h m
Miam i \ ':t i l£'.'' ~-F.. Clinron -i.l
MltXller r.w m ~ 1 . Ham ll1c.r i:l
SI&lt;~M~~IM ~:n F'C'mdc k 72. S. Char leston

"

Tnt Sr. Jolin li:, Strllch -12
Tnl ~11 f\.1, Tol. Roj;cPr-s ~
Tol. Whilmrr iii. Af&gt;dford. MIC'h. 51

Midpark nt lllm'&lt;l 42
Mllli'l' CIT:\· 90. Fort .Jmnio~ n-1

Trl'nton F:d.~:f'll·ood 61. M iam l~bur2 !'il
Trl·ValiC'\' .it'), Ma\ 'SVllJC' -IR
Tt·I·VIll~f' ti1. T\~·ln Va11('1.· S. -t!
Trorwood Madlo;on tifi. r.r.-Y.n\illl' -l-'1
Un io nr~· n Lakr l:iti, N. Canton 57
U p(X'r A1'll ~ (ln j'll. W('!;ff'f\11](' S. -UI
l.Jt iC'a IJI. Nrvourk C'ath. fii
\'an BUI'('f'J 7.'. PanOOra ·Gillxlt.l jiJ
\'andalla-But!C't' fo-1, Pi:Jua 5;!
VPI'Si;lillf'!o; ."il. Mi ami F:aM ~

Mlll&lt;'rsport ffi. ralrfld d Unkm i1
Mi nford f{l, L lK'a&lt;&gt;vllk&gt; Val . 4ti
Mot\Nl('\-Uit• ~ . Bla{·k- Rl\'c•r 11'1
r-.'lor~&lt;!an 7t She-ridan Gi
7\'apolron 6'1. ~n Cia\· llJ
NPbon\·Jif'-York !ll. Tr~biC' 71

NN'

7:l

Booton

F\l r~r l'l'

F ranklin

GJwn-&amp;11

N('ll.· BJ"C&gt;mm !\;!, MlnsiC'r ~
N{'V.' K floxdllrr

f"i. MroOOn

Wu rrrn

U nion 4.1

NP.\'Ilrk til, 7.anf'!!Yill(' 00
Nol"\l.';t,VI'l(' iJt, Sml!lli.'U](o :f.!
N. Col ~" Hln 70. C"l n. Cl"fl('&gt;fl hllls In
N RI&lt;Rr-.·Uif' 70. Amhr-1'!\t Stn' IP t&gt;1
N. Rl.~·a Jr on '»\, Bl«'ksv UIC' ';'!i
l"orthwwd 7!\, l.akeskiC'67
Norton 91. F'lc·ld m

Wa rrm \\' . R&lt;¥1"\'f' ffi. Wun·t'll Ha n::ll!l,l&lt;

hl

Wa!Xlkonf'ta )(l. sr. M ar.·~~
WHikln.~ Mf'mor·Jal

~~

Fnstorlu n'"•. S~•lvil nia Nor tll\' IN' ;,I

:Iii

C a raWa\· -114. Nf'WC'OITlf•r.;too·n -~
(~'fl t•vo !il. A.~ htu bulu Sr . .John 1~
f A'fiO:r 'il. CII)K)nbuf'R ~12
C~ hm ~- &amp;tu~-1&lt;~ ~;

(in '('nflf'ld McClain ~1. Clrl'lc'\: llc
Cr"('('nnn 7.1, Brllclo n t a~(' ~

:.&gt;

ifi, HCltron l..ak('Y.'OCX!

"W:n·&lt;'rJ:.·

~1. Rl&lt;"hmoncl Dal(' SE !ill
Wa.v /l("!(fi&lt;' ld-C!l'I'IC'n 7-l Ohio ("jty :H
WC'll lngton +.fl. Lora in 81-oo k.~lcF ~
Wf'li:-\·Jilf' M. Min~l :'il
Y. . ll ran t"tr ill. Wul !'rlou Ii-I

Norwood .'1 1, .Cin . Thfllln -t'l

:..-.

C hari'lp~n ~- 't' Oll n~- I. IIX'I1,\ ' ~

Warren How land 71. NilM Mr l\lnl('\· -l7
War1-rn La Brat'~. Badgf'r ~lt
·

Oak ·C im , W . Va . ~ . E . l.i\'t'rpool -t !
Oak Hartxlr R.I. WtlQ(t'OOrf' ~1
Oak Hill 7:\. C'oal Gron• 1\.1
{)b('rlln Ofi. Lorain CIN:rY[rv.· ~li
On'\'HIC' 1¥1, 1\l&lt;;('arawas \'&lt;Jl. ft.!
Painf"oi\'liiP Harvc•.l ' i£, Pv ma tun l n .~: \':1 1.

w. Hol m~ ; n, Triv.-a\

:\1

W. .l f'ffN'SOJl :~ . Mar~·s\-ilt(' '\i
W. Llbrt1 _\'·SaiC'111 11:!. lXGrati Rhw"it.-,

51

Palrlr \ 'al. :fi, Hunlln.cton 2-1
Parma f.4 . Qlrfif'lfl His. 1\1
Pnrma Hoi~- N&lt;• mt• 1\1. G ll rmu r .fj

W. SIJ I('ffl r&gt;.:on h\4'1'StC'm 7ti . Dil ltoo '11{
Whi'f'lf't':'lbu~J: Jti. Md)rr nToll l\'W lit
Whll('hall Ill , C'hlllirotlx- t.l
\Vhlti'OOk fi.l. f'(\( •blf'S 1i:!

Girls scores
Cla.,..; ,\,\ Twmarrnt'lb

f\ll'l"- Wf'Sr ti.. W. Uniun 61

F'u rmin].:ton :11. Rrl, td ~ lJ
Ft-o•ml Hockin~.! ti!l . Wdl~1on rJH
(;atHJ)()]I ~ :~ . MPigs

Plain ~ ~-

=

r lr$1.1 nl 9R, Rid2f'dal(' £1
Punsmouth ~ ;. G~Wnu p, K \·, 6.1
Pons. na\· 71. Pons. Ea.~r ~~

~~

AkrOn Manrh(lSif'!'

~

PlrkfflnJ.(Ion ti!t, MI. Yf'rrv,n 5-l
Piketon li2. Unlolo ~1

~~iliOn

Sou t h'-~...,_.

SliM' -r.i. Ravmna 7U
T,alu\l."andn tii. L£omon-MoiU'OI" 00
Tanm oclj;w at N01'donla 51
T(la:-,; Va l. f&gt;.l. Miami 't'r-u("(" 61
Tt"Wffilif&gt;h ffi. Clarton NOrrhmOnl · $ .

Pl• lf'rshu r~ ~prl n.~:. 77. I.CM•, ·Jh·illr• il'l
Pr&gt; tt L~\'liJ(' 7M. Fa\'('11£&gt; :lH

Ea~ !I:Jkr •

F.lnia ~•- Lorain -~
F.l\ rill W_ ~- Lora in

Mad ison

112

C01 Sourh &lt;i7, Col. Linck'll Md\lnlfo\· ft!
Col \\";oHP!'l'l l/1 77. Col. Wf'hril' 70 '
Col \\'hf'l ~lont • til. Col F:a~Hnoor ~ .
&lt;'ll lumhu ~ Grt)I.'C' 7.1. Pa ulding ;,7
Cn))k.w ll lt• +i-1. Philo -r.1
Cu~·;• ho g'J ra J ~ t.i . •\kron Sprl n ~ . 17
Dil\' . llt'lmonllll. Fairl:.-•rn :.j
Dd\ , C'ilrl'Oil "•'1. DUI StC'hbiiL'\ l~l
Da\ Ottkwoxllll . Oa\ . Chrl&lt;itlan ·lr,
Du\ WavnC' ~ . Sprin~. South 1W
J)( •flann• Iii , \'&lt;r n Vl'f'rl :12
[)'l ~ ~·:rr&lt;' +ii, Col Fr~ n klin ti L-. .,,
Dr • l plu~ ,Jt'fh·l"ii.Jil '"•1. U p~JT ~ioto \ ".d.

'\1
~anron i!J .. lt'ffcnooo Union fll
Slf'Ubrnl'lllr 'm, Cum bd~f' i'l

London !ih. Urbilna a.l
Lomln Kina 7'il, .t ·mnont ~ IX
ILJ!JI&lt;;VlJlC' AA, E . CCl nton t~t
!.ll'&gt;'f'iand !iii. Millon.! 4~•

Carlflo•ld ti7. Weti'IHI KPtlfll:'(l\' •-,1;

\\'. (-d'&gt;&lt;~u.c: • ·17
Chitlrtuthl• Fl.iS!f'l ')2. \\'('\11:!11 +I
Cin F:J~r '{, , Cln Sr X..t\'k•r• l'i
t'in Hue two; :,1, l in . ,\lknl ;.()
Cln L.1~1llf' t&gt;l. C1rt R.:IC'On li:!
lin -~urt hwo'!-1 i'l\ Cin Ant.;r&lt;&gt;on \:l
t'in . Oak Hil l s~ . lin Coh•raln ''ti
l in. Purw ll Ma rl&lt;111 h:l. C'ln. Modlt•r \'1
r irl I'U•;dn c jJ , fin,....,.·Joo·n hl
Cin. Sunun ll !ft. Cln Sl lll•r · n;~rd ' II
I 'In, S\'('110'101'(' tti. Milrlmlonl 10'1
f'l n Tull ~ I , Cln . Woo:IW&lt;~ rd 7ti
('ill Walnul Hill&lt;• It!. Cin. Wllhl'QI'.' til'.
Cln . \\\ ornln~ O.l H&lt;J ITi&lt;;[)n fi.1
Clf';u Fork Iii, f'r('{k·rickTCJI.\'n -! I
C'lo\"t' r'lfl al "ii. \\"a&lt;tw:or1h !'fl
C"l:oclf&gt; 7ti. S..mth.l'k\' Sl . Man n
t 'ol Ac;,tk-nll &lt;11. Olt'rlt. m ~ "ii
i'ol (Mim nl&lt;~l ~ . \of Brl.cgs ~
rol DPS:rl~ ~H . Col. Rf'11£]\' ·,:z. OT
f'u l Hamilton Twp. :H. Rc~m· Union ·r.
l 'nl lndl-pmtk'nCI"· R.l t ol. I::Vsr 7!1
Cui Marlon-frrtnklln 1-fl. r·oJ. i\ort h.l&lt;Jnd

f'&lt;l.~ l('l[l

Linrolnvk'•w G.l Ada i'i

Rluom Carroll 'it U lrm Union.\&gt;
. llltrkt•v(' \'il l at. :-,: L'nbn ~
Caldwl'U II , Skwut• ,'tl
Campbl•ll .i\.lt'll lori:U ~l. C.ir.u1J 71

.•

Shfttanr.lnah It), Barnr:'!i.dlll' til
She-rwOOd F'alnl~' 61. Wa ~ IV' ThaC'C' !J6
!'ldn&lt;';Y II), ~ !WI,
&amp;lion T.l. 1\t.•ln..W!J: 6.1
S. Ra n~ !'\2. Columbiana .'IJ
S. Wrtl;lt1' W, Por1s. Noti'T' Damr S:Z
~ttllnp:~on it, 1-0t"();;CM•n ~
Spar1.a Hl,olhland ~- I Rd~on ~
Sp(&gt;r!C'C'tvlllc i11. Allm F:. IJl
Spr lnJ!Ixro itl. Bl_an&lt;'hC'Sf'('i- ~~
. ~rinJt. 1'\o r1 h~·t:'S i l:'11J ~. Kmton Rl(\re
47
SprlnJ:. ShuWfl('(' 6\J, Sprtne. North·

C.~.~t·r~·

J\

Rlll'lnl' Soulhl't·n ~WI, P atl'iol !o."W +1
RrnJJid&lt;;burg li!i. G;1h:urna f\l
Rl!lm..:m :an. Hill'&lt;iall' ,.tl
RlvN 7.1, Woodsflrld ~I
Rl\'l'f VI('V,' 7:1, i\f'V,· I .{'XInJ!Ion t-11
Ror:i::_v Rlw r til, F'ali"\'il'w Park jl)
S! . Hf'flry 7ti. F'oq R('("(J\'( '1':\ -U1
St. Clalrsvllk' 7!i. Toron1o ~
~ ll'm Ill, S1ru1 hflrs ;{l
SC'brln !! ~ - Malvr--rn ~ - :.~
Shad ~·si&lt;k' i'!t. BtiCkf'yf' N. SO
ShaltC't' His. !i9, Parrrur \'al l~· Forpr' ~~ I

Rrookl,\'n :it. C"lf'\'f', C'f'n r r:rl Ca_rh. -lil
Cana l F\lltor1 ~W .' t... M(&gt;dlm• Rut:kf'''''

.

Da ~ .

Oakw001t li6. Arook\·illf&gt; :tl

Kf'ntnn Rleil(' -II•, At&gt;njamin Logan
.1 ; 1(-k~on :ll
l"orv•a .~ I'M' ~~ - Smilh\'illr ~
Olm~ ll'd Falls -1~1 . Lut hl't·;m W. r::t
Ponl'. WI'S! -1-1 . Ironton :rr
?.pi· in ~h:!m ii:l. Ma ~.111 :,-,
~lrulX'nvil\C' tit. BtK·kr;.•C' ~- ~4
\ 'a ile,· VlN ' .' n, Arranum :it
Vr•rsuilk"' ~-1. &amp;•11c(on'taint• ~
Winl(lN'IIIr -11. WC'Ihwillf' -10

~~

Mlnfu 1rl H'J,

February 20, 1,.3

Re dmen host Jackets in
final cage .co·n test Tuesday
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College"s ·Redmen wm close out
their regular·season Tuesday night
when they host Cedarville College
in a Mld·Ohlo Conference clash at
the Paul R Lyne Physlca,J Educa·
tlon Center.
Game time Is set for 7: 30 p.m.
The Redmen are 22·8 on the sea·
son, 10.21n the MOC. Cedarville, the
defending NAlA District 22 cham·
pion, are 15-11 overall aild &amp;.6in the
MOC.
"Cedarville is a well·coached and
disciplined team," said Rio Grande
head coach John Law!iorn . "We ex·
peel a good contest from them as
we head into the tournament."
The Yellow Jackets wi)l'come to
town with the most potent offense In

.'S tate/ ational

the MOC. Cedarville is averaging
Pryor is connec\lng tor 12.9 points,
81.6 points per game behind the
BUI Hamlet 11.4 and Tom Greve
scortng laleots of Dave Carr, who is
11.3.
averaging 15.6 point!; per game.
Carr Is the top rebounder, aver·
Last week, the senior captain
aging 8.8 per game.
·'
moved up three notches to 12th
Rio Grande will be led by guard
place on the all·time Yellow Jacket
Jerry Mowery, who Is averaging
scoring list with 1,164. He is only
15.9 points pet game. He is shootJna
two games away irom tying the
54 percent from the floor and 86 pel'
school's all-time games play\ng r~
cent from the free throw line.
,
cord with 111 appearances.
Two other Redmeri are averag'·
Carr is shooting 50 percent from
lng In double digits. Forward Dan
the floor and 70 percent at the free
Curry Is averaging 15.1 markerS
throw line.
per outing while John Maisch is at
Tim Danul;le is close behind In
12.2.
scoring. He Is averaging 15.3 points
The Redmen boost the league top
per game while shooting !!6 percent
free throw shooting team (72.5) and
from the floor and 80 percent atthe . are secon,ct In rebound percentage
free throw line.
(54.5) and third In offense (77.5).
Three other Yellow Jackets are
Tuesday night's. game will also
scoring in double digits . Tony
mark Ohio Valley Bank Night.

open to fishing during 1983, but
should produce the best fishing dur·
ing the 1984 and 985 seasons. The
largemouth bass, bluegill, and
channel catfish stocked in these
ponds wlll provide enjoyable fish·
1ng for years to come. This work
was conducted by the wlldWe resources division through a joint ef·
fort with the city of Pt. Pleasant,
the West VIrginia N&lt;~tlonal Guard,
the Southwestern Senior Commun·

J enkins, a junior, tied his career
scoring high by hitting 15 points In
t he second half. He was 1Hor·ll
from the foul line; including three

lty Service Program, and the sou
conseiVatlon service.
Management activities designed
to improve fishing at McClintic Jn.
elude annual weed tteatment of all
fishing ponds open year around,
fish populatlon su!VeyS, and reestablishment &lt;:A balanced fish popula tlons. McClintic Wlldllle Statloft
\s , 'ocated five Ull1es north of Pt.
Pleasant and one mile east of Sta!t'
Route 62.

THUMBS UP - Senator Jolul Glenn appears to
be giving the thwnb8 up sign as he greets supporters
In Colwnbus Friday nlghl at his kick off fund-raiser

clutch tree throws in the last three
minutes.
Xavier improved to 1·3 in lhe
conferenceand11Hioverall, tbebest
Xavier mark since Its 1&amp;.10seasonot
1963. Detroit fell to 5-5 in the ·
conference and 9-13 overall.
Xavier ran off nine straight points
to lake a 25-211ead In the first half
and held on for a 3&amp;.27 advanlageat
the half.

4 cyl., 4 spd., 12,500 low miles.

$6488

McDERMaiT, Ohio (AP ) -An overhea ted wood
Electric Co., Marshall Julian , said the Spencer's
stove may have caused a house fire that claimed four
electricity was disconnected Nov. 16. 1981, because
lives, a firefighter says. A utility spokesman says . they had not paid their bill in three months.
electrical service could have been restored at the
They owed $M and could have paid one-third of the
oouse for Jess than $31
bill or 15 percent of their Income, whichever Is less. to
have power restored. he said.
Harold Spencer. 26, esc ,· ~ from his burning
house Friday but ran back u.,.de to get his three ' Mrs. Spencer contacted the utlllty In January for
children. Spencer and the children perished. A
restoration of power and was directed to the Scioto
County Community Action Agency, a . routine
neighbor restl"alned his wife. Sharon. 23. to make
certain she didn 't go back into the flames that
procedure. Julian said.
Eugene Collins, the county' s Heating E m ergency
destroyed the three-room house on a hill in vlewofthe
Rush Township Volunteer Fire Station .
Assistance PrOgram director, said Mrs. Spencer was
Firefighters said the bouse hml no uttlities and was
given $nlln November 1982 for the stove.
heated by coal and wood. They said the family used
"She did return in January . but we expla ined that
we can only assist one time in a program year."
candles and oO lamps for light. Firefighter Nathan
Mummert said the fire was believed caused by an
Collins said.
overheated wood stove.
.
Bernice Goodson. 61. who lives next to the fire
station and ha ndles its a larm and radio. said Mrs,
""There was nothing but the shell left." he said.
"Our station Is within sight of the house which ls·on a
Spencer awoke her about 5:45 a.m. yelling that the
hill across the street from the station and maybe two
house was on fire.
·
'
blocks away. It was engulfed when we got there. The
"I sounded·the a larin," Mrs. Goodson said, "Then 1
woman had escaped through a window in the house.
held her here at my house until the fire trucks left. I
and she came to the station to turn In the alarm and
didn't wa nt her running baCk in that house. She went
!hen went back.'"
·
on back as soan as the firemen were on the way
because I knew they could keep her from going back
A spokesman for Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
in. "

1979 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
Small V·B, air, cruise, PS, PB, new tires.

1981 CUTLASS LS
V-6, air, cruise, PB, PS, only 23,617 miles, wire wheel
covers.

$4888
1979 DODGE 4X4
NOW

POWER WAGON
318-V-8, auto., PS, PB, CB.
NOW

$6988
.1980 CHEV. MALIBU
SHAR~

2 dr., V-6, air cond., PB, PS, It blue.

,$4688

RIO GRANDE - Guard Jerry
Mowery of Rio Grande College has
been named "Player of the \VE!ek"
in the NAlA District 22.
Mowery. a 5-8 guard from Willi·
amsport, Ohio, averaged ·28.5
Points and seven assists pe~ game
last week whlle stJootlng 62 percent
from the floor and 92 pereent from
the tree . throw line. He scored 30 .
points in a 94.58 victory over Mt.
Vernon College and scored 27 In a
92·90·overtlme loss 1o Urbana.
For the seasor•• Mowery is averaging 15.9 points and seven assists
P,er game. He Is shooting M percent
from the floor and 8.'1 percent from
the tree thrOw line.
·

il

Portsmouth home Frlday morning where Harold

Laserpboto ).

2 dr., light blue, landau top, tilt, cruise, air, stereo, local
car. .

STATION WAGON

$5588
1979 DODGE lf2 T. PICKUP
6 cyl.,

~utomatic,

MUST SEE!!

$1988

$3888

19n OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

1972 CHEV, STA. WAGON

BROUGHAM '
Tilt, cruise, A.C., NADA Avg. retail $3500.

SPEC~

$188

NOW

$2988

5
3· 9!!8~~19~79~C~H~EV2!.
1978 JEEP ...:..:CJ:..:-5~
· .:.:P£0::~~$
· RA=-~!!!~i
~
STATION ~~BU_~~~
....«. 9!!.~~PO~N~Til£AC!.!V~E~NTU:
dr. Hatchback. Low
$2988
· · ·~

See.Bill Gene Jahnson or Teny Hamilton

renchtvwn Car

Co.

446-0069

OR
GA~~t~sAVE. 446-0691

1640

parent mass shooting at a private club In Seatde's
International Dlstrld. According to pollee, the rna.
live appears to be robbery. (AP Laserphoto).

Associated Press Writer
SEA TILE tAP) -Thirteen people, most of them
'"hog·tled,"" were shot in the head and kliled In a
gang'land·style mass slaying In a priva te gambling
club in the city's Chinatown district, police said today.
Police, who found the bodies early today after
prying open t~doorsof the biood·spattered Wah Mee
club, called it t largl"St mass homicide in the city's
his tory.
.
A 14th victim. a man whowas shot In the face. was
in serious condition in a local hospital under heavy
police guard.
The dead were 12 men and one woman .
Capt. Mike Slessman sa id all the viet ims he saw
had been bound hand and loot , shoved face down on
the floor, and shot at least once In the head.
Handguns of a t least two different calibers were
·
used, he said.
The room was so saturated with blood, "We were
...

Sec. Watt ·rips .
·. Washington Press

'

'

Y£5, 11 RUHSII

THE LONG WAIT- SeaUie Ponce offlcel'!l sit In
their car at the entrance of an alley where thirteen
people were f01111d dead early Saturday after an ap-

1978 CHEV. IMPALA.

QEAN MAOtiNE!!

PS.
NOW ·

SP&lt;Jrty, 2 dr., economy sedan, 4 spd., 4 c~ .. vinyl top.

4 dr.,
family car, small V-8,
air cond., PS, PB.
---.

4 spd., 4 cyl., local car.
NOW

1979 DODGE COLT

1976 CHEV. CAMARO

COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP) -The public isn't
getting the facts about natural resources and the
environment because Washington· based news repor·
~ers ~n' t telling them, Interior Secry-tary James
Watt says.
1
"The Washington press COfllS focuses on presentIng opinion. not facts," ' Watt told a meeting of Ohki
newspaper editors Friday.
Branding reporters in the nation's capital "a bunch
• of psychiatrists," Watt said environmental groups
are doing a good job of getting their views to the
press.
• "Special Interest groups control the news flow to
the newspaper people. They focus your attention on
' what they want to see you print. I'm trying to focus
your attention on .the p1,1bllc record," Watt told the
editors.
Watt said newspapers in Ohio and elsewhere

••

'

.,

13 killed in ··g angland
style mass murder

$5988

ONLY

"We could stop using ·food as a foreign poUcy
weapon,. start helping farmers to open our markets
up abroad. "
Glenn said funds for education and researCh should
be spared trom the administration' s budget ax.
"The money saved by cutting back on education,
that fundamental thing In our country; that's not the
big budget buster where we s hould be cutting back,"
Glenn said.
·
The Ohio Democrat a lso called for passage of the
Equal Rights Amendment. "Making one woman a
justice does not bring justice to American women,"
he said.
Also speaking at the fund · raiser were ~eleste, Ohio
Jiouse' Speaker Vernal Riffe a nd Ohio Senate
President Harry MesheL
•
Glenn hasn't formally announced as a presidential
candidate, but In rE&lt;:Cnt months he has been
hopscotching the country to gauge support.
His staff estimates that as much as $27 million
would he needed for him to make a run for the
presidency.
On Thursday, Glenn appeared in Iowa, criticizing
the Payme nt ·ln·Kind agriculture program, which
would pay grain to farmers who idled acreage. Glenn
said it doesn't make sense to give grain to farmers
who already have too much.
.
"I hope the program works." Glenn said . But
quoting a n Ohio farmer, he added, "Only an
administration that calls a missile the 'Peacekeeper'
would use corn to ball out farmers who are already up
to their keis ters in it"

Spencer, 26, and his three children died. Sharon
SJII'ncer, 23, suffered bums and cuts in the fire. ( AP

Burgundy with burgundy cloth interior. Air, tilt, cruise:
PS, PB, 28,029 miles.

6 cyl., standard trans., PS, turbine mag;.

$4888
1979 PINTO PONY

20, 1983 '

FOUR DIE IN FIRE - Flreman and safety
workers sort through the siDI smoldering rubble of a

1980 CUTlASS L. S.

V-6, PS, PB, Air cond., cloth interior, AM·FM·Cassette.
· Only 11,418 miles.

1979 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
Mowery named
'Player-of-Week'

for his 1984 presldent1al bid. Behind Glenn Is Ohio
Governor Richard Celeste. (AP Laserphoto).

By LEONARD PALLATS

All-SEOAL team
will be named on
February 27
JACKSON- The annual basket·
ball meeting of the SEO SportswrJ.
.ters and Broadcasters Association,
scheduled for today in Jackson, has
been postponed untjl Sunday, Feb.
27.
.
The scribes and .play·by·piay me·
dla, along with the league's seven
head basketball coaches, will meet
in Jackson next week to select the
All·SEOAL basketball team.

A!llOCiared Press Writer
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sen. John Glenn has
made a major deposit in his presidential campaign
savings account , raising $600,&lt;rn during a fund· raiser
he halls as the biggest In Ohio's history.
The Democrat said allout 1,200 people paid $500
each to attend Friday night's fund-raiser, held at a
Colwnbus hotel.
"This Is truly the biggest politica l financial night
Ohio has ever had, " he said.
The success of the fund· raiser was echoed by Gov.
Richard .Celeste and Ohio Democratic Party
Chairman James Ruvolo, who 'l!alled the turnout
"terrific.··
During the fund· raiser, Glenn attacked the Reagan
administration for its statements on nuclear war and
called for trimming the fat from the defense budget. ·
"We could end the loose talk about nuclear war.
about nuclear warning shots a nd winnable nuc lear
war," Glenn said .
He said the nation should "bolster a coherent
foreign policy with a strong defense to defend our
Interests by buying only the weapons we ne,oed instead
of what the last salesman wanted to sell when he
came Into the Pentagon.'"
Glenn said surplus grain could be used to feed the
hungry and urged the opening of foreign markets for
farmers.
"We could end the disgrace of soup lines by feeding
the people who a re hungry; do it with some of the
surplus grain we' re paying to store." Glenn said.

'

1982 CUTLASS SUPREME

Februa

Father, three children
die in house fire

Sale Starts Monday, February 21 at 8:00 A.M.

1981 CHEV. LUV 4X4

Sunda

·'

Xavier trips Detroit, 69-61
CINCINNATI (AP) - Forward
Jeff Jenkins poured In 25 points to
lead Xavier University in a 69-61
victory over Detroit in a Midwest·
ern City Conference college basket·
ball game Saturday.

~ime~~- ~ennatei Section

By JAMES HANNAH'

Announce fishing improvements
at McClintic Wildlife Station
Pr. PLEASANT- The West Vir·
glnla Department of Natural Resources, wildlife resources division
has announced that major lm·
provements at ·McClintic Wlldllfe
Station in MaSon County have been
completed. These improvements
provide eight additional acres of fl·
shable water, a waterfowl marsh,
and sportsmen access to 11 ponds . .
Four ponds (21, 22, 23, and 38)
were rebullt during the .fall ol1982
adding approximately four acres of
fishable water. Ponds 16 and 33
were repaired and enlarged adding
the additional four ·acres. Ponds
five and :W ·were drained and
cleared for repair dwing 1983.
Fishermen access trails were
developed around 11 ponds. Fish at·
tractors, which concenttate fish,
were constructed In ponds four, 16,
33. and 36 with bl"\lSh cleared from
pond edges.
These improved ponds will be

•

o:..

Glenn hails fund-raiser
as Ohio's biggest

Area bowlers
do well in
tournament
NIAGARA FALLS- A five man
bowling team sponsored by Skyline
J_.anes of Gallipolis recently repres·
ented the Melgs·Gallla area in the
A.B.C. National Championship
Tournament in Niagara Falls, New
York. Team members Included
ADger Riebel 11, Randy Snider,
Leonard Woods, Jim Phillips, and
:Roger Riebel.
· Among those bowling, local res!·
dent Roger Riebel brought home
several honors among the group;
Riebel bowled a 710 series and r~
celved a 700 patch and sliver medal
for the series. he also claimed a
J&gt;ronze medal· for a 278 game and a
bronze medal for a 1816 series in the
overall competition.
These awards were presented
Immediately after Riebel threw his
line score in the event. As a group
the quintet represented the area
very well against some very tough
national competition.
Currently Riebel and his partner
are currently leading In the doubles
competition against some fine
bowlers from across the country.

'

around the country haven't been able to report the
accomplishments of his department because the
Washlngion p~s corps has failed to report on them.
focusing Instead on emotional issues raised by spec! al
Interest groups.
Watt several times criticized the administratiOn of
former President Jimmy Carter for what he called its
lack of protection for feqera l lands and resources.
When he took his job, Watt said, he "found in these
lands a shameful picture ... too much pollution,
w!ldllfe lands that were ignored. timber lands
abused."
COntrary to claims of his critics, Watt insisted the
Reagan administration has not and will not allow oil
or gas weUs to be drUied in federal parks, has no plans
to sell Yellowstone National Park and will not sell the
· nation's 750 million acres of federally owned land.

..

SU H t-~-&gt;~ "

AND

all worried a bout railing in it- it was that thick," said
Slessman.
One police spokesman specula led robbery might
have been the moiivc, but Slessman would say only
that the " very methodica l'" killings appeared to be
the work of more tha n one killer.
Slessman said those in the c lub we re playing a '
Chinese game called "paykyo." Domino· like chips
..,
a nd money were found in the room .
He said the victims apparently knew their ;
assailants since they would have had to be recognized
to gain entry to the club.
Twelve bodies were fou nd ins ide the club when
pollee arr ived soortly after midnight. Two wounded
people were taken to H arbon~ iew Medica l Center.
where one.Jater died.
"The bodies are just strewn at'Ound the floor."" sa id ,
F lynn, who .was a t the scene. "There is a profuS&lt;' ·
amount of blood in the area where the bodies were
found."

COLLt:v • •-

ENFORCEME~} _F tNES

.,
·--0
·:i_....enm
.c:

.

0

0

1

1

... ,_A .. , VAAr
PRJ!BENTJNG THE FACTS - Intertor Seclreabout his policies. He also chastised the. Waohlnctoo
tary Jllhtll8 Watt hcJida aloft 11M of the charta he ll8ed
prinl media for what he Sllld were their Inaccuracies.
Friday II&amp; a matslhl of the Oldo Newapaper Aalocla(AP LaserphcKcl).
tloilla Columbua 1o 111u11rate what be laid lithe tndh.

�/

Business

~me- -··.mtti Secti!!'IJl,.
Independent agents
protest
bank-insurance firm merger
..

•
•
•
•

:: FIFTEENTH 1\NNIVERSi\RY- Incommemora·
tion of the 15th anniversary of the Hurst Oldsmobile
Cutlass, 2,400 models were manufcalured by General
111otors this year and one each were distributedtoOids
pealers throughout the country. Sinunons Cadill•c·

one

of the
Old&lt;;mobUe-chevrolet of Pomeroy was
recipients of the anniversary car, recently !lQid to Tim
Smith, left, of Middleport. Congratulating Smith on
the purehase is Simmons.salesman Mike Anderson.

:Petails income tax- penalties
•'RIO

GRANDE - With the time · are imposed for failure to me the
rapidly approaching to file income return and to pay taxes.
Hyder is a certified public actl&lt; returns, a professor at Rio
countant, who has a master's de~ande College and Community
Oollege warns of the penalties im· gree in taxation from Georgia State
pgsed by the Internal Revenue Ser· University.
Failure to file annual return: 11
, qt;e for failure to comply.
the taxpayer falls to me a timely
•Sid N. Hyder, professor of ac•·
return, a five percent penalty is im·
e~~unting in the Emerson E. Evans
Sfhool of Business Management at . posed on the net tax !labillty for
each month or part of a month the
~o Grande, says it is advisable to
return is delayed. This penalty can·
~orne aware of the penalties that

.

I

filF1I

WINNER - Jack Lewis, left, was presented a microwave oven by
Robert Bowers, right, unit manager of Pomeroy's Kroger store, as
grand prize winner of the store's celebration which has been underway.
The celebration.marks the grund opening oftheenlarged and remodeled
store. Lewis resides on Flalwoods Rnad near Pomeroy.

Business Briefs:
Warner attends CIC institute
POMEROY - Michael C. Warner of Brogan-Warner Insurance
Services. 214 E. Main St., Pomeroy, has completed certified
insurance counselor training at the Certified Insurance Counselor
iCICl Personal Lines Institute recently con,ducted in Columbus.
The three-day seminar was one. of five offered annually by the
Professional Insurance Agents Association covering ail areas of
insurance and agency management.
.Following completion of all institutes held by CIC, Warner wU! be
awarded the certified insurance counselor des!gnationm by the
Society of Certified Insurance Counselors I CIC).
Warner and his wife, Sheila, live in Rutland.

not exceed a maximum of 25 per·
cent. Also, this penalty cannot be
less than the lesser of (1) $100, or (2)
the net tax llab!llty.
Failure to pay tax: If the tax·
payer falls to pay his or her tax on ·
time, Interest is added to the tax at
20 percent per annum. The current
rate of 20 percent became effective
Feb. 19, 1982. For the two-year period before that date, the rate was
12 percent. Traditionally, the inter·
est rates charged by the government on underpayments have been
lower than marked rates. In the fu·
ture, the government's rate will approximate the market rate.
In addition to Interest, the statue
provides a penalty of 0.5 percent
per month (or part thereof) for any
underpayment. This penalty also,
cannot exceed a mllldmum of 26
percent. (Note: During any month
In which both the "!allure to file penalty" and the ''failure to pay penalty" apply, the "!allure to file
penalty" is reduced by the amount
of the "!allure to pay penalty.")
The five percent '~allure to file
penalty" and the 0.5 percent "fail·
ure to pay penalty" is not Imposed
If the taxpayer's !allure is due to a
reasonable c~use. If the taxpayer
exercised ordinary business care
and prudence and was nevertheless
unable to "file the return" within ·
the prescribed tfme, then the delay
is due to a reasonable cause.
Deficiencies In tax paid: 11 the
tax computation is incorrect and
the tax payment is less than the tax
owed, a penalty of five percent of
the " understatement" is added to
the tax when the deficiency is due to
"negligence." 11 the deficiency Is
due to "wlllful negligence" or
· "fraud," a penalty of 50 percent of
the deficiency is added to the tax.
When the 50 percent "fraud" penalty Is imposed: the five p&lt;ercent
penalty for "failure to file" and the
five percent penalty lor "negligence" are not imposed. But the 20
percent Interest is charged in any
case.
Criminal penalties: The willful"
failure to pay the tax, to make a
return, to keep adequate records,
or to evade or defeat the tax, and
willful making and subscribing to a
false return are "criminal acts," or
"misdemeanors,"- or "felonies.''
Fines of up to $10,\X)O and imprison·
ment ol up to ftve years are the
punislunents for these criminal
acts. ·
The criminal penalties are lm·
posed only after the taxpayer is
found guilty In criminal proceed·
lngs. The other penalties, however,
are imposed by the IRS.

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
planned affiliation between Bane
OnE! Corp. and Nationwide Insu·
ranee Co. has prompted a public
protest from at least one rival
Insurance company and Is raising
eyebrows at the ·state Depariment
of Insurance.
Beginning in April, Nationwide
plans to place insurance agents in at
lea$! three Bane One facUlties on an •
experimental basis. Gordon C.
Rader, president of Grange Mutual
Casualty Co., says the arrangement
threatens to drive independent
agents out of business.
"The afflllatlon of two giants like
Bane One and Nationwide is a great
danger and wlll.do great harm to the
way we sell insurance," Rader said.
"The threat to the Independent
insurance sysiem Is that .:. with the
massive reach of Bane One and the

\

terrific advertising facUlties of
Nationwide, the · independent
(agents) will just be washed away."
Banks are prohibited by law from
selling insurance. But Nationwide
andBanc One say their agreement
is legal because insurance agents
will be leasing space In the bank.
The. state Department of Insu·
ranee has taken no position on the
matter, but is interested.
"It's under review," said Robert
H. Katz, assistant directpr of
research for the department.
Thomas H. Hardy, executive vice
president of the Independent Insu·
ranee Agents Association of Ohio,
said that group also is withholding
judgment on . the . Bane. OneNationwide arrangement.
Historically, · banks have been
prohibited from se!l!Qg insurance

beeauseoffearsthatdo!ngsom!ght ·
risk depositors' money or that "
banks would place undue pressure ..
on customers to buy insurance.
•
Lou Von VIlle, an Insurance·
industry analyst, said Rader'sfears ' .
are Understandable;
.
"He sees possible Inference on the •
part of bankers: 'I'll Joan you the"
money, but at least slop in and see
my (Insurance) friend next door,"'"::
Von Ville said.
Rader said Grange MutUal, with.assets of $250 rn!lllon, is considering"
pulling Its funds from Bane One.
'

"We had two agents call In who·;
had heard about this," he Said.
"They !nuned!ate!y went down to
Bane One and transferred aU their "
bu,slness out. We will ptobably"
encourage agents who call in hereto
do the same thing."

Deregulation allows choice
of phone service, equipmenl . .
MARION - General Telephone
Co. of Ohio is entering a new era in
telephone communications with
deregulation allowing customers
more choice in telephone equlpment aod control over their bills,
while continuing quality telephone
service.
In 19!ll, the Federal Communica·
t!ons Commission (FCC) decided
increased competition would benefit consumers a nd ordered the
remova l of state and federal
controls from ma ny telephone
services.
The order sa id telephone companies must offer telephone equipment and associated gear 1called
customer premises equipment or
CPEl on an unreglilated, or
competitive, basis after Jan. 1,
l!m.
General of Ohio, however, was
allowed to extend .its deregulation
date to Feb. 15. This enabled the
company to use up its inventory of
telephones purchased under
regulation.
Basic telephone service, how·
ever. remaiils unchanged. Local
calling and long-distance services
still are regulated by state and
federa I agencies.
"General Telephone continues to
provide quality service, local calling, telephone directories a nd
long-distance service to customers,
the same as always," said Robert
R. Randall of Marion, state vice
president -general manager. "Cus·

tomers should conti nue to call local
business offices with any questions
about service.
"General Telephone customers
who now lease their phones may
continue to do so on a regulated
basis," Randal added . "They won 'I
even notice a change In procedures
until they decide to move. changE'
service, exchange their equipment
or require major equipment
repairs."
Customers wa nting changes then
have several options. They may
choose to buy a new phone from a
large selection at General Tele·
phone's deregulated Phone Marts
- or they may buy their existing
tele phones. They also may choose
to rent phones from the Phone
Marts a t prevailing deregulated
market rates. Or, as with a ny other
appliance, they may buy phones
from other retailers.
What happens if the telephone
doesn't work? "That depends on
where · the customer obtained the
phone,"" said Randall. "General
Telephone will contin\le to provide
repair for phones · it rents to
customers. But, if a customer b).lys
a tele phone from GTE or any other
vendor. he hears the costs of all
repairs after the warranty expires
- just as with other appliances
such as toasters. hair dryers, hot
water heaters and so on."
Genera l Telephone continues to
provide all repairs to the telephone

network itself. A customer uncer: ·
ta In whether ihe problem exists in
the phone or the network should
,
call repair service.
Repa ir clerks will ask questlons .
to pinpoint the probable cause of
trouble. If the problem is in
company cable or writing, it will berepaired a t no additional. charge:
Customers renting phones will be
asked to bring the telephones to the.
Phone Mart or other deslgnat~
repair points. Customers who
decline will be charged for time
required to make an on-site repair.
"Other services, such as the
installation of wiring inside · a
custome r's home, will be priced
and obtaineddlffprently from In the '
past," Randall said. "Customers'"
will have options for saving mney.
by doing some or all of the work
themselves ... or they may pay to"
have It done for them by General'
'
Tele phone or other suppliers.
"The important thing to re-'"
member about deregulation,·· said'
Randall, " is customers can assume_
as much responsibllity for pur.;
chase a nd maintenance of tele- ;
phone equipment as thl&gt;y choose."
Deregulation gives them more
opt ions. Arid no matter wh!cti'
options they select, General Tele-~.
phone will continue to provide a;
reliable telephone network. qualitY, ;
service and a wide variety of,
tclepho'le equipment to keep our
customers talking."
.
'

"

CAR WASH
··.OPEN
'
"

..

RGC receives grant
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande College has been named recipient of
an unrestricted grant fro m the Sears-Roebuck Foundation.
Unrestricted grants totalling more than $47,000 will be distributed
to 30 privateiy-supported colleges and universities this month .
·
RGC's grant was $.'100.
. A spokesman said tnat Ohio colleges and universities chosen for
grants are among 946 private, accredited two and four-year
lnstllutions across the country sharing $1.565,000 in Sears
Foundation funds for 1982-83.

.

Multimedia w .buy cable systems
GREENVilLE, S.C.- Multimedia, Inc. says an agreement has
been reached to acquire four cable television systems in Oklahoma
from American Television and Communications Corp. in exchange
for three. cable television systems now owned by or under option to
Tar River Communications in North Carolina.
tar River' Is 60 percen t owned by Multimedia.
·
Multimedia's cable system in Oklahoma presently serves 47,500
subscribers, - 'ld the transaction is subject to certain regulatory
approval.
Multimedia publishes the Sunday Times-Sentinel, PomeroY·
Middleport Daily Sentinel, Gallipolis Dally Tribune and Point
Pleasant Register.

POINT PLEASANT BOWINCAL- Last Tuesday
marked the opening ofBowlncal at2515Jack.son Ave.,
Point Pleasant. The fast-food restaurant specializes In

Decision may
force Nigeria
to take action
By ROBERT BURNS
AP BIBness Writer
. Britain's decision to cut its North
Sea
priCes by $3 a barrel cbuld
force financlally strapped Nigeria
to break OPEC guidelines and
match the British, analysts believe.
That could lead in tum to price
red1,1ct!ons f)y · other OPEC
members .ani!l .by Mexico, which.
does not beJOIIg to the cartel,
accelerating even further the trend
of failing gasollne prices.
And North Sea oil prices could fail
yet again, tjle London Times said
today, if the 13 OPEC member
states break ranks and announce
unilateral priCe cuts.

oil

Restaurant ·opens in Pt. Pleasant
POINT PLEASANT (OVP) More hot dogs and !ce cream have
come to Point Pleasant with .Ill!"
opening of Bowlncal, a franchise
stemming from Charleston, W.Va.
LOcated at ~15.JacksonAve., the
fast-food restaurant is owned by an
Ona, W.Va. father and son, ~!mar
and Terry Massie. The pair own
· three other Bow!ncal franchises In
Huntington, Ceredo and Summersville and have been In business for
the past six years.
The Point Pleasant iocatlon
opened on Feb. 15. The young
Massie, who. also manages the
store, says the Point Pleasant area
was selected for its potent!al for

~----- ----

J

hot dogs, from the popular Bowincal regular to Ice .
cream. 'The Point Pleasant location was selected for
its potential huslni'SS, open 'terrain ·for expans!(ln and
little competition.
·

!•

'

business and open, flat terrain for
cents, going to a high of $1:55.
expansion. The small community
Bow!ncal is derived from the-'
was also favorab!e'for less fast-food
nicknames of !Wo of its present .
competition:
owners and a former one. '.'Bo" Is;
Massie says for Bowincal's open· from Buford Jiventon's name an~ ,
lng day, business was "pretty
"Win" from Wayne Litton's nam~.
good.''Twelvepeopleareemployed
"Cal" Is fromCalv!nStover'sname.','
·at the restaurant. Hours are lOa.m. Stover and Jlventon were from~
to 10 p.m., Monday through
Charleston. Former owner Litton.:
Saturday; In spring, Sunday hours
resides In South Carolina.
.,
wlll be extended from noon to 10 · · Bow!nca! was extended to othe~. ,
p.m .
states, hut hasbeenconflnedtoWest"
Bowlncal offers 10 different types V!rg!nta, says Stover, whO wa~
of hot dogs, such as the Bowlncal · helping out In Point Plea$ant last.
Super Dog, Bowlncal regular, the
week. He says he found mo!'E' •
most popular, Big Bow, English, control was kept on the boslnessand;:
Kosher and Reuben dogs. Price ihatit kept a borne touch.
.,;
ranRC for hot dQRS is as !ow as 70

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-3 •

February 20, I 983

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

Agriculture and our community

•
• •
area competition
Gallia 4-H'ers do well In

Three big events on
tap in Gallia next week
By BRYSON R. CARTER

3: 30 p.m. PCA Building, Gallipolis.

Exleruiloo Alent
Agriculture lo CNRD
Gallla County
GALLIPOLIS - Three big
events are coming up next week in
Gallia County Agriculture. On Wed·
nesday, Feb. 23, we will have our
annual Winter Tobacco Meeting at
Hanltan Trace High School In .Mer·
cerviiJe, beginning at 7 p.m. Our
earlier announcement said 7: 30
p.m. but We have backed the start·
lng time up ro 7 p.m. because of a
full program.
·
Jim We!ls, Coord!nator'Tobacco
Program, Ohio Farm Bureau Fed·
eratlon Inc., w!!l be the featured
' speaker. Jim's presentation wlll be
in two main areas; a) Tobacco Pol·
Icy and Outlook, b) Update and
Tips on Chemicals, Plant Bed and
Field Management.
Brooke Cheny, Tobacco Instl·
tute; wlll make a few comments
and perhaps have several leglsla·
tors with him. ·
Jim Baughman and other local
farmers will discuss a local Gallla
County Tobacco Growers Assocla·
t!on that is currently being
organized,
This annual program Is a joint
effOJ;t between Extension Service
and Tom Pope, Hannap Trace VoAg' Dept. with assistance from tobacco warehou.ses. Refreshments
w!!l be served, so plan now for a big
evenlng,.Feb. 23.

Ben . White, County Extension
Agent; Agriculture, Adams
County, wlll be on hand to teach
Marketing Strategies with empha·
siS on Periods Available to Price a
Grain Crop and Tools for EvaluatIng Grain-Pricing risks.

The second event Is the continuation of our. Farm Marketing.Risk
Management School on Thursday
afternoon, Feb. 24, 12: 30 p.m . to

Area dairy farmers are Invited to
join us .for the ''Extenslon·FBPA
Dairy School" at Buckeye Hllis Ca·
reer Center near Rio Grande,' 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 25.
This school is sponsored by the
Gallla County. Cooperative Exten·
s!on Service In cooperation with
Glenn Graham, FBPA Instructor
at Buckeye Hills.
Cannichael Farm Supply DeLaval Division, Boso Agr!·
Center, Incorporated and Gallla
Roller M!lls, Incorporated will provide the noon meal. Please make
your dinner reserva lions by Tues·
day evening, Feb. 22, with either
the extension office or Glenn
Graham.
Program topics include: Compu·
ters and Dairy Herd Management,
Breedlng.Programs for Milk Com·
ponents, Increasing Dairy Profits
aod Somatic
Counts. and Their
Use. Speakers Include Harry Barr,
Don Pritchard and Pete Spike, all
Ohio State University Extension
Dab)rmen.
The meeting will be held .In the
Human Resource Service Center,
the new building on the right as you
drive Into Buckeye Hills. Please
park In the back lot on the right watch for signs.

cell

Meigs County agent's corner

Cover crops and PIK
By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Alent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY - Can you get a
dover crop to grow where you have
used a traz!ne or simazlne (Prln·
cep)? There are several alterna·
lives. First, the traditional legumes
or grasses should be considered.
Rye Is by' lar the most tolerant to
trlaz!nes. How can you determine If
slgnlflcant triazine is present In a
particular fiel(j?
.
· First look now for presence of
many younger broadleaf and/ or
gra,ssy weeds which developed late
· laSt summer and taU. If plenty of
such weeds exist, negllgible tria·
zlne residue Is present. The next
way to cheek is to secure soU from
the top one to three tnches of soil
from throughout different parts of
the field. Plant pots or fiats to oats
Inside this winter or early In the
spring using sampled soU. 11 oats
develop properly up to five-six
inches tall, presence of trlazlne residue Is negl!gib!e. Remember,
plOWing or deep dlsklng will further
"dilute" any trlazlne. There are
ways to chemically analyze soU for
triazine, but these tests are costly.
Can winter type grains be
planted at other Urnes that~ nor·
maUy recommended If soU cover
and not grain production is the ob·
jectfve? Yes, In fact, Dr. Hal La·
fevel' points out that the winter·
grains - rye, whiter wheat and
winter barley - require colder
temperatures during growth to
"trigger" the plant to proceed to
.form gtjlin heads. Spring planted
winter grains may not receive su!ff.
clent cold to induce seed head pro:
ductlon or only produce grain late
In the summer. This greaterveget·
atlve growih may provide mere soU
cover than spring oats which rapidly proceeds toward grain
productfon.
Income taxes and expensing . unless you had some ou tstandlng
profits · It will not pay. We have
more details on this If needed.
Com varieties, soybean varieties, alfalfa varieties - we have the
summaries on all of these. Select
your varieties carefully. It can

make a difference.
Are you borrowing money this
spring? You wt11 need to be much
more business-like In dealing with
your lender. Lenders may be re,
qutrlng more detaU, both of past
performance and of expected per·
formahce In the years ahead.
To prOvide this better loan docu·
mentation, you should take an accu·
rate detailed Inventory at the end of
each .year. Otber businesses routinely take inventories because It is
required for tax purposes, but
farmers have been allowed to ~
cash basis accounting and so have
not bothered with Inventories.
An accurate inventory "provides
much of the basic information
needed for net worth statements,
profit and loss statements, and
cash flow statements': For example, the quantity and timing of pur·
chases are the major cost items In a
cash flow projection for the next
year, but how can you project the
amount of purchased feed you may
need if you don't know how much
you have on hand at the first of the
year? Forms to reccord amounts
and value of Inventories are In·
eluded in nearly ali farm record
books, such as the Ohio Cammer. clal Farm Account Book.
H!lvingto make cashflowprojec·
tfons, net worth statements, etc., is
not just to protect the lender, It Is
just as much or more for the protec·
tfon of the borrower. The banker
doesn't want to lend money unless
the chances are good that It will be
repaid; likewise, the borrower
shouldn't want to borrow money
. unless he can repay the Joan and
make money In the business. It's
really just good business practice to
develop sound financial management records.
Grass Tetany - Consider putting
magnesium oxide In your mineral
ration now and feed It through
June. In feed, use two ounces per
head per day. In salt, up to 40 per·
cent magnesium oxide should be
mixed in.
Don't forget Thursday's dairy
meeting at the Meigs Inn, starting
at 10 a.m .

'

No-till dinner set March 7
heneflts.
Best estimated range from 8.5 to
12 mUllan acres of what could be
termed pure no-tfll acreage In the
U. S. In 1!m.. This means crops
planted into fields receiving no Ill·
!age preparation. Estimates for
ril!nlmum till acreage In the U. S.
ex,ceeds 88 mlll!on acres. Minimum
till implies the .use of rlo-tlll techniques along with some l!m!ted Ill·
.!age operations . such as dlsclng,
chisel plow or field Cultivator.
The development of lmprmied .
planters aild better weed control
programs Is making successful ~a­
till !lloreeasUy llttatnable than ever
before. In need to choose an alter·
native to conventfonalllllage which
wt11 resolve sucli
probbenefitS.
..
Best estimated ranae ·rrom 8.5 to lems as erosion, higher fuel prices,
12 inWJon acres of what could be larger farm sizeS, moisture ahor·
terined pure' no-till teclmology ad· tages, soU compaction, labor ahor·
vances and farmers become more · tages and reduced sediment '
aware of the concept and its pollution In Jakes and streams.

By AMY VINSON
Dbttrlct Secretary
Gallla SoU and Water
Co~~~ervatloa Diltrlct
GALLIPOLIS ..:.. Here are some
facts on no-till planting.
Since 19'12 (the first year na tiona!
acreage figures were com"!llled) notill has grown an esUmated 260 per·
cent, or about T1 percent peryear.
Mlnlmum tillage In the same period of time has grown approxl·
rna tely 335 · percent. Experts
predict this growth rate will remain
at least as str9ng, and very l!keiy
will accelerate, through the l9llJs
· and '91)1 as no-till technology advan:
ces and farmers become more
aware of tbe concept .·and Its

pressme

GALLIPOLIS - Recently thrt&gt;e · conserve energy were emphasized.
4-H members In Gallia County
During this activity they gathered
submitted National Report Forms cans and sold them to be recycled.
to be considered for awards on the
The major highlight of the year for
Area, State and Natlonallevel. Last
the club members was how well
week on the area level, Lori Copley
they dld on projec"ts which they
of the Rio Sllver'Thlmbles4-H Club exhibited at the Gallla County
was designated
theSafety
.Jackson
Winner
In both the
AreaArea
and
the Clothing Area.
Jeff Roach of the Rio Wranglers
4-HC!ubwasdeslgnatedthew!nner
In the Horse Division. Holly
LambertoftheFancyFarmers4-H
Club was an Area Alternate In
PhotOgraphy.
All three of these Individuals
completed National Report Forms
which 'Is a record of their 4-H
activities In which they bave
P.,rticlpated lndurlngthelryearsin
·Report
willLori
nowand
be consl·
the 4·H Forms
program.
Jeff's
dered with the nine other Area
Winners around the state In their
Individual categories for State
Awards.

Fair.of which they were
Junior
very proud.
· afi
Among their plans for 1!m are
efforts .to recru,lt new members so
they too can participate In the
opportunities provided in 4-H. The
present members of the 4-H
Explorers are: Lisa Couthenour,
Melissa Davis, ~Iii Drumond,
Eileen Harbour, Melissa Harbour,
Melissa Kitchen,' Rachael Lassiter
and Jarni Miles. Most of these
members eside in ·the Addison
Community. You th living in that

advisors and members ofthat club
for more details about joining 4-H.
During the next two months
many 4-H clubs will be organizing
and reorganizing for 1983. Interested youth in Gallia County are
invited. to take part in the opportuni·

ties available in 4-H by joining a 4-H
club in their COI'l'lffiunity. For more
Information concerning 4-H clubs
in Gallia County contact the Gallla
County Extension Office, 446-7007,
or stop in our office at 1502 Eastern
Avenue.

r---;=================;---GOOD
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Owner must sell flourishing Cany Out Business.-Perfect family operation. Living
quarters included in long
lease.

term

Be

YOUr Own bOSS fOr a Change.
Call Ike W"lseman-446-3643
WISEMAN

REAL

ESTATE AGENCY

are encouraged
to contact
theb~:;:;:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~;;;;~
r~a~re~a~in
~te:res~t:ed~in~j:o!:n:in~
g:a:4:·H~c:lu:

ENTERTAINING
THIS WED., FEB. 23
THRU SAT., FEB. 26

Featured aub of the Week
This week featured club is the4-H
Explorers which was organized In
1982. The advisors are Cindy
Drummond and Loreda Davis. The
1982 4-H club officers were: Jill
Drummond, president ; Jami
Miles, vice president; Lisa Cough·
enour, secretary; Eileen Harbour,'
news reporter; Melissa Davis,
recreation leader; Melissa Kit·
chen, treasurer; Lori Morgan,
health chairman, and Melissa
Harbour, safety chairman.
The main project areas fo r the
club members in 1982 was clothing
and food and riutr!tion projects. But
some of the members were also
enrolled in small animal projects,
photography projects and Creative
Arts. During 1982 the 4· H Explorers
were involved in several special
activities Including Energy Conser·
vation at which time, ways to

FOR YOUR DINING AND
DANCING PLEASURE

DAVID DUNN
7-11 NIGHTLY

MEIGS INN
126

POMEROY

MAIN ST.

992-3629

100kOFTHEMONEYYOU EARN
IN INTEREST IS GOING TO
'.

•

Recently, Congress quietly passed a withholding law.
that will CO!\t American savers and investors the use
of 10% of their interest and dividends.
.
In simple terflls, effective July 1st, '1~~ thi,s
new law requires banks and other flnanCJal mstitutions to deduct 10%oftheinterestordividendsyou ·
earn on your savings and investinenta. That money
then goes to the Internal Revenue Service in much
the same way as payroll deductions are now handled.
· The sponsors of this law have told ,us it was .
designed to catch a small minority of Americans who
· evade taxes on their interest and dividends . But the
truth is the Jaw Jlenalizes the great lJUI.iority of
America's savers and investors who pay their taxes
faithfully. What's more, the federal government is
now receiving aU the necessary information to curtail

tax cheating.

Though the law does include .exem~tions for
some ·low income and elderly Amencans, if they go
' through the red tape of filing an application, most
savers and investors will forfeit some of the money
they could earn in compounded.interest_. .
.
·
)We urge you to join our efforts by wntmg letters
to your representative .in Congress and to the two
senators from this state. '!ell them you want the 10%
. withholding tax repealed, because it would impose
an unfair penalty on savers like yourself.
.
· For assistance in contacting your ·represent:a·
tiveandsenators please ask 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 Jaw.

·&lt;::&gt;

Commercial .&amp; .Savings
. Bank
Ohio V,alley Bank
The Central Trust Co.

..

'

.'

''

.,"

�20, 1913
W. Va.

Ohio-Point
Times-Sentinel

8

11

Help Wanted

44

42 Mobile Home•

32 Mobile Homes

Professional
Services

23

for Sale

Mobile homo llotoforoolo. 2 bdr noor Pondorou. Largo 3 rooms 8o bot~
pERM AN E.~N; T ossio•nal '( 1967 Buddy mobile homo private . ref 8o ooc dop
•r•rtmony Lorge walk In
nowoxpondong•n your area REMOVAL - r
x6 0 , 2bdr gas hoot, rural Adulto, no poll Coli 448· G' out 640 5th Avo.
14
WVa State Champt on Auct1 opemngs for aggreiiiY&amp;
and is In immed•ate need of
Electrolysis Center, Inc • water, set up with 2 or 4 2481 after 6
G•lllpolla. 441·1107
r R .ck Pearson Estates leaderstn this area No large
two
sales
persons
to
learn
A
M
A
APProved
Dr
loti
Call
448-1240.
h, memory of Delia Gtlhlan onee
ant1ques fa rm househ olds mvestment , unl1m1ted our bu ness while sh;nul- Referrals Gtft Certificates. I~=:...:..:.:..----:----;-- 3 biKiroom Mobile Home
3 bdr clean • earpeted
who de pa rte d Fe b 1 9
11
Licensed Oh to WVa 304 earn1ng potenttal Call taneously
tratning for new hours Byappotntment. 1972 moblla hOme for sale. Appmxill'llltelyiJ mile~ from unturnithed upstalrl apt
) 967
77 3 57 85 or 304 77 3 614 367 7682 weekdays
management position Must 304 676-6234
exeellent shape, ready to Pomeroy or Middlaport Prlvetaantrence, parklnt~ off
Sixteen yea rs have nQw
9185
2
4PM
have
some
sales
eKpertence.
move Into Mutt see to 814-992-6818
ttre-et, down town. dep.
gone by Smce you ve gone
hSchool Education&amp;•
C&amp;l Bookkeepmg
required. adult• ontv. no
1 real bonus
1
to be wtth God o n htgh
.Hig
Au ctton every Fn n1g ht at
Persons 1n Galha strong dutre to ktecl a sales Tax Returns&amp;. bookkeeping
'
2 bd.room fumlahed. •160 pets or children. 1fJ utilttlei·
e6 B6
9
&amp;ome day ag etn w e s hall the Hartfo rd Co mmunt t y NEEDED
count'( to provtde tempor
fon:e Call collect at 304- forlndivoduola&amp;buoonosses
dopoolt t171 per month pold. 11711 mo Call 446·
meet to s1t and t alk at Jesus
Cent er Truckloads of new ary care tn own home to 733-0708
Short forms $5 00
Good mobile home $7,1100 pluo u•lhl01 end lown c - 3581 44 Locust Bt o.r
loot
cha nd iSe evary weak
tndtvtduals w1th develop
Long forms $20 00 and up will conoldor controct ..lo Coii614-9BI-3949
446-3310
Mt ss e d by c h tldren . mer
Cons1gmenu o1 new and mental d1sabtllly Rece1ve Tho Meson County Boord of Carol Nasi
62 Call sunday 446-1167 or
446-38
Dolores M•ldred Shuley
use d merchanJ;hse always
room and bored fee
now accepting
2 bedroom In Mlddioport Apt for rent Holt doublo-2
Beatnce Beuv a nd thet r welcome R1chard Reynolds salary
11
614 •246 •5830
Edu -non
0 TUNING 8o REPAIR .:_:_;_:..:..:...--;---::--:-:-:::-:::-;and tr1nge beneftts Tre1n1ng apphcat
ns
for
the
pos1t1on
Fu mlahed. pre f er • d u It •· bd room APt • Ad"'•·
~~ -•
r· 10
taml11es
Auctmneer 27 5-3069
prov1ded Call Buckeye of constructloneng~noerfor
Call B•ll Ward for appoint· USED MOBILE HOME
$22&amp; monthly Pluo dop- lorred No pots 614-882CommunitY Serv1ces at t~e school S'lstom Interest mont Ward • Keyboard.
oolt. uJIIItlaopald 614-992· l-=2~7.:
4~9..:,__.....;_~--~·
576 •271 1
AUCTION every Satu rdey 614 286 5039 Equal
In lovmg memory of Del
apphcanu
should
oubnlltt
446-4372
-------::-----:::-:
6610
ntght Mt Alto WV 6 p m opportun•tv employer
bert Games who passed
thetr appltcatto nand resume ~~~~~~~~~~~ ON LV 0 NE New 12ft wkle,
Furmahed Apt 3 rOC&gt;'I'I ana ,
Cons 1gnm e nt s wel co me THE GALLIA -JACKSON
by March 2 19B3 to the
2 bedroom, oil electric. 2 bedroom mobile home both. utllltleopold
Ernma Bell auct1oneer
from th1s hfe February
MEIGS cOMMUNITY Mason County Board of
mobile homo only t7.996, 10x50 NoorRaclno Call oouth Muklloport
19th 1978
MENTAl HEALTH cENTER EducollOn Othce. 307 8th
bonk financing 1 valloblo All 1 :6~14~·..:9..:9..:2.:
·1:..:8:..:1.:8----: 367-0611 John
The Famoly
s currenty accepting Street Pt Pleasant WV 31 Homes for Sale
State Modular HomM. hell 19 Wan1ed To Buy
1apphcaltons ior the follow
25660 Applicants are to
way between Pt PleaaentS. TWO moblehom1Hmllor
Apartments 304-676and Fnends
Hunttngton on STAT. 2
on Rt 2 about
nu
5648
WANTED TO BUY Old mg position COMMUNITY have experttse m the area o1
from town Call alter I
furniture and Ant~qu es of all p R E v E N T I 0 N constNct•on management, Excellent condtt 1on &amp; 304 &amp;76-2711
~ Announcements
plomonary doslgmng, wnt· locauon oil reody for
304 671-8277
APARTMENTS. mobile
k1nds call Kenneth Swatn SPEC IALIST B S or M A
ations
homn.hou ... Pt PleaMrit
446 3159 or 256 1967'" 10 educat•on soc1al wor k• 1ng 0 f spec• ''c
' tmmedJate occupancy··
it and G-'llpollt 814-446SWEEPER and sew•ng the eventngs
mantal health or equtvalent developtng and raadmg blue Interest rates are down and 33 Farms for Sale
ltWO bedroom treilet k •
...
(nach~ne repan parts and
educauon and expenence pr 1nt s and any other probably won' t be lower
chen turni1hed , couples 8221
~ ,
IUppiiBS PICk up and Buytng Gold., Stiver Plat•
prehrred Responsible for eJtperlence related to the
28 acres mostly level , only, OM sm•ll child K ·
delivery oav1&amp; Vacuum num Gold and Stiver pnces the design and lmplamenta· constructlonoffec•htlesand H~-~ -;---~-~-d or rental drasttcally reduced Was cepted. refer,ncll, 304· UNFURNISHED lpartment
Cleaner 011 e half mtie up are the htghest '"'wo years
f mental health remodallngoflacllitBS
Broadwoy·Middleport
now 045,000
676-1071
. *180 00 for
1 Automotive,
bedroom
•o\5'.000
"
th
1180rent,
00 Coli
O
Georges creek Rd Call check our pnces on gold &amp; t'on
educat 1on and prevention
•••••• ••• Must sell 3 bdr. home, new
mon
Supply, 8-6 304-075;
446-0294
stlver. scrap Jewelry Buytng programs commumty 12
Situations
Modern bu11neu bldg 58 furnence. county water.
2218. &amp;78 &amp;763
Old cotns scrap rmgs S. organ 1zat1on andtram1ng
Wanted
Court St GallipoliS
new bath. carpeted, new 2 bedroom. •II electric
Gun shoot Ractna Gun stlverware Da11y quotes public relatons
-···· -·· •
aluminum siding. coal •
mobile home, FOR RENT ONE bedroom apartments
Club Every SundaY starttng ava1lable Also cotns &amp; cotn If quahf1ed please send
112+ acres w1th 2 homes woodburnln;stove Barn• WITH OPTION TO BUV for tM elderly All utHitlll
., p m Factory choked gUms
supplies for sale Sprmg resume to the Personnel IREE TRIMMING&amp;. REMO
Galha County
other bldgl Garage located Payment• t186 permo pold Tononto PlY 30 1141:;
Valley Tradtng Co Spnng Adm•nlBtrator Galli&amp;· VAL CALL614-949 2129
• .... ...... ....
on old 180noar Porter con 304·&amp;78-2711 .
cent ot their adjuated.
Only
lcValley Plaza 446 8025 or Jockson-Me•g• Community OR 614-992 6040
lnoom• In thlo HUD oubold·
Call992-3267or676-2616 614-388-9060
GINGER BREAD STUDIO
446 8026
lzed apartm•nt bull din;.
Mental Health Center. 412~========== even1ng1
l..:._:__;___ _ _ _ _ _ _ t 43 Fermi for Rent
7Jtrt lessons
JONI
Twin R1ver1 Tower, phone
v
207 1 c;re tarm Langsvtlle
nton Pike Galhpohs, Ohio
1
~ARRINGTON 698 3290
We pay cash for late model 45631 The Mental Health 13
Insurance
s100 down reoervos con· M•nenl nghtolncludod No
304-671-8179 Equ~
elean used cars
Center ts a pr1vate, non 1- - - - - - -- - - dommlum Deposit II 100% houee f12,000 down WIH
opportUnitY houolng
'Alcoholics Anonymous Call
Paature for rent Call
Frenchtown Car Co
profit corporation and an SANDY AND BEAVER re1undebla Choose now carry rut 614-388 9346
&lt;146-0276. 304 676 3547
81!1 Gene Johnson
304-671 5110
N- Hoven 2 bdr lumlohod•
Equal Opportunity
Insurance Co has offered See John Ecker Rtvers•de
446 0069
opt , UtlitiH pd • 1210 ~
Aiftrmat1ve Actton serv 1ces for f~remsurance Terrace Call446-1126
mo, t tOO dep Call 614'employer
coverage
In
Gallta
County
34
Business
G•veaway
BEDS -IRON B11ASS old
for almost a century Farm
Now 4 bdr brick •n R•o
Buildings
44 Apartment
'
446 7621
furniture gold sliver INFLATION GOT YOU IN A home and personal property Grande $65 .000, land I - - - - - - - - - for Rent
'JioNY PERSON who has dollars wood 1ce boxes
PINCH? Ease t,ile squeeze coverages are avatlable to contract 8% loan Call
enythlng to gtve away and stona 1ars ant1ques etc
sell Avon Call 614 843 meet md 1v 1dual needs
614-246 6439
For rent or sale ttore
46 Furnished Room'
does not o1fer or attempt to Complete households
2982, 614 · 388 -9046 , or Contact Neal Ins Agency. 1_:_:__;__.:..::.;_____~ budd lng witlh ulpltltc"o"rnpetr 2 bdr Re--y Inc Aport
'bffer any other thtng 1or sale Wnte M 0 Mtller Rt 4
~-t Phone 446 1694
3 bdr 1 cor garage, central and 2 rente tra1ers
_ .....
2 3690
-·-·
manto t200 -r
mo or If SleePing room t121. utili- •
'may place an ad In thIS Pomeroy Oh Or 992 61 4 · 9 9 •
au located Y2 m1 out of Rt 160 o•- Bu1av1 llo Rd
pd. eingle male. 1here '
Tho Meogs Local School
George's Creek Rd Owner Call 446 38BB or 446· income Ia t10.000 or loll tiel
eolumn There w•li be no 7760
bath 919 2nd Avo • Gaiiii&gt;Q·
l:harge to 1he adverttser
D•stnct has tholollow•ng 15
Schools
may llnsnce $37 000 Call ~~4~4~9~1;;~~~~~~;;;; HUD avolloblo A-One Reel llo Call 446 441 6
Cash 1or used mobile homes extra
curncular coach1ng
Instruction
367 7743
Ettatas. Carol Yaager. 7PM
,•
it the Son therefore shall or travel trailers Will vacanctes Gtrls' Vars 1ty 1----------,-Realtor Call 304-171 ~
conSider
damaged
or
burn
make you free Ye shall be
Softball. G1rls' Reserve Karate the ult1m
m self 6 rm house. small house,
6104 or &amp;715 1381 or
outa CaH 446 0176
678-7786
Softball and Drama Any de1ence all pnvate lessons acre of land $10.600 Call
lree mdeed
46 Space for Rent
'
~
John836 ~
ATTENTION LOG PRO· ~ndNldualwhopoaoessoson Men woman, II&lt; ch•ldren
614 246 9211
41 Houses for Rent 2 bdr unfumlohod opt In
DUCER s We need grade Ohio Teachmg Certificate ln•truct10n thru black belt
Crown City Ca11114-251Female Caltco cat to good logs and veneer we are and who Is Interested 1n Also available Karate $48 ,000 home small down 5 rm house • bath Inquire
8520
home please Call 446· paymg top prtcea forquadtty mak1ng apphcahon 1or the un 1fo r "ls puch 1ng and payment, balance assume· at 918 2nd Ave. Galhpohs, 1_::_:.:.:_______:-::-: KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33 . North ol
-7697
matenal delivered to our vacanc1es should contact k1ck1ng bags and protectrve ble at 8 %·% 3 bdr • 2 full Oh
Furniahed ept 1 bdr. 920 Pomeroy lerge Iota Call
mtll •n the following Dan Morns. Supenntend equipment Jerry lowery &amp; baths full basement .
4 th Ave Galllpolil Adults. 992-7479
1 female puppy 6 mos old spec• as The oaks Ash ent, on or before February Aasoctates Karate Stud1o
lneplace new carpet, new 3 bdr 1 car garage, central water 6 electric pd. 1200
-has had shots Call 446 · Cherrv Hard Maple and 23. 1983 telephone 614 143 Burlington Rd. Jack
roof tdeal location Jaffer
air, located Yi m1 out mo Call 4 4 1 -4411 after
7729
Walnut Blanev Hardwoods 992 2163
aon Oh Call 614 286
son Ave Pt Pleasant. George' s Creek Rd Call 7 PM
48 Equ1pment
•
JoOUND 1 male dog 30 lbo
of OhiO , Sr Rt 339 North· 1-----~----:-:-;:: 3074 or 614 384 6160
Homo8rokers 676 4053or 367-7743
1.:..:......,..----~---;--:-:
for Rent
-houaebroken . 2 3 yrs old
Barlow. Oh 614 678 2960 Someone to stay wtth
675 5540
3rm and~rm unfurniahed
Call446 1364 after 2
wheelchau patient no
D
Farm house lor rent $100 apartment&amp; Utillt•• paid.
Gold sliver sterltng. hftmg ilve-mpreferredCall _
18_....;._______
Wanted to 0
3bedroomhouss1orsale
mo plusdep Call81, 4246· no poll, no children Call Backhoe ondloodor dl•o 8
•
N
t 1n throughout
0819
9316
446
1
4 4e 3437
.Puppies 112 Pekenese 8t Vz Jewelry . rmgs, old coms 8t I_:_.:.·------,--~
ew carpe 9
•
~orr•er
Call even tn gs currency Ed BUrken Barber
General Hauhng and lruh Located on Baahan Rd and - - - - - - - - - - ~~:=~=~:::;:::;:--;;;;;;;;,,l It , large bed pick
Excellent
• 4-246 6876
1ncome
for
part
1
s
e
Reliable
ts
on
3
acres
o11and
h
1
bl
toyourool
51
Shop , Middleport • 9 92·
k
remove ervtc
2 bedroom ouse near Nlc: ..yfumlshedmob
hau 1 e. opera
• 1
ume home assembly ~~
and dependable Call 446 Excellent terms to rtg ht Lang 1v111e Oh References In city AduiU only.
t90 p• day 304·8983476
30
1
2 dogs y, Pokonose 8o y, 1----- - -- - - For ~nformatlon ca
• 3159aftor6PM 2661967 porty MAKE AN OFFER
requ,.od Coli 614 742· 446_033 B
~=3=B=4=1=;~=====;
1'errMir 3 cats 2 male and 1 Buytng new 8t used comtc 641 8003 Ext 7124 Open
year fmanclng ava•lable
2641
•
LEMLEY S DRILLING Water Contact Bank One of Poma
For ront unlurnlohod opt
F le
:tamale declowod &amp; speyod books 614-949 2445 after Sun
&lt;:all446 2949
5 pm
Tho West Vlrgtnla Depari Wells Shallow gas and core roy 614-992 2133
2 bedroom In Sy.recuse
rooms and bath Inquire at , ____o_r_ _•_•_e_ __
dr~llong Myers and Gould 1-...:...---..----;-~~8160 month pluo utolot101
1.
87 VIne St , Gollp .. ls
"white male Cockapoohouse WANTED to ~aae Tobacco ment of Health II seek•ng a pump a Sales and Service SALE or rent 2 bedroom Employed couple or email
trained,goodwlthkldt Call quote, will gtve 15 lb
full time Hospttal AdmmtS· GasandOtlwellservlce Call house kitchen llvmgroom
family 992-6965 or 992- Furnlahed 3 rma with Wanted to lea•• c-orn
'446 6564
Morgans Woodlawn farm. trator for Its Fatrmont 614 388-8643
bath utlhty room S175 00 6236
1 • - n•&amp;
d C 1 II 614 21&amp;·
month. coll304 676-4369 ' - - - - - - - - - - pnvate bath. lt. •~ .,.. groun
•
Emergency Hospital lo
~
Pliny 30 4 · 6 75 - 227 5
catod on Fatrmont. West
I·
2nd Ave' Gallipolll Call( ..:.1:3:5:2:.__ _ _ _ _ __
3045236843
Goodmechamcdes~resany
TWObedroomhouse
446 •22 15
. 1German
~ 2 fema Ie d
d breed I:.- - -- - - : : - : : - - v ug1 n1a R eq u tr oments kmd of mechamcal wor k 8'"•
a .og •
,; PERCENT assumable baoemont, 1 chtld or 2 smell
1
Ql
mtKe
1·
·cShepherd
11614 256
1398
Down htll skus ladles or Baccalaureate degree plus Reasonable pnces c B II loan 2 year old b1 -level
children, couplet only
t 4
~ a
mens IIZB good cond
two years of expenence m 446 8262 ask for John
Rolling Acres large lot, 304 676~1301
~~~';.!•:-: :::h~ 1~:.!~.no
er ColliS reasonably priced Call hospital or health serv1ces,
many extras 304-675
d
'" 12 YEA R 0 ld Bor d
or bust ness adml"ustratton
Jack's Locksmtth Servtce
6768
pete 44
edultt only ep req
•
This 44 bed facility provtdes
SIX room house. lull baseCall
6-1611
•to good home tn the country 304·882 2974
~ood companton 04
for older~ ~~~~~~~~~~
Commercial DomestiC
ment, garage mcelocat1on,
676
long term skolled nursmg Automotive Coli 304 882
s226 month . 304 676
e'•o
plu 1
services and outpat1ent 2079
3 bdr apt lu mo
•
People Call 3
:&amp;768
clime serv 1ces Apphcants
1090
S76
dep.
C.M
614
24!
9316
'
should submtt resumes and 1==:::::::::=:
Allelectr1c home 14th St &amp;
"5
Happy Ads
d
applocat•ons to L Clork
TRI STATE MOBILE Ohoo St. Pt Plouant . 5
11 Help Wante
Hanabargor. MD D11ector
==~~~
HOMES USED· CARS. rmo 8o both, rent reooono·
•
'Av•co p Happy bolotod 1--- -- - - -- - of Health. 1800W.,hmgton
OLIS
blo 304 676-6711 after
Valentines day Lets get Can ' t work 9 to 5 Sell Street East Charleston
l
TRUCKS GALLIP
5PM
-togotharsoon maybesprmg AVON Work when you wast V~rg~n•a 25305 , by 22 Money to oan
CHECK OUR PRICES
"'break Super Sale1man
want Call 446 3 359 or December 16 SalarynegotCALL 446-7672
Homes
446 2166
•able EquAAal~tpo~tFn~ty su 11ness &amp; Second Mort CLEAN USED MOBILE 42 Mo
for
Rent
Emploversn
gogo
loon~
EqUity
ReHOMES
KESSEL'S
QUAL·
Lost and Found
O~rect Care Staff to work on
LOOKING for a part t1me1ob so u r1 e 1
o n 0 hI o lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
en
as needed basts wtth that has good pay, hfo 1 BOO 992 -2361 out of 4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLIS. 'A MILE out Sandhill Rood.
-LOST German Shephard mentally
retarded adults onsuronco retirement plan. Ohoo 1-513 258 0112
RT 35 PHONE 446·7274
304-676-3B34
: brown. 6 mos old lost Tvn w th behavortal dtsorders
1
-Rhol Ad II found call Interest appli cants must be
ob will
skill.teach
plusyou
help
w1th a
a valuable
' 614 245 5536
entergettc, pattent and ~e 1that
college
or
Vo
Tee
educe
to work 1iel'uble hours
-LOST 1n 81dwellarea Black able
tlon? There's only one
PreviOUS
expenmce
work
... tan Doberman weanng a mg w1th people reQu1red If around! Htgh schqol sen•ors
· red collar Call 614 388 mterested send resume to or graduates you may even
f&lt;lr a cash bonus
:t969
Oh1o Res 1denta1l Serv•ces qualifY"
Contact
the West Vugtnta
Attn Oavtd Brown
-FOUND ·R&amp;d Coon hound Inc
Army
Netto
nal Guard For
,emale 1 mtle above Ra p 0 Box 936 GallopOIII, Oh
more 1n formatton call
CLAD HALVES
.i#enawood bndge on SR 46631
Sergeant Sergeant luttM at
U.S. SILVER
•33B Call 843-5376
304
676
3960
or
coli
toll
1965-1970
Real. Estate sales penon
196411ld Older
free 1 BOO 642 3619
SPECIAL
:WANTED People who took wanted Full or part ttme
Half Dollar .... $4.60
·························
-bleck female p1t bull g1ven You must heve or get Rawle1gh Dutrtbutors
license
We
'
ll
help
Send
War Nickles
Quarter ......... $2.30
... way In Letart area at
Low moles, economy
wanted Full or part 11me
resume
to
STROUT
~47 3314 Dog was "'9"
!iOCEach
Dime ............ .ea. 92'
REALTY Box 100 C 0 EKcellent opportunitY for
.tered and stolen Chtldren s Tubune,
extra Income Call304 876
Gallpolts,
Oh
-chertshed pet Plea•a call
1090
46631
Sharp loaded low miles
'949 2646
Build 1ncome for your
futunr Aloe V e ra has

TO COAST INTER·

somlght ·
or that "
pressure u

01

~N-~A'"""NAL COMPANY Is

nee

':

lbsurance ·

!f'r' sfears '
~

!lee on the- •
11 you the

IIi and see
~ door/"':

(!!f.'::&amp;

ID ln who-,
he said.

down lo
• all their
probably -.

ljlherelo

";!

1----------

unce r
exists ln
' should

-~

uestlons"

1-----------

•ause

of

Is ln
twill be-

charge'

will be
!S to the.

~ate&lt;f.'

1----------

'

who

I' time

pair
8f 1he

•""!

\ltle a

l•ced
lnthe

laf_ncr.t
ftlnev.
wor~

y lo
neral

~

me_
ur _

ele-

uf.

~o~J

f~ch'
Tele:

4

fde a')

mlltY, ,
f y of..
1 our,

"

B~~~.WANT ADS

~~~iiiiiii~~

~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~

.

'3695

14m'

1979 OLDS 98 REGENCY .............. WHO~f~~l:o:~~

--LOST 1 male Redbone
·coonhound approx 60 lbs
.and 1 female Redbone
..Coonhound approK 50 lbs
"lost 1n Ch1mne.x Rock and
\ferrion Woods Rd area,,
~allia county If wherea
'bouts 1re known plene
·contact James E Tramer
.z 136 Dark Hollow Rd
-Jockoon Oh 45640 or call
114-286 -3806 Reward
i:otftorod
Yard Sale
til OV 1N G SALE, who Ia
)toulehold. everythtng must
-eo Four piece Brovhlll oolld
"Oak dinning room table •
chelrs •600 Three piece
:Broyhill aolld oak queen olza
..t)edroom set with mattrell
11 bOX aprlngo $600 Twin
:.1ze bed, b eby ch eet of
~t~nwen. wicker table Ia.
:P.Iont atond. whole kltchon .
jllellas. gla1111. pots pane.
•liver ware. utenails. small
•ppllan 9,,, aheetl. towels,
)adoproad . booko, nlc
••ckl. mile Saturday,
Iunday • Monday. February 19th. 20th. 2ht
) 301 Meadowbrook l!lr Pt
fltoa.. nt. 304 675·7921

•

1978 MONTE CARLO ................................. ' 4195

BROWN IMPL.' CO.
ASHVIllE, OHIO

614-983-2951

OVER STOCKED

6-NEW J.D. 7000 12 RN FOLDING
PlANTERS w/COMPUTER TRAK MONITOR.
PRICE LESS J.D. REBATE ...... '19,600
LIQ. FERT. .. ........................... '3525
INSECT. w/BAND SPREADER ....... '950
NO Tl LL COULTERS .................. '2325
U-SET-UP FREIGHT ....................'500
WE-SET-UP FREIGHT ................ '1500

.

Good condot1on, low miles one owner

1978 MALIBU CLASSIC ............................. ' 3695
1978 DODGE ASPEN ................................. '2695

t·.
~...

...

!'

'I

~

t

ll!lllftll9!!1~

,
.
,
.
,
I
,.:
t I
I
SPRING VALLEY TRADING CO. t :
:
...

~

, . ..

.'

'

'

r

•

'

,

,...

•

•

..

r

•

I

.'

AKC Registered Doberman
pupo, t50 Coli 446 7796

'

I

..

'

SPECIAL - We can offe1 this
home f&lt;J- a limiled time only on
lhlse great temE. ()ny
$4 000 00 down and $310 97 a
II10dh paymen1s indude taxes
alli onso.rance. Th• home •
Slualol oo I acre ~ has 4 lEd
moms, INilg room has spare lor
wwdbumer, fireplace on famiy
ooom look al Ito• one loday'
Pro;e • reduced to $31 500 00
OOAA GOOO BUY - Noce 2
si!Jy home, 2 IEdrooms upstirs. IIVong ooom w/ IIIXId
burner kitchen balh alli lEd
room dowrruol'i Situated on
noce l&lt;i Milo oulbuo~ll&amp; Sells
for $20,000 00
Velma Noconsky Assoc
Phone 742 3092
ChtiYI Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742-3171

Butldtng matenala
block briiCic, sewer pepea,
Windows . llntele , etc
Claude Winters R1o Grande.
0 Coll614 245 1121

56 Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boerding all breeda AKC
Reg Doberman• pups afd
Oobermen Stud Serv1ce
Coll446 7795

Real Estate General

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
NEW LISTING - llladbuiY - Mobile home With expallio, bay
Window, cenlral aor mce lront Sitting porch two car garage will!
two 1ooms alli a beautiful laymg I l / 5 acre yMd Mostly fur
mshed mdudmg washer and dryel $2900000 •
TUPPERS PlAINS - Agorgeous two acre lot wilh aooe floor plan
len year old home Three bedrooms donong area. ful basemen!
wilh garage patio and mce cabnels on kilchen Jusl $38 500 00
SYRACUSE - Two lois wrth older home lilaI has three bedrooms
, ·~room, part basemen! and ublrty room $11,00000
NEW 1.1STNG - POMEROY - A 1Wo slof'l home wolh lhree
1Ed10oms, la1ge be.!utifullovong room and domng room l'h baths
~cony paho and a "'shong well lots of close! space new
plumbing and new wmnR. $38 000 00
NEW LISTING - IIIDOLEPORT - Anoce corner ~t on a good
neghborhood wolto lour bedrooms, beautiful bath large lo~ng
room, domng room big pantrj, lUI basemen~ and a one car garage
$5050000
992-6191
992 5692
949-2660
992-2259

•

Join TMsefl
Office .............. .... .

m

Real Estate General
1\I"Okl•r AliCIIOfll I r

~wf

liFf

M~GHEE

INSUJ.?AN ( f

t

~

,,n 44&amp;-0;"&gt;52 J\nyllnw
llt'lh Nnll

tl;"•!l!'~n

IIIIR 427 - $30s mamlenance lree Sldon~t lenced back va•d
Iillllly or~'llled neo~hlxlrhood Th• " a very clean 3 BR hom•• Call
for appoonlmenl

30. 896

Pot atoes S6 per hundred
lb bag $3 26 50 lb bogr
U S No 1 Wuc onsuf
Ruooett 304 676 3762 oi
446 8247

-·---J.------..li-----..
,
WISEMAN
Real Esta1e General

1

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
PHONE 446-3643

WI

Ike Woseman Broker, 446 3796 Eve
hm Cochran, Assoc~ale 446 7881 Eve

*Willis T Leadtngham, Realtor, Ph Home 446·f5l9
*Phyllis. Loveday, Phone 446 2230
*Joan Boggs. Phone 446-3294

B J Haorslon Assoc - 446-42411 Eve
Clyde Walkeo, Assoc 145 ~276

I
I

3 ileoiriiiMs

Approx I acre Noce yard
Garden space N&lt;e tomforta
ble home large frool porch
back pal&lt;&gt; deck modern
country k~chen large ba
throom On Stale Hoghway
Phone for more delaols
#555

COUNTRY LIVING
AT ITS BEST
84 ACRES
MORE OR LESS
(flee Na1 Gas)
Slep onto one of lhe cleanest
larm homes on an odeal loca
bon Three good sozed lEd
rooms ~rge lovon~ room sunny
ealon kolchen and balh To
bacco base gas lease and tree
gas all go wolh ot large bam
cellar house and chocken
hoose Call today lor many
more extras
#483

DRIVE A LITTLE SAVE A LOT
3 BR lull basemen! whole alumonum ~don~ luel ool FA luonace
30 x40' bam shonRied root lois of young peach aIll apple trees All
lhos reduced lo only $14 900
•
'
#452
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
BEAT INFLATION - 8Vo% ASSUMPTION
Charm &amp; Qualoty WI! be yours on thos all brock 3 bedroom hom~
large hvong room and formal drnonR room w/poclure w~do ws
overlookong ltoe Ohoo Rover 3 baths Ia moiy room 2 car garagewrth
dooo opener attoc 2 firepla ces cenlral aor large basemen! alli
over I acre of beautofully landscaped grounds. C~ se lo the oty For
more delaols call today
11523
RESTFUl AREA-3 BEDROOMS-I 38 ACRES
Proce 1educed lo $31 ,50000 Coty water Close lo fore hydrant
Basemen! Well buott house Carport Outbuoldllgs Good onsulaloon
trees garden space Very QUK!Iarea POSSible •ssumable mortgage
at low onte~esl rate Phone for detaols

11566
INVESTMENT - INCOIIE - INVESTMENT
71 12x65 furn•hed mobole home 68 12x50 furnoshed mobile
home and 4 exira lots too rental septic systems all on State Roule
#565
BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES- $47 000
31Edrooms I'! balh home woth lots of extra noce lealures buoll111
Cilbonels St~l&lt;:lea nong range doshwasher garbalif dospoSiOI and
large donong 100m Kyger Creek Schools
#50t
BEAUTIFUL WATERFRONT All BRICK HOME
CITY SCHOOLS
Ideal for boatong foshong and jliCknockong al vour back dooo En)oy
lhos spacoous cheerlul house woth 31Edrooms 1v, baths large ivong
room eal&lt;n ~tchen 2 f11eplaces lull basement 2 porches chaon
lonk lence plus much more Callloday lo onake an appoontm!nt to
see thos lovely yea~ around home
#505
BUSINESS PROPERTY- 1312 EASTERN AVE
Nore buoldong_ lois of poclme wondows Slone lronl hke new
30'x80 lots of uses - Two kJs Approx 92' fmnlage lois of
corocrete parkong spaces Phone too all delao~
•
#562
BUSINESS-HOME RENTAL

Bu~ness equopmenl buoldonr. 6 room home- Cenlral a11 modern
k~chen 111 baths all coty conven~nce Noce home Rental - 3

Dog kennel for 2 dogt
11'x6'h x6'. 1296 Call
114 2451184

BIIR 422 - NICe ranch localed on Roush lane os proced lo sell al
$38 000 latRe LR 2 BR kolchen oncludes ran~e eye lev~ oven
&lt;hshwasher and dosposal Can lo see

Kanmore waeher •n A 1
cond , •11 0 Wh1rl pool
dr:yer real n1ee *90 Call
446 8181

BMR 423 - In lown locaboo Walk lo school larRe lwo story
home oncludes 4 IEdrooms loVIng room dononR room formal
entrance lg counlry kilcoon lull basement wolh famoly room 2
fireplaces, plus more Reduced lo $53 000 00 Call for delaols

Gaaclotheadryer $100
Electric cloth•• dryer •as
Weaher and dryer t126
Coli 614 742-23&amp;2

BMR 424 - 2 plus acres woth a very n~e 3 bedroom ranch slylc
home You woll love lhe country almospohere Pos•ble ~an
as.,umploon

'3 ,cord neaoned epllt oek
160 cord 114 1192 3895

a•

425- heculove lype brock hoo1e on french Pr!liOl~~l
fealunng 2 I00 square leel of hvong area on lhe mam lloor plu' a
lui walkool basement Thos lone hoone os one of a kond on lh" area
Be loo lor~ lo ""' lhos one Call now
BIIR 426 - Proced rl!(hl al $37 500 II has an assumable loan
Wllh only 9'1·~, onleresl We aoe lalkong abuul a very clean 3 RR
home ~luated on nee llailolon a lamoly oroenled neoghborhood
Cal too complele delaols.
BIIR 391 - PRICE GREATLY REDUCFOO 11wner lransle11ed and
musl selllhos 3 BR - ai ( PEftDIMG;Iooes deluxe 1Bx36
onground pod Red, ,._ ... "~ - n.US owne~ woll pay
f HAVA poonls and cmmg cost~

5-

811R428- Sled ~d•nR. 3 BR ranch situab!d on largeflalkt (Jiy
School Distroct Pri:ed al $37,500 00 Call br appomtmenl
BIIR 429 - All electric b1~evet on Kyger Creel&lt; School llislncl
Situated on I 21 acres With assumable 9\\% loan Cal for complete
delais'

.R 411- NEW umNG -Excellent buy dt $38 500 L&lt;Ne~

frame ranch with 3 BR'S,IIIJI! l!ifcllen wilh Cl,_ dollnglll!a 2
•

•• 431 - NEW USTIIIG - Bnck 11nch Includes 3 BRs. lR,
DR , famly 100m 2\\ baths. atuated on 38 acres. Callo see this
one blaJ!
I'

NEW LISTING -IN TIIWN- Complelely redecorated home on a good on lown neoghborhood Thos
wei decorated 2 story home has new vonyl sidong.
new wmng. new caoJl'ts. new h w OO.Ier part new
roof &amp; os fully onsulaled OHel'i 4 IEdrooms 2 ~,
balhs famoly room eQUopped krtchen lull basenal gas heal ovel'iored garage large fenced
alli more Call Jom Cochran for appoontmenl

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

BIIR 414 - 12•60 mobile hom• ' '"''"" on l acre plus lol
Includes lurnolure, hi
PENDINGonve~ed lront ded
12•24 ~aral(e woth Slv ""'

SA\£

II
II

, Oolor TV console model,
ru.g. couch &amp; chair Cell
446 7013

'

Fruit

8o Vegetables

Amencen E1k1mG Sp1U
pupp1e1 shots &amp; wo rmed ,
t1 00 Call 304 896 3935

'

B'h% ASSUMPTION
5 Rooms 3 bedroom, large mode~n ealon kotchen lull basement
Wllh large fa moly room and woodburner lhal does an excellenltob
heabng th• home Garage summer aor coodolooned A down
payment and loan assumable Paymenls ol $292 00 PI'' IM!IIh
Nice large lot Phone too fullonformaloon
#559

\'

58

Pets for Sale

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

blths. Benet see Ito~ one today'

..

PHEASANTS
3972

NEW LISTING - 1973 traoler mModdleport. 21Edroom ~undry
room, underponnon&amp; onsulabon tolal efeclnc hookup onctuded can
be moved lo your lol or rental al present locabon Appraised value
more lhan askong proce $6 950

rooms All lor one pnce An excellent rnvestmenl Gel started now
on busoness and a near by home
j
#529

W£ ALSO WORK 011
All OTHER APPLIAIICES

"Utens grandfather
Wild 80LJC8t Very gentle &amp;
•1fecuonete. black with
whate feet &amp; mark1ngs I 76
or be1t of1er 304-876
6694

NO
II

Georce S Hobstetter Jr
810ker
Ofloce 992 5739

66 Building Supplies

.

56

NEW LISTING- 3 or 4 bedrooms possoble on lhos Dne Traoler wrth
large add-on on neany an acre lot Includes slorage buoldrng. Lol
can have second traier as extra oncome Can for more detaol&lt;
Asking $12 000

BIIR 389 - lhos lone home toes 4 IEdrooms and 'locaiL&lt;I clo• •
to lown Vou Will hbavc a large lot w1lh a 1 ounlry almosph~n· ami
"""' alllhe cily r.omvenoences Call now'

ol- ,

'

Atred•l• Tarner pupa AKC.
3 beautiful lomeloo Roady
now, w1H make great 11m1tv
pots Co111 -614-692 2170

66 Pets for Sale

NEW USTNG - 4 IEdroom home rn loo coontry VInyl sidon&amp;
storm wmdows, on 3 acres. lots of frullrees. plenly ot good water
assume loan of $18,500 wilh monlhly paymentof$258 or arrange
a new loan

IIALIOI

New 1983 White sewing
mach1ne 1ree arm model
with built in 1tretch stech
dg illl patterna. makes
button holea. monogram•
much mcH"e We are over
stOcked wtth thia model. we
muet d.cteeM our 1nven
tory factory 20 yr guaran
181 Reg prtce over 1300
vvur COlt only $96 Call
114 385-8918 out of town
cell collect Free delivery to
your home

1

l

••
'

AKC REgistered beautiful
Cocker Spaniel Call 446
1824

Henry E Cleland, Jr • GAl

RCA cabinet modal atero
AM FM tepa adaptor t100
SH 2826 Jelfer•on AVe.
Pt p..... nt. wv

:~t.,.,..,..,.,_..,.._._.,,,...,.,,...,.,,...,.,,...,..,.....,..••,.. ..... _.¢, I

Price Less J.D. Rebate &amp; U-Set-Up .. 58700

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
• KENNEL AKC Chow
pupp1e1. CFA thmalev•n.
Per...n and Siamese klttens Coli 446-3844 oftor
4PM
,

thermostat Will take t326
304-6711-2602

Dottoe Turner

• AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
,GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

!

•

Spring Vallily Plaza
Gallpohr Ohio
Monday lhnl $atulday
10:00 A.M. 'Til 6:00P.M.

1-NEW J.D. 7000 SRN PlANTER

1- - - - - - - - -

CENTRAL REALTY

IIOBILE HOME - With large add-oo buoklong also asphaft dnveway localed oo Quiet. clean slreet ott of hrgh water on Racone Too
liVIng room os extra ~1ge There~ a cement walk and large cO'Iered
poo:h, also a metal sorage butldong. You can be on thos one mtwo
Mel!s lor only $16 900

REAlTORS

Equ1pment

'

Jt i :

Rebate &amp; IJ-.Set-Up .. '6200

7220

90,000 BTU Reddy Heater

ca. TV. Radio

TaOYBILT ROTOTILLERS
Dlacounta Free hiller
utcluded Immediate lltap·
m•nt Parta, anginas
703-842.3171 Hickory HMI
Nursery, Rt 1 lo• 390 A
Flohttovlllo VA 221139 .
Trade-In• acceqted
'"'

t,

j

62

G•vel or fill dirt delivered

~~~~~~------~~~~==71
Oolcl&amp;-...,• ""-are upl Prl.,.. Subject to
_ n p due to rNibl condldo...
.

'495

UMd elec:tnc:: dryers 1 white
Whirlpool. 1 Horvoot gold 2
coppertone 1 wh1te GE ,
Norge All guaranteed 30
doyo Coll614-251 1207

ell 61•· 992 3191

*'

1-NEW J.D. 7000 6RN PLANTER
Price Less J.D.

i...

t

..-

•

Auto, gas saver, work car

..

.CLASS RINGS 8o
WEDDING RINGS
,...
•ST£RJ,JNG FLA1WARE
oi-l •
.OOLD TEETH
.PLATINUM
,.
•SILVER CONTACTS........1 1 gQ lb. ~ I

*!

1977 DODGE MONACO .............................. ' 1795
49,000 m1les, new battery, good rad1als sharp
1973 MONTE CARLO ................................... ' 895
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

..

U. S. SILVER DOIJARS ............. 112.75 ell.
1935 and Older
,._',
STERLING SILVER ....................... lb $l 70 ~

...&gt;1-

6 cyl , auto , good cond1t10n

1973 CHEV. VEGA

•

~
!-----------------------~·
~ OTHER ITEMS WANTED i.

A1r. t1lt, AM FM new !Ires

Onves and runs good ,

•1.75 ea.

ea.
ea.

Oold love ae•t. raverSable.
side hi&amp; aoltd oek around
bOttom, 176 Calll14 388
97113

lood Call 441 2716

t
l..

GOLD &amp;
SILVER

RefrigeratiOn. washer,
dryers. r•nge1. d11
hwethen servece &amp; repa.r
of oil moko &amp; modolo. 9 to 6
Call•4e 8181

Firewood delntered *30 PU

i..
~
•..

COINS

1981 TOYOTA

POODLE GROOMING Call
Judy Taylor It 614 387

9 gal Kerotene tank w1th

for ule lump coal &amp; tare
wood Z111n Coal Co Inc
Call 446-1408

.

WANTED

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa chair. rocker on oman, 3 tltbles. teKtre heavy
by Frontter), $685 Sofa.
chaar end loveeeet. 8276
Sofea and chan priced from
t285 to 1895 Tabfoo 145
and up to • 1 26 H1de abeds.*440 end up to
t525 RocWnors. t171 to
1360, Lampo from 128 lo
t7tl 6 pc dinette• from
t99. to 1435 7 pc t189
and up Wood table With , ..
cho~ro U25 to t746 Delli
1110upto 8226 Hutches.
f660 and up mepleor p1ne
fin11h Bunk bed complete
wath mattresses. t250 and
up to 8395 Boby bods,
f110 Mettreuea or box
ipfinge. hilt or twm, t 68 ,
finn, tl8 and 178 Quoon
·~~~ t196 4 dr cheall.
t42 6 dr chasti, 164 a.d
framn. 120 ond 125 10
gun Gun cabineu. $360 ,
dlnone cholra t20 and t25
Oas or electrte rangea, 1326
up to t376 Baby ma·
treasea, t 26 &amp; *36. bed
fromoo 120. 126, 8o 130,
ktng freme $60 Good
•lectlon o1 bedroom IUIIII.
ceder cl)asta. rocken. met•l
cabinets, awwel rockers
Used Furniture bookcase.
ranga1, chairs end teblea.
weahera, dryera refriger•·
ton and rv·. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd Open 9am to
8pm Mon thru Fn 9am to
5pm Sat
4411-0322

Pets for Sale

64 Mille Merchandise

*"''*'~*** ·~···ir**•'** ************

:&amp;

Goods I-F-Ir_e_w_o_o_d_d_e_l-,v-o-ro_d_l_6_0_o
cord Coal dollvorod t45
ton Call Tom Hoskins
814 949-2ao or 114
:
SWAIN
;AUCTION. FURNITURE 742 2834
162 Olivo St . Gllltlpolio K1n9
~coal • wood heetera wtth Firewood, split. •30 00 a
trucldoed. I 35 00 deli
ten t469,
bo11 1prmg •
'manreu 1100. ftrm e120 vorod Ph {6141 912-2770
fSOio·loveooat 8o chair t199. or 13041 882-2194
love 1eat1 *70 new coal A
wood heatefl 11 low 11 Lultalfe netural gea furnace
1*398 With blowers, uaad Complete Excellent condl
doel • wood heaters . new tton Callll14·992·7810
d1net seta •7&amp; • up, refngeretora, rengea. bunk beda Kirby aweeper w1th attach
compl•to t179, bunkloo mente, lneludlng ahem
mattreaaes *40. cheatt pooer E•cetlent condition
dreueu. TV·a CeU 441 Throw pillows double knat
comfortera end ruga Cell
~169
114-98&amp;-4355
GOOD USEO APPUANCES 1- - - - - -- - washera dryers refragere
tors. rengn Sbggt Ap- Colonaal Ceram1c1 2919
pllancea Upper River Rd
Jec;bon Ave Pt PI Evening
beside Stone Cre1t Motel claiMS •nd deily workahop,
446 1398
Duncan African• &amp; Mayea
Pa10t1 Greenware Bisque.
RAY'S USED FURNITURE Easter greenware a. bisque.
2 PC bedroom IUite e86. bowla a p1tchera Houre
couch t26, cheat 115. oak Mon • Frl 9AM to 4PM.
office chair $36 gel range everhngs Mon &amp; Wed I
t81, refrlg t 126 Blrdooyo p m • 9 p m Set 9 1 2
maple dreaaer $85 Call Aegittar tor free door pr11ea
814-367-0637
304-676-3210

••t

Apertmant
for Rent

for Rent

66

64 Mille

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

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

The

Oh1o-Point Pleasant, W Va

ENERGY EFFICIENT
3rd AVE -GALUI'OLIS
Be sure lo see tho c~an remod~ed home wrth large open lovong
room dn11nR room eal on k~ ch en Ulolily room garage sl!lage
buoldn~ woth gas heal &amp;cenlral ' " F11m reduced pr &lt;e al $25,000
#561
BUY THIS HOME FROM OWNER WITH $2 500 DOWN
And low onleoesl rale on ba~ n ce wlh (M'rer 2 IEdroom coNage
wolhon 5 monules ol &amp;lver Brodre Shoppon~ Pla1a
#260
CHARMER AT $25.900
POSSIBLE ASSUMABLE IDAN
WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT
Coul1 be 4 oo 5 bedroom s lJorl!' porches balh 1
foreplace wrth P,aws loll' Honong room, k~chen ~~~~R~~

COLONIAL HOllE- 40 ACIIES- Just hsted lhos
lovely 2500 SQ ft modern 4 IEdroom home Thos
lone home offers 2 large balhs. equopped kotchen
• fa moly room fireplace wood)lume• basemen! plus
approx 10 teres crop and balance on pasture &amp;
woods 4 barns 1472 lb tobacco base plus over
2 000 road honlage on twp road - Rt 775 Call
Clyde Walker loo more onlo

I

I
1
I

REDUCED TO $59 900 - 12% FINANCING Owneos lransfe~red very an11ous lo selllhos Spnng
Villey Home 3 bedrooms 2'1, balh' 2 hreplaces
lui basement large lamoly room w/bar nal gas
cent aor garge &amp; mole Woll consoder 20 o•30 year
mor1gage

I
I
1
II

I

I
1
I

I
I

II

" ~-:'::'1,-, II

~ -r.--1

I
I
REOUCEO $3400 - MUST SELL NOW - An I
anractowe 3 yr dd home s~ualed on over I acre I
yard ., coty school dosl 1481 sq It ol lovong area
wh~h leatures 31arge IEdrooms 21uU balhs noce I
donong room utol &amp; storage room heal I
2 car garage and large storage burldon&amp;
,·-~-ed_m__se_lla-1-$5-1-.500-------------, I
!:.,,."'~

RIVER BRICK - ENERGY EFFICIENT
RANCH - One ollhe Iones! you'll see on lower Rl
7 woth a terroloc voew 4 IEdrooms 2 baths fan&gt;ly
room loreplace eqmpped krtchen formal donon~
basemen! 2 car garage eKira onsuatoon 16" on
wals) lnRie windows hoghesf elect brll $65 and
owner woll fonance at 12'~. $79900

II
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Good localoon oul
I 2sidelown
1412SF boockranchlypebuoldin&amp;Has
half balhs nal gas ool, central aor &amp; 2 slorage
1rooms Has been used for chu!Ch pu1poses larRe
1Jom
parkong area &amp; 2 lois Pnced al $54 000 00 Cal
Cochfan

ACRES - Owne~ anxoous lo sell Located on
IIs4Horse
Creek RD I mole oH Rl 7 Includes modern
bedroom home w•lh woodbu1ner basemen! &amp;
kdchen Has 700 lb tobacco base &amp; 24x36
1large
barn Would consoder mobile home on trade Cal
I Clyde $37 500
I SPLIT
LEVEL - NEStlED IN WOOOS - Very
anractove 4 bedroom home on a lovely 4 5 acre
I seltong near Rio Glande on an excellent 11e1ghbo1 Nearly 26 sq fi of IIVong area 11cludes a
I hood
huge tamoly 1oom will! wb fireplace br.ifi on kil
I chen
3 lull baths p~ty of storage and located on
coty
Can be looughl wolh nearly 10 acres.
Call
Ike
Wiseman
I
I NEW
LISTING - COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING RESIDENTIAL &amp; RENTALS- Several sources of
oncome 38•50 brock buoklonR on 31d Ave Oown
I stars
has
rooms currently
rental
Upslaoos has 2 apartments rentong $200
I biness
each 1973 mobilehome renlong $275 mn
I mowoodburner
has 3 bedrooms I balhs. faonly 1oom
VInyl Sldongmsulaloon stormwondows
I and rn good condot10n
Will sell house separale Cat
I today for delaols Call Jom Cochran
I RTloc alton588m- 3scbedroom
ranch m rt n xt tllt•nl
hools. Has lull
Walke~

school ~

21Ul~hed

hoo~ng

Ho~se

1

c1~

ba~mr. nt l&lt;10111~

16'
bedroom 1 hHth
l garage firl'place
carport plus 40 x 60 ' 15 hogh buoklon~
room)

1

mitsiPr

1

I w/20•40 anached shed (Excellenl lm tractor
1 wrnk) all localed 011 1'1• acoes $60s Call Clyde
Walker
II over
NEW LISTING - NO DOWN PAYMENT - Take
present 10% mig assumplooo 3 01 4 lEd
room bnck ranch rs II yl'i old alli has 21, baths,
I large
kotcoon, lulllomshed basement nat gas cent
aor and 2 car garage hcellent localoon on Rl 141
I on I acre
I CHANCE
OF A LIFETIME - RESIDENTIAL
FESSIONAL OFFICES OR BOTH - AnractoV!' 2 ~
12 room house on 2nd Ave on lhe heart ol
I slory
the prolessoonal bu• ness commumly Includes 2
I Mchens 2'h balhs lull basement 2 car Rarage
quality conslrucloon when built aod good
I Top
maontenance makes lhos a solod onveslment A
almosphe~e os provoded by the larl(e rooms
II stale~
hardwood ftoors fireplaces elc Call Ike Woseman
fftV

I MILE FROM HII C - 3Y• ACRES - h cellenl
coostnocted bricl&lt; home on one of lhe area's finesl
neghborhoods Alovely scenoc loCation enhances
lh~ 3 bedroom home on Charolaos Hils Has 2
baths famoly room, fireplace eQuopped kolchen
formal donon&amp; basement nal gas, cent aor '1 car
garage and 3'h acres w/ pond low onteresl as
sumption Call Ike Woseman

'

#550

1497

JU;

LISTED - MINI FARM - If you re wanting
to raose lois oftobacco then lh~ ~ the place lor you
14 acres thai onci.Jdes a 1586 lb base (owner.
raMI over 4600 lbs 1n 1982) 3 bams (38x48
new 14x84 new and 36x40 lobacco barns), bot
loms have a good cover alli one os tiled Also
ordudes an attracloved 3 yr old bedroom maont
free home Includes lamoly room fireplace alli .
woodburner large kolchen ulol room pal&lt;&gt; &amp; new
1001 ceHar &amp; workshop Woll sell some equop Call
Jom Cochran $60s

I

~=~os~~~tb:n,g,ltms:a~~~;kfong and Rilden spot on ciy
NICE BRICK LIKE NEW CLOSE ro EVERYTHING
Beautdul surroundrn~:&gt; 7 roollli all brod&lt; lwo-car garage larll!
ld famiy room 14 x28 lovong ro!JTI 14'x28' Nocemodern klcoon
And ltoe best part about th~ proeprty os loo low low pro;e Phore
now
#554
3 BEDROOMS - 3 AnES M OR L
Mol)~ home 14 x70' 1976 F~eedom •;, balbs, ooderpnnlrl~ lois
ot buolon cabonels range, lffrl!l!ratll donetle set ~~ coodltiorer
and olher furnlu1e R,.al waler nrQl land for gilden AN lh~ l:ir
00~ $22500
#425 '
39 ACRES MOllE DR LESS
Tdlal*! paslu~e land soore timrer pffljy of spr~ng wale~ ~ mile
frmlage on PrMpect Church Road Phone for full rJ&lt;:Iails

r

k~chen

~ump

LOST YOUR JOB?

a very good

opportumty to be
your own boss ThnYmg cany-oot bustness Petfect for man and Wtfe Owner
anx1ous to sell Has 2 JObs, must sell
Call Ike W1seman - 446 3643
Here ts

1
' - - - - - - W.oR.
-_oE._rA._.;......;.........I I
I
GRADE A DAIRY - 2 home - 238 acres m/t
localed I mole west of Rutland 90 Ac m/1 good I
crop land Mode1n molk parlor &amp; molk hoose woth al
I
I
I
I
$34.000- Noce 3 bedroom home localed on
I
:iouthwestem Schoof Disl Has an equopped krt
chen
area I\\ baths full basement 2 I
carports &amp; I'A acres Call Clyde Wilker
I
COIIIIERCIALLOT IN RIO GRANDE- Excellent I
locaton at corner of Maple &amp; Easl College Ave.
eQUIP 60 f1ee stalls 16x50 C STV solo woth un
loader &amp; feed bunk Tasteluly remodeled older 6
room brock home wolh full basement Also 2nd
remod~ed lrame home w~h new krtchen &amp; bath
full lone of farm eQUip oncluded on pnce Fonancong
avaolable Call Clyde Walker

don~ng

Reslncled buoklong l&lt;i zoned commercoal Cal
Clyde Walker f~r onto
IF YOU WANT ABEAUTIFUL HOME SITI- LOTS
OF WDOOS &amp; WILDLIFE - lake a look al th"
You11 kove olol )1JU love nalure walk' hoose rdonl'.
hunlong alli pnvacy Up lo B3 acres ol noce laymg
vacanl ~Ill m Rll Grande area Growong
ne~borhood Several luture homi!SIIes on 2
roads Pnced woth 83 acres al37 500 Crty so:hools
Call Jom Cochran

I

I
II'
168 ACRE FARI -

1
I

I

$48 500 _Excellent buy on
lh~ laree ac~eage will a remodeled 4 bedroom
home Approx 10-20 acn!S crop, wilh bllance 11
woods aIll pasture Has some buildonflS and bam~
Home hos fireplace ...,.. nd
Rt
554 Cal Jm Coclranca,""'' 1 garage 011

th~

1

I
I
I

I

Cree~

b~ance

land lays veiY good lois ol pnvacy
BRAND NEW LISTING ~ EXCEllENT LOCATION
- You II fond lhls hom•• oo he one ol lhe hesi
decoraled on lhe markel Quahly llvong space '"
over 1900 sq H 3 n~" "'"I h!&lt;lrooms 21 h•llrs
lamoly mom woodburn""' h11•plac1' !Ionon!' '"''"
nal gas healnR and priCed well below repla• '''""'''
costs &amp;tuated on a lovely ~oulscaped yaul oil Rl
35 on a tone neiRhborhoo!l Callloday to "'' lhos
home alli slart lhe new yeao oil roght
ON tST AVE - v, BLOCK FROM PARK - "'"
loandoome 140 Y' old hoHie " oearfy lor you too~
rcenUy oebuil - new uxol new 3 pi"" hoi
Na~o system, new W1nn1•. "'w plumi)nR (? to&lt;lhll.
oew ~II: hen new ca•pl ami coon1Mely
&lt;lecoraled lo plr~sr. anvon&lt;' One o1 1111• best
localllnson the area and a bow· home lor .ony .,ed
tamoly Cai Ike \\Iseman

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

L

I

I
169 A - Beef cattte Iarm 25 A m/ 1, crop 115 A I
pasture 2 barns, 2 houses wolh one 1emodeled &amp;
own gas supply lrom weU on farm Just on S R 1 I
mie W Rultand Call Clyde l'lall&lt;er
I
1918 CHATHAM - Ranch slyle home near new I
playground ara 3 bedrooms. foreplace tivmg room
nal gas ooal, I Oxl5 workshop or small Ruesl I
hoose 12x60 shed &amp; lenced yard Call Clyde
I
Walker
I
164 AC - SR 141 - localed on Raccoon
farm otters lobacco base approx 60 ac pas I
lure, 50 crop,
on woodland 40x60 barn
and 16&gt;60 shed for lobacco &amp; hveslock WeK &amp; I
rural water avaolable for home sole Less lhan $450
ac Call Clyde w•ker
I
RIO CENTRE ESTAtES - lleaubful wooded buold I
ong lots from 21o 5 ae~es each ldeallocahon near I
college on good residenhal area $6 800 to $11 000

new e&lt;]llpped k1tchen all nverSIZed anr1 ahmcttve

CHEAPER THAN REfll - Payments of $242 mo
oncludong !axes &amp; onsurance 9'h% mortgage as
sumpbOn woth $4500 down pymt 2 bed1oom
home locale on lhe aly school diSl Has fireplace
ealon kotchen new paonl 'h acre yard and proced
at $26 500 Call Jom Cochran

II

j

I
II
I

I
1

J1

�'

is, Oh1o-Point

Times-Sentinel

20, 1983

W.Va.

Oh1o-Poont Pleasant, W Va.

54 Mise Merch1111di18
Fuewood delivered f60 a

Tribune - 44&amp;-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

'
SWAIN
:AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olive St GallipoHa Kin9
~coal &amp;. wood heetera w1th

fan

••ss

set box spreng &amp;

1nottrou e1 00, f1rm e120
,aofa·-t 8o cheor •199,

cord Coal delivered *46
ton Call Tom Hoaklna
614 949 2UO or 614
742 2e34
Firewood, opllt UO 00 1
truckload. *36 00 dell
verad Ph f614) 992 2770
or (3041 882 21!14

love aeat1 170. MW coal &amp;
wood heaters aa low as
•ass wtth blowera used
toal • wood tteat1r1, new

8

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

VVVa State Champ1on Auct1
oneer R1ck Pearson Estates
ant1ques farm households
L1censed Ohtp WVa 304

tn memory of Della Gdhlan
who departed Feb 19

t967

773 6785 or 304 773
9185

Sixteen years have now
gone by Smce you ve gone
to be wtth God on htgh
Some dav agatn we shall
rneet to Sit and talk at Jesus

Auctton every Fn ntght at
the Hartford Commun1ty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Cons1gments of new and
used merchandiSe always
welcome R1chard Reynolds
Auct1oneer 276 3069

laet

Mtssed bV children
Dolores Mildred , Shirley
}leatrtce Betty and the1r
famthes

In

lOVIng memory of Del·
bert Games who passed
from th1s hfe February

AUCTION every Saturday
ntght, Mt Alto, WV 6 p m
Consignments welcome
Emma Bell aucttoneer

19th 1978
The Fam1ly
and Fnends

9

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old

3 Announcements

furntture and Ant tques of all
ktnds call Kenneth Swam,

446 3159 or 256 1967 1n

SWEEPER and SOWing

the eventngs

[nachme repatr parts and
auppl1es
Ptck up and
del1very DaviS Vacuum
Cleaner one half mfle up
Georges Creek Rd Call

Buvtng Gold Stiver Platt
num Gold and Sliver pnces
are the htghest tn two years
check our prtces on gold &amp;
s1lver scrap Jewelry Buyrng
Old cotns scrap rtngs &amp;
stlverware Da1ly quotas
avatlable Also cotns 8t cotn
suppltes for sale Spnng
Valley Tradtng Co Sprmg

446 0294
l3un shoot Ractne Gun
Club Every sundaystanmg
1 p m Factory choked guns
1
_;0.:_"_:Y_ _ _ _ _ _..:. Ic-

1JINGER BREAD STUDIO
Valley Plaza 446 8025 or
]&gt;. r t 10 os on s
J 0 N I _4_4_6_B_0_2_6_ _ _ _ __
.CARRINGTON 698 3290 1
We pay cash for late model

'Alcoholics Anonymous Call

A46-0276 304 676 3647

clean used cars
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson

446 0069

:4

GIVeaway

BEDS IRON B11ASS old

"ANY PER SON who has
-:inythtng to gtve BV(fV and
'doas not offer or attempt to
bHer anv other thtng for sale
fnay place an ad 1n thts
"COlumn There wtll be no
~ harge to the adverttser
~f the Son therefore shall
make you free Ye shell be
1ree tndeed

John 8 36

'female Calico cat to good

homo please
-.7697

Cell 446

1 fomalo puppy 6 mos old
haa had shots

Call 446

7729

7760
Cash for used mob1le homes
or travel trailers W1ll
constder damaged or burn

outs CaK 446 0175
ATTENTION LOG PRO
OUCERS We need grade
logs and veneer, we are
pay1ng top prtces for quatlttv
matertal delivered to our
II, In the followmg
spec1es The oaks Ash,

Cherry Hard Maple and
Walnut Blaney Hardwoods
of Ohio Sr Rt 339 Nonh

fOUND 1 male dog 30 lbs
:housebroken 2 3 vrs old
,Call 446 1354 after 2

Barlow, Oh 614-678 2960

.Pupp1ea Y2 Pekenese &amp; Y2
1'errter Call evenmgs

..614 245·5B76
2 dogs 1h Pekenese &amp; v~
'terrter 3 cats 2 male and 1
Jemale declawed &amp; spayed
~.u

furntture gold Stiver
dollars wood tce boxes
stone Jars anttques etc
Complete households
Write M 0 Mtller Rt 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992

44&amp; 2949

11

Help Wanted

COAST TO COAST INTER·
NATIONAL COMPANY 10

Build Income for your
future Aloe Vere has
openings for aggres11ve
leaderalnth~sarea Nolerge
tnvestment unltmtted
earnmg potent1al Call

now expanding tn your area
and Is In 1mmadtate need of
two sales persons to learn
our bUIInBII Whtle Sll;nUI
taruJously tra1ning for
managament posttton Must
have some sales exper1ence
a Htgh School Educatton 8r. a
strong destre to tead a sales
fon:o Call collect at 304-

614 36 7-7682 weekdays
2·4PM
NEEDED

Person~

Gelha

County to provtde temp or·
ary care mown home to
mdtvtduals wtth develop·
mental dtsablltty Rece1ve
salary room and borad fee
and funge beneftts Tratntng
provtded Call Buckeve
Communtty Servtces at

733 070B
The Mason County Board of
Education 11 now acceptmg
apphcattons for the pos1br;m
of constructiOn engmeer for
the tchool system Interest
applicants should subm1tt

614 286·5039 Equal
opportunrty employer

Educetoon OffoC1l 307 8th
Stroot Pt Pleasant, wv
25660 Applicants aro to

ts currenty acceJilttng
apphcattons for the follow
tng pos1t1on COMMUNITY

have expert11e 1n the area of
construct10 n management
phmenary designtng wrlttng of spectftcattons
developmg and read1ng blue
prtnts and any other
expenence related to the
construct10 n of focthttesand
remodelmg of facitlt18S

PREVENTION
SPECIALIST B S or M A
1n educatton soctal work
mental health or equtvalent
educatton and expertence
preferred Responstble for
the des1gn and tmplementa
t1on of mental health
educatiOn and prevent(OJ'1
programs communiY'y
organ1zatton and tra1ntng
pubhc relations
If qualtfted please send
resume to the Personnel
Admlntstrator. Gall1a
Jackson Metgs Commumty
Mental Health Center 412
Vmton Pike Galhpohs, Oh10

12

S 1tuat1ons
Wanted

TREETRIMMING&amp;REMO
VAL CALL 614·949·2129
OR 614 992 6040

PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL - Profeuoonol
Electroly 111 center . Inc
A M A Approved Dr
Referrals G11t Certificates.

Mobile home 8olotafor11lo,
1967 Buddy mobile home
14x60, 2bdr 11111heot.rural
water. aot up with 2 or 4
j.:.:lot.:.•:_:C:..;•:..:II_4_:4:_.6_12_4_0~-­

new hours By appointment,

1972 mobile home for ule.
excellent shape, ready to
move Into Muat ••• to
apprl!crate 1 real bonul

304·676 6234

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Tax Returns It bookkeeping

forlndov1duals8o buaoneues
Short lonna $5 00
Long forms 120 00 and up
Carol Neal
446 3862
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint
:::;'s"~;~;'d's Keyboard,

31 Homes for Sale
Excellent conditeon &amp;
locatton all ready for
1mmedjate occupancy-Interest rates are down and
probably won't be lower
Home and or rental
Broadway Middleport
Modern busmen bldg 68

Court St Gallopoho.
112 + acr•a w1th 2 homes
Galha County

Call992-3267 or675-2518
eventnga

45631 Tho Mentel Health

13

Center 11 a pnvate nonprofit corporatiOn a{'ld an
Equal OpportunltyAfftrmattve Act1on
employer

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER

INFLATION GOT YOU IN A
PINCH? Ease Ulo squeeze

sell Avon Call 614 843
2982 614 388 9046 or
614 992 3690

The Me1gs Local School
OIStr~ct has the following

Soo John Eoker Riverside
Torroce Coli 446 1 1 26

agent Phone 446 1694

3 bdr 1 car garage, central
arr. located Yz m1 out

Schools

Instruction

1--------C.:...-

23 19B3 telephone 614
992 2153

Someone to stay With
wheelchair pattent no
litttng hve 1n preferred Call

$100 down r&amp;I&amp;Nel con~
dom1111um Daposet 11100%
refundable Chooae now

Insurance Co has offered
serv1ces for fue msurance
coverage tn GaiiUI County
for almost a century Farm
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet 1ndtv1dual needs
Contact Neal Ins Agency.

15

Karate the ult1mate m self
defence all pnvate lessons,
Men women &amp; chtldren
lnstructton thru black belt
Also available Karate
uniforms puchtng and
klcktng bags and protectNe
equtpment Jerry Lowery &amp;
Assoc1ates Karate Stud1o,

143 Burlington Rd Jock
son Oh Coli 614-286
3074 or 614 384 6160

New 4 bdr brick In Rio
Grande 866 000, lend
614 246 5439

Gopogo o Creak Rd Owner
may finance $37.000 Call
367 7743
6 rm house small house.
acre of lend, $10.500 Call
614 246 921 1
848,000 homo small down
payment balance assume·
ble at 8 'h% 3 bdr • 2 lull
baths full basement
ftreplace new carpet new
roof tdaal locatton Jeffer
son Ave Pt Pleasant
Home Brokers 676 4063 or

675 5540

18 Wanted to Do

Sun

loan 2 year old b1 level
Rollmg Acres large lot,
many extras 304 675

6758

Happy Ads

·Rhos Rd If found call
·a 14 246 5536
..LOST tn 81dwell area Black
-&amp;: tan Doberman weaung a

"red collar
:&amp;969

Call 614 388

"fOUND Red Coon hound,
lemale 1 mile above Ra
""'enawood brtdge on SR

·338 Call 843 5376

1149 2646

..Vernon Woods Rd area lf1

on old 180 near Porter Call

614·3B8·9080
207 acre farm Lang .ville
M1n•al nghta mcluded No

houao $12.000 down WIH
carry real 614·388-9346

34

Busmass
Buildmgs

atr, loceted Y2 mt

out
George'• Creek Rd Call

367 7743

-bedroom sat with mattreu
'lo box aprlnga UOO Tw1n

)llze bod. baby cheat of
..ctrawen. Wicker table It
:!!lent stand, whole kitchen
Jilahaa, glaues pots pans,
•llvar ware. utens111 small

&lt;appllancu. aheets. towelo,
Joadapru d, bo okl. n lc
.naclla. miac

Saturday.

Sunday. 8o Monday Fobru·
ory 19th, 20th. 21at,
)301 Meadowbrook Or Pt
4'!aallnt, 304-875 7921

Apartmentt

6548

Trtbune

GallpoltS

Oh

304-117&amp;,.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houMI Pt Pl. .l8rit

end Golllpolla
B221

a14·446·
•

only, one ameli child ac·
cepted, reference•. 304· UNFU RNISHEO apartment
176·1078, t180 00 for rent. 1 bedroom
month
81 BO 00 Coli Automotlvo
Supply, 8·8 304-875·
;
2 bedroom, all electrlo 2218 676-6763
m11blle home, FOR RENT
WITH OPTION TO BUY ONE bedroom apartment%
Payments •185 per mo for the elderly All utllltlo
pold Tenants pay 30 poo',
304-1178-2711&lt;
cent of thtlr odjuated
Income In this HUD aublld·
tzed lpertment building
43 Farms for Rent
Twin AIvers Tower ./hone
304-676-8179
qual
Pasture for rent

opportunity housing

Call

N- Haven 2 bclr fu m1ahod'
apt , Utlltlea pd U&amp;O !Mot,
rna, t100 dop Ca11 ' 11&gt;f.
448·7526
~

Apartment
for Rent

46

Furm1hed Room'

SIMpng room *126. utili· •
toea pd, alngle male, ahara
bath 91 B 2nd Avo • Galllli&lt;!·
ha Call 446 441 B altar
~ ..

?PM

46 Space for Rant
KOUNTRY MOBILE Hom'o
Park. Route 33 North of
Pomeroy lerge Iota Celt

992-7479

water &amp; electric pd. I

mo Call 446·44111 after
7PM

48

3 rm and ~ rm unfumilhed
apartment• Utilities pltd
no pats, no children Call

446 3437

•

Equ1pment
for Rent

•

Backhoe endloeder dtga 8

1---..:._______

ft

large bod

pic~

ub

Nteley fumllhed mob home h•uleble, operate youratlf.

2 bedroo'Jl In Syracuaa

For rent unfurnfsh_. apt, 4
rooms and beth Inquire at

49

Employed couple or amall

87 Vine St, Gallpolla

famoly 992-8966
8236

Furnlohed 3 rma ~lth Wanted to Ieese corh
priVate bath, 1 at. floor 846 ground Coli 614·2116·
2nd Ave • Oelllpolla Call 13112
448·221&amp;
1-~----.,......--

0&lt;

992·

WO bedroom house,
basement. 1 child or 2 small
children, couples only

304 675 1301

SIX room house. full

base~

a225 month
1090

304-675

304·89&amp;;·

pota adults only, dep req
Call 4411·1519

3 bdr apl e1&amp;0 rna plus
876 dop CaU 814-246·
9316

Call 446·

A_,.

4411-7398 '
RAYS USED FURNITURE
2 pc bedroom sutta 186

couch 126, cheat f1&amp; oak
office chaor U6 goo renge
t85 refrlg •126 Bordaeyo
meple dreaaar ass Celt
814 387 0637
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Safe, chair, rocker, otto
man. 3 tables, letttra heevy

by Frontier), .SB6 Sola
chaor and lovuoat, *275

Sofaaand chatrtt pnced from

UB&amp; to ess&amp; Toblea. t46
ond up to •126 H1de a
beds. t440 ond up to
e&amp;26 Reclnora t1711 to
f360 Lamps from •28 to
17&amp; 6 pc d1nattoa from
•9s to •436 7 pc , , , 89
and up Wood table weth

101

chaora t425 to H46 Do*
f110 up to 1226 Hutchoa
1660 and up maple or p1no
flnoah Bunk bod complete
wtth mattriiHI. $260 end
up to 1395 Baby beda
1110 Mettrenes or bOx

apronga. fuU or twon 158
and HB Quaen
firm
aeta • ., 96 4 dr cheat•
e42 6 dr cheltl 164 Bad
framu. no and e26 • 10

•es

gun
dtneHecheeral20
Gun cab1nataand
t350
t25
or elactnc range• 8325

G••
up to

*378 Baby me
tro•••• t25 8o 135 bod
framu t20, e25 &amp; 130
ktng frame t60 Good

aeJectron of b6droom surt•s
cedar chests rockera. metal
cabinets swivel rockers
Uaed Furniture bookcaae
ranges chatn end tabl81
washera. dryars refngere
tors and TV 1 3 mdea out
Bullvtlle Rd Open 9am to
&amp;pm. Mon thr\1 Fn 9am t9

lipm, Sat
44tl 0322

Call446 B1 81
Gold love seat reverl•ble
aida h11 tohd oak around

bottom t76 Call614 3B8
9713
UMd electrtc dryers 1 wh1te

Whortpool. 1 Harvoot gold • 2
coppertone. 1 whtte GE
Norge All guarenteed 30

days Call614 2611 1207

For Lease

~lht•

RCA cebinet model atero

54 M1sc Merchand1sa

WANT ADS
'

'

New 1983 White sew1ng
m•chtne free arm model
with built In stretch attch
zig z•g patterns makea.
buuon holet monograms
much mote We are over
atbcked with th11 model. we
muat decreaee our enven
tory Factory 20 yr guaran ~
t • Reg pnce over e300

1D90

Sharp, loaded low m11es

BROWN IMPL. CO .

NADA 8001( ~

1978 MONTE CARLO ................................. s4195
Good condition, low' m1les, one owner

r

6-NEW J.D. 7000 12 RN FOLDING
PlANTERS w/COMPUTER TRAK MONITOR.
PRICE LESS J.D. REBATE ...... $19,600
LIQ. FERT. .. ........................... $J525
INSECT. w/BAND SPREADER ....... '950
NO TILL COULTERS .................. $2325
U-SET-UP FREIGHT .,.................. ssoo
WE-SET-UP FREIGHT ................ '1500
1-NEW ,1,0. 7000 6RN PLANTER
Price Less J.D. Rebate &amp; lJ..Set-Up .. '6200

1-NEW J.D. 7000 8RN PlANTER
Price Less J.D. Rebate &amp; U-Set-Up .. '8700

1978 DODGE ASPEN ................................. S2695

6 C~l,

U.S. SILVER COINS

CLAD HALVES

1964 and Older
Half Dollar .... ea. $4.60
Quarter ......... ea. $2.30
Dime .............ea. 92'

1965-1970

1.75 ea.

1

War Nickles
SOC: Eaclr

U.S. SILVER DOLlARS ............. '12.75 ea.
1935 and Older
STERLING SILVER ...................... lb. $1 70

49,000 m1les, new battery, good rad1als, sharp

1973 MONTE CARLO ................................... sags
Dnves and runs good

•

1973 CHEV. VEGA ...................................... 1495
Auto , gas saver, work car

Kenmore washer tn A 1
cond 11 t 0 Whorl pool
dr.yer real ntce e90 C1ll

441-81B1

Gaa clotheo dryer I 1 00
Electric clothes dryer·t85

•ClASS RINGS &amp;
WEDDING RINGS
•STERUNG FLATWARE
eGOLDTEETH
ePLAnNUM
•SILVER CONTACTS....... !1&amp;0 lb.
IIIII• l'llcel•n~ upl Price~~ Subject to

I

SPRING VALLEY TRADING CO.
Sping Valley Plaza

Regtster for free door pnzea

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

90 000 BTU Roddy Heeter
9 gal Karou,a tank wtth
thormoatet Will take e325
304 676 2602

SPECIAL - We can oher lh~
home lo! a irnlled time only on
these gJI!a l!Jn&amp; Only
$400l00down and $31097 a
mortll payments 1nclude taxes
and Insurance ThiS OORie 5
Slluated on r acoe, ~ has 4 bed
rooms, living room has space lor
woodbucner, fireplace 1n lamiv
room Look at lhls one todav"
Pn:e IS reduced to $31 500 00
EXTRA GOOD BUY - N~e 2
stcxy oome 2 bedoooms upsta;cs, liv11g coom w/wood
bumer k~hen bath and bed
room downstairs Situated on
mce IIi Wllh outbwkJ1nt Sel~
lor $20,000 00
Velma N1~1nsky, Assoc
Phone 742 309~
Checyi _Lemley Assoc
Phone 74nl71

304 676 3210

56 Building Supplies
Build1ng matertels
block brick, aewer ptpaa
window• lintels etc
Claude Wrnten Rio Grenda

0 Call614 246 6121

56 Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boerdtng •II breed• AKC
Reg Dobermans pupa afd
Doberman Stud Sarv1ce

Call 44a 7795

m•nt

P•rta , englnea

703 942t3871 H1ckory Hll
NlltHry Rt 1 Box 390 A
Fllhlravllla. VA 2~939
Trede 1na

WE ALSO WORK ON

ALL OTHER APPliANCES

GaRipolla, Ohio
Monday fhN Saturday
10:00 A.M. 'Til 6:00P.M.

TUPPERS PLAINS- Agorgeous lwo acre lol With aone floor ~an
len vear old home Three bedrooms d1mng area lwl basernenl
wilh garage, patio, and n~ee cabnels m lulchen Jusl $38 500 00
SYRACUSE - Two lots wllh older home Ihal has lhree bedrooms.
, '~ room part basement and ublrtv room $11 000 00
NEW lJSING - POMEROY - A lwo sl01y home w1lh three
bedoooms. large beautilul iVIOg room and dmmg room I ~~ baths
balconv pallo and a WIShing well LoiS ol closet space new
plumbmg and new w1nn~ $3800000
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - A niCe corner lol 1n a good
oe~gflborOOod w11h lour bedrooms beautiful bath large hvmg
room d1mng room big pantry lUI basement and aone car garage
$5050000

per hundred;

1100 Call 304 895 3935

No 1 W111 conairt
Runett 304 676 3762 ot

US

446 8247

llli--.L.------..
-------1
WISEMAN

, . . _ l _ l...

1

II
rn~
I

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
PHONE 446-3643
Ike WISeman Brokec, 446 3196 Eve
hm Cochoan Associate, 446 7881 he

I
I
I
l

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

I[AUOR

J1111 Trussell

949 2G60

Office

992 2259

m

-A

COUNTRY LIVING
AT ITS BEST
84 ACRES
MORE OR LESS
(free Nal Gas)
Step mto one ol the cleanest
larm homes 1n an 1deal loca
tion Three good SIZed bed
1ooms large liVIng room sunnj
ea11n k1tchen and bath To
bacco base gas lease and lree
gas all go w~h 1t Large barn
cellar house and ch&lt;ken
hoose Call looay loc manj
more extras
#483

LOVE AT
SIGHT
BEAT INFLATION ASSUMPTION
Chaom &amp; qualty will be vours 1n thiS all br1ck 3 bedroom home
Large hvmg room and lorrcJal d1n~r room w/pctuoe wmdows
overlookmg lhe Oh1o RIVI!I 3 balhs lam1ly room 2 car garagew1th
door opener att&lt; 2 fireplaces central a1r laoge basement and
over I acre ol beauhluHy landscaped ground' Close lo the aly for
more dela1ls call todav
#523
RESTFUL AREA-l BEDROOMS-I 38 ACRES
Pnce reduced to $3150000 C1ly wale~ Close lo hre hydrant
Basemen! Well bUIH house Carport Oulbuoldmgs Good Insulator\
trees garden space Very qu~el aoea Poss1b~ assumable mortgage
al low 1nleresl rale Phone for deta~ls
INVESTMENT - INCOME - INVESTMENT
71 12&gt;65 lurmshed mob1le hOme 68 l2x50 fuo01sbed mob1le
home and 4 edra lots lor rental septic systems all on State Route
#565
BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES-$47 000
3 bedrooms. I Y bath home With lots ol edra mce lea lures bwll "'
cab1nets ••11-cleanmg range diShwasher garbage diSposal and
large d1mng room Kyger Creek Schools
11501

RWIOR

Real Estate General
t\rok' r AucttOIU tr
liH
INSU~ANCf

( .111 446-nr.s2 A.nvtm11•
Rt-th Nodi :ur,.!lrm
liMA 427 - $30&gt; ma~nlenance lret •d1n~ lenced back vard
lanulv Ofll'flled n~ghillrhOod Th' IS a vl!ly clean 3 BR home Call
loo apiJOinlmerll
BMR 389 - Tl11s hne home has 4 bedmoms and " located close
lo lown lou w1ll hbiivo a large lol w1th a country almosphere and
have all lhe c1ty convemences Call now1

SAI.f

,e

BMR 423- In town location Walk to school Large lwo siOI'I
home mcludes 4 bedcooms 11v1ng room d1nmg room lormal
entrance IR counlry ~tchen lull basemen! Wllh lam1ly room 2
hreplaces plus 100re Reduced to $53 000 00 Call lor deta1ls

featucmR 2100 squace feet ol hvmg are• o" lhe ma1n lloor plus a
lui walkout basement Th~&gt; line home IS one ol a ~nn m thiS area
l!e lhe l1rsl to see !hiS one Call now
BMR 426 - Pr~ed f1ghl al $37 500 II has an assumable loan
w1lh only 911·\ mtecesl We are talkmg aboul a verv clean j AR
home Sltuall'!l on mce llat lot m a lam1ly onenled ne~ghborhood
Call lor complele dela1ls
BMR 398- PRICE GREATLY REOUCFfll nwrier lransferred and
must sell thiS~ BR " 11l'fpEKOIKG~udes deluxe 1Bx36
1nground pool Red ~"
• ., "~ - n.US owners Will pav
f H A. VA POints and clos11g cost~
BMR 428 - SIEel Siding, 3 BR raoch situated on large flat lot Cily
Schoolllistrict Priced at $37,500 Oil Call lor apiJOinlment
'
BMR 429 - All electriC b1level 1n Kyger Creelt Sc:hciolllistnct
gtualed on I 21 acres w~h assumable 9WI; loan Call lor complete
• • 4JJ- NEW USTING - Excel\!nl buy lfl $38 500 Loveiv
frame ranch wth 3 BR's, --lcilchen iVith caflli!IM diRIIIf!orea 2
bllhs. ~r see Ill~ one loday1 •

,,

NEW LISTING- IN TOWN- Completely redec"'
rated home 1n a good 1n town nmghlxlrhood ThiS
well decoraled 2 slorv oome has new v1n~ si:l1ng
new w1nng new carpels, new h w heater, part new
roof &amp; " fullv msulated Olfe~ 4 bedcooms · 2~,
baths lamdy room eqUipped krtchen, lull basemenl nal gas heal oversized garage' large lenced
vard and more Call J1m Cochran lor apiJOinlment
$60s

JUST LISTED- MINI FARM - If you re wanting
lo raiSe lois ol tobacco then th~ IS lhe place lor yoo
14 acres lhat 1nci.Jdes a 1586 lb. base (owners
raised over 4600 lbs 1n 1982) 3 barns 138•48
new 14•84 new and 36x40 tobacco barns) bot
toms have a good cover and one " tiled Also
Includes an allractiVed 3 yc (jd bedroom mamt
lree home Includes lam1iy room fireplace and
woodbumer large krtchen u111 ooom patiO &amp; new
root cella1 &amp; workshop Will sell some equ1p Call
J1m Cochran $60s

I
I
I
I
I
I

II
I

#566
992-6191
~ 992 5692

~

Real Estate Gl!neral

•W•IIis T Leadingham, Realtor, Ph Home44' 9539

• Phyllos Loveday, Phone446 2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446 3294 -

REALTORS

Heney E Clellnd, Jr GRI
Oo1te Tumer
•

• R 4h - NEW O~ING - Old raoch oncludes 3 BRs lR
DR. fllmiy room, 211 baths. Situated on 38 acres. Cal t&gt; see this
one IDdayl
\.

Amertcan Esk1mo Spttz
pupp1a1 shots &amp; wormed

6694

e6

I

NEW LISTING - Blacjbuoy - Mobile home With expando bav
w1ndow cenlral ., mce Iron! Silting porch lwo car garage w1th
lwo rooms and a beaut1lul lavmg I 115 acre vard MosHv luo
mshed oncludmg washer and dryer $29 000 00

detail~

''

Potatoes

lb bag &amp;3 25. 50 lb bog r

8 J Haorslon Assoc - 446 4240 Eve
Clyde Walke1 Assoc 245 5276

BEAUTIFUL WATERFRONT ALL BRICK HOME
CITY SCHOOLS
Ideal lor boahnR IIShmg •nd p!Cknck1ng al your back door En1oy
thiS spac1ouscheerlu l house w1lh 3bedrooms, l'h balhs large ~v1ng
room eat '" k1lchen 2 hreplaces lull biisement 2 porches cham
hnk lence plus much more Callloday lo make an apiJOintmenl to
see
lovely year around home
#505

tn"

BUSINESS PROPERTY-1312 EASTERN AVE
N1ce bUilding Lots ol pictuce Windows Slone Iron! like new
30 •80 Lots ol uses - Two l~s Approx 92 lrontage Lots ol
concrete par~ng spaces Phone lor all deta1~
'
#562
BUSINESs-HOME RENTAL
Busmess CQUipmenl bwldmg 6 room home - Central all modern
~lchen t 'I balhs all city conven~nce N1ce home Rental - 3
rooms All lor one pnce An excellent nveslment Gel started now
1n buSiness and a near by home
I
#529
BV&gt;% ASSUMPTION
5 Rooms 3 bedroom large modern eat mkitchen lull basement
Wllh large lamily room and woodbu1ner lhal does ~n excellen1 1ob
heating lhiS home Garage summer a1r cond1ti:med A down
pavment and loan assumable Payments ol $292 00 per monlh
N1ce large lot Phone lor lull 1nlormatcn
#559
ENERGY EFFICIENT
3rd AVE -CAIUPOLIS
Be sure I o see th5 clean remodeled home w1lh large open hv1ng
r0001 d111111g room eat 1n klchen ul1lity ooom ~aoag~ storage
bu,ldn&amp; w1th gas heat &amp;central air firm reduced pr~e at $25 000
#561
BUY THIS HOME FROM OWNER WITH $2 500 DOWN
And low 1nleresl rale on balance wlh OWIH 2 bed1oom collage
w1lh1n 5 m1nu1es ol Si~ec Bndf•e Shopping Plaza
#260
CHARMER AT $25 900
POSSIBLE ASSUMABLE IDAN
WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT
Coukl be 4 oo 5 bedroom s larll! porches bath IIVflg roan
!~replace w~h gaws lo~ d1n10g room kdchen Wllh builln
cab1net lui basenoml storage bU1Id1ng and garden spot 1n clv
school diSincl Call 101 more delails

•

#550
!liCE BRICK LIKE NEW CLOS£ 10 EVERYlHING
BeautifUl surroondmg; 7 roorm all bruit lwo-au garage Lari!!
I~ lamnv ram 14 x28 liVIng rocml4'1&lt;28' NICe modern kdchen
And tile best part aooul thiS proeprty IS I IE low low pr~re Phone

now

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
.GEIERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

304 B96

I
I
I

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

81111 425-ExeaJtNe lype bnck home '" Foench Prtw1nc1al

ROTOTILLERS·

PHEASANTS

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

3972

NEW LISTING - 19731ra~ler 1n Middleport, 2 bedroom, laundry
room, underponmng msulation Iota! electnc hookup mcluded can
be moved lo your kJI or rental at present locaOon Appraised value
more than askmg pnce $6,950

J.'======~~[!~~]~~~=====

3 .cord aea1oned spht oek
tiO cord a14 992·3896

Dlacounta Free hiller

NO
' "Utens grandfather
as w1ld Bok:tcet Very gentle &amp;
affecttonate, black With
whtte feet &amp; markmga 176
or beat offer 304 676

NEW LISTNG - 4 bedroom home 1n the country VInyl sid1ng
storm w1ndows on 3 acres. lots ol fruit trees. plenty ol good waler
assume loan ol $18,500 wilh monthly payment ol $258 or arrange
a new loan
NEW LISTING- 3 or 4 bedrooms possoble on thiS one Trailerw1th
large add-on on nearly an acre loL Includes storage bU1id1n~ Lot
can ha\le second tra~er as extra 1ncome Call lor more details.
As~ng $12,00l

58

OffiCe 992 5739

BMR 424 - 2 pi,; acces woth a verv mce 3 bedooom ranch slvlc
home You w1ll love the counlrv almospohere Possible loan
assumptiOn

GMval or fill dtrt delivered

MOBILE HOME - wllh large add-on buold1ng, also asphatt dnvewav Located on qulel. clean street oul ol h1gh waler on Rae one The
l111ong room IS extra large There~ acemenl walk and large covered
porch, also a lilefal sorage bulid1og. You can be mlhis one 1n 1wo
weeks lor only $16900

Geocae S HobsteHer, Jr
Brolcer

bowls 8o pltchera Houra
Mon Fr1 SAM to 4PM
evenonga Mon a. Wad a
p m 9 p m Sat 9 12

W.aaher •nd dryer 1126

Cell 614 742 2362

CENTRAL REALTY

T1mes-Sen1onei- Page- O.S

56 Pets for Sale

56 Pets for Sale

' CALL. ~;;,,',",;·~
NANCY "

ctaaHs and daily workthop
Duncan Africans &amp; Mayco
Pelnta Greenwere Bisque
Easter greenware 6 biaque

BMR 422 - N1ce ranch tocaled on Roush Lane IS pnced lo sell at
$38 000 Large LR 2 BR k1lchen 1ncludes range eve level oven
riiShwasher and d1;;posal Call to see

11 k&amp;'ll'x&amp;'. 8296 Call
II 14-246-111184

lnqtuded lmmlliflete ahlp

ct.p due to IMrlcet conctttlone.

Colon1ol Coram1ca 2919
Jackoon Ave Pt PI Evonong

Dog kennel for 2 dogs,

T~OY81LT

OTHER ITEMS WANTED

IGold •

pupa 160 Call 446 7796

BMR 414 - 12•60 mobile home """'"" on I acre plus lot
lnclu~es lurn1ture h,
PENOING.nverterllront deck
12x24 gara~&gt;e w1th sl••

Cell 1114 992 3e95

auto, good conditiOn

1977 DODGE MONACO .............................. S1795

AKC Regtstared Doberman

, Color TV console model.
rug couch Ia -chan Call

448 7013

SILVER
1979 OLDS 98 REGENCY ......... :.... WHOLESALE S6295

now. wiH make great family

firewood d•ltvared t30 PU

GOLD&amp;

low miles, economy

peto Call1 614 692 2170

load Call 4411 271 6

call collect Free deltvery to
your home

wanted Full or part t1me
Excellent opportuntty for
extra mcome Call304-676

tons Call 446 3844 after
4PM

Call 4411 1408

your colt only 195 Call
1114-386.8918 out 'i'l town

1981 TOYOTA ......................... 14m" SPECIAL S3695

Per11en end Stamese kit

pooer E•callentcondttton
Throw plllowa, double knet
comfonera end ruga Call

For ul• lump coal &amp; fue
wood Zum Coal Co Inc

WANTED

Raw let gh ___Qj stnbuto rs

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
KENNEL AKC Chow
puppoea CFA Hlmolayon

Airedale Terrier pupa AKC
3 beautiful femaloa Ready

52 CB,TV, Radoo

AM FM tapo adaptor n 00
See 21126 Jalloraon AVo
PI Plouant, WV

7220

Kirby aweaper with attach
menta, Including aham

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
weehers dryers. refngera
tora, r•nget Skaggs
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
bealde Stone Cre•t Motel

POODLE GROOMING Call
Judy Taylor at 614 367

AKC REglatored beautiful
Cocker Spamol Call 448
1824

614 98&amp; 4356

Equipment

1-~-------

Furniahed u .. t.lirs 1pt • 4
rooma • bath. clean. no

dreuora TV's
3169

RefrigeratiOn washer
dryera rangea du
hwaahera servtce • repetr
of all make &amp; model a 9 to 5

ego per day
3841

OVER STOCKED

a..

homH for rent
on
about 1!5 mtnu•s
from town Cell efter 8

In city Adulta only Call
446-0338

Call 814-742·
•

.2136 Dark Hollow Rd
-.JoCkaon. Oh 46640 or call
614 286 3806 Reword
:.,fforad

room table

bath, utllltoea pold 3~ mlloo
aouth Muldloport R· 7 Coli
387-0a11 John Sheeta.

Coli

Realtor
Call 304·676·
Eata1ea Carol
Yaogor,
6104 or 876·&amp;3811 or
878· 7786
41 Hous1111 for Rent 1--.:.~~----2 bdr unfumtahed apt in
5 rm house &amp; bath Inquire Crown City Call 1114·256
at 918 2nd Ave. Golhpolls 81120
Oh
Furnished apt 1
3 bdr 1 car garage. centr111l 4th Avo Golhpoha Ad,ulta,

A1r, tilt, AM FM new t1res

~inntng

Apt for rent Hell doublo·.2
bd room Apt Adultl pra•
farNd No pots a14·9U·
2749
Fur1111hed Apt 3 rooms and

oncomo 11 e10 000 or looa
HUD available A-One Rul

614-983-2951

ruak

pold, e175 mo Call 448·
3&amp;B6 44 Locuot St or
44a 3310

home

Call 446 3888 or 446·
4491

\"bouts ere known pl~ase
"contact ;James E Tra1ner

J&gt;holra 1600 Three p1eco
.Broyhill aoNd oek quaen 01ze

unfurnlahed upltaira apt
Privata entranca. perking off
atreat. down town. dep
required, 1dulta only no
polo or chHdron, 'II ulillt'-'

2 bedroom In Middleport
Fu mlahod, prefer adult a
U26 monthly Pluo dop·
oalt, udlltleapold 614-992·
6510

2 bdr Reo-ncy Inc Apart
manti f200 permo or If

1978 MALIBU CLASSIC ... :...•..............•.....• S3695

-MOVING SALE, whole
)w&gt;uoehold. everything must
-eo Four pece BroyhlllsoUd

3 bdr clean 8o carpeted

2 bd room fumlahed, n 60
dopoalt $176 per month
pluo utlltlea and lawn care
COli 114-98&amp;·3949

For rent or sale store
butldtng with upttatra apt
and 2 rental trailers Cornir
Df Rt 160 Bt Bulavllla Rd

ASHVILLE OHIO

Yard Sale

3 badroom Mobile Home
App 10xlmotoly 5 mllea from
Pomeroy or Middleport
614-992-6868

44

liiiiiiiiii~

bat~

Galllpolla 446·1107

304·6 76·611 0

.Qalllo Coult1y If whorea

_7

Lorge 3 rooms 8o

erators, l'enges. bunk beds
complet• 1179 bunkias
mattress•• 11110, cheata.

blo 304-676 -5711 after
6PM

i.O ST 1 malo Red bone
.Coonhound appro• 60 lbs
l.oat In Chlmn't)' Rock and

other blclga. Ganagelocated

dinat aeta t7&amp;, 8o up refrog·

Apartment
for Rent

IPirtmerJy Large walk in
closet 840 6th Ave ,

P 0 Box 936 Gallipolis Oh
46631

45631

Coonhound approx 60 lbs
.and 1 female Redbona

drastically reduced Waa
8 54,000 n1&gt;w 04 6.000
Must aell, 3 bdr hom a. new
furnance county water
new bath. c•rpet•d. new
alumtnum 11d1ng. co•l6
wood burning atove Barn &amp;

Otrect Care Staff to work on
an as needed basts wath
mentally retarded adults
With behevonal dtsorders
Interest applicants must be
enterget1c, pat1ent and be
able to work fleXtble hours
Prev.ous expenence work
1ng wtth people reqwred If
tnterested send resume to
Ohto ResJdonta ll Serv1ces
Inc Attn Dov1d Brown

reou[mo to STROUT
REA TY Box 100 C 0

-chenahad pet Please call

26 acral moatly level.

rma &amp;. bath, rent reaaone·

..tared and stolen Chtldren s

:.147 3314 Dog was regiS

2 bdr near Ponderosa,
p riv-te ref &amp; sec dep
Adulta no pota Call 4411·
2491 after 6

chen furnlahed. couples

Cant work 9 to 5 Sell
AVON Work when you
want Call 446 3368 or
446 2166

I----------

44

liWO bedroom troller kit·

All olectroc homo 14th St 8o
Ohto St Pt Pleesant 5

female p1t bull gtven
-.way in Letart area at

~black

33 Farms for Sale

mer,t garage. ntce locat1on

Mob1le
for Sale

Mobile Homes
for Rent

304·675-8277

Help Wanted

11

Real Estate sales person
wanted Full or part t1me
You must have or get
ltcense We II help Send

::WANTED People who took

304·676·271 1

$160 month piUs utlhtln

Automotive Call 304 882
2079

"'LOST German Shephard
: brown 8 mos old Lost Tyn

State Modular Homes. half
way between Pt Plaeunt a
Huntington on ST RT 2

Langav 111e Oh References

Jack's Locksmith Servtce
Commercial Domesttc

lost and Found

ONLY ONE N- 12ft wide
2 bedroom , all aloctric.
mobile home, only 07,995
bank financing available All

roquored
2641

8% PERCENT assumable

"6

Good mobile home o7.5001
w1ll conalder conti'IICI 1110
Call Sunday 446 1167 or
614 246 6B30
USED MOBILE HOME
576 2711

Farm house for rent 8100
mo plusdep Call614·245·
9315
2 bedroom house near

"446 6564

~Av1ce P Happy belated
..Valenunes day Let's get
~together soon, maybesprtng
:Jlreak Super Salesman

Call 446 96B6

contract 8% loan Call

"Whtte male Cockapoohouse
-tramed good w1th ktds Call

"5

42

bile
for Sale

Professional
Services

by March
2 1983
the1r
appl iC'atton
and to tho
Mason County Board of

Gold, Stiver sterlrng
Jewelry, rmgs old coms &amp;. 446 0819
currency Ed Burkett Barber 1-~-------Excellent income for part
Shop Middleport 992
3476
time home assembly work
1----- - -- - - For mformat1on call 504
Buy1ng new &amp; used comtc 641 8003 Ext 7124 Open

books 614 949 2445 after
5 pm

23

resume~~~~~~~~~~~

THE GALLIA JACKSON
MEIGS COMMUNITY
MENTAL HEALTH CENTER

extra curncular coachmg
vacanc1es Gtrls' Varsity
Softball Gtrls Re"serve
Softball end Drama Any
tndrvldual who possesses an
Ohto Teachtng Certificate
and who ts Interested 1n
mak1ng applicatiOn for the
vacanctes should contact
Dan Moms Supertntendent on or before February

Help Wanted

56 Pets for Sale

The

#554
3 BEDROOMS - 3 AnES M OR L
Moille oome 14 x70 1976 Foeedom v, balhs llllderpmom&amp; lois
ol bUll in cab1nels range relngerator d1neHe set Pir conditioner
and other lurnture Rural water , mre land lor ga~den Allh5 kn
on~ $22 500
#425
39 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tllatle pasture land some bmrec p~b ol sprotg war.. y, mle
lrmtage on Pru;pecl Church Road Phone lor full detail'

8497

HKIME - 40 ACRES - Jusll~led lhiS
I Coi.ONIAL
sq ff modern 4 bedroom home Th~
hne
oilers 2 large baths, equipped k1lchen

ooom fireplace woodburner basemen! plus
I lam1ly
appoox 10 teres ccop and balance 1n pastuce &amp;
I woods 4 barns 1472 lb tobacco base plus over
1
2 000 road frontage on lwp road - Rt 775 Call
I Clyde
Walker lor more 1nfo

REDUCED TO $59 900 - 12% FINANCING Owners lcansleored very anxmus to sell thiS Spnng
Valev Home 3 bedcooms 21h baths 211feplaces
luU basement large lam1ly room w/bao nal gas
cent a1r garge &amp; more W1ll conSider 20 01 30 yaao
mortgage

I

LARGE RIVER BRICK - ENERGY EHICIENT
RANCH -One ollhe l1nesl you II see on Lower Rt
7 w1th a 1ernl1c ~ew 4 bedrooms 2 baths lamly
room hreplace equ1pped kitchen lormal d11110~
basemen! 2 car garage exira 1nsulat10n (6 on
waHs) lnp~ windows hlghesl elect bill $65 and
owner w~ll1nance at 12'! $79 900

1

I
II
BUILOING - Good hx:at1on oul
side town 1412 SF bnck ranch lype bu1kJmg Has
I COMMERCIAL
hall balhs nat gas het central a1r &amp; 2 storage
12rooms
Has been used loo chucch pu1P1J5es Large
1park1ng area &amp; 2 lots Pnced at $54 000 00 Can
J1m Cochran

ACRES - Owners an•mus to sell Located on
II B4Horse
Creek RO 1 m1~ olf Rt 7 Includes modern
bedroom home w1lh woodburner basemen! &amp;
kdchen Has 700 lb tobacco base &amp; 24x36
1large
barn Would conSidel mobile home 1n trade Call
I Clyde Walker $37 500

REDUCED $3400 - MUST SELL NOW - An
attractive 3 vr old \rime s~ualed on over I acre'
vald H1 city school dlst 1481 sq It o1 h~ng area
whiCh lealures 3 large bedrooms 21uH baths mce
lulchen dining room uld &amp; storage room heal
b ld
pump 2 car garage and large storage "' lng
PriCed lo sell at $51 500

LOST YOUR JOB?
Here IS a ve!Y good opportunity lo be
your own boss ThnYing cany-{lut bus1
ness Perfect for man and wife Owner
anKIOils to sell Hasl. Jobs, must sell

I SPLIT
LEVEL - NESTLED IN WOOOS - Very
attraciiVe 4 bedroom home '" a lovelv 4 5 atre
I settmg
near ~ 0 Grande 1n an exceUenl nelghoor
hood Nearly 26 sq ft ol liVIng acea 1ncludes a
I huge family 100m wrth wb fireplace bwll'" kil
I chen 3 lull balhs plenty o1 slorage and IOcaled

I

$34 000- N1ce 3 bedroom home localed 1n

fl

I NEW
LISTING - COMMERCIAL BUILDING RESIDENTIAL &amp; RENTALS - Seve~al sources ol
38•50 bnck bulldong on 3rd Ave Down
I mcome
slm has 211111shed rooms cunenlly housmg rertal
I b1ness
Upslaws has 2 apartmenls renlmg $200
mo each 1973 mobllehome renlmg $275 ma
has 3 bedrooms I baths tamlly room,
I House
woodburner "nvl ~dmg onsulat1011 storm Windows
I 1n good cond~on W1ll sell house separate Cat
I and
today lor detaols Call J1m Cochran
I RTlocatiOn588 -c1ly3"hool'
berhoom ""' h an IXCIIIt•nl
Has full basenmnl lanllly
I garag'.
room hn•place 16 masllo l»droom 1'1 halh
caq))rt plus 40 • 60 x 15 h1~h buildllli!
I wl20x40
aNached shed lbcellenl lor traclor
w01k) all localerl on I• ac1"' $60s Call Clyde
I Walker
I NEW LISTING- NO DOWN PAYMENT- Take
present 10 ~ mig assumpllon 3 oc 4 bed
I over
ooom bnck ranch IS 11 vrs old and has 2'6 balhs
111

111

llaoge k1lchen lull hniShed basement naL gas cent
a1r and 2 car garage EKcel~nt1ocat1011 on R1 141
on I acce
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME _ RESIOEIITIAL '""
FESSIONAL OFFICES OR BOTH - ~Hracbve 2;,
story 12 100m house on 2nd Ave In Ihe heart ol
lhe profeSSional bu~ness commumlv Includes 2
krtchens 2~, balhs lull basemen! 2 car ga~age
Top quahtv conslcucl1on when buill and good
mamlenance makes thiS a solid Investment A
slately atmosphere IS prov1derl by the larRe rooms
hardwood lloors fi1eplaces elc Call ike W1seman

I
I

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I1

J
II

I

I

1
Call Ike Wiseman - 446·3643
1
W.R.E.A.
•
I
GRADE A DAIRY
21m
238
/l
me" acres m 1
located I mile west ol Rulland 90 Ac m/1 good
crop land Modem m1lk paolrr &amp; milk hoose w1th al
eQUIP 60 Ieee stalls 16•50 C STV s1kl w1th un
loadec &amp; feed bunk Taslelully remooeled older 6
ooom briCk home With lull basemen! Also 2nd
remod~ed lrame home w1th new kitchen &amp; balh
fulll1ne ollarm equ1p Included on pnce fmancmg
available Call Clyde Walkeo

city school' Can be ooughl With neadv I 0 acres.
Call Ike Wiseman

I

1
II
I

1
:iouthwestem School llist Has an equipped kit 1
chen dm1ng area, I y, balhs lull basement 2

carports &amp; J'A acoes Call Clyde Wakl!l
COMMERCIAL LOT IN RIO GRANDE - hcellerrt
locatKin at corner ol Maple &amp; Easl College Ave
Restncled bUilding lot zoned commercial Cal
Clyde Walket I()( lnlo
IF YOU WANT A BEAUTIFUL HOME SITE- LOTS
OF WOOOS &amp; WILDLIFt - take a look allhl&amp;
You II love 1! 11you love natuoe walk~ 1-.llse u:Jmg
huntmg and pnvacv Up to 83 acres ol mce laymg
vacant land 10 RKI Grande area Growmg
ne~ghborhood Several tulure ilbmeslies on 2
roads Pnced w1lh 83 acoes at 37 500 Cdy schools.
Call J1m Cochran

I
II

1
I
1

1

II
169 A. - Beel cattle larm 25 A. m/1 crop 115 A. I
paSiuce 2 barns 2 houses wllh one remodeled &amp;
own gas supply lrom weU on farm Jusl olf SR I I
m~e W Rutland Call Clvde W'allter
1
1918 CHATHAM - Ranch style home neao new
plavgcound ara 3 bedrooms, l11eplace tivong 1oom
nal gas heat I 0• 15 workshop 01 small guesl
house 12x60 shed &amp; lenced yard Call Clyde
Walker
164 AC - SR 141 - localed un Raccoon Cree~
th~ farm offers tobacco base appoox 60 ac pas
lure 50 crop b~ance 1n woodland 40x60 barn
and 16•60 s~ed lor lobacco &amp; IIVestoc~ WeK &amp;
rural waler av811able loo home Site Less than $450
ac. Cal Clvde Wakeo

1
1

I
II

I
1
RIO CENTRE ESTATES- Beaublul wooded bUild
mg klts 1rom 2 to 5 acres eac h ld ea lloca110n near 1

I

I MILE FROM H M C - 3Y: ACRES- hcellenl
Constructed briclt home One Ollhe acea s Iones! college 1n good resi:lenl1alarea $6 BOO to $11 000
neghlxlrhoo!ls A lovely "'
scenic locabon enhances Land lays 1/ery good Lots ol pnvacv
th1s 3 bedroom home m Charrna1s H1lls Has 2
balhs lam1ly room fireplace equ1pped k1lchen BRAIID NEW LISTING - EXCELLENT LOCATION
formal d1mng basement nat gas cent a1r, 2 cac - You II lmd thiS hom&lt; lo he one ol lhe besl
garage and 3'1' acres w/pond Low 1nterest as decorated on lhe markel Quahly 11vong space "' •
sump11011 Call Ike WISeman
over 1900 sq H 3 n~c ' "' rl hedrooms 2'1 halhs
new eQUipped kilchen an oveosomd and allrochve
CHEAPER THAN RENT - Pavments ol $242mo lamilv room woodbunww hcr.placr• 1i111m1 rooot
l1nclud1ng ta•es &amp; Insurance 9'1/llo mortgage as
nal gas healng and pnce.d wr.ll t.&gt;low repl;ot ement
sumpt10n w11h $4500 down pyml 2 bedroom cO$ !'iluated on a lovely landscaped yard oil Rt
home locale 1n the aty schOO diSt Has llfeplace
35 1n a line llelghborpotxt r~ll today to ""' lhiS
eal1n ~tchen new pamt 1h acre jard and pr~ed hcime and start the new yea~ oil ngllt
al $26 500 Call J1m Cochran
ON 1ST AVE - y, BLOCK FADM PARK - It'"
168 ACRE FARM _ $48 500 _ E cellenl b 011 113ndsome 140 yt ~d ho•oe " wally loo Y"'' Jns1
x
uy
rcently reliuit - """ 10111 new 3 l'h'" 11ft
111IS large aeoeage wilh a• remodeled
4 bedroom
NaEr System new Wlrlnj&gt; I&gt;'W plumh1ng j7 hath s)
home Approx 10.20 acres crop, wllh balance 1n
1ew kitchen new carpo t a111l com1Mely
woods and paS1ure. Has some OOldongs and barns.
decoraled 1o plfo.ase anymn• On• ol no besl
Home has loeplilte carport and garage Off Rt
locaiiOns 1n the area and • '"'' home lor onv "'""
554 Cal Jm Cochran
lamily Call lite Wiseman

I
'I
1
1

I

I
1
I

I

I
I

1
I

I

L------~·-----------'

j

J

�l •

Page- 0.6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
59 For Sale or Trade

63

Livestock

1983
71

64

Hay

8o Grain

64

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Hay

Autos for

8o Grain

Registered Quarter Horae .
19 75 Buick Elec:trll 2 dr .,
PS, PB. AC , AM -FM stero
S1 ,850 or trade for cattle,
farm equipment of equal

value. Call 446 -4537 .

61

Farm Equipment

hone blanket&amp;. Wes tern

Wanted : Small 2 wheel
manure spreader. 614-742-

2763.

8x36 house trailer . Sa le or

trade . Would make ni c e
c amper. 614 - 742 -2002 .

$1 .800 .

.

1982 S10 pickup. V-6. 4

Ruth Reeves . Also grade .
Saddles. · bridles . winter

International No . 46 hay
baler. new Knottera. 8600 .

304 -882 · 2532 or 30 4882 -2274.

speed , radials, sliding back

636 RIGID $1600. Th,ead·

glass . 4 .000 miles. $6 ,995 .
614 -992 -3517 evenings.

'ing machine with attach menu, Homelite pump 100
G.P.M. 2 hoses&amp;. accesso-

boots. 614-698-3290.

2 · 2 year old Percheonfillies .

Yearling tennenee walking
filly . 11 year old registered

tennessee walking mere due
to foal March 1st . Call
614 -949 -2466 or 614 ·
992, 3900.

Conditioned hay, ear corn.

Call 614-949-2870.

Hey for sale-Excellent
excess at lasher Farm in
Rutland. For mon!l in forma·

Hay for sale. 614-843-6390
Hay for eale. 614-992-661 6
after 5 p.m .

1- --.;_______

MIX hay, clover 8t alfalfa ,

3838.

Phone 304·273-344 7.

1978 Buick Century 2 dr-.
au1o .. Pa. AM · FM otero
caueua. ex . cond . Cell ·
446-2133.

By owner 1982 Dodge
Mirada ax. cond. 18,000
mllaa, 318, V-B. orulao •.
many axtr10. 17.932. will
atk:rlflco. Coli 446-0047.

delivered. by truck "loed .

446-6610'
II

Real Estate General

1880 Pinto auto, air, ps;

Pl.

r &amp; I remote mirrows.
Rear defrost, wire wheels,

A'-'·FM otero. Call 814·
3·8-9B11 .
.

IB

ries. $344.00. 1972 Honda
350. $250. phone 304675 -5420

Autoafor

1880 T-Bird, A.C.. velour
lnto~or, AM-FM cau .. now
radf•l•. bukea, eKheust,
oxc. cond. 1119911. 387·
0457.

Real Estate General

Mile from town. 1 1t. Oual-

ity. 2nd.crophav•2.&amp;0bllle

1976 Buick Electra 2 dr.,

timothy a. clover, large billies PS, PB, AC. AM·FM otero
f2 .00. 304-882-24~2 after 11 .860 or tr•de for c•ttle,
farm equipment of equal
4:30.
value . Call 446-4537.

TIMOTHY hey $2.00 bela. B

tion cell F . Goebel at
Coolville . 1-614 - 667 -

Bl;. owne r 1973 Dodge
Polora 4 dr .. auto. trona. PS. ·
PB.• 380 V-8, good cond ..
1~00 firm . Call676 -641&amp;.

REALTOR"

1978 ·ford Mustang. V-8, 4
aP,IJ.. AC. PB, PS, axe. cond.
814 266 87311
Call
•
'
•
1.76 Plymouth Vellont 6
al~nt engine, 3 apd. trans.

OUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.
Judy DeWitt-Reeltor-388-8155
J . Merrill Carter-Reehlor-379-2184
Becky Lana- Assoc.-446-0468
Don Bleke- ASIIOC.-675-1480

very good ca·nd .. $1,400.

C•ll 448-2297 .

AMERICA;S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER, CENTURY 21.

'ifft~~fi;)'i) ~THATICIIAIIILEDWORDOAIIE
~ ~ ~~·
byHenriAmoldandt!otJLoa
Unacramble theM tour JumbiN,

2~6 - 1786.

one letter 10 etcn aquara, to form
four o !nary wordl.

I GURAU±
1·1 r IJ

tSNAFETj
J

r

I

l·l'f

()

JNECBOKj

I I K ()

Answer here:
Yesterda .1

Y

A

am-fm ce•ntte radio. redial

tlioa. gao . •1.160. 614·
992-2736.

DOWNTOWN - L011ely C&lt;Joo~l. beautiful entry,
baths. 2 large bedrooms. you'll l011e lhe nside.
#1149

53 LINCOLN ST. - 2 bedroom home wilh aluminum siding
$8,500
RT. 554 - Lol with water &amp; sewage, lor mobile home. $4.000.

ROAMING ROOM -Good burldrng~te, 8'A acres.Graham School
Rd.
#108()

FOREMAN&amp; USED CARSFor 1111 expen1ive cara. On
SR .124 in Langavillo, Dh .
Phone 814-742-2734.

JUST LISTED! DUPL£1 558 THIRD AVENUE ~
Lit lhe_rncome fJom lh~ property pay for irrl!lt.
Each side has 2 bedrOOi!lS, ~rge folmal dinin~
bath, kitchen. Fen~d back yanj. Separate entry.
Vrnyl ~drng. Both sides presently occuJied.
#282

HARTS Uoed Cora, Now
Haven Weet Virginia . Over
20 less expenaive c•ra in

Ot9Ck.

LOCATION PlUS QUALITY should describe this
lovely 3 BR brick ranch. Special features are a
large LR &amp; dining rm . eQUIP!&gt;'d krlchen, 1~ bath~
~undry, quality carpet cent. arr &amp; an oversized 2
car garage. Located on US. 35 West &amp; shown by
apporntment.

NEAT AND Cl£AN - CONVENIENT IN TOWN
LOCATION - 2 BRs, 12x 18 LR. larll! kichen &amp;
d1nrngarea wrth range, refrig. &amp; disp., launtiy wrth
washer &amp; dryer, new carpel. ex!&gt;'nsive drapes,
carpo~ . gas heat. humidif~r. dehumirulrer, arr
cie01er, central arr. Watch too Blue Devil footbaH
g&lt;111es from tte large rear s111 deck $50 00071 NO ·
$37.500
•
•

1978 ford Bronco. 4-wheol
drive. 742-2690.
---------- ·
1981 Jeep CJ6. Call Joyce

iiiE
. ~:::~~

electric locka. excellent

NEW liSTING - SHINY &amp; CLEAN - lfs a
pleasure to view this attractive 3 bedroom brick ·
ranch. Large lutchen and dining area w«h plenty It
cabinet space. Garage with electric opener. Low
monthly heating budget. Central arr. Olarn link
lence surrounds lawn. Pricet1 in the 40's. Within
minutes ol town.
11283

c~ndition ,

19'74 MERCURY Cougar
XR7. good running condition. t400. 304-676-1117.
69 VW Bootie AM · FM

{

446-1066

'

Mose C•n~rt1urv . :2J

DREAMS OR MEMORIES COULD BE YOURS when
yoo move into this exerting bnck ranch Over 2500
sq. It 4 bedroom~ 2h bath s. buitt-in kitchen.
Garage. F~l basement fireplace. Blacktop dnve
Approx. 4 secluded acres. Pond. City schools.
, #236
1

NEW liSTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
approx. 4 mi. north ol HMC on old route 160.
Modern lri-level has brrck &amp; vrnyl construction. 3
BRs. 2 baths. equipped krtchen. dinrng area,
~undry &amp; 2-oar garage Can be booght wrth or
without acreage.

YOU HAVE JUST MADE $2.500.00 provrding you purchase
this beautiful 3 bedrm. home along Lower River Rd. Over·
looks the Ohio Ri.er. Family rm ., w.b. fireplace, rn -gro und
swi mming pool. approx. I acre. price reduced !o
$72.500.00.
-

3 BEDRM. MODERN
bu rner, located within
ground swimming pool.

~"'' · ~'J u. &lt;ru.

MODERN 3 BEDROOM RANCH - All electrrc wrth chrmney for
woodburner, nrce carpet 75'x 12() lot An excellent buy for
$31 ,900.00.
TIRED OF THE SNOW. cold and bad driving conditions. Purchase
this handy home kx:ated atross from Food land Groc. and ~ave the
drivin~ 10 som.eone e~e' Located close to everything. gas furnace.
modil~d lor wood burn1
ng heater. Pnce only $25,000.00.
WANTING TO GO INTO BUSINESS! We have approx, 4,000 SQ. It .
of commercial property located atross lrom the city parking lot
(Niner will ert her lease or sell. Call today lor moreinlormation Good
locallm!!!
3 BEDROOM COTTAGE located along MrM Creek Rd . wrthin,city
limits.' Good location ~nd easy to access. Price $25,000.00
LOOKING FOR A RENTAL? We have to have IWo nice apartments
overlookrng the Galipolis gon coorse. Adults only, no pets! From
$200.00
COMIIIIERCIAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN KANAUGA - JOO'Irontage on Rt. 7, corner lot 150' deep. Has concrete block building.
Call for more details!
INVESTIIENT. or residential property located within city limits. Has
been converted to two apts.,.however, can be roodified as one IP.
residence. Hot water heat lot extends from 4th Ave. to 5th Ave.
Price $65.000.00.
Wood Realty, Inc.
32 Locust St. Gallipolis
446-1~

SETTING. Elcellent
buy at $45,900. Owners have been transferred &amp;
are anxrous to sell th~ lovely brick &amp; ~ame ranch
w1th 3 BRs, large kitchen. LR wrth M!llfe~ace,
nK:e car!&gt;'! lhroughout1attached garage &amp; 1 acre
p10e-sludded ~t. Possrble blended mortgage tor
qualified buyers.
CMN YOUR OWN CAI\I' SITE -~ thewiderness
of the Wayne National Forest. 5 lo 9 acre tracts ol
wooo land now avaiable, adjoining thMands ol
acres of (llvernment ~ nd Pubi c illnting. f5hing
and camping permitte:l. Pri:es start at $3500 w~h
financrn g avar~ble.
BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY - 132 acres. mostly
clean hrll pasture, good fences, 1\7 story home.
~rge barn, tob. base, !roots on 3 roads near Mud·
sock. Pnce reduced to $64,000.

SECLUDED COUNTRY SETIING. LOOKIN(l FOR
SOMETHING SPECIA~? Let us show youth" new
3 BR. 2 balh double garage home with over 1700
sq. It of hvrng area. Jusl right for the large lamily
that needs amplespace Other features ar~ natu ral
wood srdin&amp; heat pump. range. relrrg.. OW &amp; disp.
Can be purchased wilh 2 acres or 40. Located rn RECREATION lAND - 25 acres m/1, mostly
Green Township.
woods. fronls on Little Raccoon Creek &amp; SlatE
BEST BUY IN TOWN - Stylish 2 story home was Route 325 near Tycoon Lake. $15,000.
built rn 1894 and must be seen to appreciate
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY lOCATED Large Oi&gt;'n Ioyer and stairway, LR. d1ning rm .. I 12 acre Iarm has tronlage on Slale Route 588.
parlor, completely equrpped modern krtchen. 4 F a rrf~eld Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairlield Rd.
Brs. 21h baths. new siding. garage. near school:; Ecellent lor farmrngor development Old er 5 rm. &amp;
shopp1ng, etc.
balh also rncluded. Owners wrll consrder selling
f!()DNEY-CORA ROAD - Approx. 30 acres wood· smaller lraclsof short lerm financrng. Call lor more
land located 3 mi. lrom Rodney County water mtormallon. ..
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beel. hay &amp; grain larm.
available. $12.000
80 acres, m/1, approx. 35 A. good cropland. 10 A.
RRICE REDUCED TO $32,900 - 50 acres more woods. balance pasture. good lences, 9 rm./bath
or less near Eu re~a. approx. 15 A grassland. bal· home was buill in 1872 &amp; has been partrally
ance wooded. nicely remodeled 6 rm. and bath remodeled. 50x50 cattle barn with concrete lloor,
home. WF fire~ace . stove, relng., seVBral oulbuild· large srlo wrlh auto. unloader. several '""''1!J'J&lt;¥.1E
ings. Owners leaving the area and wouldlike a pond. sprrngs. stand1ng crops g~ to new owner.
qurck sale.
HUNTINGTON TOWN911P - 176 acres m/ 1vaBUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE - Appro&lt; Cilllland fronts on Rao:ooo Creek &amp; the Glen Rd.
5 ~ acres localed on the Graham School ~ .
Approx . 3 til~ble &amp; the balan ce woodoo. Under
. county water, over 300ft. rood frontage. Green $400 per acre.
Grade Schoo l and Gallia Academy Hrgh School.
$10.~0.
OH 10 RIVER loTS FOR SALE - l ocated 3 mries
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE ~88 - Remo- below Eureka Dam. I de~ lor camping, builcing or
·
deled home ·rncludes 6 rms and bath. carport mobile h(Jlles. Call Ranny lllatkbum.
stove. retrig., dishwasher. ~ most 6 acres of land PERRYTOWNSHIP - 78 acr&gt; 15A.SimmsCreek
and priced for quick sale.
bottom, balance rolling pasbJre ~ woods, nice
$1,000 DOWN PAYMENT on l~i; Oh o River Veo modular home, ~rge barn. several othe1 buildings
property. Pjlprox. 8 acres wocrfoo land on Route 7 Tobacco base, corner ol SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
and 5 mi' soulh ol town (Niner will finance baf Woods Rd.
ance at 10%
GUYAN TOWNSHIP - JOB acres m/1, locatoo
south ol Merce r~lle. /wrox . 20 A. ti l~ble, balance
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST - uke new sec- woods,tlb. base Owners wil help finance.
tional home. 1200 S!i-fl. 3 BR, 2 balhs, cath:!dral
ceilings, 2 water systems. All th" on 1.55 atre lot HOLIDAY PARK - 2 camping lots. fum5hoo 26
wrth fishing pond between Rio S. Vinton. $29,900. H. Trctwrod travel trailer, shel er hous~ ..ility
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 82x80 all ~eel con bu Icing, county water. sewer. atcess 1o Racoon .
struction withfireproof insulation. OVerhead crane Creek. Prired for quduale
has office &amp; baths. Formerly used for boat sales &amp;
reparr. Located across from Silver Bridge Plaza wrth BARGAIN PRICED AT $10,500 - 10x55 motile
·auess to lhe Oh~ River. Potentr~ un~mrled Cal home wrth 10xl8 addioon. several buikl ilr:;, over
6 acres of land on Sand Holow Rd. in Grem Twp.
Ranny Blackburn al Strout Realty, 446-0008.
Owner will hell lil01re.

HOMES EOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH OPTION
.TO BUY OR lAND CONTRACT. TWO AND THREE
BEDROOM STARTING Al $200 PER MONTH.

Trucks for Sale

1f12 QMC 'h ton PU. 360
V-8. auto .. PS. P8 . runa
good. good tiNa. •800. Coli
446-7367.
• .
NEW LISTING - WHO COULD ASK FOR MORt
- Anice vf'N ot the riverand a poceto dock your
boat is rndiJJed wrth lhis immacu~te 3bedroom.2
bath· home. Kitchen has "~nd range Basement
completely fin~hed . large 9'x57' de&lt;:k pius CJx57
patio. Priced in the 50's
#274

NEW ON MARKET - 7 acres, rn ~ wrth improve
ments on llie land. Qlunty water. septic lank and
ek!ctrlc. Land rspartrally wooded. could be used lor
pasture. hunting. etc. Fronts·on State Route 775,
i(lins 0. 0. Mcintyre Park.
#275
IF YOU liKE avery livable home. agood neighbnr
hood, a oonve~ent loctron, thrs home is for you.
Featuring 3 bedrooms. I ~ baths, fireplace. large
covered patio, aluminum ~ding, 1Sx32' in ground
pool Slorage building. Possibility of owner
financnig.
#260
TRY OFFER! 5 rooms and bath. Modern kitchen.
Woodburner Electric baseboard heal Two mobi~
home pads. Three se~~ lank&amp; Rural water. One
acre of land. 1~ miles from Holzer Medical Center.
$30,000.
#278
K'iGER CREEK LOCATION - 3 bedroom frame
home wrth bafh.living room. ~rtchen. County water
and 1 acreof ~nd . Nalural gas line lo house. but
not hooked up. Owner needs to sell. Make us an
offer.
#238
FAMILY DELIGHT -Be lhe proud owner of th~ 3
bedroom ranch. Livrng room with woodburner.
drnrng room. double car garage. Large level lot.
Convenient loshoppingand hospital. Prrr:ed rn lhe
40'~

#225
ARE YOU lOOKING FOR SMALL ACREAGE? Then klo ~ no l~rther. 13.90 atres, 3 bedroom
ranch st~e oome, only 6 years old 20x60 tobacco
barn. Tobacco base. Farm priced al only $37,500.
#211
BEAT THE PRICE! 42 acres, more or less wrth 5
room house ard other outburldrng~ Most al
wooded, some timber. Morgan Twp. Unbelievable
price at $21 ,000. Po~ ble land cortract 25%
down. 10 yearn A.P.R., $208.15 monthly.
#242
FRINGE BENEFITS -Buy this home aild enjoy
free natural gas for heating and a monthly check
from roya~e~ This farm home is in excellent cond&gt;
ijon wrth aR moo em facilil~s ard 48 acres of land.
#193
JUST LISTED - 'I ACRE LOTS - Frontage on
State Route 160. Excelenl horne ~te. Rural water
av31lable. Restncted.
·
#263
ATTRACTIVE BUY! 205 Kineon. aose to city convenience~ W61 cared·for 3 bedroom ranch. Living
room, formal dining, worlishop. Garage with electrrc oener. Naturalll'!Sooal. central air Nice lawf\
pr~ed in lhe 40's,
#243
ONE YOU MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE - Clean
and attractive 2 bedmrrn home. Forced air furnace. County water sysleiJI. 2.75 ·Acres of pasture
and woods. Priced in too lower 20's.

#249
(I')

Mobile Homo Root Prob· RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
lorna? Would you llko to end rlonced roofing, Including 1b,;,:.G:-rli&gt;--""
rootleaka. roof rumble. roof hot tar appllcotlon, corponcoatlng. ceiling condenoa- tor. electrician. muon. Cill
tionspotaondaave30to40 304-676-2088 or 676·
percent on your heating bill? 1 _4_&amp;6_o_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Call 992-7034 and oak,.
about ' our NeW Roof Water Wella . Commercial
and Domestic . Teet hole1.
Product.
Pump1 Salas and Service. IJ:\'0\I
304-696-3802 . .

#246
ENJOY EASY LIVING within your budget wilh lhls
bargain priced one fklor flian 2 bedroom home.
Mooern .knchen, lorced arr heat. Storm doo" thermopane w1ndows. Possible ~nd contract Evergreen area. Pnced mid twenties.
#245
LOAN ASSUMPTION - Wrth alow down payment
you can assume the present VA loan on the remodeled 2 bedroom home. Well insu~ted . OutbuildIngs. t acre. more or less. Pnced rn the 20'~
' ·#176
NEW LISnNG - 2600 ~ - ft. 4 bedroom bi-~Vet.
Lwll!! hvong room. deluxe lutchen, diAng area.
family room, firetlace. 2~ bath:; heal pump, central air, 2 car garage, concrete drM!. Swimmrng
pool 18'x36'. Lots of living on '" acre comer lot.
H25~

NEW LISTING - LOOKING FOR ANEW HOMEThe owners have priced hiS home to sell. 4 bedrooms, large krtchen and diAngcomb .. fivingroom,
double vanity in bath. Nalural gas heal'4 extra lots.
Mobile home hookup. Priced in the 30'~ City
schools.

NEW LISTING - BARGAIN OF TflE YEAR Suburban 3 bedroom ranch. Fam~y room with
fireplace plus wood burnin~ st011e. fuly car!&gt;'ted.
· 2 ~ car attached garage, ~ acre lot. fenced in
bacllyard Priced for quick sale.
#264
WANT A SIIAU FARM? One atre homeslead and
'55 enjoyable atres. Approx. 20 acres crop land.
tobacco base. The rest is pasture and woods. Lov.er
IWenties.
#207
lANGSVILLE ARE'A- - 2 bedroom home wrth
aluminum s idin~ living rcofl\ kitchen. bath.
screened in porch. Gas lurnace Cellar !louse !nd
I ~ acre. Proced al $22.~0. Located at Crouser
Road.
#2n
9 ACRE ESTATE - Ranc h style brick 3'bedroom ~
3~ baths. baement. Caretakers burldin&amp; trees,
shrubs, beautiful landscaping. Ltrge clean stocked
pond. We will show you lhe rest. Fa~rtrekl Vaned
Road. Green Townshrp.
#251
ALITTLE FAR OUT - Bul priced right at $25,000:
Owner w~l sel on land contract with $4,000down.
10% APR. 15 years, monthly paymenl $204,18:
Home has 8 rooms and balh. Situated on 3 acres. •
...
'
#2!XI
FINISH TlfiS i!NE! - Have a beautiful home at
the edge.of woods. 5 Acres, more or less, 3 bedroms, 2 fireplaces. lots of pos~bilities.
·

#204
NEW LISTING - L011ely modern home located rn
the crty school district Home has4 bedrooms. I v,.
baths, famrly room. kilchen wlh drnrnR L. lhis
home ~ priced in the 50's. Possible loan
as5umpboo.
•·
#262
.67 OF All ~RE, more or less. Older garage. Rural
water tap included. No reslricl&lt;lns. Clay schoo~.
#203

aaii: OI'PICIIS lftii'8.D8MrtY OWW8D A11D OPIIAIID.·
1982 Century 21 Rtal Eshll\t CorporaUon as lrus lt:" fm lh• NftF CIC &gt;.nlcl Tt.! hilllt-m.uh ~ n l

I

I

1969 QMC' V-6. 'h ton PU,
ru'ne good , body rough,
UOO. Call 446·1838 aftar
6 .-

.

-,..--------lc77 Oodgo Pick -up . Low
mllugo. 13.000 . Coli
614 -986 -3590.

1)

Windows

Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
How mot P~tlo Covers

t-towme1 screen rooms

446·2642

Harne

81

1981 KAWASAKI KX 126,
ridden 1 ••••on . good
condition, for d8teil1 cell

Auto Parts

8o Accessories

87

HAMLIN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Dissolutions or Uncontested Divorces $350.00

Upholstery

{Costs included).

STARKS Tree Trimming &amp;
Removal. Mini-backhoe
816 . hour, inaured , free

Plumbing

Cor. Fourth •nd Pine

304-676-4164.

~========:..L

Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477

PAINTING · interior and
exterior. plumbing. roofing.
1oma remodeling. 20 yrs .

446-{)855

512 Second Ave.. Gallipolis
Servinc Gill~ &amp; Meip
Counties

· 1 Box 124. Pt. Plaannt,

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

84

Small Estates $350.00

MOWREYS Upholatery At .

&amp; Heating

estimates. Cell 614-266 1182.

Wills $25.00

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ava. , Galllpolia.
448-7833 or 448-1833.

oatlmatea. 304-676 -2010.

Home
Improvements

textured ceilings commercief and residential , free

away or 1omethlng moved?
We'll dolt. Call448-3169 or
614-268-1967 alter e.

ahapo. Wotorromoval, FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 814·446-2107.

I~~.C~al~l~4~4~6~-6~6~3~9~.~~~~
STUCCO PLASTERING •

f.:=======::;

General Hauling

Need eometh lng hauled

.

Oet your karpet in ship

Byerly and Fehs AU1omatlc
Tranamlssron Repair. NOW
,(tPEN . Corner of Kamper
Hollow &amp; Karr Bethal Rd .

74 Honda motorcycle 360
CC. run1 good, axe. cond .•
8800 firm . Coll4:46-3027.

86

Improvements

__.::.•

SOLUTION

•c

.'.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Salee 8t Service Sharpen
SCI110r1 . Fabric Shop ,

oxp. Call 614·38B-9862 . .

Marcum Roofing &amp;. Spout-

ing. 30 vearasexperlence,
E7B-14. 126. call304·676- specializing in bulh up roof.
248a.
Coii614-38B-98117.

2 good studded anow tirea,

,..••

.

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

'

•

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE call Ci1y Furniture
304-876-2608.

Real Estate General

~
l

A

CAN'ADAY .
REALTY

~~~~~=J ;
77 Hasten

· Diana Pearson, Assoc.

78 Bible
1 Protecllve

25locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio
.

screen

7 Applauds

-·-----·--------

12 tncllned

irfeuleted ,
aluminum ,

a paneled , ell

exc. cond., like
now. 110.000. Call 614387-71B2.

.

1878 CJ-6 Jeep Ronogode
Weatern bullet wheels.

many txtroa. Coll814-3677147 or 446-0498.
11180 Jeep . Excellent
condition. Block. 814-992-

17 Fond desire
21 Clergyman

nrep~ce.

and
room.
•
mrcrowave 011en,
il room , use of tenniscoqrts and swimming
pool. Assumable loan • 8 ~ %.

$75.000.
WARM. WELCOMING AND SPACIOUS RANCH - Exce ptional
zoning makes rt possible for an active family to ~ve. in thrs home
wilhoul having to tiptoe around each other. Fam1ly room With
fireplace is v.ell separated from formal dining. living room and
bedrooms. Everyday traffic enters from the garage to the family
room and kitchen. Master surte has private bath, there are 3 other
bedrooms on first floor plus bedroom and storage on second floor.
2 car gagage. 16x32 . Near city.

84 Lamb's pen
name
85 Spack
87 Fright
89 Red or
Green
90 Choose

24 Greek letter
25 Conjunclion
26 War god
26 Dinner
course,
30 Football
team
32 Ruthenium
symbol
33 Number
35 Obstructs
37 Apporti oned
39 Chinese
coin
40 ProhlbUion
41 Teu1on1c

horse

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

Phone

• 1-(614)-992-3325

JUST liSTED - ~rn 3yr.
Old. 3 bedroom ~orne. 2~
ilaths. large family room, nrce
kik:hen, dining, with glass
doors to sundeck Ltrge bal!ilalent wlh 2 car.garage, utilitY'
10om &amp; one atre. $56,950.

•

the ·
appeal of its New
England forebears - gable roof, dormers, horizontal lap siding,
large front porch. But lacks none of the modern leatures so
· necessary today. Traditional entry hall With open starrway, formal
living and dining rooms. Work saver kitchen. 3 bedrooms. I~
baths. Cen. arr cond., fireplace, basement and garage. Beautiful
•view d fhe Ohio. Excellent cond. NEW lDW PRICE $72,900.

iActNE - 1974 Schlitz,
12x65 wrth tipout. 3 bedrooms,
I Y.. baths. inter-com, ulilty and·
2 level lots out ol all ftoods.
\'lant iust $11,90Q.

J26,000.

~INE - Next to store &amp;
JChoois. Has 21arge bedmoms,
llling 12x24, bafh, large eaHn
iitthen, front porch and level
kll'$18,500. .

tered

SPACIOUS HOME - 3 bedrooms. 2~ baths, living room.
I dining room, family room, modern kitchen and 2 car garage
in city school dist
custom I
dishwasher.
lrom dining
area
1\? baths.
utility room w.ith ample
storage. 2car garage. Narly an acre. Kyger Creek area.Th1s horn•
in excellent cond~on. $.~2 .000.

..

S21.soo.
• ·
' PTS. - 1976 Sl:hultz
JIVE

GENERAL STORE would probably be the best use tor this building;
but ~ you have a different venture in mind, ~- might be suitable.
Main bulding is 36x36 pius storage and walk•n cooler. Concrete
block construction. Good location. Owner win consider fonancin~
$32,000. .

QUICK ACTION PRICE TAG! Price 5-I+S-It+d. New l2xl6
kitchen, bui ~-in range, mrcrowave oven, d~hwasher &amp; disposal
New bedroom &amp; bath, 2 other bedrooms, gas heat Washington
Elementary.
•

TWO STORY FRAME - New comb. wood/eleCtric furnace. 3 BR,
dining room, tu1 basement. large deck with grea_tvf'N. Kyger Creek
Schod1 $42,000. Possible mortp1111 assumptio~ .

· view. Wooded lot 3 or 4 bedrooms. kitchen, living room • lining
area. All wooden beamed ceilings. Cit:led rustic round deck

CHilliCOTHE ROAD ~. $13,000 - Three rooms and ~
cctti!IB in excellent condilion. Has alum. siling and l~rge storage
buildi~ Converliert locllion.

36 BUILDING lDTS - In an approved subcjiv. Central sewager
and all underground utillies. City school listricl

!raier. 2 nice sire bedmoms,
farge lillin~ modem kitchen &amp;
~ice dining. New wood garage
With concrete floor, walks, front
Porch. idity and over one
~- $26,500.
'

Ho11sing

92 Goddess of

weeds
135 Smal l b rook
136 Exist
137 Winter
vehicles

139 Weary
141 NH's neigh-

bor

coin
143 Sedan
145 Sends forth
147 Regulation
149 Uncooked
152 Greek
letter
153 Betroth
155 Blemish
157 Ruth or

discord

DidriKson
159 Compass

speech

97 Welcomes
99 Golf mound
100 Moscow
name
101 Transported
with delight

102 FOot parts
103 Quarrel

point
160 Son of
Adam
162 Cheerful
songs
164 Mistake
166 Rang
168 Shade trees
169 Choose
170 Ac'ts
171 Makes into

law

105 Tolls

107 Cyprlnoid
fish
109 Munched

110 Untamed
111 Candle
113 Barracuda

114 FDA agcy.
115

River m

Italy

116 Staff
117 Make lace
118 Welghl of
India
120 26th Pres.
121 Bose
122 Son
123 Tibetan holy

68 OIHicult
69 Editor's
concern:
Abbr.
7 1 Number
72 Hair style

12B Spoor
130 Harm

74 SwiH

132 Burden

man

124 FolloW
126 Angry out• burst

134 Biblical

Dorado
34 Sewmg

need

142 S1amese

94 Leak
through

95 Several
96 Figure or

beloved
19 Sieve
20 Frequents
27 Pintail duck
29 Decides
3 1 Paso or

DOWN
1 Blemish
2 Rabbit's
relative
3 Exists
4 Greek letter
5 Nobleman
6 Vision

7 Cesium
symbol

8 Vegas or
Pal mas
9 First name
10 lost color
11 Declared
12 Sun god
13 Honest 14 Liquefy
15 Folds

16Lucky
number
17 Take a
ribbon
18 Zeus's

36 Withered
38 Oared
40 Scorch
42 Bright
shades
44 Small children .
46 Remainder
48 Declared
49 Make love, .
old style
50 Blemish
51 Robert Niro
53 Tart

55 Note of
scale
56 Pastry item
58 Loss
60 Ti(Jy
62 Tro pical
tree
65 Macaw
68 listen
69 Bishop 's
headdress
70 Prophets
72 Priest's
garment
73 Commanded
75 Vessel
76 Drives

onward
77 Safe place
79 Slum bered
80 Painful
spots

82 Corners

83 Opera
singers
84

Wed

secret ly·
Sta lem ate

86
88 Soak

89 Metal fas tener

90 Thong
91 Muse of
poe1ry

'·

93 Ruses
95 Dettect
97 Prect ous
mPiat

98 Soak up
102 Fork p ru ng
104 Direction
106 likely
107 Turkish
decree
108 Challeges

'·..

'~

•~

'

•.
•

I

110 Place for
a mural
11t Mexican
dish

112 Actual
114 Closer
116 lament
117 Scottish
caps
119 Disturbance
121 British babv
buggv
122 Fountain

I
....

,.
'\

order
123 Tra follower
125 Den
127 Pronoun
128 Daze
129 Ceremony
130 Minor Hem
131 Prepared
tor print

133 Beat deci-

'

_,

'

..,.,
I

'

'
I

sively

136 Tru mpet' s
cousin
138 leer
140 Gladden
143 A rtt cle
144 Eye amo-

rously

146 Father
148 Black
150 Dt llseed
151 Marries
153 US NA grad .
154 Usetul
abbr .
156 Bow
158 Guido note
161 NegAtive
prethe
163 City map
abbr.
165 Delhi coins :
Abbr .
167 letters on a
U$N craft

'

'

•
•'
J

J

l

'

J

I

'

'

,:

COMIIERCIAL - SUPER BUY
PRICE REDUCED FROM $69 900 TO $45,000! OOWNTONN BUSI·
NESS BUILDING. OVER !400 SO. FT. BUSINESS AREA FRONTING
00 CW~T STREEH'I.US OVER 1300 SQ. FT. BUILDING SUIT ABLE
FOR STORAGE, AUTO REPAIR, ETC. FRONTittJ ON ALLEY. 2 BR
APT. ON SECOND FLOOO. THE PRICE IS RIGHT •. CALL FOR A
SHONIN&lt;i

!IIDDL£POIIT - Nice concrete block, 6 rtlllj1l home. Natpral gas lurnace, modern
Ptchen. basement and lellel
lot Near swimming pool. Only

52 God of love
54 Puts off
56 Mount,ain
lakes
57 Cushioned
59 Short jacket
61 Ascend
62 Ache
63 LubricJtes
64 Digraph
66 Sunbonnet
girl ol song
67 EnCoun-

76 Animal coat

'

ptJTIAND -This older home
100, 2levellots on Rl. 124. Has
,, bedrooms, HI baths. natural
ias. crty water, chimney for
rour wood buroor. Front &amp;
liack enclosed porch~. Askrng

MIDDLEPORT - New log cabin. Select your own carpet and
decot. Lovely river view, living room, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, bath.
Gas heal Priced 30's.

82 Streetcar,
British style

23 White

43 Encounter
45 Hinder

EAFOR

weight

83 Tropical
fruit

47 Thoren
symbol
48 Garment
49 Spirited

.•

Abbr.
79 Besmirches
81 Heavy

22 Memorable
Egyptian ·

dolly

3~47 .

:

section.

roadways

poplar

Owner must relocate and hiS rirfuced the asking price to

...

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636.
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

AM-FM Clltette . 4 extra

1 fl79 3110 V-8 Chevrolet
atop Von . PS. PB . auto;

j

·I

~==~~~~~~~ A

446-3636 _ANY HOUR

Vans 8o 4 W.O.

•
::

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lanier, 304-676·
7397 .

tireo &amp; whoolo. 12,000. Call
61,4-986-3648.
73

•••

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Calta614'-387 7471 or 814-387-0691 .

1977 Chavy ·Luv Truck.

Jl,!, ulrjllilrters

Ctnllfr~ 21 ~AI Est•!.. Corporation F.quol Hnu-.mA Opporh.m11y (i)

Nu·Prlme replacement

Mobile home awningo
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive

#271
2v, ACRES - more or ~- in the ~llage o1
Brdwell. Rural water. Storage buidrng. Several feet
of frontage. No restrictions.
#201

Bill's

304-896-3857.

72

V.A. I.OAII ASSUMPTION - Ranch style
home. Green Twp., 3 bedrooms, 11h baths, large
iving room. lormal·dining room . deluxe kitchef\
ut~ity, patio, heat pump, central air, 2 car garage.
Private concrete St Exira large level lot. Low sixties.

Lennox Hutinc I Air Cond~
tionlnJ. All Types Insulation
Eleetncal ltlirlnc.
Coil 446-8515 or 446-0445
Arter 4:30 p.m.
"'

good tires.

gciod. good body. t860 . Call
304-876-31333 .

~TYLE ... ELEGANCE .. A WAY OF LIFE - First
limeon the market tor lh" like new contemporary,
3or 4 Bf?s. 2 baths. large O!&gt;'n LRwith frreplace &amp;
beamed cerlrngs, krtchen rncludes range, OW &amp;
r~ln g.. lull basement wraparound deck. cedar
srdrng. 12x24 aixllle ground pool, garage, barn &amp;
NEW liSTING $49.500-0wn•rs have moved &amp;. 10 ''res near Eu re~a. C1ty schools.
have lherr lovely 3 BR brick ranch priced to sell.
Specral features are 11h bths. family rm. wrth W8
fireplace. carl"! lhroughout full basement. garage,
covered rear porch &amp; large lot on the Bulaville Rd.

ELLIOTT

HOWARD L. WRITESEL RON ' S Televlalon Service.
ROOFI '3 COMPANY . Specializing In Zenith end
Motorola . Quazer . end
Gutters ~ wownepouta-New­
Repa ir - Guttar Painting ~ house colla. Coli 678-2398
Storm Doors S. Window1 . or 446-2464.
Free .Eatlmetes . Phone
614-949-2263 or 814· F &amp; K Tree Trimming, ltump
removal. Call 6711-1331 .
992 -2791 .

11!77 MERCURY Cougar,
black-ailvar top, PS , PB.

RUSS AND MAX

82

76

MERCURY Zoyphar

with Major

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Now arrange the drded leners to ,
form the aurprtse answer, u suggested by the above cartoon ,

81

304-882-2887.

CMMtte Pioneer outfit, run•

WOOD
REALTY, Inc.

Soalig
at 61 4-742-2774
or
614·742·2306
oftor4 p.m.

304-876-1 780 afte, 4:30.

5804.

11250

Home
Improvements

(Anlwo&lt;l Monday)
Jumblea : ICILY COVEY BODICE PAYING
Answer: Thla wickedness sounds as though It has a
·
atrong grlp-"VICE" .

ALL terrain vehicle. 18 HP. 8

wagon, excellent condition,
low mlle•g•, 1 owner,
1~425.00, phone 304-87&amp;-

375 DEBBIE DRIVE - Owner is being transferred
and ~ anxious to sell th~ lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
brick ranch. Full divided basement. Large 2 car
garage. N~e level landscaped law~ Pnced rn the
60 '~ Call kxlayr

EAT Hl5 f'OOD
WITH THI5.

81

I

wheel drive. good conditk»n.
1~78

NEW LISTING - Looking for a nice home in town' Thisranch has
3 bedrooms. carport, vin~ .rlding. located rn Adnan Dr.
I
#-4350

10 ACRES - Cklse lo Rio Grande. hall woods, $1 2.500.

CADMUS WATIRLOO
. 141. Modem 2
bedroom home Master bedroom 12'x l6' with
waik-in closel Family room IG'x29'. Frre~ate insert.wrth blower. Living room 13'1&lt;22' Large country krtchen, abeauty, everylh1ng includrng new old
fashion cookstove. Patio. Rural water. Must see
inside to apprec~te .
#279

50UND~ i..II&lt;E A
MU~ICIAN MlcSHT

Home
Improvements

Times-Sentinei-Page-0..7

r Xl I I I )[ I XI )

1976 Rabbit. 4 cyl .. 4 ep ..

EXECUTIVE CHARM- That's what you'll fmd
1n lhrs 4 BR, 211 bath Dutch Colonial located m
beautiful Charolar s Hills Estates. Com plete in
every way including a com pletely equrpped '
kr_tchen, large lrvmg &amp; drnmg rms.. family rm .
wrth f~repla ce . basemen! &amp; cenl a~r. The 300
sq. fl. sun deck overlooks the beauliful 20x44
pool All thiS plus a well landscaped 3~ acre
lot. Shown by appointment. Call Ranny Blackburn al Slrout Rally, 446 0008.

Some ulonollo, pleaao

81

1 9 6 9 Pontiac laM 1 n s . - - - - ' - - - - - - - 1-=o--:---::o--:--c~atom 9 co~vertlblo. runs
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
77 Auto Repair
good. body need a work ,
•epo. Call 814-268 -8620.
1978 Chevy Malibu at01ionwogon. U .995. Call 614·

ASSUME 8Y1% UlAN -Lovely ranch a! the edge
of town rs prlCed to sell at $49,900. Features are 3
BR. I ~ baths. large LR with WB fireplace, modem
krtchen &amp; drnrng area. laundry rm., garage &amp; ~
heat Call for appointment.

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

POMEROY- ROUNO CEDAR HOME -lots of glass and alovely
completely around the home.

,

'

�Oh~Point

•

W.Va.

20, 1983

Born near Beirut, Tabit owned Gallipolis property
.JAms

By
SANDS
SpeCial
GALLIPOLIS
- The buDding at
Tlllrd and Court
that today houses
B run Icard!
Music Company
was erected in

l9ai by a Lenanes
had by the 1920! realized the "great
American dream". .
That man was George Tablt.
He was born in 1877 at Bhamdoun, Lebanon (about
J!liles
from Beirut) and who in his 50 years of business in Gallipolis owned
a score of concerns Including the
Ohlo Valley Laundry, Tablt's
Broom Works,•the Lafayette Hotel
and Tablt's Department Store.
'l1DS SON of Abraham and Hannah Tablt came from a family of
silk factory workers who toUed for
the pay of six plasters pei- day. In
1i186 George's !atber came by him·
sell to Callfornfa to order to make
enough money to bring hls famlly to
·Amertca. When he returned to Lebanon in 1891, Hannah refused to
leave Bhamdoun and so Abraham
came to America with two of his
sons- Charles and George, Others
of tbe family came to the United
States la.ter.
. It was some time in the late 1890s
when George Tablt left CaUfornla
and settled at GalUpoUs. i:n 1899
George was naturalized as a U.S.
citizen by Judge Ingles and In 19ffi
Ta bit opened up hJs first store to
Gallipolis .in the 8:XJ block of Second
Avenue. About 1911 TabU purchased the Vance corner (where
the Lafayette now slis) and opened
a second department store. TabU
also had an interest in a laundry on
Court Street as well as a grocery.
IN l9U TABIT purchased there. matos of the Ohio Valley Furniture
complex on ~~e Street. There Is ·
only one builwng that remains
standing - the one presently used
by Ohio Valley Laundry; it was
here that Tablt developed a broom
factory. George also tore down
some of tbe old factory bulldfngs on
State and had erected three houses.
This area of Gallipolis came to ·be
known as Tablt Town.
Tablt's store at Second and Court
burned to the ground to 1923 and It
was at this time that he gave
thought to the Idea of buldlng a department store at Third and Court
where there had been an empty lot
for some years. A fire about 1910
had destroyed tbe store that did occupy tbe spot.
TABIT'S NEW department store
opened with great hoopla in 1926 but
it was not long before this store was
superseded by TabU's new store to.
the Lafayette Hotel, which Tablt
completed in 1928.
George TabU's motto of "money
Is to be made In buying, not selling"
was to put him in good stead !\lid
about the only bustoess that TabU
seemed to have failed at was his
department store in the Lafayette
as it went bankrupt in 1933.
THE TIDRD AVE. side of the
TabU buUdlpg was used briefly as

an Ev!il!S grocery store. In 1926 one
could buy at this grocery three dlf.
!erent klnds of coffee: Best Yet,
Man 0' War, and Liberty Bell at 45
cents a can. Hershey Cocoa sold for
40 amts a pound ·Chevrln Spagh' ettl for eight cents a pound; Eagle

Brand milk · 20 cents a can; Old
Dutch Cleanser for eight cents a
can; and drled peaches for:.! cents
a .pound. It was here (according to
hJs sister Jerry Miller) that Bob
Evans at the age 9f 12 learned how
to cut meat.

In later years ~e Third Ave. part
of the Tablt block was used by

Buckeye Fruit and Supply, Payne
Maytag, The Laundrette, Charm
Beauty, MUstead's, Baird RadioTV, Tile Printed Page, and Secur·
lty l\Dd Safety Service.

1•

FOR THE F1RST 15 or so years of the history of this 1928 vintage
buDding, a department store Wl!S here. George Tablt, WhO erected the
. buDding, was a Lebanese Immigrant who also had buUt In 192'7-1928 the
Lafayette HOtel. Bnmlcardl Music Cmnpany moved to this spot to the
mld·19'llls from State street.

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

Jim and Mary Myers count
Mason Township graveyards
.'

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - James C. and
Mary L. Myers, 17i Portsmouth
Road, recorded all the cemeteries
In Masoll" Township, Lawrence
County, and donated them to t he
Gallia County Historical Society.
Henny Evans says that the Society
has published them . and the Mason
Township booklet is at the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce on
State Street.
TillS NEW BOOKLET can be
purchased either at the Chamber or
from Jim Myers himself (tele
· phone 446-2148) . "This is a fine donation," Henny says, "as ali of us
know how much work Is involved.
There are 45 cemeteries included."
Cost is $4.50at the Chamberor$5.50
by mall .

PAUL H. HEINS, 1519 Fauver
Ave .. Dayton 45410, sent along with
his letter a photosta t of a cllpptog
from the Decatur (Alabama) Dally
with a photograph of a couple astride a motorcycle which is pulling
a camper trailer. Under the picture
It reads, "Paul and June Payne on
the road ."

Howard Harding."
HERE ARE SOME more of Ida
lifae Thompson's words: "My fa·
ther, the late Ross E. Harding, was
a cousin to Howard and Arthur. My
mother, who was the former Hazel
Helen Fife, was the daughter of the
late Chauncey E. Fife. Chauncey
Fife was a former Gallla County
surveyor, whose wife was the late
Mittie Ball."
ANOTHER SISTER of Mrs.
Ha rding was Mrs. Thelma Georgatlle of GaUlpolls, deceased. She was
the widow of Forrest H. Fife, state
highway surveyor. H someone
wants any more information on this
subject he should telephone 367·

rns.

IT WAS JUNE. 1~5, that the
Cheshire Gang brought natural gas
to Galllpolls, Ida Mae Thompson
wrote.

IDA MAE gave other names in
the natural-gas story: Frank
Bruce, ex-boss; Jim Frazier, his
successor; Archie ·Swisher, too
young to be effective; George C.
. Thompson; Archie Darst took care
THE THREE-COLUMN head- of· the jack; Wash . Thomas, the
line reads, "Riders, past 50, not
cook; Walt McCarty, painter; Ruover hill." Paul Heins' letter reads
fus Grover, home body; Fred Multhat Paul Payne, prior to his retire
ford, quiet thinker; Harry
ment. was a foreman at Dayton's
Beverage loves music and popular
former Frigidaire plant, was and is songs; Young Kelly , a slabber;_
a relative not only of him but also of John Ray, oldest; Davy Darst, Mid·
Dr. Dan Notter, Mrs. Sadie Notter,
dleport native.
· Everett McMahon of Central
Supply, and has an aunt !lYing at
AMONG OTHER names assoCentenary. HOwever, Heins does
ciated with the Cheshire Gang
not attach a name to that aunt.
were: Pearl Graves, who brought
hJs llttle boy to watch; Big Roy
MRS. IDA MAE Thompson, Rt.
Thqmpson, brother of George C.;
1, Cheshire 45620, Wrote that she is
Merry Mit and Nick; Young
sending to Peeps the .copy she
Denver, good at tongs; C. C. Jolly
promised on natural gas coming to
llves up to his name; Big Leonard
Gallipolis. " Also you told me tore
quit; Eddie Swisher quit, prefermind you to have James Sands give
rtng the farm; John Loucks, skilled
me a call - If time permits - 367at driving men; Little Roy and
7208 - as a tiny followup on the
Young Wade, bucket boys; blind
article on produce house on Third
Maude; old Jim.
and Fourth Avenues concerning

1982 J EP PICKUP .. 4 WHEEL DRIVE.,
Just what you've been looking for! Features a low 5,d00 miles, lock out hubs, 4·
spd. transmission and Jeep's famous drive train .

VE BIG DOLLARS!

'

i'
t

A guide to local
television programming
February 20 thru February 26

1982 CHEVETIE 3 DR. HATCHBACK

'

Your price leader has done it again! Buy this sporty economy model for only $4250.00
cash or $680.00 down and only $97.47_per fl)Onth lor 48 months.
A.P.R. is 13.5% Plus
e Tax. Qualified Ruvt1!11rs

Includes complete

I
'l

!l
\

I

·listings

1976 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
Local one owner. Extra clean. Features cruise control, tilt wheel, rallye wheels, AM-FM
stereo: vinyl roof, factory air, traded in on new Buick leSabre.

Quali

Sally Struthers.

Pages 3, 4

at Smith's

Dr. Oscar W. Clarke to head
Ohio Medical Licensing Board
GALLIPOLIS - Oscar W.
Clarke, M.D. , r1 Holzer CUnlc Ltd.,
Galllpolls, has been elected pres!dent of the State of Ohio Medical
Licensing Board.
A specialist in internal medicine,
Dr. Darke was first appointed to
the state licensing board by Gov.
James A. Rhodes in late 1917. He
became vice president in 1982.

Actlv~

Virginia.
After servtog in the military service in World War II as· Chief of
Medicine, 317th Station Hospital,
USAF, Europe from 1946 to 1948, he
did post graduate training at the
University of Vienna and the Pratt
Diagnostic Center in Boston.
Dr. Clarke and his wife, Susan,
have been resldentsofGalllpolls for

Showbeat ·
Pages 4, 5

~~33:;ye;ar;;s.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r

in numerous
organaa!loins, Dr. Darke
is currently
chairman of the executive committee at
Holzer Cllnlc, vice chairman of the
medical staff of the Holzer Medical
Centef"lmd a member of lts board
of trustees. He is a past president of
DR. OSCAR W. CLARKE
the Ohio State Medical Association
1973-74, and Is now chairman of the
Ohio State Medical · Delegatbn to
the American Medical Association.
He Is a Fellow of !be American ColG~IPOLIS - Filing for mar·
lege a Physicians and a Diplomate
rlage ucenses this past week in . in the American Board of toternal
Gallla County Probate Court were:
Medicine.
Rickey .G. Smith. 24. Ches hire,
Locally, Dr. Clarke is serving as
11 factory employee. and Ca thy M.
president of the GaiUpolls Health
Greene, 24, 196 Upper Ohio 7.
Department. He is a past president
licensed practical nurse.
of the Gall1a County Medical
'Ronald L. Newell. 22. Point
Society.
Pleasant, welder. and Lisa D.
He received his B.S. degree from
Crump, 21, Point Pleasant, stock
Randolph-Macon College in Ash· personnel.
. ·
land, Va., and his medical degree
Scott D. Miller. 23, Rio Grande. from the Medical College a. VIrgicollege administrator, and Andrea
nia in Richmond. He interned at
J. Cook, 21, Rio Grande. student.
Boston City Hospital, Boston,
Mass., and served his residency in
IntePnal Medicine and was'
Emergency calls ·
awarded a Fellowship in Cardlol·
ogy both at the Medical College d.
POMEROY--Four calls were
anSWered by local units Friday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Flag project begins
Service reports.
At 3:01a.m., the Syracuse Unit took
MIDDLEPORT--Orders are now
Charles Grueser from his home in
being accepted for maroon and gold
Minersville ·to Veterans Memorial
school flags, . a project of tbe
Hospital; at 11:41 a .m., Pomeroy
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club,
took Brenda Templeton to Veterans Hank Cleland announced when the
Memorial; Middleport at 2:51p.m. clubmetatHeathMethodlstChurch .
took Augustine Clonch to Veterans · Friday evening. The _flags, com- .
Memorial and at 3:54p.m., Pome plete with pole, will sell for $ID.
roy took Goldie Cremeans to Dinner was served by women of tbe ·
church .
.. Veterans Memorial.

Marriage licenses

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

Playtex·

.

,

.

LYLOOKm

TELEVISION GRACE - Althoup ~Cheryl Ladd was jll!i a cbDd whea Grace Kelly
eoded berlllm career byiiUUT)'IncPrlnceRalnertobeoomeprll" i ofMonacio, thefonneranpl
will be~ her Ill the TV apedal "Grace Ke!IJ." ''llhoogtlt of her children and famDy,"
· Ladd 181d. ''I fell we had~ tolmow lbemdolng ftlleai'Ch forlhepldure." (APT e erpboto).

Minimizer Bras by 18HOUR®
#522 Underwire in beige
1
· ·
34-42C, regularly $16.00, NoW Only $12.80 with Refund
34-420, regularly $17.00, Now Only $13.60 with Refund
34-4200, regularly $17.50, Now Only $14.00 w~h Refund

Hollywood
Pages 5, 8

#547 Soft Cup in beige
3442C regularly $15.00 Now Only $12.00 with Refund
3442D: regularly $16.00: Now Only $12.80 with 'Refund
3442DD, regularly $16.50, Now Only $13.20 with Refund

PLAYTEX WilL SEND YOU A

.20o/o
Refund
·if you like the bra,
Your Money Back
if not completely satisfied.

'

TV Ratings
J;lage6

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="117">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2686">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="42870">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42869">
              <text>February 20, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1065">
      <name>lipscomb</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7224">
      <name>maize</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
